“Somehow I always think of Mary Lou’s husband as a prominent officer, or a diplomat,” Mrs. Lancaster would say. “Not necessarily very rich, but with a comfortable private income. Mary Lou makes friends very easily, she likes to make a good appearance, she has a very gracious manner, and with her fine figure, and her lovely neck, she would make a very handsome mistress for a big home—yes, indeed you would, dear! Where many a woman would want to run away and hide, Mary Lou would be quite in her element—”
“Well, one thing,” Mary Lou would say modestly, “I’m never afraid to meet strangers, and, don’t you know you’ve spoken of it, Ma? I never have any trouble in talking to them. Do you remember that woman in the grocery that night, Georgie, who said she thought I must have traveled a great deal, I had such an easy way of speaking? And I’d love to dress every night for dinner.”
“Of course you would!” her mother always said approvingly. “Now, Georgie,” she would pursue, “is different again. Where Mary Lou only wants the very nicest people about her, Georgie cares a good deal more for the money and having a good time!”
“The man I marry has got to make up his mind that I’m going to keep on the go,” Georgie would admit, with an independent toss of her head.
“But you wouldn’t marry just for that, dear? Love must come, too.”
“Oh, the love would come fast enough, if the money was there!” Georgie would declare naughtily.
“I don’t like to have you say that even in fun, dear! ... Now Jinny,” and Mrs. Lancaster would shake her head, “sometimes I think Jinny would be almost too hard upon any man,” she would say, lovingly. “There are mighty few in this world good enough for her. And I would certainly warn any man,” she usually added seriously, “that Jinny is far finer and more particular than most women. But a good, good man, older than she, who could give her a beautiful home--”
“I would love to begin, on my wedding-day, to do some beautiful, big, charitable thing every day,” Virginia herself would say eagerly. “I would like to be known far and wide as a woman of immense charities. I’d have only one handsome street suit or two, each season, beside evening dresses, and people would get to know me by sight, and bring their babies up to me in the street—” Her weak, kind eyes always watered at the picture.
“But Mama is not ready yet to let you go!” her mother would say jealously. “We’ll hope that Mr. Right will be a long time arriving!”
Then it was Susan’s turn.
“And I want some fine, good man to make my Sue happy, some day,” her aunt often said, affectionately. Susan writhed in spirit under the implication that no fine, good man yet had desired the honor; she had a girl’s desire that her affairs—or the absence of affairs—of the heart should not be discussed. Susan felt keenly the fact that she had never had an offer of marriage; her one consolation,