"Marcia is a dear!" she replied. "She's a good sport in everything, and she is something to look at besides. The two years that you were away have made her. I don't blame the men for being crazy about her. The only drawback she has is her mother. She's a pusher. She thinks she's put Marcia in society, whereas Marcia has come in naturally, and the old lady rides on her train, so to speak. I can't abide Mrs. Emerson! To me she has about every obnoxious fault of her class. Old Emerson is not half so bad; he is honest and amusing—and the men like him, I understand. I've asked Marcia down to-morrow, for the week-end—you don't mind, I hope."
"Not in the least—if she doesn't mind me," said Stephanie.
"She knows you are to be here. Mrs. Emerson, however, may throw a fit when she knows it!" Gladys laughed.
"Is any one else coming?" Stephanie asked.
"Just a few—your friends, of course: Dorothy Tazewell, and Helen Burleston, with Montague Pendleton, Sheldon Burgoyne, Warwick Devereux and Steuart Cameron. Two tables of Auction, you know—and plenty of go to the crowd."
"Mayn't I be a wet blanket?" Stephanie suggested.
"Why?" was the astonished query.
"Do they also know I'm coming? They may not care to be housed up with me for two days."
"Sure they know. You're too timid, my dear—when did it come on you?"
"Abroad, I reckon," Stephanie replied. "I appear cold and calm enough, but it's all bluff, Gladys. The truth is, I'm scared to death."