SANTA CLAUS’ SWEETHEART

       [Illustration: “Will ye tell me good-by now, swateheart?”

                              _Page 93._]




                            [Illustration:

                             SANTA CLAUS’
                              SWEETHEART

                                  BY

                             IMOGEN CLARK

                              ILLUSTRATED

                       [Illustration: colophon]

                               NEW YORK

                        E. P. DUTTON & COMPANY

                      31 WEST TWENTY-THIRD STREET]




                           COPYRIGHT, 1906,
                          E. P. DUTTON & CO.

                      Published September, 1906.


               THE UNIVERSITY PRESS, CAMBRIDGE, U. S. A.


                                  TO

                              E. A. M. M.




CONTENTS


CHAPTER                                                             PAGE

  I. ENTER SANTA CLAUS                                                 3

 II. THE RIDE TOGETHER                                                30

III. EXIT SANTA CLAUS                                                 66

 IV. CHRISTMAS EVE AT THORNBY’S                                       97

 V. THE PEACE OF GOD                                                 130

 VI. CHRISTMAS DAY                                                   165




LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS


“Will ye tell me good-by now, swateheart?” (p. 93)      _Frontispiece_

She stood waiting, listening to the bells             _Facing page 96_




SANTA CLAUS’ SWEETHEART

[Illustration: text decoration]




CHAPTER I

ENTER SANTA CLAUS


Terry O’Connor always declared he was born under a happy star, and he
also maintained that at the time of his coming into the world it had
danced for very joy. This statement, which no matter how much others
might doubt but could not dispute, he had direct from his mother’s
mother, who was present on that most auspicious occasion, and had
observed the unusual conduct of the stellar body from the window. And,
moreover, as if to establish quite conclusively the connection between
the shining merriment in the skies and the advent of the little child on
earth, the first thing the baby did was to smile. Old Mrs. Mulcahey knew
what she was talking of. She had seen many new-born children in her
time, and all of them, with the exception of her small and only
grandchild, had worn such doleful countenances that a less hopeful
person than herself would have been cast into despair. Whether that
dazzling, dancing star had blinded her eyes, or had given them a truer
vision, who shall say? She had seen--what she had seen! A little joyful
slip of humanity come valiantly into this world of trouble, equipped
from the outset with the sign-royal of a light heart.

It was the humblest of cradles; but to it, as to all cradles--so runs
the old belief--had trooped, unseen, the good fairies with their gifts,
and hither also had come the wicked fairy, who is seldom absent at such
times, and whose malignant generosity mars all the gracious giving,
making possession only too often of doubtful value. Here, as elsewhere,
she wreaked her evil will so that the little child grew to be a man
known through the countryside as a good-for-naught. That was the extent
of her work, however; she was powerless to prevent another testimony. He
was also known as a kindly, happy-go-lucky fellow, his own worst enemy,
but the friend of all the world. Such was the record of five-and-sixty
years, and such it would be to the end.

Terry dragged his squirrel cap closely down about his ears, and pulled
the collar of his fur coat up to meet it, shutting out the shouts that
rose from the group of idlers gathered around the roaring fire in
Wistar’s tavern. Not even Ulysses, on that memorable voyage of his past
the sirens, ever strove so vigorously to dull his hearing as did this
little commonplace man, who was generally in thrall to his own
pleasures. In spite of the laughter which reached him in faint bursts,
he strode resolutely to the door and let himself out into the still,
white world. For a moment his will, nerved as it seldom was, faltered;
back of him, through the open door, he could see the gleaming eye of
the fire winking and blinking in friendly wise; the grinning human faces
turned his way, jovial as they were, were less alluring, though he knew
what comfort lay in their mirth, and what additional comfort would be
passed from lip to lip as the hours went by. He was not unfamiliar with
such scenes, but the knowledge that the morrow would be Christmas and
his rude sleigh contained what would go to the needs, and also to the
meagre pleasuring of the shantymen at Thornby’s logging-camp, as well as
another and still more potent thought, lent an unusual firmness to his
step. He was not sure of himself even then, however, though he cleared
the distance with a bound which landed him in the centre of his waiting
sleigh, and shook out the reins with a wild halloo that startled the
placid old horses and made them whirl forward on the frozen road with
the friskiness of youth. The noise of the hurried departure brought the
men within the tavern running to the open door, to stand there
bare-headed, gaping at the diminishing speck which they knew--and did
not know. A man of determination, surely, and hitherto their
acquaintance had been with one who never could say “no,” or a quarter of
a “no,” on any occasion--the real Terry O’Connor.

Meanwhile, as the sorry-looking nags sobered down to their everyday
gait, the man back of them knew which was the real self. His own
conduct, despite the fact that he held its key, had surprised him even
more than it had his companions; and as his thoughts turned longingly to
the spot he had just quitted, he let his grasp slacken on the reins. It
was better that the horses should take their own way for a while; he
could not quite trust himself. Presently, however, when no backward
glance revealed the tavern, and all around the country lay wrapped in
the white silence of winter, he gathered the lines more firmly between
his fingers and called a jovial word of encouragement. His voice rang
out loud and far-reaching,--the only sound to break the stillness save
the monotonous sing-song of the sleigh bells that struck a vibrant note
on the clear air, and the sharp crunching of the hardened snow under
the passing hoofs. Another man in Terry’s place, doing his duty against
his inclination, would have performed the task stolidly if there were no
one by to applaud his action and recognize what a fine fellow he was.
With Terry it was different. Once starting out to do a thing he carried
his own lightness of heart into the matter, which was probably the
result of being born under a happy star.

There were other reasons in this instance, besides the performance of
his duty, to make Terry happy. He had never heard that duty done is the
soul’s fireside; indeed, had he been consulted on the subject he would
have frankly cast his vote for Wistar’s fireside with the hot toddy
going around at blessed intervals rather than for any warmth that might
come from his soul because of his own well-doing. He knew little of his
soul, and cared less; that was something, according to him, to be
reserved for the time when illness, or old age, should overtake him. At
present, with his lusty health and his gay heart that was bubbling over
with youth despite his years, he disregarded the acquaintance entirely.
He had turned his face resolutely toward the north and to the north he
would go, though first the provisions would be duly left at the camp;
but he had no intention of remaining there himself. A glass of
grog--another--they could scarcely offer him less than two!--and he
would be away again. Like a beacon, out of the distance, beckoning to
him was the jollity up at Merle. It was there he meant to keep the
Christmas Eve vigil and, moreover, win the bet Narcisse Vélin had made.
For Narcisse, smarting under what he termed “a slight to hees honor-r,”
had declared that Terry would never be able to leave Wistar’s tavern and
the jolly crowd assembled there, and the shantymen would be obliged to
do without their Christmas cheer because they had chosen so unworthy a
bearer instead of a more capable man--he would mention no names!--and
then with an evil laugh he had made a heavy wager that his words would
come true.

Terry shivered momentarily under his furs, though he was so well
wrapped up that the cold was powerless to reach him. How nearly had
Narcisse been right, how nearly had he--Terry O’Connor--been the loser.
The grog was so good at Wistar’s, and Baptiste, the most famous
story-teller of them all, had just come in with a new and wonderful
adventure at his tongue’s end, and the glow of the fire was like a
gentle hand soothing one into forgetfulness. Then suddenly he had
remembered the packed sleigh without with Danny and Whitefoot waiting
patiently, though mournfully shaking their bells from time to time to
remind him of themselves, of his duty, and, more than all, of Narcisse.
The latter thought was the real spur to goad him out of the ease into
which he had fallen. So he had left the tavern, and the surprise his
action had caused filled him with great glee.

“They’ll niver be t’rough talkin’ av it,” he chuckled aloud, “niver!
They’ll say whin they tell their shtories ’twas the year, ye mind, whin
Terry, the little jool av a man, wudn’t stay along wid us though we
besached most beguilin’, an’ the grog was that edifyin’ ’twas its own
monymint. He wint out into the piercin’ cold did that brave little
felly”--Terry’s chest swelled with pardonable pride--“because he’d
passed his say-so. He’s a square sowl is the lad, though there do be
some avil-minded folks as give out that he an’ his promises don’t walk
on the same side av the way--now the howly saints fergive thim!” He
flapped the reins on the horses’ backs.

“Hi, there, me byes!” he shouted. “’Tis a fine supper ye’ll be havin’,
an’ Narcisse Vélin will be afther payin’ the score. Kape a-goin’, me
beauties. The moon will be up whin we go into Merle, an’ ye’ll be
dhroppin’ wid fatague; but aisy! now--aisy!--there won’t be anny work
to-morry, childer--oh, jist ye wait an’ see! They’ll be afther thinkin’
we ain’t comin’, an’ Narcisse will say in his Frenchy way: ’Bieng!
didn’t I tol’ ye so? The bet is mine, an’ little Terry’ll have to pay
up; ye can’t put no daypindince in a man av his build iver--’ An’ whilst
the avil wurrds are dhroppin’ from his mouth I’ll walk in on thim all as
inconsequenshul-like as if I was goin’ to a fair. That’s the toime the
laugh will be wid me, an’ Narcisse will want to slink aff to some
remoted place. Oh, there does be no sinse at all to make wagers onlesst
ye be sure av winnin’--thin ye can make thim big--”

The thought so pleased him that he laughed boisterously, and flicked the
horses with the whip, much as a man would nudge his neighbor with a
friendly elbow at some witticism; then, his merriment abating a trifle,
he began to sing.

Suddenly he broke off in his song, and his fingers closed tightly over
the slack reins; the horses felt the authoritative touch and came to an
instant standstill. Before them lay the road which here led across the
open country, though farther on it wound through the woods and over the
low hills. Back of them, three good miles by now, was the little
settlement with Wistar’s tavern (which had given the place its name) as
a nucleus, while to the left stretched the plain empty of all sign of
life; and to the right there was the same level whiteness, broken only
by a solitary house which fronted the road at some distance away and
seemed like a belated straggler, held captive by the relentless bonds of
winter, as it peered longingly in the direction of the small town from
whose companionship it was forever set apart. There was an air of
forlornness about it, surrounded as it was by all that glitter of ice
and glint of frost, though the chimney smoke curling slowly up through
the sharp air told of a certain homely cheer within. It was off the
beaten track, however, and despite the fact that Terry had halted he
made no attempt to give evidence of his presence by so much as a shout.
Out of the earth, almost beside him, there had unexpectedly risen a
small figure, and he now found himself staring into a child’s eager
face.

“Are you Santa Claus?” she demanded with bated breath.

He looked back at her, taking in, even in his dull fashion, the delight
that widened her eyes and shrilled her voice. Suppose he told the
truth--what then? How the disappointment would cloud the upturned
radiant face at the commonplace statement that he was only Terry
O’Connor. He hesitated an inappreciable moment; then, because he had
been born under a dancing star and loved a jest, he answered her
question.

The child’s laugh rang out on the air in happy triumph, waking the
echoes. The horses stirred a little and their dull old bells gave forth
a low sound, but it wasn’t music compared to that which filled Terry’s
ears. He took up the reins reluctantly. She pressed nearer, putting out
a small, resolute hand as if she were one of those old-time,
fierce-browed highwaymen and meant to stop his further progress.

“Ah, please don’t,” she protested, in a tone no knight of the road would
ever have employed, “please--” Then with a little rush, as if the words
were eager to escape: “ I was so sure it was truly you, so sure. I saw
you when you were way off--just a teeny, weeny speck--and first I
thought maybe it was Pierre, or p’r’aps the doctor, or Mr. Higgins, and
I came down here ’cause they always say ‘How are you?’ as they
pass--they’re such noticing big men! I couldn’t see very clear, you
know, with the sun shining one way and the snow sending back baby
sparkles the other; but everything seemed so happy, and when I heard you
singing, I knew why--even your bells sounded glad--glad! I just could
hardly wait. I’ve thought so much about you always--I knew you’d come
some day. Where--where are you going now, sir?”

“Home,” answered Terry, honestly enough.

She cast a quick glance at the north along the road he must travel, and
which, to her fancy, led henceforth to an enchanted world; then her eyes
sought his face again.

“Oh!” she cried breathlessly, “must you go quite--quite yet?”

At the possibility of his departure, the joy that had been written all
over her confident little person seemed suddenly to take wing, leaving
her dejected and forlorn. The pleasure had been so brief,--a mere flash
of brightness that was over almost as soon as it had come.

Terry hesitated; every moment he lingered imperilled the fulfilment of
his wager, for his horses were old, and their best was apt to be very
slow indeed. He could not afford to loiter. “Before twelve av the clock,
Christmas Eve,” Narcisse had taunted him. But the little child! It
seemed almost a sin to cheat her of this happiness. He must go, yet
everything about her--drooping lips and saddened eyes--bade him stay.
Then, filled with a desire to please her and, at the same time, not
interfere with his own plans, he bent down.

“Come along wid me,” he suggested jocosely.

He had not been prepared for the effect his words would have on her; the
joy in her face was keen as a dagger’s point, and seeing it he would not
temporize.

“Come wid me,” he urged.

She hesitated in her turn, and cast a backward glance at the silent
house whose tin roof flashed almost like an admonishing eye in the sun.
Duty was a word of even less proportions in her vocabulary than in
Terry’s, though she knew its existence; knew, too, young as she was, the
wide gulf that lies between right and wrong doing. Yet here was no
question of wrong, certainly. The possibility of the passing of such an
Important Personage had never occurred to her elders, and they, who
loved to see her happy, would never refuse to let her go with him; it
wasn’t necessary to ask--she couldn’t wait. The house was so lonely! Her
uncle was away at his work, and her mother sat sad and quiet, sewing the
livelong day; there were no children’s voices in the empty rooms, no
rollicking, romping feet in the hall or on the stairs. Just silence,
save for the little sounds she herself made as she played with her
dolls, or, tired of them, watched the big, desolate world from the
window. That was the picture the house held for her. This,--she looked
again at the little red-cheeked, blue-eyed man smiling at her from under
his big fur cap, his white beard framing his jovial face--why, he had
just stepped from her story book; hundreds of times he had met her
glance in this same friendly fashion from the printed page; just so had
he looked at her in those long daydreams, gleamed at her so in the
twilight from the leaping fire, haunted her slumbers at night. Even the
sound of his voice was familiar, though she had never thought to hear
him say: “Come with me, come with me.”

The road, stretching away to the north, gleamed like silver under the
dazzling sky, twinkling and beckoning to her as with a thousand hands,
and innumerable voices, too fine to be heard by ordinary ears, echoed
the invitation. The voices of the sleeping plains waking at the thought
of the happiness in store for her, the voices of the snow-covered trees
where the little leaves danced in the summer time, and all the spirits
of the birds that had once darted in and out among them and had nested
there sang now in a mighty chorus: “Come, come, come.”

Oh, that happy, happy road. Never a child of all the multitude of
children on earth who had loved him, dreamed about him, and longed to
see him had been so fortunate as she. It was impossible to hesitate a
moment longer, especially when the pursed up lips might so quickly slip
from the magic word into a chirrup to the horses, and in consequence
sleigh and occupant would vanish into thin air.

“Do you really mean it?” she asked tremulously. “Do you really mean it?”
For though she was deafened by the noisy voices, his had been the first
to speak. “Will you take me, truly?”

For answer he threw back the robes, and as she sprang to his side he
gave a great laugh and drew her closer to him; then he dragged an extra
rug from the bottom of the sleigh and folded it about her.

“Santa Claus’ swateheart mustn’t ketch the p-noo-moany,” he cried.
“Divil a bit av it! What do I percaive--is it missin’ a mitten ye are?
Sure that’s disthressful, fer we can’t hunt it up now wid toime racin’
by like a mill-shtrame--”

“I’m unpartikilar, truly. I don’t mind the leastest bit--”

“Well, mine wud be too shmall fer the likes av ye annyway, an’ I nade
thim mesilf. So tuck your hands clost under, me darlint, an’ ye won’t be
afther falin’ the cold. Now thin, is it ready ye are?”

“Yes, oh, yes.”

“Hi, there, Danny! Hi, there, Whitefut!” he shouted. “Buckle to, me
byes; the luck av the wurrld is foldin’ her arrms about me at this
toime, an’ no mishtake. Git a move on ye, childer.”

The horses obeyed his voice with alacrity, as if they were eager to get
their work over; the bells jingled, the snow beneath the runners gave
out a sharp hissing sound by way of answer, and the little sweetheart,
only her face showing out of the old brown rug as she nestled close
against the man’s arm, laughed merrily.

Before them the happy road, its joyous voices still calling to her, went
on and on into the very rim of the sky; behind them the white earth
stretched. They didn’t glance back--why should they? There was not much
to see,--nothing but the empty plain and the lonely little house that
seemed to shiver there all by itself; the silent little house where no
child played, or looked from any of its windows. It seemed to have no
love for the outer world, and no interest in it; yet zigzagging from its
door were the prints of certain steps--too big for a fairy, too tiny for
a man,--a strange huddle of marks ever forming new paths, and finally
coming to an end at the side of the road.

And the road led north, and the road led south, but nowhere was there
any trace of a small maid faring forth on a mission of discovery. One
would never have dreamed of her passing that way, had it not been for
those adventurous footprints and for the little red mitten that showed
upon the snow like a hand flung out in a silent good-by.




CHAPTER II

THE RIDE TOGETHER


“An’ the shtar danced whin I was born--”

“That was because you were Santa Claus,” laughed the little maid.

“Faith, ’twas because I was mesilf--jest a slip av a babe that wud have
gladdened your eyes to see. ’Twas a happy shtar, an’ it came geekin’ in
at the windy,--An’ how are ye, me broth av a b’y?’ it seemed to say;
an’ I, not knowin’ the spache av the wurrld, jest shmiled back for an
answer. A shmile, or a laugh, is the best spache afther all, an’ don’t
ye fergit it. Why, even the brute dorgs know the differ betwixt glum
looks an’ cheerful ones. An’ the shtar wasn’t to be bate by a dorg, not
it! Iv’ry blessed wurrd that lay in me heart an’ cudn’t git to me
tongue’s end--the way bein’ thin unknown--was clear to it, an’ twinkle,
twinkle, hop, skip, jump it wint, a-twangin’ its little fiddle in chune
to its steps. Me mither’s mither--may the peace av hivin be her sowl’s
rist!--near dhropped me aff her knees wid amazemint, fer niver had she
beheld such divarshions; an’ by reason av the same she ran the pins into
me body, mishtakin’ it fer a cushion, but niver a whoop did I let forth,
bein’ all took up mesilf wid the joy av the shtar. Sure, she cud have
made a clove apple av me intoirely an’ I wudn’t have been none the
wiser. She rectified her mishtake did she, an’ if she’d been in doubts
that all the saylestial fandarago was in me honor, she saw the truth av
it thin. ‘Mavourneen,’ she sez to me mither, ‘there’s a little happy
shtar widout in the hivins doin’ a quick-shtep, an’ up an’ down the
middle, an’ ballings to corners all because av this new-born babe who’s
laughin’ wid the humor av it--’ ‘An’ why not?’ sez me mither, wid a
certain fierceness in the soft voice av her. ‘Why shudn’t the whole
firmymint be set into a commotion av gladness because av him? Faith, if
ye cud pennythrate to me heart,’ sez she, ‘ye’d see it dancin’ as niver
was. Bring him here to me arrms, alanna, that I may cuddle him clost,
so’s he can fale the bate av it.’ Thin the ould woman did as she was
bid, an’ me mither--now the saints bless her swate sowl!--held me till
her side an’ talked to me low, whilst the joy av her heart crept
insid’yus like into me own, an’ it’s lived there iver since.”

“What did she say? Did she call you Santa Claus?”

“Faith, she didn’t--not thin, nor aftherwards. She called me _Cushla
ma-chree_,--which manes Pulse av me Heart,--an’ Jool, an’ Precious, an’
Light av me Eyes--”

“But those are my own names, truly, all but the first one, and Heart’s
Content, and--”

“Ah, the mithers--bless thim! There does be but one langwidge they spake
the wurrld over. Don’t I know the truth av it? An’ the haythins as
well, that haven’t a wurrd av English to their names--God pity thim,
though he made thim an’ gave thim their gibberish, too--they say the
same thing in their outlandish tongue, an’ the little haythins
undershtand as well as you an’ me. Heart’s Contint, an’ Wurrld’s
Blessin’ an’--”

“‘Dear my little own,’--only muvver made that up speshilly for me; she
told me so--”

“Did she, now? Begorra, the familiarity av it sounds like music in me
ears. I remimber me own mither whisperin’ something akin to it wanst
whin I snuggled clost to her. Whist! ’tis out av their falin’s fer us
that they do be gettin’ the wurrds afther all, an’ that’s betther than
learnin’ thim from the books. Whin ye come to think av it, it ain’t to
be wondered at that there’s a sort av fam’ly raysimblince betwixt thim,
seein’ as their hearts are av the same complexion. Oh, there ain’t
annything annyw’eres like a mither’s love.”

For just a little minute the eyes blazing with fun took on a misty
twinkle, and something like a shadow crossed the old man’s face, making
it seem strangely grave; but it was gone as quickly as it had come, and
he was his merry self once more.

“It must have been a most ’normous long while ago when you were a baby,”
the child said, inspecting him shyly.

“It was, me darlint; it was the beginnin’ av toime--fer me.”

“Somehow I never thought of you as a baby at all,” she went on, plainly
distressed. “Oh, what ever did the little children do then for Santa
Claus? There was never any other, was there?”

“Niver a wan, Swate Eyes. I’m the original, simon-pure Santa Claus, an’
no mishtake. Troth, they had to get on the best they cud widout me; an’
a sorry toime they had av it, wan an’ all. Thin I came, an’ the wurrld
was a different place iver afther--so me mither towld me.”

The child breathed a sigh of relief.

“I’m so glad I got born when I did. I shouldn’t have liked to be borned
before you came. I’m half-past six, you know. Who filled your stocking?”
she demanded the next moment, as the new idea occurred to her.

“Divil a wan I had to hang up whin I was a spalpeen; ’twas bare-futted
an’ bare-legged I wint.”

“But Christmas,”--the little maid’s lip trembled,--“what did you do at
Christmas?”

“’Twas like anny plain, ordinary iv’ry day to me, agra, an’ no differ;
except that wanst in jest so often me mither hid a plum in the bit cake
she was afther makin’ fer me, an’ I’d the joy av searchin’ it out
mesilf, same as ye’d seek out a naydle in a hayrick. An’ toimes it was
fat, an’ toimes ag’in ’twas like the shadder av itsilf; but glory be! I
niver missed it. An’ ’twas so good, fat or lane, that I used to drame
I’d give iv’ry child in the wurrld a cake all shtuffed wid plums whin I
growed up--”

“That was what put it into your head to be Santa Claus.”

The man cast a sidelong glance at his companion’s eager face.

“S’pose so,” he muttered.

“But the star knew all along, and that’s why it danced and couldn’t keep
still.” She stole her hand into the curve of his arm, and gave it a soft
little squeeze. “Tell me ’bout that first time,” she coaxed.

“What first toime?”

“When you went Santa Clausing. Were you very long growing up?”

“’Twas a terrible long spell from the b’y’s ind, an’ a terrible short
wan from the man’s,--all av which you’ll undershtand whin your hair is
me own color. But ’twas over an’ done wid sooner or late, an’ there I
was a man grown, though the heart av me has always been like a child’s
because av the shtar--”

“And ’cause you belong to us.”

“’Tis a Solymon King av Sheba ye are, alanna. Well, I wint about me
work, an’ I toiled up an’ down the wurrld; but the goin’ was joyful
like, ’count av the fun I left in me wake, an’ iv’rywheres folks seemed
powerful glad to see me.”

“I tried to keep awake last Christmas Eve,” she broke in shrilly, “after
muvver hanged up my stocking, but the sandman would come. I’d been awake
so long that when he crept in in his long gray cloak and with his bag
on his back, I thought it was truly you, and my heart went thumpety
thump. But he shook out the sand--sprinkle, sprinkle, sprinkle.
‘To-night of all nights you must sleep,’ he said; and I cried ‘No,’ and
closed my eyes quick, so’s the sand couldn’t get in; and when I opened
them the next minute it was quite morning--not yellow morning, you know,
but just the baby light that comes first. Then very soft, so’s not to
’sturb muvver, I crawled out of bed, ’cause it made me incontented to
lie still, and there was my stocking, full to the brim. I knew who’d
filled it--” She stopped in her recital to smile at him and to pat his
arm again. “Then I climbed up on a chair to take it down, and muvver
laughed out loud. ‘Come back to bed, dear my little own,’ she said;
‘bring the stocking, and cuddle down warm and snug in blanket land.’ So
I did; and she kissed me and I kissed her, and we both said ‘Merry
Christmas’ to each uver. She went fast asleep again, but cert’inly you
couldn’t expect a little girl could sleep. I felt all my presents;
muvver says us little folks have eyes in our finger tips; and every
minute the light grew brighter, and then--I really saw! Dear, dear Santa
Claus, how could you ’member just what I wanted?” She rubbed her
dimpling cheek ecstatically against the old sleeve. “But you didn’t put
anything in muvver’s stocking,” she added softly.

He could not meet her reproachful glance.

“’Twas in a hurry I was,” he mumbled, “an’ me bastes shtampin’ widout in
the cowld--”

“Oh, she didn’t know,” the child interrupted, “’cause when she was tight
asleep I found her stocking, and I put that very rosy-cheeked apple
you’d put in mine quite far, far down in hers, and some nuts, too.
Cert’inly I couldn’t give her the little doll or the picture book,
’cause grown-ups don’t care for such things, really; but things to eat
are different. You don’t mind, do you?”

He did not answer. For the moment it almost seemed as if he had not
heard. His head was turned quite away.

“And she was s’prised--oh! you can’t think--and glad, too; so glad her
eyes got all shiny and bright. But you can’t guess what happened next.
She said, ‘Bless my Santa Claus.’ Wasn’t that funny? And then she kissed
me most ’s if she ’spected.”

Danny and Whitefoot felt a sudden queer twitch on the reins--a
compelling touch that made them both swerve out of the direction they
were taking. It was almost as if their driver meant them to turn around.
Much earlier in the day, when they first left Wistar’s, for instance,
such a command would not have appeared singular; but coming at a time
when the tavern lay so far behind as to be forgotten, when the world
seemed a blanket of drift and down and glistening silver, with no house
in sight, the action was at least puzzling to their equine minds. They
stopped instantly, however, the noise of their bells hushed into
silence. Whitefoot turned a wondering face upon his master, and almost
immediately Danny looked protestingly around. The man met their gaze
half guiltily. Beyond--oh, very far beyond--lay Merle, with its
Christmas fun,--Merle, where he must be that night, or his name would be
the jibe of the countryside; and back of them--a good twelve miles,
perhaps fifteen, they had jogged on at such a steady pace--was that
solitary house. If he turned round it must be good-by to Merle; it would
be impossible for Danny and Whitefoot to make the journey again without
rest. He shifted the reins from one hand to the other.

“Why are we stopping?” asked the child.

He looked at her in some perplexity, then his brow cleared.

“To give the bastes their feed; they’re perishin’ wid hunger, so they
are, the saints fergive me,” he answered, in a relieved tone, glad to
postpone his decision for a time.

He threw back the robes as he spoke, and sprang out on the ground. Where
they had stopped the narrow, lane-like road widened for a considerable
space into a plain again and a well, not far distant from the track, now
furnished water for the team, after which a bag at the back of the
sleigh poured forth grain into the pails; and when these were set before
the horses they fell to work as if Terry’s words were in danger of
coming true. The child watched the proceedings with wide eyes.

“They’re only just very woolly horses, after all,” she said, with a
tinge of disappointment in her voice, “in the books they’re reindeer.”

“Sure, the reindeers is at home savin’ up forninst this night. I cudn’t
be dhrivin’ thim in the broad daylight, alanna dear; folks wud think us
a thravellin’ circus widout the elefunt. Begorra, ’tis shtarvin’ I am
mesilf, an’ I’ll take my Alfred-Davy ye’re in the same boat. We’ll be
afther havin’ a snack oursilves an’ a dhrop av somethin’ warmin’. Tumble
back into the sleigh, mavourneen, an’ wrap yoursilf up clost till I
shpread the tablecloth ag’inst the bankquid.”

The tablecloth, as was speedily disclosed, was nothing more than a very
greasy newspaper, which was wrapped around a huge pile of sandwiches,
each with a rim of bacon showing darkly between its thick slices of
bread, a hunk of cheese, and some fat crackers; but the finest damask
under other circumstances would not have seemed half so beautiful in her
eyes. And she had no quarrel with the coarse fare. Hunger, after all, is
the best sauce for appetite that can be served with any meal, and it is
more apt to come in with the plain dishes than with the elaborate ones,
as Santa Claus and his little sweetheart proved.

“Faith, I cud ate a nail wid relish if nothin’ else was handy,” he
laughed, as he made his first onslaught on the sandwich he was holding,
and lessened it by a third, “but this is a dish to set before a king, so
tinder an’ tasty as it is. Take a rale thry at it, me darlint; ye do be
nibblin’ sech little grand lady bites ye’ll niver be t’rough. ’Tis wan
sandwidge I’ve put away already, an’ ye but embarkin’ on the top roof av
yours. Here’s the second to kape ye comp’ny, Brown Eyes.” He took an
enormous mouthful, and smiled at her, while he was rendered speechless,
and she smiled back, mute, too, from a similar reason.

“Did ye iver taste betther?” he made out to ask.

“Never,” she answered promptly; and she really spoke the truth. Sawdust
eaten in such companionship would have seemed as palatable as sugar,
and the present food was like the ambrosia of the high gods. Even those
delicious sandwiches that her mother made for her sometimes, with the
little slice of ham blushing faintly between the dainty pieces of bread
where the butter lay like a filmy, glistening veil, had never seemed so
good and satisfying as these big grown-up ones eaten under the high blue
sky in that country of snow and ice.

As soon as the sandwiches had disappeared Santa Claus covered a cracker
with bits of cheese like nuggets of gold, and presented it to her with a
bow as if she were a queen. It seemed a fitting crown to the feast,
though apparently he had quite other ideas of a crown, as was soon
shown. When the crackers and cheese were all eaten, and even the last
crumb chased home and captured, he put his hand into the breast of his
coat and drew out a flat, dark bottle which he regarded with loving
eyes.

“Here’s me beauty,” he cried; “here’s what’s to top aff a faste a king
wudn’t disdain; here’s something he wudn’t give the go-by to, not he!”

“What is it?” the little maid asked curiously.

“What is it? Troth, ’twud take an hour by the clock to tell all the
names it has the wurrld over; an’ some is good, an’ some is bad--the
names, I’m manin’. Merry-go-down an’ Tangle-legs,--that’s shlander’us!
an’ Water av Health, an’ Odivvy, as the Frenchies say, which is the same
as Water av Life; but I’m not so much fer water in it mesilf, likin’ it
nate. Then there’s Oil av Gladness an’--Sure ye shall have the first
taste, mavourneen, as ’tis fit an’ proper--ladies always lead. Come,
shtand up an’ give us the toast--”

“The toast--” she looked around bewildered; “why, we’ve eaten all the
bread, and there isn’t any fire--”

“This is the fire an’ the bread too,” roared Santa Claus. “Bless your
innercent sowl, me dear, ’tis a propysition I’m afther askin’ ye fer.
Whist now, the fellies at the tavern sit ’round, an’ before they drink
wan will git up an’ say, a-wavin’ av his glass, ‘Here’s to him’--namin’
some wan prisint; or ‘Here’s to honist hearts an’ true;’ or ‘Here’s to
thim at home, God love thim!’ an’ we all drink to it. So now thin,
Swate Eyes, spake quickly, an’ drink long, an’ pass the bottle spadily
if ye love me, fer iv’ry minnit’s an hour till it quinches me thirst.”

She got to her feet quite gravely, her eyebrows drawn together in the
little pucker they always made when she was thinking very hard; and
first she looked up at the sky, and then around at the stretch of land
where the sparkles under the crusted snow flashed like so many
imprisoned diamonds, and then at the sky again as if for inspiration.
Finally her glance rested upon him, leaning forward, regarding her with
his merry smile.

“Why, here’s to you,” she cried, “our very own, ownest Santa Claus.”

She tipped the bottle against her lips as she finished speaking, gurgled
a little, choked, spluttered--

“Saints above! child, howld your hand stiddy,” Terry shouted. “’Tis your
hood-shtrings an’ your coat as is gettin’ all that precious elixir, an’
iv’ry dhrop av it a jool.”

“Oh, take it away very quick,” she gasped. “I’m sorry to spill it, but
it’s most dreffly horrid.”

“Aisy, me darlint, aisy! There’s no accountin’ fer tastes, as the ould
woman said when she kissed her cow. It’s a quare wurrld this is; but
sure, ’tis a most glorious dispinsation av Providince that we don’t all
be thinkin’ alike. See! I’ll have to take your share as well as me own.
An’ first, here’s me hand on me heart to your toast, an’ the honor av
it; ’tis proud I am at this minnit, an’ next, here’s to
ye--shtandin’--here’s to the best thing a man can have in this
wurrld,--the love av a little child.”

She stood up facing him, and bowed as he had done.

“Here’s me hand on me heart to your toast,” she echoed, “an’ the honor
of it, ’tis proud I am at this minute.”

Then she climbed back on the seat and watched him with round eyes as he
tilted his head very far back and took a deep draught. If his attack on
the sandwiches had astonished her, this new conduct awakened all her
wonder. As he took the bottle from his lips he uttered a sigh which
immediately slipped into a loud guffaw at sight of her expression.

“You can’t like it,” she shuddered.

“I’m not quarrellin’ wid the taste,” he answered, “an’ annyway, ’tis by
the docthor’s orders I do be takin’ a dhrop av the crayther, to kape the
cold out an’ the warm in. A nip once in jest so often, the wise ould man
sez, an’ don’t improve on the occasions, mind ye! But sure, there’s a
toast I haven’t yet given, an’ that’s to our next merry meetin’, an’ may
it come sooner than ’tis expected.”

He neither looked nor bowed her way; indeed, the words were addressed to
his familiar spirits, and his eyes were fixed solely upon what he held
in his hand. After a moment he put the bottle back in his breast, and
buttoned his coat securely across.

“An’ now to juty, swateheart,” he cried, springing out of the sleigh,
“the raypast is over, an’ the horses have gorged thimsilves like
magisthrates, the rapaycious gossoons! Come, be shpry, an’ lind a hand
wid the pails.”

She did not wait to be told twice, but bustled around delightedly,
helping him stow the buckets among the dingy bags and barrels which
formed the prosaic load this Santa Claus carried.

“Jest food forninst to-morry fer the shantymen,” he explained, as she
prodded the bulging sacks with inquisitive fingers. “They axed me to
fetch along their Christmas dinner. Oh, they knowed their man. An’ I,
that obligin’, cudn’t say no till thim. If I’d hardened me heart like
Phareyo we wudn’t be knowin’ aitch other this blessed minnit; so ’tis
glad I am that I’m mild as a mid-summer night by nature an’
dishposition. Let’s limber up a bit afore we shtart ag’in on our
thravels; ’tis shtiff I am in the fate av me. All hands down the middle,
sashy to corners. Gintlemin, take your pardners--gintlemin twirl your
gurrls! Ladies change!”

He roared out the calls, as he had so often done in the different
taverns when he sat with his fiddle beneath his chin and played such
enlivening strains that nobody who heard them could keep still. This
time, however, he was going to cut pigeon-wings himself, and do
wonderful double-shuffles; and he needed both hands to swing his little
thistledown of a partner, so the old fiddle lay undisturbed in the
bottom of the sleigh, while he whistled and sang the tunes with great
gusto.

It was a scene unlike any he had ever known. Instead of the long, low
rooms with the candles, set a-row in bottles, spluttering through the
haze of dust and giving out, besides their meagre light, a smell of
dripping tallow, where the air was noisy with the scraping and pounding
of many feet, and shouts and laughter rose on every side, was this wide,
beautiful place with its pure white carpet and the roof of blue far, far
above. Its remote walls were hung with white, where the low hills
climbed skyward. And nearer, where the woods began, tall snow-crowned
trees stood, their branches shining with frost. Clumps of bushes, with
here and there a stunted isolated tree, dressed in the same glittering
garments, took on fantastic shapes as if they were spectators; nor were
they the only ones,--the furtive little people of the forest in feathers
and fur peeped out from their shelter to watch with all their eyes, and
then to murmur under their breaths: “How mad these mortals be!”

Terry stood at one side of the road some distance beyond the sleigh, and
opposite him, her face aglow with excitement, her eyes like twin stars,
the child waited. As he bowed with a great flourish, bringing his old
cap to rest over his heart, she swept him a curtsey so low that her
skirts stood stiffly out on the ground,--“a cheese” she would have
called it; then the next instant she sprang to her feet again and poised
on tip-toe, watching eagerly for his signal.

“Now,” he called, “now, thin, darlint, ready.”

She raised her right hand high in air, as if to meet the one he extended
toward her, and skimmed across the shimmering floor close, close to him;
their fingers met, clasped, parted--and she was in his place and he in
hers. Then dipping, bowing, swaying, they advanced, retreated, advanced
again; passed each other, now disdaining hands, each twisting and
turning alone as if the other did not exist; then repentant, meeting,
joining forces, and with hands crossed, setting off together--oh! happy
word--in swift sliding steps that scarcely touched the ground, so light
they seemed; and up the road and down the road they went, laughing,
shouting, singing. It was the maddest, merriest dance! The snow whirled
up from their flying feet in soft clouds, and lo! each tiniest particle
was a fairy; the air was full of graceful bending shapes fluttering here
and there, there and here, until at last, quite tired out, they dropped
to earth again to twinkle and sparkle, chattering softly to one another
of the fun they had had. Only an old man and a small child light of
heart and heels dancing out there in the wide country, do you say? Oh,
no! oh, no! Santa Claus and his little sweetheart; and, as if that were
not happiness enough, there were the others besides,--the snow fairies
(and no dancers are like them anywhere), and the spirits of the plains
sending back the gay music and laughter, and the spirits that dwell in
the woods in their soft shadowy robes winding between the trees in a
stately measure, and the spirits of the wind laughing softly among the
snow-laden, ice-gemmed branches, and the spirit of the high blue sky
smiling down on everything.

Hitherto the little maid had only danced by herself, or with her shadow,
or her dolls,--those rather unsatisfactory partners whose limp legs went
every which way; but she was happy at all times because she kept the
fairy, Content, in her breast. Now joy came to her in larger fashion.
She waved her hand to sparkling earth and smiling sky as she darted up
and down like some belated butterfly caught tenderly up into the heart
of winter, a bit of glowing color. She saw the dancers in the
clearing,--young eyes are sharp eyes, surely!--and I think she caught
glimpses, too, of the shy woodland creatures peering out in open-mouthed
amazement; she blew a kiss toward them, anyway. Tired? Not a bit. Tired?
She could dance forever. Faster, faster, faster, like the little red top
at home she spun, and then slower, slow-er, and more slowly. The little
top always did that just before it hummed off to sleep. Faster again,
slow--Two strong arms caught her and flung her up quite high toward the
sky; how blue it was! Then--how blue Santa Claus’ eyes were, and how
they twinkled, giving back the picture of herself! She laughed into them
gayly, and his deep merriment echoed her flute-like notes. Swiftly he
carried her to the sleigh, wrapped her close in the thick rug again,
then sprang to his place, and gathered up the reins.

“Och, ’tis the most thriminjious shtepper-out ye are,” he cried. “’Twas
the iligantest shport in the wurrld, bar none. Go on, me b’ys.”

Jingle, jangle went the bells; sober music surely, after what had gone
before. It was like the little tune when the dance is done and the
lights are burning low that, no matter how jolly it may be, still sounds
sad, because in and out of its lilt run the words: “Good-by, pleasure,
good-by.”

Jingle, jangle clashed the bells as Danny and Whitefoot settled very
gravely to their work. On and on they went, through the woods and over
the barren stretches, but always toward the north. There was no thought
of turning back.




CHAPTER III

EXIT SANTA CLAUS


The air bit more keenly, for the afternoon was wearing on; already the
dazzling sparkles had vanished from the snow, and rosy sunbeams slipped
among the glistening tree shafts and lay with the tall shadows upon the
ground of the forest aisles. She nestled closer against him.

“Tell me some more,” she urged.

“Sure, ’tis me hist’ry from the cradle up that I’m afther tellin’ ye,
’tis your turn now. I don’t know so much as your name, though I do be
runnin’ away wid ye.”

“Muvver calls me heart-names--I telled you what; and uncle says
E-lis-a-beth when he’s cross, uvver times, child, or Betty. I wroted it
at the end--Betty Hammond. It was just make b’lieve writing, only I
thought you’d know--”

“Aisy, swateheart, aisy! Av coorse I did.”

“You got it, didn’t you?” she demanded, sitting bolt upright, and facing
him as the possibility of a dreadful mischance took possession of her
whole being.

“What do ye mane, mavourneen?”

“Why, the letter I wroted; oh, ever so long ago,--the letter that went
up the chimbly. I saw it fly away. Muvver says that’s the children’s
post-box ev’rywheres.”

A light dawned upon him; not, alas, from his own childhood, which had
been poor and sordid enough, and held no such golden make-believes,
though in other ways he had entered into the beautiful kingdom to the
utter forgetting of cold and hunger, want and sorrow, but from what he
had heard here and there from little lips in his long journey through
life. He had always been the children’s friend. He looked into her
anxious eyes, therefore, and winked slowly.

“Whist, now! your Christmas letther,” he said, “an’ that’s what,--the
wan that towld me how to set to work. Come, say the list over slow till
I see if we both mane the same thing.”

She put up her hand, and dragged his head down until his ear was on a
level with her lips; then she poured in the secret, interrupted by happy
bursts of laughter.

“Begorra, the stockin’ will have to be made av injy rubber, or’t will
burrst intoirely.”

“I’m going to put a chair under,” she confided hurriedly, “and if the
things won’t go quite in you can leave them there. Did you ’member ’em
all? The little crosses low on the paper I meant for kisses, you know.”

“Howly St. Pathrick! I was afther thinkin’ they was extrys.”

“You must get a most ’normous lot of letters,” she said thoughtfully, a
moment later.

“’Twould be aisier countin’ the sands on the sayshore than to count
thim,” he answered, entering heartily into his rôle of the jolly saint,
“me secretarries an’ under-secretarries niver rest at all; they do be
dhroppin’ wid fatague, the poor fellies! ’Tis entries they have to make,
an’ double-entries, an’ charges an’ counter-charges, an’ I must give
each wan my speshul suprevision--”

“Do you burn our letters up after you’ve read them?”

“Do I look like a man as wud desthroy his love-letters, alanna, fer
that’s what they are? Not me! I’ve the walls av me mansion papered wid
thim, an’ I’ve autygraph quilts an’ tablecloths made out av thim, an’
curt’ins to me doors an’ windys, an’ sofy-pillers an’ chair-sates,--oh,
’tis an injaneyus mind I have. Sure, the shtuff av drames makes foine
wearin’ material, an’ don’t ye fergit it. I had to build an appindix to
me house year before last, an’ last year there was an addenda, an’ this
year I’m goin’ to t’row out an L, an’ if things continny the same I’ll
have to add the whole alphabet before I know it.”

“Of course it must be a big place to keep all the toys of the world
there.”

“Whist, me darlint, no house in the wurrld wud be big enough to howld
all the toys an’ all the drames av the childer too; an’ I’d sooner be
havin’ the latter than the former anny day. ’Tis as much as I can manage
to kape me autygraph collection intacks, so I have workin’ drawin’s av
the toys, an’ the big dipartmintal shtores in the cities an’ towns an’
villidges do kape the rale articles. An’ by the same token I’ve me
dep-puties stationed iv’rywhere to git things ready forninst me comin’,
an’ thin I can make the journey wid the spade av the wind--”

Her head dropped against his arm.

“Not Whitefoot and Danny,” she said drowsily, “but Dancer and Prancer
and Vixen,--I like Vixen best in the picture; then there’s On-come-et,
and--”

She didn’t finish her sentence, and he, looking down, discovered the
reason.

“The darlint,” he said. “Faith, ’tis tired out complately ye are, an’
the slape will refresh ye. Cuddle clost, mavourneen. ’Tis a day fer a
notch on the shtick annyway, an’ I’ll niver fergit it.”

He tucked the rugs about her as tenderly as her mother could have done,
though his fingers were clumsy, and unused to such offices. Then, after
he had seen to her comfort, he bethought himself of his own, and had a
merry meeting with that Other,--quite a longish meeting this time,--and
he murmured the same toast, repeating the words again and again with
funny little nods by way of emphasis. After which he fell to singing,
rather loudly, the diverting history of “Kelly’s Cat”:--

    “It was on a Sunday evenin’--I’ll mind it evermore,
     Whin Paddy Kelly wint to bed an’ fergot to bar the door,
     The cat riz up an’ shook hersilf widout either dread or fear,
     An’ over the hollow to Barney’s she quickly thin did steer.
     The night bein’ cold an’ stormy, an’ the cat bein’ poor an’ thin,
     An’ the windy, it bein’ open, she--”

He broke off here, his chin falling forward on his chest. Danny and
Whitefoot, however, were used to his ways, and knew their own duty too
well to stop because the reins fell so slack on their backs; they jogged
on quite as steadily as if he were awake. It was a lonely country where
there was little travel, so there was no fear of meeting any one and no
reason for turning out; all they had to do was to keep on. Presently he
stirred and opened his eyes.

“’Tis forty winks I’ve been havin’, an’ they’ve made a new man av me,”
he said, with a prodigious yawn. “But begorra, I dramed me arrm was
held in the grip av a monsther. ’Tis useless an’ shtiff it is this very
minnit. Faith, ’tis as sound aslape as if ould Pickett was tellin’ wan
av his wurrld widout ind shtories. Arrah! wake up wid ye--”

He started to jerk his arm free, and glanced down with some impatience;
but the sight of what rested there made him pause. So that was the
monster he had dreamed was holding him fast! He had forgotten the child
for the moment, forgotten, too, the part he was playing; then everything
came back with a rush as he gazed at her peaceful little face.

“Sure, ’tis no shtiffness at all, at all,” he muttered. “What’s the
weight av a feather fer a man to complain av? ’Tis like the touch av an
angel’s wing, so it is, an’ proud I am to fale it,--proud an’ plazed.
Lie shtill, _Cushla machree_, lie shtill.”

But she had been partially aroused by his attempt to ease himself, and
very obligingly changed her position, cuddling down on the seat. He
helped to fix her anew, murmuring fond little phrases, and as her
eyelids fluttered open he bade her go to sleep again. She obeyed without
question; the air made her very drowsy, and the steady forward motion of
the sleigh was like the lulling of a cradle. He began to sing again
almost immediately, though in a subdued key, and still about “Kelly’s
Cat.” But he took scant pleasure in the song; half of its fun lay in
hearing the laughter it always evoked, and he missed her silvery
merriment. To sing a comic song just for one’s own amusement is rather
dreary work, after all. Everything is better when it is shared; a laugh
is always jollier, and even the heaviest sorrow will grow lighter at a
true word of sympathy.

He did not complete the history of the celebrated combat, therefore, but
after a few lines brought it to a close and began something else. Then,
before he knew it, a song that had lived in the background of his memory
for many years found its way, for the little child’s sake, to his lips.
Curiously enough it didn’t seem to him that he was singing it, for
through the words he could hear his mother’s worn voice carrying the
tune forward, and his own voice, the best in all the country round for
trolling out a drinking catch or some fantastic rigamarole set to music,
grew so tender that the roisterers at Wistar’s, or up at Merle, would
never have recognized it. But if they could have heard him they wouldn’t
have laughed; the song would have been like a little key unlocking the
gates of childhood; even if the words had been unfamiliar to them the
sweet sounds would have taken them back.

After he had finished singing he sat very still, one hand holding the
reins, the other resting gently on the warm little bundle at his side;
but his thoughts were far back in that distant past where, because of
his light heart, he only dwelt on the golden spots--and his nature had
made many such. Then he began to build some castles in that dear,
impossible, ever-true country where one may rear the most beautiful
houses and have them ready to be lived in in the wink of an eye; where
there are never any vexing questions of rent, or taxes, and one doesn’t
have to bother about gas, or electricity (such a wonderful lighting
system as they have there, by the way!), and there are never any repairs
to be made. Perhaps a prosaically minded architect would never have
called Terry’s dream-house a castle, but such sober matter-of-factness
is not to be envied. Very much happier are the people who live in the
clouds at times, though they do have many a tumble to earth, than the
ones who never see things through the rose-colored glasses of fancy,
but plod along in the dull light of a common grayness.

Terry belonged to the first kind, and because his mind was still full of
the nonsense he had uttered to his companion he began to build a
beautiful palace where the dreams of little children could come true. On
every side he could see their wishes written plainly, sometimes in
copy-book writing, sometimes in big print, and sometimes again in those
funny, wavering uphill lines that Santa Claus never fails to read. And
everywhere he could hear merry laughter and shouts, and the sounds of
scrambling, racing feet. It was a beautiful palace! He chuckled to
himself, seeing it so distinctly, and then, suddenly--very
suddenly--just in front of him, a trifle at one side of the road, stood
a small, square house of the sort that your eminently practical,
no-thought-of-beauty contractor would build. Terry’s hand, reins and
all, went up to his eyes to clear the mist from before them. Impossible!
He knew the country as well as Danny and Whitefoot, and he knew, too,
that no such house stood there; the shantymen’s hut, the only human
habitation for miles, was still some distance off. He looked again
sharply, convinced that in the darkening land some snow-covered tree had
taken on the likeness to a building. And he was quite right--there was
no house.

The bells smote the air sullenly and soberly as the horses started once
more on their patient, even course; they did not merit the sharp flap of
the reins on their backs,--they were doing their best. Terry tried to go
on with his dreams, but the thread of fancy once broken is hard to
recover; he caught bravely at it--and there stood the house again,
square, squat, unpicturesque, with the low stable at one side connected
by the covered way, as is the custom in cold countries. He rubbed his
eyes, and it was gone again--they had driven right through it! He
laughed, but not gayly. Two parts of him seemed to be dreaming--the one
that built a castle for little children, the other that thought of
solemn, elderly folk. He began to sing:

    “Now Mrs. McGrath to the Sargint said,
     ‘Sure I’d like me son to be a corpril made,
     Wid a foine rid coat an’ a goold laced hat--
     Och Tiddy me b’y, wuddent you like that?
          Musha ti ral la--’”

It was no use! The house was quite near him again, with its chimney
breathing out a soft little line of smoke, and its tin roof dull in the
level light--the roof that had flashed like a reproving eye hours
earlier. And then he knew! He turned and looked back fearfully. As far
as he could see there was no sign of life; before him it was the same
tale--even the house his fancy had conjured up had vanished. It was very
still save for the bells on his horses, and they were not clinking
merrily just then, only giving out a monotonous jog-trot sound that did
not deafen him to the faint voice crying very far away: “Dear my little
own, where are you?” He shivered among his furs, still looking back, and
sobbingly the words came again: “Dear my little own, where are you?”

Danny and Whitefoot pawed the snow uneasily. Merle was still distant,
and they were anxious to be at rest; they even determined to pull more
steadily, more swiftly; they had been saving their best wind for that,
but the hand on the reins kept them still.

“Och! wurra, wurra, that iver I shtooped to desate,” the old man
murmured. “What will I do wid juty sayin’ ‘go forrard,’ an’ juty sayin’
‘go back’? ’Tis most thirty miles from the shantymen’s hut to that
lonely little house, an’ I can’t take the journey over ag’in. Whist
there, mither, wid your callin’ to the colleen, or ’tis cracked me heart
will be intoirely. Aisy now! the voice av you is far away loike, an’ yet
’tis plain as thunder in me ears. Sure, I thought the fun av the wurrld
was in this thing, an’ I meant no harm at all--whist there, mither dear!
They do be waitin’ fer me up at Merle,--thim an’ the Christmas fun--an’
Christmas only comin’ wanst a year!--an’ there’s the wager besides. Och!
wurra, wurra, what will I do? I must go on, but ’tisn’t wid me the
darlint can be goin’.”

He recognized that very clearly now when it was almost too late. His
home as the child dreamed of it and his home as it really was were two
very different things. He couldn’t take her to the tavern at Merle, with
its rough, carousing crowd--such fun was not for her--and he had nowhere
else to go. Then he thought of the road ever getting darker and darker,
of the frozen lake with its treacherous ice that he must cross, of the
night growing colder--he knew how to keep himself warm, but it was
another matter where she was concerned. And when he went driving into
Merle to claim his bet his hand might not be steady--that had happened
so often before! and there was that ugly bit just below the tavern,
where even the most careful driver must pick his way warily; but with a
little child--the thought made him giddy. No--no--no--he couldn’t take
her with him, that was impossible! And equally he saw, because he knew
himself so well, he couldn’t take her back to her mother’s longing arms.
He couldn’t go back! He sat quite still, turning over different plans in
his mind, while the precious minutes slipped by unheeded. Finally his
brow cleared a trifle. There was but one solution to the difficulty--the
lumbermen might help him--must help him; he would see that they had no
choice in the matter. As he reached this decision some of his old
reckless daring came back to him; but he bore himself in a shamefaced
fashion, and with none of his usual jauntiness, though he straightened
his shoulders, and tried to appear unconcerned. He began to whistle,
too, as if to silence the wailing cry that still pursued the sleigh--he
would not let himself listen.

“Och! child,” he said, looking down at the little maid, “’tis sorry I am
fer ye, darlint, but ’twill all come right in the mornin’--throubles
always do. Whist now! ’tis sorriest I am fer mesilf, since I can’t help
mesilf at all--I bein’ what I am, ye see.”

He put his hand into his coat, and though his fingers came in contact
with the flat bottle, they did not draw it forth; they groped farther,
past the inner coat and beneath the blouse, to something that hung
against his chest suspended from a cord. When he brought out his hand it
held a dingy little bag. He stripped off the outer covering, disclosing
a cheap gilt locket and the half of a broken sixpence. With shaking
fingers he took a wisp of hair from the trinket, and wrapping it up
again thrust it back into his breast; but the locket and the coin he
folded in a bit of newspaper, and stooped once more to the child.

“Sure, it ain’t a dolly that will shut its eyes, mavourneen, that I do
be givin’ ye fer a Christmas gift,” he whispered; “but mebbe ye’ll like
it fer the sake av wan as loved it. An’ God Almighty an’ all the howly
saints bless ye feriver an’ iver, amin.”

She stirred at his touch and opened her eyes, misty still with sleep.
For a moment she looked at him in some doubt, then, as she struggled
into a sitting position, she laughed gayly.

“Oh! it’s really and truly you.” Her glance swept their surroundings.
“And are we home now--at your very home? Is that it?”

The walls of the lumbermen’s hut showed indistinctly through the
clearing. It was almost dark; the night that comes swiftly in the north
lands was folding its mantle like a great soft wing over the whole
country, though in the west there was still a faint streak of rose, as
if the day was sorry to go, and so it lingered in that little tender
time between the lights, when one can dream best of all.

“Is that home?” she asked again, very softly.

“Listen, Swateheart. But first take this wee packidge--Aisy, now! ye
mustn’t fale the edges--an’ shtow it away in your pocket if ye have
wan; ’tis not to be looked at, nor so much as prodded, mind ye, till
sunrise to-morry. Remimber! An’ second--faith, me second is hardest fer
me, fer ’tis good-by I must be sayin’.”

Her lip trembled.

“But I’m goin’ with you all the way,” she declared stoutly.

“Sure, an’ I wish it from me heart, only ’tis partin’ we must be. Ye see
ye can go on, an’ Danny an’ Whitefut will be proud to draw ye; but ’tis
’most night, an’ the way gets bad up yonder, an’ there’s the lake to
cross, an’ I’m not always the stiddy driver--to me shame be it said--”

“I’d sit very still--”

“An’ ’twill be cold, bitther cold! Thin I’ve been thinkin’, I didn’t
tell ye this afore; but no child has iver seen me house--’tis a thing av
drames (an’ sure that’s the truth!). Whisper now, cud ye see it, it wud
all split to smither-eens wid a crack like doom. An’ where wud I be
thin? The folks wud have to do widout me, I’m thinkin’--”

“The little children--us?” she asked round-eyed.

“That wud be the size av it. Av coorse ye could kape on wid the
dep-puties; I’ve trained thim well, an’ the spirit av Christmas niver
dies, the givin’ an’ the lovin’, fer the Lord made thim in his own
imidge. But ye’d be missin’ me, ye know.”

She was very still, the little pucker showing between her anxious
brows.

“I’ve an iligint plan. Yon’s a foine place to spind the night, an’
iv’rything will come right in the mornin’. Oh! ye’ll see. An’ ye’ll hang
up your shtockin’ same as usuwil; but first ye must put that bit there
down in the toe av it, an’ ’twill be Merry Christmas all ’round. Will ye
tell me good-by now, swateheart, an’ let me go on to kape me wurrd that
I’ve been afther passin’ sacred-loike?”

“Yes,” she said gravely. “I wanted to see Vixen and Oncome-it close, but
I’ll let you go, ’count o’ the children, ev’rywheres.”

He lifted her gently to the ground, and she stood quietly at one side
while he tumbled out the barrel and the bags from the back of the sleigh
with great caution. He could not stay for a word; already he had much
time to make up, and discussion of any sort, hospitality even, would
retard him. The light had quite disappeared from the west, and a few
pale stars--God’s candles, he called them--were beginning to kindle in
the dark above. He stooped to her.

“Whin I’m gone, _Cushla machree_, ye’ll go to the door an’ they’ll let
ye in--they’re foine fellies. ’Tis but a shtep up there annyhow; ye
can’t niver miss it--see, where the rid light shows t’rough the cracks.
An’ ye’ll not ferget me, little wan?”

“No--no,” she choked.

He caught her in his arms and kissed her; but though he held her very
close, he could not see her face well because of the misty curtain that
had dropped suddenly before his eyes. In that moment he realized how
far, how very far, below her thought of him he really was. He put her
down almost roughly, detaching the little clinging fingers with scant
tenderness, and sprang into the sleigh. An instant, from that vantage
point, he looked her way; then Danny and Whitefoot, surprised into using
their best wind by a fierce sting of the whip, dashed into the dark,
their bells swinging out a sharp, tremulous cry of bronze that cut the
air like a knife.

“Good-by,” she called in a breaking voice.

And back from the distance came the answer:

“Good-by, little swateheart. God love ye an’--”

She stood waiting, listening to the bells that grew faint and fainter
until they were like a chime from Fairyland; when at last her loving
ears could hear them no longer she turned and trotted obediently to the
house. The door was closed, but a narrow thread of light glimmered
warmly at the sill, and a tiny fiery eye peeped out half way up the dark
surface. She struck the wood with her little clinched fist; struck it
once, then again--a twig snapping off in the teeth of the frost would
have sounded louder.

From within there came the noise of many voices and great bursts of
laughter, but no lessening of the merriment made room for her appeal.

[Illustration: She stood waiting, listening to the bells.]




CHAPTER IV

CHRISTMAS EVE AT THORNBY’S


It was a large, roughly-finished room, lighted for the most part by the
great heap of logs that blazed on the hearth, though a lantern fixed
against the wall, at the opposite side, in front of a tin reflector,
shone bravely, as if to say that it was doing its best despite the fact
that no one heeded its efforts. For the occupants of the room, without
an exception, were gathered about the camboose, or fireplace, where in
the full glow of the leaping flames a number of stockings were hung; not
because it was Christmas Eve, but for the more prosaic reason that they
must be dried. Every working day showed the same display,--the men, on
an average, hanging up two or three pairs apiece. Still they were
keeping their Christmas Eve vigil after a fashion, though it was not in
the orthodox way, and, notwithstanding its noise, it lacked the real
flavor of the blessed season.

“What was that?” Shawe asked suddenly.

“Didn’t hear a blessed thing. Fire ahead, Sandy; ev’ry chap’s got a
stunt to do this night, an’ the fust lot’s fell to you. Come,
begin--Where’s that lazy raskill Terry? He’d oughter be’n here hours
agone.”

“Back at Wistar’s,” a young fellow growled. “Told yer what to expect
when yer singled him out to fetch the grub. A sorry Christmas we’ll
have. Any meal left in the bar’l, Cooky?”

“’Nough to make pap fer you in the mornin’, kid,” Cooky responded with a
grunt, “so don’t be sheddin’ tears--you an’ yer delikit appetite will
pull t’rough. ’Tis plum-puddin’ the child was expectin’.”

The young fellow laughed almost good-naturedly.

“Gorry! what’d I give to smell a plum-puddin’ even. There was a
Christmas oncet when I’d the taste o’ one. There was turkey before, an’
the bird was a tip-topper, but it don’t live in my mem’ry like the
puddin’. _That_ come in with a wreath o’ greens ’bout its brown head,
an’ its sides crackin’ open with plums the size o’ Jake’s thumb there.
An’ there was clouds o’ incinse risin’ from it, an’ the smell o’ the
burnin’ sperits, an’ the blue flames lickin’ each other with joy at the
taste they got--’Tis before my eyes this bloomin’ minnit, an’ my ears is
deafened with the roars the fellers sent up; you could ha’ heard ’em a
mile off--”

A chorus of protesting voices interrupted further reminiscences. “Shut
up, will yer?” “T’row him out, some one.” “You’ve no call to make our
mouths water so.”

“A pudden,” a thin-faced man said dreamily as the din subsided, “I never
seed its like. An’ a-fire, you say. What was thet fer?”

“Why, fer the celebration, ijit.”

“Begorra,” another voice broke in, “I’d like to live in the counthry
where they’ve the crayther to burn. Did it smell good?”

“Smell good?” again the young fellow laughed. “’Twas better than a
gardin full o’ roses when the wind blows soft an’ warm over ’em; ’twas
finer an’ more penatratin’ than the o-dick-alone the tenderfoots parfume
themselves with. An’ there was the sarse besides, with a dash o’ rum in
it to make it slip down easier.”

“Sarse!” The ejaculation was a groan. “My things come plain.”

“Thet’s about the size o’ it fer ev’ry mother’s son of us,” some one
began philosophically, then in helpless rage at the turn affairs had
taken he finished with a wail: “Hang thet Terry O’Connor. He’d oughter
remembered tomorrer’s Christmas--”

“Christmas is like any other day to us,” an elderly chopper interposed
grimly. “It’s only meant fer the kids.”

A man near the fire stirred restlessly.

“Back there,” he said, with a sweep of his thumb, “they hang up the
stockin’s all in a row--six of ’em!--an’ my woman makes shift to fill
’em, too--”

“How they chitter in the mornin’,” another man chimed in, “before it’s
reely light. Don’ know as there’s any sound quite so nice as that. Wisht
I was home to hear it--Gord! I do.”

“Never hed no little stockin’ hangin’ afore my chimbly,”--the occupant
of the big barrel chair looked into the blaze thoughtfully as he made
the statement, “baby’s sock was too teeny that fust year, an’ after--”

“Faith, I niver had no chimbly av me own at all,” a reckless voice
interrupted with a hard laugh. “Here to-day, an’ gone to-morrer, an’
divil a sowl to care where I was. It made little differ to me thin, but
’tis a wide wurrld an’ a lonely wan when a man’s gittin’ on in the
years.”

“Only got so fur ez the patty-cakin’ age, ez you might say,”--it was the
man in the barrel chair who was speaking again,--“but turr’ble
over-masterin’--turr’ble! When ye come to think uv it, there ain’t
anything like a baby fer over-masterin’ness; he jes’ makes a clean sweep
o’ ev’ry blessed thing.”

The Frenchman in the corner leaned forward excitedly.

“I nevaire hang ze stockin’ up zat time I was what you call a keed,” he
cried, “but zere was a leetle tree an’ a Christ chil’ up at ze ver’ top.
Zey had eet een ze _église_ an’ every chil’ een ze pareesh was made ver’
happy. So for two-t’ree years did I get a--a--what you say?”

“A present, Frenchy.”

“But yes, a--a prresent. Zen I must go to worrk, an’ Christmas eet is
ovaire for me. ‘_Adieu, beaux jours de mon enfance!_’”

The leaping firelight fell upon grave faces; dear, lazy laughter had
slipped very far away from the warmth and glow.

“What’s that?”

“You’re like an ould faymale widdy woman, Shawe, wid your fidgits an’
starts, an’ your inquisitiveness. That? ’Tis an ash fallin’ to the
hearth; ’tis a burd askin’ to be let in; ’tis Christmas come to hunt us
up far from home an’ the frien’s we love so dear. Man alive! if you’re
so set to know what it is, go an’ find out fer yoursilf.”

“Yes, go an’ be hanged to you!” The chorus was unanimous.

Shawe did not wait for the permission, go he would; as for being hanged,
that was quite another matter. He left his place in the warm corner,
and, picking his way dexterously over the tangle of outstretched legs,
he strode across the room to the door, flinging it wide. The cold air
rushed in in a great gust that caused the men to shiver in their
places, and made some of them swear angrily at him; but he did not heed
their words. His ear had earlier caught a faint cry, yet as he stood
facing the night his level eyes saw nothing in the darkness; then the
sound came again, and this time quite far below him. His glance fell;
the next moment he started back in amazement.

“My God!” he cried sharply.

There was a great creaking of stools and boxes in the room behind him as
the men, startled out of their indifference by his exclamation, turned
to see what had occasioned it, those who were farthest away rising to
their feet and craning curiously over the shoulders of their companions
in front. Shawe had moved a trifle to one side, and they had an
unobstructed view through the open door, that framed the glimpse of the
dark world without, of the strip of snow in the foreground gleaming
ruddily with lamp and firelight; and just where the glow fell brightest
stood a little child, her face raised in entreaty. For a long moment
they looked with held breaths, incredulous, wondering, half fearful that
the vision would disappear at the least movement on their part; several
of their number made the quick sign of their creed, and one man covered
his eyes with a shaking hand, but no one spoke. Then Shawe stooped to
her.

“Who are you?” he asked very gently, touching the little flesh-and-blood
shoulder with tender fingers; she was no spirit then.

“I’m Santa Claus’ sweetheart,--you know Santa Claus. He left some things
for you out there, then he went away.”

“Mother o’ Moses! the child must mane Terry,” one of the men, quicker
than the rest, exclaimed. “The ould riprobate! An’ but fer your ears,
Shawe, she might ha’ be’n froze shtiff fer all we’d knowed--an’
Christmas Day to-morrer.”

Shawe drew his breath hard.

“Thank God, I did hear,” he said through his closed teeth; then he
lifted the small stranger in his arms, and as the thronging men fell
back on either side he carried her through the little lane thus formed
up to the fire. He put her down gently and knelt before her, chafing her
hands and face with rapid touches; after a few moments thus spent he
set clumsily to work to unfasten her hood and coat. She kept very still
while he knotted instead of unknotting the strings, only her eyes moving
from face to face frankly curious, yet without an atom of fear in their
glance. There were forty pairs of eyes to meet, and in each she left a
little smile.

At last the outer wrappings were cast aside, and, as Betty stood before
them, a small, slim figure, very different in appearance from the
shapeless, roly-poly bundle of a short time previous, with her fair hair
ruffled into little curls and tendrils that made a soft nimbus about her
head, she seemed even more like some lovely spirit than they, awed by
the strangeness of her coming, had thought her. Yet her first action
was quite sufficient to remove all doubts that she belonged to another
sphere. Those inquisitive eyes of hers, taking a survey of the room and
its inmates, lighted suddenly upon the stockings dangling before the
fire; they widened at the sight, then the smiles brimmed over and her
whole face broke up into glee. How could she feel strange, or afraid, in
a place where--big, grown-up men though they all were--such signs of
expectancy were so openly displayed? She slipped from the protecting arm
and ran close to the hearth, clapping her hands in delight.

“Oh! you’re all ready for Santa Claus,” she cried. “My! how he’ll have
to work--there’s such a ’normous lot. But he’ll fill ’em all.” She
threw out this balm in eager haste. “He’s truly coming; he said so. If
I’d gone home with him his house would have cracked to--to smither-eens,
so I stayed.”

A deafening roar of laughter greeted her words and sent her, unerringly
as a homing bird, back to her first friend, who still knelt on the
floor; but resting against him her fears vanished almost instantly, and,
as she glanced around with renewed confidence, her pretty silvery laugh
tinkled out to join their rougher merriment. The men pressed closer, one
of them, the oldest, acting as spokesman. He was the man whose chimney
had never seen any Christmas stockings hanging before it, the baby’s
sock being too tiny in that far-away year; but he seemed to know better
than any of them how to ask just the right questions that would set free
the little tongue. Betty climbed gladly up on his knee, and from her new
perch poured forth an account of her wonderful adventures.

It was the fault of her companions, surely, and not her own that the
things that were so real and true to her were like myths out of
Fairyland to them, because they had travelled farther down the stream of
time. Much of what she said was unintelligible to their dull, grown-up
minds; but if each word had been of gold they could not have waited for
it more eagerly; and when she stopped in her recital of that marvellous
journey to laugh at some remembrance of Santa Claus’ fooling, they
looked at one another, smiling in perfectest sympathy. Perhaps, after
all, they understood--who shall say? There was no interruption, except
when old Jerome hazarded some remark that helped on the tale; and the
only person to move was a tall, gaunt man, who bent mysteriously over
the fire and made something that smelled like--like the most delicious
thing in all the world. You have to ride for hours through the snow, and
feel the keen air in your face, and be as hungry as a bear into the
bargain, to know just what that is.

By some remarkable law of coincidence the story and the cooking came to
an end at one and the same moment; nothing could have been more timely.
Betty’s whole attention was quickly transferred to the tin plate which
was placed before her; and her evident appreciation of the good things
of life was so keen that the lookers-on, who even in that short time had
learned that their rougher ways frightened her, laughed gently among
themselves. Well, they understood that too! While she was busy over her
supper, to the utter forgetting of her surroundings, several of the men
went outside to see if they could find any traces of the recreant Santa
Claus; they returned after a hasty search, bringing in the barrel and
bags--sufficient proof that Terry, despite all convictions, wise
head-shakings, and gloomy forebodings, had not failed them. He had kept
his word. But the mystery deepened--Who was the little maid? Aside from
her name, which was an unfamiliar one to them, they had not been able to
learn anything definite about her. The excited little brain only seemed
to live over the immediate past, in which Santa Claus had figured so
importantly; the fact that she was his sweetheart apparently outweighing
every other consideration.

“Terry O’Connor hain’t a chick, nor child, an’ never hed,” old Jerome
declared stoutly, as somebody ventured this solution of the difficulty,
“nor there ain’t any kin b’longin’ to him--guess I orter know--I’ve
knowed him ’nintimut these thirty years--”

“Losh, man!” interrupted Sandy, “then he just inveegled the bairn awa’,
makin’ oot he was Santa Claus. The e-normity of it!”

“Oh, Terry must olluz be jokin’; it’s his way,” Jerome returned
tolerantly. With his arm around the small form, and the little golden
head resting on his breast, he was knowing one of the rare, happy
moments of his life; there could be scant condemnation from him under
the circumstances.

Betty, who had been alternately blinking at the fire, and smiling
contentedly to herself for some time, now interrupted any dispute that
might have arisen concerning her absent friend by giving utterance to a
series of baby yawns. The discussion came to a speedy close, such signs
needing no interpretation to her hearers.

“Don’t ye want to go to sleep, deary?” the old man asked.

She signified her willingness without delay, though first her stocking
must be hung up among the others. He proceeded to draw it off; but
before that could be accomplished, he was let into the secrets the
buttons on your shoe always tell,--what you are to be, what you will
wear, and in what manner you will travel through life,--in carriage,
cart, wheelbarrow, or wagon. When this “sure-as-sure” knowledge had been
mastered he stripped off the stocking, and Shawe, imperiously summoned,
came close and put the wee packet, as she directed, way down in its very
toe; then he hung it up in the centre, where even the blindest deputy,
supposing Santa Claus unable to get round, would never have passed it
by. A rollicking little cheer went up at sight of the small red
stocking swinging slightly to and fro in the breath of the fire; but it
died away on the instant, for the child had slipped to the floor and
knelt there by the old man’s knee, her face hidden in her chubby hands.
Perhaps in the intense stillness she missed the voice that generally
guided hers, for there was a moment of hesitation on her part; then she
began to pray aloud, halting over the words:

    “Jesus, tender shepherd, hear me;
       Bless thy little lamb to-night,
     In the darkness be thou near me,
       Keep me safe till morning light.
     Let my sins be all forgiven,
       Bless the friends I love so well,
     Take me when I die to heaven,
       There for ever with thee to dwell.”

She paused, a moment: “And please, God, take care of muvver, and uncle,
and far-away daddy, and make Betty a good girl f’rever and ever. Amen.”

It was very still all around; and usually when she finished her prayers
a soft cheek was laid against her own, while a soft voice echoed,
“Amen,” and that meant “my heart wants it to be exactly so!” Now,
however, no one spoke. Betty glanced wonderingly about as she rose to
her feet, a trifle dazed and even frightened; but such grave, quiet,
_kind_ faces looked back at her that swiftly she dropped to her knees
again with another petition: “God bless ev’rybody, an’ most speshilly
Santa Claus.”

“Amen,” said old Jerome, in the pause that followed.

A bed had been hastily constructed in the warmest corner, out of the
best materials the camp afforded, and thither Jerome carried the child.
She nestled down drowsily while he tucked the covering about her; but
his was an alien touch, and through the room there suddenly sounded a
low, wailing cry:

“Muvver--oh! muvver--”

“There, Honey; there, Blossom--” the man’s voice broke, the hand that
soothed was clumsy and old, and it trembled--“there, Honey--”

The men sat breathless--waiting, dreading to hear the cry again; but
moment after moment passed, and it did not come. There was one little
sob, then the dream-fairy stooped with her comfort.

How quiet the room was! And this was Christmas Eve--the time when each
man was to do a stunt for the amusement of his fellows and the glory of
himself. Generally on this occasion the Lord of Misrule held high
carnival,--the flowing bowl was like a perpetual fountain, and laughter,
shouting, and horse-play abounded on every side. There was rum in plenty
since Terry had not failed them, but no effort was made to secure it;
desire of that kind was dead, it seemed. They were content to sit there
listening to the soft rise and fall of the child’s breath; the land of
dreams, into which she had slipped, open to them also. And though it was
so different from those other Christmas Eves, it was far from being
dull. Into each heart there had crept a soft glow, which did not come
from the blazing logs, and which no grog, no matter how skilfully
blended, could have given, for once again the presence of one of God’s
little ones made holy a humble place.

Shawe was the first to bring the stillness to an end. They had been
sitting quiet, nobody could tell how long, when he got to his feet.
Noiselessly as he moved he broke the spell, and eyes that had grown
misty looked at him, some with resentment, others with curiosity, and
others again with reproach. Old Jerome’s gaze held the latter quality.
Nobody knew much about Shawe, anyway. He was not one of them. He had
come to the camp some weeks before, and would be gone in a day or so--up
to Merle this time, and then--He was a wanderer--some outcast, perhaps,
from a better life gone by. Nobody knew him. They had no quarrel with
him; he was a good enough fellow, only not of them. They watched him,
therefore, almost coldly, yet noting with jealous satisfaction that he
stepped warily as he passed from the room; then they fell to thinking
again--with a difference.

He came back after a short absence with a soft, dark mink’s skin in his
hand,--a bit of fur that a woman’s fingers could fashion into a cap to
cover a child’s golden hair,--and went to the small stocking, cramming
the gift far down to keep that other company. A breath of approval
fairly twinkled around the room. The grave faces melted into smiling
delight; and just as the circles widen in a pool of water when a stone
is thrown in, spreading farther and farther till the whole surface is
disturbed, so every one present came within the influence of Shawe’s
action. As if by one accord the men hurriedly left their places, making
scarcely any noise, yet jostling against one another in their eagerness
to play at being Santa Claus; each man seeking out his kit, and
returning with what would be the likeliest thing to please a little
child.

A bright red handkerchief, an orange one, a third as many colored as
Joseph’s coat, an old _habitant_ sash worth its weight in gold to a
connoisseur, a scarf-pin set with a cairngorm the size of a man’s
thumb-nail--this from Sandy!--a--you mustn’t laugh--a pair of brand-new
suspenders, and big and little coins that spelled liquor or tobacco to
the givers, and now bought what pleased them infinitely more. Of course
one stocking couldn’t begin to hold the gifts, though they were massed
into a dizzy pyramid at the top, so its mate was pressed into service
and crowded likewise. There was a distressing similarity in the presents
when you came to think of it, especially where handkerchiefs were
concerned; still, no man withheld his giving because another’s choice
was necessarily the same; he added his contribution proudly, as if it
were the only one of its kind. Frenchy, who had a pretty trick of
carving, gave a really beautiful little frame which his deft fingers
had made in the long evenings; and the cook, when no one was looking,
slipped in his prayer-book, though I don’t believe any one that night
would have laughed at his having it with him. The young fellow they
called Kid--he was something of a dandy--added a ring of massive
proportions. It wasn’t gold, but he pretended it was, and liked to wear
it when he went to dances to make the girls think he was a fine,
up-and-coming man. And Jerome--poor old Jerome--

It was a very meagre kit that he rummaged through again and again,--one
that he himself had packed; and when a man has to take care of himself
he doesn’t put in any useless traps, any--what you’d call gewgaws; not
when he’s old, that is. So he could find nothing there; and a search
through his pockets revealed the same depressing poverty. He had
nothing--nothing but a certain battered snuff-box that had been his
companion for so many years that it would be easier to imagine him
without his head than without the box. He was evidently of that opinion,
for he stowed it down in his pocket with an air of great finality. But
nevertheless, polished to an almost glittering show of youth and filled
with coins, it very fitly crowned the motley collection.

It had taken some time to play Santa Claus, for each man had to wait his
turn to stow away his gift; there were no deputies allowed on this
occasion, and the bungling fingers couldn’t work very quickly,--didn’t
try to, if the truth were known. But all too soon the joyful task came
to an end, and the men stood back radiant-eyed, looking at those bulging
little red stockings as if they were the most beautiful things in all
the world.

How the glow spread and spread in their hearts, though the fire, banked
for the night, was shining quite dimly now! That mighty threefold cable
of the Christmas-tide--with its strand of inheritance, its strand of
opportunity, its strand of affection--bound them very closely to one
another; in that moment old wrongs and heart-burnings, bitternesses and
rivalries slipped away, and they knew the blessedness of peace and
good-will. Happy? There was just one thing to make them happier,--the
merry voice of a little child greeting the misty light of the Christmas
dawn.




CHAPTER V

THE PEACE OF GOD


Toward midnight somebody stepped close to the improvised bed and stood
looking down with troubled eyes at the child curled up among the
blankets there. The light from the low fire cast an occasional
flickering flame upon the tiny segment of cheek just visible above the
woollen covering, like a snowdrop peeping out of a mass of old bracken,
and on the floating strands of hair that had lost their golden sheen in
the semi-obscurity. An hour or so earlier the men had gone to their
bunks in the long loft overhead, and their heavy breathing now
proclaimed the fact that they were resting from their labors. Every one
in the house was sleeping but Shawe; even old Jerome, who sat huddled by
the side of the little one, nodded at his post. He had maintained the
right of watching, by supremacy of his years and her evident preference
for him, jealously putting aside all offers that his vigil be shared. He
stirred now and opened his eyes, staring into the face of the man above
him.

“What is it?” he demanded with a low, savage growl.

“I couldn’t sleep,” Shawe whispered back, “for thinking of the ones who
are mourning for her,--her mother and uncle. The father isn’t home, she
said. Don’t you remember--‘God bless far-away daddy’? So he won’t be
troubled. But the others--they ought to know. We’ve had all the
Christmas sport and they nothing but black misery and bitterness. They
ought to know quickly.”

Old Jerome’s hand fluttered above the little head, half fell to it, then
was drawn reluctantly back.

“Ye-es, they’d orter know,” he said dully, “but how? Who is she?” He
shifted his position, averting his eyes. “I’ve be’n thinkin’ thet
p’r’aps she’s nobut a little Christmus sperit come to cheer us in this
God forsook spot--”

“That’s nonsense, man. Look at her sleeping there as human as we are,
though with a difference. I tell you she has kith and kin, and their
hearts are bleeding for her at this moment. I’m going to find them--”

“Ye sha’n’t take her with yer, Shawe,” the old man whimpered. “I’ll
roust up the others, an’ they’ll fight yer--I--I can’t; she’s made me
too trembly. But ye sha’n’t take her.”

“You’re crazy! I’d no thought of taking her. It’s colder than charity
outside, and the frost is like a badger’s tooth. Besides, it must be
almost thirty miles to Wistar, and there’s no house nearer, is there?
No, I go by myself.”

“An’ ef ye don’t win through--there’s thet chanst.”

“I don’t--that’s all. But I’m not hopeless--I’ve got to win through.”

“Best wait till mornin’,” Jerome said, after the silence between them
had grown unbearable, “p’r’aps somebody’ll be goin’ by from Merle, an’
ye could git a lift, or p’r’aps her folks’ll come from somewhars--Ye
don’ know whar she come from, anyways,” he finished triumphantly.

“We worked out the sum that she came with that man Terry. Everything she
said about Santa Claus fitted him like a glove, you--who know him--say.
And he came from Wistar, so she belongs there. Perhaps her people didn’t
miss her till late; and what traces would she leave if she came on in
his sleigh? Answer me that. How would they ever dream of searching for
her up here when there’s the river--Good God! a child like that wouldn’t
notice the spruce bush signals put up where the ice is thin; and there
are the open water-holes by the barns--” He stopped with a deep intake
of breath, and moved nearer the fire; Jerome, watching him furtively,
saw that he was fully dressed to go out.

“Wal!” he muttered slowly, after a time, “ef ye be so sot on goin’,
ye’re goin’, I s’pose. P’r’aps ye’re right. Somehow I was only thinkin’
from my side, an’ hedn’t got ’roun’ to the mother’s; mebbe an ol’ codger
like me never would ha’ got ’roun’--can’t say. Here’s my hand.”

It was an unusual demonstration, but Shawe showed no particular
surprise; everything being a little out of the ordinary that night. He
grasped the extended hand warmly, then let it drop, and turned away,
bending again for a moment over the sleeping child.

“Wish I were going to hear her laugh over the stocking,” he said half to
himself.

“Got a wife an’ fambly?” Jerome asked.

“No,” the other returned.

“Thought mebbe ye hed, ’count o’ yer thinkin’ how the mother’d
feel--mebbe ye hed oncet.”

“Yes,” Shawe answered shortly.

“Then ye know how turr’ble masterful the kids are. Strange, ain’t it?
Mine hed got so ez he could patty-cake, ye understan’. Lord! there
warn’t never a sight like it--never. Thought fust ’twas a kinder fool
thing the mother’d learned it; but bless yer! I didn’t think so long;
’twas the purties’ sight--

    “‘Patty-cake, patty-cake, baker’s man--’”

Shawe moved cautiously across the room, and paused at the door to look
back at the old man softly clapping his palms together. Something in his
glance recalled Jerome to a sense of his surroundings; he got up in his
turn and joined his companion.

“Ye’ll keep an eye out fer them deers, won’t yer?” he whispered
anxiously. “Christmus Eve they all kneel in the woods an’ look up to
he’vin, ye know. Thet’s Injin talk ’roun’ here from way back; some o’
the oldest fellers swear their folks seed the thing done. Can’t say
’xactly ez I b’lieve it myself, but ’twould be a purty sight--an’
anyways, ye jes’ watch out. Wal, luck to ye, lad, luck to ye.”

“Oh! you’ll see me again, never fear,” Shawe said lightly, to cover the
other’s concern. “I’m a bad penny. So long!”

He let himself out into the night, closing the door speedily, and with
as little noise as possible; but quick as he had been, a blast of the
nipping air filled the room. Jerome hurriedly drew the blankets closer
about his little charge; then he stooped to the fire, coaxing it into a
brighter glow.

“Fer a bad penny,” he mumbled, as he went back to his place, “Shawe
rings oncommon true. There ain’t nary of us ez would ha’ thought o’
doin’ what he’s a-doin’--nary a blessed one of us. I swan he’s dif’runt
somehow--kinder apart, but square--square. Never knowed nothin’ ’bout
Shawe; hed to take him on his face value, so to say; he ain’t a gabbler
’bout himself, but gen-i-al--gen-i-al--an’ oncommon quick-witted inter
the barg’in. We’d a-waited till Kingdom come afore we’d thought ’bout
fillin’ them stockin’s ef he hedn’t started the game; an’ ’twas him ez
heerd her callin’ when the rest of us was deef ez postses. Hmm! mebbe--”
but praise and conjecture alike were silenced as the grizzled head
dropped forward and the old chopper fell into a heavy doze.

Shawe, meanwhile, oblivious to both, thrust his hands deep into his
pockets, and started off on his lonely errand. It might prove fruitless,
but results were not for him to consider; his was to do the duty of the
moment, and by the moment. Nor did it seem to him that he was doing
anything to be especially commended. He had been driven out into the
night by his thoughts of the distress in the child’s home, and once they
had taken possession of him it was impossible to stay warm and
comfortable in his bunk. He simply had to go--he could not wait.
Besides, he told himself, it wasn’t much; he had been out on nights to
which this, bitter as it was, was balmy by comparison. He had faced
gales, terrible as that chill wind which the old Moslem fable says will
blow over the earth in the last days, and yet had come safely through.
There was no air stirring at this time; the intense silent cold of the
North wrapped everything close. He was guarded against it, however, and
while he could keep in rapid motion he had little to fear from its
searching tooth.

He drove his hands deeper into his pockets and strode on. The way had
been broken through some weeks earlier and was well defined; there was
no chance of missing it. In the clearing the night was as bright as day;
under the light of the moon the snow lay like an immense silver shield
across which the trees threw bars of shadow; but as the road wound
through the woods the brightness retreated in great measure, shimmering
only here and there through the high trunks, striking off a gleam from
this snowy head and that, or shivering down like a lance of steel as if
to pierce the deeper blackness which crouched beyond.

Shawe knew no fear. He passed on silently and as swiftly as possible,
casting a wary glance around occasionally; but he seemed to be the only
living creature abroad that night. The deer, if there were any, were not
stirring, or his eyes, perhaps, were too sceptical to witness the simple
spectacle of their adoration. There was no sign of life anywhere. It was
almost as if it were the end of the world, and he the last man--the last
of creation--left on earth, so wide and empty were the spaces about him;
the great vault overhead, in which the moon and stars rode calmly, was
out of his pygmy reach.

Presently, as the trees grew sparser and the road showed its slighter
depression through the plain of snow lying beyond like some frozen sea,
he became conscious of life and motion close at his side. With the
instinct of the woodland creatures, he held himself perfectly tense, and
waited. Then right across his path there lumbered a huge, clumsy shape,
its breath showing like smoke on the moonlit air. Suddenly great drops
of moisture stood out on Shawe’s face as if it were mid-summer, and his
weight of furs had become intolerable; he had never felt fear before,
yet now panic gripped him. It was not the thought of physical hurt that
appalled him, but rather the sense of the utter futility of his
endeavor. So the end had come; and over there, still very far away, a
little child’s mother was sobbing--he could almost hear her moans.

He stirred his hand from his pocket to his belt, and grasped the butt of
his pistol, drawing it forth swiftly. It might not be too late! His
finger was firm as iron as it touched the trigger; but the next instant
the beast slouched noisily into the shadows beyond. There was no other
sound--had been no other sound; the cartridges lay unused in their
chambers. Shawe lowered his hand. He had not been dreaming, he told
himself; he could swear to that. And the animal was no creature of
fancy; he had seen it quite plainly, had felt its breath as it passed,
had met the dull stare of its eyes. It was real,--as real as he was at
that moment, yet he had not fired because there had seemed no need--the
beast had simply disregarded him. Then suddenly Shawe laughed aloud, not
boisterously, but very gently,--the way you do sometimes when something
has happened that seems almost too good to be true, and the quick tears
rush into your eyes,--I think, perhaps, they were in his also.

“It’s the peace of God,” he said softly to himself, “the peace of God--”

For on the moment he remembered the old tradition he had heard in many
lands, that on the night before Christmas, from the day’s close to the
day’s coming, there is no slaughter anywhere among the beasts; that the
fiercest and most savage of them all are as harmless as doves to one
another, and even to their natural enemy--man. He put his pistol back
into his belt, unspeakably glad that no shot of his had broken the holy
truce. It was useless to try to account for what had happened. To
believe in the legend, or to laugh it away and attribute the animal’s
indifference to some natural cause. The whole experience--dream, or
reality--left him throbbing with a sense of gratitude that nothing had
interfered with his mission. The thought seemed to lend him greater
activity, as if his moccasined feet had suddenly become winged. There
could be no loitering anywhere while the mother mourned for her little
one, her voice crying vaguely, vainly, through that wonder-space of time
when, because of another Little Child, God’s peace wrapped the earth
close.

There were no landmarks discernible. Terry would have recognized certain
ones, as would also some of the lumbermen; but to Shawe, who was a
stranger, the whole country was unfamiliar; all he could do, therefore,
was to lessen the distance step by step, knowing that while he kept the
road he could not miss his destination. Yet he never lost heart, nor was
he particularly tired. As boy and man, much of his time had been spent
in the open. He was used to hardships, rough weather, and great
exertion; the present undertaking seemed slight compared to others he
had known.

Presently the white light of early dawn crept faintly up,--little Peep
o’ Day he’s called,--a tiny fellow, truly, to be sent out to fight the
darkness, and yet so persistent and undaunted that every moment he
glowed more confidently at his task, and grew bigger and bigger with his
efforts. The moon had looked scornfully at the coming of such an
adversary; but now she paled visibly, and called in her routed army of
moonbeams, while below,--the sleeping world laughed here and there at
the contest, stirring out of its slumbers. As soon as his duties were
accomplished, the little champion stole away, losing himself in the
brightness that filled the sky, and made it and the land look like
tinted silver; but nobody missed him, for the morning was at hand. There
was a gorgeous, rosy flush along the east melting into purple, out of
which the sun came up like a wonderful flower, opening slowly, first
pink, then yellow, then red--and it was Christmas Day!

Shawe’s eyes gladdened at the sight, though he did not pause; he
couldn’t--oh! now less than ever--now, he must hurry--hurry. Back in the
shantymen’s hut the little child was already waking, he knew, and her
glee was filling the house; but in her home others were waking,
too,--they had not slept,--and listening in vain for the music of her
laughter. He must hurry! So he kept on; but somehow, though he was
beginning to be very tired, the going was much easier. Joy comes with
the morning, and new hope; all the doubts and fears of the night
disappear; they are some of the foes little Peep o’ Day vanquishes so
triumphantly. Shawe couldn’t feel despondent in that beautiful world
while the still morning brightened around him, especially when every
step brought him nearer his goal. He laughed like a boy, and shouted out
“Merry Christmas!” though there was no one by to answer his greeting;
but the clear cold air bore it wide, and it helped to swell the chorus
going up all over the earth.

He ran a few paces, so wonderfully light-hearted had he grown, and flung
out his arms, clapping them against his body to warm himself; then he
sobered down--outwardly. Nobody would ever have supposed that the tall,
furclad figure with head bent a trifle, and only a bit of his face
visible between his big cap and high collar was the bearer of joyful
news. For one thing, he was walking quite stolidly, and your happy
messengers are always winged; and for another, he was looking neither to
left nor right. Wasn’t he?--Then why did he start suddenly, and throw
back his head, laughing up again at the sky? Why?--Because just in front
of him there was a house,--an ugly, squat little house, the glass in its
windows twinkling in the sun. He drew nearer, and his heart, that
had almost instantly rushed into his throat, fell back to its
proper place with a most discouraging thump. The house seemed
uninhabited,--deserted,--as if the people who had lived there had grown
tired of being so far from the settlement, and had gone back to be with
their kind, perhaps to stay there always, or at least over this day of
festivity. It was impossible to associate a merry Christmas with this
sober, grown-up abode. A closer approach, however, revealed a small
thread of smoke issuing from the chimney; but otherwise, the general air
of dreariness about the place--its loneliness, its empty, staring
windows--chilled Shawe more than the winter night had done.

He went quickly up to the door, over snow that had been tracked by the
passing of many feet; there were footprints everywhere,--great marks of
a man’s boot, and the smaller ones of a woman’s or a girl’s shoe. The
sight turned him a little giddy. Was this his goal--could his happy news
be spoken here? He tried to shout, but his voice seemed frozen in his
throat; he fell to trembling. He--he could not speak. He tried again,
choking out a faint sound. There was no sign from the silent house that
his call had been heard,--no stir, no movement of life. He flung himself
against the door, and battered it with his fists. The waiting seemed
like eternity to him; then his hand sought the knob, turned it, and the
door flew wide. He stared half dazed into the narrow passage-way with
the stairs climbing at one side; all the light seemed out in the world
behind him; the place was dim and chill. For a moment he paused, then
his voice sounded through the silence.

“Halloo! Halloo! Is a little child missing here?”

There was a quick sound of running feet overhead, an opening door, and a
woman’s scream.

“Uncle--Uncle, have you--”

The cry went up from below:

“Is a little child missing here?”

Something darted down the stairs; one wouldn’t have said it was anything
human, so swift was the motion; yet swifter than the flying feet, and
very piteously human were the words that came from the mother’s heart:

“Is--is--she--dead?”

“No, I tell you, no; she’s alive and well. She’s at Thornby’s
logging-camp--don’t faint! She’s all right; she’s safe, I tell you;
don’t--”

Shawe was only just in time to catch the swaying form in his arms, and
for the moment, as he stood there, holding the unconscious woman, he was
unable to think what to do. It didn’t seem possible to him that the joy
of his message could harm her; perhaps he ought to have broken it more
gently--but how could he? It had to be told---- No--no--the joy couldn’t
harm her! A little air, a touch of snow on her temples, and she would be
herself again. He lifted his burden and turned to the open door. The
clear light from without came searchingly in upon the still face on his
breast, showing its pinched lines of distress and the ravages the tears
had made in its fairness; he started at the sight, and uttered a sharp
exclamation.

The keen air revived her; she stirred a trifle with a low moan; a minute
later her eyelids fluttered, and her words came disjointedly in little
sobbing breaths:

“Safe, my precious, safe--thank God, oh! thank----” The cold whipped a
tinge of color into her lips; her eyes opened wide, and she stared up
into Shawe’s face. A look of bewilderment suddenly clouded their gaze.

“You,” she said softly, “you--Humphrey?”

She did not move from his arm; but very slowly she lifted her hand and
touched him wonderingly, her fingers lingering over his coat, and
creeping up and up to his cheek.

“You, Humphrey--”

Something like a sob broke from him.

“Elisabeth!” he cried.

“I don’t understand,” she said weakly. “It was so very long ago--oh! is
it really you? I--I--thought you would never come back--so long ago--and
you were angry--we were both angry; but I was the one to blame----”

“No, no, no,” he interrupted, “mine was the real fault. I knew that when
it was too late, but I couldn’t let you know. Before we could make our
port the ship was wrecked--oh! it’s a sad story. Most of the crew were
lost; but the few of us who were saved lived somehow on that desolate
little island waiting--hoping--fearing--through those interminable
months before the rescue came. Then we were carried off to the other
side of the world, and from place to place,--wanderers on the face of
the globe; but I got home at last, and--there was no home for me--you
had gone away, you and Baby. They couldn’t tell me where, but I searched
for you, my girl, I searched for you. I wouldn’t give up looking--I
meant to find you--and it was so useless--”

She clung closer to him, stroking his quivering face with gentle
fingers.

“I thought you never meant to come back,” she whispered, “and I wanted
to beg you to come. I wanted to tell you I was really the most to blame,
but I didn’t know where to send a letter--I had to keep still. Oh! I
waited so patiently, and every day was a year. Then when you didn’t
come, I couldn’t bear the neighbors’ pity; it--it hurt!--so I stole away
one night with Betty. We went to a big city where no one knew us, and we
were very poor. I didn’t mind much for myself, only for Baby. It was so
hard to find work, I--I almost gave up. Then I remembered Uncle Steven,
my mother’s half-brother, who used to be with us a good deal when I was
a child. I knew he was all alone out here, and I felt he would help
Betty and me in our troubles. And he was so good--he is so good! He
didn’t even wait to answer my letter; he came to find us instead, and he
brought us back to share his home with him. That was three years
ago---- But you, how is it you are here?”

“It’s a long story, Bess, darling. I’ve knocked around everywhere. I
hadn’t the heart to settle to anything, you know,--hunting, trapping,
whatever offered. I’d try first one thing and then another. Something
made me come over here--I don’t know what it was--I simply had to come.
I was on my way to the Northwest, and passed through Wistar three weeks
ago, never dreaming you were so near; then I went on to the logging-camp
and stopped there for a time, but I’d made all my plans to leave
to-morrow----” his voice trembled, and he rested his face against hers.
“Oh!” he went on brokenly, “I might have missed you altogether; we
might never have met again--never--if it hadn’t been for Santa Claus’
sweetheart----”

She looked up curiously, interrupting him with a quick exclamation, and
bit by bit the account of the little child’s arrival at the lumber-camp
was told.

“But didn’t you know right away who she was?” the mother asked jealously
when he paused.

“Dear, I didn’t. She was such a baby when I left,--scarcely two years
old, you remember. There was a likeness, though, to you that troubled
me, but I told myself I was fanciful. I’ve seen that likeness so many
times,--it has been upper-most in my mind, going with me everywhere,
eluding me everywhere. And, her name was different--Hammond.”

“That’s uncle’s name; he would have her called so. Then you came all
that way not knowing who she was, nor for my sake?”

“Yes,” he answered honestly, “I only thought of the sorrow in the
stricken household. I didn’t think of you at all. And yet it was for
your sake, too. Ah! Bess dear, my heart has been very tender for all
mothers since I left you to fend for the little one alone. I can never
make up for that--”

“Hush!” she interposed, “you have made up. Even if I’d been somebody
else, and Betty somebody else, it would have atoned and doubly atoned
for you to do what you have done,”--she laughed unsteadily, she was so
happy that her words had become hopelessly tangled. “You know what I
mean,” she finished.

“I know,” he smiled back.

“But you ought to have recognized Betty at once; there was no excuse.”

“I thought she was a dear little tot.”

“Why, Humphrey, she’s the very dearest, the sweetest, the most precious,
the--”

He stopped the loving catalogue with a kiss.

“You’ll let me stay and find that out for myself, won’t you?” he asked
humbly.

She clung to him, trembling all over, her face quite drawn and white.

“It won’t take long--oh! you must stay longer than that.”

“I’ll stay till the end, please God,” he said very solemnly.

As they stood together, faintly from the distance there came the sound
of bells; the spirit of the blessed season filled the air,--the cheer,
the peace, the good-will. North, south, east, west, along the happy
roads that lead around the world, the message ran. Oh! very beautiful
are the roads of the world, but surely the most beautiful of them all is
little Forgiveness Lane that winds through tangles and briers, and over
stony and waste places, from heart to heart and climbs at last up to the
very gates of heaven.




CHAPTER VI

CHRISTMAS DAY


The day was several hours older when Humphrey and Elisabeth Shawe
started for Thornby’s camp. Before that time, however, poor Uncle
Steven, weary and disheartened and looking suddenly like an old, old
man, had returned from his futile search in and around Wistar,
accompanied by a number of the inhabitants of the little town who were
eager to lend what aid they could, although they realized how unavailing
their efforts must prove.

They had expected to find the house wrapped in gloom, but instead, as
they stopped at its door, a young woman with a radiantly happy face ran
toward them crying out the joyful news. Then a mighty shout went up from
the sleighs,--no one knew who started it, but it grew and grew, until it
seemed to reach the sky, and when it died away--it was a long while
before that happened, because it was always breaking out again--there
was a great blowing of noses and clearing of throats, as if an epidemic
of influenza was raging among them all. As soon as quiet was restored
every one went within-doors to find Shawe, who was resting under the
strictest orders not to move, and who was allowed to remain quiet no
longer. There would be ample time on another day to get over his
fatigue; for the present he had to submit to being made much of. Such a
shaking of hands as took place then,--Uncle Steven started it,--and such
hearty wishes as were poured forth! It wasn’t Merry Christmas just once,
but it was Merry, merry Christmas over and over again, until the house
rocked with the noise. And there were no reproaches in word, or thought,
about that sad past, with its mistakes and misunderstandings, it was all
blotted out,--just as the snow stretched its sparkling whiteness over
the earth, hiding many an ugly spot, so the beautiful mantle of charity
lay close over what had been.

Finally, at Shawe’s insistence, the sleigh was made ready. Not Uncle
Steven’s shabby cutter, but the roomier one of the most important
citizen of Wistar, who had been among the first to offer his services to
find the little child. It was heaped high with robes from the other
sleighs, until its gorgeousness and comfort were something to wonder at,
and four horses were harnessed to it; then the best driver climbed up in
front with much pride and, as soon as the husband and wife had taken
their places behind him, he cracked his whip briskly, in a hurry to be
gone. Again the air was rent with cheers, and amid the tumult the horses
sprang forward. Ah! they were very different from sober old Danny and
Whitefoot; they fairly flew over the road that had seen the jolly
progress of Santa Claus and his little sweetheart the previous day, and
that solemn faring southward through the night of the messenger bearing
his good tidings. The bells rang out merrily,--the gayest, gladdest
tune,--and the spirits of the sky, the plains, the woods, laughed back
in an ecstasy of delight, echoing the happiness everywhere; as far as
eye could reach the snow twinkled and shone as if with rapture that
Christmas Day. There was hardly any speech among the travellers, but joy
sat very close to their hearts, and no one objected to the silence.

At last the logging-camp was reached, and, as the horses drew up with a
great shaking of their bells, the door of the shanty flew open, and a
body of men trooped out to greet the newcomers. They had all heard of
Shawe’s errand from old Jerome,--all but the child, who was kept in
ignorance, because no one knew what its result would be,--and at sight
of their former comrade a shout of welcome--and something
more--something deeper--burst from them, to be echoed again and again.
Under cover of the happy sounds Shawe, too moved for any words, jumped
from the sleigh and turned to help his wife; but she scarcely touched
his hand, springing past him as if she were winged. Only too well the
men knew who the shining-eyed woman was, yet they had no greeting for
her,--the exultation in her face silenced them all; they opened a way
speedily for her to pass through, and then turned by common accord to
look at the sight that would meet her. As if they could see with her
eyes! And yet the picture was an unforgettable one to them.

They saw the rude familiar room, beautiful as it had never been until
the previous night, with the huge fire blazing at one side, and on the
hearth old Jerome bending down to the child, who, at the clatter
without, had risen from her play, the skirt of her gown gathered up over
a store of her new treasures as she turned wonderingly toward the door.
The men, still looking, saw the little hand relax its hold hastily, so
that the precious hoard fell to the floor unheeded--forgotten. The small
face changed from bright to brighter,--to brightest,--they had not
believed that possible,--and then they saw nothing but two figures
running toward each other and meeting in a close embrace, and they heard
the cries uttered in shaking voices, “Muvver--” “Dear, my little own!”
mingle and lose themselves in breaking sobs and a low peal of rippling
laughter.

“I swan thet hick’ry makes the ’tarnallest smoke,” Jerome muttered a
moment later, “it do beat all”--he stopped, choking over the words,--“it
do beat all,” he said again, blinking around with misty eyes.

Some one laughed unsteadily, and some one else coughed, then a third
person sneezed--and so the charm was broken. The mother raised her head
and gazed over the little shoulder at the other occupants of the room
with a look of deepest gratitude. How good every one was! Her thought
was plainer to them all than the most eloquent words would have been.
Indeed, words were not necessary at all. Betty, in the silence, turned,
and still resting in the encircling arm, smiled right and left on her
many friends, then her eyes came back to the face she loved so well, and
she patted it with fond fingers.

“It’s the very happiest Christmas now,” she laughed, “’thout you
’twasn’t half so nice. Did dear Santa Claus bring you, too?”

“You can never guess,” Elisabeth Shawe answered, the delight in her
voice vibrating like a bell. “It was some one far better and kinder than
Santa Claus, though you and I, darling, have much to thank that old man
for, and we’ll bless him all our days. Listen, sweet.”

For a moment the woman bent close to whisper in the rosy ear, then, as
if she realized that the men who had been so tender to her child had
earned a right to share in the new-found happiness, she told the story
aloud. She spoke very simply so the little hearer might
understand,--indeed, it was meant chiefest for her,--but the others
crowding near were not denied a glimpse of the great joy the morning had
brought into three lives.

“Not daddy,” Betty screamed, as the full truth dawned upon her, “not my
very own, own daddy!”

She didn’t wait for an answer but ran swiftly to Shawe, who was
standing just behind, and threw herself into his arms.

“Oh! you won’t be a far-away daddy ever any more, will you?” she cried.

“Never any more,” he answered brokenly, then he gathered her close to
his breast and kissed her.

The men looked on shy-eyed and silent in the presence of that boundless
content. Who could say anything? Who could speak? Betty’s laughter, as
her father released his hold and she slipped to the floor, acted like
magic upon them all; in a moment a deafening hubbub filled the room.
After it had subsided a little the Kid, who had served as master of
ceremonies on several occasions, assumed the leadership; though he was
the youngest of them, _he_ knew how things were managed out in the
great world. Therefore he escorted Mrs. Shawe to the seat of honor with
his very best company manner,--and there never was a manner like it
anywhere, so his comrades heartily declared, and I’m quite sure they
were right!

The great barrel-chair which Jerome usually occupied was drawn up to the
centre of the hearth, and as soon as her mother was seated Betty brought
all her new treasures and displayed them with great pride, while the men
nudged one another slyly as the former owners were recognized; no matter
how hard they tried to appear unconscious, a quirk of pleasure, or a
I-mustn’t-appear-as-if-I-had-ever-seen-that-before look was a sure
indication when all other signs failed. And Betty always found them
out, shouting gleefully at each discovery, while her mother smiled in
gratitude, no less pleased than the little one. Well, why shouldn’t they
be glad, too, to give all that pleasure? Somehow there was such a cosey,
comfortable feeling about it they felt good all over, and they couldn’t
keep quiet,--that was too much to expect! So the old room rang again and
again with their mirth.

“Sing to us now, dear, my little own,” Elisabeth Shawe said, when the
gifts had been duly admired, “sing the old song about this blessed day.”

Betty leaned against her mother’s shoulder within the happy circle of
her arm.

“You too,” she whispered, “just like we always do?”

“Yes, darling, in our own way.”

The child’s glance went round the room, taking in the joyful faces that
smiled back at her in friendly fashion; then she met her father’s eyes,
and, reaching out, she took his hand in hers, drawing it close, until it
rested on that other hand above her heart. A moment later she began to
sing in her sweet little thread of a voice:

    “‘I saw three ships come sailing in,
       On Christmas Day--on Christmas Day,
     I saw three ships come sailing in,
       On Christmas Day in the morning.’”

Elisabeth Shawe took up the next verse:

    “‘Oh! they sailed into Bethlehem,
       On Christmas Day--on Christmas Day,
     Oh! they sailed into Bethlehem,
       On Christmas Day in the morning.’”

It was Betty’s turn:

    “‘And all the bells on earth shall ring
       On Christmas Day--on Christmas Day,
     And all the bells on earth shall ring
       On Christmas Day in the morning.’”

Again there came the fuller, richer tones of the sweet antiphony:

    “‘And all the angels in heaven shall sing,
      On Christmas Day--on Christmas Day,’”

The voices of mother and child blended in unison, filling the room with
happy, rippling music:

    “‘And all the angels in heaven shall sing
      On Christmas Day in the morning.’”

At a signal from Shawe the men joined in the next verse, waiting for the
first line to be given, and then going on with the simple iteration,
until the little carol became a mighty triumphal chorus:

    “‘And all the souls on earth shall sing
       On Christmas Day--on Christmas Day,
     And all the souls on earth shall sing
       On Christmas Day in the morning.’”

“Dang thet hick’ry,” old Jerome grumbled in the hush that followed, “it
do set a man splutterin’ ez never was!”


THE END