the case. 
"You would be very ungrateful if you disliked her," Mother went on,
"as she took such a tremendous fancy to you." 
"Dear me, I didn't know that!" I exclaimed, opening my eyes wide. "I 
thought it was Vic she----" 
"You are her favourite, as you are with Miss Woodburn, also," said 
Mother, who gets the effect of being so tremendously dignified partly, I 
believe, from never clipping her words as the rest of us do. "I am 
asking them down again especially on your account, and I want you to 
be particularly nice to them." 
"It's easy enough to be nice to Sally Woodburn, but----" 
I caught a look from Vic and broke off my sentence, hurrying to change 
it into another. "As they're sailing for the States so soon, I shan't have 
time to spread myself much." 
"Don't be slangy, Betty; it doesn't suit you," said Mother. "You pick up 
too many things from Stanforth." 
"Trust him not to drop anything worth having," interpolated Vic, which 
was pert; but Mother never reproves her. 
"Perhaps Mrs. Stuyvesant-Knox and Miss Woodburn won't come," I 
said, for the sake of getting on safer ground. 
"Not come? Of course they will come. It is short notice, but if they 
have other engagements they will break them," returned Mother; and 
though it would be as impossible for her to be vulgar or snobbish, as it 
would for a tall white arum lily to be either of those things, still I 
couldn't help feeling that her unconscious thought was: "The invitation 
to a couple of unknown, touring Americans, from the Duchess of 
Stanforth, is equivalent to my receiving a Royal Command." 
She was probably right,--anyhow, so far as Mrs. Ess Kay is concerned: 
as for Sally Woodburn, I don't think she has a drop of snobbish blood 
in her veins. She's Southern--not South American, as I was stupid 
enough to think at first; but from some Southern State or other;
Kentucky, I believe it is. She's short and plump, and olive and smooth 
as ivory satin, with soft, lazy brown eyes, a voice like rich cream, a 
smile which says: "Please like me"; and pretty, crinkly dark hair that is 
beginning to glitter with silver network here and there, though she isn't 
exactly old, even for a woman--perhaps about thirty. 
I knew that Miss Woodburn rather fancied me, and I was quite pleased 
to take her up to her room, when she and her elder cousin arrived, about 
an hour before dinner. I stopped for a few minutes, and then left her 
with her maid, while I went to help Vic, and get myself ready. We've 
only one maid between the three of us, nowadays; which means (unless 
there's some reason why Vic should be made particularly smart), that 
Mother gets more than a third of Thompson's services. That's as it 
should be, of course, and we don't grudge it; but Vic's rather helpless, 
and I always have to hurry, to see her through. 
This evening, though, I found Thompson in Vic's room, next to mine; 
and just as I scientifically dislocated my arms to unhook my frock, 
which does up behind, Mother came in. "Betty," she said, quite 
playfully for her, "I have a very pleasant surprise for you. You would 
never be able to guess, so I will tell you. I have consented to let you go 
and visit Mrs. Stuyvesant-Knox and Miss Woodburn in America. 
Aren't you delighted?" 
I felt as if the wall of the house were tumbling down, and I would 
presently be crumpled up underneath. 
"My goodness gracious, Mother!" I managed to stammer, forgetting 
how I've always stood in awe of her, since I could toddle. "How--how 
perfectly extraordinary! Why am I going? And is it all decided, whether 
I like or not?" 
"Of course you will like. To travel with pleasant companions and see a 
great, new country under such charming auspices, is an immense 
privilege, a very unusual privilege for a young girl," Mother replied 
promptly. "As for the 'why,' you are going because you have been 
cordially invited; because I think the experience will be for your 
advantage, present and future; because also it will be good for a
growing girl like you to have the bracing effect of a sea voyage." 
"Mother, I haven't a thing the matter with me, and I haven't grown the 
eighth of an inch this whole last year; you can see by my frocks," I 
protested, more on principle than because it would be any use to protest, 
or because I was sure that I wanted Mother to change her mind. 
Naturally the protest had no effect, but Mother's mood mercifully 
remained placid, and she didn't give me a single freezing look. 
"Mrs. Stuyvesant-Knox is a woman of good family and    
    
		
	
	
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