<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>SIX MONTHS LATER</div>
<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was a cold snowy afternoon, late in January.
Rob Moore, looking at his watch as he hurried
along the street, found that he was ten minutes
ahead of the time at which the next car was due
to start to the Valley. Rather than wait on the
windy corner or take refuge in the already crowded
drug-store, he walked on down to the car-shed. He
rarely left town this early. As he sprang up the
steps and took his seat in the waiting car, he saw
that it was the one usually filled by the school-children
living in the suburbs. It was already
nearly filled now by half-grown boys and girls,
flocking in with their book straps and lunch-baskets.
It made him think of his own High school days.
They laughed and joked and called messages back
and forth as freely as if they were at home. Here
and there he recognized the younger sisters and
brothers of some of his old classmates, so like them<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</SPAN></span>
that it gave him a curious sense of having stepped
backward several years. There was Wat Sewall
wriggling and writhing out of his overcoat with the
same contortions that Fred always went through
with. That slap on the back with its accompanying
"Hi, there, old man," was exactly like T. D.
Williams' salutation. He nearly always laid a
fellow out flat when he spoke to him. And the
couple on the seat in front of him, exchanging
class pins, was only a repetition of a scene he had
witnessed dozens of times.</p>
<p>With a reminiscent smile he shook out the pages
of the evening paper which he had bought as he
came along and glanced at the head-lines. But before
he had time to read further the girl in front
of him exclaimed, "Look, Harry! Here comes
Miss Sherman! Isn't she perfectly stunning in
that dark blue broadcloth? I think she's the prettiest
débutante of the season."</p>
<p>"She's a peach," was the enthusiastic answer.
"I say, Ethel, she looks like you."</p>
<p>Rob did not see the girlish blush which rose to
Ethel's cheeks, for at the first exclamation he had
lowered his paper to peer quickly through the window.
He had just a glimpse of a slender stylish
figure hurrying into the ticket office.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The girl in front was speaking. "I suppose I've
been more interested in the débutantes this year
than any other because Cousin Amy is one of them.
She comes out to Anchorage for a week-end now
and then to rest up, and I keep her talking the whole
time about what they do. She says that Miss Sherman
is the most popular of them all, with the girls
as well as the men. She's had so many beautiful
entertainments given in her honour, and she's been
asked to help receive or pour tea or do something
or other at every single function that's been given
in Louisville this winter. I think it's perfectly
grand to be out in society when you can be as great
a success as that. They say that the American
Beauties sent to her in just one day sometimes
would fill a florist's shop window. There's a man
from Cincinnati who sends them all the time. He's
crazy about her. I should be too if I were a man.
Cousin Amy has a photograph of her taken in
evening dress, and she's simply regal looking. I
don't wonder she makes a sensation wherever she
goes."</p>
<p>"Here she comes now," interrupted the boy,
turning with a stare of frank admiration. Rob
turned too, as Lloyd came down the aisle, glancing
from one side to another for an empty seat. Her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</SPAN></span>
face was glowing from her walk in the cold wind,
and the little hat of dark blue velvet and her rich
dark furs made her seem fairer than ever by contrast.
Hers was a delicate, patrician style of beauty,
and Rob in one critical glance saw that this winter
in society had given the graceful girl the ease and
poise of a charming woman. The little school-girl
on the seat in front had good reason for admiring
her so extravagantly. He rose as she came nearer,
and stepped out in the aisle to give her the seat by
the window.</p>
<p>"Oh, Rob! This is great!" the little school-girl
heard her exclaim cordially. "I haven't seen you
for an age. How does it happen you are going out
on such an early train?"</p>
<p>Much as she was interested in "Harry's" remarks,
she wished he would keep still at least until
the car started. She wanted to hear how this big
handsome man answered her adorable Miss Sherman.
She would have been shocked could she have
heard his second remark.</p>
<p>"There's a big flake of soot on your nose,
Lloyd."</p>
<p>"Thanks," she said, almost looking cross-eyed
in her endeavour to locate it. "There usually is in
this dirty town. There! Is it off?" She scrubbed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</SPAN></span>
away with a bit of a handkerchief she took from
her muff. "And I was flattering myself as I came
along that I looked especially spick and span," she
sighed. "It's refreshing to have somebody tell you
the truth about yoahself, and you nevah were one
to mince mattahs, Bobby."</p>
<p>The old name on the lips of this pretty girl so
like the old Lloyd in some ways, yet so bewilderingly
unlike in others, stirred him strangely.</p>
<p>"Better throw off your furs and that heavy
jacket in this over-heated car," was his only answer.
"You'll take cold when you get off if you
don't." She thanked him for the suggestion, and,
as he hung her wraps over the back of the seat,
settled herself comfortably for the hour's ride.</p>
<p>"Now tell me all about it," he began as the car
started. "All that you've been doing these last
months. Of course I've kept up with you in the
papers. I know that you went here and went there,
and that you wore sky-blue pink folderols at this
banquet and velvet satin crêpe de chine at the Country
Club dinner, with feathers and jewels to match,
but that's no more than all the rest of the world
knows. I want to be let in on the ground floor and
told about the inner workings of this social whirl.
How have you managed to do it all? To vibrate between<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</SPAN></span>
town and country and not peg out. You look
as fresh as a daisy; as if the pace that kills agrees
with you."</p>
<p>"I haven't vibrated much," she answered. "I've
made Aunt Jane's house my headquartahs, and
you know what a crank she is about hygiene.
Every moment not actually engaged in 'whirling'
she had reduced to a system of simple living.
What I have suffered in the way of naps in a darkened
room when I wasn't sleepy, and hot milk when
I loathed the idea of swallowing anything, and
gymnastic exercises in the attic when the weathah
was too bad for long walks, would fill a volume."</p>
<p>"Is the game worth the candle?" he asked soberly.</p>
<p>She hesitated. "Well, yes. For a season anyhow.
I wouldn't want to keep up such a round
yeah aftah yeah, but I <i>have</i> had a good time, and
I must confess it's awfully nice to be really grown
up and have everybody treat you with the consideration
due yoah age."</p>
<p>They were out in the open country now. The
car stopped, and as the door opened to admit a
passenger, the shrill voices of some children skating
on an ice pond near the road floated cheerily in.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</SPAN></span>
Lloyd looked out the window with a smile at the
gay scene.</p>
<p>"I'd like to be out there with them," she confessed.
"Look at that little girl in the red mittens
and Tam O'Shanter. She skates exactly the way
Katie Mallard used to. Oh, deah, didn't we used
to have fun with her down on our ice pond?"</p>
<p>"Do you remember the day Malcolm broke
through when he was trying to cake-walk on the
ice?" asked Rob with a reminiscent grin.</p>
<p>"He was laughing about that only last week
when he took me to the Country Club dinnah. I've
seen a lot of Malcolm this wintah."</p>
<p>"I thought he was rushing Molly Standforth."</p>
<p>"Well, he is, pah't of the time, but he's rushed
me too, as you call it, just as much."</p>
<p>Rob gave her a keen glance, but she made the
announcement in such a calm way that he said to
himself there couldn't be much in it as far as she
was concerned, or she wouldn't have spoken of it
in the way she did.</p>
<p>At Anchorage the boy and girl in front left the
car, he with such open solicitude for her comfort
as he helped her off that Lloyd's eyes met Rob's
with a twinkle.</p>
<p>"Aftah all, it's good to be young like that," she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</SPAN></span>
said. "Don't you remembah Kitty and Guy Ferris
at that age? How we used to tease Kitty for keeping
a dead rose and a valentine and a brass button
from his military coat, tied up with a blue ribbon
in a candy box?"</p>
<p>"But we boys had a better time teasing Guy
about the lock of Kitty's hair that he carried around
in the back of his watch. His watch got out of
order, and when the jeweller opened it and found
all that hair in the back, he didn't say a word, but
with a most disgusted look tossed it into the wastebasket
as if it hadn't been Guy's most sacred possession.
I was along with him, and I simply roared.
Guy didn't have the nerve to ask for it, just stood
there looking like the big silly he must have
felt."</p>
<p>The series of reminiscences that this story started
lasted all the way out to the Valley. The red streak
of the wintry sunset had faded out of the west when
the car stopped there, and Lloyd looking out into
the cold gray gloaming saw that the snow was
beginning to fall again.</p>
<p>"Let's get out and walk the rest of the way,"
she exclaimed impetuously, snatching up her jacket
and furs as she rose.</p>
<p>"I haven't had a twilight walk in the country this<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</SPAN></span>
wintah, when it's all good and gray like this, with
snow-flakes in yoah face."</p>
<p>They were off in another instant, and as he stood
on the station platform helping her on with her
wraps, she held up her face to feel the stray flakes
blowing cold and soft against it. He smiled at
her childish delight in them, and seeing the smile
she started up the narrow path ahead of him,
laughing over her shoulder.</p>
<p>"There's no use denying it," she called back.
"When I want to be the propah dignified young
lady I'll have to stay in town. Just the smell of the
country, the fresh earth, the fallen leaves, has such
a rejuvenating effect that I want to tuck up my
skirts and skip and run as I used to."</p>
<p>"Come on," he exclaimed gaily, falling in with
her mood. "I'll race you to that dead sycamore
up the road."</p>
<p>She looked up at him, her face dimpling as she
noticed how he towered above her and how broad
were the shoulders in the big overcoat. Then she
shook her head sadly.</p>
<p>"Nevah again, Bobby! We're too old and dignified.
I'd almost as soon think of racing with
the Judge as with you now. What if somebody
should see us? They'd be shocked to death.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</SPAN></span>
There's some one now," she added, peering forward
through the dusk.</p>
<p>"Only old Unc' Andy coming back from his
rabbit traps," answered Rob, as the grizzled old
coloured man shuffled nearer. Uncle Andy had
been the gardener at Oaklea more years than Lloyd
could remember, and now as he stepped out of the
path with elaborate courtesy to let her pass, she
delighted his soul by stopping with a friendly inquiry
about himself and family.</p>
<p>"Lawd, if it aint the Little Cun'l herself!" he
chuckled. "All growed up and a bloomin' like a
piney! I reckon, Miss Lloyd, youse forgot the
time that you pulled up all the pansies in my flowah
beds 'cause you said they was makin' faces at you."</p>
<p>"No, indeed, Uncle Andy," she answered with
a laugh, and started to pass on. But the encounter
with the old servant seemed somehow to set her
back among the days when she had been almost
as much at home at Oaklea as she was at The Locusts,
and prompted by some sudden impulse she
called over her shoulder as she had often called
then: "Unc' Andy, tell Mrs. Moore that Mistah
Rob won't be home for dinnah. He's going to
stay at The Locusts."</p>
<p>It was a familiar message although it had been<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</SPAN></span>
several years since Andy had heard it. He looked
back bowing and scraping, and then walked on
chuckling to himself.</p>
<p>Taken by surprise, Rob did not remonstrate
when she thus took his consent for granted. If
she had waited to ask his permission to send such
a message home he would have made some excuse
to decline, and then left her at the gate. That night
under the measuring tree when he listened to her
singing he had resolutely made up his mind to keep
out of the way of temptation. Since then he had
become convinced that she was engaged to Leland
Harcourt and had put her out of his dreams as far
as possible. Now that she had left him no choice,
he gladly accepted the opportunity that fate seemed
to throw in his way, and gave himself up to the
enjoyment of it.</p>
<p>The fitful snow had stopped falling again by the
time they reached the gate, and the stars were beginning
to glimmer through the bare branches of
the locust-trees. As Lloyd looked up the avenue,
and saw the lights from many windows streaming
out across the white-pillared porch into the winter
night, her gay mood suddenly changed to one
of intense feeling.</p>
<p>"Isn't it deah?" she said in a low voice. "I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</SPAN></span>
nevah had it come ovah me so overwhelmingly,
how good it is to come back to the things that nevah
change—that nevah fail! The home-lights and
the home-loves, the same old trees and the same
old sta'hs and the same old chum!"</p>
<p>Rob made no answer, but his silence was only
another proof to Lloyd that she had found her old
chum unchanged. He never answered at the times
when she knew he felt most deeply. Rob's silences
expressed more sometimes than other people's
speeches.</p>
<p>He was talkative enough at dinner, however, and
between them he and Lloyd made the meal such
a lively one that the old Colonel heaved a sigh when
it was over.</p>
<p>"I'd give a good deal if our whist club didn't
meet to-night," he said in response to Lloyd's question.
"I surely would have asked them to postpone
it if I had known you were coming out to-night."</p>
<p>"Suahly not a time-honahed institution like
that!" exclaimed Lloyd teasingly, "and when it's
yoah turn to entahtain it. Rob, we haven't found
out what refreshments mothah has for them.
Think of wasting all this time without knowing."</p>
<p>It had always been a matter of interest with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</SPAN></span>
them in earlier times to have a finger in this particular
pie. It was one thing in which Mrs. Sherman
was most careful to humour her father's
whims, and she always pleased him by giving her
personal attention to the dainty little suppers which
she served after the game.</p>
<p>Lloyd led the way to the pantry and they lifted
covers and opened doors, smelling and peering
around till they unearthed all the tempting dishes
that had been so carefully prepared for the occasion.</p>
<p>"We'll be in at the end," warned Lloyd as the
Colonel's old cronies began to arrive, "and in the
meantime I'll pop some cawn. I used to think that
old Majah Timberly came for my cawn as much
as he did for the game."</p>
<p>To his great annoyance a telephone message
called Mr. Sherman over to the Confederate Home.
He had looked forward to a quiet evening in front
of the great log fire, and was loath to leave the
cosy room and cheerful company. Presently some
household matters claimed Mrs. Sherman's presence
up-stairs, and she too had to go, leaving Lloyd
at the piano, playing runs and trills and snatches of
songs as a sort of undercurrent to their conversation.
Rob in a big armchair in front of the fire, looking<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</SPAN></span>
comfortable enough to want to purr, glanced around
the familiar old room that long association had
made as dear to him as home.</p>
<p>"Why don't you read your letters?" he asked,
his gaze happening to rest on a pile of various sized
envelopes lying on the table near him, all bearing
Lloyd's name.</p>
<p>She turned around on the piano stool and held
out her hand for them as he rose to take them to
her.</p>
<p>"I forgot all about the possibility of there being
any mail for me," she said, tearing open the first
one. "This is from Betty. I know you want to
hear that, so I'll read it aloud."</p>
<p>Crossing the room she seated herself under one
of the silver sconces in the chimney corner, so that
the candlelight fell on the paper. She had never
relinquished the idea that came to her on her return
from school that Rob was growing especially fond
of Betty. It seemed to her such a desirable state
of affairs that she longed to deepen his interest in
her.</p>
<p>"I am not being carried to the skies on flowery
beds of ease, by any manner of means," wrote
Betty. "Life at Warwick Hall as a pupil is one
thing. It is quite another to be a teacher. But I'm<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</SPAN></span>
gaining experience and that's what I came for, and
best of all I'm having some little successes that
make me take heart and feel like attempting more.
I have had two little sketches of school-girl life
accepted and <i>paid for</i> (mark the paid for) by the
<i>Youth's Companion</i>, and a request for more.
'<i>True hope is swift and flies with swallows' wings.
Kings it makes gods, and meaner creatures kings.</i>'
You can imagine how happy I am over it, and what
castles in the air I am already building again."</p>
<p>It was a long newsy letter, telling of a reception
she had attended at the White House, to which
she took half a dozen girls in Madam Chartley's
place, and describing a famous lecturer who had
been at the Hall the day before.</p>
<p>"Betty's a girl in a thousand!" said Rob approvingly
as she slipped the letter back in its envelope.
"She's a dear little piece, with sense and
pluck enough for a dozen."</p>
<p>His hearty tone confirmed Lloyd's suspicions,
and she looked as pleased as if he had paid her a
compliment instead of Betty. She led him on to
express a still deeper appreciation, by telling of
some of the things that Elise Walton had written
home about Betty's kindness to the new girls and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</SPAN></span>
how they all adored her. Then she opened the next
letter.</p>
<p>"From Phil Tremont," she said, glancing down
the page. "He's back in New York and has just
seen Eugenia, who is still delighted with housekeeping,
and makes an ideal home for Stewart and
the doctor. And he's seen Joyce," she added, turning
the page, "and Joyce is as happy as a clam,
struggling along with a lot of art-students in a flat,
and really doing well with her book-cover designs
and illustrations."</p>
<p>She read a paragraph aloud here and there, then
hastily looked over the last part in silence, laying
it down with a little sigh. Rob glanced up inquiringly.
"I wish he wouldn't make such a to-do
about my writing moah regularly. It makes a
task of a correspondence instead of a pleasuah, to
know that every two weeks, rain or shine, I'm expected
to send an answah. I like to write if I can
choose my own time, and wait till the spirit moves
me, but I despise to be nagged into doing it."</p>
<p>"You write to Betty every week," he suggested.</p>
<p>"Yes, sometimes twice or three times. But that's
different. I haven't seen Phil for two yeahs and
when you don't see people for a long time you
can't keep in touch with them."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"The song says, 'Absence makes the heart grow
fonder,'" quoted Rob mischievously.</p>
<p>"Maybe it does if you're old friends, and have
lots to remembah togethah, but it seems to me that
absence builds up a sawt of wall between people
sometimes, especially if you've known each othah
only a little while, and at a time when you're both
growing up and changing all the time. Do you
know," she added musingly, dropping the letter
into her lap and leaning forward to gaze into the
fire, "I believe if Phil and I had been togethah
daily I'd have grown awfully fond of him. When
we were out on the desert in Arizona, I was only
fou'teen that spring, he was my ideal of all that was
lovely and romantic, and I believe if it hadn't been
for those talks Papa Jack and I used to have about
Hildegarde and her weaving, I'd have done like
foolish Hertha, cut my web for him then and there.
I did imagine for awhile that he was a prince, and
the one written for me in the sta'hs."</p>
<p>"And now?" asked Rob, in a low tone, as if
afraid of interrupting the confession she was making
more to the fire and herself than to him.</p>
<p>"Now," she answered, "when he came back
to be best man at Eugenia's wedding I still liked
him awfully well, but I could see that my ideals<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</SPAN></span>
had changed and that they didn't fit him any moah
'as the falcon's feathahs fit the falcon.' Still I
don't know, maybe if we had been thrown togethah
a great deal from the time I first met him, it might
have been different, but as I say, absence made a
sawt of wall between us and we seem to be growing
farthah and farthah apart."</p>
<p>"And now you're sure he's not the one the stars
have destined for you?"</p>
<p>"Perfectly suah," she answered with a laugh,
then leaning back in the chimney corner again,
opened the third letter. The envelope slipped to
the floor as she read, and stooping over to return
it, he saw quite unintentionally that it bore a South
American stamp. She was reading so intently
that she did not notice when he laid it in her lap,
but as soon as she finished she tossed it into the
fire without a word. Her face flushed and her
eyes had an angry light in them. As she caught
his grave look, she shrugged her shoulders with a
careless little laugh, to hide the awkward pause,
and then said lightly:</p>
<p>"I think Mammy Eastah's fortune will come
true. There won't be any prince in my tea-cup."</p>
<p>"Why?"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Wait till I get the cawn-poppah and I'll tell
you."</p>
<p>She was back in a moment with the popper and
several ears of corn which she divided with Rob,
and started to shell into the big dish which she
placed on the floor between them. She shelled in
silence a moment or two.</p>
<p>"It's this wintah in society that's given me that
opinion," she said finally. "The view I've had
of it through my Hildegarde mirror. The knights
have come riding, lots of them, and maybe among
them I might have found my prince in disguise, but
the shadows of the world blurred everything. Out
heah in the country I'd grown up believing that it's
a kind, honest old world. I'd seen only its good
side. I took my conception of married life from
mothah and Papa Jack, Doctah Shelby and Aunt
Alicia, and yoah fathah and mothah. They made
me think that marriage is a great strong sanctuary,
built on a rock that no storm can hurt and no
trouble move. But this wintah I found that that
kind of marriage has grown out of fashion. It's
something to jest about, and it's a mattah of scandal
and divorce and unhappiness. Sometimes it
made me heart-sick, the tales I heard and the things
I saw. I came to little Mary Ware's conclusion,
that it's safah to be an old maid."</p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/i006.jpg" width-obs="413" height-obs="500" alt="popping corn" /> <span class="caption">"SHE POURED THE CORN INTO THE POPPER AND BEGAN TO SHAKE IT OVER THE RED COALS."</span></div>
<p>Drawing a low stool nearer the fire, she poured
the corn into the popper and began to shake it over
the red coals.</p>
<p>"It's dreadful to be disillusioned," said Rob,
smiling at her serious face. "That's one reason
why I keep so 'far from the madding crowd.' My
old friends have been good about remembering me
with invitations and I've been sorely tempted to
accept some of them just to see what kind of a
show was going on. But I couldn't accept one and
refuse another and I couldn't afford to go in wholesale;
carriages and flowers and the bummed up
feeling that follows make it too expensive for a
poor man like me. It's nearly over now, I suppose,
anyway."</p>
<p>"Yes, the fancy dress ball on Valentine's night
will be the last big thing befoah Lent."</p>
<p>"Who is to be your escort?"</p>
<p>"Mistah Whitlow, probably. He hasn't asked
me yet, but he saw Aunt Jane this mawning and
told her not to let me make any engagement, for
he was coming to ask me as soon as I got back to
town Monday."</p>
<p>"Bartrom Whitlow!" exclaimed Rob, shifting<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</SPAN><br/><SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</SPAN></span>
his easy lounging position to an upright one, and
looking very stern. "Lloyd, you don't mean to
say you're going with <i>that</i> man! He isn't fit to
be invited to decent people's houses, much less fit
to shake hands with their daughters. Some of the
others are bad enough, goodness knows, but he is
the limit. You simply can't go with him."</p>
<p>"Well, you needn't ro'ah so," exclaimed Lloyd
with a little pout, as if she resented his dictatorial,
big-brother tone. Secretly it pleased her, for it
had been a long time since she had heard it.</p>
<p>"Rather than let you go with him I'll accept
my invitation and take you myself!"</p>
<p>"What a sweet martyr-like spirit!" laughed
Lloyd, teasingly. "I certainly feel flattered at the
way you put it, and I appreciate the great sacrifice
you're willing to make for my sake. Of co'se
I don't want to go with Mistah Whitlow if that's
the kind of man he is, but it seems rathah late in
the day to raise a row. He's called on me several
times this wintah and sent me flowahs and danced
with me, just as he does with all the othah girls. I
know Aunt Jane believes he is all right, because she
is very particulah about my company. I can't see any
way to get out of going with him as long as she's
given him to undahstand that I would, but for me<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</SPAN></span>
to hold you to yoah offah and make you make a
martyr of yoahself on the altah of friendship."</p>
<p>"You know very well, Lloyd Sherman, <i>no</i> fellow
would count it martyrdom to escort the most
popular débutante of the season to the last great
function."</p>
<p>She opened her eyes wide, astonished at such an
unusual thing as a compliment from Rob.</p>
<p>"Oh, I'm just quoting," he added to tease her.
"That's what I heard an enthusiastic admirer of
yours call you on the car this evening. But I'm
in dead earnest, too. My offer is a sincere one."</p>
<p>"Very well," responded Lloyd quickly, "I'll hold
you to it. I suppose you've seriously considahed it.
You'll have to go in fancy costume, you know."</p>
<p>His face showed plainly that he had not thought
how much his offer involved, but after an instant's
hesitation he made a wry grimace and laughed.
"That's all right. I die game. I haven't been to
anything for two years, but I'll see you through
on this deal. 'I'll never desert Micawber.' Name
the character I'm to represent and I'll get the costume."</p>
<p>"I think a Teddy beah would be most in keeping
if you're going to glowah and growl the way you
did a moment ago, or anything fierce and furious;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</SPAN></span>
Bluebeard for instance. That would be fine, and I'll
carry a bloody key and you can drag me around
by the hair as an object lesson to all thoughtless
girls who weave their mantles to fit unworthy shouldahs
instead of using their yah'd sticks to do it
right."</p>
<p>"That old tale seems to worry you a lot, Lloyd."</p>
<p>"It does," she confessed. "I've thought about
it every day this wintah. Now this is all ready for
the salt and buttah," she added as the last grain
in the wire cage burst into snowy bloom. "I'll take
it ovah to the old gentlemen while it's hot. You
can be popping the next lot while I'm gone."</p>
<p>Mrs. Sherman joined them presently, and the
question of costumes was settled. "There's no
use of yoah going to any expense for one," said
Lloyd, with her usual delicate consideration.
"There are trunkfuls of lovely things still in the
attic. Come ovah next week and we'll look through
them."</p>
<p>So it came to pass that the old intimacy was, in
a measure, resumed, for several calls were necessary
to complete the arrangements for Valentine night.
That those arrangements were highly satisfactory
might have been inferred from the account of the
affair which appeared in the Society columns next<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</SPAN></span>
day, in which Miss Sherman and Mr. Rob Moore
were awarded the palm for the most unique and
striking costumes. They had gone as Bluebeard
and his beautiful Fatima. It was the crowning
good time of the season, Lloyd declared, for Rob
under cover of his disguise entered into the spirit
of the occasion with all his old zest, and when Rob
tried, nobody could be better company than he.
After that he fell into the way of an occasional call
at The Locusts. He was too busy to spare many
evenings, but when Lloyd came back to the Valley,
nearly every Sunday afternoon was spent in their
old way, taking long tramps together through the
quiet country lanes and winter woods.</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</SPAN></span></p>
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