<h2> <SPAN name="linkCHAPTER_X." id="linkCHAPTER_X."></SPAN>CHAPTER X. </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<p>A good many forebodings crowded into the Colonel's mind as he walked
hurriedly on. He wondered how he would be received. What if Jack Sherman
had died after all? What if Elizabeth should refuse to see him? A dozen
times before he reached the gate he pictured to himself the probable scene
of their meeting.</p>
<p>He was out of breath and decidedly disturbed in mind when he walked up the
path. As he paused on the porch steps, Lloyd came running around the house
carrying her parrot on a broom. Her hair was blowing around her rosy face
under the Napoleon hat she wore, and she was singing.</p>
<p>The last two hours had made a vast change in her feelings. Her father had
only fainted from exhaustion.</p>
<p>When she came running back from Locust, she was afraid to go in the house,
lest what she dreaded most had happened while she was gone. She opened the
door timidly and peeped in. Her father's eyes were open. Then she heard
him speak. She ran into the room, and, burying her head in her mother's
lap, sobbed out the story of her visit to Locust.</p>
<p>To her great surprise her father began to laugh, and laughed so heartily
as she repeated her saucy speech to her grandfather, that it took the
worst sting out of her disappointment.</p>
<p>All the time the Colonel had been fighting his pride among the memories of
the dim old drawing-room, Lloyd had been playing with Fritz and Polly.</p>
<p>Now as she came suddenly face to face with her grandfather, she dropped
the disgusted bird in the snow, and stood staring at him with startled
eyes. If he had fallen out of the sky she could not have been more
astonished.</p>
<p>"Where is your mother, child?" he asked, trying to speak calmly. With a
backward look, as if she could not believe the evidence of her own sight,
she led the way into the hall.</p>
<p>"Mothah! Mothah!" she called, pushing open the parlour door. "Come heah,
quick!"</p>
<p>The Colonel, taking the hat from his white head, and dropping it on the
floor, took an expectant step forward. There was a slight rustle, and
Elizabeth stood in the doorway. For just a moment they looked into each
other's faces. Then the Colonel held out his arm.</p>
<p>"Little daughter," he said, in a tremulous voice. The love of a lifetime
seemed to tremble in those two words.</p>
<p>In an instant her arms were around his neck, and he was "kissing away the
sorry feelin's" as tenderly as the lost Amanthis could have done.</p>
<p>As soon as Lloyd began to realize what was happening, her face grew
radiant. She danced around in such excitement that Fritz barked wildly.</p>
<p>"Come an' see Papa Jack, too," she cried, leading him into the next room.</p>
<p>Whatever deep-rooted prejudices Jack Sherman may have had, they were
unselfishly put aside after one look into his wife's happy face.</p>
<p>He raised himself on his elbow as the dignified old soldier crossed the
room. The white hair, the empty sleeve, the remembrance of all the old man
had lost, and the thought that after all he was Elizabeth's father, sent a
very tender feeling through the younger man's heart.</p>
<p>"Will you take my hand, sir?" he asked, sitting up and offering it in his
straightforward way.</p>
<p>"Of co'se he will!" exclaimed Lloyd, who still clung to her grandfather's
arm. "Of co'se he will!"</p>
<p>"I have been too near death to harbour ill will any longer," said the
younger man, as their hands met in a strong, forgiving clasp.</p>
<p>The old Colonel smiled grimly.</p>
<p>"I had thought that even death itself could not make me give in," he said,
"but I've had to make a complete surrender to the Little Colonel." That
Christmas there was such a celebration at Locust that May Lilly and Henry
Clay nearly went wild in the general excitement of the preparation. Walker
hung up cedar and holly and mistletoe till the big house looked like a
bower. Maria bustled about, airing rooms and bringing out stores of linen
and silver.</p>
<p>The Colonel himself filled the great punch-bowl that his grandfather had
brought from Virginia.</p>
<p>"I'm glad we're goin' to stay heah to-night," said Lloyd, as she hung up
her stocking Christmas Eve. "It will be so much easiah fo' Santa Claus to
get down these big chimneys."</p>
<p>In the morning when she found four tiny stockings hanging beside her own,
overflowing with candy for Fritz, her happiness was complete.</p>
<p>That night there was a tree in the drawing-room that reached to the
frescoed ceiling. When May Lilly came in to admire it and get her share
from its loaded branches, Lloyd came skipping up to her. "Oh, I'm goin' to
live heah all wintah," she cried. "Mom Beck's goin' to stay heah with me,
too, while mothah an' Papa Jack go down South where the alligatahs live.
Then when they get well an' come back, Papa Jack is goin' to build a house
on the othah side of the lawn. I'm to live in both places at once; mothah
said so."</p>
<p>There were music and light, laughing voices and happy hearts in the old
home that night. It seemed as if the old place had awakened from a long
dream and found itself young again.</p>
<p>The plan the Little Colonel unfolded to May Lilly was carried out in every
detail. It seemed a long winter to the child, but it was a happy one.
There were not so many displays of temper now that she was growing older,
but the letters that went southward every week were full of her odd
speeches and mischievous pranks. The old Colonel found it hard to refuse
her anything. If it had not been for Mom Beck's decided ways, the child
would have been sadly spoiled.</p>
<p>At last the spring came again. The pewees sang in the cedars. The
dandelions sprinkled the roadsides like stars. The locust-trees tossed up
the white spray of their fragrant blossoms with every wave of their green
boughs.</p>
<p>"They'll soon be heah! They'll soon be heah!" chanted the Little Colonel
every day.</p>
<p>The morning they came she had been down the avenue a dozen times to look
for them before the carriage had even started to meet them. "Walkah," she
called, "cut me a big locus' bough. I want to wave it fo' a flag!"</p>
<p>Just as he dropped a branch down at her feet, she caught the sound of
wheels. "Hurry, gran'fathah," she called; "they's comin'." But the old
Colonel had already started on toward the gate to meet them. The carriage
stopped, and in a moment more Papa Jack was tossing Lloyd up in his arms,
while the old Colonel was helping Elizabeth to alight.</p>
<p>"Isn't this a happy mawnin'?" exclaimed the Little Colonel, as she leaned
from her seat on her father's shoulder to kiss his sunburned cheek.</p>
<p>"A very happy morning," echoed her grandfather, as he walked on toward the
house with Elizabeth's hand clasped close in his own.</p>
<p>Long after they had passed up the steps the old locusts kept echoing the
Little Colonel's words. Years ago they had showered their fragrant
blossoms in this same path to make a sweet white way for Amanthis's little
feet to tread when the Colonel brought home his bride.</p>
<p>They had dropped their tribute on the coffin-lid when Tom was carried home
under their drooping branches. The soldier-boy had loved them so, that a
little cluster had been laid on the breast of the gray coat he wore.</p>
<p>Night and day they had guarded this old home like silent sentinels that
loved it well.</p>
<p>Now, as they looked down on the united family, a thrill passed through
them to their remotest bloom-tipped branches.</p>
<p>It sounded only like a faint rustling of leaves, but it was the locusts
whispering together. "The children have come home at last," they kept
repeating. "What a happy morning! Oh, what a happy morning!"</p>
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