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CHAPTER III. THE JAZZ PARTY.
 CHAPTER III. THE JAZZ PARTY.“What do you think we ought to wear, Marj?” inquired Lily, as she began to dress for the evening. “Dance frocks?”
 
“No, I don’t think so,” replied Marjorie thoughtfully. “We want to look like chaperones, so we ought to appear matronly. Let’s wear dark dresses, and put nets over our hair.”
 
“You’ll be suggesting that we borrow horn-rimmed spectacles next,” joked the other.
 
“Anyway, I believe that I’ll put on my dark blue . It has chiffon sleeves, you know, so it would pass for an evening dress. We’re going to drive, aren’t we?”
 
“Certainly. Which car?”
 
“Oh, use mine; you don’t care, do you, Lil?”
 
“It’s immaterial to me; mine’s put away, anyhow.”
 
They had plenty of time after supper, so they drove into the city, arriving at the settlement at exactly half past eight. Harsh sounds from a jazz orchestra greeted them from the basement windows as they stopped at the . Evidently the dance had begun.
 
“Better lock your car securely,” Lily warned her companion. “The neighborhood doesn’t seem to be any too good.”
 
“No, it isn’t,” agreed Marjorie, glancing around at the disreputable looking houses on either side of the street. “John was furious when I told him where we were coming.”
 
“So was Dick. He said they’d be along before eleven o’clock, as I suggested, because he’d be worried all evening. Aren’t men silly?”
 
“Sometimes,” Marjorie admitted.
 
They opened the heavy door of the settlement, and passed down the hall, glancing to right and left at the empty rooms and offices. Concluding that every one must be at the party in the basement, they the stairway which led to the gymnasium.
 
Never, in all their boarding school or college days, had they seen a hall so elaborately, so decorated. Great sheaves of wheat were banked all around the room; enormous branches of trees covered the ; paper streamers in every color of the rainbow hung from the lights, and confetti was around the floor near the chairs, and upon the seats. The room appeared small, although in reality it was the standard size for a gymnasium.
 
“It looks crowded,” remarked Marjorie; “and yet when you count them there really aren’t many couples dancing.”
 
Keeping close to the wall and carefully steering26 their way between the dancers, the girls reached some seats in the corner.
 
“Such elaborate dresses!” Lily exclaimed, after a hasty glance from one girl to another. “Marj, I don’t believe that one of them has sleeves in her gown!”
 
“The girls certainly aren’t poor,” returned Marjorie, thinking in amusement of the conversation she had had with Daisy that afternoon. “And they seem to know all the latest tricks in dancing.”
 
“They need !” denounced her companion . “Look at the way that girl is resting her head—right on her partner’s shoulder! Dare me to stop her and advise her that if she’s tired she better go to bed?”
 
“Oh, Lil, do be careful!” warned Marjorie, fearful lest she might antagonize the girls at the very beginning. “Of course, they haven’t had any home-training, and you can’t expect them to have our standards.”
 
“Well, they couldn’t possibly hear me above all this awful noise,” returned Lily. “Did you ever hear such an apology for music in your life?”
 
Marjorie, however, was not interested in the orchestra; she was there to chaperone the girls, and if she failed in doing that, at least to turn in a reliable report upon the evening’s entertainment. She did not mean to waste a minute; if possible she intended to size up the character of every girl present.
 
With a loud clang the jazz piece came to27 an end, the dancers stopped impatiently and began to applaud uproariously. During the brief pause before the encore, Mrs. Morgan, a , motherly sort of woman, edged her way towards the visitors.
 
“How do you do, Ladies!” she said breezily. “Miss Winthrop’s friends, aren’t you?”
 
“Yes,” replied Marjorie, rising. “Miss Gravers asked us to come to help you chaperone the dance.”
 
“Well, we’re only too glad to have you,” beamed Mrs. Morgan, “and I hope you’ll have a good time, for I can’t see as these girls need much chaperoning. They’re pretty well behaved, as girls go, and I like to see everybody enjoying themselves.”
 
“I’m sure we will,” murmured Marjorie graciously deciding, however, that Mrs. Morgan was as near-sighted mentally as her glasses proved her to be .
 
“Come into the office and take off your things,” she urged. “Then you can go back and dance a bit yourselves.”
 
“Oh, we really don’t care to dance,” answered Lily, a trifle scornfully. “We’re here to observe. But it will be nice to get our things off. It’s rather warm in there.”
 
Marjorie hoped that Mrs. Morgan would return to the hall with them and introduce them to the girls; such a formality would have rendered the situation less awkward. But she conducted them only as far as the , excusing herself on the plea of duties in the kitchen.
 
As Marjorie and Lily re-entered the room, they felt every eye turned piercingly towards them. The first intermission was on, and the hall seemed strangely quiet after so much noise. The couples arranged singly, or in groups of twos and threes about the walls, abruptly stopped talking, and stared at the newcomers. Marjorie felt as if she had never been so embarrassed in all her life. In her confusion she turned to Lily.
 
“Let’s go over to that group and try to get acquainted,” she whispered.
 
“All right,” agreed Lily indifferently.
 
As they crossed the floor they heard, to their relief, the buzz of conversation begin again, and Marjorie made a effort to get herself in hand. To her , however, as she approached the group in question, a coarse laugh broke out among the young men.
 
“Here come the Janes for some dances!” muttered an eighteen-year-old “sport” of the neighborhood, in an audible undertone. “Look out, , you’re goin’ a lose your little Charlie!”
 
Instead of the youth for his rudeness, as Marjorie hoped she would, the young lady only .
 
“Classmate of your grandmother’s, Charlie!” tittered another boy, breaking into laughter at his own wit.
 
Covered with confusion, Marjorie slipped her arm through Lily’s and staggered to a seat at the side. It was not until the music had started again that she courage to look about her.
 
“Don’t take it so hard, Marj!” pleaded Lily. “They don’t faze me—only fill me with disgust.”
 
“Poor Daisy—it certainly is a lucky thing she didn’t come; she’s so sensitive that she would be in tears by now! But Lil, please don’t say ‘I told you so!’” begged Marjorie . “You were right—I admit it now—a class election is preferable to this!”
 
Her roommate smiled indulgently; Marjorie was always so willing to admit it when she was wrong.
 
“But what are we going to do—all evening?” she inquired. “It’s silly to sit here uselessly, and evidently these young flappers have no intention of speaking to us.”
 
Marjorie assumed a look of .
 
“I’m going to stay here until I have watched every single girl through a whole dance. During each intermission I’m going out to make my notes.”
 
Lily sighed; the was not .
 
“Miss Winthrop surely will get a thorough report,” she remarked. “Which girl are you going to begin with?”
 
“The one they called Aggie. I’m trying to think of a word to describe her. ‘Mushy’ doesn’t seem soft enough!”
 
“You’re cruel, Marj! How old do you think she is?”
 
“About sixteen. I don’t think any girl on the floor is more than seventeen.”
 
She was quiet for a few minutes, and Lily watched her shift her attention to another dancer. Evidently she felt that she had succeeded in summing up Aggie’s character to perfection.
 
Their entrances and exits were not especially noticed after that, and Marjorie began to feel at the end of the sixth dance that their presence had been forgotten, when a conversation floated towards her ears which changed her opinion. She and Lily were seated on one side of a great sheaf of wheat; evidently directly behind it, two girls were consulting each other in regard to the identity of their visitors.
 
“Who are those , anyway?” demanded one voice, in a whisper. “They’ve got their noive—pullin’ the high spy act on us!”
 
“I’ll bet they’re here to tattle to Miss Winthrop, if they find any dirt,” returned the other. “Queenie, you’re the boss, why don’t you put ’em out?”
 
“How can I? It ain’t our room.”
 
“It’s ours fer t’night.”
 
“Aw, my opinion is, they’re only two birds from the country, who dropped in to see the city, and took this fer a dance hall.”
 
“That’s a laugh. Let’s see if we can razz ’em a bit!”
 
“How, Clara?”
 
“Pretend we’ve got in our pockets, and cigarettes.”
 
“No,” replied Queenie, ; “then we’d be out of luck for a place to meet the rest of the year. Miss Winthrop’d never stand for that.”
 
“If we told her it was only a joke——”
 
“All wrong, Clara. You’ve got a head, but it’s only good to keep your hat on. Fire something else——”
 
“Can’t think of nuthin’——”
 
But Marjorie and Lily had listened to enough; they rose and crossed the gymnasium to the door-way.
 
“I really have hopes of Queenie,” remarked Marjorie, “she seemed to show a of intelligence.”
 
“Pretty faint,” corrected Lily scornfully. Then, a glimpse of two young men at the top of the staircase, her eyes lighted up, and she exclaimed , “They’re here, Marj! The boys, I mean. Oh, I was never so glad to see anybody in my life!”
 
John Hadley and Dick Roberts, two old friends of the girls, smiled back at them, and hurried down the steps. Never had they seemed so fine looking, so admirable, so strong to Lily and Marjorie, as at that moment, after their weary evening of watching the , , faces of the young men at the dance, and listening to their and coarse laughter. Marjorie breathed an audible sigh of relief.
 
“Don’t tell them how awful it has been, Lil,” she cautioned. “They’d only rave—and it’s all over now.”
 
“We can’t keep it from them, you know we can’t,” replied her companion.
 
The boys were beside them now.
 
“How’s the party going?” John inquired pleasantly.
 
“Fine,” answered Marjorie, “but I guess it will be all right for us to leave.”
 
“Not till I get a look at the flappers!” Dick declared. “I want to see what kind of a job you and Lily made of it.”
 
The girls exchanged glances.
 
“What’s the matter?” demanded John.
 
So Marjorie told them the story, thinking that she could make it sound a little better than Lily might.
 
“We’re going in to see for ourselves!” announced Dick, at the conclusion of the , “and Lily, I want you to promise me that you’ll never come here again!”
 
“I’ll be only too glad to promise that,” replied the girl, with emotion. “I’ve never gone through such an evening in my life.”
 
“You’d better make Marj promise the same thing, John,” Dick suggested.
 
“He knows better,” laughed Marjorie. “But I don’t think there’s much danger of my ever wanting to.”
 
by the presence of their escorts, Marjorie and Lily assumed a nonchalant air as they re-entered the gymnasium, and seated themselves again upon the chairs by the wall. they felt the atmosphere change; it was almost as if the dancers regarded their visitors with a real respect. The girls themselves had to their amusement.
 
But if the dancers were hoping that their visitors would join in the party, they were disappointed, for, as soon as the music ceased, John suggested that they go home.
 
“Mother will be waiting for us,” he said. “She said to come home early.”
 
He took the wheel of Marjorie’s car, while Lily climbed into Dick’s. Side by side, they made their way to the suburbs.
 
It was Lily, however, who wondered whether Marjorie had been elected to the class .
 

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