Heap on more wood! the
wind is chill; But let it whistle as it
will, We’ll keep our
Christmas merry still.
Scott.
It was Christmas Eve, and the night
being in a reminiscent mood, was chillier than usual.
Adam piled up the logs till the whole room was full
of the warm glow. “Let us hang up our stockings,”
he said, with an attempt at gayety.
Robin spread out her hands with a
gesture of comic distress. “If only I had
a pair to hang!” she said. “But they
gave boxes in England, didn’t they? I noticed
that the rain the other day seemed to have come through
the shed roof, and I fear the contents of those packing
cases may be the worse for it, especially if they
happen to be sugar. Do you think it would do
to make ourselves presents of them? If you do,
please give me the smaller box; I am sure it has hair-pins
and needles and darning-cotton in it.”
Adam laughed. “We will
give them to each other,” he said, “and
perhaps you’ll find some stockings in your box,
if there is no box in your stockings. We can
dream of their contents all night, and who
knows? we may have a merry Christmas, after
all.”
Robin hardly knew the place next morning.
Adam had risen early and decked every available spot
with kinnikinnick until the room fairly glistened.
“I wish I knew how to thank him,” she said.
“Do you like it?” he said,
as he came in. “I was afraid I should waken
you putting it up.”
“Like it!” she answered,
“Why, Adam, it is beautiful. You are just
an ideal Santa Claus.”
When they had finished their breakfast
they went out and looked at the boxes.
“You must open yours first,”
she said; “it’s so big I know it doesn’t
contain anything nice, so we would better save mine
till the last, and then I can divide with you.
What do you think it is? You shall have three
guesses.”
“It might be a piano from its size,” he
ventured.
“No,” she said decidedly. “It’s
not the right shape.”
“Or perhaps it’s a feather-bed; I don’t
know of anything I want less.”
“It’s too large for that; now guess, really.”
“As a matter of fact, I expect
it is mining machinery, which will be about as much
use as another chimney; but here goes to find out.”
He brought his hatchet down vigorously between the
boards at one end, where a slight crevice promised
some leeway.
“Oh, do be careful,” she
cried “even if there’s nothing in it but
stove-polish and excelsior, the nails and the boards
are absolute treasures!”
He proceeded more gently. There
was any amount of hoop-iron, which he removed carefully,
and the nails were drawn with as much caution as if
they had been teeth, as they well might be, considering
there were no more on earth to draw. When the
top of the box was finally off, and a quantity of
papers removed, they gave a simultaneous cry of delight.
The box was full of books. They took them out,
one at a time, with little exclamations of pleasure,
as an old friend came to light. Sitting down
on the ground they piled the books about them on the
papers, and opening favorites here and there read to
each other and themselves till long after noon.
It was really a fine library, well chosen, covering
a wide range of subjects and including an encyclopaedia
and an unusually fine edition of Shakespeare.
“Isn’t it the most beautiful
Christmas present you can imagine, Adam?” she
said. “If you are not suited with this it
must be because, in the old slang, you ‘want
the earth.’”
“But we haven’t even opened your box,”
he said.
“I don’t want to,”
she answered slowly. “Somehow I feel as
if we would better stop now and let well enough alone.
Let us enjoy this awhile. Perhaps the other box
may spoil this one, or at least the day.”
Adam laughed with good-natured tolerance.
“How absurd!” he said. “Let
us see what there is. You know you said yours
would be the nicest; besides, if it contains sawdust
and last year’s almanacs, I shall have to divide
with you, and we may quarrel over the Shakespeare.”
He opened the box while she stood watching him with
a strange unwillingness. It had been labeled,
“This Side Up,” and on the very top there
was a wooden case. He put it in Robin’s
arms, and she opened it with trembling fingers.
She replaced the broken strings, adjusted the bridge,
tucked the violin under her chin, tuned it, and straightway
escaped from every sorry care of earth.
Adam went on unpacking the box.
It contained chiefly materials for writing, all
the paraphernalia that the fastidious student requires.
There were many note-books, and at the bottom a large,
handsomely inlaid writing-desk. The name on the
cover made him start and call her. She put down
the violin reluctantly, and then stooped and kissed
the vibrating wood with sudden feeling.
“It is a Steiner,” she
said. “You know the story of Steiner’s
violins, do you not? No? Some day, perhaps,
I may tell you. Can you open the desk?”
He found the key and unlocked it. There were some
letters, a few papers and memoranda, and a journal. Adam turned to the
last page written, and read:
“Have just completed arrangements
for transportation of my effects to the mountains.
Close study of various phenomena convinces me
that I may have been in error, and that the cataclysm
is much closer at hand than I have thought. Within
a few months I shall burn this book, and confess
that I should be written down an ass, or turn
to it to prove myself a prophet. From the
eyrie I have chosen I expect to be able to write
the story of the coming deluge. It will be of
great value to posterity to have a calm, scientific
account, quite free from any tinge of superstition
or religion. I have to-day written my Boston
skeptics, forwarding copies of my calculations,
with references to former inundations, and reasons
for believing the Rocky Mountain region the safest
at this time. All geologists agree that
Here the journal terminated abruptly./p>
Robin hardly seemed to comprehend
its full significance; or possibly she was not surprised.
She touched the book as gently as if it were the napkin
over the face of the dead.
“It is not to the wise that
God has revealed himself,” she said softly.
“Where is the hand that wrote this? You
must finish it, Adam. Here are the blank pages
waiting for such a chapter as was never written on
earth.”
But Adam only looked at the half-written
page unseeingly. “It is all true, then,”
he muttered to himself; “it is all true.”
He walked away with a painful precision of motion,
almost as if he were drunk; he neither heard nor saw
anything, yet was conscious of everything, and while
he thought he had been hopeless before, he knew now
that he had never given up hope, never until that
moment ceased to expect a rescue.
Robin took her violin and went indoors.
Presently he heard its liquid notes stealing out to
him, like a power unknown and divine, brushing its
fingers across his heart, the harp of a thousand strings.
She played for a long time, and when she ceased, in
some strange way he felt that he was comforted.