Saturday's Child eBook

Kathleen Norris
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 623 pages of information about Saturday's Child.

Saturday's Child eBook

Kathleen Norris
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 623 pages of information about Saturday's Child.

The members pretended, to a woman, to be entirely unconscious of their social altitude.  They couldn’t understand how such ideas ever got about, it was “delicious”; it was “too absurd!” Why, the club was just the quietest place in the world, a place where a woman could run in to brush her hair and wash her hands, and change her library book, and have a cup of tea.  A few of them had formed it years ago, just half a dozen of them, at a luncheon; it was like a little family circle, one knew everybody there, and one felt at home there.  But, as for being exclusive and conservative, that was all nonsense!  And besides, what did other women see in it to make them want to come in!  Let them form another club, exactly like it, wouldn’t that be the wiser thing?

Other women, thus advised and reassured, smiled, instead of gnashing their teeth, and said gallantly that after all they themselves were too busy to join any club just now, merely happened to speak of the Town and Country.  And after that they said hateful and lofty and insulting things about the club whenever they found listeners.

But the Town and Country Club flourished on unconcernedly, buzzing six days a week with well-dressed women, echoing to Christian names and intimate chatter, sheltering the smartest of pigskin suitcases and gold-headed umbrellas and rustling raincoats in its tiny closets, resisting the constant demand of the younger element for modern club conveniences and more room.

No; the old members clung to its very inconveniences, to the gas-lights over the dressing-tables, and the narrow halls, and the view of ugly roofs and buildings from its back windows.  They liked to see the notices written in the secretary’s angular hand and pinned on the library door with a white-headed pin.  The catalogue numbers of books were written by hand, too—­the ink blurred into the shiny linen bands.  At tea-time a little maid quite openly cut and buttered bread in a corner of the dining-room; it was permissible to call gaily, “More bread here, Rosie!  I’m afraid we’re a very hungry crowd to-day!”

Susan enormously enjoyed the club; she had been there more than once with Miss Saunders, and found her way without trouble to-day to a big chair in a window arch, where she could enjoy the passing show without being herself conspicuous.  A constant little stream of women came and went, handsome, awkward school-girls, in town for the dentist or to be fitted to shoes, or for the matinee; debutantes, in their exquisite linens and summer silks, all joyous chatter and laughter; and plainly-gowned, well-groomed, middle-aged women, escorting or chaperoning, and pausing here for greetings and the interchange of news.

Miss Saunders, magnificent, handsome, wonderfully gowned, was surrounded by friends the moment she came majestically upstairs.  Susan thought her very attractive, with her ready flow of conversation, her familiar, big-sisterly attitude with the young girls, her positiveness when there was the slightest excuse for her advice or opinions being expressed.  She had a rich, full voice, and a drawling speech.  She had to decline ten pressing invitations in as many minutes.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Saturday's Child from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.