Part 13 (1/2)

Running across the lawn, and waving her scarf at them, came Mrs.

Cartwright.

”Were you coming to see me first?” she asked.

Miss Stuart confessed that she had not the shadow of an idea which house belonged to Mrs. Cartwright.

”You must see it for a minute, since you are already here,” urged Mrs.

Cartwright, and led the way up the graveled path to her veranda.

”Mollie,” she said, addressing the young girl, ”I think it is peculiarly appropriate for my b.u.t.terfly girl to be introduced to my piazza. It is made to look like a j.a.panese teahouse,” she explained to Miss Sallie.

The sides of Mrs. Cartwright's veranda were of heavy j.a.panese paper stretched on bamboo poles which opened and closed at will. The paper had been painted by a famous j.a.panese artist to represent springtime in j.a.pan. There were whole rows of cherry trees in full blossom, with little j.a.panese children playing beneath them. Opposite this scene was another painting-a marshy lake, surrounded by queer j.a.panese birds.

The veranda was lighted by a hundred tiny shaded lamps. j.a.panese matting covered the floor, while the tea tables were set with tea services bought in old j.a.pan. The girls had never seen anything so lovely.

”You are officially invited to have tea with me here, any or every afternoon you are in Newport. Now I will run and get Mr. Cartwright,”

added their hostess, ”and we will go over to the Casino.”

Outside, the Casino looked like a rambling, old Dutch mansion, with peaked gables and overhanging eaves.

”We've a Dutch house, English lawns and a French chef,” Mr. Cartwright laughingly explained to Miss Sallie as they entered.

”And we've dozens of tennis courts,” added Mrs. Cartwright. ”We are working dreadfully hard, now, for the tournament that is to take place in a few weeks. It is really the social event of the whole year at Newport. Is there a star player among you girls? Why not enter the tournament and compete for the champions.h.i.+p? We are to have a special match game, this year, played by the young people. Let us keep these tennis courts busy for a while. You'll come over, too, Miss Stuart, won't you, and play bridge while we work. Or you'll work at bridge, while we play tennis. Perhaps you think that is the way I should have put it.”

CHAPTER XII-A WEEK LATER

”Barbara, I wouldn't play tennis with Gladys and Harry Townsend, if I were you,” said Mollie to her sister, one morning a week later. ”They were horrid to you yesterday. Didn't you notice, when you called to Hugh and Ruth that their last ball had gone over the line, Gladys just shrugged her shoulders, and gave a sneery kind of smile to that Townsend fellow, and he lifted his eyebrows! Is your score the best, or Ruth's? I know you're both ahead of Gladys and Grace. I am sure Gladys doesn't play a bit better than I do; so she needn't have been so high and mighty.”

Mollie shrugged her dainty shoulders. ”You see, she told me, the first day she arrived, that, of course, I didn't play in the cla.s.s with the others, so you had just the right eight for the two courts-four girls and four men.”

”Why, Mollie!” Bab looked surprised. ”I thought you said you didn't want to play. You can take my place any time.”

Mollie smiled. ”No,” she answered; ”I don't want to play. It's not that.

But it annoys me when you let Gladys Le Baron, cousin or no cousin, snub us all the time, and you not notice it. Ralph certainly wouldn't like to have me play with him now, when you're in for a match game.”

”Mollie,” said Bab, tying her tennis shoe, ”I _do_ notice how rude Gladys is. She left me standing all alone the other afternoon, when Ruth and Grace had gone into the club house to speak to Aunt Sallie. Friends of Gladys's came up, and she deliberately turned her back on me and didn't introduce me. I felt so out of it! Mrs. Post and Mrs. Erwin soon joined them, and they shook hands with me. I found the other people were some guests who had come down for Mrs. Erwin's ball, next week, and were staying at her house.

”I know,” she continued, ”Gladys is furious that we are invited to the dance. Mrs. Erwin was so cordial and nice. She said, right before me, that though the ball was a grown-up affair, she knew Gladys would want her cousins and friends, and she had invited us on her account. Wasn't it funny? Miss Gladys couldn't say a word. Goodness knows, _she_ doesn't want us. She has been lording it over us, for days, because she and Harry were to be the only very young people invited. Gladys imagines herself a woman of society, and is in reality merely a foolish little girl,” said Barbara. Then she added reflectively: ”Miss Sallie says we are all too young to 'go out,' and she doubts the propriety of allowing us to attend Mrs. Erwin's ball. Last night she told Ruth she had almost decided against our going. Ruth championed our cause on the strength of the shortness of our stay in Newport, also that we should be permitted to go as a special favor to our hostess. You know Miss Sallie hates to refuse Ruth anything. Consequently we will be 'among those present' at Mrs. Erwin's ball whether Miss Gladys approves or not.”

”I just wish I could tell my lovely Mrs. Cartwright how mean Gladys is,”

said Mollie. ”She would not ask her to her charity fair.”

”Please don't say anything, Mollie,” pleaded Barbara, taking her tennis racquet from the bed. She had already answered Ralph's impatient whistle from the garden below. ”It won't do any good for us to be horrid to Gladys in return; it will only make us seem as hateful as she is. Things will come around, somehow. I don't mind her-so very much.”

”Well, I do,” answered Mollie. ”But you haven't told me how your score and Ruth's stand.”

”Oh, I think we are pretty nearly even.” Barbara was half way out the door. ”Be careful, Molliekins,” she urged, ”if you go rowing with that freshman this afternoon. Why do you want to know about Ruth's score and mine? It's a week before the game, and anything may happen before then.