The Christmas Megapack
Page 29
“Well,” said Mis’ Mortimer Bates, “when the men get here—if they ever do get here—we’ll send one of ’em off somewheres for the truck we forgot. What time is it?”
“Here comes a whole cartload of folks,” Mis’ Moran announced. “I hope and pray they’ve got the oysters—they’d ought to be popped in the baking oven a minute. What time did you say it is?”
“It’s twenty minutes past seven,” Mis’ Winslow said, pushing her hair straight back, regardless of its part, “and we ain’t ready within ’leven hundred miles.”
“Well, if they only all get here,” Mis’ Bates said, ringing golden and white stuffed eggs on Mary’s blue platter; “it’s their all being here when she gets here that I want. I ain’t worried about the supper—much.”
“The road’s black with folks,” Mis’ Moran went on. “I’m so deadly afraid I didn’t make enough sandwiches. Oh, I donno why it wasn’t given me to make more, I’m sure.”
“Who’s seeing to them in the parlor? Who’s getting their baskets out here? Where they finding a place for their wraps? Who’s lighting the rest of the lamps? What time is it?” demanded Mis’ Winslow, cutting her cakes.
“Oh,” said Mis’ Bates from a cloud of brown butter about the cooking stove, “I donno whether we’ve done right. I donno but we’ve broke our word to the Christmas paper. I donno whether we ain’t going to get ourselves criticized for this as never folks was criticized before.”
Mis’ Moran changed her chair to the draughtless corner back of the cooking stove and offered to stir the savory saucepan.
“I know it,” she said, “I know it. We never planned much in the first start. It grew and it grew like it grew with its own bones. But mebbe there’s some won’t believe that, one secunt.”
Mis’ Winslow straightened up from the table and held out a hand with fingers frosting-tipped.
“Well,” she said, with a great period, “if we have broke our word to the Christmas paper, I’d rather stand up here with my word broke this way than with it kept so good it hurt me. Is it half-past seven yet?”
“I wish Ellen Bourne was here,” Mis’ Bates observed. “She sent her salad dressing over and lent her silver and her Christmas rose for the table—but come she would not. I wonder if she couldn’t come over now if we sent after her, last minute?”
Simeon Buck, appearing a few minutes later at the kitchen door to set a basket inside, was dispatched for Ellen Bourne, the warming oven, and the coffee-pot, collectively. He took with him Abel Ames, who was waiting for him without. And it chanced that they knocked at the Bournes’ door just after Ben Helders had driven away with the little boy, so that the men found the family still in the presence of the little tree.
“Hello,” said Simeon, aghast, “Christmassing away all by yourselves, I’ll be bound, like so many thieves. I rec’lect not seeing your names on the paper.”
“No, I didn’t sign,” Ellen said. “I voted against it that night at the town meeting, but I guess nobody heard me.”
“Well,” said Simeon, “and so here you’ve got a Christmas of your own going forward, neat as a kitten’s foot—”
“Ain’t you coming over to Mary Chavah’s?” Abel broke in with a kind of gentleness. “All of you?”
Ellen smote her hands together.
“I meant to go over later,” she said, “and take—” She paused. “I thought we’d all go over later,” she said. “I forgot about it. Why, yes, I guess we can go now, can’t we? All three of us?”
Abel Ames stood looking at the tree. He half guessed that she might have dressed it for no one who would see it. He looked at Ellen and ventured what he thought.
“Ellen,” he said, “if you ain’t going to do anything more with that tree tonight, why not take some of the things off, and have Matthew set it on his shoulder, and bring it over to Mary’s for the boy that’s coming?”
Ellen hesitated. “Would they like it?” she asked. “Would folks?”
Abel smiled. “I’ll take the blame,” he said, “and you take the tree.” And seeing Simeon hesitate, “Now let’s stop by for Mis’ Moran’s coffee-pot,” he added. “Hustle up. The Local must be in.”
So presently the tree, partly divested of its brightness, was carried through the streets to the other house—in more than the magic which attends the carrying in the open road of a tree, a statue, a cart filled with flowers—for the tree was like some forbidden thing that still would be expressed.
“He might not come till Christmas is way past,” Ellen thought, following. “She’ll leave it standing a few days. We can go down there and look at it—if he comes.”
A little way behind them, Simeon and Abel, with the coffee-pot and the warming oven, were hurrying back to Mary’s. They went down the deserted street where Abel’s candle burned and Simeon’s saint stood mute.
“When I was a little shaver,” Abel said, “they used to have me stand in the open doorway Christmas Eve, and hold a candle and say a verse. I forget the verse. But I’ve always liked the candle in doors or windows, like tonight. Look at mine over there now—ain’t it like somebody saying something?”
“Well,” said Simeon, not to be outdone, “when we come by my window just now, the light hit down on it and I could of swore I see the saint smile.”
“Like enough,” said Abel, placidly, “like enough. You can’t put Christmas out. I see that two weeks ago.” He looked back at his own window. “If the little kid that come in the store last Christmas Eve tries to come in again tonight,” he said, “he won’t find it all pitch dark, anyway. I’d like to know who he was....”
Near the corner that turned down to the Rule Factory, they saw Ebenezer Rule coming toward them on the Old Trail Road. They called to him.
“Hello, Ebenezer,” said Abel, “ain’t you coming in to Mary Chavah’s tonight?”
“I think not,” Ebenezer answered.
“Come ahead,” encouraged Simeon.
As they met, Abel spoke hesitatingly.
“Ebenezer,” he said, “I was just figuring on proposing to Simeon here, that we stop in to your house—I was thinking,” he broke off, “how would it be for you and him and me, that sort of stand for the merchandise end of this town, to show up at Mary’s house tonight—well, it’s the women have done all the work so far—and I was wondering how it would be for us three to get there with some little thing for that little kid that’s coming to her—we could find something that wouldn’t cost much—it hadn’t ought to cost much, ’count of our set principles. And take it to him...,” Abel ended doubtfully.
Ebenezer simply laughed his curious succession of gutturals.
“Crazy to Christmas after all, ain’t you?” he said.
But Simeon wheeled and stared at Abel. For defection in their own camp he had never looked.
“I knew you’d miss it—I knew you’d miss it!” Simeon said excitedly, “cut paper and fancy tassels and—”
“No such thing,” said Abel, shortly. “I was thinking of that boy getting here, that’s all. And I couldn’t see why we shouldn’t do our share—which totin’ coffee-pots and warming ovens ain’t, as I see it.”
“Well, but my heavens, man!” said Simeon, “it’s Christmas! You can’t go giving anybody anything, can you?”
“I don’t mean give it to him for Christmas at all,” protested Abel. “I mean give it to him just like you would any other day. We’d likely take him something if it wasn’t Christmas? Sort of to show our good will, like the women with the supper? Well, why not take him some little thing even if it is Christmas?”
“Oh, well,” said Simeon, “that way. If you make it plain it ain’t for Christmas—Of course, we ain’t to blame for what day his train got in on.”
“Sure we ain’t,” said Abel, confidently.
Ebenezer was moving away.
“We’ll call in for you in half an hour or so,” Abel’s voice followed him. “We’ll slip out after the boy gets there. There won’t be time before...what s
ay, Ebenezer?”
“I think not,” said Ebenezer; “you don’t need me.”
“Well—congratulations anyhow!” Abel called.
Ebenezer stopped on the crossing.
“What for?” he asked.
“Man alive,” said Abel, “don’t you know Bruce has got a little girl?”
“No,” said Ebenezer, “I—didn’t know. I’m obliged to you.”
He turned from them, but instead of crossing the street to go to his house, he faced down the little dark street to the factory. He had walked past Jenny’s once that evening, but without being able to force himself to inquire. He knew that Bruce had come a day or two before, but Bruce had sent him no word. Bruce had never sent any word since the conditions of the failure had been made plain to him, when he had resigned his position, refused the salary due him, and left Old Trail Town. Clearly, Ebenezer could make no inquiry under those circumstances, he told himself. They had cut themselves off from him, definitely.
How definitely he was cut off from them was evident as he went down the dark street to the factory. He was strangely quickened, from head to foot, with the news of the birth of Bruce’s child. He went down toward the factory simply because that was the place that he knew best, and he wanted to be near it. He walked in the snow of the mid-road, facing the wind, steeped in that sense of keener being which a word may pour in the veins until the body flows with it. The third generation; the next of kin—that which stirred in him was a satisfaction almost physical that his family was promised its future.
As he went he was unconscious, as he was always unconscious, of the little street. But, perhaps because Abel had mentioned Mary’s house, he noted the folk, bound thither, whom he was meeting: Ben Torry, with a basket, and his two boys beside him; August Muir, carrying his little girl and a basket, and his wife following with a basket. Ebenezer spoke to them, and after he had passed them he thought about them for a minute.
“Quite little families,” he thought. “I s’pose they get along.... I wonder how much Bruce is making a week?”
Nellie Hatch and her lame sister were watching at the lighted window, as if there were something to see.
“Must be kind of dreary work for them—living,” he thought, “...I s’pose Bruce is pretty pleased...pretty pleased.”
At the corner, someone spoke to him with a note of pleasure in his voice. It was his bookkeeper, with his wife and two partly grown daughters. Ebenezer thought of his last meeting with his bookkeeper, and remembered the man’s smile of perfect comprehension and sympathy, as if they two had something in common.
“Family life does cling to a man,” he had said.
That was his wife on his arm, and their two daughters. On that salary of his.... Was it possible, it occurred to Ebenezer, that she was saving egg money, earning sewing money, winning prizes for puzzles—as Letty had done?
Outside the factory, the blue arc light threw a thousand shadows on the great bulk of the building, but left naked in light the little office. He stood looking at it, as he so rarely saw it, from part way across the road. Seen so, it took on another aspect, as if it had emerged from some costuming given it by the years. The office was painted brown, and discolored. He saw it white, with lozenge panes unbroken, flowered curtains at the windows, the light of lamp and wood stove shining out. And as sharply as if it had been painted on the air, he saw some unimportant incident in his life there—a four-wheel carriage drawn up at the door with some Christmas guests just arriving, and himself and Letty and Malcolm in the open doorway. He could not remember who the guests were, or whether he had been glad to see them, and he had no wish in the world to see those guests again. But the simple, casual, homely incident became to him the sign of all that makes up everyday life, the everyday life of folk—of folks—from which he had so long been absent.
His eye went down the dark little street where were the houses of the men who were his factory “hands.” Just for a breath he saw them as they were—the chorus to the thing he was thinking about. They were all thinking about it, too. Every one of them knew what he knew.... Just for a breath he saw the little street as it was: an entity. Then the sight closed, but through him ran again that sense of keener being, so poignant that now, as his veins flowed with it, something deeper within him almost answered.
He wheeled impatiently from where he stood. He wanted to do something. At the end of the street he could see them crossing under the light, on their way to Mary Chavah’s. Abel and Simeon might stop for him...but how could he go there, among the folk whom he had virtually denied their Christmas? What would they have to say to him? Yet what they should say would, after all, matter nothing to him...and perhaps he would hear them say something about Bruce and Jenny. Still, he had nothing to take there, as Abel had suggested. What had he that a boy would want to have? Unless....
He thought for a moment. Then he crossed the street to what had been his house. He went in, seeing again the hallway and stair, red-carpeted, and the door opened into the lamplit room beyond. He found and lighted an end of candle that he knew, and made his way up the stair. There he set the candle down and lowered the ladder that led to the loft.
In the loft, a gust of wind from the skylight blew out the flame of his little wick. In the darkness, the broken panes above his head looked down on him like a face, and that face the sky, thousand-eyed. He mounted a box, pushed up the frame, and put out his head. The sky lay near. The little town showed, heaped roofs and lifting smoke, and here and there a light. Sparkling in their midst was the light before the Town Hall, like an eye guarding something and answering to the light before his factory and to the other light before the station, where the world went by. High over all, climbing the east, came Capella, and seemed to be standing above the village.
As he looked, the need to express what he felt beset Ebenezer.
“Quite a little town,” he thought, “quite a little town.”
He closed the glass, and groped in the darkness to where the roof, sloping sharply, met the door. There he touched an edge of something that swayed, and he laid hold of and drew out that for which he had come: Malcolm’s hobbyhorse.
Downstairs in the hall he set it on the floor, examined it, rocked it with one finger. The horse returned to its ancient office as if it were irrevocably ordained to service. Ebenezer, his head on one side, stood for some time regarding it. Then he slipped something in its worn saddle-pocket. Last, he lifted and settled the thing under his arm.
“I donno but I might as well walk around by Mary Chavah’s house,” he thought. “I needn’t stay long....”
* * * *
At Mary Chavah’s house the two big parlors, the hall, the stairs, the dining room, even the tiny bedroom with the owl wall paper, were filled with folk come to welcome the little boy. And on the parlor table, set so that he should see it when first he entered, blazed Ellen Bourne’s little tree. The coffee was hot on the stove, good things were ready on the table, and the air was electric with expectation, with the excitement of being together, with the imminent surprise to Mary, and with curiosity about the little stranger from Idaho.
“What’ll we all say when he first comes in?” somebody asked.
“Might say ‘Merry Christmas,’” two or three suggested.
“Mercy, no!” replied shocked voices, “not to Mary Chavah, especially.”
But however they should say it, the time was quick with cheer.
At quarter to eight the gate clicked. The word passed from one to another, and by the time a step sounded on the porch the rooms were still, save for the whispers, and a voice or two that kept unconsciously on in some remote corner. But instead of the door opening to admit Mary and her little boy, a hesitating knock sounded.
Those nearest to the door questioned one another with startled looks, and one of them threw the door open. On the threshold stood Affer, the telegraph operator, who thrust in a very dirty hand and a yellow envelope.
“We don’t deliver nights,” he said, �
��but I thought she’d ought to have this one. I’m going home to wash up, and then I’ll be back,” he added, and left them staring at one another around the little lighted tree.
XIII.
Before they could go out to find Mary, as a dozen would have done, she was at the threshold, alone. She seemed to understand without wonder why they were there, and with perfect naturalness she turned to them to share her trouble.
“He hasn’t come,” she said simply.
Her face was quite white, and because they usually saw her with a scarf or shawl over her head, she looked almost strange to them, for she wore a hat. Also she had on an unfamiliar soft-colored wrap that had been her mother’s and was kept in tissues. She had dressed carefully to go to meet the child. “I might as well dress up a little,” she had thought, “and I guess he’ll like colors best.”
Almost before she spoke they put in her hands the telegram. They were pressing toward her, dreading, speechless, trying to hear what should be read. She stepped nearer to the light of the candles on the little tree, read, and reread in the stillness. When she looked up her face was so illumined that she was strange to them once more.
“Oh,” she said, “it’s his train. It was late for the Local. They’ve put him on the Express, and it’ll drop him at the draw.”
The tense air crumpled into breathings, and a soft clamor filled the rooms as they told one another, and came to tell her how glad they were. She pulled herself together and tried to slip into her natural manner.
“It did give me a turn,” she confessed; “I thought he’d been—he’d got....”
She went into the dining room, still without great wonder that they were all there; but when she saw the women in white aprons, and the table arrayed, and on it Ellen Bourne’s Christmas rose blooming, she broke into a little laugh.
“Oh,” she said, “you done this a-purpose for him.”
“I hope, Mary, you won’t mind,” Mis’ Mortimer Bates said formally, “it being Christmas, so. We’d have done just the same on any other day.”