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Abbott, Jane - Keineth

Page 13

by Keineth(Lit)

_Merrylips:_ How foolish they are!

  _Peace:_ They forget that we will help them!

  _Happyheart:_ You see they don't believe in fairies! It's because they

  are so old! Why, they say that some are over thirty! _Goodwill:_ As if

  that mattered!

  _Spirit:_ But I do feel very sorry for them! They can scarcely remember

  when they used to hang up their stockings! They will come and gather

  around this tree and there will be no presents!

  _Happyheart_ (sits down upon stool): Oh, dear! (Drops her chin in her

  hand.) Can't we do something?

  _Peace:_ Let's think hard!

  _Goodwill_ (sadly): Our real presents are gone. There were so many

  children this year!

  _Merrylips:_ And they make out such long lists! Why, the trees would

  scarcely hold all the things!

  _Spirit:_ We must do what we can to make Christmas merry for these

  grownfolks.

  _Happyheart_ (claps her hands): I can make their hearts light!

  _Goodwill:_ I can make them kindly to one another!

  _Merrylips:_ I can make them laugh!

  _Peace:_ And I can put one of my songs in their hearts!

  _Spirit_ (as others make these suggestions she turns toward the tree,

  deep in thought; suddenly she wheels around): Your gifts are priceless

  but, somehow, I wish we had something besides them for these

  grownfolks!

  _Goodwill:_ I should like to make this a Christmas they would remember

  the year through!

  _Happyheart:_ I should like to teach them to believe in fairies!

  _Peace:_ Perhaps if we could fill their tree with gifts they would not

  forget!

  _Merrylips:_ Let's ask Joy! _Spirit:_ Where is she?

  _Happyheart:_ Oh, she is still working. But if we sing her song she

  will come!

  _Merrylips:_ Let's sing, then! (Holds up her finger.) One, two, three!

  (All sing softly the Christmas Carol, "Joy to the World." As they sing

  Joy runs into the room. The fairies circle about her.)

  _Joy_ (stepping to the foreground and stretching arms): Oh, I am so

  tired!

  _Spirit_ (steps forward and lays her hand on Joy's shoulder): Poor

  little Joy-fairy!

  _Joy:_ I've been so busy making happiness! This funny world needs so

  much of it and everyone wants something different! And there were so

  many children! (Turns to the tree.) What--another tree?

  _Spirit:_ Yes, and we have no presents! Happyheart can make their

  hearts light and Peace can give them a song, but, you know, I'd just

  like to have them have some presents--like children have!

  _Merrylips_ (dances a step or two): Fairy presents would be fun! They

  are more fun than real presents and can make wishes come true!

  _Goodwill:_ They say grownfolks are worse than children about making

  wishes, only they keep their wishes locked up!

  _Happyheart:_ Wouldn't it be lovely?

  _Joy:_ I know--let's call the Spirit of Childhood!

  _Happyheart:_ Splendid! She will surely know a way!

  _Spirit:_ How can we call her, Joy-fairy? _Joy:_ Put your fingers over

  your eyes tight! (All put their fingers over their eyes.) Now, say

  after me--"Spirit of Childhood, come at our call!"

  _Chorus:_

  Spirit of Childhood, come at our call,

  Spirit of Childhood, come at our call!

  (As they repeat this the Spirit of Childhood dances joyously into the

  room and faces them. As they remove their fingers from their eyes, they

  bow low.)

  _Chorus:_ Childhood!

  _Childhood_ (faces audience): I am the Spirit of Childhood! I am the

  happiest fairy of all! I am known all over this wide, wide world!

  Everybody loves me! Sometimes I am a dream, too, and I come out of the

  past when it is very still and creep into old, old hearts!

  _Happyheart_ (impatiently): We know all that!

  _Spirit_ (steps toward Childhood): We want you to help us now,

  Childhood, to make Christmas merry for this party of grownfolks.

  _Childhood:_ No children? They're all grownfolks?

  _Spirit:_ No children. They're all grownfolks.

  _Childhood:_ Poor things! How sad!

  _Spirit:_ But they have a tree and we want to give them gifts which,

  because they are fairy gifts, will make their best every-day wish come

  true!

  _Childhood:_ Yes-they'll think, because they are grownups, they must

  have useful gifts! But they shall have fairy gifts!

  _Happyheart_ (to other fairies): I told you she'd help us! _Merrylips:_

  And these grown folks must make a big, big wish and have it on top of

  their hearts! Then, if they carry their gifts in the bottom of their

  pockets their wishes will come true!

  _Childhood:_ I will call my Jesters! They are clever knaves--they will

  find the gifts!

  _Happyheart:_ Call them quickly!

  _Childhood:_ I have to do very funny things, because I am Childhood,

  you know. (She dances backward and forward across the room, with merry

  step; pirouettes and points finger into audience.) Some one out there

  must laugh, or the Jesters will not think we are merry. Laugh, someone,

  laugh! Harder! I am Childhood! Laugh with me! (As she speaks some one

  in the audience laughs; others join.)

  _Childhood_ (runs to door):

  Jester big, jester small,

  Come at Childhood's merry call!

  (Jesters enter--stand near door.)

  _Chorus:_ Welcome--welcome!

  _Childhood_ (to Jesters): Go--find and bring us the biggest Christmas

  stocking in the world! It must be filled with fairy gifts! (Jesters

  hurry out.)

  _Goodwill:_ How will we know which gifts to give each person?

  _Childhood:_ Oh, I will look in my Book of the Past! You see I have to

  keep careful records of everybody!

  _Spirit:_ Why it's just like Santa Claus used to do when the

  old-fashioned children believed in him! _Happyheart:_ He was a fine

  man!

  _Spirit:_ Ah, here they come!

  (Enter Jesters dragging behind them an enormous Christmas stocking made

  of red cambric. They give it to the Christmas Spirit, then step back to

  the door.)

  _Childhood_ (as others gather around the stocking): Go, Jesters, and

  bring me my Book of Records!

  _Happyheart:_ Open it quickly! (Spirit opens stocking--all peep in.)

  Oh, lots and lots of gifts!

  (Jester returns, gives book to Childhood who goes to the right of group

  and stands next to Happyheart.)

  _Childhood_ (solemnly to audience): Are all the grownups ready? Have

  they got their best wish on top of their hearts?

  _Happyheart:_ Is every one happy?

  _Goodwill:_ Do you all feel very, very kind to one another?

  _Peace:_ Do you know my songs?

  _Childhood:_ Then let's have a bright light so that we may begin!

  (Lights of the room flash on.)

  (Spirit takes packages one by one from the stocking and reads the name.

  Then she holds the package while Happyheart reads from Childhood's

  Record what the book has to say of each person. After this has been

  read Joy with dancing step takes the fairy package to the person named.

  This goes on until every one in the audience has received a gift.)

  _Spirit_ (throws stocking down): The
stocking is empty!

  _Happyheart:_ The fairy gifts are all gone! _Childhood_ (shakes finger

  at audience): But each one of you has a wish that will come true, just

  as sure as sure can be; for you have received a fairy gift!

  _Happyheart:_ And now they will be happy!

  _Goodwill_ (claps her hands together as if with a happy thought): Let

  us send the Jesters to bring in to them the Christmas Bowl! If they

  drink our fairy brew they will never, never forget this Christmas!

  _Happyheart:_ And they will always believe in the Christmas Spirit!

  _Spirit:_ And in the Christmas Fairies!

  _Goodwill:_ Go, Jesters, and bring in to them the Christmas Bowl!

  (Jesters go out quickly.)

  _Spirit:_ Now, fairies, we must stop our work! We've worked overtime

  already, and you know there is an eight-hour law now for fairies.

  _Merrylips:_ Yes, but we've helped these poor grownfolks! _Happyheart:_

  Let us say farewell to them! Now, one--two--three!

  _Chorus_ (waving hands):

  May the brew that we've mixed you make every heart light, Merry

  Christmas to all, and to all a good-night!

  (Fairies dance out, followed by the Spirit. Jesters, blowing horns,

  enter the room, bearing a tray upon which is placed a punch bowl filled

  with Nora's best cider punch.)

  * * * * *

  Loud applause demanded the return of the fairies and then all gathered

  in a merry group around the punch bowl while Mr. Lee toasted the

  youthful cast.

  "I suspect you, Miss Bab, of a hand in those records," he cried,

  shaking a finger at Barbara. A paper crown was set rakishly on his

  head.

  Behind the laughter in Mrs. Lee's eyes was shining something very like

  tears as she drew little Alice to her. Across the brightly-crowned

  heads of the children her glance caught Mr. Lee's.

  "I feel as if my heart _had_ been brushed by fairy wings to-night," she

  said with a happy sigh.

  CHAPTER XX

  SHADOWS

  "William, it _can't_ be true!"

  Keineth, pausing on the threshold of the dining-room door, overheard

  the words. Peggy and Billy had gone to school; she was starting out for

  her music lesson and had stopped to ask Aunt Nellie a question. The

  tone of Aunt Nellie's voice, the seriousness of Mr. Lee's face, made

  Keineth's heart turn cold with fear!

  "Aunt Nellie." They both turned towards her, startled. Involuntarily

  Mrs. Lee slipped the newspaper she had been reading under her napkin.

  "Keineth, dear!" She held out her hand, her eyes filling with tears.

  Keineth stood quite still, looking from one to the other, and because

  he was always somewhere very close in her mind and heart she cried

  "Daddy!"

  Mrs. Lee had a curiously helpless look, as if she scarcely knew what to

  say, and with one hand she still held the paper beneath her napkin. Mr.

  Lee's voice was husky, he had to clear it two or three times before he

  could speak, and all the while Keineth's great eyes were fastened

  gravely upon him, demanding the truth.

  "It may be a false report, my dear. There's been an accident at sea,

  and according to the paper--"

  "My daddy was in it!" cried Keineth, putting her hands to her face.

  "Was my daddy in it?" she demanded in a queer little voice.

  "Come here, dear," Mrs. Lee held out her hand again, but Keineth did

  not stir.

  "Was he--in--it?" she demanded again.

  "His name was listed among the passengers sailing from Liverpool, but

  there may have been a mistake."

  Keineth's eyes were blazing. She walked to the table.

  "Please give me that paper, Aunt Nellie! I have a right to know what it

  says!" She did not seem like the child she was as she stood there,

  white-faced. Her voice was very calm. Aunt Nellie handed her the paper;

  as she did so she said pleadingly: "Keineth, why not wait until your

  Uncle William has found out if it is true?" But Keineth did not hear

  her; she slowly unfolded the paper, stared a moment at the headlines,

  then, turning, rushed with it from the room.

  There it was--his name! Her finger found it and stopped, as though she

  cared nothing for the rest! She read the big letters of the headlines,

  the few words that told of the attack by a German submarine on the big

  passenger ship, of the horrible confusion of the few moments before it

  sank, of the wild panic of the cowardly and the splendid bravery of a

  few! Then: "John Randolph, of New York City, the well-known journalist,

  abroad on a special mission for the President of the United States, was

  among the passengers."

  Keineth, on her knees, with the paper spread out before her, read and

  reread the words. They sounded so final! He was gone--her daddy was

  gone!

  And yet--how could this happen to her in this way? She knew a little of

  death; way back in her memory was a haunting picture of her own

  mother's going, of her father's grief and the music and the flowers.

  And she had watched the funeral of Francesca's baby brother from behind

  the geranium boxes. There had been music then, too. But this was so

  different--just the lines in the newspaper and then nothing more, ever

  and ever and ever! It couldn't happen like that! She was too puzzled to

  cry. There were so many questions she wanted to ask-how deep _was_ the

  ocean there? Couldn't they swim? And whom could she ask who would tell

  her all about it?

  She heard the door open, but did not turn her head. She felt Aunt

  Nellie's arms lift her, draw her head close to her breast. Aunt

  Nellie's voice was very tender.

  "Uncle William has gone to telegraph immediately to the New York

  offices of the steamship line. We may learn more, my dear. You must be

  brave--you know how brave your father always was."

  Almost violently Keineth pushed her away.

  "I don't believe it!" she cried. Seizing the paper, she tore it into

  little bits and threw them fiercely to the floor.

  "I'll never, never, nev-er believe it! He _will_ come back!" And poor

  Keineth threw herself upon her bed and covered her face tight with her

  hands She had caught the look of deep pity on Aunt Nellie's face. Aunt

  Nellie believed it! She could not bear it!

  "Please go away," she begged through her fingers. And Aunt Nellie

  slipped out of the room, closing the door softly behind her.

  Keineth could shut from her eyes Aunt Nellie's pity, but she could not

  shut from her mind the flood of thoughts that came. Cruel thoughts,

  too, which her persistent "I don't believe it" failed to drive away!

  She had seen a picture once of a sinking ship; a great wave of water

  had engulfed it, men were clinging to its side like flies! She

  remembered it now! Remembered, too, an awful storm when, holding her

  daddy's hand, she had watched from a high point of land the angry sea

  surging over the rocks far beneath them. It was green and black and

  white where the water hissed, and its roar had made her shiver! That

  was the same sea! "Oh, I don't believe it!" she whispered. She had made

  so many pictures in her mind of her father's home-coming--she had felt

&nb
sp; sure he would surprise her! She had thought that perhaps she might go

  back to the old house and find him there, or go with someone to the

  dock and watch his boat come in and see him waving from its deck!

  Perhaps she might be standing some afternoon in the living-room window

  looking down the street watching Terry light the street lamps and

  suddenly see him walking towards her! And now--oh, it just couldn't be

  true!

  At noon Mr. Lee came home to luncheon. The newspaper report had been

  confirmed by the New York offices of the steamship company. He said

  this very gravely and slowly, as though he hated to speak the words.

  Peggy sat watching Keineth in a frightened sort of way; she wished

  Keineth would cry so that she could put her arms around her to comfort

  her! But Keineth only sat very still staring down at her plate.

  "I think I'll practice, Aunt Nellie," Keineth said when the luncheon

  was finished. She had to do something. She walked out of the room as

  she spoke, Peggy cast an entreating look toward her mother.

 

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