Held all the advantages, that her vague resentment and curiosity
concerning the family's treatment of the unknown newcomer were brief. If
Aunt Alice liked Norma to come in and talk books and write notes, if
Chris chose to be gallant, if Grandma lavished an unusual affection upon
this new protegee, well, it robbed Leslie of nothing, after all. But
with Norma it was different. She was brought into sharp contact with
another girl, only slightly her senior, who had everything that this new
turn of fortune had given Norma herself, and a thousand times more.
Norma saw older women, the important and influential matrons of the
social world, paying court to the promised wife of Acton Liggett. Norma
knew that while Alice and Chris were always attentive to her own little
affairs, the solving of Leslie's problems they regarded as their own
sacred obligation. Norma had hours and hours of this new enchanting
leisure to fill; she could be at anybody's beck and call. But Leslie,
she saw, was only too busy. Everybody was claiming Leslie; she was
needed in forty places at once; she must fly from one obligation to
another, and be thanked for sparing just a few minutes here and there
from her crowded days. Mrs. Melrose had immediately made Norma an
allowance, an allowance so big that when Norma first told Aunt Kate
about it, it was with a sense of shame. Norma had her check-book, and
need ask nobody for spending money. More than that her generous old
patron insisted that she use all the family charge accounts freely: "You
mustn't think of paying in any shop!" said Aunt Marianna and Aunt Alice,
earnestly. But Leslie was immensely rich in her own right. The hour in
which Norma realized this was one of real wretchedness. Chris was her
innocent informant. It was only two or three days before the wedding, a
warm day of rustling leaves and moving shadows, in late May. The united
families were still in town, but plans for escape to the country were
made for the very day after the event. Norma had been fighting a little
sense of hurt pride because she was not to be included among Leslie's
wedding attendants. She knew that Aunt Marianna had suggested it to
Leslie, some weeks before, and that the bride had quite justifiably
reminded her grand

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