Page:To-morrow Morning (1927).pdf/147

 "Oh, I don't remember exactly, but it was very nice. Well, Aunt Kate, don't go too hard this hot weather, and then you'll be all right. I"

"How's the baby?"

"She's very well, thank you."

"I finished the little dress for her, and, oh, Charlotte, just the tiny little tucks looked so cunning I didn't put on the lace"

"I see. Well, thank you very much, Aunt Kate."

"I'll try to get it over to you to-morrow some time. Oh, Charlotte, isn't this news about the war terrible? I can't think about another thing. What does Hoagland think?"

"Aunt Kate says what do you think about the war? . . . He's right here. I was just telling him you were asking what he thought about it. He says to tell you it won't last long. It's lucky we didn't go across this summer, isn't it? We have Nancy Lou to thank for that. Well, Hoagland says take care of yourself."

"That was Charlotte," she told Joe, sitting down on the porch steps beside him. His cigarette glowed in the dark. She could hear the cool drip-drip of watered plants.

"No!"

"She was at a bridge luncheon at Marian Cressy's to-day."

"My God!"

"Joe! What a way to talk! While I think of it, would you very much mind leaving a little package