"Me?" He shrugged his shoulders and again smiled down at her. "I'll find

quarters somewhere, and when I get too lonesome, I'll come over and talk

to you, Leila."

The rich color flooded her cheeks. "Do come," she said, again with

quick-drawn breath, then like a child who has secured its coveted

sugar-plum, she slipped through the crowd, and down into the dining-room,

where she found Mary taking a last survey.

"Hasn't Aunt Frances done things beautifully?" Mary asked; "she insisted

on it, Leila. We could never have afforded the orchids and the roses;

and the ices are charming--pink hearts with cupids shooting at them with

silver arrows----"

"Oh, Mary," the dark-haired girl laid her flushed cheek against the arm

of her taller friend. "I think weddings are wonderful."

Mary shook her head. "I don't," she said after a moment's silence. "I

think they're horrid. I like Gordon Richardson well enough, except when

I think that he is stealing Constance, and then I hate him."

But the bride was coming down, with all the murmuring voices behind her,

and now the silken ladies were descending the stairs to the dining-room,

which took up the whole lower west wing of the house and opened out upon

an old-fashioned garden, which to-night, under a chill October moon,

showed its rows of box and of formal cedars like sharp shadows against

the whiteness.

Into this garden came, later, Mary. And behind her Susan Jenks.

Susan Jenks was a little woman with gray hair and a coffee-colored skin.

Being neither black nor white, she partook somewhat of the nature of both

races. Back of her African gentleness was an almost Yankee shrewdness,

and the firm will which now and then degenerated into obstinacy.

"There ain't no luck in a wedding without rice, Miss Mary. These paper

rose-leaf things that you've got in the bags are mighty pretty, but how

are you going to know that they bring good luck?"

"Aunt Frances thought they would be charming and foreign, Susan, and they

look very real, floating off in the air. You must stand there on the

upper porch, and give the little bags to the guests."

Susan ascended the terrace steps complainingly. "You go right in out of

the night, Miss Mary," she called back, "an' you with nothin' on your

bare neck!"

Mary, turning, came face to face with Gordon's best man, Porter Bigelow.

"Mary," he said, impetuously, "I've been looking for you everywhere. I

couldn't keep my eyes off you during the service--you were--heavenly."




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