glitter and became pensive and sorrowful. You could not ignore or disdain Olive. It was quite impossible to deny that she was beautiful and effective and sometimes she was a little intelligent. Her mouth might be a trifle heavyâshe might show her fine, white, regular teeth rather too lavishly when she smiled. But when all was said and done, Olive justified Uncle Benjaminâs summing upââa stunning girl.â Yes, Valancy agreed in her heart, Olive was stunning.
Rich, golden-brown hair, elaborately dressed, with a sparkling bandeau holding its glossy puffs in place; large, brilliant blue eyes and thick silken lashes; face of rose and bare neck of snow, rising above her gown; great pearl bubbles in her ears; the blue-white diamond flame on her long, smooth, waxen finger with its rosy, pointed nail. Arms of marble, gleaming through green chiffon and shadow lace. Valancy felt suddenly thankful that her own scrawny arms were decently swathed in brown silk. Then she resumed her tabulation of Oliveâs charms.
Tall. Queenly. Confident. Everything that Valancy was not. Dimples, too, in cheeks and chin. âA woman with dimples always gets her own way,â thought Valancy, in a recurring spasm of bitterness at the fate which had denied her even one dimple.
Olive was only a year younger than Valancy, though a stranger would have thought that there was at least ten years between them. But nobody ever dreaded old maidenhood for her. Olive had been surrounded by a crowd of eager beaus since her early teens, just as her mirror was always surrounded by a fringe of cards, photographs, programs and invitations. At eighteen, when she had graduated from Havergal College, Olive had been engaged to Will Desmond, lawyer in embryo. Will Desmond had died and Olive had mourned for him properly for two years. When she was twenty-three she had a hectic affair with Donald Jackson. But Aunt and Uncle Wellington disapproved of that and in the end Olive dutifully gave him up. Nobody in the Stirling clanâwhatever outsiders might sayâhinted that she did so because Donald himself was cooling off. However that might be, Oliveâs third venture met with everybodyâs approval. Cecil Price was clever and handsome and âone of the Port Lawrence Prices.â Olive had been engaged to him for three years. He had just graduated in civil engineering and they were to be married as soon as he landed a contract. Oliveâs hope chest was full to overflowing with exquisite things and Olive had already confided to Valancy what her wedding-dress was to be. Ivory silk draped with lace, white satin court train, lined with pale green georgette, heirloom veil of Brussels lace. Valancy knew alsoâthough Olive had not told herâthat the bridesmaids were selected and that she was not among them.
Valancy had, after a fashion, always been Oliveâs confidanteâperhaps because she was the only girl in the connection who could not bore Olive with return confidences. Olive always told Valancy all the details of her love affairs, from the days when the little boys in school used to âpersecuteâ her with love letters. Valancy could not comfort herself by thinking these affairs mythical. Olive really had them. Many men had gone mad over her besides the three fortunate ones.
âI donât know what the poor idiots see in me, that drives them to make such double idiots of themselves,â Olive was wont to say. Valancy would have liked to say, âI donât either,â but truth and diplomacy both restrained her. She did know, perfectly well. Olive Stirling was one of the girls about whom men do go mad just as indubitably as she, Valancy, was one of the girls at whom no man ever looked twice.
âAnd yet,â thought Valancy, summing her up with a new and merciless conclusiveness, âsheâs like a dewless morning. Thereâs something lacking.â
CHAPTER 11
Meanwhile the dinner in