<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<h3>HOMEWARD BOUND</h3>
<div class='poem'>
"O Warwick Hall, dear Warwick Hall,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Thy happy hours we'll oft recall!</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">No time or change can break thy tie,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Though for awhile we say good-bye—</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Good-bye! Good-bye!"</span><br/></div>
<p><span class="smcap">Amid</span> a flutter of handkerchiefs and a babel of
parting cries, each 'bus-load of girls departed from
the Hall to the station singing the farewell song
of the school.</p>
<p>A dozen times on the way home Allison, humming
it unconsciously, found the rest of the party
joining in. It was an uneventful journey, but a
merry one to the five girls, travelling for the first
time without a chaperon. For the first few hours
they had the observation car to themselves. Even
the porter mysteriously disappeared.</p>
<p>"He's curled up asleep somewhere, rest his soul,"
said Gay, when she had rung for him several times.</p>
<p>"All the better," answered Kitty. "We don't
really need the table, and it's nice to have him out<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</SPAN></span>
of the way. This is as good as travelling in a private
car. We can 'stand on our head in our little
trundle-bed, and nobody nigh to hinder.' Oh, girls,
I'm so crazy glad that we're on our way home that
I'm positively obliged to do something to let off
steam. I've exhausted my vocabulary trying to express
my delight, so there's nothing left but to
howl."</p>
<p>"Or to wriggle," suggested Gay. "Why not
try facial expression? How is this for transcendent
joy?"</p>
<p>The grotesque smile which she turned upon them
was so ridiculous that they screamed with laughter.</p>
<p>"Oh, Gay, do stop!" begged Betty. "You're
as bad as a comic valentine."</p>
<p>"I'd like to see you do any better," retorted Gay.</p>
<p>"Let's all try," suggested Kitty. "Line up in
front of this mirror, girls. Now all look pleasant,
please. Now let your smiles express rapture. Now,
frenzied delight!"</p>
<p>Fascinated by their own ugliness, the five girls
stood in a row distorting their pretty faces with
hideous grins and grimaces until they were weak
from laughing. The banging of the car door sent
them scuttling into their seats. A portly old gentleman
passed through the car to the rear platform,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</SPAN></span>
and, slamming the door behind him, stood looking
down the rapidly vanishing track. Evidently it
was too breezy a view-point for the old gentleman,
even with his coat-collar turned up and hat pulled
down to meet his ears, for in a moment he came in
and passed back to his seat in a forward car. The
girls sat demurely looking out of the windows until
he was gone, then they faced each other, giggling.</p>
<p>"Suppose he had caught us making those idiotic
faces," exclaimed Allison. "He would have taken
us for a lot of escaped lunatics."</p>
<p>"No, he wouldn't," insisted Gay. "He was a
real benevolent-looking old fellow, the kind that
understands young people, and he'd know that it
was just that Christmas has gone to our heads, and
made us a little flighty. I'm sure that his name
is James, and that he has six old maid daughters.
He lives out West, and he's taking home a trunk
full of presents for them."</p>
<p>"Let's guess what he has for them," said Kitty.
"I'll say that the oldest one is named Emmaline,
and he is taking her a squirrel fur muff."</p>
<p>"And the next one is Agnes Dorothea," said
Betty, taking her turn, as if it were a game. "She's
the delicate one of the family, and a sort of invalid.
So he bought her a lavender shoulder shawl that<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</SPAN></span>
caught his fatherly eye in a show window, because
it was so soft and fluffy. But it will shrink and
fade the first time it is washed till Agnes Dorothea
will look like a homeless cat if she wears it. Still
she will persist in putting it on because dear father
brought it to her from Washington."</p>
<p>"He'd certainly think you all were crazy if he
could heah yoah remah'ks," laughed Lloyd.</p>
<p>"Speaking of shawls," cried Gay, "that reminds
me of that rainbow shawl in my bag. I haven't
taken a stitch in it since we started, and I intended
to knit all the way home. I simply have to, if I'm
to get it done in time."</p>
<p>Taking out the square of linen in which the
fleecy zephyr was wrapped, she settled herself by
the rear window in a big arm-chair, with her feet
drawn up under her, and fell to work with all her
might.</p>
<p>"It's so nice and cosy to have the car all to ourselves,"
sighed Allison, stretching out luxuriously
on the sofa. Betty, bending over her embroidery,
smiled tenderly at a picture that her memory showed
her just then. She was comparing this journey
with the first one she had ever taken. And she
saw in her thoughts a little brown-eyed girl of
eleven, setting forth on her first venture into the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</SPAN></span>
wide world, with a sunbonnet tied over her curls,
and an old-fashioned covered basket on her arm.
What a dread undertaking that journey had been
from the Cuckoo's Nest to the House Beautiful.
She remembered how frightened she was, and how
she had studied the picture of Red Ridinghood,
printed in colours on the border of her handkerchief,
until she was afraid to speak even to the
conductor. She saw a possible wolf in every
stranger.</p>
<p>Somehow her thoughts kept going back to that
time, even in the midst of Gay's most amusing nonsense,
and Kitty's brightest repartee. Even when
Allison began to sing "O Warwick Hall," and
she chimed in with the others, "Dear Warwick
Hall," she was not thinking of school, but of the
Cuckoo's Nest, and Davy, and the old weather-beaten
meeting-house, in whose window she had
passed so many summer afternoons, reading the
musty dog-eared books she found in the little red
bookcase.</p>
<p>"What are you smiling about, Betty, all to yoahself?"
asked Lloyd. "You look as if you are a
thousand miles away."</p>
<p>Betty glanced up with a little start. "Oh, I was
just thinking about the Cuckoo's Nest, and wishing<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</SPAN></span>
that I could see Davy's face when they open the
Christmas box I sent. There are only trifles in it,
but the box will mean a lot to them, for Cousin
Hetty never has time to make anything of Christmas."</p>
<p>Lloyd sat up with a sudden exclamation. "Oh,
Betty, I <i>beg</i> yoah pah'don. There's a lettah for
you in my bag from some of them that I forgot to
give you. Hawkins came up with it just as we
drove off, and there was so much excitement and
confusion I nevah thought of it again till this minute.
I'm mighty sorry I forgot."</p>
<p>"It doesn't make any difference," Betty assured
her. "Good news can afford to wait, and, if it's
bad news, it would have spoiled all the first part
of this trip."</p>
<p>She tore open the envelope and glanced down
the page. Lloyd, looking up, saw a distressed expression
cross her face and the brown eyes fill with
tears.</p>
<p>"Oh, it's poor little Davy that's in trouble," said
Betty, answering Lloyd's anxious question. "He
had his leg badly hurt last week, broken in two
places. He was riding one of those heavy old farm
horses, hurrying home to get out of a storm. Going
down a steep, slippery hill, it stumbled and fell<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</SPAN></span>
on him. He'll have to lie in bed for weeks, with
his knee in plaster, and he's so tired of it already,
and <i>so</i> lonesome. Nobody has any time to sit with
him. I know how it is. I was sick myself once
at the Cuckoo's Nest. Oh, I'd give anything if I
could spend my vacation there with him."</p>
<p>"And give up all your good times at home?"
cried Kitty. "He surely couldn't expect such a
sacrifice as that."</p>
<p>"But it wouldn't be any sacrifice. Not a mite!
I haven't seen him for such a long time, and I'd
love to go. He used to be the dearest little fellow,
never out of my sight a moment during the day.
They used to call him 'Betty's shadow.'"</p>
<p>"Why don't you go if you wish it so much?"
was on the tip of Gay's tongue, but she stopped
the question just before it slipped off, remembering
Betty's dependence on her godmother. Kitty had
told her all about it one time. Naturally she
wouldn't want to ask for the money, even for such
a short journey, when so much was being spent to
keep her at school with Lloyd; and naturally she
would not want to ask to leave Locust at Christmas,
when that was the time of all the year when she
could be of service, and in many ways add greatly
to the pleasure of the entire household.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The nonsense stopped for a few minutes. No one
knew what to say to comfort Betty, although they
were genuinely sorry, and glanced from time to
time at the brown head turned away from them
toward the window. She was looking at the flying
landscape through a blur of tears, recalling the
way little Davy's dimpled fingers had clung to hers,
his chubby feet followed her. Of course he was
much larger and older, she told herself, not at all
like the little fellow she had left so long ago. He
was big enough to stand pain now, and probably
the worst of his suffering was over. Still, she saw
only a solemn baby face when she pictured him,
and heard only the lisping voice, saying as he used
to say when stumped toe or bruised finger brought
the tears: "It hurth your Davy boy. Tie a wag
on it, Betty." How he had loved her stories!
What a pleasure they would be to him now in the
long days he would be forced to spend in bed.</p>
<p>Suddenly conscious of the silence around her,
Betty turned, realizing that her depression had cast
a shadow on the spirits of all the rest.</p>
<p>"Don't think about my bad news any more,"
she said, brightly. "It probably isn't half as bad
as I have been picturing it. My imagination always
runs away with me. It isn't Davy the baby that's<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</SPAN></span>
had such an awful accident. It was that thought
that hurt me so at first. I keep forgetting that
it's five years since I left there. I'm going to drop
him a postal card at the next station. I can write
to him every day, and make a sort of game of the
letters with riddles and suggestions of things for
him to do, and that will help the time pass."</p>
<p>"First call to dinnah in the dinah," called a
coloured waiter, passing through the car in white
jacket and apron.</p>
<p>"Now we'll have to stop all our foolishness,"
said Allison, sedately, as she rose to lead the way
to the dining-car. They followed as decorously as
grandmothers, each realizing the responsibility that
devolved on her, since they were travelling without
a chaperon.</p>
<p>To be sure, Gay choked on an olive when Kitty
made some wicked remark about the fussy old
woman across the aisle, who wouldn't be pleased
with anything the waiter brought her; and it was
too much for their gravity when an excessively
dignified man at the next table, who had been staring
at the wall like a wooden Indian, suddenly
sneezed so violently that his eye-glasses dropped
into his soup with a splash.</p>
<p>Otherwise they were models of propriety, and<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</SPAN></span>
more than one head turned to look at the bright
girlish faces, and smile at the keen, unspoiled enjoyment
which they evidently found in life and in
each other.</p>
<p>They did not stay long in the observation-car
when they went back to it after dinner. Other
people had come in, and it was not so attractive
as when they occupied it alone. The lamps had
been lighted so early that short December day that
it seemed much later than it really was, and they
were all tired. At nine o'clock, when they went to
their berths in the forward end of the car, they
found several sections already made up for the
night, and the porter was moving on down toward
theirs.</p>
<p>The fussy old woman, who had been so hard to
please at the table, came squeezing her way through
the valises that blocked the aisle, and took possession
of the section opposite Betty and Lloyd.</p>
<p>"Oh, my country!" whispered Lloyd. "I wondah
if she's going to keep up that grumbling and
scolding all night. I'm glad that I am not that
poah henpecked maid of hers. She certainly makes
life misahable for her."</p>
<p>It was nearly two hours before Jenkins, the long-suffering
maid, succeeded in settling her mistress<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</SPAN></span>
to her satisfaction behind the curtains of her berth.
The girls made no attempt to get into the dressing-room
until the little comedy was over. They
laughed until they were hysterical over each scene
as it occurred. A comedy in three acts, Betty called
it—the losing of the cold-cream bottle and the
finding of same in madam's overshoe. The unavailing
search for a certain black silk handkerchief in
which madam was wont to tie her head up in of
nights, and the substitution of a towel instead, which
the porter obligingly brought.</p>
<p>Next there was a supposed case of poisoning,
Jenkins in her trepidation having administered three
pink pellets from a bottle instead of two white ones
from a box. Five minutes' reign of terror after
that mistake brought the poor maid to a witless
state that left her almost helpless. Various trips
were made to the dressing-room, at which times
the old lady's face was massaged, her grizzly hair
rolled on crimping-pins, and her shoulders rubbed
with an evil-smelling liniment which permeated the
whole car. She seemed as oblivious to the presence
of the other passengers as if she were on a desert
island, and, being somewhat deaf, made Jenkins
repeat her timid replies louder and louder until they
were almost screaming at each other.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Every one on the car was smiling broadly when
at last she subsided behind the curtains. The smiles
grew to audible mirth when she confided in a loud
voice to Jenkins, stowed away in the berth above
her, that she hoped to goodness nobody on board
would snore and keep her awake.</p>
<p>Jenkins's answer, floating tremulously down,
convulsed the sleepy girls: "Hi 'ope not, ma'am.
Hit's a bad 'abit, ma'am, halmost, you might say,
han haffliction."</p>
<p>"What?" came in a thunderous voice from the
lower berth, and Jenkins, craning her head turtle-wise
over the edge of her bed, called back in a
tremulous squeak: "Hi honly said as 'ow hit were
a bad 'abit, ma'am!"</p>
<p>"Hump!" was the answer. "See that you don't
do it yourself. I've got my umbrella here ready to
punch you if you do."</p>
<p>A titter ran from seat to seat. The girls, unable
to stifle their amusement any longer, seized their
bags and hurried down the aisle to the dressing-room,
where, under cover of the rattle of the train,
they could laugh as freely as they pleased.</p>
<p>When Lloyd and Betty stole back to their berths
a few minutes later, they looked at each other with
an amused smile. From the opposite section came<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</SPAN></span>
an unmistakable sound, long-drawn and penetrating
as a cross-cut saw. Madam was evidently asleep.
Betty giggled, as from Jenkins's perch came a gentle
echo.</p>
<p>"'Hi honly said as 'ow hit were a bad 'abit,
ma'am,'" whispered Lloyd. "Wouldn't you love
to jab the old lady herself with an umbrella?"</p>
<p>Gay, in the dressing-room, was carefully counting
over her toilet articles, as she put them back
into her bag. "Soap-box, comb, nail-file, tooth-powder—I
haven't lost a thing this trip, Allison.
I'm beginning to feel proud of myself. Here's my
watch and here's my tickets, buttoned up in this
pocket. Mamma had it made on purpose, so in
case of a wreck at night I'd have them on me. She
patted the pocket sewed securely in the dark blue
silk robe she wore, made in loose kimono fashion.</p>
<p>"Now I'm all ready," she added, dropping her
shoes into her bag and closing it. In her soft Indian
moccasins, beaded like a squaw's, she executed a
little heel and toe dance in the narrow passage outside,
while she waited for Allison to gather up her
clothes and follow. She thought every one else
was in bed, and when suddenly the outside door
opened and she heard some one coming in from the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</SPAN></span>
next car, she flew down the aisle like a frightened
rabbit.</p>
<p>It was only a brakeman who stood just inside
the door a moment with his lantern, and then went
out again. All the lights had been turned down in
the car, and Gay stumbled several times over shoes
and valises protruding in the aisle. But finally,
with a bound, she made her escape, as she supposed,
from whoever it was that had caught her dancing
in her moccasins in the passage.</p>
<p>She gave a headlong dive into her berth. Just
then the car lurched forward, sending her bag banging
against the window, but she did not loosen her
hold of it, and she was still clinging to it five minutes
later.</p>
<p>For, with a scream of terror, she rolled out of
the berth far faster than she had rolled in. It was
madam's fat body that writhed under her, and her
stern voice that yelled "Murder! murder!" in a
voice calculated to wake the dead.</p>
<p>"'Elp! 'elp!" screamed Jenkins from the upper
berth, afraid to look out between the curtains, but
bravely pushing the button of the porter's bell till
some one, wakened by the cries and persistent ringing,
wildly called "Fire!"</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/i004.jpg" width-obs="303" height-obs="500" alt=""'I TELL YOU SOMEBODY WAS TRYING TO SANDBAG ME'"" title=""'I TELL YOU SOMEBODY WAS TRYING TO SANDBAG ME'"" /> <span class="caption">"'I TELL YOU SOMEBODY WAS TRYING TO SANDBAG ME'"</span></div>
<p>"It's train robbahs!" gasped Lloyd, sitting up.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</SPAN></span>
Little cold shivers ran up and down her back, but
she was conscious of a pleasant thrill of excitement.
Heads were thrust out all up and down the aisle.
The bell and the cries of murder and 'elp never
stopped until the porter and Pullman conductor
came running to the rescue.</p>
<p>But there was nothing for them to see. At the
first yell, Gay had tumbled hastily out, still clinging
to her bag. Before the old lady had sufficiently
recovered from her surprise enough to wonder what
sort of a wild beast had pounced in upon her, Gay
was safe in her own berth, drawn up in a knot, and
trembling behind her closely buttoned curtains.
Her heart beat so loud that she thought it would
certainly betray her.</p>
<p>"You must have had the nightmare," said the
conductor, politely, trying not to smile as the angry
face, under its towel turban, glared out at him.</p>
<p>"Nightmare!" blazed the irate old lady. "I'm
no fool. Don't you suppose that I know when I'm
hit? I tell you somebody was trying to sandbag
me. I thought a Saratoga trunk had fallen in on
me. It's your business to take care of passengers
on this train, and I intend to hold the company
responsible. I shall certainly sue the railroad for
this shock to my nervous system as soon as I get<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</SPAN></span>
home. I have a weak heart and I can't stand such
performances as this."</p>
<p>It took a long time to pacify her. Gay lay in her
berth, shaking first with fright and then with laughter.
She could not go to sleep without sharing her
secret with the other girls, but she was afraid to
trust herself to speak. She had grown almost hysterical
over the affair. Finally she crept in beside
Lloyd to whisper, brokenly: "<i>I</i> am the nightmare
that sandbagged the old lady. <i>I</i> am the Saratoga
trunk that fell on her. Oh, Lloyd, I'll never brag
again. I had just told Allison I hadn't lost a single
thing this trip, and then I turned around and lost
myself. I got into the wrong berth. Oh! oh! It
was so funny to see her, all done up in that towel.
It'll kill me if I can't stop laughing."</p>
<p>She crept back to her own side of the aisle again,
and Lloyd got up to repeat it to Betty and Allison,
who passed it on to Kitty. It was nearly half an
hour before they stopped giggling over it, and then
Kitty started them all afresh by leaning out to say,
in a stage whisper, as a certain duet was renewed
by Jenkins and her mistress, "'Hi honly said as
'ow hit were a bad 'abit.'"</p>
<p>It was snowing next morning, just a few flakes
against the window-pane, as they sat in the dining-car<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</SPAN></span>
at breakfast, but the landscape grew whiter as
they whirled on toward home.</p>
<p>"Just as it ought to be for Christmas," declared
Allison. "Oh, The Beeches will look so lovely in
the snow, and the big log fire will seem so good,
I can hardly wait to get there!"</p>
<p>"I know just how it's all going to be," exclaimed
Kitty, wriggling impatiently in her seat.
"It will be this way, Gay. They'll all be down
at the station to meet us, mother and little Elise
and Uncle Harry and his dog. Aunt Allison will
probably be there, too, and grandmother, if she
feels well enough. And old black fat Butler will
be standing by the baggage-room door with his
wheelbarrow, waiting to take our trunks. And
we'll all talk at once. Everybody along the road
will be calling 'Howdy!' to us, and at the post-office
Miss Mattie will come out to shake hands with
us, and tell us how glad she is to see us back. Then
it'll be just a step, past the church and the manse
and the Bakewell cottage, and we'll turn in at The
Beeches, <i>and the fun will begin</i>."</p>
<p>Betty turned to Gay. "That doesn't sound very
exciting or especially interesting to a stranger, but,
oh, Gay, the Valley is so <i>dear</i> when you once get
to know it. And when you go back, you feel almost<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</SPAN></span>
as if everybody were related to you, they're all
so friendly and cordial and glad to welcome you
home."</p>
<p>Even to impatient schoolgirls homeward bound,
the journey's end comes at last, so by nightfall it
all happened just as Kitty had predicted. Such
a royal welcome awaited Gay that she felt drawn
into the midst of things from the moment she
stepped from the car.</p>
<p>"You're right, Betty," she whispered as she left
her. "It <i>is</i> a dear Valley, and I feel already as if
I belong here."</p>
<p>The two groups separated when the checks had
been sorted out and the baggage disposed of. Then,
still laughing and talking, Kitty led one on its merry
way toward The Beeches, and the other whirled
rapidly away in the carriage toward the lights of
Locust.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />