<h2><SPAN name="page97"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>BERTIE’S CHRISTMAS EVE</h2>
<p>It was Christmas Eve, and the family circle of Luke Steffink,
Esq., was aglow with the amiability and random mirth which the
occasion demanded. A long and lavish dinner had been
partaken of, waits had been round and sung carols; the
house-party had regaled itself with more caroling on its own
account, and there had been romping which, even in a pulpit
reference, could not have been condemned as ragging. In the
midst of the general glow, however, there was one black unkindled
cinder.</p>
<p>Bertie Steffink, nephew of the aforementioned Luke, had early
in life adopted the profession of ne’er-do-weel; his father
had been something of the kind before him. At the age of
eighteen Bertie had commenced that round of visits to our
Colonial possessions, so seemly and desirable in the case of a
Prince of the Blood, so suggestive of insincerity in a young man
of the middle-class. He had gone to grow tea in Ceylon and
fruit in British Columbia, and to help sheep to grow wool in
Australia. At the age of twenty he had just returned from
some similar errand in Canada, from which it may be gathered that
the trial he gave to these various experiments was of the summary
drum-head nature. Luke Steffink, who fulfilled the troubled
role of guardian and deputy-parent to Bertie, deplored the
persistent manifestation of the homing instinct on his
nephew’s part, and his solemn thanks earlier in the day for
the blessing of reporting a united family had no reference to
Bertie’s return.</p>
<p>Arrangements had been promptly made for packing the youth off
to a distant corner of Rhodesia, whence return would be a
difficult matter; the journey to this uninviting destination was
imminent, in fact a more careful and willing traveller would have
already begun to think about his packing. Hence Bertie was
in no mood to share in the festive spirit which displayed itself
around him, and resentment smouldered within him at the eager,
self-absorbed discussion of social plans for the coming months
which he heard on all sides. Beyond depressing his uncle
and the family circle generally by singing “Say au revoir,
and not good-bye,” he had taken no part in the
evening’s conviviality.</p>
<p>Eleven o’clock had struck some half-hour ago, and the
elder Steffinks began to throw out suggestions leading up to that
process which they called retiring for the night.</p>
<p>“Come, Teddie, it’s time you were in your little
bed, you know,” said Luke Steffink to his thirteen-year-old
son.</p>
<p>“That’s where we all ought to be,” said Mrs.
Steffink.</p>
<p>“There wouldn’t be room,” said Bertie.</p>
<p>The remark was considered to border on the scandalous;
everybody ate raisins and almonds with the nervous industry of
sheep feeding during threatening weather.</p>
<p>“In Russia,” said Horace Bordenby, who was staying
in the house as a Christmas guest, “I’ve read that
the peasants believe that if you go into a cow-house or stable at
midnight on Christmas Eve you will hear the animals talk.
They’re supposed to have the gift of speech at that one
moment of the year.”</p>
<p>“Oh, <i>do</i> let’s <i>all</i> go down to the
cow-house and listen to what they’ve got to say!”
exclaimed Beryl, to whom anything was thrilling and amusing if
you did it in a troop.</p>
<p>Mrs. Steffink made a laughing protest, but gave a virtual
consent by saying, “We must all wrap up well,
then.” The idea seemed a scatterbrained one to her,
and almost heathenish, but if afforded an opportunity for
“throwing the young people together,” and as such she
welcomed it. Mr. Horace Bordenby was a young man with quite
substantial prospects, and he had danced with Beryl at a local
subscription ball a sufficient number of times to warrant the
authorised inquiry on the part of the neighbours whether
“there was anything in it.” Though Mrs.
Steffink would not have put it in so many words, she shared the
idea of the Russian peasantry that on this night the beast might
speak.</p>
<p>The cow-house stood at the junction of the garden with a small
paddock, an isolated survival, in a suburban neighbourhood; of
what had once been a small farm. Luke Steffink was
complacently proud of his cow-house and his two cows; he felt
that they gave him a stamp of solidity which no number of
Wyandottes or Orpingtons could impart. They even seemed to
link him in a sort of inconsequent way with those patriarchs who
derived importance from their floating capital of flocks and
herbs, he-asses and she-asses. It had been an anxious and
momentous occasion when he had had to decide definitely between
“the Byre” and “the Ranch” for the naming
of his villa residence. A December midnight was hardly the
moment he would have chosen for showing his farm-building to
visitors, but since it was a fine night, and the young people
were anxious for an excuse for a mild frolic, Luke consented to
chaperon the expedition. The servants had long since gone
to bed, so the house was left in charge of Bertie, who scornfully
declined to stir out on the pretext of listening to bovine
conversation.</p>
<p>“We must go quietly,” said Luke, as he headed the
procession of giggling young folk, brought up in the rear by the
shawled and hooded figure of Mrs. Steffink; “I’ve
always laid stress on keeping this a quiet and orderly
neighbourhood.”</p>
<p>It was a few minutes to midnight when the party reached the
cow-house and made its way in by the light of Luke’s stable
lantern. For a moment every one stood in silence, almost
with a feeling of being in church.</p>
<p>“Daisy—the one lying down—is by a shorthorn
bull out of a Guernsey cow,” announced Luke in a hushed
voice, which was in keeping with the foregoing impression.</p>
<p>“Is she?” said Bordenby, rather as if he had
expected her to be by Rembrandt.</p>
<p>“Myrtle is—”</p>
<p>Myrtle’s family history was cut short by a little scream
from the women of the party.</p>
<p>The cow-house door had closed noiselessly behind them and the
key had turned gratingly in the lock; then they heard
Bertie’s voice pleasantly wishing them good-night and his
footsteps retreating along the garden path.</p>
<p>Luke Steffink strode to the window; it was a small square
opening of the old-fashioned sort, with iron bars let into the
stonework.</p>
<p>“Unlock the door this instant,” he shouted, with
as much air of menacing authority as a hen might assume when
screaming through the bars of a coop at a marauding hawk.
In reply to his summons the hall-door closed with a defiant
bang.</p>
<p>A neighbouring clock struck the hour of midnight. If the
cows had received the gift of human speech at that moment they
would not have been able to make themselves heard. Seven or
eight other voices were engaged in describing Bertie’s
present conduct and his general character at a high pressure of
excitement and indignation.</p>
<p>In the course of half an hour or so everything that it was
permissible to say about Bertie had been said some dozens of
times, and other topics began to come to the front—the
extreme mustiness of the cow-house, the possibility of it
catching fire, and the probability of it being a Rowton House for
the vagrant rats of the neighbourhood. And still no sign of
deliverance came to the unwilling vigil-keepers.</p>
<p>Towards one o’clock the sound of rather boisterous and
undisciplined carol-singing approached rapidly, and came to a
sudden anchorage, apparently just outside the garden-gate.
A motor-load of youthful “bloods,” in a high state of
conviviality, had made a temporary halt for repairs; the
stoppage, however, did not extend to the vocal efforts of the
party, and the watchers in the cow-shed were treated to a highly
unauthorised rendering of “Good King Wenceslas,” in
which the adjective “good” appeared to be very
carelessly applied.</p>
<p>The noise had the effect of bringing Bertie out into the
garden, but he utterly ignored the pale, angry faces peering out
at the cow-house window, and concentrated his attention on the
revellers outside the gate.</p>
<p>“Wassail, you chaps!” he shouted.</p>
<p>“Wassail, old sport!” they shouted back;
“we’d jolly well drink y’r health, only
we’ve nothing to drink it in.”</p>
<p>“Come and wassail inside,” said Bertie hospitably;
“I’m all alone, and there’s heap’s of
‘wet’.”</p>
<p>They were total strangers, but his touch of kindness made them
instantly his kin. In another moment the unauthorised
version of King Wenceslas, which, like many other scandals, grew
worse on repetition, went echoing up the garden path; two of the
revellers gave an impromptu performance on the way by executing
the staircase waltz up the terraces of what Luke Steffink,
hitherto with some justification, called his rock-garden.
The rock part of it was still there when the waltz had been
accorded its third encore. Luke, more than ever like a
cooped hen behind the cow-house bars, was in a position to
realise the feelings of concert-goers unable to countermand the
call for an encore which they neither desire or deserve.</p>
<p>The hall door closed with a bang on Bertie’s guests, and
the sounds of merriment became faint and muffled to the weary
watchers at the other end of the garden. Presently two
ominous pops, in quick succession, made themselves distinctly
heard.</p>
<p>“They’ve got at the champagne!” exclaimed
Mrs. Steffink.</p>
<p>“Perhaps it’s the sparkling Moselle,” said
Luke hopefully.</p>
<p>Three or four more pops were heard.</p>
<p>“The champagne <i>and</i> the sparkling Moselle,”
said Mrs. Steffink.</p>
<p>Luke uncorked an expletive which, like brandy in a temperance
household, was only used on rare emergencies. Mr. Horace
Bordenby had been making use of similar expressions under his
breath for a considerable time past. The experiment of
“throwing the young people together” had been
prolonged beyond a point when it was likely to produce any
romantic result.</p>
<p>Some forty minutes later the hall door opened and disgorged a
crowd that had thrown off any restraint of shyness that might
have influenced its earlier actions. Its vocal efforts in
the direction of carol singing were now supplemented by
instrumental music; a Christmas-tree that had been prepared for
the children of the gardener and other household retainers had
yielded a rich spoil of tin trumpets, rattles, and drums.
The life-story of King Wenceslas had been dropped, Luke was
thankful to notice, but it was intensely irritating for the
chilled prisoners in the cow-house to be told that it was a hot
time in the old town to-night, together with some accurate but
entirely superfluous information as to the imminence of Christmas
morning. Judging by the protests which began to be shouted
from the upper windows of neighbouring houses the sentiments
prevailing in the cow-house were heartily echoed in other
quarters.</p>
<p>The revellers found their car, and, what was more remarkable,
managed to drive off in it, with a parting fanfare of tin
trumpets. The lively beat of a drum disclosed the fact that
the master of the revels remained on the scene.</p>
<p>“Bertie!” came in an angry, imploring chorus of
shouts and screams from the cow-house window.</p>
<p>“Hullo,” cried the owner of the name, turning his
rather errant steps in the direction of the summons; “are
you people still there? Must have heard everything cows got
to say by this time. If you haven’t, no use
waiting. After all, it’s a Russian legend, and
Russian Chrismush Eve not due for ’nother fortnight.
Better come out.”</p>
<p>After one or two ineffectual attempts he managed to pitch the
key of the cow-house door in through the window. Then,
lifting his voice in the strains of “I’m afraid to go
home in the dark,” with a lusty drum accompaniment, he led
the way back to the house. The hurried procession of the
released that followed in his steps came in for a good deal of
the adverse comment that his exuberant display had evoked.</p>
<p>It was the happiest Christmas Eve he had ever spent. To
quote his own words, he had a rotten Christmas.</p>
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