<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>CHRISTMAS</div>
<p><span class="smcap">Ten</span> days before Christmas Mary opened the
bottom drawer of her bureau, in which she had
placed each gift as soon as it was finished, and sitting
down on the floor beside it, proceeded to take
an inventory of the packages within. They were
all wrapped, stamped and addressed, but she had
made them ready without a single Christmas thrill.
There was nothing in the climate or surroundings
to suggest the holiday season, and she compared this
year's preparations with the year before at Warwick
Hall, when the very air seemed charged with
a spirit of delightful expectancy; when everybody
had secrets and went around smiling and humming
snatches of carols which the choir-girls were practising
for the service in the chapel.</p>
<p>Mechanically she counted the bundles and
checked them off her list: the ones for Holland,
for Joyce, for Eugenia, the bunny doll with the
chamois skin head which she had made for little<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</SPAN></span>
Patricia. She was very well satisfied with them all,
as well as with the fancy trifles she had made for
Lloyd and Betty and the girls at school, with whom
she still kept up a correspondence. They were inexpensive,
but they were original and appropriate.</p>
<p>Allowing for the crowded condition of the mails,
she decided that the packages which had the longest
distance to go should be started that very day.
These she took from the drawer and piled on her
bed, and then got out her pen to begin the writing
of her Christmas letters.</p>
<p>Now one may make all sorts of dainty gifts, and
tie them with holly ribbon, and send them away in
Christmasy looking packages which will bring a
glow to the heart of the one who opens them, and
yet do it all without one spark of festal feeling herself.
But it is impossible to write a Christmas letter
and put the proper zest into its greetings, unless
one is a-tingle with it. When Mary discovered that
fact, she tore up the sheets on which she had made
various beginnings, and put the cork in her ink-bottle.</p>
<p>"I can't do it any more than I could keep
Thanksgiving on the Fourth of July or New Year's
on April Fool's day," she thought. "Luckily the
letters travel faster than second-class mail, so I'll<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</SPAN></span>
take my packages to the post-office now, and then
go out in the boat awhile, and think about snow and
sleigh-bells and holly berries till I work myself up
to the proper mood."</p>
<p>As she started out of the door her mother called
to her to remind her that they needed eggs. That
meant that Mary was to go around by the Metz
place to get them on her way home, which would
take so much longer that there wouldn't be much
time for meditation in the boat. But it was in
going for the eggs that she came across the very
inspiration of which she was in quest.</p>
<p>Mr. Metz and his wife were sitting on a bench
in the sunny garden near the kitchen door, when
Mary opened the gate. Looking up the path between
the stiff rows of coxcombs and prince's feather,
she could see that the old lady was knitting, as
usual. He sat with a newspaper across his knees,
and his spectacles folded in one hand. The other
grasped the end of his long white beard which
flowed almost to his lap.</p>
<p>They were both singing; singing with the
quavering voices of age, a song which they had
brought with them from their far away youth in
the beloved Fatherland. It was a song of Christmas
joy which they had carolled many a time<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</SPAN></span>
around a candle-lighted tree. Their voices were
thin and tremulous, and broke now and then on the
high notes, but it was a gay little tune, very sweet
and full of cheer; and Mary, who stopped to listen
just inside the gate, was thankful that they had not
heard the latch click. When it came to an end she
waited a moment, hoping there would be another
verse, but they began to talk, and she started on
up the path. But halfway to the house she paused
again, for they had begun another song.</p>
<p>"<i>Am Weinachtsbaum die Lichter brennen!</i>"</p>
<p>Their voices came to a sudden stop at the end
of that line, however, as they became aware of an
approaching visitor. Mary hurried forward saying,
"Oh, I understood one word of it. You were
singing about a Christmas tree, weren't you? The
children in the blue cottages across from us have
been talking about a 'Weinachtsbaum' all week.
Please don't stop. It sounded so sweet as I came
in at the gate."</p>
<p>At some other time the old couple might have
been hard to persuade, but the holiday season was
their high-tide of the year, and its return always
swept them along with a rush of happy memories,
to a state of enjoyment that was almost childish
in its outward manifestation. Finding that Mary<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</SPAN></span>
was really interested in hearing them talk of the
customs of their youth, they began a series of reminiscences
so interesting that she could have
listened all day.</p>
<p>Seventy Christmases they could remember distinctly,
besides the dim impressions of several
earlier ones. In the course of describing them it
came about quite naturally that they should sing
her the interrupted song.</p>
<p>The old man, because he spoke better English
than his wife, interpreted the verses first. But even
his speech was halting and broken, and he pulled
his white beard desperately, and used many despairing
gestures when he could not find the right word.
She, clicking her needles, kept up a constant nodding
while he explained.</p>
<p>"On the Christmas tree the lights are burning.
The children gaze at the what you call it—picture—scene—till
the eye laughs and the heart laughs
and the old look Himmelwartz, heavenwards that
means, with blessed rapture."</p>
<p>"Yah, yah!" nodded the old wife, prompting
him as he paused. "Zwei Engel"—</p>
<p>"Two angels appear," he repeated, going haltingly
on with the next verse. Mary could not
understand all that he tried to convey, but she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</SPAN></span>
caught the meaning of the last part, that the day
brings God's blessing to young and old alike, to
the white as well as the brown hair.</p>
<p>"It is the same all over the world," he said,
clearing his throat preparatory to singing the lines
he had just translated.</p>
<p>"We will be alone this year. We cannot go to
our children and they cannot come to us. But we
shall not feel alone. We will make ready one little
tree, and in our hearts we will join hands with all
the happy ones who greet the <i>Weinachtsbaum</i>. We
will be part of that circle which reaches around the
whole wide world."</p>
<p>The quavering old voices took up the tune, and
although Mary recognized only three words,
Christmas-tree, angels and heavenward, there was
something in the zest with which they sung it,
something in the expression of the wrinkled old
faces, which gave her the inspiration she was in
search of. It was as if she had brought to them
a little unlighted candle, and they had kindled it
at the flame of their own glowing ones.</p>
<p>When Mary went home she was more like her
accustomed self than she had been for days. She
went dancing into the house with the eggs, and
immediately set about the writing of her Christmas<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</SPAN></span>
letters in her usual resourceful way. Mrs. Ware
looked up, much amused, to see her piling some
fresh orange peel and bits of broken cedar on the
table beside her ink-bottle.</p>
<p>"There's nothing like that combination of smells
to make you think that Santa Claus is coming
straight down the chimney," exclaimed Mary
gravely, catching her mother's amused glance. "You
may think it is foolish, but really it makes all the
Christmases I have ever known stand right up in
a row in front of me, whenever I smell that
smell."</p>
<p>She rubbed a bit of the fresh peel and then a
piece of the cedar between her palms to bring out
the pungent fragrance, and afterwards, from time
to time, bent over it for another whiff to bring her
new inspiration.</p>
<p>By the twentieth of December the last letter and
the last out-of-town package but one was started
on its way. Gay's box of ferns, a mass of luxuriant,
feathery greenness, sat on a window-sill, waiting for
its time to go. The crate in which it was to be
shipped stood ready in the wood-shed, even to the
address on the express-tag. Then time began to
drag. The next two days, although the shortest
in the year, seemed many times longer than usual.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"It's like trying to keep things hot when somebody
is late and keeps dinner waiting," complained
Mary. "If you can't eat when it's all ready, some
of the things are sure to dry up and some to get
cold. I was worked up to quite a festive state of
mind day before yesterday, but my enthusiasm is
all drying up and cooling off now."</p>
<p>"Here's something to warm it over again,"
announced Norman, coming in from the express
office with a box on his shoulder. "Here's the
first gift to arrive. Let's open up right now, and
open each thing that comes after this <i>when</i> it comes
instead of waiting for one grand surprise on Christmas
morning. You never will try my way, and
it would spread the pleasure out and make it last
lots longer if you only would. You're bound to
get more enjoyment out of each thing if you give
your undivided attention to it."</p>
<p>For once Norman's suggestion, made yearly, was
not opposed, and as he pried the lid off the box
Mary flopped down on the floor beside it, Jack
wheeled his chair closer, and Mrs. Ware came in
from the next room in answer to their eager calls
that it was from Joyce.</p>
<p>Each one of the studio family had contributed
to the filling of the box. The holly-wreaths on top,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</SPAN></span>
tied with great bows of wide red ribbon, were from
Miss Henrietta Robbins.</p>
<p>"Don't you know," exclaimed Mary, as she
lifted them out and held them up for them all to
admire, "that Miss Henrietta has turned that
studio into a perfect bower of Christmas greens?
She gives it all the elegant costly touches that Joyce
never could afford, just as she's put the finishing
touch on these wreaths with this beautiful ribbon.
It's wide enough and satiny enough for a
sash."</p>
<p>"And isn't it just like little Mrs. Boyd to send
<i>this!</i>" she cried a moment later, when the opening
of a fancy pasteboard box revealed a doll about six
inches long, dressed like a ballet dancer. Its fluffy
scarlet skirts hid the leaves of a needle-book, concealed
among its folds, and from the ends of the
sash, by which it was intended to dangle, hung a
tiny emery bag in the shape of a strawberry, and
a little silk thimble-case.</p>
<p>"She got the idea for that from the Ladies' Home
Magazine, I am sure. She adores the pages that
tell how to evolve your entire spring outfit from
a shoe-string and a strip of left-over embroidery.
It's not that she's trying to economize. Joyce says
she has the piece-bag habit. The girls tease her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</SPAN></span>
about not being able to see a scrap of goods without
wishing to find some way to use it, but they
love the homey flavor her home-made things give
to the house. She is as old-fashioned and dear in
her ways as she is in her ideas of art."</p>
<p>"That is an unusually pretty doll," remarked
Mrs. Ware as Mary swung it around by its sash.</p>
<p>"Yes," she answered, "it's the kind Hazel Lee
and I were always wishing for. Ours were flaxen
haired, and this has raven curls. We would have
called her 'Lady Agatha' if we had had her then.
I believe I'll name her that now," she added with
a glance towards Jack to see if he understood the
allusion.</p>
<p>But Jack was not noticing. He was turning the
pages of a handsomely illustrated work on Geology,
a book he had long wanted to own. Joyce had had
little to spend this year compared with last, but
in her hurried shopping expeditions, she had considered
the tastes and needs of each one so well
that every gift was hailed with delight.</p>
<p>"Norman's way is a dandy one," acknowledged
Mary, as she opened a box of fine stationery engraved
with her monogram, the first she had ever
owned. "Now I can write my note to Gay on this.
If we had waited I should have had to use the common<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</SPAN></span>
paper that we buy at the drug-store by the
pound, because it is cheap. And it's so nice too,
to have these holly-wreaths beforehand."</p>
<p>She danced away to hang them in the windows,
and to swing the Lady Agatha from a corner of
the mirror over her bureau, where her hidden
needle-book could readily be reached. Then she
thriftily gathered up every bit of ribbon and tinsel
from the discarded wrappings, smoothed out the
tissue paper and picked loose from it all the adhering
seals that had not been broken in the process
of tearing open the packages.</p>
<p>"Here's seven whole seals with holly on them,"
she announced to her mother, "six with Santa
Claus heads and four with the greeting Merry
Christmas. I'm going to use them over again in
doing up the rest of my packages. That box that
the doll came in is exactly what I want to put the
candy in that I made for the Barnabys. And that
plain one that holds the stuffed dates that Lucy
Boyd sent will do for the candy I'm going to send
Mr. and Mrs. Metz. All I'll need to do is to cover
it with some of this holly paper and tie it with the
same gold cord. I'll find a use for nearly everything
I've saved before the week is over."</p>
<p>She said it in a tone of such deep satisfaction<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</SPAN></span>
that Norman looked up from the book and other
gifts in which he had seemed absorbed, to laugh
at her.</p>
<p>"Mary is like that old woman who wrote those
recipes for cheap pies in that old New England
cook-book we have at home," he said to his mother.
"She thinks 'a little Ingenuity added to almost any
material that comes to hand will make a tasty pie!'
You ought to send the Ladies' Home Magazine
some pointers, Mary, on '<i>How to make Christmas
gifts for others on the wrappings of those sent you</i>.'
Didn't some one say something about the <i>scrap-bag</i>
habit awhile ago?"</p>
<p>Mary's only answer was a saucy grimace. She
could afford to let him tease her about her squirrel
instinct for hoarding, when it gave her so much
satisfaction to add to her store of scraps. She had
all sorts of things to draw on in emergencies. In
the one month they had been in Bauer she had
nearly filled a shoe-box with odds and ends. She
had sheets of tin-foil, saved from packages of chocolate,
picture cards, little bottles and boxes and
various samples of toilet articles sent out by firms
who advertise their goods in that way.</p>
<p>For the next two days every mail brought greetings
and remembrances to some one of the family,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</SPAN></span>
sometimes to all, so that the hours slipped by at
a fairly rapid pace. One of the gifts which gave
Mary most pleasure was the chiffon scarf that
Lloyd sent. It was like the one Roberta wore
the first evening Mary had seen her, and which
she rapturously compared to "a moonbeam spangled
with dew-drops," only she thought hers far lovelier
than Roberta's. A dozen times a day she slipped
into her room to take the floating, filmy web from
its box, and spread it out to gloat over it. She
had to try the effects of different lights on it, sunshine
and moonlight and the rays of the lamp. She
spread it over different dresses, white, pink and
green, to see which produced the prettiest glimmers,
and Norman caught her once posing before a mirror
with it draped over head, and teased her all the
rest of the evening.</p>
<p>Betty's gift was a simple, inexpensive one, intended
merely as a greeting. It was only a green
bay-berry candle, but the card tied to it by a scarlet
bow bore the verse:</p>
<div class='poem'>
"This bay-berry candle's tongue of flame<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Bears message. Prithee hear it!</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;"><i>While it burns mid your Christmas greens</i></span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;"><i>I'm with you all in spirit!</i>"</span><br/></div>
<p>"I'm glad that it's a big fat candle," said
Mary, passing it around for each one to enjoy<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</SPAN></span>
the spicy, aromatic fragrance. "It'll burn a long
time."</p>
<p>She lighted it Christmas eve and put it in the
centre of the table with one of the holly-wreaths
laid around the base, and the tongue of flame did
seem to "bear message." It started Mary to talking
of her absent friend; of the bloodstone and
the Good Times book Betty had given her. Of
Betty's clear brown eyes and dearer ways, of Betty's
sweet consideration for others, of her talent for
writing which was sure to make her famous some
day. She talked of her all during supper, not noticing
that Jack was unusually silent, and that his
eyes rested oftener on the candle than it did on
his plate.</p>
<p>As they left the table Mr. Metz appeared at the
door like a veritable old Santa Claus, with his long
white beard and eyes a-twinkle. In one arm he
carried a big round hat-box full of nuts, in the
other two bottles of home-made wine. His own
pecan trees and vineyard had furnished his offering.
He thanked them so volubly in his broken
way for the little gifts that Norman had carried
over when he went for the milk, and delivered his
nuts and wine with such benign smiles and a flow
of good wishes from his wife and himself, that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</SPAN></span>
Mary gave a skip of pleasure when she closed the
door after him. She went back to the kitchen
singing:</p>
<p>"'Now jingle, jingle, come Kris Kringle!' Oh,
I feel as if the old fellow himself had really been
here. He and Betty's candle have given me a real
Night-before-Christmas-and-all-through-the-house
feeling. It's lovely!"</p>
<p>They had had supper so early that it was barely
dusk outdoors when she and Norman started to
take the box of ferns to the rectory. When they
had passed the cotton field, the bend in the road
soon brought them to the edge of the village, and
the beginning of the short thoroughfare which led
to the main street, past the cotton-gin and the Free
Camp-yard.</p>
<p>The Free Camp-yard was always an interesting
place to both of them, and they never passed it without
looking in. It was a large lot surrounded by
a high board fence. Low sheds were built along
one side within the enclosure, in which both men
and beasts might find shelter in time of storm.
Usually they slept in the open, however, with little
campfires here and there to boil their coffee and
give them light. Peddlers, hucksters and belated
country people were its usual patrons. But sometimes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</SPAN></span>
one saw a family of armadillo hunters on
their way to the curio dealers, with crates full of
the queer nine-banded shells which can be made into
baskets, simply by tying the head and tail together.</p>
<p>One evening Mary saw two country belles, putting
the finishing touches to their toilets behind a
wagon, by the aid of a pocket-mirror. They had
come in for one of the Saturday night balls, held
regularly in the town hall. The week before, part
of a disbanded freak show had taken refuge in the
camp-yard. Norman, peeping through a knot-hole,
the gate being shut, had seen the Armless Man
scratch a match and light a fire with his toes.</p>
<p>It was deserted to-night, except for a dilapidated
covered wagon which had driven in a few minutes
before. It was drawn by a big bony horse and a
dejected little burro, and piled high with household
goods. A gaunt, rough-looking man with a week's
stubble of red beard on his chin, was beginning to
unhitch. His wife, who was only a young thing,
and pretty in a worn, faded way, put down the
sleeping baby that she had been holding, and
stretched her arms wearily. She seemed too tired
and listless to move till one of the two children,
who were climbing down over the wheel, fell and
began to whimper. A pair of hounds that had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</SPAN></span>
trailed along behind dropped down under the wagon
as if they had followed a long way and were utterly
exhausted.</p>
<p>"Did you ever see anything so forlorn in all your
life!" exclaimed Norman as they passed on. "And
Christmas eve, too. I don't suppose those poor
little kids will have a thing."</p>
<p>"No, I suppose not," answered Mary. "It seems
a shame, too, when there'll probably be a tree in
every house in Bauer. Mrs. Metz says that is one
custom that they keep up here as faithfully as they
do in the old country. Even the poorest families
will manage to get one somehow."</p>
<p>"Those were cute kids," Norman went on, too
much interested in what he had just seen to put the
subject by. "That oldest little girl with the yellow
curls looked like a big doll, and the little one is
almost as pretty."</p>
<p>He spoke of them again on the way back, after
they had left the ferns at the rectory, and turned
homeward. The lights were beginning to twinkle
all down the long street. In every house they
passed, where the shades had not been drawn, they
could see a tree, standing all ready for the lighting,
from gift-laden base to top-most taper. As they
drew near the camp-yard again they saw the red-whiskered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</SPAN></span>
man going into the corner grocery with
a tin pail on his arm. At the camp-yard gate they
looked in. A small fire had been started, over which
a battered coffee-pot had been set to boil. The
burro and the bony horse were munching fodder
near the wagon, but the woman and the children
had disappeared.</p>
<p>"There they are," whispered Mary, pointing
down the road a little way to a group standing in
front of the pretty green and white cottage next to
the cotton gin. The lace curtains had been dropped
over the windows, but they did not hide the gay
scene within. The family was having its celebration
early, because the two small lads for whom it
was designed were so young that their bedtime came
early. They were handsome little fellows, one in
kilts and the other just promoted to trousers. The
gifts hanging from the lighted boughs were many
and costly. The two little ones outside looking in,
had never seen anything so fine and beautiful before,
and stood gazing in round-eyed wonder. Attracted
by the music they had strayed down from the camp-yard,
and their mother had followed with the sleeping
baby thrown across her shoulder, to bring them
back. Now she, too, stood and stared.</p>
<p>The phonograph was still playing when Mary<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</SPAN></span>
and Norman reached the gate, so they paused to
listen, also, more interested in the watchers outside
however, than the revellers within.</p>
<p>Presently Mary turned to the woman, saying,
"It's pretty, <i>isn't</i> it?" in such a friendly way that
her remark called out an equally friendly response,
and in a few moments she had learned what she
wanted most to know about the strangers. They
were moving on to the next county, having already
been two days and a night on the road. Her man
thought he could find work in the cedar brakes.</p>
<p>They stood talking until the phonograph stopped,
then a glance over her shoulder told the woman that
her husband was returning to the wagon, and she
turned to go. The children were loath to leave,
however.</p>
<p>"It's their first sight of Sandy Claws," she remarked
as if to explain their unwillingness. Then
as one of them stumbled and caught at her skirts
she added impatiently, "I reckon it's likely to be
your last. He don't care anything for the likes of
<i>us</i>."</p>
<p>It was said so bitterly, that as Norman trudged
on in the opposite direction with his sister, he exclaimed
in a regretful tone, "It's too bad that we
didn't find out about them sooner, in time to fix<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</SPAN></span>
something for them. It sort of spoils my own
Christmas to think of those kids going without."</p>
<p>"They are not going without," replied Mary
promptly, who had been thinking rapidly as she
walked. "We've got to get something ready for
them before they shut their eyes to-night."</p>
<p>"Huh, I'd like to know how you'll do it this
late," Norman answered.</p>
<p>She laughed in reply, saying teasingly, "Who
was it said that 'A little Ingenuity added to almost
any material that comes to hand will make a tasty
pie?' Well, it will make a tasty tree too. If you'll
help I'll have one ready in an hour."</p>
<p>His skeptical "I don't believe it! Why, you
<i>can't!</i>" was all she needed to start her to working
out her resolution with the force of a young whirlwind.
She could plan with lightning-like rapidity
when any need arose.</p>
<p>"I said if you'd all help," she reminded him.</p>
<p>As soon as he had expressed a hearty willingness
to do anything he could to carry "Sandy Claws"
to the camp-yard, she began.</p>
<p>"The minute we get home, you hack off one of
the bottom branches of that cedar tree outside the
gate; a good bushy one about three feet high. Put
it into the box that Joyce's presents came in, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</SPAN></span>
nail it in place with cleats made from the lid. Better
weight it with some stones in the bottom, and
we can tack green crêpe paper all over the base.
We've nothing but ordinary white candles, but we
can cut them in two, and wire them on with hairpins,
and cover the pins with tinfoil out of my
scrap-box that you make so much fun of. That
will be <i>your</i> part.</p>
<p>"There's some corn already popped, waiting till
I get back, to be made into balls. I'll get mamma
to string it instead, and Jack to make a lot of little
gilt cornucopias out of some stuff I've saved. I'm
sure he'll donate the candy cane Joyce sent as a
joke, although he is so fond of old-fashioned striped
peppermint sticks. We'll break it up into short
pieces and hang that on. And we can tie up a few
dates and nuts into tiny packages. There are fancy
papers and ribbons galore in that aforesaid scrap-box.
I'll think of more after we get started. Come
on, let's race the rest of the way. The one who gets
there first can tell the others."</p>
<p>Norman reached the front door several yards
ahead of Mary, but he did not claim his privilege.
He merely rushed into the kitchen for a hatchet,
calling as he dashed out again, "Sixty minutes to
make a Christmas tree in! Everybody get to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</SPAN></span>
work." Mary did not stop to take off her hat.
Throwing off her coat, she began talking "on the
bounce" as Jack said, for she hurried from one
room to the other, explaining at the top of her voice,
while she gathered up pop-corn, scrap-box, paste-tube
and scissors. Her enthusiasm was so contagious,
her description of the camp-yard pilgrims so
appealing, that by the time she had finished her
breathless account of them Jack had begun cutting
squares of gilt paper and Mrs. Ware was
stringing corn as if they were working to win a
wager.</p>
<p>The race against time was the most exciting
experience they had had in Bauer. They watched
the clock with many laughing exclamations, but
were working too fast to talk much. In twenty
minutes Norman brought in a shapely little tree
firmly fastened on a green base. In thirty minutes
more the candles were wired in place; a few skilful
twists had turned part of the tinfoil into silvery
ornaments to hang beneath, while the rest had gone
to the making of a great star to blaze on the top-most
bough. White strings of pop-corn were festooned
around it like garlands of snow. Every
branch was bright with gilt and silver and blue
and red packages, holding only a nut or a sweetmeat<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</SPAN></span>
it is true, but adding much to the gay attire
of the tree.</p>
<p>A little pocket-mirror flashed from one bough, a
fancy sample bottle of perfume hung from another.
A miniature cake of scented soap and many fluttering
picture cards bore witness to the resources of
the scrap-box. Then exclaiming over a sudden
happy thought Mary darted into the bedroom and
took down Lady Agatha. Three snips of the scissors
robbed her of the needle book hidden under
her fluffy scarlet skirts and of the emery bag and
thimble case tied to her sash ends, and left her no
longer useful; only so ornamental that any little
girl would have been glad to take her to her arms
and affection.</p>
<p>"I know Mrs. Boyd wouldn't mind my passing
it on to those children," Mary said as she tied it
to one of the highest branches, "if she knew that
it makes me happy as well as them."</p>
<p>"But," asked Norman, "what if Goldilocks and
her sister both want to play with it at the same
time? What will the left-out one do?"</p>
<p>Mary thought an instant and then flew to the
tray of her trunk to snatch out a woolly toy lamb,
that had fallen to her lot from the mock Christmas
tree at Warwick Hall.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I brought it down to Texas with me because
Dorene said that 'everywhere that Mary went the
lamb was sure to go.' I expected to keep it always
as a reminder of that lovely evening, but—" with
a half stifled sigh, "it will do them more good than
me."</p>
<p>When that was in place she gave one last glance
around the room to see what else she could appropriate.
Her eyes fell on the holly wreaths.</p>
<p>"Those red bows will make lovely hair-ribbons,"
she cried. "We can spare two of them. Hurry,
mamma, and help me untie them! The needle-book
may as well go <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'to'">too</ins>. Pin it on, Norman, and stick
a date in the thimble bag and swing it up, Jack."</p>
<p>In the meantime Norman had been lighting the
candles in order that they might see how it looked
when it was all ashine, and it stood now, a very
creditable and a very bright little tree. There were
none of the spun-glass birds and crystal icicles and
artificial fruits that had made little Patricia's tree
such a gorgeous affair the year before, and were
probably making it beautiful to-night, but there was
sparkle and color and glow and charm of beribboned
packages, enough to make little eyes who saw
such a sight for the first time believe that it was
the work of magic hands.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Done!" cried Mary triumphantly, "and in
only fifty-eight minutes!"</p>
<p>"Well, I didn't believe it would be possible," acknowledged
Norman. "I'll bet it's the only tree
in Texas trimmed in such short order."</p>
<p>When he and Mary reached the camp-yard again,
they found the family sitting around the smouldering
fire, listening to the phonograph which was still
playing in the cottage down the road. The quilts
were spread out in the wagon, ready for the night,
but the children, who had slept most of the afternoon
on their tiresome journey, could not be induced to
climb in while the music lasted.</p>
<p>The two bearers of Yule-tide cheer set the tree
down and reconnoitered through cracks in the
fence. "The man looks awfully down in the
mouth," whispered Norman. "So does she. Shall
we tell them 'Sandy Claws' sent it?"</p>
<p>"No," Mary whispered back. "They look so
forlorn and friendless, and the woman seemed to
feel so left out of everything, that it might do them
good to tell them we brought it because the angels
sang peace on earth, good-will to men, and that
it's a sort of sign that they're <i>not</i> left out. They're
to have a part in it too."</p>
<p>Norman turned his eye from the knot-hole to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</SPAN></span>
gape at her. "Well!" was his whispered ejaculation.
"If you want all <i>that</i> said you'll have to say
it yourself. I'm no preacher."</p>
<p>"Come on then," said Mary boldly. She knew
what she wanted to convey to them but the words
stuck in her throat, and she never could remember
afterwards exactly what she blurted out as they
put the tree down in front of the astonished family
and then turned and ran. However, her words
must have carried some of the good cheer she intended,
for when she and Norman paused again
outside, she at the knot-hole this time and he at the
crack, it gave them each a queer little flutter inside
to see the expression on the pleased faces and hear
their exclamations of wonder.</p>
<p>"They couldn't be more surprised if it had
dropped right down out of the sky," whispered Norman.
"Now the kids are getting over their daze
a bit. They're hopping around just like they saw
the Kramer boys do."</p>
<p>"See, they've found Lady Agatha," answered
Mary. "Just <i>look</i> at Goldilocks now! Did you
ever see such an ecstatic little face. I wouldn't
have missed it for anything. Now they've got the
lamb. I'm so glad I thought of it, for the Kramers<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</SPAN></span>
had a whole bunch of little white sheep around the
base of their tree."</p>
<p>They were both very quiet when they finally
turned away from the fence and started home.
They did not speak till they reached the white moonlighted
road, stretching past the cotton field. Then
Mary looked up at the stars saying reverently,
"Somehow I feel as if we'd been taking part in
the <i>first</i> Christmas. It was a sort of camp-yard that
the Star of Bethlehem led to. Don't you remember,
'there was no room in the inn' for the Child and
His mother? It was a manger the gold and frankincense
and myrrh were carried to. I feel as if we'd
been following along—a little way at least—on
the trail of the Wise Men."</p>
<p>"Me too," confessed Norman. Then nothing
more was said for a long time. Mary could find
no words for the next thoughts which puzzled her.
She was picturing all the Christmas trees of the
world brought together in one place, and trying to
imagine the enormous forest they would make.
Then she fell to wondering what it was about them
that should make "the eye laugh and the heart
laugh, and bring a blessing to the silver hair as
well as brown" as the old couple had sung in the
garden. All over the world it was so.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Since looking into the windows at other peoples'
trees, and then causing one to bloom and bear fruit
herself for the homeless campers, she felt that she
had joined hands with that circle which reaches
around the world. She was no longer an alien and
stranger among the people of Bauer. The
"Weinachtsbaum" had given her a happy bond of
understanding and kinship. It had taken the hard,
hopeless look out of the older faces around the
camp-fire, for awhile at least, and made the little
ones radiant. And at home—she remembered
gratefully how Jack had burst out whistling several
times while he helped to trim it. And the tune that
came in such lusty, rollicking outbursts was one
which he never whistled except when he was in high
good humor with himself and all the universe. She
was sure that he wasn't acting then—he couldn't
have been just pretending that he was glad, for it
sounded as it always used to do back at the Wigwam.
She wondered why the tree had had that
effect.</p>
<p>And then, like an answer, a verse popped into
her thoughts; one that she had spelled out long
ago for Grandmother Ware, letter by letter, one
little finger pointing to each in turn. It was a verse
from Revelation, about the tree that stands on either<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</SPAN></span>
side of the river, clear as crystal, "<i>which bare
twelve manner of fruit, and the leaves were for the
healing of the nations</i>."</p>
<p>Then all of a sudden she understood why those
shining boughs with their strange fruitage of gifts
have power to bring hope and good cheer to lonely
hearts the world over. They are the symbols, which
the Spirit of Christmas sets ashine, of that Tree
of Life. And the Spirit of Christmas is only another
name for Love, and it is Love alone, the
human and divine together, which can bring about
the healing needed by hearts in every nation.</p>
<p>All this did not come to Mary in words. She
could not have expressed it to any one else, but it
sent her on her way, deeply, quietly glad.</p>
<p>Next morning while she was stooping before the
oven, basting the turkey which the Barnabys had
sent with their greetings, Jack called her to the
front window where he was sitting.</p>
<p>A covered wagon was creaking slowly by, drawn
by a big horse and a little burro. The cover was
looped up, and in the back end, carefully tied to the
tail-gate, stood the tree which had taken them fifty-eight
minutes to prepare, but whose memory would
not be effaced in that many years from the minds
of the two children, seated on the quilts beside it.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I'm so glad you got to see them," said Mary.
"Aren't they dear? And oh, look! Goldilocks is
still holding Lady Agatha, and the other one's hugging
the woolly lamb!"</p>
<p>When the wagon was entirely out of sight Mary
started back to her turkey basting, but stopped a
moment to take another look at the gifts spread
out on the side table. Several things had been
added to them that morning; a dissected puzzle
picture which Norman had made for her, a spool
case that Jack had whittled out, and a strip of exquisitely
embroidered rosebuds that Mrs. Ware had
wrought to be put into a white dress. There was
also a pot of white hyacinths from the rectory, and
Mary held her face down against the cool snow of
their blossoms, taking in their sweetness in long
breaths.</p>
<p>"It's been a pretty full Christmas, hasn't it!"
exclaimed Jack as he watched her.</p>
<p>"It's really been one of the nicest I ever had,"
she answered, "for one reason because it's lasted
so long. Norman's plan is a success."</p>
<p>That night after supper Norman insisted on
taking his mother down into the village to look at
the lighted windows. After they had gone Mary
took out her Good Times book to record the happenings<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</SPAN></span>
of the day. She had a few more notes of
acknowledgment to write also, and was glad that
Jack was busy with his own writing. She noticed
that he was using India ink and a crow-quill pen,
but thought nothing of that as he was always experimenting
with them.</p>
<p>Joyce was not the only one of the children who
had inherited artistic ability. Jack never attempted
pictures, but he did beautiful lettering; odd initials
and old English script, and had copied verses for
calendars and fly-leaf inscriptions. Joyce said
some of his pen-and-ink work was as beautifully
done as the letters she had seen in old missals, made
by the monks.</p>
<p>Nearly an hour went by. Mary addressed her
last envelope. He laid down his pen and pushed
a narrow strip of cardboard towards her.</p>
<p>"I've made you one more present to end the
day with, Mary," he said jokingly. "It's a bookmark."</p>
<p>Inside a narrow border of conventional scrollwork
was one line, and the line was from the verse
which she had quoted so disastrously that day at
the creek-bank:</p>
<p>"Close all the roads of all the world, <i>Love's</i> road
is open still!"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>As she looked up to speak he interrupted her
hurriedly:</p>
<p>"Yes, I know how miserable I made you that
day with my outburst against fate, and I've felt
that you've never believed me since when I laughed
and joked and said that I enjoyed things. But
that was only one time that I gave way, just once
that I got down in the dumps and I don't want you
to think that is my usual state of feelings. Really
I'm getting more out of life than you imagine. I'm
putting up the best fight I can. I just wanted you
to know that although every other road in the world
is closed against me I can still scrape along pretty
comfortably because that last line is true. Love's
road is open still. You all have made it a good
wide one for me, and made it worth while for me
to travel it with you cheerfully to the end. I'm
perfectly willing to, <i>now</i>."</p>
<p>"Oh, Jack!" cried Mary in a voice that trembled
with both joy and tears. "I've had a happy Christmas,
but knowing you feel that way is the very best
part of all!"</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</SPAN></span></p>
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