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.
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.
"They've got at the
champagne!" exclaimed Mrs. Steffink.
"Perhaps it's the sparkling Moselle," said Luke hopefully.
Three or four more pops were heard.
"The
champagne and the sparkling Moselle," said Mrs. Steffink.
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.
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.
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.
"Bertie!" came in an angry, imploring
chorus of shouts and screams
from the cow-house window.
"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."
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
adversecomment that his exuberant display had
evoked.
It was the happiest Christmas Eve he had ever spent. To quote his
own words, he had a
rotten Christmas.
FOREWARNED
Alethia Debchance sat in a corner of an
otherwise empty railway
carriage, more or less at ease as regarded body, but in some
trepidation as to mind. She had embarked on a social ad
venture of
no little
magnitude as compared with the accustomed seclusion and
stagnation of her past life. At the age of twenty-eight she could
look back on nothing more eventful than the daily round of her
existence in her aunt's house at Webblehinton, a
hamlet four and a
half miles distant from a country town and about a quarter of a
century removed from modern times. Their neighbours had been
elderly and few, not much given to social
intercourse, but helpful
or
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politelysympathetic in times of
illness. Newspapers of the
ordinary kind were a rarity; those that Alethia saw
regularly were
devoted
exclusively either to religion or to
poultry, and the world
of
politics was to her an unheeded unexplored region. Her ideas on
life in general had been acquired through the
medium of popular
respectable novel-writers, and modified or emphasised by such
knowledge as her aunt, the vicar, and her aunt's
housekeeper had put
at her
disposal. And now, in her twenty-ninth year, her aunt's
death had left her, well provided for as regards
income, but
somewhat isolated in the matter of kith and kin and human
companionship. She had some cousins who were on terms of friendly,
though infrequent,
correspondence with her, but as they lived
permanently in Ceylon, a
locality about which she knew little,
beyond the
assurance contained in the
missionary hymn that the human
element there was vile, they were not of much immediate use to her.
Other cousins she also possessed, more distant as regards
relationship, but not quite so geographically
remote,
seeing that
they lived somewhere in the Midlands. She could hardly remember
ever having met them, but once or twice in the course of the last
three or four years they had expressed a
polite wish that she should
pay them a visit; they had probably not been unduly
depressed by the
fact that her aunt's failing health had prevented her from accepting
their
invitation. The note of condolence that had arrived on the
occasion of her aunt's death had included a vague hope that Alethia
would find time in the near future to spend a few days with her
cousins, and after much
deliberation and many hesitations she had
written to propose herself as a guest for a
definite date some week
ahead. The family, she reflected with
relief, was not a large one;
the two daughters were married and away, there was only old Mrs.
Bludward and her son Robert at home. Mrs. Bludward was something of
an
invalid, and Robert was a young man who had been at Oxford and
was going into Parliament. Further than that Alethia's information
did not go; her
imagination, founded on her
extensive knowledge of
the people one met in novels, had to supply the gaps. The mother
was not difficult to place; she would either be an ultra-amiable old
lady,
bearing her
feeble health with uncomplaining
fortitude, and
having a kind word for the gardener's boy and a sunny smile for the
chance
visitor, or else she would be cold and peevish, with eyes
that pierced you like a gimlet, and a unreasoning
idolatry of her
son. Alethia's
imagination rather inclined her to the latter view.
Robert was more of a problem. There were three
dominant types of
manhood to be taken into
consideration in
working out his
classification; there was Hugo, who was strong, good, and beautiful,
a rare type and not very often met with; there was Sir Jasper, who
was utterly vile and
absolutely unscrupulous, and there was Nevil,
who was not really bad at heart, but had a weak mouth and usually
required the life-work of two good women to keep him from ultimate
disaster. It was
probable, Alethia considered, that Robert came
into the last
category, in which case she was certain to enjoy the
companionship of one or two excellent women, and might possibly
catch glimpses of
undesirable ad
venturesses or come face to face
with
reckless admiration-seeking married women. It was altogether
an exciting
prospect, this sudden
venture into an unexplored world
of unknown human beings, and Alethia rather wished that she could
have taken the vicar with her; she was not, however, rich or
important enough to travel with a
chaplain, as the Marquis of
Moystoncleugh always did in the novel she had just been
reading, so
she recognised that such a
proceeding was out of the question.
The train which carried Alethia towards her
destination was a local
one, with the
wayside station habit
strongly developed. At most of
the stations no one seemed to want to get into the train or to leave
it, but at one there were several market folk on the
platform, and
two men, of the farmer or small cattle-dealer class, entered
Alethia's
carriage. Apparently they had just foregathered, after a
day's business, and their conversation consisted of a rapid exchange
of short friendly inquiries as to health, family, stock, and so
forth, and some grumbling remarks on the weather. Suddenly,
however, their talk took a dramatically interesting turn, and
Alethia listened with wide-eyed attention.