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"Oh, Vio!" exclaimed that elated young lady, after the first greetings were exchanged, "I have the most delightful piece of news to tell you."
Violet looked interested immediately.
"What is it?" she asked.
"I am going to Europe next month," Nellie replied, with a face all aglow.
"Going to Europe!" Violet repeated, with a look of dismay; for her heart sank at the thought that she was about to lose her only friend.
"Yes; mamma has finally consented to let me have a year of music at Milan, and Mrs. Hawley, who is also going broad, has consented to take me under her friendly wing.
"Going for a year!" sighed Violet. "What shall I do without you?"
"Oh, it will soon slip by," said the happy girl, to whom the coming twelve months would seem all too short. "Of course I shall miss you dreadfully. I only wish you were going too. Wouldn't it be just delightful?"
"Yes, indeed. And why not?" here interposed Mrs. Hawley, who appeared to have been suddenly arrested, by this remark, in the midst of an account of a brilliant reception, which she was giving to Mrs. Mencke. "You know I am fond of your company, and should like nothing better than to have two bright girls with me. Belle, let me take Violet, too. She ought to have a nice trip abroad, now that she is out of school."
Mrs. Mencke looked thoughtful, and not especially pleased by the proposition.
"You are very kind, Althea, to propose it, but Mr. Mencke and I had planned a trip to Canada for this month and next, and we intended to take Violet with us."
Violet turned a cold, steadfast look upon her sister.
"I told you that I should not go to Canada, Belle," she said, quietly, but decidedly.
"Then come with us, by all means. I am sure it cannot make much difference whether you go to Europe or Canada, and Nellie would be very happy to have you for a chum," interposed Mrs. Hawley.
"Indeed I should. Oh, Violet, it would be simply charming. Wouldn't you like it?" Nellie cried, enthusiastically.
"Ye-s," the unsuspicious girl replied, though somewhat doubtfully, as she thought of the thousands of miles that would separate her from Wallace, if she accepted this invitation. "How long do you intend to be absent?" she concluded, turning to Mrs. Hawley.
"Oh, I shall be gone a year, perhaps two, and should enjoy having you with me all the time; but Mr. Hawley and my sister, Mrs. Dwight, will return in about three months, so if you should get homesick you could come back with them."
Mrs. Hawley was very wise; she knew that Violet would be much more likely to go if she felt she could return at any time.
The young girl wondered what Wallace would say to this plan. She really felt attracted by it; at least, it would afford her a release for a time from her sister's irritating authority.
"Why not let her come then, Belle, if she does not wish to go with you to Canada?" urged Mrs. Hawley, insinuatingly, as she turned to her friend, with a sparkle of mischief in her eyes, as she saw that Violet was really inclined to go.
"Well, I do not know," said Mrs. Mencke, contemplatively. "I suppose I should have to consult my husband--then there is the trouble of getting her ready."
"Oh, she will not need anything for the voyage except some traveling rugs and wraps and a steamer chair. We can replenish her wardrobe in Paris for half what it would cost here, so you need not trouble yourself at all on that score. Will you come, Violet?" and Mrs. Hawley turned with a winning look to the fair girl.
"Say yes--do, Vio," pleaded Nellie; and then turning to Mrs. Mencke, she added: "You will let her, won't you?"
"I have half a mind to," mused the crafty woman.
"There, Vio," cried Nellie, triumphantly; "there is nothing to hinder now."
"It is very sudden--I will think of it and let you know," Violet began, reflectively.
"There will not be very much time to think of it," Mrs. Hawley remarked, pleasantly. "You had better decide the matter at once, and thus avoid all uncertainty."
"I will let you know by the day after to-morrow," Violet returned, but she lost color as she said it.
She wanted to go, to get away from her brother and sister, but she shrank from leaving Wallace.
"She is planning to consult that fellow," Mrs. Mencke said to herself, and reading Violet like a book; "but I will take care that she doesn't get an opportunity to do so."
Mrs. Hawley said no more, but arose to take her leave, feeling that she had done all that was wise, for that day, in the furtherance of her friend's schemes.
But Nellie lingered a little, and tried to coax her friend into yielding; she was very anxious to have her companionship upon the proposed trip.
Violet was firm, however, and said again that she would like very much to go, but could not decide at such short notice.
Mrs. Mencke did not renew the subject after their caller's departure, and wisely maintained a somewhat indifferent manner, as if she did not care very much whether Violet went or not.
Mr. Mencke came in a little later from his club, and she broached the plan to him before Violet. Of course it had all been talked over before between husband and wife.
He, also appeared to graciously favor the proposition.
"Why, yes," he said, "if Violet wants to go to Europe, let her; you say she does not like the idea of going to Canada with us, and as we are going to shut up the house, she must go somewhere."
"But she is not quite sure that she even wants to go with Althea," Mrs.
Mencke remarked, while she watched her sister closely.
"Humph," responded Mr. Mencke, bluntly; "it must be either one thing or the other. Which shall it be, Violet--Europe or Canada? We can't leave you here while we are away."
"It is a somewhat important question to decide at such short notice,"
Violet returned, coldly, and determined that she would not commit herself until she could consult Wallace.
She was a little surprised that he should still talk of Canada, for she had imagined that the trip had been planned wholly on her account.
She could not know that this was a pretense, intended to blind her still further.
The next morning Mrs. Mencke went up to Violet's room about nine o'clock and found her apparently engaged in reading a magazine.
"I am going out shopping," she remarked. "I have a great deal to do; don't you want to come and help me?"
Violet looked up in surprise.
"Why, Belle, you know that I never suit your taste in shopping, and you always veto what I suggest," she said.
"But you will need a great many things yourself for your trip abroad, and you can at least purchase handkerchiefs, stockings, underwear, and so forth," her sister returned.
"But I have not yet decided to go," Violet replied, annoyed that her acquiescence should be thus taken for granted, "and in case I do not I have plenty of everything for my needs at present."
"Well, then, Vio, come to keep me company," Mrs. Mencke urged, trying to conceal her real purpose, to keep her sister under her surveillance, beneath an affectionate exterior.