<h2>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
<h3>"SWEET SIXTEEN"</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> red coat Lloyd wore that winter was long
remembered in the Valley, for wherever it went
it carried a bright face above it, a cheery greeting,
and some pleasant word that made the day seem
better for its passing.</p>
<p>Mrs. Bisbee and the little Crisps were not the
only ones who learned to watch for it. As all the
lonely town of Hamelin must have felt toward the
one child left to it after the Pied Piper had passed
through its streets, so all the Valley turned with
tender regard to the young girl left in its midst.
Mothers, whose daughters were away at school,
stopped to talk to her with affectionate interest.
The old ladies whom she regularly visited welcomed
her as if she were a part of their vanished
youth. The young ladies took her under their
wing, glad to have her in the choir and the King's
Daughters' Circle, for she was bubbling over with
girlish enthusiasm and a sincere desire to help.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>So she found the cobwebs in the neighbourhood
sky, and disagreeable enough they were at times,
even more disagreeable than her experience with
Mrs. Perkins. But she swept away with praiseworthy
energy, till gradually she found that the
accumulation of outside interests, like the cobweb
strands which Ederyn twisted, made a rope strong
enough to lift her out of herself and her dungeon
of disappointment.</p>
<p>After the novelty of giving music lessons had
worn off, it grew to be a bore. Not the lessons
themselves, for Agnes's delight in them never
flagged. It was the tied-up feeling it gave her to
remember that those afternoons were not her own.
It happened so often that the afternoons devoted
to Agnes were the ones which of all the week she
wanted to have free, and she had to give up many
small pleasures on account of them.</p>
<p>It grew to be a bore, also, calling on some of
the people who claimed a weekly visit. She never
tired of Mrs. Bisbee's lively comments on her neighbours
and her interesting tales about them. But
there was old Mr. and Mrs. Apwall, who, with
nothing to do but sit on opposite sides of the fire
and look at each other, were said to quarrel like
cat and dog. It mortified Lloyd dreadfully to have<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</SPAN></span>
them quarrel in her presence, and have them pour
out their grievances for her to decide which was
in the wrong.</p>
<p>She always rose to go at that juncture, flushed
and embarrassed, and vowing inwardly she would
never visit them again. But they always managed
to extract a promise before she got to the door
that she would drop in again the next time she
was passing.</p>
<p>"Somehow you seem to get husband's mind off
himself," Mrs. Apwall would whisper at parting.
"He isn't half so touchy when you've cheered him
up a spell."</p>
<p>And Mr. Apwall would follow her out through
the chilly hall to open the front door, and say,
huskily: "Come again, daughter. Come again.
Your visits seem to do the madam a world of good.
They give her something to talk about beside my
fancied failings."</p>
<p>So inwardly groaning, Lloyd would go again,
painfully alert to keep the conversation away from
subjects that invariably led to disputes. And inwardly
groaning, she went dutifully to the Coburns'
at their repeated requests. The first few times the
garrulous old couple were interesting, but the most
thrilling tale grows tiresome when one has heard<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</SPAN></span>
it a dozen times. She could scarcely keep from
fidgeting in her chair when the inevitable story of
their feud with the Cayn family was begun. They
never left out a single petty detail.</p>
<p>No one will ever know how often the thought
of the little rosary in the sandalwood box helped
Lloyd to listen patiently, and to keep tryst with the
expectations of those about her, so that at nightfall
there might be another pearl to slip on the
silken cord, in token of another day unstained by
selfishness.</p>
<p>There was rarely time for envying the girls at
school now. The days were too full. Almost before
it seemed possible, the locusts were in bloom
and it was mid-May by the calendar. In that time
perfect health had come back to her. There were
no more crying spells now, no more hours of nervous
exhaustion, of fretful impatience over trifles.
She went singing about the house, with a colour
in her cheeks that rivalled the pink of the apple
blossoms.</p>
<p>"Spring has come indoors as well as out," said
Mrs. Sherman one morning. "I think that we
may safely count that your Christmas vacation is
over, and you may go back to your music lessons
whenever you choose."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The night before her birthday, Lloyd sat with
her elbows on her dressing-table, peering into the
mirror with a very serious face.</p>
<p>"You'll be sixteen yeahs old in the mawning,
Lloyd Sherman," she told the girl in the glass.
"'Sweet sixteen!' You've come to the end of
lots of things, and to-morrow it will be like going
through a gate that you've seen ahead of you for
a long, long time. A big, wide gate that you have
looked forward to for yeahs, and things are bound
to be different on the othah side."</p>
<p>Next morning, just in fun, she trailed down to
breakfast in one of her mother's white dresses, with
her hair piled on the top of her head. It was very
becoming so, but it made her look so tall and
womanly that she was sure her grandfather would
object to it.</p>
<p>"He'll nevah let me grow up if he can help it,"
she said, half-pouting, as she gave a final glance
over her shoulder at the mirror, vastly pleased with
her young ladylike appearance. "He'll say, 'Tut,
tut! That's not grandpa's Little Colonel.' But I
can't stay his Little Colonel always."</p>
<p>She was standing by the window looking down
the locust avenue when he came in to breakfast, so
she did not see his start of surprise at sight of her.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</SPAN></span>
But his half-whispered exclamation, "<i>Amanthis!</i>"
told her why he failed to make the speech she expected
to hear. With her hair done high, showing
the beautiful curve of her head and throat as
she stood half-turned toward him, he had caught
another glimpse of her startling resemblance to the
portrait. He could not regret losing his Little
Colonel if that loss were to give him a living reminder
of a beloved memory.</p>
<p>After breakfast, when an armful of birthday gifts
had been duly admired and the donors thanked,
and she had spent nearly an hour enjoying them,
she strolled down the avenue, feeling very much
grown up with the long dress trailing behind her.
She wandered down to the entrance gate, hoping
to meet Alec, who had gone for the mail. She was
sure there would be a letter from Betty, for Betty
never forgot people's birthdays. Then she trailed
back again under the white arch of fragrant locust
blooms. At the half-way seat she sat down and
tucked a spray of the blossoms into her hair and
fastened another at her belt. She had not long
to wait there, enjoying the freshness of the sweet
May morning, for in a few minutes Alec came
up the avenue with a handful of letters and papers.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</SPAN></span>
She sorted out her own eagerly, six letters and a
package.</p>
<p>She opened Betty's first. It was a long one, ending
with a birthday greeting in rhyme, and enclosing
a handkerchief which she had made herself,
sheer and fine and daintily hemstitched, with her
initials embroidered in one corner in the smallest
letters possible.</p>
<p>The letters from Allison and Kitty were profusely
illustrated all around the margins, and by
the time Lloyd had read them, and Gay's ridiculous
summary of school news, she felt as if she had been
on a visit to Warwick Hall, and had seen all the
girls. The next letter was from Joyce, a good
thick one. But before she read it, curiosity impelled
her to open the package, which was a flat
one, bearing a foreign postmark and several Italian
stamps. There were two photographs inside. She
slipped the uppermost one from its envelope.</p>
<p>"Why, it is Eugenia Forbes!" she exclaimed
aloud. "But how she has changed!"</p>
<p>The picture was not at all like the Eugenia whom
Lloyd remembered, the thin slip of a girl who had
raced up and down the avenue five years before
at her house-party. She had blossomed into a beautiful
young woman.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"A regulah Spanish beauty!" Lloyd thought,
as she looked at the picture, long and admiringly,—the
picture of a patrician face with great dark
eyes and a wealth of dusky hair. The old self-conscious,
dissatisfied expression was gone. It was
a happy face that smiled back at her. It had been
nearly a year since Lloyd had had a letter from
Eugenia. She had written from the school near
Paris that her father was on his way over from
America to join her and take her home immediately
after her graduation. Lloyd had sent a reply addressed
to her cousin Carl's office, but had heard
nothing more.</p>
<p>Thinking that the other photograph was her
cousin Carl's, Lloyd unwrapped it, wondering if
he had changed as much as Eugenia. To her surprise,
it was not a middle-aged man she saw, with
gray moustache and kindly tired eyes. It was the
handsome boyish face of a stranger, yet so startlingly
familiar that she looked at it with a puzzled
frown.</p>
<p>"Why should Eugenia be sending me this?" she
thought. "And where have I seen that man befoah?"
Then, "Phil Tremont!" she exclaimed
aloud the next instant. "That's who it reminds<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</SPAN></span>
me of. It is almost exactly like him, only it is oldah-looking,
and the nose isn't quite like his."</p>
<p>She turned the picture over. There on the back
was written in Eugenia's hand the word Venice,
and a date underneath the name, Stuart Tremont.</p>
<p>"Phil's brother!" gasped Lloyd, in astonishment.
"How strange that she should know him!"</p>
<p>Tearing open the envelope lying on the bench
beside her, Lloyd unfolded a twenty-page letter
from Eugenia, written on thin blue foreign correspondence
paper. Before her glance had travelled
half-way down the second page, she gave another
gasp, and sat staring at an underscored sentence
in open-mouthed amazement. Then, never waiting
to gather up the other letters which fluttered into
the grass at her feet, as she sprang up, she rushed
off toward the house as hard as she could go, waving
Eugenia's letter in one hand and the photographs
in the other.</p>
<p>"Mothah!" she called, as she reached the end
of the avenue. She was tripping over her long
skirt, and scattering hairpins at every step, as her
reckless flight sent her hair tumbling down over
her shoulders.</p>
<p>"Mothah!" she shrieked again, as she stumbled
up the porch steps.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Here in my room, dear," came the answer from
an upper window. Falling all over herself in her
undignified haste, Lloyd tore up the stairs. A final
tangling of skirts sent her headlong into her mother's
room, where she half-fell in a breathless, laughing
heap, and sat at Mrs. Sherman's feet with her
hair almost hiding her eager face.</p>
<p>"Guess what's happened!" she demanded,
breathlessly. "<i>Eugenia is engaged!</i> And to Phil
Tremont's brother Stuart!"</p>
<p>Then she sat enjoying her mother's surprise,
which was almost as great as her own. "And she
isn't much moah than eighteen," Lloyd exclaimed,
rocking back and forth on the floor, with her arms
clasped around her knees, while her mother examined
the pictures.</p>
<p>"She looks twenty at least in this picture," answered
Mrs. Sherman, "even more than that.
Eugenia was always old for her years. If you
remember, she was wearing long dresses when we
left her the summer we were in Europe together."</p>
<p>"Yes, but it doesn't seem possible that Eugenia
is old enough to be <i>married</i>," insisted Lloyd. "I
can hardly believe it is true."</p>
<p>She sat staring dreamily out of the window until
a slight breeze fluttering the sheets of paper still<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</SPAN></span>
clutched in her fingers reminded her that she had
read only two of the twenty pages.</p>
<p>"Heah is what she says about it," began Lloyd,
reading slowly, for the closely written sheets were
hard to decipher.</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>"'I know you are going to wonder how it all
came about, so I'll begin at the beginning. Last
summer papa came on to Paris in time for Commencement.
He was so pleased because I took
first honours, when he hadn't expected me to take
any, that he said he would do as fathers sometimes
did in fairy-tales,—grant me three wishes, anything
in reason; for he had had an unusually successful
year and could well afford it.</p>
<p>"'Well, I thought and thought, but I couldn't
think of anything I really wanted, as I just had
an entire new outfit in clothes, so I told him finally
I'd like to stop in London long enough to have a
tailor make me a riding-habit, and I'd think of the
other two wishes sometime during the year. So
we went to London. Papa is such an old darling,
and we've grown to be real chums. After the
tailor had taken my measure, we drove to our banker's
for the mail, and who should papa meet there
but Doctor Tremont, an American physician whom<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</SPAN></span>
he knew years ago when they were young men.
They belonged to the same college fraternity.</p>
<p>"'They forgot all about poor little me, sitting
over in the corner of the office, and stood and talked
about old times, and asked each other about Tom,
Dick, and Harry, until I was thoroughly tired of
waiting. But after awhile the handsomest young
man came into the room, and Doctor Tremont
introduced him to papa as his oldest son, Stuart.
Then they remembered my humble existence, and
papa brought them both over to me. In about two
minutes we all felt as if we had known each other
always.</p>
<p>"'Doctor Tremont said he had had a very hard
winter in Berlin, making some study of microbes
with a noted scientist,—I forget his name. He
said Stuart had been closely confined also (he was
taking a medical course), and they were off on
a hard-earned holiday. They were going coaching
up in the lake regions, first in England, then in
Scotland, and maybe later would go over to the
Isle of Skye.</p>
<p>"'Would you believe it, before we left the bank,
Doctor Tremont had persuaded papa that he needed
a vacation also, and almost in no time it was arranged
that we should join them on their coaching<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</SPAN></span>
trip. We had a perfectly ideal time, and Stuart
and I got to be the best of friends. We corresponded
all summer and fall after that. I didn't
expect to see him again for two years, because he
intended to stay abroad until he had finished his
medical course. But along in the winter papa's
health broke down, and the doctor told him he must
keep away from business for a year, and ordered
him to Baden-Baden for the water.</p>
<p>"'He was horribly ill after we got there, and
I was so frightened and inexperienced that I
thought he was going to die, and I telegraphed
for Doctor Tremont. It isn't far from Berlin, you
know, as we Americans count distances. But the
doctor had gone to Paris for several weeks, and
Stuart came at once in his place. Of course he
wasn't an experienced physician like his father, but
he was such a comfort, for he cheered papa up so
much, and assured us that the doctor in charge was
doing everything that his father could do. And
he helped nurse papa, and boosted up my spirits
mightily, and was so dear and thoughtful and considerate
that, when he went away, I felt as if the
bottom had dropped out of everything. You can't
imagine how kind and lovely he was all that week.
Papa fairly swore by him.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"'We wrote to each other every week after he
went back to Berlin. Early this March papa and
I went down into Italy. We shifted about from
place to place,—Naples, Sorrento, Rome, Florence,
and finally to Venice. I don't know why I
never wrote to you those days. You were often
in my thoughts, but you know how it is when one
is constantly on the wing.</p>
<p>"'I used to wish daily that Stuart could be with
us. He is the most satisfactory of travelling companions,
but I didn't know how very much I wished
it until one day in Venice. Papa was asleep at the
hotel, and I was so lonely that I started out by
myself to explore. I left a message with the clerk
that I had gone to vespers at Saint Mark's Cathedral.
There was a crowd of tourists in the square
in front of the cathedral, feeding the pigeons.
Hearing their English speech after so many months
of nothing but foreign tongues made me homesick.
In the whole plaza, no one but myself seemed to be
alone. They were walking in groups or couples,
and everybody seemed so gay and happy that I
was glad to cross over to the cathedral to get out
of sight.</p>
<p>"'The vesper service had just begun, and I
stood inside the door listening to the chanting of<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</SPAN></span>
the monks' voices, and getting more homesick every
moment. Just as the tears were ready to brim over,
I looked up, and there in the dim light beside me
stood Stuart. I thought I must be dreaming, but
it was a very happy dream, for I felt that I could
never be homesick or unhappy again when he
looked down and smiled.</p>
<p>"'I couldn't believe that I was awake and that
he was really there, until we got outside the cathedral
and he began to talk. Then he told me that
he had gone to the hotel, and they had given him
the message I had left for papa. It never occurred
to me to wonder why he had come to Venice. It
just seemed so natural and lovely that he should
be there that I never even asked him why. He
called a gondola, and we got in and went drifting
down the canals under the bridges and past the
old palaces, with the sunset turning everything
around us to rose-colour and gold. Oh, I can't
begin to tell you how perfectly heavenly it all was.
There was a new moon in the sky when we turned
back to the hotel, and, though Stuart <i>hadn't</i> proposed
in the same way that Laurie did to Amy in
"Little Women," he had told me why he came
so far to find me, and I liked his way a great deal
better than Laurie's.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"'Wasn't it all romantic? Papa was awfully
surprised to see him, and nearly as glad as I, and
I told him that now I'd claim the other wishes
he had promised me at Commencement, and take
the two in one. I wished that he would say yes
to the question Stuart had come to ask him. Dear
old dad, he always keeps his promises, so he said
yes after awhile. After Stuart had explained that
he didn't intend to ask him to give me up. When
he finishes his medical course here next year, he
has a position waiting for him near New York City.
We're to have a little home on the Hudson, and
papa is to live with us. So is Doctor Tremont,
when he gets through with his microbe business.
We are done with hotels for ever.</p>
<p>"'I cannot remember ever having had a home,
Lloyd. I have always lived either in a hotel or at
boarding-school. And Stuart says the only one he
can remember distinctly was the one presided over
by his great-aunt Patricia, and she never did understand
boys. This summer I shall spend with papa
in Switzerland. He is about well now. Then in
the fall, when he goes back to New York, I am
going to a delightful school near Berlin which I
have just heard of. It is a school where none but
the daughters of the German nobility are received,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</SPAN></span>
as a rule. They make an exception sometimes in
the case of Americans like myself. There they are
taught all the housewifely arts that delight a good
frau's soul. Don't laugh at me, Lloyd. I'm going
to learn how to broil and brew and conduct a well-regulated
establishment from attic to cellar.</p>
<p>"'A year from this June, Cousin Jack and
Cousin Elizabeth are to bring you and Betty on
to New York to be my bridesmaids. I'd love to
have Joyce, too, if it were possible for her to leave
home. She has been so good to Stuart's brother
Phil. Isn't it strange that we should all be so
linked together? I'd like to have all of you girls
that I met at your never-to-be-forgotten house-party.
That was where I had my first taste of a
real home, and found out that there is something
to live for besides the things that money can buy.</p>
<p>"'I have looked so often lately at my little Tusitala
ring. I have been a better girl because of that
ring, Lloyd, and I intend it shall be the inspiration
of all my married life,—to help me leave a road
of the loving heart in the memory of every one
around me.</p>
<p>"'I wish everybody in the world could be as
happy as I am. I am sending Stuart's picture,
so that you can see for yourself what a fine, splendid<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</SPAN></span>
fellow you are to have for a cousin some day.
Give my love to your father and mother and Betty,
and do write soon and tell me that you are glad.</p>
<div class='sig'>
<span style="margin-right: 2em;">"'Your loving cousin,</span><br/>
"'<span class="smcap">Eugenia</span>.'"<br/></div>
</div>
<p>Lloyd looked up from the reading of the letter,
wondering what sort of an expression she would
find on her mother's face. To her surprise, it was
one of approval, and there were tears in her eyes.</p>
<p>"Poor motherless child!" said Mrs. Sherman,
softly. "I shall write to her to-day. I don't approve
of early marriages, but Eugenia has always
been more mature than most girls of her age, and
she does need a home sadly. The care and pleasure
of one will develop her character in a way that
nothing else will. Let me see. She will be nearly
twenty next June. Yes, I have no doubt but that,
with this next year's training in housekeeping
which she intends to take, she will be far better
fitted for home-making than many an older
woman."</p>
<p>"And may Betty and I be bridesmaids?" interrupted
Lloyd, eagerly, a starlike expectancy shining
in her eyes.</p>
<p>Mrs. Sherman considered a moment, then answered,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</SPAN></span>
slowly: "There is no reason why you
should not be, so long as you are willing to go as
little maids, and not young ladies. I am very jealous
for your girlhood, Lloyd dear. I must guard
against anything that would shorten it in the least.
Mother's baby must not grow up too fast."</p>
<p>"I don't want to grow up fast, honestly!" cried
Lloyd, scrambling to her feet and tripping over the
long skirts again as she threw her arms around her
mother's neck. "I'm not dignified enough yet to
fit yoah dresses, and my hair simply won't stay up.
Sweet sixteen doesn't seem half as old when you
really get there as you think that it is going to.
I'll do my hair down and weah short skirts as long
as you want me to, but, oh, I'm so glad that I'm
going to be a bridesmaid! It will be <i>such</i> fun.
I must write to Betty this minute to tell her that
you are willing."</p>
<p>That night Lloyd sat before her dressing-table
again, this time with the new photographs propped
up in front of her. Stuart's picture almost seemed
to bring Phil before her eyes, and for a moment,
instead of the familiar walls of her room, she saw
the moonlighted desert, and smelled the orange-blossoms,
and heard a strong young voice ringing
out across the silence of the sandy cactus plains:<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class='poem'>
"Till the sun grows cold,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And the stars are old,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And the leaves of the Judgment</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Book unfold."</span><br/></div>
<p>"Wouldn't it be strange," she thought, "if he
were really the one written for me in the stars,
as Betty said in the beginning, and that we should
meet at Eugenia's wedding again, and that some
day, a long time after, I should find that he is the
prince? But it couldn't be Phil," she said to herself
after another glance. "He doesn't measuah up to
Papa Jack's yardstick. Neithah does Malcolm now,
for that mattah," she mused, with her chin in her
hand. "Jack Ware might, or Rob, but they seem
moah like brothahs than anything else, and would
not fit my ideal of a prince at all."</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/i008.jpg" width-obs="308" height-obs="500" alt=""'NO MATTAH WHAT LIES AHEAD . . . I'LL NOT DISAPPOINT THEM'"" title=""'NO MATTAH WHAT LIES AHEAD . . . I'LL NOT DISAPPOINT THEM'"" /> <span class="caption">"'NO MATTAH WHAT LIES AHEAD . . . I'LL NOT DISAPPOINT THEM'"</span></div>
<p>"'As the falcon's feathahs fit the falcon,'" she
quoted, dreamily. "It would have to be some
strangah that I've nevah yet seen, to do that. Or,
maybe Mammy Easter's grandmothah was right
when she read my fortune in the teacups. Maybe
I'll be an old maid. I wish I knew. I <i>wish</i> I
knew!"</p>
<p>She peered wistfully into the mirror, as if she
half-expected to see a shadowy hand stretch out
of its dim background, and lift the veil of the future<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</SPAN></span>
to her eager gaze. "The thoughts of youth are
long, long thoughts." Lloyd's flew back to Eugenia's
romance for an instant, then drifted far
beyond the two in the gondola, with the Venetian
sunset turning all their little world to rose-colour
and gold.</p>
<p>One is a mariner at sixteen, sailing toward an
undiscovered country, with seaweed and driftwood
on the crest of every wave beginning to whisper,
"Land ahead." Toward the dim outline of that
untried shore, Lloyd drifted now in her reverie.</p>
<p>"I <i>wish</i> I could know what the next sixteen
yeahs hold for me," she whimpered. "I hope it
will be something bettah than I could choose for
myself. Mothah and Papa Jack expect so much
of me."</p>
<p>Then her glance fell on the unfinished rosary,
and, picking up the string of tiny pearls, she looped
it around her throat, and faced the girl in the
mirror with resolute eyes.</p>
<p>"No mattah what lies ahead," she said, bravely,
"I'll not disappoint them. I'll keep the tryst!"</p>
<h3>THE END.</h3>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />