Captain Langrishe arrived only just
in time for lunch on the Christmas Day. By the
time he had been shown his room and had deposited his
bag and returned to the drawing-room it was time for
the luncheon-bell.
The meeting between Nelly and himself
would have seemed to outsiders a cold one. To
be sure, it took place under the General’s eye.
One might have supposed that the General would have
absented himself from that lovers’ meeting,
but as a matter of fact he did not. Nelly’s
flush, the shy, burning look which Langrishe sent
her from his dark eyes, were enough for the two principals.
For the rest, all seemed to be of the most ordinary.
No one could have supposed that for the two persons
mainly concerned this was the most wonderful Christmas
Day there ever had been since the beginning.
During lunch Langrishe talked mainly
to the General. They had plenty to talk about.
The General found it necessary to apologise to Nelly
for “talking shop,” an apology which was
tendered in a whimsical spirit and received in the
same. Pat, waiting at table, quite forgot that
he was Sir Denis Drummond’s manservant, listening
to the stirring tale; and was once again Corporal
Murphy, back in “th’ ould rig’mint.”
In fact, he once almost forgot himself so far as to
put in an eager comment, but fortunately pulled himself
up in time. He mentioned afterwards to Bridget
that the Captain’s talk had nearly brought him
to the point of “joinin’” again.
“Only that I remembered that at last you’d
consinted to my spakin’ to Sir Denis I couldn’t
have held myself in, Bridget, my jewel,” he
said. “But the thought of gettin’
kilt before ever I’d made you Mrs. Murphy was
too much for me.”
There was considerable excitement
in the servants’ hall over Captain Langrishe’s
presence. Pat, of course, knew all about him since
he belonged to “th’ ould rig’mint”;
but it was through Bridget’s feminine perspicacity
that it broke on the amazed couple that it was for
him Miss Nelly had been breaking her heart all the
time.
“It ’ud do you good,”
said Pat, “to see the way she carries her little
sojer’s jacket, and the holly berries on her
pretty head like a crown.”
To be sure, the younger ones of the
servants’ hall were talking too, and they even
approached Pat, who outside the duties of his office
was not awesome, for the satisfaction of their curiosity.
“Just wait,” said Pat
oracularly, “an’ ye’ll see what ye’ll
see.”
The speech meant nothing to Pat’s
own mind except that they would be all wiser later
on. However, it went nearer the mark than he had
intended.
The afternoon of Christmas Day was
always the occasion for a Christmas Tree. Everyone
in the house was remembered in the distribution of
presents, even the dogs. The tree was set up in
the servants’ hall and the General had never
omitted to distribute the presents himself in all
the years they had been at Sherwood Square. He
had mentioned the tree to Langrishe at lunch, apologising
for asking his assistance at so homely an occasion.
His eye twinkled as he said it; and rather to Nelly’s
bewilderment the young man blushed like a girl.
Apparently he had heard of the Christmas Tree before,
for he made no comment.
After lunch the lovers were a little
while alone. Sir Denis had his secrecies about
the Tree, gifts which had to go on at the last moment
and to be placed there by himself. When he came
back to the drawing-room he was aware from the looks
of the young couple that everything had been satisfactorily
arranged between them. He looked as cheerful himself
as anyone could desire. While he put those last
touches to the Tree he had been thinking how good
it was that he was going to have his children to himself,
no troublesome Dowager with her claims and exactions
to come between them. For a long time to come,
anyhow, Langrishe must be off active service; and
they would all be together in the kind, spacious old
house. And presently there would be Nelly’s
children. Please God he would live to deck the
Tree for the delight of Nelly’s children!
It was the thought of the golden heads of the little
lads and lasses yet to be dancing about the Tree that
brought the dimness to his eyes, the look of happy
dreams to his face.
The Tree was far from being a perfunctory,
haphazard affair. Everything had been thought
out and planned beforehand. The servants sat in
a circle with eager, expectant faces. In front
of them was a circle of dogs. The dogs’
presents were not much of a novelty. A new collar
for one, a new basket for another, a medal for the
oldest of the dogs; the possible gifts were very soon
exhausted, but they made hilarity, and the dogs barked
as they received their gifts as though they understood
and enjoyed it all, as no doubt they did.
There was a delightful sensation for
the servants’ hall when the gold watch which
had been hanging near the top of the tree was handed
down, and its inscription proved to be: “To
Bridget Burke, on the occasion of her marriage to
Patrick Murphy, with the affection and esteem of the
master and Miss Nelly.” The servants’
hall broke into cheers. They had all known that
there was something between Bridget and Pat, but the
thing had hung fire so long that it might well have
hung fire for ever. Pat’s present was a
ten-pound note for the honeymoon. Mr. and Mrs.
Murphy were to have a fortnight together after their
marriage in some seaside place, before settling down
to their old duties. Sir Denis had made Pat the
offer of a cottage in the country, but this Pat had
refused, to his master’s great relief. “Sure,
what would you do without me?” he said.
“I was thinking the same myself,” responded
the General.
The General had it in his mind that
presently, when those children came, it might be necessary
to give up Sherwood Square and live in the country
for their sakes. A little place in Ireland now,
the General thought, where there was always plenty
of sport and good-fellowship. However, that might
wait. But the thought was a sweet one, to be turned
over in the old man’s mind.
Sometimes the present took odd shapes.
There was a young housemaid whose eyes were ringed
about with black circles, eyes pale with much weeping.
Her mother was ill among the Essex marshes, and the
only chance for her life, said the doctors, was to
get her away to a mild, bracing place for some months.
Bournemouth would do very well. Bournemouth?
Why, Heaven was much more accessible, it seemed, than
Bournemouth for the poor mother of many children.
“Emma Brooks,” said the
General. “I wonder what’s in this
envelope for Emma Brooks.”
Poor Emma came up, smiling a wavering
smile that was on the edge of tears. She took
the envelope, peered within it, and then cried out,
“Oh, God bless you, sir!” It contained
a letter of admission to a convalescent home at Bournemouth
for six months, and the money for the expenses of
getting there. “It’s my mother’s
life, sir,” cried Emma. “You shall
go home to-morrow, my girl, and take her there,”
said the General. “I’ll pay whatever
is necessary.”
At last the Tree was stripped of nearly
everything but its candles and its bright dingle-dangles.
There was a little basket at the foot of the Tree
addressed to the General, which had been moving about
in a peculiar way during the proceedings, and had
been a source of much fascinated interest to the dogs.
On its being opened a fat, waddling, brindle bull-dog
puppy sidled himself out of a warm bed, and made straight
for the General’s feet. A puppy was something
Sir Denis never could resist, and though there were
already several dogs at Sherwood Square, all desperately
jealous at the moment and being held in by the servants,
he discovered that he had wanted a brindled bull-dog
all his life.
“But what is that,” he
asked, “up there at the top of the Tree?
Why, I was near forgetting it. Come here, Pat,
you rascal, and hand it down to me. It’s
a pretty, shining thing for my Nelly, as bright as
her eyes. Hand it down to me, Pat. I want
to put it on her pretty neck.”
The gift was a beautiful flexible
snake of opals in gold, with diamonds for its eyes
and its forked tongue, such a jewel as the heart of
woman could not resist. The General himself clasped
the ornament on Nelly’s neck, where it lay emitting
soft fires of milky rose and emerald.
There was a little pause. The
Tree seemed to be finished. The women-folk began
to clear their throats for the Adeste Fidèles
with which the festivity concluded. Afterwards
there was to be a glass of champagne all round.
The pause, however, was a device of
the General’s to give more effect to what was
to follow. Captain Langrishe had been standing
apart, his shy and modest air commending him the more
to the women who thought him so handsome and the men
who knew him for heroic; for had not Pat sung his
praises? And to be sure, the women’s hearts
swelled at beholding a hero taking part in their own
particular festivity of the year, a hero that is to
say with his heroism brand-new upon him and from the
outside world, so to speak. They were so accustomed
to a hero for a master all the year round, that in
that particular connection they hardly thought upon
him.
“I believe, after all,”
said Sir Denis, as though he were talking to children it
was his way with women and children and dependents
and animals “I believe there’s
something for my girl which she’ll think more
of than anything else. It’s hidden just
down here at the foot of the Tree, and might very
easily be over-looked if one didn’t know beforehand
that it was there. Captain Langrishe, will you
give this little packet to my Nelly? It’s
your gift. She’ll like it from you.”
Langrishe came forward, looking radiantly
happy and handsome, and wearing withal that look of
becoming shyness. He extracted from somewhere
near the roots of the Tree a white paper-covered packet,
very tiny and tied with blue ribbon, which he undid
with quick, nervous fingers. When he had laid
the covering aside it revealed itself as a little
ring-case. Opening it, he took out a beautiful
old-fashioned ring, a large pearl surrounded by diamonds.
He held it for a second between his fingers; and turning
round he went to Nelly’s side and taking her
hand lifted it to his lips. Then he slipped the
ring on to her third finger.
“My dear friends,” said
the General in an agitated voice, “I am very
happy to announce to you the engagement of my daughter
to Captain Langrishe.”
At that the cheering broke out, led
by Pat. As the dogs joined in, and even the brindle
puppy added his shrill note, there was the happiest,
merriest uproar lasting over several minutes, during
which the General stood, looking proudly from the
shy and smiling lovers to those dependants whom he
had really made his friends.
And at last, when the pause came, the General spoke:
“And now, my friends,”
he said, “to show that God is not forgotten in
our happiness and in our grateful hearts, we will sing
the Adeste Fidèles.”