<h2>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>BACK TO DIXIE</div>
<p><span class="smcap">There</span> was another mark on the kitchen calendar
now; not a red star, betokening some happy event
to come, but a deep black border, drawn all around
the date on which Lloyd's visit was to end. The
heavy black lines marked the time as only a few
days distant.</p>
<p>It was Saturday again, a week after the excursion
to the Indian school. Joyce had gone down
to the ranch, for Mr. Armond to criticize the drawings
which she had made since the last lesson, and
Lloyd, on the seat under the willows, was waiting
for Phil. He was to come at four, and ride over
to one of the neighbouring orange groves with her.</p>
<p>She had a book in her hand, but she was not reading.
She was listening to the water gurgle through
the little water-gate into the lateral, and thinking
of all that had happened during her visit, especially<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294"></SPAN></span>
since the night she was lost on the desert, and Phil
had found her.</p>
<p>Monday he had spent the entire day at the Wigwam,
and, since Joyce had forbidden him to come
near the spot where the washing was in progress,
he and Lloyd had brought a jar of paste and the
little wicker table down to this very seat under the
willows, and had mounted all her photographs in the
book she had bought for the purpose. There were
over a hundred, beginning with a view of the Wigwam
and ending with the four laughing faces
around the table on the balcony of Coffee Al's
restaurant. There was Lloyd on her pony, coming
back from the duck hunt, and again in the act of
dropping her cherry tart. There was Mary in the
hammock watching the bees, Jack in his irrigating
boots, and Holland on a burro. There were a dozen
different pictures of Joyce, and family groups, and
picnic groups, in which was represented every acquaintance
Lloyd had made in Arizona. Turning
the pages was like living over the pleasant days
again, for they brought the scenes vividly before
her.</p>
<p>When the last picture was mounted, Phil proposed
that they write an appropriate quotation under
each one. So they spent another hour over that,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_295" id="Page_295"></SPAN></span>
Phil suggesting most of them, and at Lloyd's request
writing the inscriptions himself in his strong,
dashing hand. Some of his apt phrases and clever
parodies seemed really brilliant to Lloyd, and they
had laughed and joked over them in a way that had
ripened their friendship as weeks of ordinary intercourse
would not have done.</p>
<p>"Do you know," he said, when the last inscription
was written, "I've kept count, and I'm in twenty-five
of these pictures. You won't have much chance
to forget me, will you? I haven't put my collection
in a book, but I have a better reminder of this last
month than all these put together."</p>
<p>Opening the little locket that hung from his watch-fob,
he held it toward her, just long enough for
her to catch a glimpse of her own face within it.
Then, closing the locket with a snap, he put the
fob back in its place. It was a picture he had taken
of her one day as she sat on this same seat under
the willows, watching Aunt Emily braid an Indian
basket. He had cut out a tiny circle containing
her head, from the rest of the group, just the size
to fit in the locket.</p>
<p>Lloyd, leaning forward unsuspectingly to look
at it, was so surprised at seeing her own picture
that a deep blush stole slowly over her face, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_296" id="Page_296"></SPAN></span>
she drew back in confusion, not knowing what to
say. If he had asked her permission to put her
picture in his locket, she would have refused as
decidedly as she had refused Malcolm the tip of a
curl to carry in his watch.</p>
<p>But Phil had not asked for anything; had not
said a word to which she could reply as she had
replied to Malcolm. He had showed her the locket
in the same matter-of-course way that Rob had
showed her the four-leafed clover which he carried.
Yet deep down in her heart she knew that there was
a difference. She knew that her father would not
like Phil to have her picture in his locket, but she
didn't know how to tell him so.</p>
<p>It was only an instant that she sat in shy, embarrassed
silence, with her heart in a flutter, and
her eyes fastened on the book of photographs which
she was fingering nervously. Then Jack came out
with a pitcher of lemonade, and the opportunity to
speak passed. She hadn't the courage to bring
up the subject afterward.</p>
<p>"Phil might think that I think that it means
moah than it does," she told herself. "He weahs
the pictuah just as he would Elsie's, and if I tell
him that I don't want him to, he'll think that I think
that he cares for me the way that Malcolm does.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_297" id="Page_297"></SPAN></span>
I don't suppose that it really makes any difference
whethah he has it in his locket or not."</p>
<p>He did not mention it again, but it did make a
difference. The consciousness of it embarrassed
her whenever she met his eyes. She wondered if
Joyce noticed.</p>
<p>Tuesday he came again, and read aloud all morning
while they ironed. Wednesday he spent the
day without bringing anything as an excuse. Thursday
he rode with them over to the Indian reservation.
Her pony had been brought back to her the
day after it ran away. When he left them at the
Wigwam that evening he said that he would not be
back the next day as he had to go to Phœnix, but
that he would be up Saturday afternoon to ride with
Lloyd to the orange grove while Joyce took her
drawing-lesson.</p>
<p>It was of all this that Lloyd was thinking now,
as she sat under the willows. And she was thinking,
too, of the tale Mrs. Walton told her of The
Three Weavers; the tale that had been the cause
of the Shadow Club turning itself into the Order
of Hildegarde.</p>
<p>Mrs. Walton had spoken truly when she said that
"Little girls begin very early sometimes to dream
about that far-away land of Romance." Lloyd's<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_298" id="Page_298"></SPAN></span>
dreams might not have begun so soon, perhaps, had
it not been for the meetings of the Shadow Club at
boarding-school, when Ida Shane fired their imaginations
with the stories of "Daisy Dale" and "The
Heiress of Dorn," and made Lloyd the bearer of
her letters to her "Edwardo." The unhappy ending
of Ida's romance had been a grave warning to
Lloyd, and the story of Hildegarde in the Three
Weavers was often in her thoughts. Part of it
floated through her memory now, as she realized,
with a start, how large a place Phil had occupied
in her thoughts the last week.</p>
<p>"Hildegarde worked on, true to her promise, but
there came a time when a face shone across her
mirror, so noble and fair that she started back in
a flutter. 'Oh, surely, 'tis he!' she whispered to
her father. 'His eyes are so blue they fill all my
dreams!' But old Hildgardmar answered her,
'Does he measure up to the standard set by the
sterling yardstick for a prince to be?'"</p>
<p>"That is just what Papa Jack would ask,"
mused Lloyd. "And he'd say that little girls outgrow
their ideals as they do their dresses, and that
if I'm not careful that I'll make the same mistake
that Hertha and Huberta did. Besides, there's my
New Yeah's promise!"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_299" id="Page_299"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>For a moment she ceased to hear the gurgle of the
water, and heard instead the ticking of the clock
in the long drawing-room at Locust, as she and
Papa Jack kept watch beside the embers, waiting
for the old year to die and the new one to dawn.
And in the solemn hush she heard her own voice
repeating Hildegarde's promise:</p>
<p>"<i>You may trust me, fathah, I will not cut the
golden warp from out the loom until I, a woman
grown, have woven such a web as thou thyself shalt
say is worthy of a prince's wearing!</i>"</p>
<p>A woman grown! And she was not yet quite
fourteen!</p>
<p>"I'll not be the only one of all the Lloyds that
can't be trusted to keep a promise," she said, aloud,
with a proud lifting of the head. Resolutely shaking
herself free from the day-dreaming that had
been so pleasant, she picked up her book and started
to the house.</p>
<p>Listening to Aunt Emily's conversation over her
stocking darning, about the commonplace happenings
of the household, was not half so entertaining
as letting her thoughts stray back to the moonlight
ride, to the smile in Phil's eyes as he showed her
the locket, or the sound of his voice as he sang,
"From the desert I come to thee." There were a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_300" id="Page_300"></SPAN></span>
dozen such memories, so pleasant to dwell upon that
a girl of less will-power would not have pushed
them aside. Even Lloyd found it difficult to do.</p>
<p>"It's like trying to drive away a flock of cherry
birds," she thought. "They keep coming back no
matter how often you say <i>shoo</i>! But I won't let
them stay."</p>
<p>Such a resolution was easier to make than to keep,
especially as she was expecting to see Phil ride up
to the door at any moment. But the time set for
his coming passed, and when a step on the bridge
made her glance up, it was Joyce she saw, walking
along slowly. Usually she danced in after her lesson-hour
with Mr. Armond in the gayest of spirits.
To-day it was apparent that she was the bearer of
bad news.</p>
<p>"Oh, mamma!" she began, dropping her sketches
on the table, and fumbling to find her hat-pin.
"They're all so worried down at the ranch, over
Phil! Mrs. Lee says he went to town yesterday
morning, expecting to be back in time for dinner,
but he hasn't come yet. Jo went in on his wheel,
last night, and he saw him at one of those places
where they play faro, and all those games, and he
was so excited over his winnings that he didn't
even see Jo, although he stood and watched him<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_301" id="Page_301"></SPAN></span>
ever so long. This morning Mr. Ellestad went in,
and he came across him, wandering about the streets.
He had lost not only every cent he had deposited
in the bank, but he put up his horse, and lost that,
too. He didn't have any way to get out to the
ranch.</p>
<p>"He wouldn't drive out with Mr. Ellestad. He
was so mortified and disgusted with himself that
he said he couldn't face them all. He said his father
would never trust him again, and that he had lost
not only his father's confidence, but our respect and
friendship. He said he was going to look for work
of some kind, he didn't care what, and it didn't make
any difference what became of him now.</p>
<p>"Mr. Ellestad left him at a hotel, and he felt so
sorry for him that, tired as he was, he rode over to
Tempe, after he got home, to see a friend of his who
is a civil engineer. This friend is going to start on
an expedition next week, surveying for some canals.
Mr. Ellestad persuaded him to take Phil in his party,
and give him some work. Phil said he didn't intend
to touch a cent of his usual monthly allowance until
he had earned back all he lost. Mr. Ellestad telephoned
to him from Tempe, and he is to start in
a few days. Mrs. Lee says that losing everything
is the best thing that could have happened to Phil.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_302" id="Page_302"></SPAN></span>
It's taught him a lesson he'll never forget; and
this surveyor is just the sort of a man he ought to
be with,—clean, and honourable, and strong."</p>
<p>As Joyce finished her excited telling with these
familiar words, the colour that had faded completely
out of Lloyd's face rushed back again. "Clean, and
honourable, and strong!" These were the standards
of the yardstick that Papa Jack had given
her. How far Phil had failed to measure up to the
last two notches, and yet—</p>
<p>Mrs. Ware finished the unspoken sentence for her.</p>
<p>"He is so young that I can't help feeling that,
with something to keep him busy and some one to
take a helpful interest in him, he will turn out all
right. He has so many fine traits, I am sure they
will prevail in the end, and that he will make a manly
man, after all."</p>
<p>Joyce openly wiped away the tears that came at
the thought of this ending to their happy comradeship,
but Lloyd stole away to the tent to hide her
face in her pillow, and sob out the disappointment
of her sore little heart. She would never see him
again, she told herself, and they had had <i>such</i> good
times together, and she was so sorry that he had
proved so weak.</p>
<p>Presently, as she lay there, she heard Holland<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_303" id="Page_303"></SPAN></span>
come clattering up on the pony, inquiring for her.
He had killed a snake, she could hear him telling
his mother, and had brought it home to skin for
Lloyd. It was a beautifully marked diamond-back
with ten rattles, and now she could have a purse
and a hat-band, like some she had admired in Phœnix.</p>
<p>Lloyd listened, languidly. "An hour ago," she
thought, "I would have been out there the instant
I heard him call. I would have been admiring the
snake and thanking him for it and asking a hundred
questions about how he got it. But now—somehow—everything
seems so different."</p>
<p>She started up as he began calling her. "I wish
he'd let me alone," she exclaimed, impatiently.
"Aunt Emily will think it strange if I don't answer,
for she knows I'm out heah, but I don't feel
like talking to anybody or taking an interest in anything,
and I don't want to go out there!"</p>
<p>The call came again. She drew back the tent-flap
and looked out. "I'll be there in a minute,
Holland," she answered, trying to keep the impatience
out of her voice. As she went over to the
wash-stand to bathe her eyes, she brushed a magazine
from the table in passing. It was the one Phil
had brought up several days before to read aloud.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_304" id="Page_304"></SPAN></span>
She replaced it carefully, almost as one touches the
belongings of some one who is dead.</p>
<p>There were so many things around the tent to
remind her of him, it would be almost impossible
to keep him out of her thoughts. She confessed
to herself that it was growing very hard to keep
her Hildegarde promise. She started to whisper
it as one might repeat some strengthening charm:
"You may trust me, fathah—" She stopped with
a sob. This sudden ending of their happy companionship
was going to shadow all the rest of her
visit.</p>
<p>As her eyes met her reflection in the little mirror
hanging against the side of the tent, she lifted her
head with determination, and looked at it squarely.</p>
<p>"I <i>will</i> stop thinking about it all the time!" she
said, defiantly, to the answering eyes. "It will
spoil all my visit if I don't. I'll do the way the
bees do when things get into the hive that have
no right there. I'll seal it up tight as I can, and
go on filling the other cells with honey,—doing
things that will be pleasant to remember by and
by. I'll <i>make</i> myself take an interest in something
else!"</p>
<p>The same spirit that looked from the eyes of the
proud old portraits at home looked back at her now<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_305" id="Page_305"></SPAN></span>
from the eyes in the mirror—that strong, indomitable
spirit of her ancestors, that could rise even
to the conquering of that hardest of all enemies,
self, when occasion demanded it.</p>
<p>Running out to the wood-pile, where Holland
impatiently awaited her, she threw herself into the
interests of the hour so resolutely that she was soon
absorbed in its happenings. By the time the snake
was skinned, and the skin tacked to the side of the
house to dry, she had gained a victory that left
her stronger for all her life to come. She had
compelled herself to take an interest in the affairs
of others, when she wanted to mope and dream.
Instead of an hour of selfish musing in her tent,
she had had an hour of wholesome laughter and
chatter outside. It would be a pleasant time to look
back upon, too, she thought, complacently, remembering
Mary's amusing efforts to help skin the snake,
and all the funny things that had been said.</p>
<p>"Well, that hour's memory-cell is filled all right,"
Lloyd thought. "I'll see how much moah honey I
can store away befoah I leave."</p>
<p>There was not much more time, for Mr. Sherman
came soon, with the announcement that they would
leave in two days. Numerous letters had passed
between the Wigwam and the mines, so Lloyd knew<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_306" id="Page_306"></SPAN></span>
what was going to happen when her father arranged
for her and Joyce to spend part of one of those days
in town. She knew that when they came back they
would find a long rustic arbour built in the rear of
the tents—a rough shack of cottonwood poles
supporting a thatch of bamboo and palm-leaves.
Underneath would be a dozen or more hives, humming
with thousands of golden-banded bees. And
for all the rest of their little lives these bees would
spend their "shining hours" in helping Joyce on
toward easier times and the City of her Desire.</p>
<p>Something else happened that day while they
were in town. Phil made his last visit before starting
away with the surveying party. Nobody knew
what passed between him and Aunt Emily in the
old Wigwam sitting-room, but he came out from
the interview smiling, so full of hope and purpose
that her whispered <i>Godspeed</i> seemed already to have
found an answer.</p>
<p>She told the girls afterward a little of their conversation.
His ambition was aroused at last, she
said. He was going to work hard all summer, and
in the fall go back to school. Not the military academy,
but a college where he could take the technical
course this friend of Mr. Ellestad recommended.
Phil admired this man immensely, and she was sure<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_307" id="Page_307"></SPAN></span>
that his influence would be exceedingly helpful.
She was sure, too, that he would be all right now,
and he had promised to write to her every week.</p>
<p>As Phil came out of the Wigwam he heard Mary's
voice, in a sort of happy little chant, as she watched
the settling of the bees in their new home. She had
heard nothing of Phil's troubles, and did not know
that he was going away until he told her.</p>
<p>"I want you to tell Lloyd and Joyce something
for me," he said.</p>
<p>"Try to remember just these words, please. Tell
them that I said: 'Alaka has lost his precious turquoises,
but <i>he will win them back again, some
day</i>!' Can you remember to say just that?"</p>
<p>Mary nodded, gravely. "Yes," she said, "I'll
tell them." Then her lip trembled. "But I don't
want you to go away!" she exclaimed, the tears
beginning to come. "Aren't you ever coming
back?"</p>
<p>"Not for a long time," he answered, looking
away toward old Camelback. "Not till I've learned
the lesson that you told me about, the first time I
saw you, that day on the train, to be inflexible.
When I'm strong enough to keep stiff in the face
of any temptation, then I'll come back. Good-bye,
little Vicar!"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_308" id="Page_308"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Stooping, he kissed her gently on each plump
cheek, and turned hastily away. She watched him
go off down the road through a blur of tears. Then
she rubbed her sleeve across her eyes. He had
turned to look back, and, seeing the disconsolate
little figure gazing after him, waved his hat. There
was something so cheery and hopeful in the swing
he gave it, that Mary smiled through her tears, and
answered with an energetic fluttering of her white
sunbonnet, swung high by its one string.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Joyce's delight on her return, when she found
the long row of hives, was something good to see.
She could hardly speak at first, and walked from one
hive to another, touching each as she passed, as
if to assure herself that it was really there, and
really hers.</p>
<p>"Joyce is so bee-wildered by her good fortune
that she is almost bee-side herself," said Holland,
when he had watched her start on her third round
of inspection.</p>
<p>"That's the truth," laughed Joyce, turning to
face Lloyd and her father. "I'm so happy that I
don't know what I'm doing, and I can't begin to
thank you properly till I've settled down a little."</p>
<p>There was no need of spoken thanks when her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_309" id="Page_309"></SPAN></span>
face was so eloquent. Even the mistakes she made
in setting the supper-table spoke for her. In her
excitement she gave Mr. Sherman two forks and
no knife, and Lloyd three spoons and no fork. She
made the coffee in the teapot, and put the butter
in a pickle-dish. Only Mary's warning cry saved
her from skimming the cream into the syrup-pitcher,
and she sugared everything she cooked
instead of salting it.</p>
<p>"Oh, I'm sorry," she cried, when her mistakes
were discovered, "but if you were as happy as I
am you'd go around with your head in the clouds
too."</p>
<p>After supper she said to Mr. Sherman, as they
walked out to the hives again, "You see, I'd been
thinking all day how much I am going to miss
Lloyd, and what a Road of the Loving Heart she's
left behind her on this visit. We've enjoyed every
minute of it, and we'll talk of the things she's said
and done for months. Then I came home to find
that she's left not only a road behind her, but one
that will reach through all the years ahead, a road
that will lead straight through to what I have set
my heart on doing. I'm going into bee culture
with all my might and main, now, and make a fortune<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_310" id="Page_310"></SPAN></span>
out of it. There'll be time enough after that
to carry out my other plans.</p>
<p>"To think," she added, as Lloyd joined them,
"when I first came to the Wigwam I was so lonesome
and discontented that I wanted to die. Now
I wouldn't change places with any other girl in the
universe."</p>
<p>"Not even with me?" cried Lloyd, in surprise,
thinking of all she had and all that she had done.</p>
<p>"No, not even with you," answered Joyce, quoting,
softly, "For me the desert holds more than
kings' houses could offer."</p>
<p>The last two days of Lloyd's visit went by in a
whirl. As she drove away with her father, in the
open carriage that had been sent out of town for
them, she stood up to look back and wave her handkerchief
to the little group under the pepper-trees,
as long as the Wigwam was in sight. Then she
kept turning to look back at old Camelback Mountain,
until it, too, faded from sight in the fading
day. Then she settled down beside her father, and
looked up at him with a satisfied smile.</p>
<p>"Somehow I feel as if my visit is ending like
the good old fairy-tales—'They all lived happily
evah aftah.' Joyce is <i>so</i> happy ovah the bees and
Mr. Armond's lessons. Aunt Emily is lots bettah,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_311" id="Page_311"></SPAN></span>
the boys have so much to hope for since you promised
to help Holland get into the Navy, and make
a place for Jack at the mines. As for Mary, she
is so blissful ovah the prospect of a visit to Locust
next yeah, that she can't talk of anything else."</p>
<p>"And what about my little Hildegarde?" asked
Mr. Sherman. "Did the visit do anything for
her?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Lloyd, growing grave as the name
Hildegarde recalled the promise that had been so
hard to keep, and the victory she had won over
herself the day she turned away from her day-dreams
and her disappointment to interest herself
in other things. She felt that the bees had shown
her a road to happiness that would lead her out
of many a trouble in the years to come. She had
only to follow their example, seal up whatever had
no right in her life's hive, or whatever was spoiling
her happiness, and fill the days with other interests.</p>
<p>"Oh, I'm lots wiseah than when I came," she
said, aloud. "I've learned to make pies and coffee,
and to i'on, and to weave Indian baskets."</p>
<p>"Is that the height of your ambition?" was the
teasing reply. "You don't soar as high as Joyce
and Betty."</p>
<p>"Oh, Papa Jack, I know you'll be disappointed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_312" id="Page_312"></SPAN></span>
in me, but, honestly, I can't help it! I haven't any
big ambitions. Seems to me I'd be contented always,
just to be you'ah deah little daughtah, and
not do any moah than just gathah up each day's
honey as it comes and lay up a hive full of sweet
memories for myself and othah people."</p>
<p>"That suits me exactly," he answered, with an
approving nod. "Contented people are the most
comfortable sort to live with, and such an ambition
as yours will do more good in your little corner of
the world than all the books you could write or
pictures you could paint."</p>
<p>The engine was steaming on the track when they
drove up to the station. Waffles, the coloured man
whom Mr. Robeson had brought with him as cook,
hung over the railing of the rear platform, whistling
"Going Back to Dixie."</p>
<p>"How good that sounds!" exclaimed Lloyd, as
her father helped her up the steps. "Now that we
are really headed for home, I can hardly wait to get
back to the Valley and tell mothah and Betty about
my visit. I don't believe anybody in the whole
world has as many good times to remembah as
I have. Or as many good times to look forward
to," she added, later, when, with a mighty snorting
and puffing, the engine steamed slowly out of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_313" id="Page_313"></SPAN></span>
the station, and started on its long homeward journey.</p>
<p>As they rumbled on, she began picturing her arrival,
the welcome at the station, and her meeting
with her mother and Betty and the Walton girls.
How much she had to tell them all, and how many
delightful meetings she would have with the club!
Her birthday was only two months away. Then
the locusts would be white with bloom, and after
that vacation. With the coming of summer-time
to the Valley would come Rob to measure with her
at the measuring-tree, to play tennis, and to share
whatever the long summer days held in store.</p>
<p>With a vague sense that all sorts of pleasantness
awaited her there, her thoughts turned eagerly
toward Kentucky. Even the car-wheels seemed to
creak in pleased anticipation, and keep time to the
tune she hummed half under her breath:</p>
<div class='poem'>
"My heart turns back to Dixie,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">And I—must—go!"</span><br/></div>
<div class='center'><br/><br/><br/>THE END.</div>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_314" id="Page_314"></SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />