“I know I ain't,” declared the old woman, “and I don't reckon you gwine to gi' me a dollar ev 'y Sunday.”
“I certainly am not. I am only getting you launched.”
The following week Mrs. Graeme said to her husband, “I think Mammy is launched. The preacher came to the front door to-day and asked to see Mrs. Quivers. At first I did not know whom he meant. Then he said it was 'a colored lady.' You never saw any one so gotten up—silk hat, kid gloves, and ebony cane. And Mammy was quite set up by it. She says the preacher is from home and knew Caesar. She was really airy afterward.”
Mr. Graeme uttered an objurgation. “You will ruin that old woman, and with her the best old negro that ever was.”
“Oh, no,” said Mrs. Graeme, “there is no danger of that. You could n't spoil her.”
A few weeks later she said: “Yes, Mammy is launched. She told me to-day she wanted to join the club, and when I asked, what club, she said, 'the Colored Ladies Siciety Club.'” “I should say she was launched,” sniffed Mr. Graeme. “She told me she wanted her money to invest it herself. The old fool! They will rob her of it.”
III
The weeks that followed, and Mam' Lyddy's immersion in “Siciety” began apparently to justify Mr. Graeme's prophecy. A marked change had taken place in the old woman's dress, and no less a change had taken place in herself. She began to go out a good deal, and her manner was quite new. She was what a few weeks before she would have derided as “citified and airified.” At length Mrs. Graeme could not conceal it from herself any longer.
One evening as her husband on his return from his office threw himself on his chair with the evening paper, she brought up the subject.