“Perfectly splendid,” echoed her auditors.
“Why, we shall be almost bridesmaids,” said Roberta Lewis in awestruck tones. “Does Mary know?”
Betty nodded. “She hasn’t had time to answer yet, but she can certainly go, as she lives so near Ethel.”
“The only difficulty about our going,” said Babe, “is what to do with the few days between the wedding and the opening of college.”
“And that’s easily settled,” said Madeline promptly. “Miss Hale lives just out of New York, doesn’t she? Well, you are all to come and stay in the flat with me. Hasn’t it just been beautifully cleaned? And aren’t you all longing for a glimpse of Bohemia?”
That was the climax of the tea drinking. The Merry Match-Makers spent the evening writing home to their parents for permission to go to the wedding and considering momentous problems of dress. For Roberta’s best evening-gown was lavender and Babbie’s was pink, and the question was how to distribute Betty, Babe and Helen in white, Bob in blue, Eleanor in her favorite yellow, Madeline in ecru, and Mary in any one of a bewildering number of possible toilettes, so as to justify Ethel’s hope that the aisle would be ornamental as well as useful.
How the days flew after that! For besides the wedding there were the luncheon and the dance to anticipate and plan for, as well as the unknown joys of Bohemia, New York, not to mention the regular excitement of going home, the fun of tucking Christmas presents into the corners of half-packed trunks, and the terrors of the written lesson that some inhuman member of the faculty always saves for the crowded last week of the term.
On the afternoon of the twenty-ninth the Merry Match-Makers met in New York. Babbie had sent a sad little note to Miss Hale and a tearful one to Betty to say that her mother, who was a good deal of an invalid, had “looked pretty blue over my running off early, and so of course I won’t leave her;” and Helen Adams had decided that considering all the extra expenses of senior year she couldn’t afford the trip to New York. So there were only seven “almost bridesmaids,” as Roberta called them, or “posts,” which was Bob’s name for them, to fall upon one another as if they had been separated for years, instead of a week, say thank you for the presents that were each “just what I wanted,” and exclaim excitedly over Betty’s new suit, Mary’s fur coat, and the sole-leather kit-bag that Santa Claus had brought Roberta.
“It’s queer,” said Bob. “I feel as if I’d had one whole vacation already, and ought to be unpacking and digging on psychology 6 and history 10. Whereas in reality I’m just beginning on another whole vacation. It’s like having two Thanksgiving dinners in one year.”
“Not quite like that, I hope,” laughed Eleanor, as they started off to inspect the wedding present, a beautiful pair of tall silver candlesticks. Madeline had ransacked New York to find them, and every one but Babe, who clung to her turtle as far superior to any “musty old antiques,” thought them just odd and distinctive enough to please Ethel’s fastidious taste. And after that there was barely time to catch the train they had arranged to take out to Ethel’s home.