<h2>CHAPTER X.</h2>
<h3>THE DUNGEON OF DISAPPOINTMENT</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was nearly noon when Lloyd wakened next
morning. Her head ached, and she wondered dully
how anybody could feel lively enough to sing as
Aunt Cindy was doing, somewhere back in the
servants' quarters. The sound of a squeaking
wheelbarrow had wakened her. Alec was trundling
it around the house, with the parrot perched on it.
The parrot loved to ride, and its silly laugh at every
jolt of the squeaking barrow usually amused Lloyd,
but to-day its harsh chatter annoyed her.</p>
<p>"Oh, deah!" she groaned, sitting up in bed and
yawning. "I feel as if I could sleep for a week.
I wouldn't get up at all if it wasn't for Katie Mallard's
pah'ty. I hate this day-aftah-Christmas feeling,
as if the bottom had dropped out of everything."</p>
<p>She dressed slowly and went down-stairs.
"Where's mothah, Mom Beck?" she asked, pausing<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</SPAN></span>
in the dining-room door. The old coloured
woman was arranging flowers for the lunch-table.</p>
<p>"She's done gone ovah to Rollington, honey,
with the old Cun'l. Walkah's mothah is sick, and
sent for 'em. I'm lookin' for 'em to come home
any minute now. Come right along in, honey.
I've kep' yoah breakfus' good and hot."</p>
<p>"I don't want anything to eat. I'm not hungry
now. I'd rathah wait till lunch. Where's Betty,
Mom Beck?"</p>
<p>"Now listen to that!" ejaculated the old woman,
sharply. "Don't you remembah? She went off
on the early train this mawning to that place you
all calls the Cuckoo's Nest. I packed her satchel
befoah daylight."</p>
<p>"I had forgotten she was going," exclaimed
Lloyd, turning to the window with a discontented
expression, which only the snowbirds on the lawn
could see. She had come down-stairs expecting to
talk over all the happenings of the previous day
with Betty, and to find her gone gave her a vague
sense of injury. She knew the feeling was unreasonable,
but she could not shake it off.</p>
<p>The flash of the new ring gave her a momentary
pleasure, but she was in a mood that nothing could
please her long. When she strolled into the drawing-room,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</SPAN></span>
everything was in spotless order, and
so quiet that the stillness was oppressive. Even
the fire burned with a steady, noiseless glow, without
the usual crackle, and the ashes fell on the
hearth with velvety softness.</p>
<p>Some of her new books lay on a side table. She
picked them up and glanced through them, catching
at a paragraph here and there. But one after
another she laid them down. She was not in a
mood for reading. Then she took a candied date
from the bonbon dish, but it seemed to lack its
usual flavour. After nibbling each end, she threw
it into the fire. Slipping her new opera-glass from
its case, she went to the window and turned the
lens on the distant entrance gate. The road in each
direction seemed deserted. So she put the glass
back in its case, and, after strolling restlessly around
the room, walked over to the harp and struck a
few chords.</p>
<p>"It's all out of tune!" she exclaimed, fretfully,
thrumming the faulty string with impatient fingers.
"Everything seems out of tune this mawning!"</p>
<p>As she spoke, the string broke with a sudden
harsh twang that made her jump. She was so
startled that the tears came to her eyes, and so nervous
that she flung herself face downward on the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</SPAN></span>
pillows of the long-Persian divan, and began sobbing
hysterically. The strain of the last few weeks
had been too much for her. Miss Gilmer's prophecy
had come true. The ice had given away under
the extra weight put upon it.</p>
<p>She was sobbing so hard that she did not hear
the sound of carriage wheels rolling softly up the
avenue through the snow, and when the front door
banged shut she started again, and began trembling
as she had done when the harp-string broke.
She was crying convulsively now, so hard that she
could not stop, although she clenched her fists and
bit her lips in a strong effort to regain self-control.</p>
<p>Mrs. Sherman, her face all aglow from the cold
drive, and looking almost girlishly fair in her big
hat with the plumes, and her dark furs, hurried in
to the fire. The Colonel, throwing back his scarlet
lined cape, pushed aside the portière for her to enter.
He was the first to catch sight of the shaking form
on the divan.</p>
<p>"Why, Lloyd, child, what's the matter?" he
demanded, anxiously. "What's the matter with
grandpa's little girl?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Sherman, with a frightened expression, hurried
to her, and, bending over her, tried to get a<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</SPAN></span>
glimpse of the tear-swollen face buried so persistently
in the cushions.</p>
<p>"Nothing's happened! No, I'm not sick," came
in smothered tones from the depths of the pillows.
"It's j-just crying itself, and I—I—I c-can't
stop-p-p!"</p>
<p>A long shiver passed over her, and Mrs. Sherman,
stroking her forehead with a soothing hand,
waited for her to grow quiet before plying her
with questions. But the old Colonel paced impatiently
back and forth.</p>
<p>"The child <i>must</i> be sick," he declared. "She'll
be coming down with a fever or something if we
don't take vigorous measures to prevent it. I shall
telephone for Dick Shelby this minute."</p>
<p>He started toward the hall, but a wild wail from
Lloyd stopped him.</p>
<p>"I won't have the doctah! I'm not sick, and
you sha'n't send for him! I j-just cried because
the harp-string b-broke so suddenly that it s-scared
me!"</p>
<p>The Colonel paused and looked at her in amazement.
Not since the time when she, a five-year-old
child, had flung a handful of mud over his white
clothes had she spoken to him in such a defiant tone.
He answered soothingly, as if she were still that<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</SPAN></span>
little child, to be coaxed into good behaviour. "Oh,
yes, you won't mind the doctor's coming if grandpa
wants him to. He'll keep you from getting down
sick, and spoiling all the rest of your vacation. I'll
just ask him to step up and look at you."</p>
<p>"No, don't!" demanded Lloyd, as he started
again toward the hall. "No, you sha'n't!" she insisted,
springing up and stamping her foot. "I
won't have the old doctah, and I won't take any
of his nasty old medicine! He'll make me stay
home from Katie's pah'ty this aftahnoon and from
the matinée to-morrow—and there's nothing the
mattah, only I'm cross and nervous, and the moah
you bothah me the hah'dah it is to stop crying!"</p>
<p>Then ashamed of her petulant outburst, she threw
her arms around his neck, and sobbed on his shoulder.
In the end she had her own way, for the glass
of hot milk which her mother sent for, as soon
as she found Lloyd had eaten no breakfast, soothed
her overstrung nerves. A brisk walk to the post-office
in the bracing December air gave her an appetite
for luncheon. Then she slept again until time
to dress for Katie's party, so that when the old
Colonel watched her start off, she looked so bright
and was in such buoyant spirits that he wondered
vaguely if her crying spell could have been the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</SPAN></span>
remnant of some childish tantrum instead of the
forerunner of an illness.</p>
<p>He banished the thought instantly from his loyal
old heart, ashamed of having applied such a word
as tantrum to anything Lloyd might choose to do.
Of course she had felt ill, he told himself. So
wretched that she hadn't known what she was saying
when she stormed at him so angrily. He resolved
to watch her closely, and take matters in his
own hands if she showed any more alarming symptoms.</p>
<p>There was a matinée next day in Louisville, to
which Mrs. Sherman took all the girls in the neighbourhood.
That was the end of the Christmas
gaieties for Lloyd. Doctor Shelby was at Locust
on her return. He came out of the old Colonel's
den, where he had been sitting for several hours,
deep in a game of chess, and found her shivering
in front of the fire with a nervous chill, sobbing
hysterically.</p>
<p>She stormed at him almost as she had done at
her grandfather, protesting that she was only tired
and nervous, and that she would be all right as soon
as she had had her cry out. But she submitted
meekly when he ordered her mother to put her to
bed. The old doctor had always indulged her, but<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</SPAN></span>
there was a sternness in his manner now that made
her obey him.</p>
<p>He called to see her the next day, and the next.
But his visits did not seem like professional ones.
There was nothing said about medicine or symptoms.
He only asked her about school and the good
times she had been having, and the extra studying
she had been doing. Then he sat and joked and
talked with her and her mother, as had been his
habit ever since Lloyd could remember. The third
afternoon she was down in the drawing-room when
he came.</p>
<p>"We'll soon be having Miss Holly-berry back
again," he said, playfully pinching her pale cheek.</p>
<p>"And without taking any nasty old medicine,"
she answered. "I don't mind doctahs when they
can cure people without giving them pills and powdahs."</p>
<p>The Colonel looked up sharply. "What's that?"
he asked. "Haven't you been giving her anything,
Dick? It seems to me the child would get along
faster if she had a good tonic."</p>
<p>"I am going to prescribe one this morning," the
doctor answered. "That's what I came up for."
He laughed at the look of disgust on Lloyd's
face.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"It isn't bad," he assured her, with an indulgent
smile. "Why, I know dozens of girls who would
say that the tonic I am going to prescribe is the
most agreeable that could be given. I've even had
them beg for it. This is it, simply to lengthen your
Christmas vacation. Didn't I hear a certain young
lady wishing the other night that she could stretch
hers out indefinitely?"</p>
<p>Lloyd's dimples deepened. "How much longah
will you make it? A week? If I stay out much
longah than that, it will be such hah'd work to
catch up with my classes that the game won't be
worth the candle."</p>
<p>"But I would make it so long that there would
be no necessity of having to catch up, as you call
it. You could simply make a fresh start in a new
class."</p>
<p>Lloyd looked up in alarm. "When?" she demanded.</p>
<p>"Um—well, next fall, let us say," he answered,
deliberately. "Yes, surely by that time you'll be
well and sound as a new dollar."</p>
<p>"Next fall!" she gasped, her face growing white
and her eyes strangely big and dark. "You don't
mean—you <i>couldn't</i> mean that I must leave
school."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Yes, that's exactly what I mean. You are overtaxing
yourself and must stop—"</p>
<p>"Oh, I can't!" interrupted Lloyd, speaking very
fast. "I <i>won't!</i> It's cruel to ask it when I've
worked so hard to keep from falling behind Betty
and the girls. Oh, you don't <i>know</i> what it means
to me!"</p>
<p>The old doctor looked up in amazement at this
unexpected outburst.</p>
<p>"No," he answered, slowly, after a moment's
silence. "I don't suppose I do. I had no idea it
would be a disappointment to you. I would gladly
save you from it if I could. But listen to me, my
little girl, and try to be reasonable. You are on the
verge of a nervous breakdown. Nothing can mean
as much to you as your health. What will keeping
up with the other girls amount to if the strain and
the overtaxing makes an invalid of you for life, perhaps?</p>
<p>"Mind you, I am not saying that the work itself
is too great a tax. Madam Chartley's is one of the
best regulated schools I have ever inquired into.
Ordinarily a girl ought to be able to take the course
with perfect ease. But you see that little spell of
la grippe left you weak and unfit for any extra
strain, and, instead of easing up a bit, you went<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</SPAN></span>
on piling on all that extra load of lessons and Christmas
preparations and vacation dissipations. It was
like trying to walk on a broken foot. The more
you tried, the worse it got. The mischief is done
now, and there is no remedy but to stop short off."</p>
<p>Lloyd sat very still for a moment, staring out
of the window in a dazed, unseeing way, as if not
fully understanding all he said. Then she turned
with a piteous appeal in her face to Mrs. Sherman.</p>
<p>"Mothah, it isn't so, is it? I won't have to give
up school now! You wouldn't make me, would
you, when you know how I love it? Oh, it will
neahly <i>kill</i> me if you do! Please say no, mothah!
<i>Please!</i>"</p>
<p>Mrs. Sherman's eyes were full of tears. "My
poor little girl," she exclaimed as Lloyd threw herself
into her arms. "I'm afraid we must do as
the doctor says. He would not ask such a sacrifice
if it were not necessary. You know how dearly
he has always loved you."</p>
<p>Without waiting to hear any more, Lloyd sprang
up and ran out of the room. Rushing up-stairs,
she bolted her door behind her, and threw herself
across the bed.</p>
<p>"It is the first great disappointment she has ever
had in her life," said her mother, looking after her<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</SPAN></span>
with a troubled face. "Couldn't you make the
sentence a little easier, doctor? Couldn't she go
back and take one study, just to be with the girls?"</p>
<p>He shook his head. "No, Elizabeth. She is too
ambitious and high-strung for that. One study
wouldn't satisfy her. She'd chafe at not being able
to keep up in everything. She has nothing serious
the matter with her now, but it would not take long
to make a wreck of her health at the gait she has
been going. There must be no more parties, no
more regular school work, and even no more music
lessons this winter. She must have the simplest
kind of a life. Keep her out-of-doors all you can.
A little prevention now will be worth pounds of
cure after awhile."</p>
<p>"I suppose you are right, Dick," said the old
Colonel, huskily, "but I swear I'd give the only
arm the Yankees left me to save her from this disappointment."</p>
<p>Lying across the bed up-stairs, Lloyd cried and
sobbed until she was exhausted. The handkerchief
clutched in her hand in a damp little ball had wiped
away the bitterest tears she had ever shed. In her
inmost heart she knew that the doctor was right.
It had been weeks since she had felt strong and well.
She remembered the way she had lagged behind<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</SPAN></span>
at the picnic, and what an effort it had been to talk
and make herself agreeable lately. Recalling the
last few weeks, it seemed to her that she had been
in tears half the time. She admitted to herself
that she would rather be dead than to be an invalid
for life like her great-aunt Jane. To sit always in
a darkened room that smelled of camphor, and to
talk in a weak, complaining voice that made everybody
tired. Of course if there was danger of her
growing to be like <i>her</i>, she would rather leave school
than run such a risk. But why, oh, <i>why</i> was she
forced to make such a choice? The other girls
didn't have to. She had done no more than they
to bring about such a state of affairs.</p>
<p>They could go back to dear old Warwick Hall,
but she would have to stay behind. And she would
always be behind, for, even if she went back with
them another year, it couldn't be the same. They
would have done so much in the meantime,—gone
on so far ahead, made new friends and found new
interests, and she would have to drop back in the
class below, and never, never stand on the same
footing with them again. It was so hard, so cruel,
that she should have to face a blighted life at only
fifteen.</p>
<p>She unlocked the door presently at her mother's<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</SPAN></span>
knock, but she didn't want to be comforted. Nothing
anybody could say could change things, she
sobbed, or make the disappointment any easier to
bear. So Mrs. Sherman wisely withdrew, and left
her to fight it out alone.</p>
<p>The next time she peeped into the room, Lloyd
was asleep, worn out with the violence of her grief,
so she tiptoed down-stairs, leaving the door ajar
behind her. The Colonel was pacing up and down
the library.</p>
<p>"I declare I can't think of anything but that
child's disappointment!" he exclaimed, as she came
in. "I can't read! I can't settle down to anything.
I have been trying to think of some pleasure we
could give her to make up for it in a way. A winter
in Florida, maybe. Poor baby! if I could only bear
it for her, how glad I would be to do it!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Sherman picked up a bit of needlework from
the table where she had left it, and, sitting down
by the window, began to hemstitch.</p>
<p>"I don't know, papa," she said, slowly, "but
I'm beginning to fear that we have done too much
of that for Lloyd; smoothed the difficulties out of
her way too much; made things too easy. We've
fairly held our arms around her to shield her not
only from harmful things, but from even trifling<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</SPAN></span>
unpleasantness. Maybe if she had had to face the
smaller disappointments that most children have
to bear, the greater ones would not seem so overwhelming.
She could have met this more bravely."</p>
<p>The Colonel sniffed impatiently. "All foolishness,
Elizabeth! All foolishness! That may be the
case with ordinary children, but not with such a
sweet, unspoiled nature as Lloyd's."</p>
<p>It was nearly dark when Lloyd wakened. She
heard Kitty's voice down in the hall, asking to see
her, and Gay's exclamation of surprise and regret
at something her mother said in a low voice. She
knew that she was telling them the doctor's decision.
Then Mom Beck tapped at the door to ask if she
would see the girls awhile, but she sent her away
with a mournful shake of the head. She was too
miserable even to speak.</p>
<p>The low murmur of voices went on for some
time. It grew loud enough for her to distinguish
the words when the girls came out into the hall
again to take their departure. Lloyd raised herself
on her elbow to listen. Kitty was telling something
that had happened that afternoon at the candy-pull
from which they were just returning. A wan smile
flitted across Lloyd's face, in sympathy with the
merry laugh that floated up the stairs. But it faded<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</SPAN></span>
the next instant as she whispered, bitterly: "That's
the way it will always be. They will go on having
good times without me, and they'll get so they'll
nevah even miss me. I'll be left out of everything.
There's nothing left to look forward to any moah.
Oh, it's all so dah'k and gloomy—I know now how
Ederyn felt, for I'm just like he was, walled up in
a dreadful Dungeon of Disappointment."</p>
<p>The fancy pleased her so that she went on making
herself miserable with it long after the door closed
behind Kitty and Gay. Over and over she pictured
Warwick Hall, which just then seemed the most
desirable place in all the world. She could see the
shining river, as she had watched it so many times
from her window, flowing past the stately terraces
between its willow-fringed banks. She could hear
the breezy summons of the hunter's horn, calling
the girls to rambles over the wooded hills or through
the quaint old garden. She could see the sun streaming
into the south windows of the English room,
with the class gathered around Miss Chilton, eager
and interested. All the dear, delightful round of
inspiring work and play would go on day after day
for the others, but it would go on without her.
Henceforth she would be left out of everything
pleasant and worth while.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>She would not go down to dinner. She could
not take such a puffed, tear-swollen face to the
table to make everybody else unhappy, and she
couldn't throw off her despondent mood. Maybe
in a few days, she thought, she might be able to hide
her feelings sufficiently to appear in public, but it
would always be with a secret sorrow gnawing at
her heart. Just now she shrank from sympathy,
and she didn't want any one to cheer her up. It
did not seem possible that she could ever smile
again, and she wasn't sure that she wanted to.</p>
<p>Mom Beck brought up the daintiest of dinners
on a tray, but carried it back almost untasted. As
soon as she was gone, Lloyd undressed and crept
into bed.</p>
<p>Sleep was far from her, however, and she lay
with her eyes wide open. The room was full of soft
shadows and the flicker of firelight on the furniture.
She could think of only one thing, and she brooded
over that until it seemed to her feverish, disordered
fancy that her disappointment was the greatest that
any one had ever been forced to bear.</p>
<p>"Why couldn't it have happened to some girl
who didn't care?" she thought, bitterly. "Some girl
like Maud Minor, who doesn't like school, anyhow.
It doesn't seem fair when I've tried my best to<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</SPAN></span>
do exactly right, to leave a road of the loving hah't
in everybody's memory, to keep the tryst—"</p>
<p>That thought brought a fresh reason for grief.
There was the string of pearls. Now she could
not finish her little white rosary. The fire flared up
and shone brilliantly for a few moments, lighting
a group of pictures over her bed. They were the
photographs she had taken in Arizona. There was
Ware's Wigwam. The firelight was not bright
enough to enable her to read the lines Joyce had
written under it, but she knew the inscription was
the Ware family's motto, taken from the "Vicar
of Wakefield": "Let us be inflexible, and fortune
will at last change in our favour." A shadow of
a smile actually came to her lips as she remembered
Mary Ware gravely explaining it.</p>
<p>"Why, even Norman knows that if you'll swallow
your sobs and <i>stiffen</i> when you bump your
head or anything, it doesn't hurt half as bad as
if you just let loose and howl."</p>
<p>And there was the photograph of old Camelback
Mountain, bringing back the story of Shapur, left
helpless on the sands of the Desert of Waiting,
while the caravan passed on without him to the City
of his Desire. She remembered that when she hung
it over her bed she had thought, "If ever <i>I</i> come<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</SPAN></span>
to such a place, this will help me to bear it patiently."</p>
<p>Then she thought of Joyce, how bravely and uncomplainingly
she had met her disappointment.
Not only had she left school and given up her
ambition to be an artist, but she had had to give
up the old home she loved, all her friends, and
everything that made her girlhood bright, to go
out into the lonely desert and work like a squaw.</p>
<p>The thought of Joyce brought back all the lessons
she had learned in the School of the Bees.
But she sighed presently: "Oh, deah, all those
things sounded so nice and comforting when they
seemed meant for othah people. They don't seem
so comforting now that I'm in trouble myself. It's
like the poultice Aunt Cindy made for Walkah's
toothache. She was disgusted because he didn't
stop complaining right away, and said it ought to
have cured him if it didn't. But it wasn't such a
powahful remedy when she had the toothache herself.
She grumbled moah than Walkah. It's all
well enough to say that I'll seal up my troubles as
the bees seal up the things that get into the cells
to spoil their honey, but now the time is heah, I
simply can't!"</p>
<p>Nevertheless, what the School of the Bees taught<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</SPAN></span>
did help. So did the sight of the patient old Camelback
Mountain, that had inspired the legend of
Shapur. And more than all the little group in front
of the Wigwam helped, as she remembered how
bravely they had met their troubles.</p>
<p>One by one her happy Arizona days came back
to her. After all, it was something to have lived
fifteen beautiful years untouched by trouble. She
was thankful for that much, even if the future held
nothing more for her. If she couldn't be happy,
she could at least take Mary's advice and "not let
loose and howl" about it any more. If she couldn't
be bright and cheerful, she could "swallow her
sobs and stiffen." With the resolution to try Mary's
remedy for her woes in the morning, she lay drowsily
watching the firelight flicker across the picture
of the Wigwam.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />