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"Oh, Mona and Roger and Elise and Kit Cameron and Phil,--that's all."
"Elise and Kit are pretty good friends, aren't they?"
"Yes, there may be another wedding in the dim future."
"Be careful, Patty. They say 'Three times a bridesmaid, never a bride,' you know."
"Goodness! I must beware. I was bridesmaid for Christine,--and now for Mona,--then, if I'm bridesmaid for Elise, my last hope vanishes! I might be her maid of honor, though. Does that count?"
"Yes, counts just the same. But perhaps you'll be married before Elise. She isn't engaged yet."
"Neither am I."
"Same as."
"Indeed it _isn't_ same as! Philip made me pretty mad down at Lakewood. He scorned my new friends, the Blaneys, and he was most disagreeable about it, too."
"All right. Far be it from me to hasten your matrimonial alliance.
I'm only too glad to keep you here. It's lonesome enough, days when you're away."
"Nice old Nan!" and Patty gave her a whirlwind hug that nearly took her off her feet.
Twenty girls were invited to the shower, and Mona arrived first of all.
She came bustling in enveloped in furs, which she unfastened and threw off as she talked.
"Everything's going fine!" she announced. "I've attended to the very smallest details myself, so there'll be no mistakes. There always are mistakes and oversights at a wedding and mine is going to be the great exception. My, but I'm tired! I've been chasing about since early this morning. Spent hours with the floral artist, and had a long interview with the caterer. But I confab with him every day. I've changed the menu four times already."
"You're a goose, Mona," observed Patty, smiling at her enthusiastic friend, "what do you care what people eat at your wedding, as long as it's good and proper?"
"My dear child, I only expect to get married once in my checkered career, and so I want everything connected with the occasion to be perfect. I don't want to look back and regret that I didn't have as much of a symphony in the supper as I did in the orchestra. You don't know the responsibility of a girl who has to get married and look after the wedding both. You'll have Mrs. Nan to run the arrangements, but I haven't anybody but little Mona."
The bride-elect looked so radiant and capable and generally happy, that Patty knew better than to waste any sympathy on her.
"You love it all, Mona," she said, "you're just in your element ordering decorations and deciding menus; and I suppose you've superintended the hat-check people and the elevator service."
"Of course I have. I practically run the whole hotel just at present.
The management have to take a back seat where anything connected with the fifteenth is concerned."
"It doesn't seem like a wedding at all," laughed Patty. "It is more like a pageant."
"It's a wedding, all right. You'll realise it when you see me go off with Roger. Oh, Patty, don't think I don't realise and appreciate the importance and solemnity of the marriage tie, but I do want the appointments to be perfect and beautiful just _because_ it is my wedding to Roger. We're very much in love, you know----"
"I do know it, Mona, and it's all beautiful, and I'm glad you're having everything just as you want it. You're an old dear, and n.o.body wishes you more happiness than I do."
"Don't talk in that strain, or I'll weep on your shoulder. I'm all keyed up, you know--honest, Patty, it's pretty awful to have no mother or aunt or anything. Only just a father, who's heavenly kind and generous, but no good for advice or consulting talks."
"All right, Mona girl, we won't indulge in real talk now, for the girls will begin to come in a minute. Go and primp a little, and then come down to the drawing-room."
Patty ran downstairs, Mona soon followed, and then the guests arrived.
In an effort to have a new sort of a shower, Patty had decreed a lace shower, and many and varied were the gifts. As Patty had wisely remarked, lace gave a wide scope. One could choose valuable specimens of real lace or trifling affairs that were pretty and inexpensive.
And so, when the time for their exhibition came the score of merry young people sat breathlessly awaiting the fun.
In the doorway appeared Elise, in the costume of a Brittany peasant.
She carried a huge white basket ornamented with orange blossoms and fluttering white ribbons.
"Laces, lady?" she said, approaching Mona. "Nice, pretty laces.
Handiwork of the humble peasants for the grand lady. Accept,--please."
With bows and curtseys, Elise opened the basket and placed it at Mona's feet.
Delightedly, Mona examined the contents, and at each gift a chorus of exclamations went up from all the admiring throng.
Patty's offering was a tablecloth of Filet Antique and Venetian embroidery, and was among the most beautiful in the lot.
Elise gave a berthe of rose point, and Nan a d.u.c.h.esse lace fan. But most of the gifts were of a simpler nature, and dainty boudoir pillows, table scarfs, bags, caps, and handkerchiefs made up the filmy shower and delighted the heart of the recipient.
Mona was radiant with joy. Although a pampered favourite of fortune, she was especially fond of receiving gifts, and she loved every individual lace confection and warmly thanked the donors.
"The things are heavenly, girls," she cried; "perfectly darling, every one of them! I can't thank you enough, but my heart is just overflowing with honest-to-goodness grat.i.tude. Oh, I _do_ love 'em so!" and gathering the whole lot in her arms, she rocked back and forth in ecstasy. "How did you ever come to think of a lace shower, Patty?
I love lace more than anything on earth--except Roger,--and I shall furnish my house with these beauty things. Oh, you are all so good to me!"
Tea was served in the dining-room, and Mona graced the head of the table, with her bridal attendants on either side of her. The place cards and favours were all suggestive of the wedding occasion, and, for a centrepiece, two white doves perched on a basket of white roses.
Mona was in highest spirits and her eyes glistened with pleasure as the girls a.s.sured her of their friendship and love, and wished her all sorts of future joy and happiness.
Patty looked at her a little curiously, and then she realised that the girl had lived a loveless life, and that the sudden change to the atmosphere of love and friendship had well-nigh turned her head.
The guests departed, all but Mona and Elise, who were to stay for dinner, and the three chums went up to Patty's room to chat.
"I can't believe these things are really mine," said Mona, as she collected and arranged her laces, preparatory to having them sent home.
"Why is everybody so good to me?"
"Oh, come now, Mona," said Elise, laughing, "it isn't such wonderful goodness. People always give things to brides. Patty, if you don't give me a shower like this, I won't get married at all."
"Didn't know you thought of it," returned Patty. "But I'll promise the shower all right. When shall I invite the girls, Elise?"
"Oh, I haven't picked out the bridegroom yet, so there's no hurry.
I've got to get used to having my brother married, before I think of it myself. Mona, we'll soon be sisters. Think of that!"
"I've often thought of it, Elise. I've never had a sister, and I shan't know just how to act at first. But I hope----"
"There now, don't get sentimental! Not but what I feel that way, too, but you'll get weepy in a minute,--and then it's all up with you!"
"You're so emotional, Mona," said Patty, smiling at her, "and so capable, and so generally all-round efficient, you're just the one to get married. Now, when it comes my turn, I don't want all this hullabaloo,--I think I shall get a good old rope ladder and elope."
"What! and not have any showers and music and reception and everything?"