"He"s done in Middleville," echoed Mrs. Kingsley. And that perhaps was a gauntlet thrown.

"Rot!" exclaimed Mrs. Wrapp, with more force than elegance. "I"ll invite Daren Lane to my house.... You women don"t get the point.

Daren Lane is a soldier come home to die. He gave himself. And he returns to find all--all this sickening--oh, what shall I call it?

What does he care whether or not we invite him? Can"t you see that?"

"There"s a good deal in what you say," returned Mrs. Kingsley, influenced by the stronger spirit. "Maybe Lane hated the new styles. I don"t blame him much. There"s something wrong with our young people.

The girls are crazy. The boys are wild. Few of them are marrying--or even getting engaged. They"ll do _anything_. The times are different.

And we mothers don"t know our daughters."

"Well, I know _mine_" returned Mrs. Maynard, loftily. "What you say may be true generally, but there are exceptions. My daughter has been too well brought up."

"Yes, Margie is well-bred," retorted Mrs. Wrapp. "We"ll admit she hasn"t gone to extremes, as most of our girls have. But I want to observe to you that she has been a wall-flower for a year."

"It certainly _is_ a problem," sighed Mrs. Kingsley. "I feel helpless--out of it. Elinor does precisely what she wants to do. She wears outlandish clothes. She smokes and--I"m afraid drinks. And dances--_dreadfully._ Just like the other girls--no better, no worse.

But with all that I think she"s good. I feel the same as Jane feels about that. In spite of this--this modern stuff I believe all the girls are fundamentally the same as ten years ago."

"Well, that"s where you mothers get in wrong," declared Mrs. Wrapp with her vigorous bluntness. "It"s your pride. Just because they"re _your_ daughters they are above reproach.... What have you to say about the war babies in town? Did you ever hear of _that_ ten years ago? You bet you didn"t. These girls are a speedy set. Some of them are just wild for the sake of wildness. Most of them _have_ to stand for things, or be left out altogether."

"What in the world can we do?" queried Mrs. Maynard, divided between distress and chagrin.

"The good Lord only knows," responded Mrs. Wrapp, herein losing her a.s.surance. "Marriage would save most of them. But Helen doesn"t want to marry. She wants to paint pictures and be free."

"Perhaps marriage is a solution," rejoined Mrs. Maynard thoughtfully.

"Whom on earth can we marry them to?" asked Mrs. Kingsley. "Most of the older men, the bachelors who"re eligible haven"t any use for these girls except to _play_ with them. True, these young boys only think of little but dances, car-rides, and sneaking off alone to spoon--they get engaged to this girl and that one. But nothing comes of it."

"You"re wrong. Never in my time have I seen girls find lovers and husbands as easily as now," declared Mrs. Wrapp. "Nor get rid of them so quickly.... Jane, you can marry Margaret. She"s pretty and sweet even if you have spoiled her. The years are slipping by. Margaret ought to marry. She"s not strong enough to work. Marriage for her would make things so much easier for you."

With that parting dig Mrs. Wrapp rose to go. Whereupon she and Mrs.

Kingsley, with gracious words of invitation and farewell, took themselves off leaving Mrs. Maynard contending with an outraged spirit. Certain terse remarks of the crude and practical Mrs. Wrapp had forced to her mind a question that of late had a.s.sumed cardinal importance, and now had been brought to an issue by a proposal for Margaret"s hand. Her daughter was a great expense, really more than could longer be borne in these times of enormous prices and shrunken income. A husband had been found for Margaret, and the matter could be adjusted easily enough, if the girl did not meet it with the incomprehensible obstinacy peculiar to her of late.

Mrs. Maynard found the fair object of her hopes seated in the middle of her room with the bright contents of numerous boxes and drawers strewn in glittering heaps around her.

"Margaret, what on earth are you doing there?" she demanded.

"I"m looking for a little picture Holt Dalrymple gave me when we went to school together," responded Margaret.

"Aren"t you ever going to grow up? You"ll be hunting for your dolls next."

"I will if I like," said the daughter, in a tone that did not manifest a seraphic mood.

"Don"t you feel well?" inquired the mother, solicitously. Margaret was frail and subject to headaches that made her violent.

"Oh, I"m well enough."

"My dear," rejoined Mrs. Maynard, changing the topic. "I"m sorry to tell you Daren Lane has lost his standing in Middleville."

The hum and the honk of a motor-car sounded in the street.

"Poor Daren! What"s he done?... Any old day he"ll care!"

Mrs. Maynard was looking out of the window. "Here comes a crowd of girls.... Helen Wrapp has a new suit. Well, I"ll go down. And after they leave I want a serious talk with you."

"Not if I see you first!" muttered Margaret, under her breath, as her mother walked out.

Presently, following gay talk and laughter down stairs, a bevy of Margaret"s friends entered her boudoir.

"h.e.l.lo, old socks!" was Helen"s greeting. "You look punk."

"Marg, where"s the doll? Your mother tipped us off," was Elinor"s greeting.

"Where"s the eats?" was Flossie d.i.c.kerson"s greeting. She was a bright-eyed girl, with freckles on her smiling face, and the expression of a daring, vivacious and happy spirit--and acknowledged to be the best dancer and most popular girl in Middleville. Her dress, while not to be compared with her friends" costumes in costliness, yet was extreme in the prevailing style.

"Glad to see you, old dear," was dark-eyed, dark-haired Dorothy Dalrymple"s greeting. Her rich color bore no hint of the artificial.

She sank down on her knees beside Margaret.

The other girls draped themselves comfortably round the room; and Flossie with a "Yum Yum" began to dig into a box of candy on Margaret"s couch. They all talked at once. "Hear the latest, Marg?"

"Look at Helen"s spiffy suit!"

"Oh, money, money, what it will buy!"

"Money"ll never buy _me_, I"ll say."

"Marg, who"s been fermentin" round lately? Girls, get wise to the flowers."

"Hot dog! See Marg blush! That comes from being so pale. What are rouge and lip-stick and powder for but to hide truth from our masculine pursuers?"

"Floss, you haven"t blushed for a million years."

It was Dorothy Dalrymple who silenced the idle badinage.

"Marg, you rummaging in the past?" she cried.

"Yes, and I love it," replied Margaret. "I haven"t looked over this stuff for years. Just to remember the things I did!... Here, Dal, is a picture you once drew of our old teacher, Miss Hill."

Dorothy, whom the girls nicknamed "Dal," gazed at the drawing with amaze and regret.

"She was a terror," continued Margaret. "But Dal, you never had any reason to draw such a horrible picture of her. You were her pet."

"I wasn"t," declared Dorothy.

"Maybe you never knew Miss Hill adored you, Dal," interposed Elinor.

"She was always holding you up as a paragon. Not in your lessons--for you were a bonehead--but for deportment you were the cla.s.s!"

"Dal, you were too good for this earth _then_, let alone these days,"

said Margaret.

"Miss Hill," mused Elinor, gazing at the caricature. "That"s not a bad drawing. I remember Miss Hill never had any use for me. Small wonder. She was an honest-to-G.o.d teacher. I think she wanted us to be good.... Wonder how she got along with the kids that came after us."

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