"
Mrs. Bolling was unsympathetic but she was thorough. She liked to see
things properly done. Since David and his young friends had undertaken
a venture so absurd, she decided to lend them a helping hand with it.
Besides, now that she had no children of her own in the house,
Mademoiselle was practically eating her head off. Also it had
developed that David was fond of the child, so fond of her that to
oppose that affection would have been bad policy, and Mrs. Bolling was
politic when she chose to be. She chose to be politic now, for
sometime during the season she was going to ask a very great favor of
David, and she hoped, that by first being extraordinarily complaisant
and kind and then by bringing considerable pressure to bear upon him,
he would finally do what he was asked. The favor was to provide
himself with a father-in-law, and that father-in-law the
multi-millionaire parent of the raven-haired, crafty-eyed ingenue, who
had begun angling for him that June night at the country club.
She made the suggestion to David on the eve of the arrival of all of
Eleanor's guardians for the week-end. Mrs. Bolling had invited a
house-party comprised of the associated parents as a part of her
policy of kindness before the actual summoning of her forces for the
campaign she was about to inaugurate.
David was really touched by his mother's generosity concerning
Eleanor. He had been agreeably surprised at the development of the
situation between the child and his mother. He had been obliged to go
into town the day after Eleanor's first unfortunate encounter with her
hostess, and had hurried home in fear and trembling to try to smooth
out any tangles in the skein of their relationship that might have
resulted from a day in each other's vicinity. After hurrying over the
house and through the grounds in search of her he finally discovered
the child companionably currying a damp and afflicted Pekinese in his
mother's sitting-room, and engaged in a grave discussion of the
relative merits of molasses and sugar as a sweetening for Boston baked
beans.
It was while they were having their after-dinner coffee in the
library, for which Eleanor had been allowed to come down, though
nursery supper was the order of the day in the Bolling establishment,
that David told his friends of his mother's offer.
"Of course, we decided to send her to school when she was twelve
anyway," he said. "The idea was to keep her among ourselves for two
y
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