<h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
<h3>A PICNIC IN THE SNOW</h3>
<p>"<span class="smcap">What</span> a good gray day this is!" exclaimed
Betty next morning, turning from the window to
look around the cheerful breakfast-room, all aglow
with an open wood-fire. "It's so bleak outside that
there is no temptation to go gadding, and so cosy
indoors that we'll be glad of the chance to stay at
home and finish tying up our Christmas packages."</p>
<p>"Yes," assented Lloyd, who, having finished her
breakfast, was standing on the hearth-rug, her back
to the fire and her hands clasped behind her.
"And for once I intend to have mine all ready
the day befoah, so I need not be rushed up to the
last minute. For that reason I am glad that mothah
had to take the early train to town this mawning,
to finish her shopping. If she'd been at home, I
should have talked all the time, without accomplishing
a thing."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I think your tissue-paper and ribbon was put
into my trunk," said Betty, drumming idly on the
window-pane. "I'll go and unpack it in a minute,
and have it off my mind, as soon as I see who this
is coming up the avenue."</p>
<p>A tall young fellow had turned in at the gate,
and was striding along toward the house as if in
a great hurry.</p>
<p>"It's Rob Moore!" she exclaimed, in surprise.
"I thought he wasn't coming home until Christmas
eve."</p>
<p>"So did I," answered Lloyd, crossing the room
to look over Betty's shoulder. "I'll beat you to
the front doah, Betty."</p>
<p>There was a wild dash through the hall. Both
slim figures bounced against the door at the same
instant. There was a laughing scuffle over the latch,
and then the two girls stood arm in arm between
the white pillars of the porch, gaily calling a greeting.</p>
<p>Rob waved a pair of skates in reply, and quickened
his stride until he came within speaking distance.
One would have thought from his greeting
that they had seen each other only the day before.
Rob never wasted time on formalities.</p>
<p>"Hurry up, girls! Get your skates. The ice<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</SPAN></span>
is fine on the creek, and there's a crowd waiting
for us down at the depot."</p>
<p>"Who?" demanded Lloyd.</p>
<p>"Oh, the MacIntyre boys and the Walton girls
and that little red-headed thing that they brought
home from school with them. Kitty's going to
have a picnic on the creek bank for her."</p>
<p>"A picnic in Decembah!" ejaculated Lloyd.</p>
<p>"That's what she said," Rob answered, clicking
his skates together as he followed the girls into the
house. "They telephoned over to me to hustle up
here and get you girls. They're on their way to
the station now. We're to meet them in the waiting-room."</p>
<p>"They should have let us know soonah," began
Lloyd, "so that we could have had a lunch ready.
There'll be nothing cooked to take this time of day."</p>
<p>"They didn't know it themselves," he interrupted.
"Kitty proposed it at the breakfast-table,
and they just grabbed up whatever they could get
their hands on and started off."</p>
<p>"We have so much to do to-day," said Betty.
"I don't see how we can ever get through if we stop
for this."</p>
<p>"Let everything slide!" begged Rob. "Do your
work to-morrow. This will be lots of fun. The<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</SPAN></span>
ice may not last more than a day or so, and the
MacIntyre boys are not going to be out here all
vacation."</p>
<p>"I suppose we could tie up those packages to-night,"
said Lloyd, with an inquiring look at Betty.</p>
<p>"Of course," Rob answered for her. "And I'll
help you with anything you have to do. Come on."</p>
<p>"Well, then, you run out to the kitchen and ask
Aunt Cindy to give you something for a lunch,—anything
in sight, and we'll get ready while Mom
Beck finds our skates."</p>
<p>Rob rubbed his ears apprehensively. "I'd as
soon beard the lion in his den as Aunt Cindy in her
kitchen. She's never forgiven my early thefts."</p>
<p>"Go on, goosey," laughed Lloyd. "Don't you
know that since you're 'growed up,' as Aunt Cindy
says, she swears by you? I heard her tell Mom
Beck last night she reckoned she'd have to make
a batch of little sugah hah't cakes right away, for
Mistah Rob would be coming prowling round her
cooky jah."</p>
<p>"Am I growed up?" asked Rob gravely, throwing
back his shoulders and looking into the mirror
at the tall reflection it showed him.</p>
<p>"You are in inches and ells," laughed Lloyd,
"but you're not always six feet tall in yoah actions."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"It's only when I am in your society that I appear
so juvenile," retorted Rob. "When I'm away
at school with the other fellows, I feel and act as
old as Daddy, but when I'm back home, where you
all seem to expect me to be a kid, I naturally adjust
myself to that role just to be companionable and
obliging. You would be afraid of me if I were
to turn out my whiskers and stand back on my
dignity. You know you would."</p>
<p>"Don't try it, Bobby," advised Lloyd. "It
wouldn't be becoming. Trot out to Aunt Cindy
and get the lunch. That's a good little man. We'll
be ready in just a few minutes."</p>
<p>Even in her baby days, Lloyd had been patronizing
at times to her good-natured playmate, ordering
him about with a princess-like right that always
seemed part of the game. So now he laughingly
shrugged his shoulders and started to the kitchen,
while Lloyd followed Betty up-stairs to change her
slippers for heavy-soled walking-boots.</p>
<p>A few minutes later the three were hurrying
down the avenue to the gate, under the bare windswept
branches of the locusts.</p>
<p>"Aunt Cindy had disappeared temporarily," said
Rob. "There wasn't a soul in the kitchen, so I
rummaged around till I found this old basket, and<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</SPAN></span>
filled it with a little of everything in sight. It is
a long way to the creek. We'll be ready to eat
nails by the time we tramp over there in this snappy
weather."</p>
<p>"It is snappy," agreed Lloyd. "Betty, yoah
cheeks are as red as fiah."</p>
<p>The rosy face under the brown tam-o'-shanter
smiled back at her. "So are yours. Aren't they,
Rob? They are as red as her coat."</p>
<p>"Hello!" exclaimed Rob, noticing for the first
time the long red coat that Lloyd wore. "That's
something new, isn't it? I thought you looked
different, but I couldn't tell exactly what it was.
That's a stunner, sure enough, Princess. It sort
of livens up the landscape."</p>
<p>"I'm glad you like it," laughed Lloyd, "but I
don't believe you would have seen it at all if Betty
hadn't called yoah attention to it. You'll nevah
get on in society, Bobby, if you don't learn to notice
things. You'll miss all the chances most boys take
advantage of to pay compliments and make pretty
little speeches."</p>
<p>Rob scowled. "You know I don't go in for that
sort of stuff."</p>
<p>"But you ought to," persisted Lloyd, who was
in a perverse mood. "I considah it my duty to take<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</SPAN></span>
you in hand and teach you. You may practise on
Betty and me. Now we've been talking to Gay all
term about our friends in Lloydsboro Valley, and
naturally we want everybody to put their best foot
foremost and show off their prettiest. Malcolm
and Keith will leave a charming impression of themselves,
because they will make her feel in such an
easy graceful way that she has made that sawt of
an impression on them. If she wears an especially
pretty dress, or says an especially bright thing, or
plays unusually well, they will notice it in some
way so that she will know that they noticed it, and
that they were pleased. Naturally that will please
her, and she will like them bettah for it."</p>
<p>Rob faced her with a whimsical expression.
"Look here, Lloyd Sherman, I've played every kind
of a game that you've asked me to ever since I
learned to walk. I've been your man Friday when
you wanted to be Robinson Crusoe, and played
B'r Fox to your B'r Rabbit. You've scalped me
and buried me and dug me up. You've made
me be Pharaoh with the ten plagues of Egypt, or
a Christian martyr thrown to the wild beasts, just
as it pleased your fancy. I've even played dolls
with you week at a time, but I swear I draw the
line at this. I'll do anything in reason to help entertain<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</SPAN></span>
your chum,—ride or dance or skate or get
up private theatricals,—but I'll <i>not</i> make a ninny
of myself trying to be flowery and get off complimentary
speeches. It comes natural to some people,
but I'm not built that way. I'd be as awkward at
it as a fish out of water."</p>
<p>Lloyd turned her head with a despairing gesture.
"Oh, Rob, you're hopeless! You don't undahstand
at all! Nobody wants you to be flowery, and nobody
likes flat-footed, out-and-out compliments.
They're not nice at all. I just meant—well—I
scarcely know what I <i>did</i> mean, but you know how
Malcolm does. It isn't that he says a thing in so
many words, but he has a way of somehow making
you feel that he has noticed nice things about you,
and that he is <i>thinking</i> compliments."</p>
<p>"Gee whiz!" exclaimed Rob, in a teasing tone.
"Say that again, won't you please, and say it
slowly, so that I can take it all in. Do I get the
thought? To be agreeable one must not say things,
but must cultivate an air of having noticed that you
are agreeable, and stand off and think compliments
so hard that you can actually feel them flying
through the air. Is that your idea?"</p>
<p>"Oh, Rob! Stop your teasing."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Well, that is what you said, or words to that
effect. Didn't she, Betty?"</p>
<p>The brown eyes flashed an amused smile at him.
They walked along in silence for a few minutes,
then he said, humbly, but with a twinkle in his eye
which boded mischief: "Well, I'll do the best I
can to please you, Lloyd. I'll watch Malcolm till
I get the hang of it, then I'll stand off and think
compliments about your friend till her ears burn
and she is duly impressed. Grandfather is always
saying, 'Who does the best his circumstance allows,
does nobly. Angels could do no more.'"</p>
<p>"I wish I had never mentioned the subject,"
pouted Lloyd, as they walked on down the frozen
pike. "I simply meant to give you a little advice
for yoah own good, and you've gone and made a
joke of it. I am suah you'll say or do something
befoah the mawning is ovah that will make Gay
think you are perfectly dreadful."</p>
<p>Rob only laughed in answer, leaving her to infer
that she had good reason for her fears. As they
passed the only store which the Valley boasted,
Kitty came rushing out, a bright new tin saucepan
dangling at her side like a drum. It was tied by
a piece of twine, and she was beating a tattoo upon<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</SPAN></span>
it with a long-handled iron spoon. Keith followed,
his overcoat pockets bulging with parcels.</p>
<p>"Are you playing Santa Claus this early?" cried
Betty, as he hurried across to shake hands with
them.</p>
<p>"No; Kitty decided that no social function in
the woods was properly a picnic without a fire and
some kind of a mess to cook. So we stopped at
the store, and she's loaded me down with stuff for
fudge. Malcolm and the girls are on ahead in the
waiting-room."</p>
<p>"Where's Ranald?" asked Lloyd, as they crossed
the railroad track and walked along the platform
toward the door of the station.</p>
<p>"He's gone hunting with John Baylor, the boy
he brought home from school with him," answered
Kitty. "We can't get him within a stone's throw
of Gay. I teased him so unmercifully in my letters
about the girl who had asked for his picture to put
in her group of heroes that he won't even look in
her direction."</p>
<p>As Lloyd greeted Malcolm, whom she had not
seen since the close of the summer vacation, and
then stood talking with him while Allison introduced
Rob to her guest, she was conscious that
Rob was watching every motion, and making note<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</SPAN></span>
of it, to tease her afterward. A few moments later,
when they were all discussing a choice of places
for the picnic-grounds, he edged over to her.</p>
<p>"Now I understand what you mean," he said, in
a low voice. "Malcolm didn't say anything about
that red coat. He just gave a sort of quick, pleased
glance at it, as if it had hit him hard, and made
some gallant speech about a Kentucky cardinal. I
tried my best to follow suit. So when I was introduced,
I gave the same kind of a glad start when
I saw her hair, and was about to make a similar
reference to a Texas redbird, when my courage
failed me. So I just stood off and fired the
name at her in thought till I'm sure she understood."</p>
<p>"You mean thing!" exclaimed Lloyd, under her
breath. "Her hair isn't red. It's just a deep, rich,
bronzy auburn, and perfectly lovely. I do wish
I'd nevah said anything. Now you'll not act natural,
and you won't like each othah as I had hoped
you would."</p>
<p>A gayer picnic party never started down the
pike than the one that went laughing along the
road that winter morning, under barbed-wire fences,
through pasture gates, across bare woodlands, and
over frozen corn-fields. It was a still gray morning,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</SPAN></span>
with the chill of snow in the air, and presently the
snow began to fall in big feathery flakes.</p>
<p>Gay was delighted. She held up her face to let
the cold, star-shaped crystals settle on it. She
caught them on her sleeve to marvel over their airy
beauty. "It's like frozen thistle-down!" she cried.
"I hope it will snow all day and all night until
everything is covered. I never saw a white Christmas."</p>
<p>"This will stop the skating," said Allison, "unless
we had a broom to sweep the ice as it falls."</p>
<p>Rob offered to go back for one, but they were
so far on their way they all protested it would not
be worth while.</p>
<p>"How much farthah is it?" asked Lloyd, presently.
For the last half-mile she had had nothing
to say, and had fallen behind the others.</p>
<p>"I'm so tiahed I can hardly take another step."</p>
<p>Rob looked at her curiously. It seemed strange
for Lloyd to admit that she was tired. He had
known her to tramp nearly all day after nuts, and
then be ready for a horseback ride afterward.</p>
<p>"We'll stop just over this hill," he replied.
"There's a good place to camp. Here! Catch hold
of my skate-strap, and I'll help pull you up."</p>
<p>"It helps some," she said, clinging to the strap<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</SPAN></span>
swung over his shoulder, "but I don't believe I'll
evah get ovah this hill."</p>
<p>"It looks like a grove of Christmas trees!" cried
Gay, as they started down the other side toward
the creek. Little cedars from two to five feet high
dotted the hillside, and the snow had drifted across
them till the branches drooped with the soft white
burden. It began blowing faster, and coming down
like a thick white sheet between them and the creek.</p>
<p>Rob, who had often picnicked here on his hunting
trips, led the way farther down the hill to a
cavelike opening under an overhanging ledge of
rocks.</p>
<p>"This will keep the wind off your backs," he
said. "Huddle down here a few minutes until we
build a fire. Then you'll be all right."</p>
<p>Some charred sticks and ashes between two flat
rocks, with an old piece of sheet iron laid on top,
marked the spot where many meals had been
cooked. The boys began at once foraging for firewood.
There was plenty of it all around,—dead
limbs and broken twigs,—and soon they had a
big heap ready to light.</p>
<p>"Now if somebody can donate a piece of paper
to start a blaze, we'll have you warm in a jiffy,"
said Rob.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Keith slapped his pockets. "I haven't a scrap,"
he declared. "Malcolm, you might be able to spare
that bunch of letters you carry around in your
pocket. You've read them enough to know them
by heart, I should think."</p>
<p>"Oh, keep still, can't you?" muttered Malcolm,
in an aside. "Don't get funny now."</p>
<p>"See him get red!" whispered Keith to Betty.
"They're from a girl he met at the first college
hop last fall. She's older than he is, but he thinks
she's the one and only."</p>
<p>Then he turned to Malcolm again. "You might
at least spare the envelopes when it's to keep us
from freezing. It would be a big sacrifice, but to
save your own blood and kin, you know—"</p>
<p>Malcolm stole a quick glance at Lloyd, but she
was leaning wearily against the ledge of rocks, paying
no attention to Keith's remarks. Kitty solved
the difficulty by diving into Keith's pockets after
the packages, and emptying the brown sugar and
chocolate into the saucepan. She handed the wrapping-paper
and bag to Rob, saying if that was not
enough she would scratch the label off the can of
evaporated cream.</p>
<p>Carefully holding his hat over the pile of twigs
to shield it from the wind, Rob applied a match to<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</SPAN></span>
the paper. It blazed up and caught the wood at
once, and in a few moments a comfortable fire was
crackling in front of them. Back in the cavelike
hollow, under the rocks, the boys found a big, dry
log, which other campers had put there for a seat.
They rolled it forward toward the fire. Some flat
stones were soon heated for the girls to put their
feet on, and, warmed and rested, they began to investigate
the contents of the baskets.</p>
<p>"Oh, Rob!" groaned Lloyd. "What a lunch
you did pick up for a wintah day! These slabs
of cold pumpkin pie would freeze the teeth of a
polah beah, and there's nothing else but pickles and
cheese and apples and raw eggs."</p>
<p>"That's fine!" exclaimed Allison. "We can
roast the eggs in the ashes, and I've brought bacon
to broil over the fire on switches. And here's
crackers and gingersnaps and salmon—"</p>
<p>"And peanuts," added Kitty, "don't forget them.
Or the fudge. We will have that ready in a little
while."</p>
<p>"Now what could be jollier than this?" cried
Gay, as she took the long, pointed switch that Rob
cut for her, and held a piece of bacon over the fire
to broil. "It's a thousand times nicer than a picnic
in the summer, when you get so hot, and the mosquitoes<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</SPAN></span>
and redbugs and spiders swarm all over
you."</p>
<p>Lloyd, with a sigh of relief, saw that Rob was
"acting natural" at last, and he and Gay were
showing off to mutual advantage. She was enjoying
the novel experience so fully that she was in
her brightest spirits, and he was talking to her with
the familiar ease with which he talked to Lloyd and
Betty, even scolding her with brotherly frankness
when she dripped bacon grease around too promiscuously.</p>
<p>The eggs were saltless, the bacon smoked and
black, because, held in the flame as often as against
the embers, nearly every piece caught fire and had
to be blown out. Smoke blew in their eyes, and
the snow fell thicker and thicker. But, with their
feet on the hot stones, their backs to the sheltering
ledge of rocks, and the fire crackling in front of
them, they sang and laughed and ate with a zest
which no summer picnic could have inspired.</p>
<p>No one had remembered to bring a pail for water,
and rather than tramp over another hill to a distant
spring, they quenched their thirst with handfuls
of snow. The fudge boiled over, and more
than half of it was lost in the ashes.</p>
<p>"It's a good thing that it did," Allison declared,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</SPAN></span>
tossing the empty salmon box and a bag of peanut
shells into the fire. "Ugh! The mixture we've
already eaten is enough to kill us! I think we ought
to start back home now. I'm sure that I heard the
one o'clock train whistle."</p>
<p>But Kitty protested. They hadn't been out half
long enough, she said. If the ice on the creek had
been free from snow, they would have skated for
hours, and she thought as long as that sport had
been spoiled, they ought to do something to make
up for it. Gay had never gathered any mistletoe.
She thought it would be fun for them all to go
around by Stone Hollow, and get some off the big
trees that grew in the surrounding pastures.</p>
<p>Lloyd listened to the ready assent of the others
with a sinking heart. She had been leaning back
against the rocks for some time, taking no part
in the conversation. She had grown so tired that
she dreaded the long tramp home, and had been
vainly wishing that Tarbaby could suddenly appear
on the scene, or some one with a conveyance.
Even a wheelbarrow or a go-cart would have been
welcome. She could not remember that she had
ever felt so exhausted before in all her life.</p>
<p>"But I won't be the one to hang back and spoil
every one's fun," she said to herself, "They<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</SPAN></span>
wouldn't let me go home the shorter way by myself.
It would only break up the pah'ty if I proposed it.
But I do not see how I can evah drag myself all
the way around by Stone Hollow."</p>
<p>At another time they might have noticed that she
lagged behind, that she had little to say, and that
she looked white and tired. But Gay, her spirits
rising in the wintry air, was in her most rollicking
mood. Even Kitty had never known her to say so
many funny things or to tell so many amusing experiences.
She followed on behind with Lloyd,
watching admiringly as Gay's bright face was
turned first toward Malcolm, then toward Rob,
jubilant to see that her guest was captivating them
as she did every one else who fell under the charm
of her vivacious manner.</p>
<p>Betty and Allison were on ahead with Keith,
keeping a sharp lookout for mistletoe. Lloyd
scarcely heard what any one said. She plodded
along like one in a dream. It was an effort just
to lift her feet. Only one thing in life seemed desirable
just then, that was her warm soft bed at
home. If she could only creep into that and shut
her tired eyes and lie there, she wouldn't care if
she didn't waken for a month. She felt that it<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</SPAN></span>
would be bliss to sleep through Christmas and the
entire vacation.</p>
<p>The long walk came to an end at last. The roundabout
route through Stone Hollow led them near
Locust, and, with their arms full of mistletoe, the
merry picnickers parted from Lloyd and Betty at
the gate. Gay exclaimed enthusiastically over the
beautiful old avenue, leading under the snow-covered
locusts to the house, but to Lloyd's relief her
invitation to come in was refused. There were a
dozen reasons why they could not stop, but they
promised to be over early next morning.</p>
<p>"It has been the very loveliest picnic I ever went
to in my whole life," declared Gay, as they turned
away. "I'd like to turn around and do it all over
again."</p>
<p>"So would I," echoed Betty, warmly. "I'm not
at all tired."</p>
<p>Lloyd looked at her in vague wonder as they
plodded up the avenue. "I don't know what's the
mattah with me," she said, "that I couldn't keep
up with you all, unless it's true what Miss Gilmer
said. The ice is too thin for holiday dissipations,
and this picnic was too great a weight for it."</p>
<p>Betty glanced at her white face anxiously. "Go<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</SPAN></span>
and lie down the rest of the afternoon," she said.
"I'll tie up your packages."</p>
<p>"Oh, if you only would!" exclaimed Lloyd,
gratefully. "But it seems too much to ask of any
one. Don't tell mothah that I got so woh'n out.
I'll be all right by evening."</p>
<p>"She hasn't come home yet," said Betty, looking
ahead of them at the smooth expanse of newly fallen
snow. "There isn't a track either of foot or wheel."</p>
<p>"Then maybe I'll have time for a nap, and be all
rested when she comes," said Lloyd. "I don't want
her to get any of Miss Gilmer's notions about me."</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />