<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE MIRACLE OF BLOSSOMING</div>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> beginning of Lent was the end of all the
social gaieties and most of the girls who had flittered
through the season with Lloyd fluttered away
like a bevy of scattered butterflies to various resorts
on the Florida coast. Kitty departed to make her
long-talked-of visit to Gay in San Antonio, Katie
Mallard went with an invalid aunt to Biloxi, and
Lloyd came back to the country. She was almost
as much alone as she had been that winter when she
had not been allowed to return to Warwick Hall
after the Christmas vacation.</p>
<p>True, Allison was at home after her interesting
trip abroad, with the MacIntyres, and Lloyd spent
many hours at The Beeches. But Raleigh Claiborne's
sister from Washington was there on a visit
part of the time, and Raleigh himself made several
flying trips, and although Allison's engagement
made her doubly interesting to the younger girls,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</SPAN></span>
it seemed to rise up as a sort of wall between them
and their old intimacy. She had so many new interests
now that she did not enter quite so heartily
into the old ones.</p>
<p>So it came about that Lloyd fell quite naturally
into her former habit of dropping in to see Mrs.
Bisbee and Mrs. Apwell and all the other old ladies,
who welcomed her with open arms. One blowy
afternoon in March she took her embroidery and
went to sit with Mrs. Bisbee awhile, beside the
window that Mrs. Walton had laughingly dubbed
the "window in Thrums." The old lady, growing
chatty and confidential over her quilt-piecing, seemed
so unusually companionable, that Lloyd remarked:</p>
<p>"It really seems as if I'm catching up to you all,
Mrs. Bisbee. As I get oldah everybody else gets
youngah. Why, this wintah mothah has been just
like a sistah. I had no idea she could be so much
fun. We do everything togethah now. I help with
the housekeeping so that she can hurry through
with it early in the mawning and then we practise,
piano and harp, or she plays the accompaniments
for my songs. And then we read French awhile
and we go for long walks and we discuss every
subject undah the sun, just as Betty and I used to
do. And we plan things to do in the deliciously<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</SPAN></span>
long cosy evenings—surprises, you know, for
grandfathah and Papa Jack. I believe I'm enjoying
this pah't of my yeah bettah than the first."</p>
<p>Mrs. Bisbee looked out of the window wistfully
at nothing.</p>
<p>"That's the way that it used to be here when
daughter was at home," she sighed. "Sometimes I
think if I'd had the planning of the universe I'd
have fixed it differently. Just when your little girl
is grown up to be a comfort and a joy, and the best
company in the world, some man steps in and takes
her away from you. I had daughter to myself only
one short year after she got through school. Then
she married. Of course it would have been selfish
to have stood in the way of her happiness, yet—"</p>
<p>She shook her head with another sigh, and left
the sentence unfinished. "I have often wondered
how I could have stood it if her marriage had been
an unhappy one, like poor Amy Cadwell's. You
know her."</p>
<p>"Only slightly," answered Lloyd, recalling a face
that always aroused her interest; a face with thin
compressed lips and watchful defiant eyes, that
seemed to have grown so from the long guarding
of a family skeleton.</p>
<p>It was not gossip the way Mrs. Bisbee told the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</SPAN></span>
story, only the plain recital of a sad bit of human
history that had fallen under her observation. The
cloud of it rested on Lloyd's face as she listened.</p>
<p>"That's the worst thing about growing up," she
exclaimed bitterly when Mrs. Bisbee paused, "the
finding out that everybody isn't good and happy as
I used to think they were. Lately, just these last
few months that I've been out in society I've heard
so much of people's jealousies and rivalries and
meannesses and insincerity, that I'd sometimes be
tempted to doubt everybody, if it were not for my
own family and some of the people out in this
little old Valley that I've trusted all my life.</p>
<p>"There's Minnie Wayland, whose engagement
was announced last month to Mistah Maybrick. I
don't see how she dares marry when her own fathah
and mothah made such a failure of it, that they can't
live togethah, and Mistah Maybrick's wife got a
divorce from him on account of some dreadful scandal
the papahs were full of. I couldn't go up and
wish her joy when the othah girls did. She talked
about it in such a flippant mattah of business way,
as if millions atoned for everything. One of the girls
laughed at me for taking it so seriously, and said
that matches aren't made in heaven nowadays, and
that I'd have to get ovah my old-fashioned Puritanical<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</SPAN></span>
notions and ideals if I expected to keep up
with the sma'ht set. I thought for awhile that
maybe it was only the sma'ht set who are that way,
but what you've just told me about Mrs. Cadwell,
and what I've heard lately about several families
right in our own little neighbahhood, shows that
it's <i>all</i> a bad old world, and these yeahs I've been
thinking it so good I've been blind and ignorant. I
suppose it's for the best, but I'm sorry sometimes
that my eyes have been opened."</p>
<p>Mrs. Bisbee sighed again at her vehemence, and
then quite unexpectedly piped up in a thin tremulous
voice, with one of the songs of her youth. In a
high minor key and full of quavers, it was so ridiculous
that they both laughed.</p>
<div class='poem'>
"'I sat beneath a hollow tree,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">The blast it hollow blew.</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">I thought upon the hollow world,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And all its hollow crew.</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Ambition and its hollow schemes,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">The hollow hopes we follow,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">The world and all its hollow dreams—</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">All hollow, hollow, hollow!'"</span><br/></div>
<p>"That's the way it seems to you now," she said.
"It's the reaction. But you mustn't let it make you
pessimistic. When you get to feeling like that you'll
have to do like old Abraham did, quit looking at all<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</SPAN></span>
the sinners in Sodom, and hunt around for the ten
good men."</p>
<p>A whole row of Sunday-school lessons rose up in
Mrs. Bisbee's mind. She had taught a class for
thirty years in the vine-covered stone church whose
spire she could see from her window, and Lloyd was
used to her startling and unexpected application of
Scripture texts.</p>
<p>"Or better still," she continued, "turn your back
on entire Sodom, and look away to the plains where
the faithful pitched their tents. The world is full
of that kind of people to-day as it was then, the
faithful who never join themselves to the idols of
the heathen, but who tend their flocks and live good
peaceful lives, and in all their journeyings, wherever
they go, <i>raise an altar to the Lord</i>.</p>
<p>"It's the marriages that are founded on <i>that</i> rock
that never fall," she added reverently, her mind
skipping from the tent-dwellers of Genesis to the
wise builder in the parables with the ease of long
practice. "'<i>And the rain descended, and the floods
came, and the winds blew, and beat upon that house;
and it fell not; for it was founded upon a rock.</i>'"</p>
<p>"Sometimes just the wife's part is built on it.
She's the only one that raises the altar. Sometimes
the man is the one. Of course that's better than all<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</SPAN></span>
being on the sand, and saves many a marriage from
being the wreck it would have been if they'd left God
out of it altogether. There! I never did think it all
out in words quite as straight and clear and convincing
to myself before. But I've often had the
idea come to me when I'd be sitting in church looking
at old Judge Moore's white head in the front
pew, and thinking of the trouble <i>he'd</i> had—the
sorrow and accidents and misfortune that have beat
on <i>his</i> house—and his faith standing up bigger
and stronger than ever. Even his wife's death
couldn't shake it."</p>
<p>Here she paused to lean nearer the window and
nod and smile at some one driving past the house.</p>
<p>"It's Agnes Waring," she explained, as Lloyd
looked up too late. "Or Agnes Bond, I should say.
I never can remember to call her that, although she's
been married over two years. Now <i>there's</i> a happy
marriage if ever there was one. The good old-fashioned
sort like the Judge's, for they're both of
the faithful. And do you know, my dear," she continued
lightly, "I shall always hold you responsible
for that. It was your making such a picture out
of Agnes at that Martha Washington affair that
brought her out of her shell and gave John Bond a
chance to discover her. Miss Sarah thinks so too.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</SPAN></span>
By the way, she was here yesterday, and she told
me that she has about consented to break up housekeeping
and go to live with Agnes. It's so lonely
for her since poor Miss Marietta died."</p>
<p>"Yes, I know," said Lloyd softly, thinking of the
happy release that had come to Miss Marietta only
the week before.</p>
<p>"Now, there was another case," resumed Mrs.
Bisbee. "Nobody who saw her lying there in that
beautiful dress that was to have been her wedding
gown, and with that wonderful smile lighting up her
face, could doubt what sort of a foundation she and
Murray Cathright built on. That was a love that
outlasted time and reached past even death into
eternity itself. So don't you go to doubting that
it doesn't exist any more, my dear."</p>
<p>Lloyd made one more call on the way home, stopping
in at the Apwalls' with a magazine which Mrs.
Bisbee had asked her to leave. Oddly enough the
conversation turned to the same subject that she and
Mrs. Bisbee had been discussing, but she went away
in a very different mood from the one in which she
left the first place. Old Mr. Apwall irritated her.
He was in one of his sprightly facetious humours,
when he delighted in making personal remarks in a
teasing way.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Well, my little lady," he began. "I hear you've
had a whole string of admirers dangling in your
wake this last year. Oh, you needn't deny it!"
he added, shaking a finger at her in a way he considered
playful. "We've heard the gossip about
that young Texas fellow and that man from the
North who nearly wore out his private car coming
down to see you every whip-stitch and that old duck
from Cincinnati that you refused. Refused them
all! Oh, yes, you did, though. We heard about
it. But you must remember the story of the lass
who went through the forest looking for a straight
stick. She kept throwing them away and throwing
them away, getting harder to please at every step,
until she'd gone through the whole forest, and had
to pick up a crooked one at the last."</p>
<p>He laughed childishly at his own tale. "Look
out that you don't get a crooked stick!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Apwall broke in sourly. "That's about all
there is left lying around to choose from these days,
to <i>my</i> notion. But land sakes, Alexander, quit teasing
the child. You talk as if all her chances are
gone by and that she's doomed to be an old maid.
The happiest lot of all, <i>I</i> say, for there's no man
living but has some crook in him, and most of 'em<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</SPAN></span>
are all crookedness." She darted a warlike glance
in his direction.</p>
<p>Lloyd left as soon as she could get away politely,
wondering how they had heard so much of her
affairs. She had refused both proposals, but she
didn't know that any one outside the family knew
anything about it. She wondered now if she had
been over particular, for the crook that Mrs. Apwall
insisted was in every man was only a slight one in
the case of the owner of the private car, principally
a matter of little refinements of speech and appearance
which one had a right to expect of a man in
his position and whose lack argued to a dainty girl
like Lloyd some corresponding coarseness of nature.
She had seen the other man slightly intoxicated one
night at a theatre party, and could never quite forget
the maudlin smile with which he poured out complimentary
speeches by the wholesale.</p>
<p>The conversation at the Apwalls' brought back
two very disagreeable occasions that she did not care
to remember, and she made up her mind as she
walked rapidly along towards home that it would be
many a day before she went back there. They
always gave her a gloomy impression of life.</p>
<p>The roads were so muddy that she had to take
to the railroad track, stepping from one cross-tie to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</SPAN></span>
another to avoid the sharp cinders between. Presently
she found herself walking along the rail as she
and Betty used to do on the way to school, balancing
themselves with outstretched arms and counting how
many steps they could take without slipping off.
That was the way she and Rob had taken their walk
the week before. It had been too muddy to go anywhere
save along the track and they had walked the
cross-ties for two miles in the face of a keen March
wind. It was soft and balmy to-day, fluttering her
hair and skirts in a playful way wholly unlike the
boisterous flapping with which it had ushered in the
month.</p>
<p>As she went along she peered into fence corners
and up at the budding branches, happy over every
sign of spring. If the roads were dry enough by
the end of the week she and Rob intended to take
a long tramp through Tanglewood in search of
wild flowers. Anemones, harebells and spiderwort,
foxgloves and dog-tooth violets, she knew them all,
and the haunts where they came the earliest. She
rarely gathered them, but went from one hiding-place
to another for a glimpse of their shy faces,
welcoming them as she would old friends. Lloyd
loved the woods like an Indian, and one of the most
satisfactory things about Rob's companionship was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</SPAN></span>
that he enjoyed them in the same way. Often they
tramped along, scarcely saying a word a mile, finding
the vibrant silences of the wood better than
speech, and their mutual pleasure in them sufficient.
After the winter in town, which had been an unusually
cold and severe one, Lloyd longed for the
beginning of spring, and from the call of the first
robin and the budding of the first pussy-willow,
spent as much time as possible out of doors.</p>
<p>April came in with a week of sunny days which
hurried everything into luxuriant leafage and bud.
When Rob came over one warm day for his usual
Sunday afternoon walk, the whole world seemed
so near the verge of bursting into full bloom that
the very air was aquiver with its half-whispered
secrets. Faint delicious odours stole up from the
moist earth and the green growing things that
crowded up out of it. Even the old locusts, conscious
of a hidden wealth of sweetness which was
soon to make a glory of their gnarled branches,
nodded in sympathy with all that was young and
riotous.</p>
<p>There were so many things to discover near at
hand that Lloyd and Rob sauntered about the place
first, before starting farther afield. There were
spring beauties covering the little knolls in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</SPAN></span>
pasture, like a fall of rosy snow. There were
violets down by the ice-house, and early columbines
starting out from the crevices of the rockery, holding
up slender stems, whereon by and bye their
airy blossoms would poise like a flock of light-winged
butterflies. Lloyd, happy over every tiny
frond she found unfolding itself in the fern bed, and
every yellow dandelion that added its mite of gold
to the young year's coffers, was so absorbed in her
quest that she did not notice any difference in Rob's
manner.</p>
<p>He walked along beside her, saying little, but with
the same air of repressed eagerness that the whole
April day seemed to share, as if like the locusts, he
too was conscious of some inner wealth of bloom,
some secret happiness whose time for sharing with
the spring had not yet come. Once when he answered
her enthusiastic discovery of a snowdrop
with only an absent-minded monosyllable, she
glanced up at him curiously. There was such a
light in his eyes and such an unwonted tenderness in
his expression that she wondered what he could be
thinking about.</p>
<p>Across the pasture they went, down through the
orchard where the peach-trees were turning pink
and the clusters of tiny white plum buds were already<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</SPAN></span>
calling the bees, and around again to the
beech-grove at the back of the house. It was a
sweet flower-starred way, and Lloyd, bubbling over
with the spirit of the hour, began to hum a happy
little tune. Suddenly she stopped short in the path,
turning her head slightly with the alert motion of a
young fawn.</p>
<p>"What is it that smells so delicious?" she demanded.
"It's almost heavenly, it's so sweet."
Then after another long indrawn breath, "I'd
think it was lilies-of-the-valley if it were any place
but out heah on the edge of the wood-lot. They
<i>couldn't</i> be way out heah. It must be some rare
kind of wild flowah we've nevah discovered."</p>
<p>Leaving the path, they both began searching
through the underbrush, pushing aside the dead
leaves, and stooping now and then to examine some
plant that did not seem entirely familiar.</p>
<p>"I'm positive it's a <i>white</i> flowah," declared
Lloyd, closing her eyes and drawing in another
breath of the faint, elusive fragrance. "Only a
white flowah could have such an ethereal odah. It
makes you think of white things, doesn't it? Snow
crystals and angel wings! Oh, they <i>are</i> lilies-of-the-valley!"
she cried the next instant, stooping<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</SPAN></span>
over a bed of green from which Rob was raking
the dead leaves with a stick.</p>
<p>"And don't you remembah now," she cried, her
eyes like eager stars as she recalled the incident,
"<i>we</i> planted them heah ourselves, yeahs ago. I remembah
digging up a whole apronful of some
thrifty green things out of the flowah bed undah
yoah mothah's window and lugging them ovah home
all the way from Oaklea. You planted them in this
place for me, because we thought we'd build a play-house
heah, but aftahwards we changed our minds
and built it by the grape-vine swing."</p>
<p>"It seems to me I do have a faint recollection of
something of that sort," Rob answered. "I know
I had a row with Unc' Andy once for digging up
some of his pet borders and transplanting them over
here, but I didn't know they were lilies."</p>
<p>"I suppose we didn't know because we nevah
happened to wandah this way aftahward when they
were in bloom," she continued, seating herself beside
them and parting the thickest sheaths of green
to reveal the perfect white flowers hidden away
among them. Throwing aside her hat, she bent
over to thrust her face into their midst, revelling in
the purity and exquisite fragrance.</p>
<p>"There's nothing like them!" she exclaimed, so<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</SPAN></span>
intent on the beauty of the tiny white bells that
she did not see the expression with which Rob was
looking down on her. There was a likeness between
the two, he was thinking, the white-gowned
girl and the white, white blossoms. They seemed
spiritually akin. She touched one of the racemes
softly.</p>
<p>"It's a miracle, isn't it!" she said in a low, reverent
tone.</p>
<p>"A miracle that anything so sweet and white and
perfect can suddenly come into being like this. It
must have made those old lily bulbs wondah at themselves
the first time they unfolded and woke up to
find that such a heavenly thing had happened to
them,—their hearts filled with this unearthly
beauty and sweetness. Don't you suppose it made
the whole world seem different, that they're not
yet done wondering ovah the surprise and joy of
it?"</p>
<p>She said it with a shy side-glance as if half-afraid
he would laugh at such a childish fancy. Then she
looked up startled, at the unexpected intensity of his
answer.</p>
<p>"I <i>know</i> it made the whole world different," he
said in such a strange exultant voice that she hardly
knew it for Rob's. Dropping to one knee beside her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</SPAN></span>
he singled out one of the lilies just beginning to
burst from its sheath, and folded it close shut again
in its green leaves.</p>
<p>"Look!" he said in the same exultant voice.
"That's the way I've been for years, with something
hidden away in my heart, unrecognized at first,
then its sweetness only half-guessed at. And I kept
it hid, and I thought never to tell you. But this
morning in church it happened to <i>me</i>, this miracle of
blossoming. I was sitting looking at you as I've
done a thousand times before, and all of a sudden
it came over me, just as sweet and unexpected as the
bursting of these lilies, the knowledge that life is
dear and the world beautiful because <i>you</i> are in it.
I think I've always held the thought of you in my
heart, Lloyd, but it has come to such full flower
now, dear, I couldn't hide it from you long, even if
I tried. It seems to me now that all of my life must
have been a gradual growing up for this one thing—to
love you!"</p>
<p>Then his face, glowing with an eager gladness
that almost transfigured it, paled a little before the
mute misery in hers.</p>
<p>"Oh, Rob!" she stammered, finding it hard to
believe that she had heard aright. "<i>Don't</i> tell me<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</SPAN></span>
that! I've always loved you deahly, but not <i>that</i>
way." Then as she saw all the light fade out of his
eyes and his face settle into grim stern lines, she
reached out both hands crying, "Oh, you deah old
Bobby! I wouldn't have had it happen for the world!
I can't <i>beah</i> to hurt you this way!"</p>
<p>Her eyes filled and two big tears splashed down
on the hands she had thrust impulsively into his.
With a gentleness that stirred her even more than
his words had done, he bent and touched them with
his lips.</p>
<p>"Never mind, dear," he said with a great tenderness
that brought a sob up into her throat. "Don't
think of it any more if it makes you unhappy. If
you could have loved me it would have been heaven,
but as you can't we won't talk about it any more.
And—I still have my miracle. Nothing can
change that."</p>
<p>She could not answer, the tears came crowding
so fast, and as they walked back towards the house
together all the brightness seemed to have dropped
out of the April day. The sweetness of the lilies
still followed them, however, and when she glanced
around, wondering why, she saw that Rob still held
the one he had knelt to pick for her. He twirled it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</SPAN></span>
absently in his fingers, but as they parted at the steps
he held it out to her with a smile so tender and full
of understanding, that another sob came up in her
throat and she took it without a word.</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />