It’s a dull person who doesn’t
wake up Christmas Morning with a curiously ticklish
sense of Tinsel in the pit of his stomach! A
sort of a Shine! A kind of a Pain!
“Glisten and Tears,
Pang of the years.”
That’s Christmas!
So much was born on Christmas Day!
So much has died! So much is yet to come!
Balsam-Scented, with the pulse of bells, how the senses
sing! Memories that wouldn’t have batted
an eye for all the Gabriel Trumpets in Eternity leaping
to life at the sound of a twopenny horn! Merry
Folk who were with us once and are no more! Dream
Folk who have never been with us yet but will be some
time! Ache of old carols! Zest of new-fangled
games! Flavor of puddings! Shine of silver
and glass! The pleasant frosty smell of the Express-man!
The Gift Beautiful! The Gift Dutiful! The
Gift that Didn’t Come! Heigho! Manger
and Toy-Shop, Miracle and Mirth,
“Glisten and Tears,
LAUGH at the years!”
That’s Christmas!
Flame Nourice certainly was willing
to laugh at the years. Eighteen usually is!
Waking at Dawn two single thoughts
consumed her, the Lay Reader, and the humpiest
of the express packages downstairs.
The Lay Reader’s name was Bertrand.
“Bertrand the Lay Reader,” Flame always
called him. The rest of the Parish called him
Mr. Laurello.
It was the thought of Bertrand the
Lay Reader that made Flame laugh the most.
“As long as I’ve promised
most faithfully not to see him,” she laughed,
“how can I possibly go to church? For the
first Christmas in my life,” she laughed, “I
won’t have to go to church!”
With this obligation so cheerfully
canceled, the exploration of the humpiest express
package loomed definitely as the next task on the
horizon.
Hoping for a fur coat from her Father,
fearing for a set of encyclopedias from her Mother,
she tore back the wrappings with eager hands only
to find, all-astonished, and half a-scream, a
gay, gauzy layer of animal masks nosing interrogatively
up at her. Less practical surely than the fur
coat, more amusing, certainly, than encyclopedias, the
funny “false faces” grinned up at her with
a curiously excitative audacity. Where from? No
identifying card! What for? No conceivable
clew! Unless perhaps just on general principles
a donation for the Sunday School Christmas Tree? But
there wasn’t going to be any tree! Tentatively
she reached into the box and touched the fiercely
striped face of a tiger, the fantastically exaggerated
beak of a red and green parrot. “U-m-m-m,”
mused Flame. “Whatever in the world shall
I do with them?” Then quite abruptly she sank
back on her heels and began to laugh and laugh and
laugh. Even the Lay Reader had not received such
a laughing But even to herself she did not say just
what she was laughing at. It was a time for deeds,
it would seem, and not for words.
Certainly the morning was very full of deeds!
There was, of course, a present from
her Mother to be opened, warm, woolly stockings
and things like that. But no one was ever swerved
from an original purpose by trying on warm, woolly
stockings. And from her Father there was the
most absurd little box no bigger than your nose marked,
“For a week in New York,” and stuffed to
the brim with the sweetest bright green dollar bills.
But, of course, you couldn’t try those on.
And half the Parish sent presents. But no Parish
ever sent presents that needed to be tried on.
No gay, fluffy scarfs, no lacey, frivolous
pettiskirts, no bright delaying hat-ribbons!
Just books, illustrated poems usually,
very wholesome pickles, and always a huge
motto to recommend, “Peace on Earth, Good Will
to Men.” To “Men"? Why
not to Women? Why not at least to “Dogs?”
questioned Flame quite abruptly.
Taken all in all it was not a Christmas
Morning of sentiment but a Christmas morning of works!
Kitchen works, mostly! Useful, flavorous adventures
with a turkey! A somewhat nervous sally with an
apple pie! Intermittently, of course, a few experiments
with flour paste! A flaire or two with a
paint brush! An errand to the attic! Interminable
giggles!
Surely it was four o’clock before
she was even ready to start for the Rattle-Pane House.
And “starting” is by no means the same
as arriving. Dragging a sledful of miscellaneous
Christmas goods an eighth of a mile over bare ground
is not an easy task. She had to make three tugging
trips. And each start was delayed by her big gray
pussy cat stealing out to try to follow her.
And each arrival complicated by the yelpings and leapings
and general cavortings of four dogs who didn’t
see any reason in the world why they shouldn’t
escape from their forced imprisonment in the shed-yard
and prance home with her. Even with the third
start and the third arrival finally accomplished, the
crafty cat stood waiting for her on the steps of the
Rattle-Pane House, back arched, fur bristled,
spitting like some new kind of weather-cock at the
storm in the shed-yard, and had to be thrust quite
unceremoniously into a much too small covered basket
and lashed down with yards and yards of tinsel that
was needed quite definitely for something else. It
isn’t just the way of the Transgressor that’s
hard. Nobody’s way is any too easy!
The door-key, though, was exactly
where the old Butler had said it would be, under
the door mat, and the key itself turned astonishingly
cordially in the rusty old lock. Never in her
whole little life having owned a door-key to her own
house it seemed quite an adventure in itself to be
walking thus possessively through an unfamiliar hall
into an absolutely unknown kitchen and goodness knew
what on either side and beyond.
Perfectly simply too as the old Butler
had promised, the four dog dishes, heaping to the
brim, loomed in prim line upon the kitchen table waiting
for distribution.
“U-m-m,” sniffed Flame.
“Nothing but mush! Mush! All
over the world to-day I suppose while their
masters are feasting at other people’s houses
on puddings and and cigarettes! How
the poor darlings must suffer! Locked in sheds!
Tied in yards! Stuffed down cellar!”
“Me-o-w,” twinged a plaintive
hint from the hallway just outside.
“Oh, but cats are different,”
argued Flame. “So soft, so plushy, so spineless!
Cats were meant to be stuffed into things.”
Without further parleying she doffed
her red tam and sweater, donned a huge white all-enveloping
pinafore, and started to ameliorate as best she could
the Christmas sufferings of the “poor darlings”
immediately at hand.
It was at least a yellow kitchen, or
had been once. In all that gray, dank, neglected
house, the one suggestion of old sunshine.
“We shall have our dinner here,”
chuckled Flame. “After the carols we
shall have our dinner here.”
Very boisterously in the yard just
outside the window the four dogs scuffled and raced
for sheer excitement and joy at this most unexpected
advent of human companionship. Intermittently
from time to time by the aid of old boxes or barrels
they clawed their way up to the cobwebby window-sill
to peer at the strange proceedings. Intermittently
from time to time they fell back into the frozen yard
in a chaos of fur and yelps.
By five o’clock certainly the
faded yellow kitchen must have looked very strange,
even to a dog!
Straight down its dingy, wobbly-floored
center stretched a long table cheerfully spread with
“the Rev. Mrs. Flamande Nourice’s”
second best table cloth. Quaint high-backed chairs
dragged in from the shadowy parlor circled the table.
A pleasant china plate gleamed like a hand-painted
moon before each chair. At one end of the table
loomed a big brown turkey; at the other, the appropriate
vegetables. Pies, cakes, and doughnuts, interspersed
themselves between. Green wreaths streaming with
scarlet ribbons hung nonchalantly across every chair-top.
Tinsel garlands shone on the walls. In the doorway
reared a hastily constructed mimicry of a railroad
crossing sign.
Directly opposite and conspicuously
placed above the rusty stove-pipe stretched the Parish’s
Gift Motto duly re-adjusted.
“Peace
on Earth, Good Will to Dogs.”
“Fatuously silly,” admitted
Flame even to herself. “But yet it does
add something to the Gayety of Rations!”
Stepping aside for a single thrilling
moment to study the full effect of her handiwork,
the first psychological puzzle of her life smote sharply
across her senses. Namely, that you never really
get the whole fun out of anything unless you are absolutely
alone. But the very first instant you find
yourself absolutely alone with a Really-Good-Time
you begin to twist and turn and hunt about for somebody
Very Special to share it with you!
The only “Very Special”
person that Flame could think of was “Bertrand
the Lay Reader.”
All a-blush with the sheer mental
surprise of it she fled to the shed door to summon
the dogs.
“Maybe even the dogs won’t
come!” she reasoned hectically. “Maybe
nothing will come! Maybe that’s always the
way things happen when you get your own way about
something else!”
Like a blast from the Arctic the Christmas
twilight swept in on her. It crisped her cheeks, crinkled
her hair! Turned her spine to a wisp of tinsel!
All outdoors seemed suddenly creaking with frost!
All indoors, with unknownness!
“Come, Beautiful-Lovely!”
she implored. “Come, Lopsy! Miss Flora!
Come, Blunder-Blot!’”
But there was really no need of entreaty.
A turn of the door-knob would have brought them!
Leaping, loping, four abreast, they came plunging
like so many North Winds to their party! Streak
of Snow, Glow of Fire, Frozen
Mud Sun-Spot! Yelping-mouthed slapping-tailed!
Backs bristling! Legs stiffening! Wolf Hound,
Setter, Bull Dog, Dalmatian, each according
to his kind, hurtling, crowding!
“Oh, dear me, dear me,”
struggled Flame. “Maybe a carol would calm
them.”
To a certain extent a carol surely
did. The hair-cloth parlor of the Rattle-Pane
House would have calmed anything. And the mousey
smell of the old piano fairly jerked the dogs to its
senile old ivory keyboard. Cocking their ears
to its quavering treble notes, snorting
their nostrils through its gritty guttural basses,
they watched Flame’s facile fingers sweep from
sound to sound.
“Oh, what a glorious
lark!” quivered Flame. “What a a
lonely glorious lark!”
Timidly at first but with an increasing
abandon, half laughter and half tears, the clear young
soprano voice took up its playful paraphrase,
“God rest you merrie animals!
Let nothing you dismay!”
caroled Flame.
“For ”
It was just at this moment that Beautiful-Lovely,
the Wolf Hound, muzzled lifted, eyes rolling,
jabbed his shrill nose into space and harmony with
a carol of his own, octaves of agony, Heaven
knows what of ecstasy, that would have hurried
an owl to its nest, a ghoul to a moving picture show!
“Wow-Wow Wow!”
caroled Beautiful-Lovely. “Ww ow Ww ow Ww Oo Wwwww!”
As Flame’s hands dropped from
the piano the unmistakable creak of red wheels sounded
on the frozen driveway just outside.
No one but “Bertrand the Lay
Reader” drove a buggy with red wheels! To
the infinite scandalization of the Parish no
one but “Bertrand the Lay Reader” drove
a buggy with red wheels! Fleet steps sounded
suddenly on the path! Startled fists beat furiously
on the door!
“What is it? What is it?”
shouted a familiar voice. “Whatever in the
world is happening? Is it murder?
Let me in! Let me in!”
“Sil ly!” hissed
Flame through a crack in the door. “It’s
nothing but a party! Don’t you know a a
party when you hear it?”
For an instant only, blank silence
greeted her confidence. Then “Bertrand
the Lay Reader” relaxed in an indisputably genuine
gasp of astonishment.
“Why! Why, is that you,
Miss Flame?” he gasped. “Why, I thought
it was a murder! Why Why, whatever
in the world are you doing here?”
“I I’m having
a party,” hissed Flame through the key-hole.
“A a party?”
stammered the Lay Reader. “Open the door!”
“No, I can’t,” said Flame.
“Why not?” demanded the Lay Reader.
Helplessly in the darkness of the
vestibule Flame looked up, and down, and
sideways, but met always in every direction
the memory of her promise.
“I I just can’t,”
she admitted a bit weakly. “It wouldn’t
be convenient. I I’ve
got trouble with my eyes.”
“Trouble with your eyes?” questioned the
Lay Reader.
“I didn’t go away with my Father and Mother,”
confided Flame.
“No, so I notice,” observed
the Lay Reader. “Please open the door!”
“Why?” parried Flame.
“I’ve been looking for
you everywhere,” urged the Lay Reader. “At
the Senior Warden’s! At all the Vestrymen’s
houses! Even at the Sexton’s! I knew
you didn’t go away! The Garage Man told
me there were only two! I thought surely
I’d find you at your own house. But
I only found sled tracks.”
“That was me, I,” mumbled Flame.
“And then I heard these awful screams,”
shuddered the Lay Reader.
“That was a Carol,” said Flame.
“A Carol?” scoffed the Lay Reader.
“Open the door!”
“Well just a crack,” conceded
Flame.
It was astonishing how a man as broad-shouldered
as the Lay Reader could pass so easily through a crack.
Conscience-stricken Flame fled before
him with her elbow crooked across her forehead.
“Oh, my eyes! My eyes!” she cried.
“Well, really,” puzzled
the Lay Reader. “Though I claim, of course,
to be ordinarily bright I had never suspected
myself of being actually dazzling.”
“Oh, you’re not bright
at all,” protested Flame. “It’s
just my promise. I promised Mother not
to see you!”
“Not to see me?”
questioned the Lay Reader. It was astonishing
how almost instantaneously a man as purely theoretical
as the Lay Reader was supposed to be, thought of a
perfectly practical solution to the difficulty.
“Why why we might tie my big handkerchief
across your eyes,” he suggested. “Just
till we get this mystery straightened out. Surely
there is nothing more or less than just plain righteousness
in that!”
“What a splendid idea!”
capitulated Flame. “But, of course, if I’m
absolutely blindfolded,” she wavered for a second
only, “you’ll have to lead me by the hand.”
“I could do that,” admitted the Lay Reader.
With the big white handkerchief once
tied firmly across her eyes, Flame’s last scruple
vanished.
“Well, you see,” she began
quite precipitously, “I did think it
would be such fun to have a party! A party
all my own, I mean! A party just exactly
as I wanted it! No Parish in it at all! Or
good works! Or anything! Just fun! And
as long as Mother and Father had to go away anyway ”
Even though the blinding bandage the young eyes seemed
to lift in a half wistful sort of appeal. “You
see there’s some sort of property involved,”
she confided quite impulsively. “Uncle
Wally’s making a new will. There’s
a corn-barn and a private chapel and a collection
of Chinese lanterns and a piebald pony principally
under dispute. Mother, of course thinks
we ought to have the corn-barn. But Father can’t
decide between the Chinese lanterns and the private
chapel. Personally,” she sighed, “I’m
hoping for the piebald pony.”
“Yes, but this party?” prodded
the Lay Reader.
“Oh, yes, the party ”
quickened Flame.
“Why have it in a deserted house?”
questioned the Lay Reader with some incisiveness.
Even with her eyes closely bandaged
Flame could see perfectly clearly that the Lay Reader
was really quite troubled.
“Oh, but you see it isn’t
exactly a deserted house,” she explained.
“Who lives here?” demanded the Lay Reader.
“I don’t know exactly,”
admitted Flame. “But the Butler is a friend
of mine and ”
“The Butler is a
friend of yours?” gasped the Lay Reader.
Already, if Flame could only have seen it, his head
was cocked with sudden intentness towards the parlor
door. “There is certainly something very
strange about all this,” he whispered a bit hectically.
“I could almost have sworn that I heard a faint
scuffle, the horrid sound of a person strangling.”
“Strangling?” giggled
Flame. “Oh, that is just the sound of Miss
Flora’s ‘girlish glee’! If she’d
only be content to chew the corner of the piano cover!
But when she insists on inhaling it, too!”
“Miss Flora?” gasped the
Lay Reader. “Is this a Mad House?”
“Miss Flora is a a
dog,” confided Flame a bit coolly. “I
neglected it seems to state that
this is a dog-party that I’m having.”
“Dogs?” winced the Lay Reader.
“Will they bite?”
“Only if you don’t trust them,”
confided Flame.
“But it’s so hard to trust
a dog that will bite you if you don’t trust
him,” frowned the Lay Reader. “It
makes such a sort of a a vicious circle,
as it were.”
“Vicious Circe?” mused
Flame, a bit absent-mindedly. “No, I don’t
think it’s nice at all to call Miss Flora a ‘Vicious
Circe.’” It was Flame’s turn now
to wince back a little. “I I
hate people who hate dogs!” she cried out quite
abruptly.
“Oh, I don’t hate them,”
lied the Lay Reader like a gentleman, “it’s
only that that . You see a dog
bit me once!” he confided with significant emphasis.
“I bit a dentist once,”
mused Flame without any emphasis at all.
“Oh, but I say, Miss Flame,”
deprecated the Lay Reader. “That’s
different! When a dog bites you, you know, there’s
always more or less question whether he was mad or
not.”
“There doesn’t seem to
have been any question at all,” mused Flame,
“that you were mad! Did you have
your head sent off to be investigated or anything?”
“Oh, I say, Miss Flame,”
implored the Lay Reader, “I tell you I like
dogs, good dogs! I assure you I’m
very oh, very much interested in this dog
party of yours! Such a quaint idea! So so !
If I could be of any possible assistance?” he
implored.
“Maybe you could be,”
relaxed Flame ever so faintly. “But if you’re
really coming to my party,” she stiffened again,
“you’ve got to behave like my party!”
“Why, of course I’ll behave
like your party!” laughed the Lay Reader.
“There is a problem,”
admitted Flame. “Five problems, to be perfectly
accurate. Four dogs, and a cat in the wood-shed.”
“And a cat in the wood-shed?”
echoed the Lay Reader quite idiotically.
“The table is set,” affirmed
Flame. “The places, all ready! But
I don’t know how to get the dogs into their
chairs! They run around so! They yelp!
They jump! They haven’t had a mouthful
to eat, you see, since last night, this time! And
when they once see the turkey I’m I’m
afraid they’ll stampede it.”
“Turkey?” quizzed the
Lay Reader who had dined that day on corned beef.
“Oh, of course, mush was what
they were intended to have,” admitted Flame.
“Piles and piles of mush! Extra piles and
piles of mush I should judge because it was Christmas
Day!... But don’t you think mush does seem
a bit dull?” she questioned appealingly.
“For Christmas Day? Oh, I did think a turkey
would taste so good!”
“It certainly would,” conceded the Lay
Reader.
“So if you’d help me ”
wheedled Flame, “it would be well-worth staying
blindfolded for.... For, of course, I shall have
to stay blindfolded. But I can see a little of
the floor,” she admitted, “though I couldn’t
of course break my promise to my Mother by seeing
you.”
“No, certainly not,” admitted the Lay
Reader.
“Otherwise ” murmured Flame
with a faint gesture towards the door.
“I will help you,” said the Lay Reader.
“Where is your hand?” fumbled Flame.
“Here!” attested the Lay Reader.
“Lead us to the dogs!” commanded Flame.
Now the Captain of a ship feels genuinely
obligated, it would seem, to go down with his ship
if tragic circumstances so insist. But he never, so
far as I’ve ever heard, felt the slightest obligation
whatsoever to go down with another captain’s
ship, to be martyred in short for any job
not distinctly his own. So Bertrand Lorello, who
for the cause he served, wouldn’t have hesitated
an instant probably, to be torn by Hindoo lions, devoured
by South Sea cannibals, fallen upon by
a chapel spire, trampled to death even at
a church rummage sale, saw no conceivable
reason at the moment for being eaten by dogs at a
purely social function.
Even groping through a balsam-scented
darkness with one hand clasping the thrilly fingers
of a lovely young girl, this distaste did not altogether
leave him.
“This this mush that
you speak of?” he questioned quite abruptly.
“With the dogs as as nervous as you
say, so unfortunately liable to stampede?
Don’t you think that perhaps a little mush served
first, a good deal of mush I would say,
served first, might act as a as
a sort of anesthetic?... Somewhere in the past
I am almost sure I have read that mush in sufficient
quantities, you understand, is really quite a quite
an anesthetic.”
Very palpably in the darkness he heard
a single throaty swallow.
“Lead us to the mush,” said
Flame.
In another instant the door-knob turned
in his hand, and the cheerful kitchen lamp-light, glitter
of tinsel, flare of red ribbons, savor
of foods, smote sharply on him.
“Oh, I say, how jolly!” cried the
Lay Reader.
“Don’t let me bump into
anything!” begged the blindfolded Flame, still
holding tight to his hand.
“Oh, I say, Miss Flame,”
kindled the entranced Lay Reader, “it’s
you that look the jolliest! All in white
that way! I’ve never seen you wear that
to church, have I?”
“This is a pinafore,”
confided Flame coolly. “A bungalow apron,
the fashion papers call it.... No, you’ve
never seen me wear this to church.”
“O h,” said the Lay Reader.
“Get the mush,” said Flame.
“The what?” asked the Lay Reader.
“It’s there on the table
by the window,” gestured Flame. “Please
set all four dishes on the floor, each
dish, of course, in a separate corner,” ordered
Flame. “There is a reason.... And then
open the parlor door.”
“Open the parlor door?”
questioned the Lay Reader. It was no mere grammatical
form of speech but a real query in the Lay Reader’s
mind.
“Well, maybe I’d better,”
conceded Flame. “Lead me to it.”
Roused into frenzy by the sound of
a stranger’s step, a stranger’s voice,
the four dogs fumed and seethed on the other side of
the panel.
“Sniff Sniff Snort!”
the Red Setter sucked at the crack in the door.
“Woof! Woof! Woof!” roared
the big Wolf Hound.
“Slam! Bang! Slash!” slapped
the Dalmatian’s crisp weight.
“Yi! Yi! Yi!” sang the Bull
Dog.
“Hush! Hush, Dogs!” implored Flame.
“This is Father’s Lay Reader!”
“Your Lay Reader!”
contradicted the young man gallantly. It was
pretty gallant of him, wasn’t it? Considering
everything?
In another instant four shapes
with teeth in them came hurtling through!
If Flame had never in her life admired
the Lay Reader she certainly would have admired him
now for the sheer cold-blooded foresight which had
presaged the inevitable reaction of the dogs upon the
mush and the mush upon the dogs. With a single
sniff at his heels, a prod of paws in his stomach,
the onslaught swerved and passed. Guzzlingly
from four separate corners of the room issued sounds
of joy and fulfillment.
With an impulse quite surprising even
to herself Flame thrust both hands into the Lay Reader’s
clasp.
“You are nice, aren’t
you?” she quickened. In an instant of weakness
one hand crept up to the blinding bandage, and recovered
its honor as instantly. “Oh, I do wish
I could see you,” sighed Flame. “You’re
so good-looking! Even Mother thinks you’re
so good-looking!... Though she does get
awfully worked up, of course, about your ’amorous
eyes’!”
“Does your Mother think I’ve
got ... ’amorous eyes’?” asked the
Lay Reader a bit tersely. Behind his spectacles
as he spoke the orbs in question softened and glowed
like some rare exotic bloom under glass. “Does
your Mother ... think I’ve got amorous eyes?”
“Oh, yes!” said Flame.
“And your Father?” drawled the Lay Reader.
“Why, Father says of course
you’ve got ’amorous eyes’!”
confided Flame with the faintest possible tinge of
surprise at even being asked such a question.
“That’s the funny thing about Mother and
Father,” chuckled Flame. “They’re
always saying the same thing and meaning something
entirely different by it. Why, when Mother says
with her mouth all pursed up, ’I have every
reason to believe that Mr. Lorello is engaged to the
daughter of the Rector in his former Parish,’
Father just puts back his head and howls, and says,
’Why, of course, Mr. Lorello is engaged
to the daughter of the Rector in his former Parish!
All Lay Readers....”
In the sudden hush that ensued a faint
sense of uneasiness flickered through Flame’s
shoulders.
“Is it you that have hushed? Or the dogs?”
she asked.
“The dogs,” said the Lay Reader.
Very cautiously, absolutely honorably,
Flame turned her back to the Lay Reader, and lifted
the bandage just far enough to prove the Lay Reader’s
assertion.
Bulging with mush the four dogs lay
at rest on rounding sides with limp legs straggling,
or crouched like lions’ heads on paws, with
limpid eyes blinking above yawny mouths.
“O h,” crooned
Flame. “How sweet! Only, of course,
with what’s to follow,” she regretted
thriftily, “it’s an awful waste of mush....
Excelsior warmed in the oven would have served just
as well.”
At the threat of a shadow across her
eyeball she jerked the bandage back into place.
“Now, Mr. Lorello,” she
suggested blithely, “if you’ll get the
Bibles....”
“Bibles?” stiffened the
Lay Reader. “Bibles? Why, really, Miss
Flame, I couldn’t countenance any sort of mock
service! Even just for for quaintness, even
for Christmas quaintness!”
“Mock service?” puzzled
Flame. “Bibles?... Oh, I don’t
want you to preach out of ’em,” she hastened
perfectly amiably to explain. “All I want
them for is to plump-up the chairs.... The seats
you see are too low for the dogs.... Oh, I suppose
dictionaries would do,” she compromised reluctantly.
“Only dictionaries are always so scarce.”
Obediently the Lay Reader raked the
parlor book-cases for “plump-upable” books.
With real dexterity he built Chemistries on Sermons
and Ancient Poems on Cook Books till the desired heights
were reached.
For a single minute more Flame took
another peep at the table.
“Set a chair for yourself directly
opposite me!” she ordered. For sheer hilarious
satisfaction her feet began to dance and her hands
to clap. “And whenever I really feel obliged
to look,” she sparkled, “you’ll
just have to leave the table, that’s all!...
And now...?” Appraisingly her muffled eye swept
the shining vista. “Perfect!” she
triumphed. “Perfect!” Then quite abruptly
the eager mouth wilted. “Why ... Why
I’ve forgotten the carving knife and fork!”
she cried out in real distress. “Oh, how
stupid of me!” Arduously, but without avail,
she searched through all the drawers and cupboards
of the Rattle-Pane kitchen. A single alternative
occurred to her. “You’ll have to
go over to my house and get them, Mr. Lorello!”
she said. “Were you ever in my kitchen?
Or my pantry?”
“No,” admitted the Lay Reader.
“Well, you’ll have to
climb in through the window someway,”
worried Flame. “I’ve mislaid my key
somewhere here among all these dishes and boxes.
And the pantry,” she explained very explicitly,
“is the third door on the right as you enter....
You’ll see a chest of drawers. Open the
second of ’em.... Or maybe you’d better
look through all of them.... Only please ...
please hurry!” Imploringly the little head lifted.
“If I hurry enough,” said
the Lay Reader quite impulsively, “may I have
a kiss when I get back?”
“A kiss?” hooted Flame.
In the curve of her cheek a dimple opened suddenly.
“Well ... maybe,” said Flame.
As though the word were wings the
Lay Reader snatched his hat and sped out into the
night.
It was astonishing how all the warm
housey air seemed to rush out with him, and all the
shivery frost rush back.
A little bit listlessly Flame dragged
down the bandage from her eyes.
“It must be the creaks on the
stairs that make it so awfully lonely all of a sudden,”
argued Flame. “It must be because the dogs
snore so.... No mere man could make it so empty.”
With a precipitous nudge of the memory she dashed
to the door and helloed to the fast retreating figure.
“Oh, Bertrand! Bertrand!” she called,
“I got sort of mixed up. It’s the
second door on the left! And if you don’t
find ’em there you’d better go up in Mother’s
room and turn out the silver chest! Hurry!”
Rallying back to the bright Christmas
kitchen for the real business at hand, an accusing
blush rose to the young spot where the dimple had
been.
“Oh, Shucks!” parried
Flame. “I kissed a Bishop before I was
five! What’s a Lay Reader?”
As one humanely willing to condone the future as well
as the past she rolled up her white sleeves without
further introspection, and dragged out from the protecting
shadow of the sink the “humpiest box”
which had so excited her emotions at home in an earlier
hour of the day. Cracklingly under her eager fingers
the clumsy cover slid off, exposing once more to her
enraptured gaze the gay-colored muslin layer of animal
masks leering fatuously up at her.
Only with her hand across her mouth
did she keep from crying out. Very swiftly her
glance traveled from the grinning muslin faces before
her to the solemn fur faces on the other side of the
room. The hand across her mouth tightened.
“Why, it’s something like
Creation,” she giggled. “This having
to decide which face to give to which animal!”
As expeditiously as possible she made her selection.
“Poor Miss Flora must be so
tired of being so plain,” she thought.
“I’ll give her the first choice of everything!
Something really lovely! It can’t help
resting her!”
With this kind idea in mind she selected
for Miss Flora a canary’s face. Softly
yellow! Bland as treacle! Its swelling, tender
muslin throat fairly reeking with the suggestion of
innocent song! No one gazing once upon such ornithological
purity would ever speak a harsh word again, even to
a sparrow!
Nudging Miss Flora cautiously from
her sonorous nap, Flame beguiled her with half a doughnut
to her appointed chair, boosted her still cautiously
to her pinnacle of books, and with various swift adjustments
of fasteners, knotting of tie-strings, an
extra breathing hole jabbed through the beak, slipped
the canary’s beautiful blond countenance over
Miss Flora’s frankly grizzled mug.
For a single terrifying instant Miss
Flora’s crinkled sides tightened, a
snarl like ripped silk slipped through her straining
lungs. Then once convinced that the mask was not
a gas-box she accepted the liberty with reasonable
sang-froid and sat blinking beadily out through
the canary’s yellow-rimmed eye-sockets with frank
curiosity towards such proceedings as were about to
follow. It was easy to see she was accustomed
to sitting in chairs.
For the Wolf Hound Flame chose a Giraffe’s
head. Certain anatomical similarities seemed
to make the choice wise. With a long vividly
striped stockinet neck wrinkling like a mousquetaire
glove, the neat small head that so closely fitted
his own neat small head, the tweaked, interrogative
ears, Beautiful-Lovely, the Wolf Hound,
reared up majestically in his own chair. He also,
once convinced that the mask was not a gas-box, resigned
himself to the inevitable, and corporeally independent
of such vain props as Chemistries or Sermons, lolled
his fine height against the mahogany chair-back.
To Blunder-Blot, the trim Dalmatian,
Flame assigned the Parrot’s head, arrogantly
beaked, gorgeously variegated, altogether querulous.
For Lopsy, the crafty Setter, she
selected a White Rabbit’s artless, pink-eared
visage.
Yet out of the whole box of masks
it had been the Bengal Tiger’s fiercely bewhiskered
visage that had fascinated Flame the most. Regretfully
from its more or less nondescript companions, she picked
up the Bengal Tiger now and pulled at its real, bristle-whiskers.
In one of the chairs a dog stirred quite irrelevantly.
Cocking her own head towards the wood-shed Flame could
not be perfectly sure whether she heard a twinge of
cat or a twinge of conscience. The unflinching
glare of the Bengal Tiger only served to increase her
self-reproach.
“After all,” reasoned
Flame, “it would be easy enough to set another
place! And pile a few extra books!... I’m
almost sure I saw a black plush bag in the parlor....
If the cat could be put in something like a black
plush bag, something perfectly enveloping
like that? So that not a single line of its its
figure could be observed?... And it had a new
head given it? A perfectly sufficient head like
a Bengal Tiger? I see no reason why ”
In five minutes the deed was accomplished.
Its lovely sinuous “figure” reduced to
the stolid contour of a black plush work-bag, its small
uneasy head thrust into the roomy muslin cranium of
the Bengal Tiger, the astonished Cat found herself
slumping soggily on a great teetering pile of books,
staring down as best she might through the Bengal
Tiger’s ear at the weirdest assemblage of animals
which any domestic cat of her acquaintance had ever
been forced to contemplate.
Coincidental with the appearance of
the Cat a faint thrill passed through the rest of
the company.... Nothing very much! No more,
no less indeed, than passes through any company at
the introduction of purely extraneous matter.
From the empty plate which she had commandeered as
a temporary pillow the Yellow Canary lifted an interrogative
beak.... That was all! At Flame’s left,
the White-Haired Rabbit emitted an incongruous bark....
Scarcely worth reporting! Across the table the
Giraffe thumped a white, plumy tail. Thoughtfully
the Parrot’s hooked nose slanted slightly to
one side.
“Oh, I wish Bertrand would come!”
fretted Flame. “Maybe this time he’ll
notice my ‘Christmas Crossing’ sign!”
she chuckled with sudden triumph. “Talk
about surprises!” Very diplomatically as she
spoke she broke another doughnut in two and drew all
the dogs’ attention to herself. Almost
hysterical with amusement she surveyed the scene before
her. “Well, at least we can have ‘grace’
before the Preacher comes!” she laughed.
A step on the gravel walk startled her suddenly.
In a flash she had jerked down the blind-folding handkerchief
across her eyes again, and folding her hands and the
doughnut before her burst softly into paraphrase.
’Now we sit
us down to eat
Thrice our share of Flesh
and Sweet.
If we should burst before
we’re through,
Oh what in Dogdom
shall we do?’
Thus it was that the Master of the
House, returning unexpectedly to his unfamiliar domicile,
stumbled upon a scene that might have shaken the reason
of a less sober young man.
Startled first by the unwonted illumination
from his kitchen windows, and second by the unprecedented
aroma of Fir Balsam that greeted him even through
the key-hole of his new front door, his feelings may
well be imagined when groping through the dingy hall
he first beheld the gallows-like structure reared
in the kitchen doorway.
“My God!” he ejaculated,
“Barrett is getting ready to hang himself!
Gone mad probably or something!”
Curdled with horror he forced himself
to the object, only to note with convulsive relief
but increasing bewilderment the cheerful phrasing
and ultimate intent of the structure itself. “’Christmas
Crossing’?” he repeated blankly. “’Look
out for Surprises’? ’Shop, Cook,
and Glisten’?” With his hand across his
eyes he reeled back slightly against the wall.
“It is I that have gone mad!” he gasped.
A little uncertain whether he was
afraid of What-He-Was-About-to-See, or whether What-He-Was-About-to-See
ought to be afraid of him, he craned his neck as best
he could round the corner of the huge buffet that
blocked the kitchen vista. A fresh bewilderment
met his eyes. Where he had once seen cobwebs
flapping grayly across the chimney-breast loomed now
the gay worsted recommendation that dogs specially,
should be considered in the Christmas Season.
Throwing all caution aside he passed the buffet and
plunged into the kitchen.
“Oh, do hurry!”
cried an eager young voice. “I thought my
hair would be white before you came!”
Like a man paralyzed he stopped short
in his tracks to stare at the scene before him!
The long, bright table! The absolutely formal
food! A blindfolded girl! A perfectly strange
blindfolded girl ... with her dark hair forty years
this side of white begging him to hurry!...
A Black Velvet Bag surmounted by a Tiger’s head
stirring strangely in a chair piled high with books!...
Seated next to the Black Velvet Bag a Canary as big
as a Turkey Gobbler!... A Giraffe stepping suddenly
forward with with dog-paws thrust into his
soup plate!... A White Rabbit heavily wreathed
in holly rousing cautiously from his cushions!...
A Parrot with a twitching black and white short-haired
tail!... An empty chair facing the Girl! An
empty chair facing the Girl.
“If this is madness,”
thought Delcote quite precipitously, “I am at
least the Master of the Asylum!”
In another instant, with a prodigious
stride he had slipped into the vacant seat.
“... So sorry to have kept you waiting,”
he murmured.
At the first sound of that unfamiliar
voice, Flame yanked the handkerchief from her eyes,
took one blank glance at the Stranger, and burst forth
into a muffled, but altogether blood-curdling scream.
“Oh ... Oh ... Owwwwwwww!” said
the scream.
As though waiting only for that one
signal to break the spell of their enchantment, the
Canary leaped upward and grabbed the Bengal Tiger by
his muslin nose, the White Rabbit sprang
to “point” on the cooling turkey, and
the Red and Green Parrot fell to the floor in a desperate
effort to settle once and for all with the black spot
that itched so impulsively on his left shoulder!
For a moment only, in comparative
quiet, the Concerned struggled with the Concerned.
Then true to all Dog Psychology, absolutely
indisputable, absolutely unalterable, the Non-Concerned
leaped in upon the Non-Concerned! Half on his
guard, but wholely on his itch, the jostled Parrot
shot like a catapult across the floor! Lost to
all sense of honor or table-manners the benign-faced
Giraffe with his benign face still towering blandly
in the air, burst through his own neck with a most
curious anatomical effect, locked his teeth
in the Parrot’s gay throat and rolled with him
under the table in mortal combat!
Round and round the room spun the
Yellow Canary and the Black Plush Bag!
Retreating as best she could from
her muslin nose, the Bengal Tiger or rather
that which was within the Bengal Tiger, waged her war
for Freedom! Ripping like a chicken through its
shell she succeeded at last in hatching one front
paw and one hind paw into action. Wallowing, stumbling, rolling, yowling, she
humped from mantle-piece to chair-top, and from box
to table.
Loyally the rabbit-eared Setter took
up the chase. Mauled in the scuffle he ran with
his meek face upside down! Lost to all reason,
defiant of all morale, he proceeded to flush the game!
Dish-pans clattered, stools tipped
over, pictures banged on the walls!
From her terrorized perch on the back
of her chair Flame watched the fracas with dilated
eyes.
Hunched in the hug of his own arms
the Stranger sat rocking himself to and fro in uncontrollable,
choking mirth, “ribald mirth”
was what Flame called it.
“Stop!” she begged. “Stop it!
Somebody stop it!”
It was not until the Black Plush Bag
at bay had ripped a red streak down Miss Flora’s
avid nose that the Stranger rose to interfere.
Very definitely then, with quick deeds,
incisive words, he separated the immediate combatants,
and ordered the other dogs into submission.
“Here you, Demon Direful!”
he addressed the white Wolf Hound. “Drop
that, Orion!” he shouted to the Irish Setter.
“Cut it out, John!” he thundered at the
Coach Dog.
“Their names are ’Beautiful-Lovely’!”
cried Flame. “And ‘Lopsy!’ and
‘Blunder-Blot!’”
With his hand on the Wolf Hound’s
collar, the Stranger stopped and stared up with frank
astonishment, not to say resentment, at the girl’s
interference.
“Their names are what?” he said.
Something in the special intonation
of the question infuriated Flame.... Maybe she
thought his mouth scornful, his narrowing
eyes...? Goodness knows what she thought of his
suddenly narrowing eyes!
In an instant she had jumped from
her retreat to the floor.
“Who are you, anyway?”
she demanded. “How dare you come here like
this? Butting into my party!... And and
spoiling my discipline with the dogs! Who are
you, I say?”
With Demon Direful, alias Beautiful-Lovely
tugging wildly at his restraint, the Stranger’s
scornful mouth turned precipitously up, instead of
down.
“Who am I?” he said.
“Why, no one special at all except just the
Master of the House!”
“What?” gasped Flame.
“Earle Delcote,” bowed the Stranger.
With a little hand that trembled perfectly
palpably Flame reached back to the arm of the big
carved chair for support.
“Why why, but Mr.
Delcote is an old man,” she gasped. “I’m
almost sure he’s an old man.”
The smile on Delcote’s mouth
spread suddenly to his eyes.
“Not yet, Thank God!” he bowed.
With a panic-stricken glance at doors,
windows, cracks, the chimney pipe itself, Flame sank
limply down in her seat again and gestured towards
the empty place opposite her.
“Have a have a chair,”
she stammered. Great tears welled suddenly to
her eyes. “Oh, I I know I oughtn’t
to be here,” she struggled. “It’s
perfectly ... awful! I haven’t the slightest
right! Not the slightest! It’s the the
cheekiest thing that any girl in the world ever did!...
But your Butler said...! And he did so want to
go away and And I did so love your dogs!
And I did so want to make one Christmas in the
world just exactly the way I wanted it!
And and Mother and Father will
be crazy!... And and ”
Without a single glance at anything
except herself, the Master of the House slipped back
into his chair.
“Have a heart!” he said.
Flame did not accept this suggestion.
With a very severe frown and downcast eyes she sat
staring at the table. It seemed a very cheerless
table suddenly, with all the dogs in various stages
of disheveled finery grouped blatantly around their
Master’s chair.
“I can at least have my cat,”
she thought, “my faithful cat!”
In another instant she had slipped from the table,
extracted poor Puss from a clutter of pans in the
back of a cupboard, stripped the last shred of masquerade
from her outraged form, and brought her back growling
and bristling to perch on one arm of the high-backed
chair. “Th ere!” said
Flame.
Glancing up from this innocent triumph,
she encountered the eyes of the Master of the House
fixed speculatively on the big turkey.
“I’m afraid everything
is very cold,” she confided with distinctly
formal regret.
“Not for anything,” laughed
Delcote quite suddenly, “would I have kept you
waiting if I had only known.”
Two spots of color glowed hotly in the girl’s
cheeks.
“It was not for you I was waiting,” she
said coldly.
“N o?” teased
Delcote. “You astonish me. For whom,
then? Some incredible wight who, worse than late isn’t
going to show up at all?... Heaven sent, I consider
myself.... How else could so little a girl have
managed so big a turkey?”
“There ... isn’t any ... carving knife,”
whispered Flame.
The tears were glistening on her cheeks
now instead of just in her eyes. A less observing
man than Delcote might have thought the tears were
really for the carving knife.
“What? No carving knife?”
he roared imperiously. “And the house guaranteed
’furnished’?” Very furiously he began
to hunt all around the kitchen in the most impossible
places.
“Oh, it’s furnished all
right,” quivered Flame. “It’s
just chock-full of dead things! Pressed flowers!
And old plush bags! And pressed flowers!
And and pressed flowers!”
“Great Heavens!” groaned
Delcote. “And I came here to forget ’dead
things’!”
“Your your Butler
said you’d had misfortunes,” murmured Flame.
“Misfortunes?” rallied
Delcote. “I should think I had! In
a single year I’ve lost health, money, most
everything I own in the world except my man and my
dogs!”
“They’re ... good dogs,” testified
Flame.
“And the Doctor’s sent
me here for six months,” persisted Delcote,
“before he’ll even hear of my plunging
into things again!”
“Six months is a a
good long time,” said Flame. “If you’d
turn the hems we could make yellow curtains for the
parlor in no time at all!”
“W we?” stammered Delcote.
“M Mother,”
said Flame. “... It’s a long time
since any dogs lived in the Rattle-Pane House.”
“Rattle-Brain house?” bridled Delcote.
“Rattle-Pane House,” corrected
Flame.
A little bit worriedly Delcote returned to his seat.
“I shall have to rend the turkey, instead of
carve it,” he said.
“Rend it,” acquiesced Flame.
In the midst of the rending a dark
frown appeared between Delcote’s eyes.
“These these guests that you were
expecting ?” he questioned.
“Oh, stop!” cried
Flame. “Dreadful as I am I never never
would have dreamed of inviting ’guests’!”
“This ‘guest’ then,” frowned
Delcote. “Was he...?”
“Oh, you mean ... Bertrand?”
flushed Flame. “Oh, truly, I didn’t
invite him! He just butted in ... same as you!”
“Same as ... I?” stammered Delcote.
“Well...” floundered Flame. “Well
... you know what I mean and ...”
With peculiar intentness the Master
of the House fixed his eyes on the knotted white handkerchief
which Flame had thrown across the corner of her chair.
“And is this ‘Bertrand’
person so ... so dazzling,” he questioned, “that
human eye may not look safely upon his countenance?”
“Bertrand ... dazzling?”
protested Flame. “Oh, no! He’s
really quite dull.... It was only,” she
explained with sudden friendliness, “It was
only that I had promised Mother not to ‘see’
him.... So, of course, when he butted in I....”
“O h,” relaxed
the Master of the House. With a precipitous flippancy
of manners which did not conform at all to the somewhat
tragic austerity of his face he snatched up his knife
and fork and thumped joyously on the table with the
handles of them. “And some people talk
about a country village being dull in the Winter Time!”
he chuckled. “With a Dog’s Masquerade
and a Robbery at the Rectory all happening the same
evening!” Grabbing her cat in her arms, Flame
jerked her chair back from the table.
“A a robbery at the
Rectory?” she gasped. “Why why,
I’m the Rectory! I must go home at once!”
“Oh, Shucks!” shrugged
the Master of the House. “It’s all
over now. But the people at the railroad station
were certainly buzzing about it as I came through.”
“B buzzing about
it?” articulated Flame with some difficulty.
Expeditiously the Master of the House
resumed his rending of the turkey.
“Are you really from the Rectory?”
he questioned. “How amusing.... Well,
there’s nothing really you could do about it
now.... The constable and his prisoner are already
on their way to the County Seat wherever
that may be. And a freshly ‘burgled’
house is rather a creepy place for a young girl to
return to all alone.... Your parents are away,
I believe?”
“Con stable ... constable,”
babbled Flame quite idiotically.
“Yes, the regular constable
was off Christmasing somewhere it seems, so he put
a substitute on his job, a stranger from somewhere.
Some substitute that! No mulling over hot toddies
on Christmas night for him! He saw the
marauder crawling in through the Rectory window!
He saw him fumbling now to the left, now to
the right, all through the front hall! He followed
him up the stairs to a closet where the silver was
evidently kept! He caught the man red-handed as
it were! Or rather white-handed,”
flushed the Master of the House for some quite unaccountable
reason. “To be perfectly accurate,”
he explained conscientiously, “he was caught
with a pair of of ” Delicately
he spelt out the word. “With a pair of c-o-r-s-e-t-s
rolled up in his hand. But inside the roll it
seemed there was a solid silver very elaborate
carving set which the Parish had recently presented.
The wretch was just unrolling it, them,
when he was caught.”
“That was Bertrand!” said
Flame. “My Father’s Lay Reader.”
It was the man’s turn now to jump to his feet.
“What?” he cried.
“I sent him for the carving knife,” said
Flame.
“What?” repeated
the man. Consternation versus Hilarity went racing
suddenly like a cat-and-dog combat across his eyes.
“Yes,” said Flame.
From the outside door the sound of furious knocking
occurred suddenly.
“That sounds to me like like parents’
knocking,” shivered Flame.
“It sounds to me like an escaped Lay Reader,”
said her Host.
With a single impulse they both started for the door.
“Don’t worry, Little Girl,”
whispered the young Stranger in the dark hall.
“I’ll try not to,” quivered Flame.
They were both right, it seemed.
It was Parents and the Lay Reader.
All three breathless, all three excited,
all three reproachful, they swept into
the warm, balsam-scented Rattle-Pane House with a gust
of frost, a threat of disaster.
“F lame,” sighed her Father.
“Flame!” scolded her Mother.
“Flame?” implored the Lay Reader.
“What a pretty name,”
beamed the Master of the House. “Pray be
seated, everybody,” he gestured graciously to
left and right, shoving one dog expeditiously
under the table with his foot, while he yanked another
out of a chair with his least gesticulating hand.
“This is certainly a very great pleasure, I
assure you,” he affirmed distinctly to Miss
Flamande Nourice. “Returning quite
unexpectedly to my new house this lonely Christmas
evening,” he explained very definitely to the
Rev. Flamande Nourice, “I can’t express
to you what it means to me to find this pleasant gathering
of neighbors waiting here to welcome me! And
when I think of the effort you must have made
to get here, Mr. Bertrand,” he beamed.
“A young man of all your obligations and complications ”
“Pleasant ... gathering of neighbors?”
questioned Mrs. Nourice with some emotion.
“Oh, I forgot,” deprecated
the Master of the House with real concern. “Your
Christmas season is not, of course, as inherently ‘pleasant’
as one might wish.... I was told at the railroad
station how you and Mr. Nourice had been called away
by the illness of a relative.”
“We were called away,”
confided Mrs. Nourice with increasing asperity, “called
away at considerable inconvenience by a
very sick relative to receive the present
of a Piebald pony.”
“Oh, goody!” quickened
Flame and collapsed again under the weight of her
Mother’s glance.
“And then came this terrible
telephone message,” shuddered her Mother.
“The implied dishonor of one of your Father’s
most trusted most trusted associates!”
“I was right in the midst of
such an interesting book,” deplored her Father.
“And Uncle Wally wouldn’t lend it.”
“So we borrowed Uncle Wally’s
new automobile and started right for home!”
explained her Mother. “It was at the Junction
that we made connections with the Constable and his
prisoner.”
“His victim,” intercepted the
Lay Reader coldly.
At this interception everybody turned
suddenly and looked at the Lay Reader. His mouth
was twisted very slightly to one side. It gave
him a rather unpleasant snarling expression.
If this expression had been vocal instead of muscular
it would have shocked his hearers.
“Your Father had to go on board
the train and identify him,” persisted Flame’s
Mother. “It was very distressing....
The Constable was most unwilling to release him.
Your Father had to use every kind of an argument.”
“Every ... kind,” mused
her Father. “He doesn’t even deny
being in the house,” continued her Mother, “being
in my closet, ... being caught with a a ”
“With a silver carving knife
and fork in his hand,” intercepted the Lay Reader
hastily.
“Yet all the time he persists,”
frowned Flame’s Mother, “that there is
some one in the world who can give a perfectly good
explanation if only, he won’t even
say ‘he or she’ but ‘it’, if
only ‘it’ would.”
Something in the stricken expression
of her daughter’s face brought a sudden flicker
of suspicion to the Mother’s eyes.
“You don’t know
anything about this, do you, Flame?” she demanded.
“Is it remotely possible that after your promise
to me, your sacred promise to me ?”
The whole structure of the home, of mutual
confidence, of all the Future itself, crackled
and toppled in her voice.
To the Lay Reader’s face, and
right through the Lay Reader’s face,
to the face of the Master of the House, Flame’s
glance went homing with an unaccountable impulse.
With one elbow leaning casually on
the mantle-piece, his narrowed eyes faintly inscrutable,
faintly smiling, it seemed suddenly to the young Master
of the House that he had been waiting all his discouraged
years for just that glance. His heart gave the
queerest jump.
Flame’s face turned suddenly very pink.
Like a person in a dream, she turned
back to her Mother. There was a smile on her
face, but even the smile was the smile of a dreaming
person.
“No Mother,”
she said, “I haven’t seen Bertrand ...
to-day.”
“Why, you’re looking right
at him now!” protested her exasperated Mother.
With a gentle murmur of dissent, Flame’s
Father stepped forward and laid his arm across the
young girl’s shoulder. “She she
may be looking at him,” he said. “But
I’m almost perfectly sure that she doesn’t
... see him.”
“Why, whatever in the world
do you mean?” demanded his wife. “Whatever
in the world does anybody mean? If there was only
another woman here! A mature ... sane woman!
A ” With a flare of accusation
she turned from Flame to the Master of the House.
“This Miss Flora that my daughter spoke of, where
is she? I insist on seeing her! Please summon
her instantly!”
Crossing genially to the table the
Master of the House reached down and dragged out the
Bull Dog by the brindled scuff of her neck. The
scratch on her nose was still bleeding slightly.
And one eye was closed.
“This is Miss Flora!” he said.
Indignantly Flame’s Mother glanced
at the dog, and then from her daughter’s face
to the face of the young man again.
“And you call that a lady?”
she demanded.
“N not technically,” admitted
the young man.
For an instant a perfectly tense silence
reigned. Then from under a shadowy basket the
Cat crept out, shining, sinuous, with extended paw,
and began to pat a sprig of holly cautiously along
the floor.
Yielding to the reaction Flame bent
down suddenly and hugging the Wolf Hound’s head
to her breast buried her face in the soft, sweet shagginess.
“Not sanitary, Mother?”
she protested. “Why, they’re as sanitary
as as violets!”
As though dreaming he were late to
church and had forgotten his vestments, Flame’s
Father reached out nervously and draped a great string
of ground-pine stole-like about his neck.
“We all,” broke in the
Master of the House quite irrelevantly, “seem
to have experienced a slight twinge of irritability the
past few minutes. Hunger, I’ve no doubt!...
So suppose we all sit down together to this sumptuous if
somewhat chilled repast? After the soup certainly,
even after very cold soup, all explanations I’m
sure will be cheerfully and satisfactorily
exchanged. Miss Flame I know has a
most amusing story to tell and ”
“Oh, yes!” rallied Flame.
“And it’s almost all about being blindfolded
and sending poor Mr. Lorello ”
“So if by any chance, Mr. Mr.
Bertrand,” interrupted the Master of the House
a bit abruptly, “you happen to have the carving
knife and fork still on your person ... I thought
I saw a white string hanging ”
“I have!” said the Lay Reader with his
first real grin.
With great formality the Master of
the House drew back a chair and bowed Flame’s
Mother to it.
Then suddenly the Red Setter lifted
his sensitive nose in the air, and the spotted Dalmatian
bristled faintly across the ridge of his back.
Through the whole room, it seemed, swept a curious
cottony sense of Something-About-to-Happen! Was
it that a sound hushed? Or that a hush decided
suddenly to be a sound?
With a little sharp catch of her breath
Flame dashed to the window, and swung the sash upward!
Where once had breathed the drab, dusty smell of frozen
grass and mud quickened suddenly a curious metallic
dampness like the smell of new pennies.
“Mr. ... Delcote!” she called.
In an instant his slender form silhouetted
darkly with hers in the open window against the eternal
mystery and majesty of a Christmas night.
“And then the snow came!”