Betty Neels - Damsel In Green.txt

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by Damsel in Green [lit]


  would be able to banish him from her mind. After the visitors had gone, and

  she was sitting on the rug before the fire opposite her aunt, that lady

  looked at her keenly and said;

  "You're still happy looking after Cornelis, dear?"

  Georgina put down the paper she had been glancing through.

  "Yes, Aunt Polly, he's a very nice little boy, and bright for his age.

  I'm teaching him chess, you know, and he gives me a Dutch lesson each

  morning. He says I'm shocking at the pronunciation, and I must say some of

  the words are tongue-twisters. "

  "How about his chess?"

  "He's good. I'm not bad, am I? But I shall have to take care not to be

  beaten before very much longer."

  "Do any of the others play?"

  "No--at least Karel may do so, but I don't fancy he has much time at

  present." She added, because she knew her aunt would ask anyway, "Professor

  Eyffert plays. Cor is going to challenge him to a game when he gets back."

  "And when will that be?"

  Georgina got up.

  "I don't know. He's a busy man, he comes and goes.

  I'm going to start supper, darling. Supposing I do something to that

  chicken--I can leave some to warm up for Moggy when she gets back. "

  She went away to the kitchen, leaving her aunt to gaze thoughtfully into the

  fire.

  The weather changed before St. Nicholaas. The wintry sunshine gave way to

  grey, woolly clouds and a biting wind, but despite the weather Georgina went

  for her daily walks, and Beatrix, more often than not, with her. She lea mt

  a great deal about the Professor from the little girl, although she was

  careful never to ask questions about him, much though she longed to do so.

  It was dark early on St. Nicholaas' Eve. They had tea a little earlier and

  Georgina drew the chintz curtains against the gloom outside, and they sat in

  a circle round the fire, with the dog Robby well in front, and Ginger and

  Toto curled up carefully on either side of Cor. It was the nicest part of

  the day, thought Georgina; the mornings were nice too, but filled with the

  strict schedule she had devised--treatment for Cor, lessons and massage and

  games of chess before lunch--but by teatime everyone was pleasantly tired,

  and the children were content to sit over the Christmas decorations, which

  were nearly finished. There was, naturally enough, a great deal of talk

  about St. Nicholas over tea. Georgina suspected that the only one present

  to believe in him was Beatrix, but this didn't prevent them all assuring her

  that they would put their shoes in the fireplace when they went to bed.

  It was late by the time she judged everyone was asleep, and safe for her to

  go to the Professor's room. She went to the great tallboy against one wall

  and opened the drawer, and looked with something like dismay at the gaily

  wrapped packages within it. She should have brought a basket. Instead, she

  scooped up the hem of her long quilted dressing gown and dropped them into

  it, and thus loaded, slipped back through the quiet house to her own room.

  Everyone, it seemed, had two presents. She sorted them carefully, and found

  her name was on two of the small packages as well. Everyone in the household

  had put a shoe in front of the fire in Cor's room--even Stephens had

  appeared, soft- footed, with some highly polished footwear belonging to his

  wife and Milly and himself. Georgina crept along the row of shoes, carefully

  removing the sugar lumps and carrots with which each was filled, supposedly

  for the delectation of the good saint's horse. She arranged the presents

  neatly in their stead, and went soft-footed back to her room, wondering what

  to do with the offerings for the horse. At length she opened her suitcase

  which was in the big cupboard behind the panelled wall, and stuffed them in.

  They opened their presents before breakfast-even Dimphena, who was always

  last out of bed, came into Cor's room with Beatrix. Georgina,

  already up and dressed, thought she looked like a fairy-tale princess, with

  her lovely hair tousled and wrapped in a gorgeous dressing gown which must

  have cost the earth.

  Each of them had a chocolate letter--the initial letter of their names,

  extravagantly wrapped and beribboned--a charming custom which Cor had been at

  great pains to explain to Georgina some days previously. But it was the

  second package which contained the real gift. They started with Cor, who

  undid his with excited hands, and whooped with joy at the watch inside.

  Beatrix had one too--a small, dainty version of her brother's;

  Georgina helped fasten them on and then joined in the chorus of admiration

  when Franz, in his turn, showed them a camera--a Praktica, he told them

  proudly--a Domiplan F2. 8/50--a piece of information which conveyed nothing

  at all to his hearers, but which seemed to give him the greatest possible

  satisfaction. Dimphena's box was very small; it contained pearl earrings,

  exquisitely simple--exactly right for a young girl. Georgina hadn't much

  knowledge of good jewellery, but even to her unsophisticated eye, they looked

  real. She admired them with wholehearted sincerity and a complete lack of

  envy, and led a rapturous Dimphena to her mirror to observe their beauty.

  It seemed rather an anti-climax to open her own gift after that. She did so

  swiftly, expecting a diary or one of those pen and pencil sets so suitable

  for the sort of people for whom it was hard to find the right gift. It was

  neither, but a small, fragile porcelain figure of a girl in a green and white

  and gold dress, with a little dog half hidden in her skirts. Georgina held

  it in her hands, speechless with pleasure, for by some delightful quirk of

  fate it was something she had admired many times in an antique shop in

  Saffron Walden. It was Meissen, and she had never quite plucked up the

  courage to ask its price. She looked at the watching faces around her.

  "I simply can't believe it!" she breathed.

  "St. Nicolaas has given me something I've been wanting for months. However

  did he know?"

  The little figure was passed from hand to hand and duly admired, and declared

  by Beatrix to be exactly right for her dear George, before being placed on

  the little table by Georgina's bed. She thought about it a good deal during

  the day. Of course, it was the Professor, not St. Nicholaas, who had

  provided the gifts, but although he would have made it his business to find

  out what his cousins wanted, she doubted very much if he would have gone to

  the same trouble in her case. Besides, who was there to ask? She had never

  mentioned it to anyone at Dalmers Place. It was, she concluded, one of those

  happy coincidences which almost never happen.

  She examined the little figure again when she was getting ready for her walk.

  She was sitting on her bed, her coat half on, cradling it in her hands. She

  would keep it for always; a constant reminder of Julius, even if she were

  never to see him again--which seemed probable. It was unlikely that their

  paths would cross once she went back to St. Athel's. She fought a strong

  urge to burst into tears. That vague man of her dreams, whom she was one day

  to have met and
married, had somehow turned into the Professor. He was, she

  admitted to herself, the man she had been waiting for, and she loved him with

  all her heart. It was a pity that he didn't feel the same way.

  She put her treasure down, finished dressing, and went for a walk with

  Beatrix. It was still very cold, with the smell of frost strong in the air,

  mixed with the sharp tang of rotting apples in the orchards and the aromatic

  smoke of burning leaves. They found a chestnut tree on their way home, and

  filled their pockets with nuts, so that when the Professor telephoned they

  were all crowded around the fire, roasting them on a shovel and making a good

  deal of noise about it. It was while she was peeling the last of the nuts

  that Georgina had her idea.

  Beatrix was chattering away in Dutch to her guardian; she was about to put

  back the receiver when Georgina cried, "Beatrix, just a minute. I want to

  speak to your guardian," and said in a panicky little voice, "Professor

  Eyffert, I'd like to go to London one day next week. Do you mind if I have

  my day off during the week instead of Sunday?"

  His voice came back, maddeningly placid.

  "My dear good girl, take whichever day you wish-have Sunday as well if you

  need to. Why do you sound so desperate?"

  Georgina swallowed.

  "I'm not. I--I thought Beatrix would hang up before I could speak to you."

  "Is that all? I'm disappointed." He rang off.

  She took the Mini to London, driving carefully, not because she was nervous,

  but because it was, after all, a borrowed car, and the road was icy. She

  parked it at St. Athel's, resisting an impulse to go into Cas for a gossip

  with anyone who was free, and hailed a taxi. It was already dusk when she

  arrived back at the hospital, loaded with parcels, having spent almost all

  her money, and for that very reason feeling more cheerful than she had done

  for some days. She drove back as fast as she dared, for she had said that

  she would be back in time for tea with Cor and she hated to disappoint him.

  As it was, they were halfway through the meal by the time she reached her

  room. She arranged her parcels tidily on the chest of drawers and was on her

  way to Cor's room as the telephone rang. She went and sat quietly by the

  fire with her cup of tea, wondering if the Professor would want to speak to

  her.

  Apparently he didn't, for after a few minutes he rang off, without even so

  much as his usual formal message.

  She waited until she went to bed before opening her purchases. Most of them

  were presents for Christmas, but some of them were for herself.

  The largest box contained a dress--a long-skirted dream of a dress, of dark

  green velvet, with narrow sleeves and a high neck banded with white

  organdie--a feminine version of a clerical collar, its demureness accentuated

  by the white organdie wristbands. She had bought velvet slippers too, and

  for good measure, another lipstick.

  She tried them all on before she went to bed, then hung the dress in the

  magnificently fitted cupboard in the wall. In all likelihood it would stay

  there until she left Dalmers Place.

  The next few days were busy ones. Mr. Sawbridge came, followed by the

  physiotherapist and the radiographer. The Professor had said he would be

  home in two days' time, and there were only five days left before Christmas.

  The decorations were almost finished; they had only to be sorted into boxes,

  ready to be put up on Christmas Eve. The tree had been installed in the

  drawing room by old Legg, and Mrs. Stephens sent up vast quantities of mince

  pies each teatime.

  Karel was home too, and Franz was on holiday from school--the old house was

  alive with a cheerful bustle. It began to snow the day before the Professor

  was due back. Georgina got Milly to sit with Cor while they all went outside

  and built a snowman, and afterwards, at Beatrix's urgent request, had a

  tremendous battle with snowballs, which left them glowing and famished. When

  they went back indoors and Georgina saw Cor's rebellious face against the

  pillows, she went to him and put a comforting arm around him and said:

  "You may not be as big as your guardian. Cor, not in size, but you're a real

  big man just the same. If you weren't I would never have been able to go

  outside with the others, because you would have made a fuss, and what would

  have made it unpleasant for everybody, wouldn't it? We each threw a snowball

  for you, and put one of your caps on the snowman, and here's Franz with

  something for you." The something was a plastic bucket, filled with snow,

  which Cor, suitably protected, made into snowballs for Franz and Karel to

  hurl out of the window: this restored his good humour to such an extent that

  Georgina heard him repeating to his brother what she had said, with a few

  embellishments which he had thought up for himself.

  Karel was going out to dinner, and when the rest of them had dined they went

  back to Cor's room. It was barely half past eight, and past the children's

  bedtime, but Georgina saw that they were both far too excited to sleep.

  "I'm going to wash my hair," she announced.

  "I'll do it now, and then how about singing some carols while I'm drying it?"

  Her suggestion was greeted with enthusiasm, and Dimphena made it easier by

  saying that she wanted to wash her hair too, anyway. Half an hour later they

  were sitting by the fire again, the girls in their dressing gowns, and

  Beatrix ensconced firmly on Georgina's lap. There was a carol programme on

  Cor's radio and they were all singing with gusto, but presently the programme

  ended and Georgina said, "I wish we had a piano, then we could sing all we

  wanted."

  Dimphena, who was brushing her hair on the opposite side of the fire, looked

  up.

  "But we have! Not the one in the drawing room--there's one in the schoolroom

  at the end of the corridor--it's on casters."

  It was no sooner said than done. With Franz's help, the piano was installed;

  five minutes later Georgina was seated at it, playing "The First Now- ell'

  with great verve and dash, and leading the singing in a rather nice soprano.

  They were singing so heartily that they failed to hear the car crunching

  through the snow on the drive below; they were still singing when the

  Professor opened the door. At the sight of him they stopped with the

  abruptness of a cut of the scissors through tape. They surged to meet him,

  laughing and talking and exclaiming;

  telling him everything at once. Georgina sat at the piano, watching him as

  he greeted each of them in turn while his eyes swept lazily around the room,

  noting the untidy heaps of decorations overflowing their boxes, the gay

  wrapping paper, the labels and string, the Christmas cards festooning the

  Balkan frame over Cor's bed, the cats and Robby crossing the room to wreathe

  themselves around his legs, the abandoned towels from the hair-drying

  session. At the piano he blinked, and then eyebrows lifted, gave her a long

  look. She reddened under it, conscious that a dressing gown and hair hanging

  anyhow were the antithesis of the uniform he had requested her to wear at all

  times
. He started towards her and she longed to turn and run. He would be

  bitingly polite and she would be shattered. But he said, to surprise her

  utterly:

  ' I have been looking forward to coming home-- I didn't realise how much

  until the moment I entered this room. "

  She stared at him while she got her breath.

  "It's Christmas--the children have been so good, I thought an extra hour

  would be fun for them-and it's my fault the piano is here. I hope you aren't

  too annoyed."

  He gave her a half smile and said without annoyance, "It amazes me how you

  contrive to make me out to be an ogre. Why should I object to the

  children--or you--being happy?"

  His blue eyes searched her face and his smile widened.

  "I can't think how we ever managed without you..."

  The others had closed in around them: she looked round at their glowing faces.

  "You're not an ogre. Professor, I--I think I was surprised."

  Cor's voice broke in before she could say more.

  "Cousin Julius, you haven't seen anything, have you? I mean anything strange

  in this room?"

  He sounded apprehensive. His guardian stopped his calm study of Georgina and

  wandered over to the bed.

  "Nor," he answered readily.

  "Should I have done so?" He looked round him vaguely.

  "It all looks much as usual." He was answered by a good deal of laughter and

  a babel of voices, each offering an explanation, which didn't cease until he

  told Franz to go down to the hall and bring up the packages he would find

 

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