Page:Maud Howe - A Newport Aquarelle.djvu/103

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A NEWPORT AQUARELLE.
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"It was just like her, but I suppose Gladys Carleton was at the bottom of it. Were the invitations given out in Mrs. Fallow-Deer's name?"

The speaker was the lady with the three-syllabled name whom Larkington had met on board the Dolphin on the occasion of the yachting party.

"No," said the handsome brusque lady; "but everybody knows that she and Gray Grosvenor made out the list. As to Gladys Carleton, I can't say I blame her for not likin' Boston people."

"Why?" asked several voices.

"Because, when she came on there to make a visit last winter, she had a perfectly horrid time. She stayed with some people livin' on Newbury Street, whom she had met in Europe. They were from Philadelphia, and nobody knew them in Boston, though they had lived there five years. I got her an invitation to the assembly, but she would not go because her friends were not asked. They