Christmas Eve. All day a blaze
of white and gold, softening now into cold glories
of rose and violet over the great snow-fields.
The road, white upon white, outlined with fringes
of trees, and here and there a stretch of stump fence,
was as empty as the fields, the solitary sleigh with
its solitary occupant seeming only to emphasize the
loneliness.
Calvin Parks looked down the long
stretch of road into which he had just turned, and
gave a long whistle.
“Hossy,” he said, “do
you know what this ro’d wants? It wants
society! I don’t know as it would be reasonable
to expect a house, or even a barn, but it does seem
as if they might scare up a cow; what?”
Hossy whinnied sympathetically.
“Just so!” said Calvin.
“That’s what I say. Christmas Eve
and all, it does really appear as if they might scare
up a cow. Not that she’d be likely to trade
to any great extent. What say? She’d
buy as much as that last woman did? That’s
so, hossy; you’re right there. But we ain’t
complainin’, you and me, I want you to understand.
We’ve done real well this trip, and before we
get our little oats to-night we’ll work off
every stick in the whole concern, you see if we don’t,
and have money to put in the bank, io, money
to put in the bank. Gitty up, you hossy!”
He flourished his whip round the brown horse’s
head and whistled a merry tune.
“Hello! What’s up now?”
Some one was standing at the turn
of the road ahead, waving to him; a child; a little
girl in cloak and hood, her red-mittened hands gesticulating
wildly.
“We’re a-comin’,
we’re a-comin’!” said Calvin Parks.
“Git there just the very minute we git there,
you see if we don’t. Why, Mittie May! you
don’t mean to tell me this is you?”
“Oh! yes, please!” cried
the child. “Oh! please will you come and
see Miss Fidely? oh! please will you?”
“There! there! little un; why,
you’re all out of breath. Been runnin’,
have ye?”
“Oh, yes!” panted Mittie
May. “I ran all the way, for fear I wouldn’t
get here before you went by. Will you come and
see Miss Fidely, Mr. Candy Man?”
“Well!” said Calvin, “that
depends, little gal. There’s three p’ints
I’d like to consider in this connection and
as touchin’ this matter, as old parson used
to say. First, is Miss Fidely good-lookin’
and agreeable to see? Second, does she
anyways want to see me? Third, how far off does
she live? It’s gettin’ on towards
sundown, and hossy and me have a good ways to go before
we get our oats.”
“It’s not far,”
said the child. “And she wants to see you
terrible bad. Her goods ain’t come that
she ordered, and the tree’s all up, and the
boys and girls all comin’ to-morrow, and no candy.
And I told her about you, and how you mostly came
along this road Wednesdays, and she said run and catch
you if I could, and I run!”
“I should say you did!”
said Calvin. “Now you hop right in here
with me, little gal! Hopsy upsy there
she comes! Let me tuck you in good so!
now you tell me which way to go, and hossy and me’ll
git there. That’s a fair division, ain’t
it?”
Still panting, the child pointed down
a narrow cross-road, on which at some distance stood
a solitary house.
“That the house?” asked Calvin. Mittie
May nodded.
“I hope Miss Fidely ain’t
large for her size,” said Calvin; “she
might fit rayther snug if she was.”
It was a tiny house, gray and weather-beaten;
but the windows were trim with white curtains and
gay with flowers; on the stone wall a row of milk-pans
flashed back the afternoon sun; the whole air of the
place was cheerful and friendly.
“I expect Miss Fidely’s
all right!” said Calvin with emphasis. “Smart
woman, to judge by the looks of her pans, and there’s
nothing better to go by as I know of. Them’s
as bright as Miss Hands’s, and more than that
I can’t say. Now you hop out, Mittie May,
and ask her will she step out and see the goods, or
shall I bring in any special line?”
The child stared. “She
can’t come out!” she said. “Miss
Fidely can’t walk.”
“Can’t walk!” repeated Calvin.
“No! and the path ain’t
shovelled wide enough for her to come out. Come
in and see her, please!”
His eyes very round, Calvin followed
the child up the narrow path and in at the low door.
Then he stopped short.
The door opened directly into a long,
low room, the whole width of the house. The whitewashed
walls were like snow, the bare floor was painted bright
yellow, with little islands of rag carpet here and
there. There were a few quaint old rush-bottomed
chairs, and in one corner what looked like a child’s
trundle-bed, gay with a splendid sunflower quilt.
These things Calvin saw afterwards; the first glance
showed him only the Tree and its owner. It was
a low, spreading tree, filling one end of the room
completely. Strings of pop-corn festooned the
branches, and flakes of cotton-wool snow were cunningly
disposed here and there. Bright apples peeped
from amid the green, and from every tip hung a splendid
star of tinsel or tin foil. No “boughten
stuff” these; all through the year Miss Fidely
patiently begged from her neighbors: from the
women the tinsel on their button-cards, from the men
the “silver” that wrapped their tobacco.
Carefully pressed under the big Bible, they waited
till Christmas, to become the glory of the Tree.
The presents might not have impressed a city child
much, for every one was made by Miss Fidely herself;
the aprons, the mittens, the cotton-flannel rabbits
and bottle-dolls for the tiny ones, the lace-trimmed
sachets and bows for the older girls. Mittie
May, all forgetful of marble palaces, stole one glance
of delighted awe, and then remembered her manners.
“Here’s the Candy Man, Miss Fidely!”
she said.
Miss Fidely turned quickly; she had
been tying an apple to one of the lower branches with
scarlet worsted.
“Pleased to meet you!”
she said. “Do take a seat, won’t you?
I can’t rise, myself, so you must excuse me!”
Miss Fidely sat in a thing like a
child’s go-cart on four wheels. Her little
withered feet clad in soft leather moccasins peeped
out from under her scant brown calico skirt.
They could never have supported the strong square
body and powerful head, Calvin thought; she must have
spent her life in that cart; and at the thought a mist
came over his brown eyes. But he took the hard
brown hand that was held out to him, and shook it
cordially.
“I am real pleased to make your
acquaintance!” he said. “Nice weather
we’re havin’; a mite cold, but ’tis
more seasonable that way, to my thinkin’.”
“I was so afraid Mittie May
wouldn’t catch you!” Miss Fidely went on.
“I s’pose she’s told you my misfortune,
sir. I order my candy from a firm in Tupham Centre;
and I had a letter this mornin’ statin’
that they had burned up and lost all their stock,
and couldn’t fill any orders. ’Twas
too late to order elsewhere, and I couldn’t make
enough for all hands thirty children I
expect to-morrow, and some of ’em comin’
from nine or ten miles away and what to
do I didn’t know; when all of a sudden Mittie
May thought of you. She lives on the next ro’d,
not fur from here, Mittie doos, and she helps me get
the tree ready; don’t you, Mittie May?
I don’t know what I should do without her, I’m
sure.”
She smiled at Mittie May, who glowed
with pride and pleasure. Calvin thought he had
seen only one smile brighter than Miss Fidely’s.
“It did seem real providential,”
she went on, “if only she could catch you, and
I’m more than pleased she did. Here’s
my bags all ready,” she pointed to a neat pile
that lay on a table beside her; “and if you’ve
got the goods to fill ’em, I guess we sha’n’t
need to do much bargainin’. I’ve
got the money ready too.”
“I guess that’s all right!”
said Calvin, rising. “I’ll bring my
stock right in, what’s left of it, and you can
take your pick. I’ve sold the heft of it,
but yet there’s a plenty still to fill them bags
twice’t over.”
“Mittie May, it’s time
for you to go,” said Miss Fidely. “Your
Ma’ll be lookin’ for you to help get supper.
Mebbe you can run over to-night to hang the bags,
or first thing in the morning.”
“I’ll hang the bags!” said Calvin
Parks.
“Oh!” said Miss Fidely.
“You’re real kind, but that’s too
much to ask, isn’t it?”
“I guess not!” said Calvin.
“I guess I’d rather trim a Christmas Tree
than eat my supper any day in the week. You run
along, Mittie May; I’ll tend to this.”
The rose and violet were deepening
over the snow-fields, and stars were piercing the
golden veil of sunset. Calvin filled the brown
horse’s nose-bag and hung it over his head,
and covered him carefully with the buffalo robe.
“You rest easy a spell, hossy!”
he said. “This is trade, you know.
Christmas Eve, you can’t expect to get to bed
real early.”
Hossy shook himself, whinnied “All
right!” and addressed himself to his supper.
Calvin pulled out one drawer after another, studying
their contents with frowning anxiety. “She’s
goin’ to have the best there is!” he said.
“There’s a look in that lady’s eyes
that puts me in mind of Miss Hands; and take that
with her bein’ afflicted and all I
guess we’ll give her a good set-off, hossy.
I guess that is what
we’ll do!”
While he spoke, he was piling box
upon box, jar upon jar, holding the pile firm with
his chin. Entering the house again, he deposited
them carefully on the table, and proceeded to spread
them out.
“There!” he said.
“I guess you’ll find what you want here.
All the candies, stick, drop and fancy; tutti-frutti
and pepsin chewing-gum, chocolate creams and marshmallow
goods. You didn’t say what amount you was
calc’latin’ to lay out ?”
Miss Fidely looked round her carefully.
“I didn’t care to say before the little
gal!” she said. “My neighbors is real
careful of me, and they grudge my spendin’ so
much money. I tell ’em it’s my circus
and fair and sociable and spring bunnet all in one.
There! I calc’late to spend five dollars,
and I’ve got it to spend. I’m a stranger
to you, sir, and mebbe you’d like to see it
before we go any further.”
“I guess not!” said Calvin
Parks. “I guess I know a straight stick
when I see one ” his eyes fell on
the twisted outlines covered by the brown calico skirt,
and he finished his sentence in silence. “Your
one comfort,” he said, “is that it ain’t
likely the Lord made another fool like you when he
see the way you’d act.”
“That’s a handsome sum
of money,” he added aloud. “You’ll
get a handsome set-out for it.”
“I’ve got no one belongin’
to me,” said the lame woman simply; “and
I’m far from church privileges. I never
touch my burial money, but I do feel that I have a
right to this. Well! you have got elegant goods,
I must say. Now we’ll get down to business,
if agreeable to you.”
It was most agreeable to Calvin Parks,
and he made it so to Miss Fidely. She must taste
every variety of sugar-plum, so that she could know
what she was giving.
“That’s trade!”
he said, when she remonstrated. “That’s
straight trade; no samples, no buyers! You try
this lemon taffy! I do regard it as extry.
These goods is all pure sugar, every mite; I know the
man as made ‘em, and helped some in the makin’.
Some of the pineapple sticks? That’s a
lovely candy to my mind. I helped make these only
yesterday morning. You try a morsel; here’s
a broken stick!”
“Why, I never had no such candy
as this before!” cried Miss Fidely, crunching
the white and scarlet stick. “Why, ’tis
as different from the goods I’ve bought before
as new-laid eggs is from store. I guess you’ll
have a steady customer from now on, as many Christmases
as I have to live.”
“That so?” said Calvin.
“Well, I aim to give satisfaction, and so does
the man who makes for me. All pure sugar; no glucose,
terry alby, nor none of them things, destroyin’
folks’s stomachs. Nothin’ else than
poison, some of the stuff you’ll find in the
market is; but good sugar and good flavorin’
is wholesome, I claim, taken moderate, you know, and
the system craves it, or so appears to do. Say
we commence to fill the bags now, what? And so
you toll in the neighborin’ children and give
’em a Christmas Tree! Now that’s
a pleasant thing to do; I don’t know as ever
I heard of a pleasanter.”
Miss Fidely glowed again, and again
she looked like Mary Sands. “I’ve
been doin’ it for ten years now,” she said,
“and shall, I expect, as long as the Lord thinks
I’m best off here. You see, not havin’
the use of my limbs, I can’t go much; and I
do love children, and they’ve got the habit
of runnin’ in here for a cooky or a story or
like that. This ain’t a wealthy neighborhood;
the soil’s rather poor; folks has moved away;
I scarcely know how it is, but yet ’tis so.
And, too, they haven’t had the habit of makin’
of Christmas same as they do in most places.
Some ten year ago I spent a winter in the city.
There was a man thought he could cure me of my lameness,
or made me think so; and though I was old enough to
know better, I give in, and went and let him try.
Well, I didn’t get any help that way, but I
got an amazin’ deal other ways. There was
a Tree to the hospital where I was, and they carried
me in to see it; and I said that minute of time, ’There
shan’t any child round our way go without a
Tree after this, as long as I live!’ I says.
I count it a great mercy that I’ve been able
to keep that promise. I begin Near Year’s
day to make my presents doin’ it evenin’s
and odd times, you know, and ’tis my child’s
play all the year through till Christmas comes again.
They ask me sometimes if I ain’t lonesome; any
one can’t be lonesome, I tell ’em, while
they’re makin’ Christmas presents.”
“You don’t live all sole alone?”
asked Calvin Parks.
“Certin I do! I’ve
no kin of my own, and them as wished to marry me warn’t
more than what I had time to say no to,” she
laughed gleefully; “and I wouldn’t be
bothered with no stranger messin’ round.
I’m used to myself, you see, but I don’t
know as any person else could get along with me real
well, come to stay right along. I expect I’m
as caniptious as an old hen. The neighbors is
real good; any one couldn’t ask for better help
than they be when I need help, but ’tis seldom
I do. I’m strong and well, and everything
is handy by, as you may say. Only when it comes
Christmas, I can’t fetch in the tree nor yet
mount up to trim the upper branches, and then I have
to call on some one. My! ain’t you smart?
you’ve got all them bags hung while I’ve
been talkin’. They do look pretty, don’t
they?”
“They look handsome!”
Calvin assented warmly, “they certainly do.
But if you’ll excuse me takin’ a liberty,
I think there’s just one extry touch this tree
needs, and with your permission I’m goin’
to put it on. Excuse me a half a minute!”
He ran out, and soon returned beaming
with pleasure and good will, his hands full of small
tissue paper parcels.
“I had these all wrapped up
separate,” he said, “’cause they’re
fraygile. How many children did you say there
was? Thirty? Well, if that ain’t a
nice fit! Here’s three dozen left; and not
one of them is goin’ any further to-night.”
He unwrapped the parcels, and displayed
to Miss Fidely’s wondering eyes dogs, lions,
camels, rabbits, all sparkling in barley sugar, all
glittering in the sunset light. The lame woman
clasped her hands, and her eyes shone.
“Oh!” she cried.
“I see the like of them in the hospital; I never
see them before or since. I can’t believe
it’s true. Oh! I do believe the Lord
sent you, sir!”
“I believe so too!” said Calvin Parks.
Suddenly Miss Fidely’s face changed.
“My goodness!” she cried.
“I never thought, and I know you never either.
I can’t take them, sir! I’ve spent
all my money, and more too, I expect, for I know well
you give me extry measure in some of them candies.
But I’m just as pleased at you takin’
the pains to bring ’em in, and the children
haven’t seen ’em, so there’s no harm.”
“Now what a way that is to talk!”
said Calvin, “for a lady as sensible as you
be. Didn’t I know you had laid out your
money, and a good sum, too? Did you think you
was the only person that liked to do a little something
for the children Christmas time? Now ain’t
that a sight! Them’s my present to Mittie
May and her friends, that’s all. Now see
me hang ’em on!”
He turned hastily to the tree, for
Miss Fidely was crying, and Calvin did not know what
the mischief got into women-folks to make ’em
act that way. Drawing a ball of pink string from
his pocket, he proceeded to hang his menagerie, talking
the while.
“I’ve had quite a time
to-day. Any one sees a good deal of human natur’
drivin’ a candy route, yes sir, I would say ma’am!
Hossy and me has come a good ways to-day, and seen
’most all kinds. Are you acquainted any
with a woman name of Weazle, down the ro’d about
four mile from here? Ain’t? Well,
she’s a case, I tell you. Long skinny kind
of woman, looks like she’d bleed sour milk skim if
she scratched her finger. She made up her mind
I was goin’ to cheat her, and she warn’t
goin’ to be cheated, not she. Quite a circus
we had.
“‘How much is them marshmallers?’
she says.
“‘Twenty cents a pound,’ I says.
“‘It’s too much!’ she says.
“‘Is that so?’ I says.
“‘It’s scandalous!’ she says.
“‘I want to know!’ I says.
“‘You won’t sell none at that price!’
she says.
“‘Is that a fact?’ I says.
“‘Well, what’ll you take for em?’
she says.
“‘Twenty cents a pound,’ I says.
“‘I tell you it’s too much!’
she says.
“‘I know it’s too
much for you,’ I says, ’and so is the marshmallows.
They might give you the dyspepsy!’ I says.
‘Gitty up, hossy!’ and I druv off and
left her standin’ there with her mouth open.
There! now they’re all up and I must be ramblin’
along, or I sha’n’t get nowheres by the
end of time.”
Miss Fidely had dried her eyes, but
the look she fixed on Calvin disturbed him almost
as much as the tears.
“I won’t say nothin’
more,” she said; “I see the kind you are;
but I wish you could come in to-morrow and see the
children. I expect their faces will be a sight,
when they see them elegant presents; yes, sir, I do!
I expect you’d never forget this Christmas, as
I’m certin I never shall. Oh!” she
cried with a sudden outburst. “You good
man, I hope you’ll get your heart’s desire,
whatever it is.”
“I hope I shall!” said Calvin Parks gravely.
“And now,” said Miss Fidely,
brightening up, “we’ll settle. If
you’ll just lift the lid of that old teapot
standin’ on the mantel-shelf, you’ll find
three one-dollar bills and a two. I wish ’twas
a hundred!” she cried heartily.
Calvin Parks stepped to the mantelpiece
and lifted the lid of the teapot.
“I guess you made a mistake
this time,” he said cheerily; “where’ll
I look next?”
Miss Fidely turned very pale.
“What what do you mean?” she
faltered.
Calvin handed her the teapot; it was empty.
“You forgot and put it somewheres
else!” he said. “Anybody’s liable
to do that when they have a thing on their mind.
I’ve done it myself time and again. How
about a bureau drawer; what? We’ll find
it; don’t you be scared!”
“No!” said Miss Fidely
faintly. “No, sir! it was there. I
counted it last night the last thing, and there ain’t
no one my Lord! that tramp!”
“What tramp?”
“He came here this morning and
asked for some breakfast. He seemed so poor and
mis’able, and he told such a pitiful story, I
went out to get him a drink of milk he
must have taken it. I remember, he was standin’
over there when I come in, but I never mistrusted ”
Her voice failed, and she covered
her eyes with her hands. Calvin Parks cast a
rapid glance behind him, and ascertaining the position
of the door, began to edge quietly toward it.
“Don’t you fret!”
he said soothingly. “I shall be round this
way again some time; mebbe you’ll find it some
place when you least expect. I’ve known
such things to happen, oftentimes.”
“No! no!” cried the cripple,
her distress increasing momentarily. “It’s
gone, sir! The look in that man’s face comes
back to me, and I know now what it meant. Oh!
he must have a hard heart, to rob a cripple woman of
her one pleasure, and on Christmas Eve!”
She flung her hands apart with a wild
gesture, but the next moment controlled herself and
spoke quietly but rapidly. “I am ashamed
to trouble you, sir, but if you’ll take down
the bags I’ll empt ’em as careful as I
can. I wouldn’t trouble you if I could help
myself.”
“I I’m afraid
I can’t stop!” muttered Calvin; and he
hung his head as he spoke, for a dry voice was saying
in his ear, “Put this straight to yourself;
are you running a candy route or an orphan asylum?”
“Oh! if Mittie May would only
come!” cried the lame woman. “I’ll
have to trouble you, sir; it won’t take
you long.”
Calvin mumbled something about calling again.
“No!” cried Miss Fidely.
“There’d be no use in your calling again;
that’s all I can save in a year, and there’s
no more ”
She stopped short, and the blood rushed
into her thin face.
“No!” she said after a
pause. “I can’t take the burial money,
even for the children. Oh! you kind, good man,
take down the bags, and take your candy back!”
“I’ve got to see to my
hoss!” cried Calvin irritably. “Hear
him hollerin’? Jest wait a half a minute ”
he sneaked out of the door, closed it carefully behind
him, and bolted for his sleigh. He snatched the
nose-bag from Hossy’s nose, the robe from his
back; clambering hastily in, he cast a guilty glance
around him, and saw Mittie May, standing
a few paces off, staring at him round-eyed.
“Here!” he cried.
“You tell her I ain’t feelin’ real
well, and I’ve got to get home. Tell her tell
her my name’s Santy Claus, and my address is
the North Pole. And look here! tell
her Merry Christmas and Happy New Year, and the same
to you! Gitty up, hossy! gitty up!” and
laying his whip over the astonished flanks of the
brown horse, Calvin Parks fled down the road as if
Bluecher and the Prussians were after him.