<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE ROYAL MANTLE</div>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> week that followed was an unhappy one for
Lloyd. Everywhere she went it seemed to her that
lilies-of-the-valley were thrust into her face. On
the way to town people got on the car at nearly
every station with great bunches of them that they
were carrying to offices or to their friends. The
florists' windows were full of them. Men passed
her on the street wearing them on their coats, and
even the little shop-girl, who waited on her at the
ribbon counter, had them stuck in her belt. When
she called at Mrs. Bisbee's there was a box of them
growing on her window-sill, and at home the whole
house was permeated by the fragrance that floated
out from the great crystal bowl on the library table.
She could not get away from them, and they kept
Rob constantly in her thoughts.</p>
<p>She told herself that she had never known anything
quite so considerate and sweet as the way<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</SPAN></span>
he had taken her answer. The more she thought
of his quick putting aside of self in order that she
might not be unhappy, the more it grieved her that
he must be disappointed. She did not see him again
until the following Sunday. He came into church
behind the old Judge and Mrs. Moore, and Lloyd
dropped her eyes to her hymn-book, her heart in
such a flutter that it sent a queer little tingle all
over her. She was afraid to meet his glance, for
fear the consciousness of their last meeting would
send the telltale red to her face.</p>
<p>In the pew just behind the Moores' sat Katie
Mallard with a girl from Frankfort, who was visiting
her, and as Rob took his seat Lloyd saw the
guest's pretty eyes fixed inquiringly on him. Then
she whispered something to Katie behind her fan.
Instantly the wonder crossed Lloyd's mind what
the newcomer thought of him, and then she wondered
how he would appear to her if she could see
him with the eyes of a stranger, without the intimate
knowledge their long acquaintance had given
her.</p>
<p>She stole a glance in his direction, as the organist
pulled out the stops and struck the opening
chords of the voluntary. He was certainly good
to look at, and, she concluded, the veriest stranger,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</SPAN></span>
if he were any judge at all of such things, must
see at a glance that his was a strong character, that
he would scorn to do a dishonourable thing and
that the years behind him were clean and honest.
Then with a start she realized that she had been
holding him up to her silver yardstick, and that
he not only met its three requirements, but went far
beyond. He had family, social position, everything
that her father had desired for her save wealth,
and she remembered how earnestly he had added,
on that solemn watch-night, "but all these are
nothing when weighed in the balance with the love
of an honest man."</p>
<p>This greatest of all had been given her, but she
could not accept because—well, she didn't know
why—but probably because it was just <i>Bobby</i> who
had offered it, and she couldn't think of <i>him</i> as
being the one the stars had destined for her—a
boy that she had made mud pies with. The old
Hildegarde story had been good for her in many
ways, but it had made the prince of her dreams
a vague personality unlike any man she had ever
met. She had never put into words, even to herself,
what she expected him to be like, but the shadowy
image that her imagination sometimes held
up had no flaw like ordinary mortals, no human<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</SPAN></span>
faults and failings. And she would know him
when he came, in some strange, mysterious way
that needed no speech—his coming would be heralded
like Hebe's: "<i>Before her ran an influence
sweet, that bowed my heart like barley bending.</i>"</p>
<p>The congregation rose for the Gloria and her
eyes met Rob's. For one instant in the quick lighting
of his face she had a revelation of all that his
"miracle of blossoming" meant to him, then he
flashed her a reassuring smile that seemed to say:
"Never mind, old chum. We'll go on just as we've
always done."</p>
<p>That she had interpreted it aright Lloyd knew
when he came that afternoon as usual and proposed
a walk over past the Lindsey Cabin. He
seemed to have put himself into her place so fully
that he understood just how she felt towards him;
knew that it hurt her to have to withhold the one
great thing he desired, and that his friendship was
still as dear to her as ever. So with a fine consideration
that she was quick to appreciate, he came
back to his old place so naturally, and as such a
matter of course, that it put her at her ease with
him and made it possible for her to ignore the episode
of the lilies as if it had never been.</p>
<p>May came with its locust blossoms and the birthday<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</SPAN></span>
anniversary that made her "old and twenty."
One of her gifts was a beautiful saddle-horse, and
she began her daily rides again. Several times
when Rob could arrange to leave town earlier than
usual he rode with her.</p>
<p>Early in June Betty wrote that she was going up
into the pine woods of Maine for her vacation.
She had been offered a position to teach an hour
a day in a sort of summer school, a girls' camp,
and the position had too many advantages to refuse.
She would be back in time for a week or ten
days at The Locusts before the opening of the fall
term at Warwick Hall. Lloyd, who had looked
forward to Betty's companionship for the entire
summer, was sorely disappointed. The same day
that that letter came, Rob told her that he was
going away for awhile. Some investments his
father had made years ago had turned out to be
worth investigating, and he was sure he could dispose
of them advantageously. At any rate he was
going to Birmingham to try. He might be back
in a week or two, and he might be away the entire
month of June. If Betty had been at home probably
Lloyd would not have missed him at all, but
because she had to take so many of her walks and
rides alone, he was often in her thoughts.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I can't expect to have every summah as gay
as last one was," she said to herself one morning,
as she busied herself about her room, changing the
arrangement of the pictures. She leaned over to
dust the ones above her low bookcase. They ran
in a long panel, just above it, the series of garden
fancies that Leland Harcourt had suggested.
It was on a June morning like this almost a year
ago that she had posed for some of them in Doctor
Shelby's old garden. It seemed at least four
times as long as that. She had grown so much
older and wiser. She stooped to look again at the
picture of Darby and Joan, under which was written,
"Hand in hand while our hair is gray." As
she passed her duster lightly over the glass which
covered the two dear old faces, she remembered that
next week this devoted couple were to celebrate their
golden wedding, and that she had promised to let
them "borrow" her for a whole week before, to
help with the preparations.</p>
<p>An hour later she was opening the gate that led
to the old-fashioned door where the ugly little Chinese
idol still kept guard and held it open. She
found Mrs. Shelby out on her cool upper piazza,
behind the moon-vines, in a low sewing chair. She
was stitching daintily away on a bit of fine linen.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</SPAN></span>
"A wristband for one of Richard's shirts," she
explained, after her first moments of delighted
greeting. "And I'll go right on with it, for I'm
making him a set all by hand for my anniversary
present to him. He's always been so proud of
my needlework and had so much sentiment for the
things I've made myself. I can't begin to tell you
how glad I am to have you here. I've been sitting
here all morning thinking that if my little Alicia
had lived what an interest she would have taken
in all my preparations. I keep forgetting that she
wouldn't be a young girl like you. It's Alicia's
granddaughter who would have been your age."</p>
<p>It took only a question or two to open the gates
into this gentle old soul's happy yesterdays, and
Lloyd listened and questioned, enjoying the quiet
romance that she gathered bit by bit as one gathers
the posies of an old garden and clasps them into a
full-rounded nosegay.</p>
<p>"Aunt Alicia," she asked presently, "were you
<i>suah</i> at the time that you were making no mistake?
Didn't you have any doubts or misgivings about
the doctah's being the right one?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Shelby laughed. "I must confess that I
was a very silly girl who had read so many sentimental
stories that my head was full of dreams of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</SPAN></span>
some faultless being who should appear like the
prince to the Sleeping Beauty and change the whole
world for me with a kiss. It was a long time before
I could recognize him in the disguise of a
poor country doctor. But I think we are apt to be
that way about most things in life, my dear. Familiarity
disguises the real worth of most of our
blessings. We don't appreciate them till we are
forced to miss them for awhile."</p>
<p>"But what finally showed you?" persisted
Lloyd. "What made you see through the disguise?"</p>
<p>"Oh, my dear," laughed Mrs. Shelby again. "I
couldn't explain a thing like that! How do these
moon-flowers know what calls them to open, or the
tide when it is time to rise? They <i>feel</i> it, I suppose.
They just <i>know!</i> That is the way it was with me."</p>
<p>Lloyd came again next day prepared to spend
the week. It would be hard to tell who enjoyed the
visit the most. Gentle Aunt Alicia fluttered around,
hugging the sweet pretence to her heart that for
this little space at least she had a real own daughter
beside her, hers to call upon for any service that
the little Alicia would have gladly tendered. The
old doctor spent every moment he could spare from
his office in the spacious screened porch leading<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</SPAN></span>
from the kitchen, where all the preparations were
carried gaily forward.</p>
<p>Here, after the invitations were sent, Lloyd spent
her time. Under her supervision the old satin wedding
gown was brought out and aired and pressed
and slightly altered. Its white folds had turned
to a mellow ivory in the years it had been laid away,
just as the sentiment which cherished it had grown
deeper and richer with time. Once as Lloyd intercepted
a glance the old doctor exchanged with his
wife as they brought out these reminders of their
far-away bridal, it made her feel that she was touching
with intimate fingers the heart of a sweet and
tender old romance.</p>
<p>From the yellowed pages of an old diary, she
read a description of the original wedding feast,
and with an enthusiasm which went ahead of Mrs.
Shelby's own prepared to copy it in every detail
for the golden wedding. Jellies and cakes and
salads, candied rose-leaves and rare spiced confections
that had graced the first were all reproduced
for this great occasion. Lloyd beat eggs and shelled
nuts and stirred icing with a zest, while she planned
the decorations and gave orders right and left to
a household who joyed to do her bidding.</p>
<p>It was not until next to the last great day that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</SPAN></span>
Mrs. Shelby made the discovery they had overlooked
a certain gold-cake, whose recipe was missing.
"And I don't suppose it's to be found anywhere
in the Valley," she mourned, "unless they've
kept Phronie Moore's old cook-book. She was one
of my bridesmaids, and she made it with her own
hands. It was one of her own special recipes that
she was noted for, and I wouldn't have lost it for
anything."</p>
<p>"You know the Judge must have kept it, Alicia,"
the old doctor gently insisted. "You know the
slightest thing she ever handled was sacred to him,
and it stands to reason that anything she'd taken
so much pride in, and written every page with her
own hands, as you say, would be preserved. No
doubt his daughter-in-law can find it for you without
the least trouble."</p>
<p>"Even if she could I wouldn't want to borrow
it," began Mrs. Shelby, but Lloyd interrupted
briskly. "I'll fix it all right for you, Aunt Alicia.
I'll run right ovah to Oaklea as soon as Daphne
gets this in the oven, and ask Mrs. Moore to let
me copy the recipe for you."</p>
<p>So that is how it came about that late that afternoon,
Lloyd opened the great iron gate at Oaklea,
and, following the familiar path under the giant<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</SPAN></span>
oaks, reached the house to which she had long been
a stranger.</p>
<p>Rob's dog, a fine Gordon setter, came out with a
boisterous barking, but seeing who it was, leaped
up, licking her hands and wagging a friendly welcome.
It seemed as if Rob ought to be somewhere
near. Everything about the place suggested him.
A familiar wide-brimmed gray hat lay on the hall
table, his riding-whip beside it. Up-stairs whither
the coloured maid led her, there were other reminders
of him: Indian clubs and a tennis racquet in
a corner of the hall, and a cabinet holding the various
collections that had been his fads from time
to time.</p>
<p>"Come in here, dear," called Mrs. Moore from
the depths of a sleepy hollow chair. "I'm too tired
to move, so I knew you'd excuse my sending down
for you to come up-stairs."</p>
<p>It was Rob's room into which she was ushered.
Mrs. Moore held out both cordial hands without
rising, and drew her down for a kiss.</p>
<p>"Rob's coming home to-night," she explained,
"so of course everything had to be swept and
garnished for so grand an occasion, and I've nearly
used myself up making things fine in his honour."</p>
<p>Her eyes filled with tears. "It's the first time<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</SPAN></span>
he's been away since the dear 'Daddy' left us,
and I had no idea four weeks could be such an age.
I'm so excited and happy over his coming that I
can scarcely talk about it calmly. But you know
what a dear good son my 'Robin Adair' is to me,
so you can make allowances for a fond mother's
foolishness."</p>
<p>It was some moments before Lloyd had an opportunity
to make known her errand, apologizing profusely
for putting her to any exertion when she
was so tired.</p>
<p>"Oh, it's no trouble," answered Mrs. Moore. "I
think I know right where to put my hand on the
book in father's room. I'll step across the hall and
see."</p>
<p>Left to herself Lloyd gave a shy glance around
the room, remembering the time when it had been
a familiar playground, but now she had an embarrassed
sense of intruding. Many an hour she had
spent romping in it while Mom Beck and Dinah
gossiped by the fire. They had had their menagerie
and lions' den in that curtained alcove. Here on
the hard-wood floor between the chimney-corner
and the window they had chalked the ring for their
marble games. She leaned over and examined the
floor at her feet with a smile. Those were undoubtedly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</SPAN></span>
the dents that their top-spinning had left.
Mom Beck had told them at the time, no amount
of polishing could ever wipe out such holes.</p>
<p>The little tin soldiers that used to stand guard
on the window-sill had given place to other things
now. The rocking-horse that had carried them
such long journeys of adventure together had been
stabled for years in the attic at The Locusts. College
trophies and pennants hung on the walls. A
rifle and a shotgun stood in the corner where a
wooden gun and a toy sword used to stay. The
low table and the picture books had given place to
a massive desk and rows on rows of heavy volumes
bound in leather.</p>
<p>Then she recognized several things belonging to
a later period. There was the shaving-paper case
she made him the day he bought his first razor.
She had been so proud of the monogram she burnt
into the leather. It looked decidedly amateurish to
her now. On the leather couch among its many
cushions was the pillow she had embroidered in
his fraternity colours and sent to him while he was
at college.</p>
<p>Between the front windows where the desk stood,
and just above it, ran four long rows of photographs
set in narrow panels. Most of them were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</SPAN></span>
group pictures, the first dating back to the time of
her first house-party, and ending with some that had
been taken the week of Eugenia's wedding. It was
like a serial story of all their good times, and hastily
changing her seat she leaned her elbows on the
desk for another look. But the nearer view revealed
something that she had not seen at the first glance.
<i>She</i> was the central figure of every group. It was
<i>her</i> face that one noticed first, laughing back from
every picture.</p>
<p>Abashed at her discovery, she scuttled back to
her former seat, but not before her quick glance
had showed her another photograph on the desk,
in a silver frame. It was the last one Miss Marks
had taken of her, in her commencement gown. She
did not know that Rob had one of them. She had
not given it to him.</p>
<p>Mrs. Moore called out something to her from
across the hall, and as she turned to reply she faced
still another picture of herself, this one in an old-fashioned
silver locket swinging from the side of the
mirror. It was the Princess Winsome with the
dove. She was afraid to look any further. She felt
like an eavesdropper, for the very walls were calling
out to her those words of Rob's that she had
been trying for weeks to forget: "All my life seems<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</SPAN></span>
to have been a growing up for this one thing—to
love you!"</p>
<p>She sprang up with the impulse to leave the room,
to get away from these telltale voices that she had
no right to listen to. But just then Mrs. Moore
came back with the book.</p>
<p>"You can copy it here at the desk," she said,
laying out a sheet of paper and Rob's big heavy-handled
pen. She did not sit down while Lloyd
wrote the few lines, but stood with her hand on the
back of the chair till she had finished. Then she
said with an amused smile, "I want to show you
something funny, Lloyd. I came across it this
morning while I was looking over some old things
of Rob's. It's your first piece of needlework. You
made it over here one rainy day under Mom Beck's
instructions. It's so long ago I suppose you've forgotten,
but I remember that Rob tried to make one
too, and stuck his fingers so often that he cried and
gave it up, and you gave him yours to comfort him."</p>
<p>Opening a box which she brought from some
drawer, she took out a sorry little pin-cushion. All
puckered and drawn, its long straggling stitches
scarcely kept in place the cotton with which it was
stuffed. The faded blue silk was streaked and dirty
as if it had been used for a foot-ball at some stage<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</SPAN></span>
of its existence, and the pins that formed the
crooked letter L had rusted in their places. But
that it was accounted something precious, one could
see from the way in which it was tied and wrapped
and carefully put away in this box by itself.</p>
<p>It was a relief to Lloyd to find that Mrs. Moore
did not attach any significance to the fact that Rob
thus treasured her old gift. She only laughed and
said he was like her in that regard. She couldn't
bear to throw away anything connected with his
childhood. Only that morning she had come across
the little blue shoes that he had learned to walk in,
and nearly cried over them, they recalled so plainly
those happy days.</p>
<p>"We are both full of sentiment for old things,"
she continued. "I believe it will hurt him nearly
as much as me if we decide to leave Oaklea and try
to make a home somewhere else."</p>
<p>"Leave Oaklea!" repeated Lloyd wonderingly.</p>
<p>"Yes, Rob has had such a splendid opening
offered him in Birmingham that he has been
strongly tempted to move there. Oh, I haven't told
you the good news, have I! He succeeded in selling
that property to a big corporation that needed it to
extend their manufactories, and was able to get such
a fine figure for it that now he can give up that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</SPAN></span>
horrid grind in the hardware business and go away
in the fall for the last year of his law course. He
has studied so hard with his grandfather that this
one year is all that is necessary, and he will be the
youngest lawyer to be admitted to the Louisville
bar when he gets through. His grandfather is
prouder of that possibility than anything else connected
with the boy."</p>
<p>"But about your going away," began Lloyd,
anxiously, when she had expressed proper interest
in the news. "Oaklea won't be the same place with
strangahs living heah. I can't imagine such a
thing."</p>
<p>"It isn't settled yet," Mrs. Moore answered cheerfully,
and then rambled on to some other topic. But
Lloyd heard no word of what she was saying. A
sudden panic had seized her at the possibility of
Rob's being taken out of her life for ever. The
bare thought gave her a sinking of the heart and a
sense of desolation such as a little child might have
at being left alone in the dark. As she sat there
trying to imagine how it would seem never to see
him again, such a revelation of her own self came
to her that it sent the colour surging up in her face
and set her heart to fluttering like a startled bird.
She knew now for whom she had been weaving all<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</SPAN></span>
these years. This moment of self insight had torn
away the disguise. <i>Her Prince had come into his
kingdom!</i></p>
<p>A pause in Mrs. Moore's remarks brought the
embarrassing knowledge that she had not heard the
question whose reply was being waited for, and she
started to stammer some incoherent excuse, when
a shrill whistle from below made them both start.
The familiar sound was followed by a joyous barking
from the Gordon setter, and then Rob's voice
called gaily, "Where are you, mother? Six whole
hours ahead of time, just to surprise you!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Moore sprang up, all her weariness forgotten,
and ran down-stairs to meet him. Lloyd
stood hesitating in the middle of the floor. She
didn't want to intrude on this meeting, yet she
couldn't stay there in his room, the room that babbled
his secrets and reflected him on every side like
a mirror. Still hesitating, then going forward and
halting again, she reached the landing midway on
the stairs and saw him standing with his arm
around his mother, who had forgotten everything
else save the joy of his return.</p>
<p>Then he glanced up and saw her standing there,
one hand on the polished rail, and her white dress
trailing down the steps behind her. And the late<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</SPAN></span>
afternoon sunshine stealing through the amber
medallion window above her rested with such soft
touch on her fair hair that it seemed that a halo of
dim gold surrounded her. For an instant he
thought he must be dreaming, and stood gazing at
her with a look of happy wonder as if this were only
another vision of the dream-saint always enshrined
in his heart.</p>
<p>But his next glance showed him that it was Lloyd
in reality, for at his adoring gaze she went all rosy
red, and looked away in shy confusion. Stopping
only for the briefest greeting, she hurried past him,
saying that Aunt Alicia was waiting, and the wonderful
cake wouldn't be done in time, that his
mother would tell him about it, and she'd see him
at the wedding to-morrow.</p>
<p>What happened afterward was all a sort of
golden haze to Lloyd. The afternoon of the anniversary
came and went. She greeted the guests who
came in a constant stream with their gifts and good
wishes. She sang the old songs when they asked
her to, she saw that every one was served to the
sumptuous refreshments in the dining-room; she
played her rôle of daughter of the house to such
perfection that Aunt Alicia caught her hand
gratefully every time she passed, and followed her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</SPAN></span>
with loving eyes as she flitted from room to room.
She carried away the impression that it was all a
beautiful sacred occasion, for the whole Valley
bared its heart for that little space to show its love
for the good doctor who for half a century had been
its standby in its times of stress and anxiety and
bitter bereavement.</p>
<p>Yet the only moment that stood out quite clearly
was the one when Rob passed down the receiving
line and stopped for a word about the perfect June
day, and how sweet the white-haired bride of fifty
years looked in her old-time satin gown and white
roses. Lloyd had answered gaily, fluttering her
fan and adjusting the slender bracelet on her arm,
in a careless way, but she had not looked up at him
in her usual straightforward fashion.</p>
<p>The festivities were not extended into the evening.
Because Aunt Alicia was not strong the invitations
were only for the afternoon, and by sundown
the last guest had departed. Even Lloyd went, saying
merrily that she left them to begin their second
honeymoon, but that she would be back next morning
to help put things in order.</p>
<p>There was company at The Locusts that night,
some business acquaintances of Mr. Sherman's
whom he had invited to dinner, and who were interested<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</SPAN></span>
in nothing but statistics about the South
and other like stupid things. Tired by the day's
exhausting demands, Lloyd left them when they
went into the drawing-room, and stepping out on
the porch sat down on the steps. The moon was
coming up, turning the locusts to silver.</p>
<p>Presently she heard the sound of hoof-beats down
the pike, and as she listened a solitary horseman
turned in at the gate. She was not expecting Rob,
but even at that distance she recognized the familiar
slouch of his broad-brimmed hat and the erect way
he sat in the saddle. And she knew before a word
was spoken, the moment he dismounted and stood
before her that he had not come for a call, only to
bring some message. But he did not deliver it at
once, only asked who the guests were, and sat down
beside her on the steps and talked about the trivial
happenings of the afternoon.</p>
<p>Then a few minutes later she was walking along
beside him under the locusts. The moonlight lay
in silver patches among the black shadows and the
air was heavy with the breath of roses. They
stopped at the old measuring tree, and Rob dropped
the light tone in which he had been jesting, and his
face grew tense in his deep earnestness.</p>
<p>"It's no use trying any longer, Lloyd," he said<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</SPAN></span>
abruptly. "I can't give you up. The golden wedding
to-day was too much for me." He took a
step nearer. "Dear, isn't there <i>anything</i> I could do
to make myself worthier in your sight? In the old
days knights could go out and <i>prove</i> their valour
and fealty. Couldn't you give me some such
chance? Set me a task? I'd go to the world's end
to do it!"</p>
<p>Lloyd did not answer for a moment. Leaning
against the trunk of the gnarled locust, she stood
idly tracing the outline of the four-leaf clover that
he had cut beside the date the last time they measured
there. Then she said in a low tone:</p>
<p>"Yes, you can bring me the diamond leaf that
we've talked about so often. By that token you'd
prove that you were not only a true knight, but
that all these yeahs you've been my prince in disguise."</p>
<p>He smiled ruefully, thinking she had purposely
set him a hopeless task. They had read the legend
together, and he knew full well that Abdallah found
the diamond leaf of happiness only in Paradise, but
he took out his watch and opened the back of the
case, saying hopefully, "My lucky charm has never
failed me yet, how long will you give me to find
it?"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>She held out her hand for the little talisman, the
four-leaf clover she had given him so many years
ago, but as he picked it up, the dry leaves crumbled
to dust at his touch, and only one fell unbroken
into her outstretched palm.</p>
<p>"My good omen has failed me when I needed it
most!" he said bitterly, but Lloyd answered shyly,
"No, don't you see? This is the <i>fo'th</i> leaf. You
have brought me what I asked for."</p>
<p>For an instant he stood there, an incredulous
joy dawning in his face, then grasping the little
hand that closed over the clover, he asked wonderingly,
"And my unworthy shoulders really fit your
royal mantle <i>now</i>, dear? You are sure?"</p>
<p>She looked up at him then, not a doubt in her
trusting face as she slowly made answer, "Yes,
Rob, 'as the falcon's feathahs fit the falcon!'"</p>
<p>And then the old locusts, looking down on the
ending of a story that they had watched from its
beginning, stopped their swaying for a space, with
a soft "Sh!" each to each as one lays finger on lip
in holy places.</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</SPAN></span></p>
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