<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II."></SPAN>CHAPTER II.</h2>
<h3>GINGER AND THE BOYS.</h3>
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<p>In less time than one would think possible, a big fire was
roaring in the cabin fireplace, water was steaming in the rusty
kettle on the crane, and a pile of hay and old carpet lay in one
corner, ready to be made into a bed. Keith had made several trips
to the kitchen, and came back each time with his hands full.</p>
<p>Old Daphne, the cook, never could find it in her heart to refuse
"Marse Sydney's" boys anything. They were too much like what their
father had been at their age to resist their playful coaxing. She
had nursed him when he was a baby, and had been his loyal champion
all through his boyhood. Now her black face wrinkled into smiles
whenever she heard his name spoken. In her eyes, nobody was quite
so near perfection as he, except, perhaps, the fair woman whom he
had married.</p>
<p>"Kain't nobody in ten States hole a can'le to my Marse Sidney
an' his Miss Elise," old Daphne used to say, proudly. "They
sut'n'ly is the handsomest couple evah jined togethah, an' the
free-handedest. In all they travels by sea or by land they nevah
fo'gits ole Daphne. I've got things from every country undah the
shinin' sun what they done brung me."</p>
<p>Now, all the services she had once been proud to render them
were willingly given to their little sons. When Keith came in with
a pitiful tale of a tramp who was starving at their very gates, she
gave him even more than he asked for, and almost more than he could
carry.</p>
<p>The bear and its masters were so hungry, and their two little
hosts so interested in watching them eat, that they forgot all
about going back to meet the train. They did not even hear it
whistle when it came puffing into the Valley.</p>
<p>As Miss Allison stepped from the car to the station platform,
she looked around in vain for the boys who had promised to meet
her. Her arms were so full of bundles, as suburban passengers'
usually are, that she could not hold up her long broadcloth skirt,
or even turn her handsome fur collar higher over her ears. With a
shade of annoyance on her pretty face, she swept across the
platform and into the waiting-room, out of the cold.</p>
<p>Behind her came a little girl about ten years old, as unlike her
as possible, although it was Virginia Dudley's ambition to be
exactly like her Aunt Allison. She wanted to be tall, and slender,
and grown up; Miss Allison was that, and yet she had kept all her
lively girlish ways, and a love of fun that made her charming to
everybody, young and old. Virginia longed for wavy brown hair and
white hands, and especially for a graceful, easy manner. Her hair
was short and black, and her complexion like a gypsy's. She had
hard, brown little fists, sharp gray eyes that seemed to see
everything at once, and a tongue that was always getting her into
trouble. As for the ease of manner, that might come in time, but
her stately old grandmother often sighed in secret over Virginia's
awkwardness.</p>
<p>She stumbled now as she followed the young lady into the
waiting-room. Her big, plume-covered hat tipped over one ear, but
she, too, had so many bundles, that she could not spare a hand to
straighten it.</p>
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<p>"Well, Virginia, what do you suppose has become of the boys?"
asked her aunt. "They promised to meet us and carry our
packages."</p>
<p>"I heard them in here about half an hour ago, Miss Allison,"
said the station-master, who had come in with a lantern. "I s'pose
they got tired of waiting. Better leave your things here, hadn't
you? I'll watch them. It is mighty slippery walking this
evening."</p>
<p>"Oh, thank you, Mr. Mason," she answered, beginning to pile
boxes and packages upon a bench, I'll send Pete down for them
immediately. Now, Virginia, turn up your coat collar and hold your
muff over your nose, or Jack Frost will make an icicle out of you
before you are half-way home.</p>
<p>They had been in the house some time before the boys remembered
their promise to meet them at the station. When they saw how late
it was, they started home on the run.</p>
<p>"I am fairly aching to tell Ginger about that bear," panted
Keith, as they reached the side door. "I am so sorry that we
promised the man not to say anything about them being on the place,
before he sees us again to-morrow. I wonder why he asked us
that."</p>
<p>"I don't know," answered Malcolm. "He seemed to have some very
good reason, and he talked about it so that it didn't seem right
not to promise a little thing like that."</p>
<p>"I wish we hadn't, though," said Keith, again.</p>
<p>"But it's done now," persisted Malcolm. "We're bound not to
tell, and you can't get out of it, for he made us give him our word
'on the honour of a gentleman;' and that settles it, you know."</p>
<p>They were two very dirty boys who clattered up the back stairs,
and raced to their room to dress for dinner. Their clothes were
covered with hayseed and straw, and their hands and faces were
black with soot from the old cabin chimney. They had both helped to
build the fire.</p>
<p>The lamps had just been lighted in the upper hall, and Virginia
came running out from her room when she heard the boys' voices.</p>
<p>"Why didn't you meet us at the train?" she began, but stopped as
she saw their dirty faces. "Where on earth have you chimney-sweeps
been?" she cried.</p>
<p>"Oh, about and about," answered Malcolm, teasingly. "Don't you
wish you knew?"</p>
<p>Virginia shrugged her shoulders, as if she had not the slightest
interest in the matter, and held out two packages.</p>
<p>"Here are the valentines you sent for. You just ought to see the
pile that Aunt Allison bought. We've the best secret about
to-morrow that ever was."</p>
<p>"So have we," began Keith, but Malcolm clapped a sooty hand over
his mouth and pulled him toward the door of their room. "Come on,"
he said. "We've barely time to dress for dinner. Don't you know
enough to keep still, you little magpie?" he exclaimed, as the door
banged behind them. "The only way to keep a secret is not to act
like you have one!"</p>
<p>Virginia walked slowly back to her room and paused in the
doorway, wondering what she could do to amuse herself until
dinner-time. It was a queer room for a girl, decorated with flags
and Indian trophies and everything that could remind her of the
military life she loved, at the far-away army post. There were
photographs framed in brass buttons on her dressing-table, and
pictures of uniformed officers all over the walls. A canteen and an
army cap with a bullet-hole through the crown, hung over her desk,
and a battered bugle, that had sounded many a triumphant charge,
swung from the corner of her mirror.</p>
<p>Each souvenir had a history, and had been given her at parting
by some special friend. Every one at the fort had made a pet of
Captain Dudley's daughter,--the harum-scarum little Ginger,--who
would rather dash across the prairies on her pony, like a wild
Comanche Indian, than play with the finest doll ever imported from
Paris.</p>
<p>There was a suit in her wardrobe, short skirt, jacket, leggins,
and moccasins, all made and beaded by the squaws. It was the gift
of the colonel's wife. Mrs. Dudley had hesitated some time before
putting it in one of the trunks that was to go back to
Kentucky.</p>
<p>"You look so much like an Indian now," she said to Virginia.
"Your face is so sunburned that I am afraid your grandmother will
be scandalised. I don't know what she would say if she knew that I
ever allowed you to run so wild. If I had known that you were going
back to civilisation I certainly should not have kept your hair cut
short, and you should have worn sunbonnets all summer."</p>
<p>To Mrs. Dudley's great surprise, her little daughter threw
herself into her arms, sobbing, "Oh, mamma! I don't want to go back
to Kentucky! Take me to Cuba with you! Please do, or else let me
stay here at the post. Everybody will take care of me here! I'll
just <i>die</i> if you leave me in Kentucky!"</p>
<p>"Why, darling," she said, soothingly, as she wiped her tears
away and rocked her back and forth in her arms, "I thought you have
always wanted to see mamma's old home, and the places you have
heard so much about. There are all the old toys in the nursery that
we had when we were children, and the grape-vine swing in the
orchard, and the mill-stream where we fished, and the beech-woods
where we had such delightful picnics. I thought it would be so nice
for you to do all the same things that made me so happy when I was
a child, and go to school in the same old Girls' College and know
all the dear old neighbours that I knew. Wouldn't my little girl
like that?"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, some, I s'pose," sobbed Virginia, "but I didn't know
I'd have to be so--so--everlastingly--civilised!" she wailed. "I
don't want to always have to dress just so, and have to walk in a
path and be called Virginia all the time. That sounds so stiff and
proper. I'd rather stay where people don't mind if I am sunburned
and tanned, and won't be scandalised at everything I do. It's so
much nicer to be just plain Ginger!"</p>
<p>It had been five months, now, since Virginia left Fort Dennis.
At first she had locked hen self in her room nearly every day, and,
with her face buried in her Indian suit, cried to go back. She
missed the gay military life of the army post, as a sailor would
miss the sea, or an Alpine shepherd the free air of his snow-capped
mountain heights.</p>
<p>It was not that she did not enjoy being at her grandmother's.
She liked the great gray house whose square corner tower and
over-hanging vines made it look like an old castle. She liked the
comfort and elegance of the big, stately rooms, and she had her
grandmother's own pride in the old family portraits and the
beautiful carved furniture. The negro servants seemed so queer and
funny to her that she found them a great source of amusement, and
her Aunt Allison planned so many pleasant occupations outside of
school-hours that she scarcely had time to get lonesome. But she
had a shut-in feeling, like a wild bird in a cage, and sometimes
the longing for liberty which her mother had allowed her made her
fret against the thousand little proprieties she had to observe.
Sometimes when she went tipping over the polished floors of the
long drawing room, and caught sight of herself in one of the big
mirrors, she felt that she was not herself at all, but somebody in
a story. The Virginia in the looking-glass seemed so very, very
civilised. More than once, after one of these meetings with herself
in the mirror, she dashed up-stairs, locked her door, and dressed
herself in her Indian suit. Then in her noiseless moccasins she
danced the wildest of war-dances, whispering shrilly between her
teeth, "Now I'm Ginger! Now I'm Ginger! And I <i>won't</i> be
dressed up, and I <i>won't</i> learn my lessons, and I <i>won't</i>
be a little lady, and I'll run away and go back to Fort Dennis the
very first chance I get!"</p>
<p>Usually she was ashamed of these outbursts afterwards, for it
always happened that after each one she found her Aunt Allison had
planned something especially pleasant for her entertainment. Miss
Allison felt sorry for the lonely child, who had never been
separated from her father and mother before, so she devoted her
time to her as much as possible, telling her stories and entering
into her plays and pleasures as if they had both been the same
age.</p>
<p>Since the boys had come, Virginia had not had a single homesick
moment. While she was at school in the primary department of the
Girls' College, Malcolm and Keith were reciting their lessons to
the old minister who lived across the road from Mrs. MacIntyre's.
They were all free about the same hour, and even on the coldest
days played out-of-doors from lunch-time until dark.</p>
<p>To-night Virginia had so many experiences to tell them of her
day in town that the boys seemed unusually long in dressing. She
was so impatient for them to hear her news that she could not
settle down to anything, but walked restlessly around the room,
wishing they would hurry.</p>
<p>"Oh, I haven't sorted my valentines!" she exclaimed, presently,
picking up a fancy box which she had tossed on the bed when she
first came in. "I'll take them down to the library."</p>
<p>There was no one in the room when she peeped in. It looked so
bright and cosy with the great wood fire blazing on the hearth and
the rose-coloured light falling from its softly shaded lamps, that
she forgot the coldness of the night outside. Sitting down on a
pile of cushions at one end of the hearth-rug, she began sorting
her purchases, trying to decide to whom each one should be
sent.</p>
<p>"The prettiest valentine of all must go to poor papa," she said
to herself, "'cause he's been so sick away down there in Cuba; and
this one that's got the little girl on it in a blue dress shall be
for my dear, sweet mamma, 'cause it will make her think of me."</p>
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<p>For a moment, a mist seemed to blur the gay blue dress of the
little valentine girl as Virginia looked at her, thinking of her
far-away mother. She drew her hand hastily across her eyes and went
on:</p>
<p>"This one is for Sergeant Jackson out at Fort Dennis, and the
biggest one, with the doves, for Colonel Philips and his wife. Dear
me! I wish I could send one to every officer and soldier out there.
They were all <i>so</i> good to me!"</p>
<p>The pile of lace-paper cupids and hearts and arrows and roses
slipped from her lap, down to the rug, as she clasped her hands
around her knees and looked into the fire. She wished that she
could be back again at the fort, long enough to live one of those
beautiful old days from reveille to taps. How she loved the
bugle-calls and the wild thrill the band gave her, when it struck
up a burst of martial music, and the troops went dashing by! How
she missed the drills and the dress parades; her rides across the
open prairie on her pony, beside her father; how she missed the
games she used to play with the other children at the fort on the
long summer evenings!</p>
<p>Something more than a mist was gathering in her eyes now. Two
big tears were almost ready to fall when the door opened and Mrs.
MacIntyre came in. In Virginia's eyes she was the most beautiful
grandmother any one ever had. She was not so tall as her daughter
Allison, and in that respect fell short of the little girl's ideal,
but her hair, white as snow, curled around her face in the same
soft, pretty fashion, and by every refined feature she showed her
kinship to the aristocratic old faces which looked down from the
family portraits in the hall.</p>
<p>"I couldn't be as stately and dignified as she is if I practised
a thousand years," thought Virginia, scrambling up from the pile of
cushions to roll a chair nearer the fire. As she did so, her heel
caught in the rug, and she fell back in an awkward little heap.</p>
<p>"The more haste, the less grace, my dear," said her grandmother,
kindly, thanking her for the proffered chair. Virginia blushed,
wondering why she always appeared so awkward in her grandmother's
presence. She envied the boys because they never seemed embarrassed
or ill at ease before her.</p>
<p>While she was picking up her valentines the boys came in. If two
of the cavalier ancestors had stepped down from their portrait
frames just then, they could not have come into the room in a more
charming manner than Malcolm and Keith. Their faces were shining,
their linen spotless, and they came up to kiss their grandmother's
cheek with an old-time courtliness that delighted her.</p>
<p>"I am sure that there are no more perfect gentlemen in all
Kentucky than my two little lads," she said, fondly, with an
approving pat of Keith's hand as she held him a moment.</p>
<p>Virginia, who had seen them half an hour before, tousled and
dirty, and had been arrayed against them in more than one hot
quarrel where they had been anything but chivalrous, let slip a
faintly whistled "<i>cuckoo!</i>"</p>
<p>The boys darted a quick glance in her direction, but she was
bending over the valentines with a very serious face, which never
changed its expression till her Aunt Allison came in and the boys
began their apologies for not meeting her at the train. Their only
excuse was that they had forgotten all about it.</p>
<p>Virginia spelled on her fingers: "I dare you to tell what made
your faces so black!" Keith's only answer was to thrust his tongue
out at her behind his grandmother's back. Then he ran to hold the
door open for the ladies to pass out to dinner, with all the grace
of a young Chesterfield.</p>
<p>When dinner was over and they were back in the library, Miss
Allison opened a box of tiny heart-shaped envelopes, and began
addressing them. As she took up her pen she said, merrily:
"<i>Now</i> you may tell our secret, Virginia."</p>
<p>"I was going to make you guess for about an hour," said
Virginia, "but it is so nice I can't wait that long to tell you. We
are going to have a valentine party to-morrow night. Aunt Allison
planned it all a week ago, and bought the things for it while we
were in town to-day. Everything on the table is to be cut in heart
shape,--the bread and butter and sandwiches and cheese; and the
ice-cream will be moulded in hearts, and the two big frosted cakes
are hearts, one pink and one white, with candy arrows sticking in
them. Then there will be peppermint candy hearts with mottoes
printed on them, and lace-paper napkins with verses on them, so
that the table itself will look like a lovely big valentine. The
games are lovely, too. One is parlour archery, with a red heart in
the middle of the target, and two prizes, one for the boys and one
for the girls."</p>
<p>"Who are invited?" asked Malcolm, as Virginia stopped for
breath.</p>
<p>"Oh, the Carrington boys, and the Edmunds, and Sally Fairfax,
and Julia Ferris,--I can't remember them all. There will be
twenty-four, counting us. There is the list on the table."</p>
<p>Keith reached for it, and began slowly spelling out the names.
"Who is this?" he asked, reading the name that headed the list.
"'The Little Colonel!' I never heard of him,"</p>
<p>"Oh, he's a girl!" laughed Virginia. Little Lloyd
Sherman,--don't you know? She lives up at 'The Locusts,' that
lovely place with the long avenue of trees leading up to the house.
You've surely seen her with her grandfather, old Colonel Lloyd,
riding by on the horse that he calls Maggie Boy."</p>
<p>"Has he only one arm?" asked Malcolm.</p>
<p>"Yes, the other was shot off in the war years ago. Well, when
Lloyd was younger, she had a temper so much like his, and wore such
a dear little Napoleon hat, that everybody took to calling her the
Little Colonel."</p>
<p>"How old is she now?" asked Malcolm.</p>
<p>"About Keith's age, isn't she, Aunt Allison?" asked
Virginia.</p>
<p>"Yes," was the answer. "She is nearly eight, I believe. She has
outgrown most of her naughtiness now."</p>
<p>"I love to hear her talk," said Virginia. "She leaves out all of
her r's in such a soft, sweet way."</p>
<p>"All Southerners do that," said Malcolm, pompously, "and I think
it sounds lots better than the way Yankees talk."</p>
<p>"You boys don't talk like the Little Colonel," retorted
Virginia, who had often been teased by them for not being a
Southerner. "You're all mixed up every which way. Some things you
say like darkeys, and some things like English people, and it
doesn't sound a bit like the Little Colonel."</p>
<p>"Oh, well, that's because we've travelled abroad so much, don't
you know," drawled Malcolm, "and we've been in so many different
countries, and had an English tutor, and all that sort of a thing.
We couldn't help picking up a bit of an accent, don't you know."
His superior tone made Virginia long to slap him.</p>
<p>"Yes, I know, Mr. Brag," she said, in such a low voice that her
grandmother could not hear. "I know perfectly well. If I didn't it
wouldn't be because you haven't told me every chance you got. Who
did you say is your tailor in London, and how many times was it the
Queen invited you out to Windsor? I think it's a ninety-nine dollar
cravat you always buy, isn't it? And you wouldn't be so common as
to wear a pair of gloves that hadn't been made to order specially
for you. Yes, I've heard all about it!"</p>
<p>Miss Allison heard, but said nothing. She knew the boys were a
little inclined to boast, and she thought Virginia's sharp tongue
might have a good effect. But the retort had grown somewhat sharper
than was pleasant, and, fearing a quarrel might follow if she did
not interrupt the whispers beside her, she said:</p>
<p>"Boys, did you ever hear about the time that the Little Colonel
threw mud on her grandfather's coat? There's no end to her pranks.
Get grandmother to tell you."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, please, grandmother," begged Keith, with an arm around
her neck. "Tell about Fritz and the parrot, too," said Virginia.
"Here, Malcolm, there's room on this side for you."</p>
<p>Aunt Allison smiled. The storm had blown over, and they were all
friends again.</p>
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<p class="ctr"><ANTIMG src="images/0045-1.jpg" width-obs="60%" alt=""><br/>
<b>"'DAPHNE, WHAT'S DEM CHILLUN ALLUZ RACIN' DOWN TO DE
SPRING-HOUSE FO'?'"</b></p>
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