He told me to be sure and save a dance for him Saturday at the Eppingham party. He brought me a Coke without being asked. Parker smiled at me at the Christmas pageant. "Nothing earth-shattering," Meredith said. "What happened on Saturday to change your mind about yourself?" Ellis's brows drew together in confusion. It's a lucky thing I finally stopped growing before I became a giant! But I'm not hopeless, I realized that on Saturday." Meredith stared stubbornly at the mirror, her mind magnifying the flaws that existed. "You have striking eyes and very nice hair. Ellis argued, looking at Meredith's shoulder-length pale blond hair and then her turquoise eyes. "I've gone on a diet, and I want to do something with my hair. "It isn't them, it's me, but I'm going to change," Meredith announced. "Well, I never! There must be something wrong with the children in your school." "You have no friends? Why not?"ĭesperately in need of someone to confide in, Meredith said, "I've only pretended that everything is fine at school. Ellis, who'd worked for the Bancrofts for less than a year, looked amazed. "You have some baby fat there, that's all." To prove it, she scrambled off the antique bed and marched over to the mirror above her dressing table."Look at me," she said, pointing an accusing finger at her reflection."I have no waistline!" The door to her bedroom opened and Meredith hastily yanked the picture from her chest as the stout, sixty-year-old housekeeper came in to take her dinner tray away."You didn't eat your dessert," Mrs. Her gaze switched to Parker's picture, and a dreamy smile drifted across her face as she clasped the newspaper clipping to what would have been her breasts if she had breasts, which she didn't. Her gaze shifted to her picture and she regretted again the streak of vanity that had caused her to take off her glasses for the photograph without them she had a tendency to squint - just like she was doing in that awful picture."Contact lenses would definitely help," she concluded. It did not seem at all fair that the other girls who were fourteen, just a few small weeks older than she was, should look so wonderful while she looked like a flat-chested troll with braces. Impartially, Meredith compared herself to the other girls in the elf costumes, wondering, how they could manage to look leggy and curvy while she looked."Dumpy!" she pronounced with a pained grimace."I look like a troll, not an elf!" Standing off to the left, supervising the proceedings, was a handsome young man of eighteen, who the caption referred to as "Parker Reynolds III, son of Mr. Beneath the caption picture of the "elves" - five boys and five girls, including Meredith - who were handing out presents to the children's ward. The caption read, Children of Chicago socialites, dressed as elves, participate in charity Christmas pageant at Oakland Memorial Hospital, then it listed their names.
With her scrapbook opened beside her on her canopied bed, Meredith Bancroft carefully cut out the picture from the Chicago Tribune.