The Second Christmas Megapack: 29 Modern and Classic Yuletide Stories
Page 22
On one side a mother sat with her cheek upon her hand, her elbow on the table, gazing steadily into the fire; on the other side were two children, a girl and a boy; he on a cushion, she in a low chair. Some half-felt sadness repressed for these little ones the usual gay Christmas humor of the hopeful hour, commonly so full for them of that anticipative joy to which life brings shadowy sadness as the years run on.
Now and then the boy looked across the room, pleased when the leaping flames sent flaring over floor and wall long shadows from the tall brass andirons or claw-footed chair and table. Sometimes he glanced shyly at the mother, but getting no answering smile kept silence. Once or twice the girl whispered a word to him, as the logs fell and a sheet of flame from the hickory and the quick-burning birch set free the stored-up sunshine of many a summer day. A moment later, the girl caught the boy’s arm.
“Oh! hear the ice, Hugh,” she cried, for mysterious noises came up from the river and died away.
“Yes, it is the ice, dear,” said the mother. “I like to hear it.” As she spoke she struck a match and lit two candles which stood on the table beside her.
For a few minutes as she stood her gaze wandered along the walls over the portraits of men and women once famous in Colonial days. The great china bowls, set high for safety on top of the book-cases, tankards, and tall candelabra troubled her with memories of more prosperous times. Whatever emotions these relics of departed pride and joy excited, they left neither on brow nor on cheek the unrelenting signals of life’s disasters. A glance distinctly tender and distinctly proud made sweet her face for a moment as she turned to look upon the children.
The little fellow on the cushion at her feet looked up.
“Mamma, we do want to know why Christmas comes only once a year?”
“Hush, dear, I cannot talk to you now; not tonight; not at all, tonight.”
“But was not Christ always born?” he persisted.
“Yes, yes,” she replied. “But I cannot talk to you now. Be quiet a little while. I have something to do,” and so saying, she drew to her side a basket of old letters. The children remained silent, or made little signs to one another as they watched the fire. Meanwhile the mother considered the papers, now with a gleam of anger in her eyes, as she read, and now with a momentary blur of tear-dimmed vision. Most of the letters she threw at once on the fire. They writhed a moment like living creatures, and of a sudden blazed out as if tormented into sudden confession of the passions of years gone by; then they fell away to black unmemoried things, curling crumpled in the heat.
The children saw them burn with simple interest in each new conflagration. Something in the mother’s ways quieted them, and they became intuitively conscious of sadness in the hour and the task. At last the boy grew uneasy at the long repose of tongue.
“O Alice! see the red sparks going about,” he said, looking at the wandering points of light in the blackening scrolls of shrivelled paper.
“Nurse says those are people going to church,” said his sister, authoritatively.
Her mother looked up, smiling. “Ah, that is what they used to tell me when I was little.”
“They’re fire-flies,” said the boy, “like in a vewy dark night.” Now and then his r’s troubled him a little, and conscious of his difficulty, he spoke at times with oddly serious deliberation.
“You really must be quiet,” said the mother. “Now, do keep still, or you will have to go to bed,” and so saying she turned anew to the basket.
Presently the girl exclaimed, “Why do you burn the letters?” She had some of her mother’s persistency, and was not readily controlled. This time the mother made no reply. A sharp spasm of pain went over her features. Looking into the fire, as if altogether unconscious of the quick spies at her side, she said aloud, “Oh! I can no more! Let them wait. What a fool I was. What a fool!” and abruptly pushed the basket aside.
The little fellow leaped up and cast his arms about her while his long, yellow hair fell on her neck and shoulder. “O Mamma!” he cried, “don’t read any more. Let me burn them. I hate them to hurt you.”
She smiled on him through tears—rare things for her. “Every one must bear his own troubles, Hugh. You couldn’t help me. You couldn’t know, dear, what to burn.”
“But I know,” said the girl, decisively. “I know. I had a letter once; but Hugh never had a letter. I wish Kris Kringle would take them away this very, very night; and lessons, too, I do. What will he bring us for Christmas, mamma? I know what. I want”—
“A Kris Kringle to take away troubles would suit me well, Alice; I could hang up a big stocking.”
“And I know what I want,” said the boy. “Nurse says Kris has no money this Christmas. I don’t care.” But the great blue eyes filled as he spoke.
The mother rose. “There will be no presents this year, Hugh. Only—only more love from me, from one another; and you must be brave and help me, because you know this is not the worst of it. We are to go away next week, and must live in the town. You see, dears, it can’t be helped.”
“Yes,” said Hugh, thoughtfully, “it can’t be helped, Alice.”
“I don’t want to go,” said the girl.
“Hush,” said Hugh.
“And I do want a doll.”
“I told you to be quiet, Alice,” returned the mother, a rising note of anger in her voice. In fact, she was close upon a burst of tears, but the emotions are all near of kin and linked in mystery of relationship. Pity and love for the moment became unreasoning wrath. “You are disobedient,” she continued.
“O mamma! we are vewy sorry,” said the lad, who had been the less offending culprit.
“Well, well. No matter. It is bedtime, children. Now to bed, and no more nonsense. I can’t have it, I can’t bear it.”
The children rose submissively, and, kissing her, were just leaving the room, when she said: “Oh! but we must not lose our manners. You forget.”
The girl, pausing near the doorway, dropped a courtesy.
“That wasn’t very well done, Alice. Ah! that was better.”
The little fellow made a bow quite worthy of the days of minuet and hoop, and then, running back, kissed the tall mother with a certain passionate tenderness, saying, softly, “Now, don’t you cry when we are gone, dear, dear mamma,” and then, in a whisper, “I will pway God not to let you cwy,” and so fled away, leaving her still perilously close to tears. Very soon, upstairs, the old nurse, troubled by the children’s disappointment, was assuring them with eager mendacity that Kris would be certain to make his usual visit, while down-stairs the mother walked slowly to and fro. She had that miserable gift, an unfailing memory of anniversaries, and now, despite herself, the long years rolled back upon her, so that under the sad power of their recurrent memories she seemed a helpless prey.
While the children were yet too young to recognize their loss the great calamity of her life had come. Then by degrees the wreck of her fortune had gone to pieces, and now at last the home of her own people, deeply mortgaged, was about to pass from her forever. Much that was humbling had fallen to her in life, but nothing as sore as this final disaster. At length she rose, took a lighted candle from the table, and walked slowly around the great library room. The sombre bindings of the books her childhood knew called back dim recollections. The great china bowls, the tall silver tankards, the shining sconces, and above, all the Stuart portraits or the Copleys of the men who shone in Colonial days and helped to make a more than imperial nation, each and all disturbed her as she gazed. At last, she returned to the fireside, sat down and began anew her unfinished task. With hasty hands she tumbled over the letters, and at length came upon a package tied with a faded ribbon; one of those thin orange-colored silk bands with which cigars are tied in bundles. She threw it aside with a quick movement of disdain, and opened the case of a miniature, slowly, and with deliberate care. A letter fell on to her lap as she bent over the portrait of a young man. The day, the time, the need to dispose of accumul
ated letters, had brought her to this which she meant to be a final settlement of one of life’s grim accounts. For awhile, she steadily regarded the relics of happier hours. Then, throwing herself back in her chair, she cried aloud, “How long I hoped; how hopeless was my hope, and he said, he said, I was cruel and hard. That I loved him no more. Oh! that was a lie! a bitter lie! But a sot, a sot, and my children to grow up and see what I saw, and learn to bear what I have borne. No! no! a thousand times no! I chose between two duties, and I was right. I was the man of the two, and I sent him away—forever. He said—yes, I was right, but, my God! how cruel is life! I would never have gone, never! never! There!” she exclaimed, and threw back the miniature into the basket, closing it with violence, as she did so, as one may shut an unpleasant book read and done with.
For a moment, and with firmer face, she considered the letter, reading scraps of it aloud, as if testing her resolution to make an end of it all. “Hard, was I? Yes. Would I had been sooner hard. My children would have been better off. ‘I went because you bid me.’ Yes I did. Will he ever know what that cost me? ‘I shall never come again until you bid me come.’ Not in this world then?” she cried. “O Hugh! Hugh!” And in a passion of tears that told of a too great trial, still resolute despite her partial defeat, she tore the letter and cast it on the fire. “There!” she cried, “would to God I loved him less.” And then, with strange firmness, she took up a book, and sternly set herself to comprehend what she read.
The hours went by and at last she rose wearily, put out one candle, raked ashes over the embers, and taking the other light, went slowly up to bed. She paused a moment at the nursery door where she heard voices. “What! awake still?”
“We was only talking about Khwis,” said the small boy. “We won’t anymore, will we, Alice? She thinks he won’t come, but I think he will come because we are both so good all today.”
“No, no, he will not come this Christmas, my darlings. Go to sleep. Go to sleep,” and with too full a heart she turned away.
But the usual tranquil slumber of childhood was not theirs. The immense fact that they were soon to leave their home troubled the imaginative little man. Then, too, a great wind began to sweep over the hills and to shake the snow-laden pines. On its way, it carried anew from the ice of the river wild sounds of disturbance and at last, in the mid hours of night, an avalanche of snow slid from the roof. Hugh sat up; he realized well enough what had happened. But presently the quick ear of childhood was aware of other, and less familiar sounds. Was it Kris Kringle? Oh! if he could only see him once! He touched the sister asleep in her bed near by, and at last shook her gently.
“What is it, Hugh?” she said.
“I hear Khwis. I know it is Khwis!”
“O Hugh! I hear too, but it might be a robber.”
“No, nevah on Chwistmas Eve. It couldn’t be a wobber. It is Khwis. I mean to go and see. I hear him outside. You know, Alice, there is nevah, nevah any wickedness on Chwistmas Eve.”
“But if it is a robber he might take you away.”
“Oh! wobbers steal girls, but they nevah, nevah steal boys, and you needn’t go.”
“But are you sure? Oh! do listen,” she added. Both heard the creaking noise of footsteps in the dry snow.
“I will look—I must look,” cried Hugh, slipping from his bed. In a moment he had raised the sash and was looking out into the night. The sounds he had heard ceased. He could see no one. “He has gone, Alice.” Then he cried, “Mr. Khwis Kwingle, are you there? or is you a wobber?” As he spoke a cloaked man came from behind a great pine and stood amid the thickly-fallen flakes.
“Why, that is Hugh,” he said. “Hugh!”
“He does know my name,” whispered the lad to the small counsellor now at his side.
“And, of course, I am Kris Kringle. And I have a bag full of presents. But come softly down and let me in, and don’t make a noise or away I go; and bring Alice.”
The girl was still in doubt, but her desire for the promised gifts was strong, and in the very blood of the boy was the spirit of daring adventure. There was a moment of whispered indecision, resulting in two bits of conclusive wisdom.
Said Alice, “If we go together, Hugh, and he takes one, the other can squeal. Oh! very loud like a bear—a big bear.”
“And,” said Hugh, “I will get my gweat gwandpapa’s sword.” And with this he got upon a chair and by the failing light of the nursery fire carefully took down from over the chimney the dress rapier which had figured at peaceful levees of other days. “Now,” he said, “if you are afwaid I will go all alone myself.”
“I am dreadfully afraid,” said she, “but I will go, too.” So she hastily slipped on a little white wrapper and he his well-worn brown velvet knickerbocker trousers. Neither had ever known a being they had reason to fear, and so, with beating hearts, but brave enough, they stole quietly out in their sweet innocence and hand in hand went down the dark staircase, still hearing faint noises as they felt their way. They crossed the great warm library and entered the hall, where, with much effort, they unlocked the door and lifted the old-fashioned bar which guarded it. The cold air swept in, and before them was a tall man in a cloak half white with snow. He said at once, “Oh! Hugh! Alice! Pleasant Christmas to you. Let us get in out of the cold; but carefully—carefully, no sound!” As he spoke he shut the door behind him. “Come,” he said, and seeming to know the way, went before them into the library.
“Oh! I’m so frightened,” said Alice to Hugh in a whisper. “I wish I was in bed.”
Not so the boy. The man pushed away the ashes from the smouldering logs, and took from the wood basket a quantity of birch bark and great cones of the pine. As he cast them on the quick embers a fierce red blaze went up, and the room was all alight. And now he turned quickly, for Hugh, of a mind to settle the matter, was standing on guard between him and the door to the stairway, which they had left open when they came down. The man smiled as he saw the lad push his sister back and come a step or two forward. He made a pretty picture in his white shirt, brown knee-breeches, and little bare legs, the yellow locks about his shoulders, the rapier in his hand, alert and quite fearless.
“My sister thinks perhaps you are a wobber, sir; but I think you are Mr. Khwis Kwingle.”
“Yes, I am Kris Kringle tonight, and you see I know your names—Alice, Hugh.” His cloak fell from him, and he stood smiling, a handsome Chris. “Do not be afraid. Be sure I love little children. Come, let us talk a bit.”
“It’s all wite, Alice,” said the boy. “I said he wasn’t a wobber.”
And they went hand in hand toward the fire, now a brilliant blaze. The man leaned heavily upon a chair back, his lips moving, a great stir of emotion shaking him as he gazed on the little ones. But he said again, quickly:
“Yes, yes, I’m Kris Kringle,” and then, with much amusement, “and what do you mean to do with your sword, my little man?”
“It was to kill the wobber, sir; but you mustn’t be afraid, because you’re not a wobber.”
“And he really won’t hurt you,” added Alice.
“Good gracious!” exclaimed Kris, smiling, “you’re a gallant little gentleman. And you have been—are you always a good boy to—your mother?”
“I has been a vewy good boy.” Then his conscience entered a protest, and he added: “for two whole days. I’ll go and ask mamma to come and tell you.”
“No, no,” said Kris. “It is only children can see me. Old folks couldn’t see me.”
“My mother is vewy young.”
“Oh! but not like a child; not like you.”
“Please, sir, do let us see the presents,” said Alice, much at her ease.
For now he pushed a great chair to the fire, and seated them both in it, saying: “Ah! the poor little cold toes.” Then he carefully closed the door they had left open, and said, smiling as he sat down opposite them: “I have come far—very far—to see you.”
“Has you come far tonight?” said the lit
tle host, with rising courage.
“No, not far tonight.” Then he paused. “Is—is your mother—well?”
“Yes,” said Hugh, “she is vewy well, and we are much obliged.”
“May we soon see the presents?” said Alice. “They did say you would not come tonight because we are poor now.”
“And,” added Hugh, “my pony is sold to a man, and his tail is vewy long, and he loves sugar—the pony, I mean; and mamma says we must go away and live in the town.”
“Yes, yes,” said Kris. “I know.”
“He knows,” said Hugh.
“Oh! they know everything in fairyland,” said Alice.
“Was you evah in faywyland, sir?” asked Hugh.
“Yes.”
“Where ’bouts is it, sir, and please how is it bounded on the north? And what are the pwincipal wivers? We might look for it on the map.”
“It is in the Black Hills.”
“Oh! the Black Hills,” said Alice. “I know.”
“Yes, but you’re not sleepy? Not a bit sleepy?”
“No, no.”
“Then before the pretty things hop out of my bag let me tell you a story,” and he smiled at his desire to lengthen a delicious hour.
“I would like that.”
“And I hope it won’t be very, very long,” said Alice, on more sordid things intent.
“That’s the way with girls, Mr. Kwingle; they can’t wait.”
“Ah, well, well. Once on a time there was a bad boy, and he was very naughty, and no one loved him because he spent love like money till it was all gone. When he found he had no more love given him, he went away, and away, to a far country.”
“Like the man in the Bible,” said Hugh, promptly. “The—the—what’s his name, Alice?”
“The prodigal son,” said Kris, “you mean—”
“Yes, sir. The pwodigal son.”