<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>A SURPRISE</div>
<p><span class="smcap">In</span> order to understand the excitement that prevailed
at the Wigwam when it was announced that
the Little Colonel was on her way toward it, one
would first have to understand what an important
part she had played in the Ware household. To
begin with, the place where she lived had always
seemed a sort of enchanted land to the children.
"The Old Kentucky Home" was their earliest
cradle-song, and their favourite nursery-tales were
about the people and places of Lloydsboro Valley,
where their mother's happy girlhood had been
passed.</p>
<p>They might grow tired of Red Riding Hood and
Cinderella. Aladdin and even Ali Baba and the
forty thieves might lose their charm, but no story
failed to interest them that began "Once upon a
time in Lloydsboro Valley." These reminiscences
had passed from Joyce to Jack, and on down the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117"></SPAN></span>
line, with the high chair and the Cock Robin book
and the red building-blocks, belonging to each in
turn, but claimed by all. Mary's tears, Holland's
tempers, and Norman's tantrums had many a time
disappeared as if by magic, at those familiar words.</p>
<p>After Joyce's return from the house-party at
Locust, the Little Colonel became the central figure
of interest, and all the glamour with which their
childish imaginations had surrounded the place, now
gathered around her like a nimbus around a saint.
To Mary, who had read the "Princess Winsome"
until she knew it all by heart, Lloyd was something
between an ideal princess, who played on a golden
harp, and an ideal little schoolgirl, who lived in a
real palace, and did exactly as she pleased. She
could talk of nothing else, after the letter came,
and followed Joyce and her mother with innumerable
questions, pausing often before the pictures of
Lloyd and Tarbaby.</p>
<p>The boys' interest in her coming was increased
when they found that she was going to bring a
rifle, and that her father had promised to hire a
horse for her as soon as they arrived.</p>
<p>Phil, who came so often to the Wigwam now
that he seemed almost one of the family, caught so
much of its enthusiasm over the coming guest, that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118"></SPAN></span>
he planned picnics and excursions for every day
of her visit. He even had a voice in what he called
the Council of War, in which it was decided to let
the two older boys move their cots out-of-doors.
Holland had been clamouring to sleep outside the
tent ever since George Lee told him that he had
begun to do so, and that was what made the cowboys
so strong.</p>
<p>So the gaily decorated tent, with its "figures
mystical and awful," was made ready for Lloyd,
and Norman took Joyce's place in his mother's tent.</p>
<p>"She'll know that she's really out West when
she once sets her eyes on those gods of the Dacotahs,"
Holland said to Mary on their way to school
one morning. "As long as we call this the Wigwam,
I think we ought to be dressed up in war-paint
and feathers when she gets here. I'll do it,
Mary, if you will. I'll dare you to. I'll double
dare you!"</p>
<p>Usually a double dare never failed to have the
desired effect upon Mary. She would attempt anything
he suggested. But it was too serious a matter
to risk the first impression that such an appearance
would make upon Lloyd, so she trudged on with
a resolute shake of her little blond braids and big
blue bows.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"No, sir-ree, Holland Ware. I'm going to stay
home from school that day, and wear my very best
white dress and my rosebud sash. It's just as good
as new if it is two years old, and the little spots on
it where I squirted orange-juice don't show at all
when it's tied. And Joyce said that she is going
to put your hands to soak overnight, to see if she
can't get them clean for once, for if there's anything
the Little Colonel abominates, it's dirty hands
and finger-nails. And you've got to wear a necktie
every day, and go into Phœnix and have your hair
cut. So there!"</p>
<p>"Oh, I have, have I?" repeated Holland, mimicking
her tone. "If Joyce has all those plans in her
head, she can just get them out again. I'm not going
to be a dude for any old girl in the country,
I don't care if it is Lloyd Sherman. And if she
is so dreadful particular as all that, I'll do something
to shock her every day, till she gets used to
it. Yes, I believe I'll come to the table the very
first meal in a blanket, with feathers in my hair,
and if you dare tell anybody beforehand, I'll—I'll—well,
I'll get even with you in a way you won't
like."</p>
<p>"Oh, Holland, please don't! <i>Please</i> don't disgrace
us," begged Mary, who always took his threats<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></SPAN></span>
in earnest. "It would be too dreadful. I'll give
you something nice if you'll promise not to."</p>
<p>"What will you give me?"</p>
<p>"What have I got that you want?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't know. I'll have to think about it."</p>
<p>Holland had no intention of carrying out his
threats, but he kept Mary in a fever of anxiety all
week, saying one hour that he'd think about her
offer, and the next that she didn't have anything
he cared for, and that he preferred the fun of tormenting
the girls to anything she could give.</p>
<p>Joyce drew a star on the kitchen calendar, over
the date on which they expected Lloyd to arrive;
a big five-pointed red star. She rejoiced that it
fell on a Wednesday, for by that time the washing
and ironing would be out of the way. Her first
experience in laundry-work made her look ahead
to the coming Mondays as weekly bugbears. But
the second was not so hard as the first. True to
his promise, Jack did all the rubbing and wringing,
getting up at daybreak to start the fire under
the big wash-boiler out in the yard.</p>
<p>This morning, as he touched a match to the little
pile of kindling, and fanned the blaze with his hat,
the new pony, grazing in the alfalfa field, came up<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121"></SPAN></span>
to the pasture-bars with a whinny, and put his head
over the fence, as if to watch him.</p>
<p>"Oh, you think you'll boss this job, do you, Mr.
Washington?" said Jack, who, in the short time
he had had the pony, had grown as fond of him
as if he were a person, and who talked to him as
if he had human intelligence. "Well, you ought
to take an interest in the washing, since that's the
way you got your name, and the reason you are
here. Wait till I get this boiler filled, and I'll bring
you a lump of sugar."</p>
<p>Washington was a wiry little pony. He had a
wicked light in his eyes, and was too free with his
heels at times, but he had been raised as a household
pet, and stood like a kitten while Jack rubbed
his nose and fed him sugar.</p>
<p>"Take it easy while you can," said Jack. "If
I have to work like a dog all morning on your
account, to earn half the dollars that you cost us,
I'll put you through your paces this afternoon to
make up for it. You'll think that you are the Wild
Mazeppa by the time we get back. Oh, you're such
a nice old fellow!"</p>
<p>Nobody was near to see the impulsive way in
which the boy threw his arms around the pony's
neck and hugged him tight. The feeling of possession<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122"></SPAN></span>
made him happy as a king, as he sat on the
topmost bar braiding Washington's shaggy forelock,
while the sun came up over the Camelback,
and the morning chorus of bird-calls swelled louder
and sweeter over the awakening world.</p>
<p>The fire under the boiler was crackling merrily,
and the water was steaming, when Joyce came out
of her tent and started toward the kitchen. She
stopped a moment by the pasture-bars to reach
through and give the pony a friendly stroke, for
she was almost as proud and fond of him as Jack.
She had had several delightful rides on him; once
with Jack for company, on Phil's new horse, and
twice with Phil, when they had raced for miles
down the sandy road, past olive orchards and
orange groves, sweet with the coming of spring.</p>
<p>"I'm going to clip his mane to-morrow," said
Jack, as he slipped down from his seat, and followed
Joyce toward the kitchen. "He must look his best
when Lloyd comes."</p>
<p>"We've done everything to that tune for a week,"
laughed Joyce. "'When Lloyd comes' has grown
to be a sort of refrain, running through all our
conversation. You notice now, at breakfast, and
see how often it will be used."</p>
<p>Holland was the first to repeat the well-worn<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123"></SPAN></span>
phrase, as he took his seat at the table, and waited
hungrily for his plate to be served.</p>
<p>"When Lloyd comes you'll have some of those
good little corn muffins for breakfast, won't you,
Joyce? Kentucky people aren't used to cold bread."</p>
<p>Joyce smiled at Jack as the words they were waiting
for were repeated, and then almost mechanically
used them herself in her answer. "We'll have them
once in awhile, I suppose, but we can't afford a very
great change in our bill of fare. We'll have a
mighty skimpy dinner to-day, for there's not much
left over from Sunday, and we'll be too busy washing
to stop to cook. But I want to have a big baking
before Lloyd comes. If I go in to meet her
Wednesday, in the ranch surrey, I'll have to do
the extra cooking to-morrow afternoon, I suppose,
after the ironing is out of the way."</p>
<p>Mary cast an inquiring glance at the red star on
the calendar.</p>
<p>"Only to-day and to-morrow, then I can stay
home the day after that when Lloyd comes, and
wear my best white dress and my rosebud sash."</p>
<p>"Oh, that will be joyful," chanted Holland, imitating
her tone.</p>
<p>"I wish that I were able to help you more with
the work," said Mrs. Ware, wistfully. "Then you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124"></SPAN></span>
would have more time for preparation. Norman
and I can manage the tent work, I think, this morning.
Then I'll go down to the seat under the willows,
and finish that Indian head sofa pillow. We
must have that done before Lloyd comes."</p>
<p>"Seems to me that I can hardly wait," said Mary,
giving an impatient little wiggle that nearly upset
her glass of milk.</p>
<p>"I wish Betty were coming, too," said Joyce.
"She would be making up stories from morning
till night about the strange things out here; but she
wouldn't have much peace. You children would
never let her out of your sight."</p>
<p>"Like Davy did at the cuckoo's nest," said Mary,
who knew Betty's history almost as well as her own,
and loved dearly to talk about it. Betty's devotion
to her godmother since she had gone to live at
Locust, and her wonderful gift for writing verses
and stories made her almost as interesting to Mary
as the Little Colonel herself. As she moved about
the house after breakfast, doing the little duties
that fell to her lot before school-time, she chanted
in a happy undertone all the play of the "Rescue of
the Princess Winsome," from beginning to end.</p>
<p>Sir Feal, the faithful knight, had been associated
in her mind with Phil, since the day he rescued<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125"></SPAN></span>
her from her fright when she was running away
from the Indian. She was the princess, and Phil
the gallant knight, who, she dreamed in her romantic
little heart, might some day send her messages
by the morning-glories and forget-me-nots,
as Sir Feal had done. Of course, not now, but some
day when she was grown, and wore long, lovely
dresses, and had a beautiful voice. She had pictured
herself many a time, standing by a casement
window with a dove clasped to her breast, and singing
the song, "Flutter, and fly, flutter, and fly, bear
him my heart of gold."</p>
<p>But now that the real princess was coming, she
lost interest in her own little day-dreams, which
were of such a far-away time and so vague and
shadowy, and began dreaming them for Lloyd.
She wondered what Phil would think of her when
they first met. She had already recited the entire
play to him, and showed him the miniature, and,
as he studied the sweet face at the casement, bending
over the dove, he had hummed after Mary in
an absent-minded sort of way:</p>
<div class='poem'>
"Spin, spin, oh, golden thread,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">He dreams of me night and day.</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">The poppy's chalice is sweet and red,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Oh, Love will find a way."</span><br/></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>She was still humming it this morning when she
came out of the back door, ready to start to school,
and her thoughts were full of the play.</p>
<p>"Joyce," she remarked, critically, pausing to
watch her sister put more wood on the camp-fire
and poke the clothes in the boiler with the end of an
old broom-handle, "you look like the witch in the
play:</p>
<div class='poem'>
<span style="margin-left: 8em;">"'On the fire</span><br/>
I'll pile my faggots higher and higher,<br/>
And in the bubbling water stir<br/>
This hank of hair, this patch of fur.<br/>
Bubble and boil, and snake-skin coil!<br/>
This charm shall all plans but the Ogre's foil.'"<br/></div>
<p>Joyce laughed, and Mary, slipping through the
bars, followed Holland across lots to school. "I
do feel like a witch in this old dress and sunbonnet,"
she said, "and I must look like one. But no one
ever comes here in the mornings but Phil, and he
has had his orders to stay away on Mondays."</p>
<p>"What is the use of worrying about how you
look?" asked Jack. "Nobody expects a fellow
to play Chinese laundryman with a high collar and
kid gloves on."</p>
<p>Sousing the tubful of clothes into the rinse-water,
Joyce went on vigorously with her morning's work.
She and Jack relapsed into busy silence as the morning<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127"></SPAN></span>
wore on, and when the clock struck eleven,
neither had spoken for nearly an hour.</p>
<p>Suddenly a sound of wheels, coming rapidly along
the road, and a child's high-pitched voice made them
both stop and look up to listen. "Aren't we getting
back-woodsy!" Joyce exclaimed, as Jack shook
the suds from his arms, and ran to the corner of
the kitchen to watch a buggy drive past. "So few
people come out this desert road, that it is really
an event to see any one. I suppose we ought not
to be blamed for staring."</p>
<p>"It is Hazel Lee," said Jack. "I'm sure that's
her voice. There must be some new boarders at
the ranch, for there's a strange gentleman and a
girl in the buggy with her, and she's standing up
in front pointing out the country to them."</p>
<p>Joyce came and looked over his shoulder. "Yes,
that's Hazel," she said. "She's the knowingest
little thing I ever saw for a child of five. You
couldn't lose her anywhere around this region, and
she is as good as a guide-book, for giving information.
Mr. Ellestad was laughing the other day
about her disputing with the White Bachelor over
the market price of chickens. She was in the right,
too, and proved it. She hears everything, and never
forgets anything she hears."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_145.jpg" width-obs="362" height-obs="500" alt="Embracing friends" />
<span class="caption">"'I THOUGHT WE'D NEVAH, NEVAH GET HEAH!'"</span></div>
<p>"She's saying something now to amuse those
people mightily," said Jack, as a hearty laugh rang
out above the rattle of wheels. Joyce transferred
her gaze from the chubby, bareheaded child, leaning
over the dashboard with eager gestures, to the
two strangers behind her. Then she grasped Jack's
elbow with a little cry of astonishment. "It's
Lloyd!" she gasped. "Lloyd Sherman and her
father, two days ahead of time. What shall we do?
Everything is in a mess, and nothing in the house
for dinner!"</p>
<p>That instant Hazel's bright eyes spied them, her
plump little finger pointed them out, and Joyce had
no more time to consider appearances; for, springing
over the wheel, Lloyd came running toward her,
calling in the soft Southern accent that was the
sweetest music to Joyce's ears, "Oh, you deah,
darling old thing! What made you move away out
to the edge of nowhere? I thought we'd nevah,
nevah get heah!"</p>
<p>In the delight of seeing her again, Joyce forgot
all about things being topsyturvy, and how little
there was in the house for dinner. She even forgot
to introduce Jack, who stood awkwardly waiting
in the background, till Mr. Sherman, amused<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129"></SPAN></span>
at the girls' absorption in each other, stepped out
of the buggy and came forward, laughing.</p>
<p>"It looks as if the two Jacks will have to introduce
themselves," he said, holding out his hand.
Jack's awkwardness vanished instantly at this hearty
greeting, and a moment later he was shaking hands
with Lloyd as easily as Joyce was welcoming Lloyd's
father, wholly indifferent to his outgrown overalls
and rolled-up shirt-sleeves.</p>
<p>In the meantime, Hazel, who was a major-general
in her small way for comprehending situations, had,
of her own accord, raced off to find Mrs. Ware and
bring her to welcome the unexpected guests.</p>
<p>"And you are Aunt Emily!" exclaimed Lloyd,
turning with outstretched hands as the sweet-faced
little woman came toward them. "Mothah said you
wouldn't mind if I called you that, because you and
she have always been such deah friends."</p>
<p>There were tears in Mrs. Ware's eyes as she
returned the impulsive kiss. She had expected to
be fond of Elizabeth's only daughter. She had
hoped to find her pretty and sweet, but she had
not looked for this winsomeness, which had been
the Little Colonel's greatest charm since babyhood.
With that greeting, Lloyd walked straight into her
heart.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>The surprise ended more satisfactorily than most
surprises do, for, while Jack was unhitching the
horse, and Mrs. Ware was talking over old times
with Mr. Sherman, whom she had known in her
school-days, some one went whizzing around the
house on a bicycle.</p>
<p>"It's Jo, the Japanese chef from the ranch," said
Joyce, springing up from the front door-step where
she sat with Lloyd, and starting back to the kitchen
to ask his errand.</p>
<p>"Oh, let me go, too," cried Lloyd, following.
"I nevah saw a Jap close enough to speak to."</p>
<p>Lloyd could not understand the pigeon-English
with which he delivered a basket he had brought,
but it was evidently a funny proceeding to Jo. He
handed it over as if it had been a joke, doubling
up like a jack-knife as he pointed to the contents,
and laughing so contagiously that Joyce and Lloyd
could not help laughing, too.</p>
<p>"He not velly nice pie, maybe," giggled Jo.
"But you eat him allee same. Mis' Lee say you
not lookee for comp'nee. You not have nuzzing
cook."</p>
<p>"Did Mrs. Lee tell you to bring the basket, Jo?"
asked Joyce.</p>
<p>He shook his head. "Mis' Lee say take soup,"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131"></SPAN></span>
pointing to the large glass jar of clearest consomm�,
smoking hot, which Joyce had just lifted from the
basket. "I, <i>me</i>, bling along the pie, for my compli<i>ment</i>.
She no care. She kind, Clistian lady."</p>
<p>"She certainly is," laughed Joyce. "Now we
can at least begin and end our dinner in style.
That's a <i>lovely</i> pie, Jo; the prettiest I ever saw."</p>
<p>The little almond eyes twinkled, as he watched
her hold up the dainty pastry with its snowy meringue
for Lloyd to admire.</p>
<p>"Aw, he not velly good pie," protested Jo, with
a self-conscious smirk, knowing in his soul that it
was the perfection of pastry, and eager to hear
Joyce say so again. "I make-a heap much betta
nex-a time."</p>
<p>Then, with another laugh, he whizzed away on
his wheel, pausing under the pepper-trees to catch
up Hazel, and take her home on his handle-bars.</p>
<p>"Joyce," asked Lloyd, as she watched him disappear
down the road, "did you uncawk a bottle,
or rub Aladdin's lamp? I feel as if I had walked
into the Arabian nights, to have a foreign-looking,
almond-eyed chef suddenly appear out of the desert
with consomm� and pie, like a genie out of a
bottle."</p>
<p>"It doesn't happen every day," laughed Joyce.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132"></SPAN></span>
"I suppose that after you stopped at the ranch to
inquire the way here, and picked up Hazel for a
guide, that it occurred to Mrs. Lee that we were
not looking for you until Wednesday, and that, as
this is our wash-day, maybe we wouldn't have a
very elaborate dinner prepared, and she thought
she would help us out in a neighbourly way. Jo
enjoyed coming. When we were at the ranch, he
was always making delicious little extra dishes for
mamma."</p>
<p>"Oh, I hope our coming soonah than you expected
hasn't made a difference!" exclaimed Lloyd.
"I nevah thought about yoah doing yoah own
work. Mr. Robeson decided not to stop in New
Mexico as long as he had planned, and, when I
found that would put us heah two days soonah, I
wouldn't let Papa Jack telegraph. I'm so sorry."</p>
<p>"Don't say another word about it," interrupted
Joyce. "The only difference it makes is to you
and your father. You've not been received in quite
such good style as if we'd been dressed in our best
bibs and tuckers, but maybe you'll feel more at
home, dropping right down in the middle of things
this way."</p>
<p>Lloyd felt as if she certainly had dropped down
in the middle of things, into a most intimate knowledge<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133"></SPAN></span>
of the Ware family's affairs. For, as Joyce
circled around, setting the table, she saw that a
pitcher of milk, bread and butter, and some cold
boiled potatoes, sliced ready to fry, was all that
the pantry held for dinner. If Joyce had spoken
one word of apology, Lloyd would have felt exceedingly
uncomfortable, but she only laughed as
she put the consomm� on the stove to keep hot, and
set out the pie-plates on the sideboard.</p>
<p>"Lucky for you," she said, "that the genie came
out of his bottle. We were spending all our energy
in rushing through the laundry work, so that we
could make grand preparations for to-morrow, but
we couldn't have equalled Jo, no matter how hard
we tried."</p>
<p>While Joyce, talking as fast as she worked, fried
the potatoes and sliced the bread, Jack wrung out
the last basketful of clothes and hung them on the
line, and then disappeared in his mother's tent to
make himself presentable for dinner. Lloyd had
already had a peep into the tent that she was to
share with Joyce, and had called her father to come
and have a laugh with her over the green-eyed gods
of the Dacotahs which were to guard her slumbers
during her visit to the Wigwam. He was to leave<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134"></SPAN></span>
that same night, and go on to the mines with Mr.
Robeson and his party.</p>
<p>Her trunk was brought out from town soon after
dinner, and, while she partly unpacked it, putting
the things she would need oftenest into the bureau
drawers that Joyce had emptied for her, Jack and
Mr. Sherman drove away to look at the horses one
of the neighbours kept to hire to tourists. They
came back later with a shaggy Indian pony, which
Lloyd at once mounted for a trial ride.</p>
<p>Joyce went with her on Washington as far as the
White Bachelor's. Lloyd was not accustomed to
a cross saddle, or to guiding a horse by the pressure
of the bridle-reins against its neck, so they rode
slowly at first. When they were almost opposite
the camp at Lee's ranch, Joyce saw a familiar
little figure trudging along the road, and wished
with sisterly solicitude that they could avert a meeting.
It was Mary on her way home from school,
dusty and dishevelled, as usual at such times, one
hair-ribbon lost, and the braid it had bound hanging
loose and limp over her ear. Joyce was not
near enough to see, but she felt sure that her shoe-laces
were dangling, that there was ink on her hands
and maybe her face, and that at least one button,
if not more, had burst loose from the back of her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135"></SPAN></span>
dress. She knew that the child would be overwhelmed
with mortification if she should come face
to face with the Princess Winsome in such a condition,
when she had set her heart upon appearing
before her in her white dress and rosebud sash.</p>
<p>Before Joyce could think of an excuse to turn
back, Mary had settled the matter for herself.
Hazel had stopped her at the gate to tell her of
the unexpected arrival, so she was not wholly unprepared
for this sudden meeting. Darting up the
high bank of the irrigating ditch like a little gray
lizard, she slid down on the other side into its dry
bed and crouched there till they passed. There had
been no water running for several days, but it would
have made no difference to Mary. She would have
plunged in just the same, even if it had been neck
deep. She simply could not let the adored Little
Colonel see her in such a plight.</p>
<p>Joyce almost laughed aloud at the frantic haste
in which she scuttled out of sight, but seeing that
Lloyd had been too absorbed in guiding her pony
to notice it, she said nothing, and delayed their return
until she was sure that Mary was safe in her
tent. So it was that when Lloyd went back to the
Wigwam one member of the Ware family was
arrayed in all her glory according to the original<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136"></SPAN></span>
programme. Mary stood out under the pepper-trees,
washed, combed, and clad, painfully conscious
of her festive garments, which had had so few
occasions to be donned on the desert, and in a
quiver of eagerness. It was not only Lloyd Sherman
who was coming toward her up the road. It
was the Little Colonel, the Queen of Hearts, the
Princess Winsome, the heroine of a hundred
familiar tales, and the beautiful Dream-Maiden
around whom she had woven all she knew or
imagined of romance.</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137"></SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />