<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>SPANISH LESSONS</div>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Harcourt carriage swung rapidly along the
road, for the Little Colonel held the reins, and was
testing the speed of the new horses, just sent down
from Lexington.</p>
<p>"Isn't it glorious?" she cried, with a quick
glance over her shoulder at Gay and Miss Marks
on the back seat. "It's like flying, the way they
take us through the air, and they're the best matched
team in the country."</p>
<p>Leland, on the seat beside her, watched with
growing admiration her expert handling of the
horses, and Gay watched him. Swathed in a white
chiffon veil, she was paying the penalty for being
so obliging the day before. She had lain so long
on the rocks in her pose of the drowned fishermaiden,
that her face was burned to a blister, and
she could not touch it without groaning. But she
would willingly go through the ordeal again, she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</SPAN></span>
told herself, in order to bring about the present
desirable state of affairs.</p>
<p>"Now which way?" asked Lloyd as they came
to a turn. "I feel like a Columbus on an unsailed
sea. I thought I knew every gah'den around heah
within a radius of five miles, but I've nevah seen
any that fits the description of the one you're taking
us to."</p>
<p>"Turn to the right," Leland directed. "Then
it's just a short way down a woodland road. You'll
come to an old-fashioned wicket gate and a straight,
box-bordered walk leading up to the back of such
a quaint vine-covered old house with a red door,
that you'll expect to see a thatched roof and hear an
English skylark."</p>
<p>"Well, of all things," laughed Lloyd, "why
didn't you say little red doah in the first place. That
would have located it for me. You've simply discovahed
the back premises of old Doctah Shelby's
place, and yoah wondahful English gah'den is their
kitchen gah'den. We could have reached their
front gate in ten minutes from our house, and heah
you have led us all around Robin Hood's bahn to
find it. That loop around Rollington took us a
good two miles out of the way."</p>
<p>"Well, that's the only way I knew how to reach<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</SPAN></span>
it," he answered, with the flashing smile she had
learned to look for. "I hope that you don't feel
that it has been time wasted. <i>I</i> don't."</p>
<p>"Not behind hawses like these," she answered.
"We'll forgive you for the sake of the ride. I
nevah get tiahed of driving when I can go this
fast."</p>
<p>She turned into a narrow lane leading around to
the front of the house, and waited for Leland to
open the gate.</p>
<p>"How natural everything looks," she exclaimed.
"I haven't been heah for yeahs, and when I was a
little thing of six or seven I used to be a weekly
visitah. I'd bring my dawg Fritz, and stay from
breakfast till bedtime. I called Doctah Shelby
'Mistah-<i>my</i>-doctah' and his wife 'Aunt Alicia,'"
she went on as Leland resumed his seat in the carriage.
"They said that I reminded them of their
only daughtah, who was dead, and they used to
borrow me by the day. They spoiled me so that it
was perfectly scandalous the way I acted sometimes."</p>
<p>"Why did you stop coming?" asked Gay.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Shelby had a fall that made an invalid of
her, and she has been away at sanitariums and hospitals
most of the time since. I've seen her often,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</SPAN></span>
of co'se, but not heah. It's only lately that they've
opened up the house and come home to live."</p>
<p>Places exercised a strong influence over Lloyd.
Just as she felt the challenge of the locust-trees in
the avenue at home, and could not pass those old
family sentinels without an unconscious lifting of
the head and that pride of bearing which they
seemed to expect from all the Lloyds, so this old
homestead had its peculiar effect upon her. As she
went up the path she had the same feeling of absolute
sovereignty that she had had a dozen years
before when her slightest wish was law in this
adoring household, and where every act of hers,
no matter how outbreaking, passed unchided. If
she chose to empty the sugar into the middle of the
garden walk and fill the bowl with pebbles, "Aunt
Alicia" took her afternoon tea unsweetened, rather
than ring for more, and thus call Mom Beck's attention
to the naughtiness of her little charge.</p>
<p>Once, some babyish whim prompting her to order
every picture turned to the wall, the doctor meekly
obeyed, and when some chance caller remonstrated,
he protested that it was a very small thing to do to
give a child pleasure, and that there was no reason
why she shouldn't have them upside down if she
wished. So strong was the old spell now, that as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</SPAN></span>
she stepped up on the porch and saw the same ugly
little Chinese idol sitting against the front door to
prop it open, that had sat there on all her former
visits, she stooped and stood it on its head.</p>
<p>"Why on earth did you do that?" gasped Gay.</p>
<p>"Simply fo'ce of habit," laughed Lloyd. "I
used to hate it so because it was such an ugly old
thing that I always stood it on its head to punish
it for staring at me. I did it this time without
thinking."</p>
<p>Leland laughed. Never in the short time he had
known her had she seemed quite so adorable as
she did at this moment, relapsing into the childish
imperiousness of her Little Colonel ways. While
they waited for Mrs. Shelby to come down he
watched her going around the room, renewing her
acquaintance with all the old objects that had once
held a fascination for her. She called his attention
to the tapestry on the wall, a shepherd and shepherdess
beside a trellis on which hung roses as big
as cabbages, and told him the quaint fancies she had
once had about the romantic figures. The stuffed
birds under the glass case on the mantel each had
a name she had given it. She remembered them
all, from the yellow canary, to the mite of a humming-bird,
poised at the top.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Stopping before a queer old whatnot, filled with
bric-à-brac and shells, she caught up a round china
box. A gilt eagle, hovering over a nest of little
eaglets formed the lid, and her face began to dimple
as she lifted the china bird by its imposing beak.</p>
<p>"There ought to be peppahmints inside," she
said. "There always used to be, because I'd howl
if there wasn't, and they couldn't beah to have me
disappointed. Well, I wish you'd look! Deah old
Aunt Alicia! She's remembahed all these yeahs
and kept it ready for me."</p>
<p>She held the box out towards him, and he saw
that it had been freshly filled with delectable little
striped drops.</p>
<p>"It hurts my conscience," she said, looking up
wistfully, as the familiar odour of the peppermint
greeted her, "to think how I have neglected her.
Heah I have been going to picnics and pahties and
all sawts of things evah since I came home from
school, and have nevah been neah her. I'm going
to find her this minute, and not wait for her to
come down as if I were some strangah."</p>
<p>The quaintly furnished old room straightway
lost its charm for Leland when she left it, but Gay,
pushing aside her veil to taste the contents of the
eagle's nest, which Lloyd had deposited in her lap,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</SPAN></span>
scrutinized everything with interest. This was
Alex's home now, and she wondered how he would
look in the midst of such surroundings. She
couldn't imagine him with such an antiquated background.
Miss Marks picked up a basket of daguerreotypes
from the marble-topped table, and
began examining them.</p>
<p>They could hear Lloyd calling at the top of the
stairs, "Aunt Alicia," and then Mrs. Shelby's voice,
tremulous with pleased surprise: "Why it's the
Little Colonel! Oh, my dear! My <i>dear!</i> what a
joy it is to have you here again!" Then they heard
Lloyd laughingly explaining their mission, and
after that they seemed to pass into another room,
for a low hum of voices was all that could be distinguished.</p>
<p>Presently Mrs. Shelby came down alone. She
was a gentle little old lady, with faded blue eyes,
and a sweet patient face. She wore a bunch of gray
curls over each ear in the fashion of her girlhood.
There was a lingering charm of youth about her,
just as there was a faint suggestion of lavender
still clinging to the fine old lace that fell over her
little hands. Almost as soon as she had finished
welcoming them an old coloured man followed her
into the room, bearing a huge tray with tinkling<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</SPAN></span>
glasses, a decanter of raspberry shrub, and a plate
of little nut-cakes. While he served the guests she
explained Lloyd's delay with almost girlish eagerness.</p>
<p>"I have taken a great liberty with your model,
Miss Marks, but Lloyd assured me you would be
perfectly willing. This last day of June is a very
happy anniversary of mine and the doctor's. I have
been thinking of it all morning, and when Lloyd
came up the stairs just now, so glowing and bright,
it seemed to me I saw my own lost youth rising up
before me, and I asked her to put on a gown I have
treasured many years, and be photographed in that.</p>
<p>"It is the one I had on when Richard proposed
to me," she explained, a faint pink tingeing her soft
old cheeks. "Fifty years ago to-day, in that same
old garden. This was my grandmother's place then.
Richard bought it afterwards. And a year from
to-day if we live, we will keep our golden wedding.
If you can use the gown in the photograph it will
make me very happy, for it is falling to pieces,
despite my care of it. Lloyd thought it very picturesque
and appropriate."</p>
<p>While Miss Marks was expressing her delight
over the privilege, for the unearthing of old costumes
was one of her pet diversions, Lloyd came<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</SPAN></span>
down the stairs and stopped shyly in the doorway.
She had tucked up her shining hair with a tall ivory
comb, and it hung in soft curls on each side of her
glowing face, in the old fashion of Mrs. Shelby's
girlhood. The thin, clinging dress enveloped her
like a pale blue cloud, and a flat, wide-brimmed
garden hat swung from her arm by its blue ribbons.
With the donning of the ancient dress she seemed
to have put on the sweet shy manner that had been
the charm of its first wearer.</p>
<p>A long-drawn "oh!" of admiration from Gay
and Miss Marks greeted her appearance, and she
turned a timid glance towards Leland, who had
risen quickly. His glance and his silence were more
eloquent than their words, for she turned away
blushing.</p>
<p>"Now if I may have a bit of paper to make a
moth to pin on the milk-white phlox," began Miss
Marks, but Mrs. Shelby stopped her eagerly.</p>
<p>"Oh, my dear, we will have the picture perfect
in every way. Richard has a case of butterflies and
moths in his office. I shall send a servant to bring
it and to call him over, for he will want to see Lloyd
in that gown I am sure. How I wish Alex were
here to be photographed with her. He is so broad<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</SPAN></span>
shouldered and erect he reminds me daily of what
his uncle was at his age."</p>
<p>"Maybe he will come before we are through,"
suggested Miss Marks. At the mere thought of his
coming, Gay pulled her veil down hastily over her
blistered face. Behind its protecting screen she
watched the old couple keenly, when the doctor arrived.
They had eyes for nothing but Lloyd, and
their gaze followed her tenderly wherever she went.</p>
<p>"They're just <i>daffy</i> about her," thought Gay.
"It's plain to be seen they'd give anything in the
world to get her into the family. I hope Doctor
Alex won't come in time to be photographed with
her. If he'd never fallen in love with her before
he'd have to do it now. He couldn't help himself
when she looks like that, and then where would all
my plans be for poor Leland?"</p>
<p>But Leland was taking care of his own interests.
As soon as Miss Marks had taken enough plates to
satisfy herself he led Lloyd off to the end of the
garden to show her a flower which he had found
with a soft meandering Spanish name.</p>
<p>"We'll begin the lessons to-morrow," he said,
as if it were all settled. The masterfulness of his
tone had pleased her the day before, but here in the
place where she had done all the dictating and others<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</SPAN></span>
had obeyed, it aroused a feeling that Mom Beck
would have labelled "the Lloyd stubbo'ness." She
didn't want to consent, simply because he had taken
it for granted that she would, so she laughingly
contradicted him.</p>
<p>"We'll begin to-morrow," he repeated, smiling
down at her so insistently that she dropped her eyes
before his. Then to her surprise she found that her
opposition had completely vanished. She felt that
it would be one of the pleasantest pastimes that
could be devised, to study such a musical language
under such a teacher. But she had no intention of
letting him know how she felt about it for a long
while, so she was thankful for the interruption
which came just then.</p>
<p>Miss Marks, who was exploring the rest of the
premises in search of further possibilities, sent Gay
to summon her to the front of the house.</p>
<p>"She says to 'come into the garden, Maud.'
She is going to add a Tennysonian pose to her
series of Fancies, and she's found a place where
there's a bit of terrace for you to come tripping
down, à la Maud, to the tune of 'She is coming,
my own, my sweet!'"</p>
<p>Catching up her long filmy blue skirt, Lloyd hurried
away, leaving Gay and Leland to follow as they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</SPAN></span>
chose. Leland finished the verse in a clear tenor
voice as if singing to himself, but it followed Lloyd
down the walk as if meant for her alone:</p>
<div class='poem'>
"'She is coming, my own, my sweet!<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Were it ever so airy a tread</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">My heart would hear her and beat</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Though 'twere earth in an earthy bed.</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Would start and tremble under her feet</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And blossom in purple and red.'"</span><br/></div>
<p>Then he hummed it almost under his breath, the
entire verse again, forgetful of Gay at his elbow
until she spoke.</p>
<p>"Wouldn't Kitty have looked adorable in that
darling old hat tied under her chin? It's too bad
she couldn't have been here to pose as Maud."</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't know," he answered absently.
"She's too dark for the part. Miss Lloyd looks it
to perfection."</p>
<p>Gay's eyes shone delightedly behind the white
veil, and for a few steps she could not help skipping,
as she blessed the Martinsville Springs, which had
taken Kitty off in the nick of time to save her for a
different fate. By the time Maud's picture was
taken Alex arrived, and Miss Marks was promptly
seized with an inspiration.</p>
<p>"I am going to have two pictures of <i>Darby<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</SPAN></span>
and Joan</i>," she exclaimed, "to add to the series.
Alex, you take Lloyd down into the garden again
beside the phlox, and turn so that I'll get your
profile. It is so like your uncle's. I'll call that one
'<i>Hand in hand when our life was May.</i>' Then I'll
take Mrs. Shelby and the doctor in exactly the same
position as a companion piece, and call that '<i>Hand
in hand when our hair is gray.</i>'"</p>
<p>They made a joke of it, the two old people, and
obligingly took the places that Lloyd and Alex left,
but a mist sprang to Lloyd's eyes a moment later,
watching the devoted old couple who for fifty years
had been lovers and for forty-nine years had been
wed. Marriage like that seemed a beautiful thing;
she wondered if such an experience would ever be
hers. She wished Mammy Easter had found a
better fortune for her than the one she told over
her tea-cup.</p>
<p>It was noon by the time the pictures were all
taken, and Leland took Miss Marks home in the
carriage while Lloyd went up-stairs to change her
dress. She wanted Gay and Leland to stop at The
Locusts for lunch, but Gay refused because she
couldn't go to the table in a veil and under the
circumstances she couldn't go without one. She got
out of the carriage, however, and sat on the porch<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</SPAN></span>
while Leland took the old Colonel for a short spin
down the road, to try the new horses.</p>
<p>"It's been a mighty nice morning," she said. "I
wish Lucy could have been with us. She adores
discovering old places like that and doing unexpected
things. It almost spoiled my good times
thinking of the wistful way she looked after us
when we drove off."</p>
<p>"But she's married!" exclaimed Lloyd. "I
shouldn't think she'd care for those things in quite
the same way as she did before. I should think
she'd rather stay with her husband."</p>
<p>"Bosh!" said Gay. "Being married doesn't
change a person's disposition and make tame old
hens out of lively little humming-birds. That's just
what Lucy was, a dear little humming-bird, always
in a flutter of doing and going; and you needn't
tell me that she enjoys poking there at home with
nobody but Jameson, as much as she would enjoy
going out with us and doing things."</p>
<p>"But he's her husband!" insisted Lloyd, as if
that term covered all that could be desired of human
companionship. Then she hummed meaningly:</p>
<div class='poem'>
"'Hand in hand when our life was May,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Hand in hand when our hair is gray!'"</span><br/></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Gay shrugged her shoulders impatiently. "Oh,
that Darby and Joan business is all right when your
hair <i>is</i> gray, but Lucy is only a year older than I
am, and Jameson doesn't interest himself in a single
thing that she likes. He's devoted to her, so devoted
he doesn't want her out of his sight; but it's
the kind of devotion that has taught me a lesson.
If ever I tie myself up that way it will not be while
life is May. I'll have a good time first."</p>
<p>Lloyd had no answer for such heresy. She was
going over in her mind the list of people from whom
she had unconsciously taken her exalted impressions
of married life: her mother and Papa Jack,
the old Colonel and Amanthis, Doctor Shelby and
Aunt Alicia, Rob's father and mother. She felt
that Gay was mistaken. To be sure there were old
Mr. and Mrs. Apwall, who quarrelled like cats and
dogs, but somehow even they had given her the
impression that they enjoyed their little encounters,
and quarrelled to pass the time, rather than because
they bore each other any ill-will. Then she reflected
that these were all people of an older generation
than Lucy, and maybe there was a difference
in the times. Surely Gay must have good reason
for speaking so feelingly. This was not the first
time that she had spoken of Lucy with tears in her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</SPAN></span>
eyes, and when she did that, Lloyd, recalling
Mammy Easter's tea-cups, was vaguely glad that
it had been foretold that hers would be empty.</p>
<p>The old Colonel came back in a few minutes
loud in his praise of the new horses, and to Lloyd's
surprise, in high good humour with their owner.
Evidently Leland had improved his opportunity and
had exerted himself to make friends with the old
Colonel, for to Lloyd's amazement he cordially insisted
on Leland's considering The Locusts a
second home as long as he should be in the Valley,
and to come at any hour he chose. The latch-string
would be out for him.</p>
<p>"I shall certainly avail myself of the privilege
very soon," he responded, "for to-morrow I have
the honour to begin giving Miss Lloyd lessons in
Spanish. So few young ladies nowadays play the
harp, that when one has the ability she owes it to
the world to learn the Spanish songs. Don't you
think so?"</p>
<p>Lloyd opened her mouth to protest that she had
not yet given her consent, but closed it again as the
old Colonel began expressing his pleasure at such an
arrangement. She felt trapped. It was to please
him that she had learned to play on her grandmother's
harp. Any reference to it always put him<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</SPAN></span>
in a gentle humour. She wanted him to be cordial
and friendly with Leland, and was glad that he was
no longer prejudiced against him, so she held her
peace; but it exasperated her to have her consent
taken for granted in such a high-handed way. He
had ridden over her objection as regardlessly as if
she had never made any.</p>
<p>She had boasted to herself, "He needn't put on
any of his lordly ways with <i>me!</i>" and here she was
submitting meekly, without a word. It worried her
after they had driven away. All the time she was
up in her room, getting ready for lunch, she kept
thinking about it.</p>
<p>"I'll just give him to undahstand that it was on
grandfathah's account," she decided finally. "Instead
of my influencing him as Gay expected, it
looks as if <i>he</i> were winding <i>me</i> around his fingah.
But he isn't! He sha'n't! I'll take the lessons, but
I'll have no foolishness about it. I'll surprise him
by sticking strictly to business, and I'll set him a
good example of the way to live up to his own
family motto."</p>
<p>Mrs. Sherman, who made no objection to the lessons
since the old Colonel approved of them so
heartily, was on the front porch with her embroidery
when Leland came up the next morning, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</SPAN></span>
first of July, to give the first lesson. She smiled
to see how energetically Lloyd threw herself into
it, thinking it was a matter of pride with her to
show him what rapid progress she could make.</p>
<p>It certainly was a matter of pride with the Colonel,
who enjoyed being waylaid to hear how beautifully
she could count to one hundred or name the
months of the year. It became his habit to take
the book, while, perched on the arm of his chair,
she rattled off the vocabulary for the day's lesson,
and reviewed all the others.</p>
<p>"That's right! That's right!" he would say
encouragingly. "At this rate you'll soon be ready
for a trip to the Alhambra, and I'm blessed if I
don't take you some of these days. I've always
wanted to go."</p>
<p>When Kitty came home from the springs Lloyd
insisted on her joining the class, but she declared
she was too far behind to attempt catching up.
Besides she was in charge of affairs at home now,
and Elise was to have a house-party soon. There
were half a dozen good reasons why she could not
take the time. The principal one, which she did
not give however, was that it was plain to be seen
that Leland was more interested in studying Lloyd
than in teaching her a language, and under such<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</SPAN></span>
circumstances, Kitty preferred not to make the
third party.</p>
<p>So while Kitty's mornings were filled with her
housekeeping duties, Betty's with her writing and
Gay's with her music and plans to keep Lucy occupied,
it gradually came about that Leland spent
more and more of his time at The Locusts. The
lessons lasted only an hour, but after that he usually
found some excuse to stay: there was a new song
that he wanted to hear, or a game of tennis, or a
stroll down to the post-office. Sometimes when
he had no excuse at all he lingered anyhow, lounging
on the shady porch, and talking of anything
that happened to come uppermost. Then at night
he was often there again, either because The Locusts
was the gathering place of the Clan, and a
frolic was afoot, or he went to escort Lloyd and
Betty to the Cabin or The Beeches to some entertainment
the other girls had planned.</p>
<p>"My oh! What a buttahfly I'm getting to be!"
laughed Lloyd one evening as she went into her
mother's room to have her dress buttoned. "A
hawse-back ride this mawning, a picnic this aftahnoon,
and now the rustic dance in the Mallards'
barn to-night. But nevah mind, little mothah," she
added with a hug, as she caught a wistful look on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</SPAN></span>
Mrs. Sherman's face. "It'll all be ovah soon.
This is the last summah of my teens. When I am
old and twenty I'll nevah leave yoah side. 'I'll sit
on a cushion and sew a fine seam' and take all the
housekeeping cares off yoah shouldahs as a dutiful
daughtah should."</p>
<p>Mrs. Sherman gave her shoulder a caressing pat
as she fastened the last button. "I'm glad to have
you go, dear," she answered, "especially to all the
out-door merry-makings. They keep you young
and well. Papa Jack and I will walk over after
awhile and look on."</p>
<p>"The Mallard barn dances are always so much
fun," said Lloyd, lingering to give a final touch to
her mother's toilet. "Wait! Yoah side combs are
in too high, and yoah collah isn't pinned straight in
the back. How did you evah manage to dress yoahself
right befoah I grew up to tend to you?"</p>
<p>As she made the changes with all a young girl's
particularity about trifles, she went on, "That last
one they had three yeahs ago was lovely. Will you
evah forget the way Rob cake-walked with Mrs.
Bisbee? It makes me laugh to this day, whenevah
I think of it."</p>
<p>"I suppose Rob will hardly be there to-night,"
said Mrs. Sherman, smiling as she recalled the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</SPAN></span>
ridiculous appearance he had made. His cake-walk
had been the feature of the evening.</p>
<p>"No, indeed," answered Lloyd. "He's no moah
likely to be there than the man in the moon. I wish
he would though. He used to be the life of everything.
We saw him this evening as we drove home
from the picnic. He had just come out from town,
and he looked so hot and dusty and ti'ahed it made
me feel bad. He's like a strangah now, didn't stop
to speak, only lifted his hat and turned in at the
gate at Oaklea, as if he hadn't gone on a thousand
drives with us. He ought to have been interested
in what we were doing for old times' sake."</p>
<p>Lloyd had not thought of Rob for days, but she
was reminded of him many times that evening, the
affair at the Mallards' barn was so much like the
one to which he had taken her three years before.
The same old negro fiddlers furnished the music.
The same flickering lantern light made weird shadows
on the rough walls, and the same sweet smell
of new hay filled the place. As the music of the
Virginia reel began she thought of the way Rob
had romped through it that other time, and wished
she could see him once more as jolly and care-free
as he was then.</p>
<p>"Why can one nevah have two good times exactly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</SPAN></span>
alike?" she wondered wistfully. She was
standing near the wide double doors, looking out
across the fields as she thought about it later, recalling
how many things were alike on the two occasions,
even the colour of the dress she wore. She
remembered that because Rob had said she looked
like an apple-blossom, and it was rare indeed for
him to make such complimentary speeches. It
wasn't best for girls to hear nice things about themselves
often, he said. It made them hard to get
along with, too uppity.</p>
<p>The music stopped and Leland Harcourt came
to find her. She was looking so pensively past the
gay scene that he bent over her, humming in a low
tone:</p>
<div class='poem'>
"'What's this dull town to me?<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Robin Adair?</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">What was 't I wished to see?</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">What wished to hear?'"</span><br/></div>
<p>She started with a little laugh, blushing slightly
because he seemed to have read her thoughts.
"Robin Adair" was one of Mrs. Moore's old
names for Rob, and she <i>had</i> been wishing for him.</p>
<p>Over at Oaklea, Rob sat scowling at a book spread
out before him on the library table. He was thinking
of Harcourt as he had seen him on the front<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</SPAN></span>
seat beside Lloyd, in his cool-looking white flannels,
the very embodiment of gentlemanly leisure. No
doubt she noticed the contrast between them, he all
dusty and dishevelled from his day's work and the
trip home on the hot car. Not that he would change
places, not that he regretted for an instant the part
he had to take in the grimy working world. But the
chance encounter had suddenly opened his eyes to
all that he had had to sacrifice for that work. Until
now it had not even left him time to realize how
much he had given up. Now to find this stranger
enjoying all that was once his, stung him to envy.
He smiled grimly as he recognized it as envy. He
had thought himself free from such a childish
trait. But he could not smile away the feeling. It
persisted till it accomplished more than the old
Judge's advice and his mother's pleadings, that all
work and no play was bad for him. Closing his
book he announced his intention of walking over to
The Locusts.</p>
<p>As he went up the avenue he heard the distant
scraping of fiddles and the rhythmic beating of feet
in the Mallard barn. He had forgotten that it was
the night of the rustic dance.</p>
<p>He was disappointed at finding no one at home
but the old Colonel. But his welcome was so cordial<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</SPAN></span>
that he stayed even longer than he had intended.
The Colonel always had the latest news of every
one, but to-night he had to talk first of the wonderful
progress Lloyd was making in Spanish, and what
a fine fellow that young Harcourt was.</p>
<p>"Didn't like the chap at all at first," he confided.
"Thought he was too much of a confounded foreigner;
but I'm a big enough man I hope to acknowledge
a mistake, and I own up I was prejudiced."</p>
<p>When Rob finally rose to start home, the Colonel
would not let him go until he had promised to
come again the next night, when Lloyd and Betty
should be at home. Afterwards he regretted having
made the promise. Although he went early
Harcourt was already there, seemingly as much at
home as if he were a member of the family. It
made Rob feel like a stranger to see this newcomer
usurping the place that he had always filled in the
Sherman household.</p>
<p>It grated on him also to hear Lloyd saying, "Si,
señor" and "gracias" when she addressed Harcourt,
and grated still more for Harcourt to turn
to her as he did continually with some aside in
Spanish. Never more than a phrase or a word,
and "just for practice," they laughingly explained,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</SPAN></span>
but it seemed to emphasize a tie that had drawn
them together, and—Rob's remoteness.</p>
<p>He left early. Walking slowly down the avenue
he thought of the hundreds of times he had passed
under those old locust-trees on sweet starlighted
summer nights like this. What a goodly company
of old friends they were! The kind that never
change. He looked up, vaguely grateful for the
soft lisping of leaves above him. They seemed to
understand why he was going, why he could not
stay.</p>
<p>Half-way down the avenue he heard the tinkle
of Lloyd's harp, and then her voice beginning to
sing. The seat beside the measuring tree was just
ahead and he made his way to it, quietly, on tip-toe
almost, that he might lose no note. But it was an
unknown tongue she was singing, a song that
Harcourt had taught her, and Rob could not understand
a word. It was so symbolical of the
change that had come between them that a fierce
impulse seized him to rush back to the house and
throw the interloper out of the window. Then
he smiled bitterly at his own vehemence. What
right had he to be so savage over her friendship?
He was her big brother only, and even that merely
in name, because she had chosen to call him so in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</SPAN></span>
those years that they had been such loyal good
chums. It was little and mean and selfish of him to
begrudge her the slightest thing that would give
her pleasure. This man with his fortune, his accomplishments,
his rare social gifts had everything
to offer, while he,—he had not even <i>time</i> to put
at her disposal. Time to find bypaths to happiness
for her—</p>
<p>The sweet clear voice sang on, the old locusts
rustled softly as the night wind stirred them. Then
the song stopped, and for a long time he sat staring
ahead of him with unseeing eyes. At last he rose,
and taking a step towards the tree beside the bench,
passed his hand over the bark, groping for the
notches he knew were there but could not see.</p>
<p>He paused at the one a little higher than his
shoulder, and then his fingers found the four leaf
clover he had carved beside it, the last time Lloyd
had stood up to be measured. He could almost see
her standing there again like Elaine, the lily-maid,
fair-haired and smiling while he repeated the charm
of the four leaf clover:</p>
<div class='poem'>
"'Love be true to her—<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Joy draw near to her—</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Fortune find what your</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Gifts can do for her—'"</span><br/></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>He had forgotten how the lines went but it made
no difference. Anyhow they voiced what had
always been his dearest wish for her, and standing
there in the dark he vowed savagely that any man
who stood in the way of the old charm's coming
true, should have him to reckon with.</p>
<p>When he swung off down the path, taking the
short cut to Oaklea, his hat was pulled grimly down
over his eyes, and his mouth was set in a firm hard
line. He did not open his books again that night.
Lying on the couch by his open window, he watched
the lights at The Locusts shining through the trees,
till the last one went out, and he knew that Harcourt
had gone.</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />