<h2>CHAPTER V.</h2>
<h3>A MEMORY-BOOK AND A SOUVENIR SPOON</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> string of white beads grew steadily, but
work went hand in hand with play at Warwick
Hall, as Kitty's memory-book testified. She brought
it out to liven the recreation hour one rainy afternoon,
late in the term, when they were house-bound
by the weather. Its covers, labelled "Gala Days
and Bonfire Nights," were bulging with souvenirs
of many memorable occasions. She sat on the
floor with it spread open on her lap. Betty was
on one side and Lloyd on the other, while Gay
leaned against her back and looked over her shoulder.</p>
<p>Kitty opened her treasure-house of mementos
with a giggle, for on the first page was a water-colour
sketch of Gay as she had appeared on the
welcoming night. She had painted her with two
enormous feet protruding from her flowing skirts,
one cased in a party slipper with an exaggerated
French heel, the other in a down-trodden bedroom
slipper painted a brilliant crimson.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"You mean thing!" cried Gay, laughing over
the ridiculous caricature of herself.</p>
<p>"That isn't a circumstance to some of them,"
remarked Allison, who was virtuously spending
her recreation hour in sewing buttons on her gloves
and mending a rip in the lining of her coat-sleeve.
"Wait till you come to the programme of the
recital given by the students of voice, violin, and
piano. The pictures she made all around the margin
of it are some of the best she has done. The
sketch of Susie Tyndall, tearing her hair and shrieking
out the 'Polish Boy,' is simply killing."</p>
<p>"Kitty Walton," exclaimed Gay, as she bent over
the grotesquely decorated programme, "where do
you keep this book o' nights? I'll surely have to
steal it. Think what it will be worth to us when
we are old ladies. There's one thing certain, you
could never pose as a saintly old grandmother with
such a record for mischief as this to bear witness
against you."</p>
<p>Kitty looked up with a startled expression.
"You know, it never occurred to me before that
I'd ever look at this book through spectacles. I
wonder if I'll find it as amusing then, when I'm
dignified and rheumatic, as I do now."</p>
<p>"I'm sure <i>that</i> will be pleasant to recall," said<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</SPAN></span>
Betty, pointing to a withered rose pinned to the
next page. "That will properly impress your
grandchildren."</p>
<p>Underneath the rose was written the date of a
private reception granted the Warwick Hall girls
at the White House.</p>
<p>"I had such a lovely time that afternoon," sighed
Betty. "It was so much nicer to go as we did,
for a friendly little visit under Madam's wing, than
to have pushed by in a big public mob. Wasn't
Cora Basket funny? She was so overawed by the
honour that she fairly turned purple. Her roommate
vows that, when she wrote home, she began,
'Preserve this letter! The hand that is now writing
it has been shaken by the President of the
United States of America!'"</p>
<p>"Cordie Brown was funnier than Cora," said
Allison. "She wanted to impress people with the
idea that the affair was nothing to her. That it
rather bored her, in fact. She went around with
her nose in the air, trying to appear so superior
and indifferent, as if crowned heads and their ilk
made her tired."</p>
<p>"What's this?" demanded Lloyd, as they turned
the next leaf, through which a single long black<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</SPAN></span>
hair had been drawn. Underneath was the gruesome
legend, "Dead men tell no tales."</p>
<p>"Oh, that's only a 'hair from the tail of the dog
of the child of the wife of the wild man of Borneo,'"
laughed Kitty, attempting to turn the page;
but Lloyd, laying both palms across it, held it fast.</p>
<p>"You know it's not, you naughty thing. You've
been up to some prank."</p>
<p>"It a p. j. A private joke," explained Kitty,
bending over the book and laughing till her forehead
touched her knees. "I'm dying to tell you,
for it's the funniest thing in the collection. It happened
at the Hallowe'en party, and I promised not
to tell."</p>
<p>"Promised whom?" demanded Betty.</p>
<p>"Can't tell that, either," was all that Kitty would
say. She flipped over the next leaf. A gilded wishbone
was fastened to the page by the bit of red
ribbon run through it.</p>
<p>"That's 'In Memoriam' of the grand spread
at the Thanksgiving Day feast. And this button
pasted on just below it, popped off the glove of
Mademoiselle La Tosto the afternoon she came to
the Studio Tea and Art reception. You know how
the girls buzzed around her like a swarm of bees,
begging for her autograph. I'd rather have this<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</SPAN></span>
button than a dozen autographs, for it dropped off
her glove as she clapped her hands in that vivacious
Frenchy way of hers, when she saw my caricature
of Paderewski that the girls stuck up on the wall.
Understand, young ladies, she was <i>applauding</i> it.
I walked on air all afternoon."</p>
<p>"Why undah the sun have you saved this tea
leaf?" asked Lloyd, pointing to one pasted carefully
in the corner of the next page.</p>
<p>"Don't you remember the day that we went down
to Mammy Easter's cabin, and her old black grandmother
was there, and told our fortunes? She
was a regular old hag, Gay. I wish you could have
seen her,—teeth all gone; skin puckered as a dried
apple; she looked more monkey than human. But
she's a fine fortune-teller. I made a few hieroglyphics
to recall what she said. This mark is
supposed to be a coach and four. She said that
Allison was to wed wid de quality and ride in a
car'age, but sorrow would be her po'shun if she
walked proud. She said that I'm bawn to trouble
as de spah'ks fly upwa'd, case I won't hah'k to
counsel, and that I mustn't marry the first man that
axes me, and I mustn't marry the second man that
axes me, but the third man that axes me, him I
can safely marry. This tea leaf stands for the third<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</SPAN></span>
man. I'm to have three sons and one daughter,
and my luck will come to me through running water
when the weather-vane points west."</p>
<p>Kitty pointed to several pencil scratches beside
the tea leaf, intended to signify a brook and a
weather-vane on a steeple.</p>
<p>"What did she say about Betty?" asked Gay.</p>
<p>Kitty studied the next line of hieroglyphics a
moment. "Oh, I see now. I intended this for
a ship. She said there was a veil done hanging
ovah her future, so she couldn't rightly tell, but
she could see ships coming and going and crowds
of people, and she could see that her fortune was
mixed up with a great many other persons. She
said that the teacup held gold for her, and the signs
all 'pinted friendly.'"</p>
<p>"And Lloyd?" queried Gay, trying to decipher
the next line of pencil marks. "Surely that's not
a cat I see."</p>
<p>"A cat, a teapot, and a ball of knitting," laughed
Kitty. "I supposed that Lloyd's fortune would
be something thrilling, but according to the old
darky, it's to be the tamest of all. She said, 'I see
a rising sun, and a row of lovahs, but I don't see
you a-taking any of 'em, honey. Yo' ways am
ways of pleasantness and all yo' paths am peace,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></span>
but I'se powahful skeered dat you'se gwine to be
an ole maid. I sholy is.'"</p>
<p>"Is that so, Lloyd?" asked Gay, leaning over
Kitty's shoulder to laugh at the Little Colonel's
teased expression. Kitty answered for her.</p>
<p>"Not if we can help it. We want her for a
cousin, and we think that she ought to marry Malcolm
just for the sake of being able to claim us
as her dear relations. Look how she's blushing,
girls."</p>
<p>"I'm not!" was the indignant answer. "You're
just trying to make me get red, because you know
I do it so easily."</p>
<p>She turned the page hastily and began to talk
about its contents to change the subject. There
were scraps of ribbon, as they went farther on,
a burnt match, a peacock feather, a tiny block of
wood with a hole shot through it, a strand of embroidery
silk, a faded pansy,—a hundred bits of
worthless rubbish which an unknowing hand would
have swept into the waste-basket; but to Kitty each
one was a key to unlock some happy memory of
her swiftly passing school-days. As the four heads,
brown and golden, black and auburn, bent over the
book, the rain beat against the windows in torrents.</p>
<p>With needle in air, Allison sat a moment watch<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</SPAN></span>ing
the water stream down the pane. "This makes
me think of that afternoon in old Lloydsboro Seminary,"
she said, musingly, "when Ida Shane read
the 'Fortunes of Daisy Dale' aloud to us. I wonder
what has become of Ida. She was living in
a little country town up in the mountains the last
time I heard of her, taking in sewing and doing her
own work."</p>
<p>"She's the girl who caused so much excitement
at the Seminary," Betty explained to Gay. "The
one who got our Shadow Club into disgrace. She
tried to elope one night, but the teachers found
it out and sent her home. It didn't do any good,
for she ran away with Ned Bannon the next summer,
and they were married by a justice of the
peace. I don't see how Ida could do it when she'd
always been so romantic, and planned to have her
wedding just like Daisy Dale's, in cherry blossom
time, and in the little stone church at Lloydsboro,
with the vines over the belfry. It's so quaint and
English looking, just like the one that Daisy was
married in. Instead of being all in white, she was
married in the dress she happened to have on when
she ran away,—just an old black walking skirt
and plaid shirt-waist. No veil, no trail, and no
orange-blossoms, and she had counted on having<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</SPAN></span>
all three. It was so prosy and commonplace after
the grand things she had planned."</p>
<p>"She's had it prosy enough ever since, too,"
remarked Allison. "Ned drinks so hard that he
can't keep a position. She didn't reform him one
single bit, and I reckon she understands now why
her aunt objected so strongly to her marrying him.
Poor Ida, to think of her having to take in sewing
to keep her from actual starvation! It's awful!"</p>
<p>"Poah Ida!" echoed Lloyd. "I don't see how
she does it. When she was in the Seminary, she
couldn't do anything with her needle but embroidah.
I used to have Mom Beck do her mending and
darning when she did mine."</p>
<p>"Thank fortune <i>my</i> mending is done!" exclaimed
Allison, dropping her thimble into her
work-bag, and throwing her coat across a chair.
"It's almost time for the bell. I must take Juliet
Lynn the papers I promised her."</p>
<p>Lloyd and Betty, looking at the clock, scrambled
to their feet, and a moment after only Gay and
Kitty were left on the rug with the memory-book
open between them.</p>
<p>"Do you think that Lloyd really cares for your
cousin?" asked Gay.</p>
<p>"No," was the emphatic answer. "You can make<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</SPAN></span>
her blush that way about anybody, and I love to
tease her. When she first came back from Arizona,
I used to think she liked Phil Tremont, a boy she
met out there, and then I thought maybe it was
Joyce's brother Jack. She talked so much about the
duck hunts they had together, and what a splendid
fellow he was, and how much her father admired
him. But the Princess is so particular that
I believe the old darky told her fortune truly. If
she's so particular at fifteen, 'I'se powahful skeered
she's gwine to be an old maid. I sholy is.' For
what will she be at twice fifteen?"</p>
<p>Gay laughed at the imitation of the old coloured
woman, then asked: "But doesn't your cousin
come up to her standard? According to Maud
Minor he is as handsome as a Greek god, as accomplished
as all the Muses put together, and as entertaining
as a four-ring circus."</p>
<p>"Oh, Malcolm's all right," answered Kitty.
"We're awfully fond of him, but we're not so crazy
about him as to think all that. I have a picture of
him somewhere in my box of photographs, if you'd
like to see it."</p>
<p>Climbing on a chair to reach the box on the top
of the wardrobe, she took it down and began rummaging
through it. In a moment she tossed a photograph<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</SPAN></span>
to Gay, who still sat on the floor, Turk
fashion.</p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/i003.jpg" width-obs="280" height-obs="500" alt=""STUDYING THE FACE OF THE HANDSOME YOUNG FELLOW WITH INTEREST"" title=""STUDYING THE FACE OF THE HANDSOME YOUNG FELLOW WITH INTEREST"" /> <span class="caption">"STUDYING THE FACE OF THE HANDSOME YOUNG FELLOW WITH INTEREST"</span></div>
<p>"Here is one he had taken years ago when he
and Keith used to play they were two little Knights
of Kentucky, and went around trying to set the
wrongs of the world to rights."</p>
<p>While Gay was still exclaiming over it, she threw
down another. "Here's the one I was looking for.
It was taken this summer at Narragansett Pier on
his polo pony."</p>
<p>Gay seized it, studying the face of the handsome
young fellow with interest. "Why, he's almost
grown!" she cried.</p>
<p>"Yes, he's nearly eighteen, and he is even better
looking than that picture. And here's Keith, the
one I'm so fond of. We always have so much fun
when they come out to grandmother's for the holidays."</p>
<p>The box slipped and the entire contents showered
over the floor. Gay helped her to put them
back into the box, glancing at each one as she
did so. One in a cadet uniform attracted her attention.</p>
<p>"Who's this? Now <i>he's</i> the one I'd like to
know. I suppose it's because I've lived at an army<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</SPAN></span>
post always that I adore anything military. <i>He</i>
looks interesting."</p>
<p>Kitty leaned over to look. "Oh, that's my
brother Ranald. He's away at military school.
Won't he be teased when I tell him what you said?
He's dreadfully bashful with girls, though you'd
think he oughtn't to be. He was under fire ever
so many times with papa in the Philippines when
he was a little chap. You know he was the youngest
captain in the army, at one time, and was on
General Grant's staff when he was still in short
trousers."</p>
<p>"Why, of course, I know," cried Gay, enthusiastically.
"I heard some officers talking about it
one night at dinner just after it happened. Papa
toasted 'The Little Captain' in such a pretty speech
that the officers who had fought with your father
cheered. But I never dreamed then that I'd ever
know his sister, or be sitting here holding his picture,
talking about him. I'm going to take possession
of this," she added, when all the other photographs
were back in the box.</p>
<p>"You don't care, do you? I'd like it to add to
my collection of heroes. I'll put it in a frame made
of brass buttons and crossed guns and all sorts<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</SPAN></span>
of ornaments that the officers have given me off
of their uniforms."</p>
<p>"No, I don't care," answered Kitty. "Allison
has one like it, and I can get another any time
by writing home for it. I wish you would take
it, for that would give me such a fine thing to tease
him about. I could worry him nearly distracted."</p>
<p>"I don't care how much you tease him so long
as I may keep the picture," laughed Gay. "I'm
a thousand times obliged to you."</p>
<p>As she sat looking at it, she exclaimed, suddenly:
"Kitty Walton, you're an awfully lucky girl to
have such nice boys in your family. I wish I knew
them. I haven't a brother or even a forty-second
cousin."</p>
<p>"Well, you can know them if you'll come home
with me to spend the Christmas vacation. Ranald
always brings a boy home with him for the holidays,
and mother said Allison and I might bring
a friend. I'm sure she'd rather have you than anybody
else, she knows your father and mother so
well."</p>
<p>The amber lights in Gay's brown eyes deepened.
"Oh, I'd <i>love</i> to!" she cried. "I'd dearly love
to! It's too far to go away back to San Antonio
for such a short time, and I hated to think of the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</SPAN></span>
holidays, knowing I'd have to stay here at the Hall,
with all you girls gone. Are you sure your mother
won't object?"</p>
<p>"You wait and see," advised Kitty. "You don't
know mammy! You'll not have any doubt of your
welcome when her letter comes."</p>
<p>"Oh, it would be too lovely for anything!" exclaimed
Gay, listening with a far-away look in her
eyes, as Kitty began outlining plans for the coming
holidays. Presently, in sheer joy at the prospect,
they pulled each other up from the floor, and,
springing on to the bed, danced a Highland fling
in the middle of it, till a slat fell out with a terrifying
crash.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>With the coming of December the holiday gaieties
began. A spirit of festivity lurked in the very
air. A mock Christmas tree was one of the yearly
features of the school, when each pupil's pet fad
or peculiarity was suggested by appropriate gifts.
Preparations for the tree began early in the month,
and whispered consultations were carried on in
every corner, with much giggling and profound
assurances of secrecy.</p>
<p>The practising of Christmas carols went on in
the music-rooms, and snatches of them floated down<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</SPAN></span>
the halls and through the building, till the blithe
young hearts were filled to overflowing with the
cheer and good-will of the sweet old melodies.
Now the usual Monday sightseeing gave way to
shopping, and every moment that could be snatched
from school work was given to crochet-needles and
embroidery-hoops, to the finishing of an endless
variety of gifts, and the wrapping of same in mysterious
packages.</p>
<p>One Monday Betty did not join the others in
their weekly shopping expedition. Her few purchases
had been made, and she wanted the day to
work on unfinished gifts. She was making most
of them with her needle. She was glad afterward
that she had decided to stay when a slow winter
rain began to fall. It melted the light snow-fall
which whitened the ground into a disagreeable
compound of slush and mud.</p>
<p>It was almost dark when Kitty and Allison burst
into the room, their arms full of bundles, and began
displaying their purchases. Lloyd followed more
slowly, and, dropping her packages on the floor
by the radiator, stood trying to warm her fingers
through her wet gloves. Presently, in the midst
of the exhibition, with her hat still on, she flung
herself across her bed, piled up as it was with<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</SPAN></span>
strings and crumpled wrapping-paper. "Excuse
me if I mash your bargains, Kitty," she said, weakly,
closing her eyes. "But I'm as limp as a rag! So
ti'ahed—I feel as if I were falling to pieces. We
tramped around in the wet so long, and then inside
the stores there were such crowds that we were
pushed and jammed and stepped on everywhere we
turned. It seemed to me we waited hours for our
change. Then the car we came out on was so ovah-heated
that we almost stifled. I'm suah I caught
cold when the icy wind struck us aftah we left
the station."</p>
<p>She shivered as she spoke. Betty sprang up and
began tugging at her wet wraps.</p>
<p>"Don't lie there that way," she begged. "Let
me help you get into some dry clothes, and ask the
housekeeper for a glass of hot milk."</p>
<p>At first Lloyd protested that she was too tired
to move. Betty could be as persistent as a mosquito
at times. She insisted until Lloyd finally allowed
her to have her way, and got up wearily to put
on the dry skirts and stockings which she brought
to her. A hot dinner made her feel somewhat better,
but her face was flushed when they went up-stairs
for the study hour. Betty saw her wipe her
eyes as she took out her Latin grammar, and in<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</SPAN></span>stantly
forgave the petulant way in which Lloyd
had answered her several times during the evening.</p>
<p>"Don't try to study, Lloyd," she urged. "I
know you don't feel well."</p>
<p>"No," acknowledged the Little Colonel, "every
bone in my body aches, and my head is simply splitting."</p>
<p>"Let me run down to the sanitarium and ask
Miss Gilmer to come up and see if she can't do
something for you," began Betty, but Lloyd interrupted
her, stamping her foot with a touch of her
old childish imperiousness.</p>
<p>"You sha'n't go! I'm not sick! I've just caught
a plain cold."</p>
<p>"But people don't catch just plain colds nowadays,"
persisted Betty. "They always catch microbes
at the same time, that are apt to turn into
la grippe and pneumonia and all sorts of dreadful
things. 'A stitch in time saves nine,' you know,"
she added, wisely, quoting from the motto embroidered
on her darning-bag, which happened to be
hanging on a chair-post in the corner. "'An ounce
of prevention is worth a pound of cure' every
time."</p>
<p>"Oh, for mercy's sake, Betty," cried Lloyd, impatiently,
"let me alone and don't be so preachy.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</SPAN></span>
I'm not going to repoa't a little thing like a headache
and a soah throat to the nurse. She'd put
me to bed and keep me there for a week. I'd get
behind with my lessons, and lose all the holiday fun.
Like as not mothah and Papa Jack would come
straight aftah me, and take me home befoah we'd
had the mock Christmas tree or any of the things
I've been looking forward to so long."</p>
<p>Betty picked up her algebra again without an
audible reply, but inwardly she was saying: "I
know she is sick, or she wouldn't be so cross."</p>
<p>The next day found Lloyd with such high fever
that she was installed at once in the sanitarium.
"It is la grippe that she has," the nurse told Betty.
"It is the real thing, and not what people always
claim to have with an ordinary cold. The worst
will probably be over in a few days, but it will leave
her so exhausted and so susceptible to other things
that I shall keep her with me for a week at least."</p>
<p>Lloyd rebelled at first, but she had to submit as
her fever mounted higher, and the world grew, to
her blurred fancy, one great, throbbing ache. She
was glad to give herself up to Miss Gilmer's soothing
touches. Mrs. Sherman did not come, for a
letter from the school physician assured her that
Lloyd was receiving every care and attention that<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</SPAN></span>
she could have had at home, and the case was quite
a simple one.</p>
<p>Miss Gilmer, the nurse, was a big motherly
woman, who seemed to radiate comfort and cheer,
as a stove does heat. After the first few days, Lloyd
would have enjoyed the time spent with her in
the cheerful room assigned her had she not been
haunted by the thought that she was falling behind
her classes.</p>
<p>"It's a pretty good sawt of a world, aftah all,"
she said one day, as she sat propped up among the
pillows, enjoying a dainty mid-afternoon lunch
Madam Chartley had personally prepared and sent
in hot from the chafing-dish. Bouillon in the thinnest
of fragile china, and a toasted scone which
recalled delightfully the little English inn she had
visited near Kenilworth ruins. By some oversight,
no spoon had been sent in on the tray, and Miss
Gilmer supplied the deficiency by bringing one of
her own from a little cabinet in the next room.</p>
<p>"It has a history," Miss Gilmer said, and Lloyd
looked at it with interest before dipping it into the
cup.</p>
<p>"Why, the handle is a May-pole!" she exclaimed,
with pleasure. "And the date down among
the garlands is the queen's birthday, isn't it? I<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</SPAN></span>
remembah we were up in the Burns country that
day, when we saw the school-children celebrating
it."</p>
<p>"To think of an American girl remembering that
date!" cried Miss Gilmer, in a pleased tone. "It
is a great day on my calendar, for it was then that
I met Madam Chartley, for the first time, on the
queen's birthday. She has been my good angel
ever since. It was she who sent me that May-pole
spoon, as a souvenir of that meeting."</p>
<p>"Oh, would you tell me about it?" asked Lloyd.
"It sounds so interesting."</p>
<p>Taking up some needlework from a basket on
the table, Miss Gilmer leaned back as if to begin
a long story.</p>
<p>"There isn't so much to tell, after all," she said,
pausing to thread her needle. "It was long ago,
when Madam Chartley was Alicia Raeburn, and I
was a bashful little English schoolgirl at St. Agnes
Hall. Alicia had come from America to visit her
uncle, who was proctor of the cathedral. His
grounds joined the school premises on the south,
and I often used to peep through the hedge and
watch her strolling around the garden. She was
older than I, and the difference in our ages seemed
greater then than now, for I was still wearing short<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</SPAN></span>
frocks, and she had just put on long ones. I had
heard that she was to be presented at court next
season. That, and the fact that she was an American,
and very beautiful, and that she looked lonely
strolling around the old proctor's garden by herself,
threw a glamour of romance about her.</p>
<p>"I would have given a fortune to have made her
acquaintance, and I spent hours down by the brook
dreaming innocent little day-dreams in which I pictured
such meetings. Suddenly heliotrope became
my favourite flower instead of roses, because she
so often wore a bunch of it tucked in the belt of
her gray dress. Indeed, because she so often wore
it, I grew to regard it as sacred to her alone, and
felt that no one else had a right to wear it. Fortunately,
at that season of the year it grew only
in the proctor's conservatory, so that the schoolgirls
could not obtain it. I would have inwardly resented
it, if any one of them had taken such a liberty as
to wear her flower. She seemed to me the most
beautiful and perfect creature I had ever seen, and
I worshipped her from afar, and imitated her in
every way possible. I don't suppose you can understand
such an infatuation."</p>
<p>"Indeed I do undahstand," interrupted Lloyd,
eagerly. She was thinking of Ida Shane, and the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</SPAN></span>
way she had fallen under the spell of her charming
personality. Even yet the odour of violets brought
back the same little thrill it had awakened when
violets seemed made for Ida's exclusive wearing.
Miss Gilmer's feeling for the beautiful Alicia Raeburn
was no deeper than hers had been for Ida.
She could readily understand about the heliotrope.</p>
<p>"Well, then," Miss Gilmer went on, "you can
imagine my state of mind when at last I actually
met her. It was on the queen's birthday. At our
school, instead of having the May-pole dance on
May-day, we waited until the queen's birthday, and
on that occasion Alicia was one of the invited
guests. It was quite by accident she spoke to me.
She dropped her handkerchief, and I sprang to pick
it up. But she must have seen the adoration in my
poor little embarrassed face, for I went quite red
I am sure. I could fairly feel the hot blood surge
over me. She said something pleasant to cover my
confusion, and then swept her skirts aside for me
to share her seat. She wanted to ask some questions
about the customs of the school, she said.</p>
<p>"That was the beginning of our acquaintance.
Next day she waved her handkerchief over the
hedge to me, and the next called me over for a little
chat. She was lonely in the great garden. After<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</SPAN></span>
awhile I plucked up courage to tell her how I had
watched her through the hedge, and dreamed about
meeting her. I could not put it into words, but
she could readily see that the good Victoria and
the queen of the May were not the sovereigns who
claimed my dearest allegiance. It was the 'Queen
Rose of the rosebud garden of girls,' the beautiful
Alicia Raeburn.</p>
<p>"She went away that summer, but we had grown
to be such friends that she promised to write to
me once a year, in order that I might not lose her
entirely out of my life. She knew what a lonely
little orphan I was, and she never denied me the
joy of that yearly letter. They were full of her
travels and the interesting experiences of her life,
for she married a young English officer and went
to India.</p>
<p>"They came back to England once. I saw her
then. It was at a great ball given for the Prince
of Wales when he honoured the little cathedral town
with a visit. She could hardly believe that I was
the little schoolgirl who had eyed her so adoringly
through the hedge. I had grown so large. But
she found from others what a lonely life I had,
and, knowing how much her friendship meant, she
still gave me the pleasure of that yearly letter, writ<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</SPAN></span>ten
on the queen's birthday. That she should remember
through all her busy years shows one of
the finest traits of her character.</p>
<p>"Once she was too ill to write, but the message
came just the same. She sent this spoon with the
May-pole handle, and on her card was scrawled the
one line, 'I keep the tryst.' She had told me the
story of their family crest. You don't know how
many times in the next few years the sight of that
card and the souvenir spoon helped me. Her fidelity
to a promise made me rely on her and her friendship
when all others failed me. My guardian died and
left my property in such shape that I found I would
have to support myself, and I began to take training
for a professional nurse. When she heard of it,
she wrote and told me that she, too, had been
obliged by her husband's death to earn her own
living, and that she had established this school in
her great-grandmother's old mansion. She offered
me the position of professional nurse here. I came
on the next steamer, and have been here ever
since.</p>
<p>"You don't know how many times I've thought
how different my life would have been if she had
failed in that one little matter of sending a yearly
letter. No doubt it was a bore to her oftentimes,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</SPAN></span>
but it was the line that kept us in touch and finally
drew me to this happy anchorage. Alicia Chartley
is a great woman, my dear. She has left her imprint
on every girl who has passed through this
school, and there'll be a long line of them to rise
up and call her blessed. Not so much for the fine
ladies she has made of them with her high-bred
ways and ideals, but for the example she has set
them always in that one thing. No matter in how
small a duty, she has never once failed to keep the
tryst."</p>
<p>Lloyd would have liked to ask some questions
about Madam's girlhood, but some one called Miss
Gilmer into the office just then, so, taking the tray
with its empty cup and plate, she passed out. Lloyd
thumped her pillows and lay looking out of the
window at the sparrows on the balcony railing.
All the ache was gone, and, with a delightful sense
of drowsiness and of well-being, she began slipping
into a little doze. Even illness had its bright side,
she thought, languidly. She liked Miss Gilmer's
reminiscences. They opened into a world so delightfully
English. When she came back she would
ask for more stories. Down from the distant music-room
stole the faint echo of one of the carols. She
opened her eyes to listen.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class='poem'>
"God rest you, merry Christians,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Let nothing you dismay,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">For Christ our Lord and Saviour</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Was born on Christmas Day."</span><br/></div>
<p>Lloyd liked that carol. "'Let nothing you dismay,'"
she repeated, softly. "No, it doesn't really
make any difference what happens," she thought,
closing her eyes again and curling up like a sleepy
kitten. "It will all come right in the end, as it did
with Miss Gilmer. I'll not worry about missing
so many lessons and so many pearls on my rosary.
I'll just be thankful for Christmas and all it brings."</p>
<p>Again through her drowsy senses echoed the
refrain, and she dropped to sleep, repeating, slowly,
"'Let—nothing—you—dismay!'"</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />