<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>SAN JACINTO DAY.</div>
<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was the twentieth of April when Phil returned
to Bauer, and for the second time his visit was cut
disappointingly short. The reason was that he had
promised Major Melville the night he dined with
him, to be back in San Antonio in time for the
Carnival. The Major wanted to take him to a
Mexican restaurant for a typical Mexican supper
the night of the twenty-first. On the twenty-second
there would be an entertainment for the Queen of
the Carnival at her Court of the Roses; something
too unique and beautiful for him to miss, they all
said. Then, on the twenty-third, San Jacinto Day,
which all loyal Texans keep as a state holiday, the
annual Battle of Flowers would take place in the
plaza in front of the Alamo, which they call their
"Cradle of Liberty."</p>
<p>The Flower Battle was an old institution, the
Major explained. But this was only the second
year for the Queen's Court, and it was something<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</SPAN></span>
so surpassingly beautiful that he thought it ought
to become a regular feature of every carnival.</p>
<p>Roberta, who was also at the dinner, added her
persuasions.</p>
<p>"You'll think you're back in the time 'when
knighthood was in flower,'" she insisted. "I wish
every Easterner accustomed to poking fun at our
state could see it. Nobody knows what I suffered
at school from having people talk as if all Texans
are 'long-horns.'"</p>
<p>"Roberta was one of the duchesses last year,"
explained Lieutenant Boglin. "You should have
seen her sweep up to the throne when they announced,
'Her Grace, the Lady Roberta of the
House of Mayrell!' She certainly looked the real
article, and was a far cry from a long-horn then."</p>
<p>"Don't emphasize the <i>then</i> so pointedly, Bogey,"
ordered Roberta.</p>
<p>When Phil hesitated to accept because his time
in Bauer would be shortened so much thereby, Gay
insisted that she was going to invite Mary down
for the Queen's entertainment and the Flower
Battle anyhow, and that if he refused to come
Mary would be cut out of the pleasure of coming,
for, of course, she couldn't leave a guest behind,
under the circumstances.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>So presently the Major's programme was arranged
to his partial satisfaction. It was not complete,
because he could not persuade the old doctor,
who intended spending several months in California,
to return also.</p>
<p>Gay went up to Bauer that same week, directly
after Alex Shelby's departure. She wanted to deliver
her invitation in person, and to spend the day
with the Ware family. She liked to hear them
sing Alex's praises. <i>He</i> was the one who discovered
that something could be done for Jack, and
he it was who had summoned Doctor Tremont, and
every discussion of the subject always brought out
the gratifying fact that had it not been for him,
Jack would not now be on the high road to recovery.
She had found, too, that Mary made a most
satisfactory little confidante; much better than
Roberta, for she seemed really interested in Alex
and all that pertained to him, and never laughed
at Gay's rhapsodies and made cynical remarks about
"before and after taking" as the worldly-wise
Roberta did.</p>
<p>Two thoughts gave Mary the utmost satisfaction
in accepting the invitation. One was, there would
be time before San Jacinto Day to make up the
white dress for which her mother had embroidered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</SPAN></span>
the lovely rosebuds. The other was, that an occasion
had come at last when it would be appropriate
for her to wear Lloyd's gift, the beautiful chiffon
scarf, spangled with the crystal beads which
sparkled like dewdrops.</p>
<p>With only a day and a half to spend in Bauer,
Phil could do few of the things she had planned
for his entertainment. Now that Jack was better,
she did not like to take him away from the house
long enough to ride out to the Barnaby ranch and
pole up to Fernbank, and such things. Instead, all
the time was spent so that Jack could have his full
share of the visit. She would have been greatly
disappointed had she not known she was going to
see Phil several times during her visit to Gay.</p>
<p>He went down to the Mexican supper on the
twenty-first, and she followed next morning. He
was to take luncheon with the Mayrells that day,
so she did not see him till night, when they all
went in the same party to the entertainment, Phil
and Roberta, Gay and Billy Mayrell, Mary and
Lieutenant Boglin.</p>
<p>The stage of Beethoven Hall was turned into a
bower of roses on this eve of San Jacinto Day, and
a great audience, assembling early, awaited the
coming of the Queen of the Carnival and her royal<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</SPAN></span>
court. In the patent of nobility given by her gracious
majesty to her attendants, was the command:</p>
<p>"We bid you to join with all of our loyal subjects
in the Mirth and Merriment of this Festival
of Flowers, which doth commemorate the glorious
freedom of this, our Texas, won by the deathless
heroism of the defenders of the Alamo, and the
Victory of San Jacinto."</p>
<p>This call for Mirth and Merriment struck the
keynote of the carnival, and everyone in the great
assembly seemed to be responding with the proper
festival spirit.</p>
<p>Back in the crowded house in a seat next the
aisle and almost at the entrance door, sat Mary
Ware, completely entranced by all that was going
on about her. Lieutenant Boglin was beside her,
and in the chairs directly behind them were Gay
and Billy Mayrell. Roberta and Phil were in front
of them. They had come early to secure these
chairs, and the men had given the girls the end
seats in order that they might have unobstructed
view of both aisle and stage. They all turned so
that conversation was general until the house was
nearly filled, then Roberta said something which
drew Phil's attention wholly to herself, and he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</SPAN></span>
turned his back on the others, beginning to talk
exclusively to her.</p>
<p>Gay, who appeared to know at least every fourth
person who came down the aisle, sat, like most
of the audience, with her head turned expectantly
towards the door, and kept up a running comment
to Mary on the acquaintances who passed her with
nods of recognition or brief words of greeting.
The thrum of the orchestra, the sight of so many
smiling faces, although they were strange to her,
and the blended colors of fashionable evening
gowns would have furnished Mary ample entertainment
after her dull winter in the country; but
it was doubly entertaining with Gay to point out
distinguished people and give her bits of information,
supplemented by Billy and Bogey about
this one from the Post and that one from the
town.</p>
<p>She wished that Phil could hear too. She wanted
him to know what prominent personages he was
in the midst of. Once when some world-known
celebrity was escorted up the aisle she leaned over
and called his attention to the procession. He
looked up with a smile to follow her glance, and
made a joking response, but returned so quickly to
the fascinating Roberta, that Mary felt that his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</SPAN></span>
interest in everything else just then was merely
perfunctory.</p>
<p>She remembered what Gay had said about his
finding his affinity, and stole a side glance at
Roberta to study her in the new light which Phil's
interest threw upon her. Now in the days when
Phil worshipped at the Little Colonel's shrine, Mary
was perfectly content to have it so. She would
have walked over hot plowshares to have brought
his romance to a happy consummation. It seemed
so eminently fitting that the two people in the
world whom she had invested with halos, should
stand together on the same pedestal in her affections.
To her doting eyes, Lloyd was such an
angel that she knew Phil must be happy with her,
and Phil measured so fully up to the notch on the
sterling yard-stick which indicated the inches and
ells that a true prince should be, that she was sure
no girl who wove her Clotho-web for him could
fail to find the happiness that was written for her
in the stars.</p>
<p>Mary had grown accustomed to the fact by this
time that she had made a mistake in her reading
of the stars. Lloyd was destined for someone else.
But it had not occurred to her before that maybe
Phil was, too. The thought that he would carry<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</SPAN></span>
a secret sorrow with him to the grave, invested
him with a melancholy charm that made him all
the more interesting. It was somewhat of a shock
to her to see him watch the downward sweep and
swift upward glance of Roberta's pretty eyes in
such an admiring way, although Mary herself had
heretofore found pleasure in watching them. Of
course she didn't want him to go on suffering
always, still—she didn't want him to forget.</p>
<p>In her passionate loyalty to Lloyd she resented
his bestowing a second glance on any girl who was
any less of an angel than she; and yet her loyalty
to Phil made her want him to have whatever he
wanted. Knowing how many men had fallen victims
to Roberta's flirtatious little ways, she longed
to save Phil from the same fate. The growing
alarm with which she watched them was almost
comical for one of her years. It was comical because
it was so motherly. Not a particle of jealousy
or a thought of self entered into it.</p>
<p>A hush fell on the great audience, and the curtain
rose on a tableau of surpassing loveliness. The
stage seemed to be one mass of American Beauty
roses. The walls were festooned and garlanded
with them. They covered the high throne in the
centre and bordered the steps leading up to it. They<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</SPAN></span>
hung in long streamers on either side from ceiling
to floor. Grouped against this glowing background,
stood the noble dukes, the lords-in-waiting
and their esquires. The gay-colored satins and
brocades of their old-time court costumes, the
gleam of jewelled sword-hilts, the shine of powdered
perukes, transported one from prosaic times
and lands to the old days of chivalry and romance.</p>
<p>The jester shook his bells, the trumpeters in their
plumed helmets raised their long, shining trumpets,
and sounded the notes that heralded the first approach.
Then the Lord Chamberlain stepped forth
in a brave array of pink satin, carrying the gold
stick that was his insignia of office.</p>
<p>"That's me friend," whispered Gay, "the man
who originated this affair. I tell him I think he
must be one of the Knights of the Round Table
re-incarnated, or else the wizard Merlin come to
life again, to bring such a beautiful old court scene
into being in the way he has done."</p>
<p>She stopped whispering to hear the impressive
announcement he was making, in a voice that rang
through the hall:</p>
<p>"Her Grace, Lady Elizabeth, of the House of
Lancaster!"</p>
<p>Immediately every eye turned from the stage to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</SPAN></span>
look at the rose-trimmed entrance door. The orchestra
struck into an inspiring march and the
stately beauty, first to arrive at the Court of Roses,
began her triumphal entry up the long aisle. She
passed so near to Mary that the tulle bow on the
directoire stick she carried almost touched her
cheek with its long floating ends, light as gossamer
web. And Mary, clasping her hands together in
an ecstasy of admiration, noted every detail of the
beautiful costume in its slow passing.</p>
<p>"It's like the Princess Olga's," she thought, recalling
the old fairy-tale of the enchanted necklace.
"Whiter than the whiteness of the fairest lily, fine,
like the finest lace that the frost-elves weave, and
softer than the softest ermine of the snow."</p>
<p>The long court train that swept behind her was
all aglisten, as if embroidered with dewdrops and
pearls. Mary watched her, scarcely breathing till
she had ascended the steps to the stage. Then her
appointed duke came forward to meet her and led
her to the steps of the throne.</p>
<p>The music stopped. Again the heralds sounded
their trumpets and the Lord Chamberlain announced
the next duchess.</p>
<p>"You see," explained Gay, hastily, as all necks
craned toward the door again, "each girl is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</SPAN></span>
duchess of some rose or other, like Killarney or
Malmaison or Maréchal Niel."</p>
<p>One after another they passed by to take their
places beside the throne, all in such exquisitely
beautiful costumes that Mary thought that each
one must be indelibly photographed on her memory.
But when they had passed, all she could
remember of so many was a spangled procession
of court trains, covered with cascades of crystal
and silver and pearls and strung jewels.</p>
<p>Each time a new duchess swept slowly and
majestically by, Mary turned a quick glance toward
Phil to see if he were properly impressed; but when
the Queen was announced, she had no eyes for anything
but the regal figure proceeding slowly up the
aisle, amid the admiring applause which almost
drowned the music of the march.</p>
<p>It was at this juncture that Phil glanced back
at Mary. Her face so plainly showed the admiration
which filled her that he continued to watch her
with an amused smile, saying to Roberta in an
undertone:</p>
<p>"Look at Mary's rapt expression! She's always
adored queens and such things, and now she feels
that she's up against the real article."</p>
<p>"I don't wonder," answered Roberta, herself so<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</SPAN></span>
interested that she turned her back on Phil until
the royal party had passed by. Two little pages
in costumes of white and gold, with plumed hats
and spangled capes, bore the royal train, and
Roberta tried to upset the dignity of one of them,
who was a little friend of hers, by whispering,
"Hello, Gerald, where did you get that feather?"</p>
<p>In Mary's estimation it was not the diamond
crown that marked the Queen as especially regal,
not the jewelled sceptre nor the white satin gown,
heavily embroidered in gold roses and gleaming
with brilliants; it was the fact that the long train
borne by the little pages was of <i>cloth-of-gold</i>. To
Mary, cloth-of-gold was more royal than ermine or
purple velvet, and lovingly associated in her thought
with the white samite of Tennyson's idyls. It was
cloth-of-gold that the Lily Maid of Astolat had
worn to her burying, and the only piece that Mary
had ever seen was the drapery over the bier of the
fair Elaine, when Lloyd took the part of the Lily
Maid, in the tableaux at The Beeches. When she
caught sight of it she clasped her hands still tighter,
and never took her eyes from it until the Queen
was seated on her throne, and the long, shining
folds swept down beside her, the full length of the
steps.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The presentation scene followed. In the name
of The Order of the Alamo, the Queen was given
a magnificent necklace, with a jewelled pendant.
After that the visiting duchesses were received,
representing many towns of Texas, from El Paso
to the gulf. They came with their maids of honor,
and when they had been met by their lords-in-waiting
and their esquires, the entertainment for the
Queen began.</p>
<p>Grecian maidens bearing garlands of roses
danced before her. The second group was of seven
little barefoot girls, carrying golden lyres, and
forming a rainbow background for another small
maid who gave a cymbal dance. The Grecian
dances were followed by a gavotte of the time of
Louis XIII, in which all the dukes and duchesses
took part.</p>
<p>"They danced the minuet last year," commented
Gay. "This is the end of the performance, but
we'll wait to watch them go out, on their way to
the Queen's ball. I went to that too, last year.
These are good seats; we catch them coming and
going."</p>
<p>The audience remaining seated until all the members
of the Court had passed out two by two, had
ample time for comment and observation. Bogey,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</SPAN></span>
who, seeing Mary's absorbing interest in the scene,
had considerately left her undisturbed most of the
time, now leaned over and began to talk. As Gay
had once said, "When it comes to giving a girl
a good time, Bogey is quite the nicest officer in
the bunch," and Phil, overhearing scraps of their
conversation, concluded that Mary was finding her
escort as entertaining as the pageant. A backward
glance now and then showed that she was not
watching the recessional as closely as she was listening
to him.</p>
<p>As they all started out of the hall together, moving
slowly along with the crowd, barely an inch
at a time, they talked over arrangements for the
next day. Lieutenant Boglin could not be counted
in. He had to ride in the procession with the rest
of the troops from the Post who were to take part
in the parade. Billy Mayrell had another engagement,
so Phil proposed to take all three of the girls
under his wing. It was too late to secure seats
in the plaza from which to watch the flower battle.
The Major had been able to get only two. So
Phil said the Major and his wife should occupy
those. He would come around for the girls in an
automobile and they could watch the parade seated
in that.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>There was a blockade near the door, but as soon
as they could get through it, they all walked up
the street to a building in which the Major had
secured the use of a second-story window, from
which they could watch the parade of the Queen
and her court on their way to the ball. The time
spent in waiting was well worth while, when it
finally appeared. The horses of the chariots were
led by Nubian servants, and each chariot represented
a rose, wherein sat the duchess who had
made it her choice.</p>
<p>The Queen's chariot was surmounted by a mammoth
American Beauty rose, and as she smiled out
from the midst of its petals, Mary had one more
entrancing view of the royal robes. This time they
were lit up by the red gleam of torches, for eight
torch-bearers, four on a side, accompanied each
chariot, and added their light to the brilliant illuminations
of the streets.</p>
<p>"You must see the river," said Billy Mayrell,
after the procession had passed by. "Nobody can
describe it, with the lights strung across it from
shore to shore all down its winding course. It
makes you think of Venice."</p>
<p>He led them to a place where they could look
across a bend and see one of the bridges. It was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</SPAN></span>
strung so thickly with red lights which outlined
every part, that it seemed to be made of glowing
rubies, and its reflection in the water made another
shining ruby bridge below, wavering on the dark
current.</p>
<p>Mary leaned over the rail watching the shimmering
lights, and feeling dreamily that this City
of the Alamo was an enchanted city; that the
buildings looming up on every side were not for
the purpose of barter and trade. They were thrown
up simply as backgrounds for the dazzling illuminations
which outlined them against the night sky.
The horns of the revellers answering each other
down every street, the music of distant bands, the
laughter of the jostling throngs, all deepened the
illusion.</p>
<p>It did not seem possible that this could be the
city through which she had once tramped in the
rain, discouraged and forlorn, in search of a home.
It was a realm given over utterly to "Mirth and
Merriment," where a gracious young queen held
sway, where illness and trouble and grief had no
part.</p>
<p>"I don't wonder that the Major wants everybody
not already a loyal Texan to see this," she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</SPAN></span>
said to the Lieutenant. "It's enough to make one
want to live here always."</p>
<p>She made the same remark to Gay next afternoon,
as she sat beside her on the back seat of the
automobile. Roberta was on the front seat with
Phil. He had ordered a machine which he could
drive himself, and they had taken a run through
the principal streets to see all the decorations, before
coming to a standstill to wait for the procession.
It was an inspiring scene, the grandstand
packed with applauding spectators, the plaza
crowded from park to curbstone. Shops and offices
had closed for the day, schools were dismissed and
all work abandoned as far as possible, in order
that everyone might share in the Carnival play-time.
The wise old town knows the full worth of
holidays, and makes the most of each one.</p>
<p>The chariots Mary had seen in the brilliantly-lighted
streets the night before, lost some of their
glamour seen by day; but the duchesses and their
ladies-in-waiting were dressed now in the colors
of their chosen roses instead of the court-robes,
and there were many new features in this parade;
floats and handsomely decorated carriages, and a
long line of troops from the post with the famous<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</SPAN></span>
military bands. It was hard to sit still when they
played so inspiringly.</p>
<p>Back and forth in front of the Alamo went the
two divisions of the parade, meeting and passing
and turning to meet and pass again, all the while
pelting each other with flowers, till the plaza where
they rode was covered deep with them. And the
bands played and the people cheered, till the smallest
schoolboy in their midst felt a thrill of gratitude
to the heroes whose deeds they were commemorating.
He might miss the deeper meaning of it all,
but he grasped one fact clearly enough: that had
it not been for the grim battle which those brave
fellows fought to the death, there would have been
no San Jacinto Day for him. No pageant-filled
holiday to make one feel that it is a great and
glorious thing to be a son of the Lone Star State.</p>
<p>Phil dined at the Major's again that night, and
Roberta was the only other guest beside Mary.
Gay had objected when her father proposed others,
saying that they intended to devote the entire evening
to music. Since they had discovered what a
magnificent voice Mr. Tremont had, and he had
discovered what proficient accompanists she and
Roberta were, they had decided to treat themselves
to a musicale given by the three, with only Mary<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</SPAN></span>
for audience. The family could listen, of course,
but with the understanding that there was to be
no conversation. As the Major had an engagement
which took him out immediately after dinner
and Mrs. Melville had some friends drop in to call
soon after, it happened that their audience was
limited to one.</p>
<p>Now the one thing that Mary enjoyed above all
others was hearing Phil sing, and quite the pleasantest
part of her whole visit was that last evening
spent in listening to him, with Roberta at the piano,
and Gay improvising wonderfully soft and lovely
accompaniments on her violin. Mary had heard
two celebrated opera singers while in Washington,
but in her opinion neither one equalled Phil.</p>
<p>Phil's surprise would have been unbounded could
he have known that she was comparing his singing
to the angel Israfel's, "whose heartstrings were
a lute, and who had the sweetest voice of all God's
creatures." It would have been a matter of still
greater surprise if he could have known the exalted
opinion that Mary had of him. Not that any sentimental
interest entered into her regard for him.
Despite her eighteen years and her womanly attitude
towards the world in general, she was still
a little girl, and a very humble little girl in her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</SPAN></span>
own estimation, as far as he was concerned. He
was her ideal; the man whose good opinion she
valued above all things, whose approval made her
inexpressibly happy, and whose advice she eagerly
followed.</p>
<p>She had adored him for years as little girls do
sometimes look up to and adore grown men, and
had stored away in her memory many a remark
that he forgot as soon as it was uttered. There
was the time she confided to him her grief at being
so fat and her ambition to be an "airy, fairy
Lillian," like Lloyd. He did not even smile, and
he answered so gravely and kindly that she remembered
even yet the consolation that his words
gave her. Another time she overheard him referring
to her as an "angel unawares," because she
had unknowingly done him a service by repeating
something Lloyd had said about him.</p>
<p>From that time on, that was the part she longed
to play in his life. She burned to be the "angel
unawares" who could help him to the attainment
of everything he wanted. That was why she had
been so bitterly disappointed when Lloyd's engagement
to Rob Moore had been announced. She
wanted Lloyd to marry Phil because she knew that
was what Phil wanted. Now that that was not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</SPAN></span>
possible she was just as ready to help him if he
should ever love again. She hardly thought that
he could do <i>that</i>, though. It seemed so incredible
that he should ever find another as fine and high
and sweet as the Princess Winsome; it was still
more incredible that once having set his mark that
high he could ever look at anything less.</p>
<p>His powerful, well-trained voice filled the room
with a sweetness that brought an ache to her throat
and sometimes tears to her eyes. Presently Roberta
rummaged out some old, old melodies—"Drink
to me only with thine eyes," and the "Bedouin
Love-song."</p>
<p>When she asked for that last one, Mary cringed
inwardly, as if she had been hurt herself, so sure
was she that it must bring up painful memories to
Phil. She fully expected to see him lay it aside
with some excuse for not singing it. She remembered
as vividly as if it were only last night how
she had sat on the floor of the library at The
Locusts, listening to the notes of his guitar as he
sang to Lloyd outside on the porch:</p>
<div class='poem'>
"Till the stars are old<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And the sun grows cold</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And the leaves of the Judgment</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Book unfold."</span><br/></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>For the life of her, she couldn't see how Lloyd
ever listened to any other wooing after that. Had
any one sung that to <i>her</i> in that voice it would have
won her so completely that she would have risen
like the Sleeping Beauty at the call of the prince.</p>
<div class='poem'>
"Beyond the night—across the day—<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Through all the world she followed him."</span><br/></div>
<p>To her surprise, Phil took up the sheet of music
as nonchalantly as if he had never seen it before.
But when he began to sing it seemed to her anxious
ear that he sang it more feelingly than anything
she had ever heard. It was plain enough to her
now that he had not ceased to care. It wrung her
heart to hear him sing it so, pouring out his soul
in a flood of noble devotion which he knew could
never be requited, but which would live on till the
sun lost its heat and the stars their light.</p>
<p>"I love that song," said Roberta, laying it aside
to pick up another. "But I'd like to meet that
fiery old duck of a Bedouin when the leaves of
the Judgment Book <i>do</i> unfold, and find out how
long his devotion kept up to high-water mark."
Then she trilled airily, "Men are gay deceivers
ever."</p>
<p>Under the circumstances the remark seemed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</SPAN></span>
flippant, almost sacrilegious, to Mary. She gave
Roberta a disapproving glance behind her back,
thinking, "Little <i>you</i> know about it. If you could
see as I do now, how Phil is hiding his real feelings,
you'd realize that there's <i>one</i> man, at least,
capable of the deathless devotion you scoff at."</p>
<p>The evening was over all too soon. Phil was to
take Roberta home on his way back to the hotel,
and when he rose to go said, "I'll not make my
farewells now. My train doesn't leave till nearly
noon to-morrow, so I'll call some time during the
morning to pay my respects to the Major and see
you all again."</p>
<p>"You'll have to say good-by to Mary now,"
said Gay. "She insists on taking that horrid
freight car back to Bauer, at seven in the morning."</p>
<p>"I must," said Mary. "You know they need
me, now that the nurse is gone, and I've already
been away two days."</p>
<p>Roberta went out into the hall for her hat, and
Gay followed as far as the door, talking as she
went.</p>
<p>"And I haven't had any visit with <i>you</i> at all,"
said Phil, who was standing, hat in hand, looking
down at Mary. "I haven't had a word with you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</SPAN></span>
by yourself, and you haven't confided once in me
or asked me a single scrap of advice. It doesn't
seem natural. But I'm not going to let you escape
me this way; I'm going down to the train in the
morning to see you off."</p>
<p>Gay turned in time to hear the last part of his
sentence. "That is," she corrected, "if you are
called in time. They don't always do it at hotels
when they say they will. I've had some bad experiences
that way. So if he doesn't appear, Mary,
you can console yourself with the thought that
he's like Kathleen Mavourneen—'slumbering
still.'"</p>
<p>"I'll be there," was the confident reply, as he
smiled down into Mary's wistful eyes and held out
his hand to say good-night. "Electric bells are
not as romantic as the 'horn of the hunter heard
on the hill,' but they're more effective when it
comes to getting a fellow up in the morning; you'll
see me sure."</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</SPAN></span></p>
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