<h2>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>PHIL HAS A FINGER IN THE PIE</div>
<p><span class="smcap">Phil</span> went up to the Wigwam early next morning.
Breakfast was just over, and Joyce had begun painting
again. He paused an instant at the front door
to watch her brown head bending over the table,
and the quick motion of her deft fingers. She was
so absorbed in her task that she did not look up,
so after a moment he went on around the house to
the kitchen.</p>
<p>Mrs. Ware was lifting the dish-pan from its nail
to its place on the table, and Lloyd was standing
beside her, enveloped in a huge apron, holding a
towel in her hands, ready to help. Norman, beside
a chair on which a clean napkin had been spread,
was filling the salt-cellars. Jack, having carried
water to the tents, was busy chopping wood.</p>
<p>"Good mawning!" called Lloyd, waving her
towel as Phil appeared in the door. Mrs. Ware
turned with such a cordial smile of welcome, that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213"></SPAN></span>
he took it as an invitation to come in, and hung his
hat on the post of a chair.</p>
<p>"I want to have a finger in this pie," he announced.
"I was told to stay at home yesterday,
but I don't intend to be snubbed to-day.</p>
<p>"Wait, Aunt Emily, that kettle is too heavy for
you!"</p>
<p>He had called her Aunt Emily since the first time
he had heard Lloyd do it. "You don't care, do
you?" he had asked. "It makes a fellow feel so
forlorn and familyless when he has to mister and
madam everybody." She was sewing a button on
his coat for him at the time he asked her, and she
gave such a pleased assent that he stooped to leave
a light kiss on the smooth forehead where gray
hair was beginning to mingle with the brown.</p>
<p>Now he took the kettle from her before she could
object, and began pouring the boiling water into
the pan. "Let me do this," he insisted. "I haven't
had a hand in anything of the sort since I was a
little shaver. It makes me think of a time when the
servants were all away, and Stuart and I helped
Aunt Patricia. She paid us in peppermint sticks and
cinnamon drops."</p>
<p>"You'll get no candy here," she answered, laughing.
"You might as well go on if that's what you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_214" id="Page_214"></SPAN></span>
expect." But there was no resisting the coaxing
ways of this big handsome boy, who towered above
her, and who took possession in such a masterful
way of her apron and dish-mop. His coat and cuffs
were off the next instant, and he began clattering
the china and silverware vigorously through the
hot soap-suds.</p>
<p>Mrs. Ware, taking a big yellow bowl in her lap,
sat down to pick over some dried beans, and to
enjoy the lively conversation which kept pace with
the rattle of the dishes. It was interrupted presently
by a complaint from Lloyd.</p>
<p>"Aunt Emily, he doesn't wash 'em clean! He's
left egg all ovah this spoon. That's the second time
I've had to throw it back into the watah."</p>
<p>"Aunt Emily, it isn't so," mocked Phil, in a high
falsetto voice, imitating her accent. "It's bettah
than she could do huhself. She's no great shakes
of a housekeepah."</p>
<p>"I'll show you," retorted Lloyd, throwing the
spoon back into the pan with a splash. "I'm going
to make a pie foh dinnah to-day, and you won't
get any."</p>
<p>"Then probably I'll be the only one who escapes
alive to tell the tale. Aunt Emily, please invite me<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_215" id="Page_215"></SPAN></span>
to dinner," he begged, "and mayn't I stay out here,
and watch her make it?"</p>
<p>"Of co'se I can't help it if she chooses to ask you
to dinnah," said Lloyd, loftily, when he had received
his invitation, "but I most certainly won't
have you standing around in my way, criticizing me
when I begin to cook. You can fill the wood-box
and brush up the crumbs and hang these towels out
on the line, if you want to, then you may go in and
watch Joyce paint."</p>
<p>"Oh, thank you!" answered Phil. "<i>Such</i> condescension!
<i>Such</i> privileges! Your Royal Highness,
I humbly make my bow!"</p>
<p>He bent low in a burlesque obeisance that a star
actor might have envied, and, throwing up a saucer
and catching it deftly, began to sing:</p>
<div class='poem'>
"The Queen of Hearts she made some tarts,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Upon a summer day.</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">But none could look—that selfish cook</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Drove every one away."</span><br/></div>
<p>It was all the most idle nonsense, and yet, as they
worked together in a playful half-quarrel, Lloyd
liked him better than she had at any time before.
He reminded her of Rob Moore. He was big like
Rob, tall and broad-shouldered, but much handsomer.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_216" id="Page_216"></SPAN></span>
Rob had teased her since babyhood, and,
when Phil began his banter in the same blunt, big-brother
fashion, it made her feel as if she had known
him always. And yet he was more like Malcolm
than Rob, in some respects, she thought later. The
courteous way he sprang to pick up her handkerchief,
the quick turn he gave to some little remark,
which made it a graceful compliment, his gentlemanly
consideration for Mrs. Ware—all that was
like Malcolm.</p>
<p>Phil would not be driven out of the kitchen until
he had exacted a promise from Mrs. Ware that he
might come the next day, and make the dessert for
the morrow's dinner, vowing that, if it were not
heels over head better than Lloyd's, he would treat
everybody at the Wigwam and on the ranch to a
picnic at Hole-in-the-rock.</p>
<p>"Prop the door open, please," called Joyce, as he
went into the sitting-room from the kitchen. "I
need some of that heat in here. It's chilly this
morning when one sits still."</p>
<p>So Lloyd, moving back and forth at her pastry-making,
could see their heads bending over the
table, and hear snatches of an animated discussion
about a design he proposed for her to put on one
of the programmes.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_217" id="Page_217"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Put a line from 'Call me thine own' on this
one," he said, "and have a couple of turtle-doves
perched up on the clef, cooing at each other, and
make little hearts for the notes."</p>
<p>"How brilliant!" cried Joyce. "Phil, you're a
genius. Do think up some more, for I'm nearly at
my wits' end, trying to get thirty different designs."</p>
<p>"Don't make them all so fine," he suggested.
"Some of those people will get it into their heads
that matrimony is all roses." He lifted his voice
a little, so that Lloyd could not fail to hear. She
was standing before the moulding-board now, her
sleeves tucked up, and a look of intense seriousness
on her face as she sifted flour, as if pie-making were
the most important business in the universe.</p>
<p>"Make the Queen of Hearts with a rolling-pin
in her hand and a scowl on her face, as she will
look after the ceremony, when she takes it into
her head to make some tarts. Put a bar of 'Come,
ye disconsolate,' with a row of tiny pies for the
notes, and the old king doubled up at the end of it,
with the knave running for a doctor."</p>
<p>"You horrid thing!" called Lloyd, wrathfully,
from the kitchen. "You sha'n't have a bite of these
pies now."</p>
<p>"Nothing personal, I assure you," called Phil,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_218" id="Page_218"></SPAN></span>
laughing. "I'm only helping the artist." But
Joyce said, in a low tone, "It <i>is</i> a little personal,
because she used to be called the Queen of Hearts
so much. Did you ever see her picture taken in
that character, when she was dressed in that costume
for a Valentine party? It was years ago.
Miss Marks made some coloured photographs of
her. You'll find one in that portfolio somewhere,
if you'll take the trouble to look through it. She's
had so many different nicknames," continued Joyce.
Norman was hammering on something in the kitchen
now, so there was no need for her to lower her
voice.</p>
<p>"She is 'The Little Colonel' to half the Valley,
and I suppose always will be to her grandfather's
friends. Then when she started to school, about
the time that picture was taken, she was such a
popular little thing that one of her teachers began
calling her Queen of Hearts. Both boys and girls
used to fuss for the right to stand beside her in recitations,
and march next her at calisthenics, and
she was sure to be called first when they chose sides
for their games at recess.</p>
<p>"Then, after she was in that play with her dog
Hero, that Mary told you about, the girls at boarding-school
began calling her the Princess Winsome,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_219" id="Page_219"></SPAN></span>
and then just Princess. Malcolm McIntyre, who
took the part of the knight who rescued her, never
calls her anything but that now. There she is, as
she looked in the play when she sang the dove song."</p>
<p>Joyce pointed with her brush-handle to another
photograph in the pile. It was the same picture that
Mary had showed him, the beautiful little medallion
of the Princess Winsome, holding the dove to her
breast as she sang, "Flutter and fly." The same
picture which had swayed on the pendulum in
Roney's lonely cabin, repeating, with every tick of
the clock, "For love—will find—a way!"</p>
<p>Phil put it beside the other photograph, and
studied them both intently as Joyce went on.</p>
<p>"Then the other day, when her father was here,
I noticed that he had a new name for her. He
called her that several times, and when he went
away, he said it in a tone that seemed to mean so
much, 'Good-bye, my little <i>Hildegarde</i>!'"</p>
<p>Phil looked from the pictures on the table to the
original, standing in the kitchen wielding a rolling-pin
under Mrs. Ware's direction. The morning
sun, streaming through the window, was making a
halo of her hair. Somehow he found this last view
the most pleasing. He said nothing, however, only
thrummed idly on the table, and hummed an old<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_220" id="Page_220"></SPAN></span>
song that had been running through his head all
morning.</p>
<p>"What's that you're humming?" asked Joyce,
when she had worked on in silence several minutes.</p>
<p>Phil came to himself with a start. "I'm sure I
don't know," he laughed. "I wasn't conscious that
I was making even an attempt to sing."</p>
<p>"It went this way," said Joyce, whistling the refrain,
softly. "It's so sweet."</p>
<p>"Oh, that," said Phil, recognizing the air.
"That's a song that Elsie's old English nurse used
to sing her to sleep with.</p>
<div class='poem'>
"'Maid Elsie roams by lane and lea,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Her heart beats low and sad.'</span><br/></div>
<div class='unindent'>She liked it because it had her name in it, and I
liked it because of the jingle of the chorus. It
always seemed full of bells to me." He hummed
it lightly:</div>
<div class='poem'>
"'Kling, lang ling,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">She seems to hear her bride-bells ring,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Her bonny bride-bells ring.'</span><br/></div>
<div class='unindent'>It must have been these bridal musicale programmes
that brought it up to me, for I haven't thought of
it in years."</div>
<p>"And that suggests something to me," answered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_221" id="Page_221"></SPAN></span>
Joyce. "I haven't used any wedding-bells on these
programmes. Now, let me see. How can I put
them on?" She sat studying one of the empty
cards intently.</p>
<p>"Here! This way!" cried Phil. "I can't draw
it as it ought to be, but I can see in my mind's eye
what you want. Put a Cupid up in each top corner,
with a bunch of five narrow ribbons, strung across
from one to the other in narrow, wavy lines, and
hang the little bells on them for notes. Then the
ends of the ribbons can trail down the sides of the
programmes sort of fluttery and graceful. Pshaw!
I can't make it look like anything, but I can see
exactly how it ought to look."</p>
<p>He scribbled his pencil across the lines he had attempted
to draw, and started to tear the paper in
disgust, when she caught it from him.</p>
<p>"I know just what you mean," she cried. "And
Phil Tremont, you <i>are</i> a genius. This will be the
best design in the whole lot." She was outlining
it quickly as she spoke. "You ought to be a designer.
You'd make your fortune at it, for originality
is what counts. Why don't you study it?"</p>
<p>"I did have it in mind for a week or so," answered
Phil, "but I wanted most of all to be an
architect, or something of the sort. Father wanted<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_222" id="Page_222"></SPAN></span>
me to study medicine, and grandfather thought I'd
do better at civil engineering. But I couldn't settle
down to anything. I suppose the truth of the matter
was I was thinking too much about the good times
I was having, and didn't want to buckle down to
anything that meant hard digging. So last year
father said I wasn't getting any kind of discipline,
and that I had to go to a military school for it.
That there I would at least learn punctuality and
order, and that military training would fit me to
be a good citizen just as much as to be a good
soldier."</p>
<p>"What does he think about it now?" answered
Joyce. "I beg your pardon," she added, hastily.
"I had no right to ask such a personal question."</p>
<p>"That's all right," answered Phil. "I don't care
a rap if you do talk about it. It's worried me a
good deal thinking how cut up the old pater will
feel when he finds out about it. He thought he'd
left me in such good hands, shut up where I couldn't
get out into any trouble, and I hated to write that
they'd fired me almost as soon as his back was
turned. If I could have talked to him, and explained
both sides of it, how unfair the Major was, and
all that, and how we were just out for a lark, with
the best intentions in the world, I could have soon<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_223" id="Page_223"></SPAN></span>
convinced him that I meant all right, and he wouldn't
have minded so much. But I never was any good
at letter-writing, so I kept putting it off the first
two weeks I was here. I wrote last week, but it
takes a month to send a letter and get an answer,
so it'll be some time yet before I hear from him. In
the meantime, I'm taking life easy, and worrying as
little as possible."</p>
<p>Joyce made no reply when he paused, only bent
her head a little lower over her work; but Phil,
unusually sensitive to mental influences, felt her
disapprobation as keenly as if she had spoken. The
silence began to grow uncomfortable, and finally
he asked, lightly, toying with a paper-knife while
he spoke, "Well, what do you think of the situation?"</p>
<p>"Do you want to know honestly?" asked Joyce,
her head bending still lower over her work.</p>
<p>"Yes, honestly."</p>
<p>Her face grew red, but looking up her clear gray
eyes met his unflinchingly. "Well, I think you're
the very brightest boy that I ever knew, anywhere,
and that it would be a very easy thing for you to
make your mark in the world in any way you
pleased, if you would only make up your mind to
do it. But it's lazy of you to loaf around all winter<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_224" id="Page_224"></SPAN></span>
doing nothing, not even studying by yourself, and
it's selfish to disappoint your father when he is so
ambitious for you, and it's—yes, it's <i>wicked</i> for
you to waste opportunities that some boys would
almost give their eyes for. There!"</p>
<p>"Whew!" whistled Phil, getting up to pace the
floor, with his hands in his pockets. "That's the
worst roast I <i>ever</i> got."</p>
<p>"Well, you asked for it," said Joyce. "You
said for me to tell you honestly what I thought."</p>
<p>"What would you have me to do?" asked Phil,
impatiently, anxious to justify himself. "A fellow
with any spirit couldn't get down and beg to be taken
back to school, when he knew all the time that he
was only partly in the wrong, and that it was unjust
and arbitrary of the officers to require what they
did."</p>
<p>"That isn't the only school in the country," said
Joyce, quietly, "and for a fellow six feet tall, and
seventeen years old, a regular athlete in appearance,
to wait for somebody to lead him back to his books
does seem a little ridiculous, doesn't it?"</p>
<p>"Confound it!" he began, angrily, then stopped,
for Joyce was smiling up into his face with a friendliness
he could not resist, and there was more than
censure in her eyes. There was sincere admiration<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225"></SPAN></span>
for the handsome boy whom she found so entertaining
and companionable.</p>
<p>"Now don't get uppity," she laughed. "I'm
only saying to you what Elsie would say if she were
here."</p>
<p>Phil shrugged his shoulders. "Not much!" he
exclaimed. "You don't know Elsie. She thinks
her big brother is perfection. She has always stood
up for me in the face of everything. Daddy never
failed to let me off easy when she patched up the
peace between us. <i>She</i> wouldn't rake me over the
coals the way you do."</p>
<p>Joyce liked the expression that crossed his face
as he spoke of Elsie, and the gentler tone in which
he said Daddy.</p>
<p>"All the more reason, then," she answered, "that
somebody else should do the raking. I hope I
haven't been officious. It's only what I would say
to Jack under the same circumstances. I'm so used
to preaching to the boys that I couldn't help sailing
in when you gave me leave. I won't do it any more,
though. See! Here is the design you suggested.
I've finished it."</p>
<p>Mollified by her tone and her evident eagerness
to leave the subject, he dropped into the chair beside
her again, and sat talking until Lloyd called them<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226"></SPAN></span>
both out to admire her pies. There were two of
them on the table, hot from the oven, so crisp and
delicately browned, that Lloyd danced around them,
clicking a couple of spoons in each hand like castanets,
and calling Mrs. Ware to witness that she
had made them entirely by herself.</p>
<p>"Don't they look delicious?" she cried. "Did
you evah see moah tempting looking pies in all yoah
life? I wish grandfathah could have a slice of that
beautiful custa'd with the meringue on top. He'd
think Mom Beck made it, and he'd nevah believe,
unless he saw it with his own eyes, that I could
make such darling cross-bahs as are on that cherry
taht."</p>
<p>"I wish you'd listen!" cried Phil. "Don't you
know that proverb about letting another man praise
thee, and not thine own mouth?"</p>
<p>"I'm not praising <i>me</i>," retorted Lloyd. "I'm
just praising my pies, and if they're good, and I
know they're good, why shouldn't I say so? They're
the first I evah made, and I think I have a right to
be proud of their turning out so well. Of co'se they
wouldn't have been this nice if Aunt Emily hadn't
showed me what to do."</p>
<p>"Let's sample them now," proposed Jack, who<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_227" id="Page_227"></SPAN></span>
had been called in from the wood-pile to pay his
respects to the pastry.</p>
<p>Lloyd threw herself between the table and Jack
with a little scream of remonstrance, as he advanced
threateningly with a knife.</p>
<p>"I believe Lloyd is prouder of making those old
pies than she was of shooting the duck. Confess,
now, aren't you?" he insisted.</p>
<p>"Yes, I am," she answered, emphatically.</p>
<p>"You had your picture taken with a duck," suggested
Phil. "Suppose you have one now with
the pies to add to your collection. Come on and
get your camera, and I'll take a companion piece
to the hunting-picture. We'll call this the 'Queen
of Tarts.' Stand out back of the tent, and hold
the custard pie in one hand, and the cherry tart in
the other."</p>
<p>With the dimples deepening in her cheeks as the
whole family gathered around to watch the performance,
Lloyd took her position out-of-doors,
with the white tent for a background. Holding her
hands stiffly out in front of her, she stood like a
statue, while Jack and Joyce each brought out a pie,
and balanced them in the middle of her little pink,
upturned palms.</p>
<p>"I want to take two shots," said Phil, waiting<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_228" id="Page_228"></SPAN></span>
for them to step out of range. "There are several
blank films left on this roll. Now," he ordered,
when the shutter clicked after the first exposure,
"hold still, we'll try another. Suppose you put
the plates up on the tips of your fingers, the way
hotel waiters do. They carry things that way with
such an easy offhand grace. I always admired it."</p>
<p>"I should say it was offhand!" cried Jack.
For Lloyd, obeying orders, clutched frantically after
the cherry tart, with a shriek of dismay. It had
refused to stay poised on her finger-tips.</p>
<p>"Topside down, of co'se," she wailed, as the
broken plate fell in one place, and the pastry in
another. "And the juice is running all ovah me,
and the darling little cross-bahs are all in the sand!"</p>
<p>Phil hastily clicked the shutter again. He was
sure that the second snap had caught the tart in
the act of falling, and with the third film he wanted
to preserve the expression of surprise and dismay
that clouded Lloyd's face. It was one of the most
ludicrous expressions he had ever seen.</p>
<p>"Pride goeth before destruction," he quoted,
laughingly.</p>
<p>"I wish you'd hush up with yoah old proverbs,
Phil Tremont," cried Lloyd, half-laughing and half-angry.
"It's all yoah fault, anyway. You knew<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_229" id="Page_229"></SPAN></span>
I'd spill that taht if I held it that way, and I just
believe you did it on purpose. You knew when
you first saw those pies it would be useless for you
to try to make any dessert to-morrow that would
half-way come up to them, and you deliberately
planned to get them out of the way, so you wouldn't
have to stand the test. You were afraid you'd have
to give the picnic you promised."</p>
<p>"Sputter away, if it will ease your mind any,"
laughed Phil. "It was worth the picnic to see your
frantic grab after that tart. But honestly, Lloyd,"
he said, growing serious as he saw she really cared,
"I'm as sorry as I can be that it happened, and I'll
do anything you say to make atonement. I'll withdraw
from the contest, award you the laurels, and
give the picnic, anyhow."</p>
<p>"There's nothing the matter with the custard
pie," piped up Norman, "'cept'n you can see where
Joyce's fingers jabbed into the meringue when she
caught it from Lloyd. I think it would be safer
to eat it now before anything else happens."</p>
<p>"No, we'll set mamma to guard it till the rest
of the dinner is ready," said Joyce, leading the way
back to the kitchen. "If everybody will fly around
and help, we'll have it a little earlier to-day."</p>
<p>It was one of the jolliest meals that Phil had had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_230" id="Page_230"></SPAN></span>
in the Wigwam. "Let's all go to Phœnix this
afternoon," proposed Phil, when they had gone
back to the sitting-room. "We can take the films
in to the photographer, and have them developed.
Joyce, you may ride my horse, and I'll get one from
Mrs. Lee."</p>
<p>"Oh, thank you!" cried Joyce, looking wistfully
through the window. "The outdoors never
did look so tempting, it seems to me, and those
programmes are getting so monotonous I can hardly
make myself go back to them. I wish I could go.
But I can't shirk even for a few hours, or they might
miss getting there in time."</p>
<p>"Couldn't anything tempt you to go?" urged
Phil.</p>
<p>She shook her head resolutely. "'Not all the
king's horses and all the king's men' could draw
me away from these programmes till they are finished."</p>
<p>"No wonder she preached me such a sermon on
loafing, this morning," thought Phil, as he rode
away beside Jack, with the roll of films in his pocket.
"Anybody with that much energy and perseverance
doesn't need to go to the School of the Bees. It
makes her all the harder on the drones. And I
know that's what she thinks I am."</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_231" id="Page_231"></SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />