V.
The New Mr. Prawley
THE new Mr. Prawley (by this time Isobel and I had ceased to
speak of him as living in our attic and being a family, but we still clung to
the name Prawley, just as all coloured waiters are called "George")
was a most unusual man. For a month before we hired him he had been trying to
undermine Isobel's faith in the Mr. Prawley from East Westcote. He had called
at the house two or three times a week. At first he merely asked for the job of
man-of-all-work, as any applicant might have asked for it, but he soon began
speaking of our Prawley in the most damaging terms. I believe there was hardly
a crime or misdemeanour that he did not lay at the door of our Mr. Prawley, and
so insistent was he that Isobel decided the two men must be deadly enemies, and
that this fellow was set on hounding our Mr. Prawley from pillar to post, like
an avenging angel. She concluded that this man must have been frightfully
wronged by our Mr. Prawley, and that he had sworn to dog his footsteps to the
grave.
But when she let our Mr. Prawley go and hired this new Mr.
Prawley, his interest in his predecessor ceased entirely. In place of the
eager, longing look his face had worn, he now wore a thin, satisfied look,
which I can best describe as that of a hungry jackal licking his chops. Mr.
Prawley his name, he told us, was Duggs, Alonzo Duggs, but we called him Mr.
Prawley was a tall, lean, villanous-looking fellow, with a red, pointed beard,
and at times when he leaned on the division fence and looked into Mr. Millington's
yard I could see his fingers opening and shutting like the claws of a bird of
prey. He seemed to hate Mr. Millington with a deep but hidden hatred, and
often, when Mr. Millington was preparing to take Isobel and me to Port
Lafayette, Mr. Prawley would stand and grit his teeth in the most unpleasant
manner. When I spoke to Mr. Prawley about it he said, "It isn't Mr.
Millington. It is the automobile. I hate automobiles!"
For that matter, I was beginning to hate them myself. Many a
pleasant ride behind Bob did I have to sacrifice because Millington insisted
that we take a little run up to Port Lafayette with him and Mrs. Millington. We
would all get into his car, and Millington would pull his cap down tight and
begin to frown and cock his head on one side to hear signs of asthma or heart
throbs or whatever the automobile might take a notion to have that day. And off
we would go!
I tell you, it was exhilarating. After all there is nothing
like motoring. We would roll smoothly down the street, with Millington frowning
like a pirate all the way, and then suddenly he would hear the noise he was
listening for, and he would stop frowning, and jerk a lever that stopped the
car, and hop out with a satisfied expression, and begin to whistle, and open
the car in eight places, and take out an assorted hardware store, and adhesive
tape, and blankets, and oil cans, and hatchets, and axes, and get to work on
the car as happy as a babe; and Mrs. Millington and Isobel and I would walk
home.
The sight of an automobile seemed to madden Mr. Prawley, but
otherwise he was the meekest of men, and a good example of this was the manner
in which he behaved at our Christmas party.
The idea of having a good, old-fashioned Christmas house
party for our city friends was Isobels idea, but the moment she mentioned it I
adopted it, and told her we would have Jimmy Dunn out. Jimmy Dunn is one of
those rare men that have acquired the suburban-visit habit. Usually when we
suburbanites invite a city friend to spend the week-end with us, the city
friend balks.
Into his frank eyes comes a furtive, shifty look as he tries
to think of an adequate lie to serve as an excuse for not coming, but Jimmy was
taken in hand when he was young and flexible, and he has become meek and docile
under adversity, as I might say. When any one invites Jimmy to the suburbs he
hardly makes a struggle. I suppose it is because of the gradual weakening of
his will power.
"Good!" I said. "We will have Jimmy Dunn out
over Christmas."
"Oh! Jimmy Dunn!" scoffed Isobel gently. "Of
course we will have Jimmy, but what I mean is to have a lot of people ten at
least and we must have at least two lovers, because they will look so well in
that little alcove room off the parlour, and we can go in and surprise them
once in a while. And we will have a Santa Claus, and lots of holly and
mistletoe, and a tree with all sorts of foolish presents on it for everyone,
and "
"Splendid!" I cried less enthusiastically,
"Now as for the ten "
"Well," said Isobel, "we will have Jimmy
Dunn-"
"That is what I suggested," I said meekly.
"We will have Jimmy Dunn," repeated Isobel,
"and then we will have we will have I wonder who we could get to come out.
Mary might come, if she wasn't in Europe."
"That would make two," I said cheerfully, "if
she wasn't in Europe."
"And we must have a Yule-log! " exclaimed Isobel.
"A big, blazing Yule-log, to drink wassail in front of, and to sing carols
around."
I told Isobel that, as nearly as I could judge, the
fireplaces in our house had not been con structed for big, blazing Yule-logs. I
re minded her that when I had spoken to the last owner about having a grate
fire he had advised us, with great excitement, not to attempt anything so rash.
He had said that if we were careful we might have a gas log, provided it was a
small one and we did not turn on the gas full force, and were sure our
insurance was placed in a good, reliable company. He had said that if we were
careful about those few things, and kept a pail of water on the roof in case of
emergency, we might use a gas-log, provided we extinguished it as soon as we
felt any heat coming from it. I had not, at the time, thought of mentioning a
Yule-log to him, but I told Isobel now that perhaps we might be able to find a
small, gas-burning Yule-log at the gas company's office. Isobel scoffed at the
idea. She said we might as well put a hot-water bottle in the grate and try to
be merry around that.
"I don't see," she said, "why people build
chimneys in houses if it is going to be dangerous to have a fire in the
fireplace."
"They improve the ventilation, I suppose," I said,
"and then, what would Santa Claus come down if there were no
chimneys?"
I frequently drop these half-joking remarks into my
conversations with Isobel, and not infrequently she smiles at them in a far-away
manner, but this time she jumped at the remark and seized it with both hands.
"John!" she cried, "that is the very, very
thing! We will have Santa Claus come down the chimney! And you will be Santa
Claus!"
I remained calm. Some men would have immediately remembered
they had prior engagements for Christmas. Some men would have instantly
declared that Santa Claus was an unworthy myth. But not I! I dropped upon my
hands and knees and gazed up the chimney. When I withdrew my head, I stood up
and grasped Isobel's hand.
"Fine!" I cried with well-simulated enthusiasm.
"Ill get an automobile coat from Millington, and sleigh bells and a mask
with a long white beard
"And a wig with long white hair," Isobel added
joyously.
"And while our guests are all at dinner, I cried,
"I will steal away from the table "
"John!" exclaimed Isobel. "You can't be Santa
Claus! Can't you see that it would never, never do for you to leave the table
when your guests were all there? You cannot be Santa Claus, John!"
"Oh, Isobel!"
"No," she said firmly, "you cannot be Santa
Claus. Jimmy Dunn must be Santa Claus!"
We had Jimmy Dunn out the next Sunday and broke it to him as
gently as we could, and explained what a lot of fun it would be for him, and
how I envied him the chance. For some reason he did not become wildly
enthusiastic. Instead he kneeled down, as I had done, and put his head into the
fireplace, in his usual slow-going manner, and looked up to where the small
oblong of blue sky glowed far, far above him.
When he withdrew his head, he began some maundering talk
about an uncle of his in Baltimore who was far from well, and who was likely to
be extremely dead or sick or married about Christmas time, but I had had too
much experience with such excuses to pay any attention to him. Isobel and I
gathered about him and talked as fast as we could, with merry little laughs,
and presently Jimmy seemed more resigned, and said he supposed if he had to be
Santa Claus there was no way out of it if he wanted to keep our friendship. So
when he suggested getting an automobile coat to wear, we hailed it as a
splendidly original idea, and patted him on the back, and he went away in a
rather good humour, particularly when we told him he need not come all the way
down from the top of the chimney, but could get into the chimney from the room
above the parlour. I told him it would be no trouble at all to take out the
iron back of the fireplace, for it was almost falling out, and that we would
have a ladder in the chimney for him to come down. It was Mrs. Rolfs who
changed our plans.
As soon as she heard we were going to have a Santa Claus,
she brought over a magazine and showed Isobel an article that said Santa Claus
was lacking in originality, and that it was much better to have two little
girls dressed as snow fairies distribute the presents from the tree, and Mrs.
Rolfs said she was willing to lend us her two daughters, if we insisted. So we
had to insist.
By the merest oversight, such as might occur in any family
excited over the preparations for a Christmas party, Isobel forgot to tell
Jimmy Dunn that the plan was changed. She had enough to think of with out
thinking of that, for she found, at the last moment, that she could not pick up
a regularly constituted pair of lovers for the little alcove room, and she had
to patch up a temporary pair of lovers by inviting Miss Seiler, depending on
Jimmy Dunn to do the best he could as the other half of the pair. Of course
Jimmy Dunn does not talk much, and it was apt to be a surprise to him to learn
he was scheduled to make love, but Miss Seller talks enough for two. When Jimmy
arrived, about four o'clock Christmas eve, Isobel let him know he was to be a
lover, but he was then in the house, and it was too late for him to get away.
Isobel had done nobly in securing guests. Jimmy and Miss
Seiler were the only guests from the city, but she had captured some
suburbanites. Ten of us made merry at the table that is, all ten except
Jimmy. I was positively ashamed of Jimmy. There we were at the culminating
hours of the merry Yuletide, gathered at the festive board itself, with a bowl
of first-rate home-made wassail with ice in it, and Jimmy was expected to smile
lovingly, and blush, and all that sort of thing, and what did he do? He sat as
mute as a clam, and started uneasily every time a new course appeared. Before
dessert arrived he actually arose and asked to be excused.
Now, if you intended making a fool of your self in a friend's
house by impersonating Santa Claus and coming down a chimney in a fur
automobile coat, and nonsense like that, you would have sense enough to
remember which room upstairs had the chimney that
led down into the parlour fireplace, wouldn't you? So I blame Jimmy entirely,
and so does Isobel. Jimmy says of course he had
to have some excuse that we might have told him we had given up the idea of
having Santa Claus come down the chimney, and that if we had wanted him to come
down any particular chimney we should have put a label on it. "Santa Claus
enter here," I suppose.
"Isabel
and I gathered about him and talked as fast as we could"
Jimmy said he did the best he could; that he knew he did not
have much time between the threatened appearance of the dessert and the time he
was supposed to issue from the fireplace and so on! He was quite excited
about it. Quite bitter, I may say.
It seems or so Jimmy says that, when be left the table,
Jimmy went upstairs and got into his automobile coat of fur, and his felt
boots, and his mask, and his fur gloves, and his long white hair, and his
stocking hat, and that about the time we were sipping coffee he was ready. He
says it was no joke to be done up in all those things in an overheated house,
and he thought if he got into the chimney he might be in a cool draught, so he
poked about until he found a fireplace and backed carefully into it, and pawed
with his left foot for the top rung of the ladder. That was about the time we
arose from the table with merry laughs, as nearly as Isobel and I can judge.
No one missed Jimmy, except Miss Seller, and she was so
unused to being made love to as Jimmy made love that she thought nothing of a
temporary absence. It was not until I took Jimmy's present from the tree and
sent one of the Rolfs fairies to hand it to Jimmy that we realized he was not
in the parlour, and then Isobel and I both felt hurt to think that Jimmy had
selfishly withdrawn from among us when we had gone to all the trouble of getting
the other half of a pair of lovers especially on his account. It was not fair
to Miss Seiler, and I told Jimmy so the next time I saw him.
When the Rolfs fairy had looked in all the rooms, upstairs
and down, and had not found Jimmy, she came back and told Isobel, and that was
when Isobel remembered she had forgotten to tell Jimmy we had given up the idea
of having a Santa Claus. Isobel looked up the parlour chimney, but he was not
there, and then we all started merrily looking up chimneys. We found Santa
Claus up the library chimney almost immediately. He was still kicking, but not
with much vim more like a man that is kicking because he has nothing else to
do than like a man that enjoys it.
I think we must have been gathering around the Christmas
tree to the cheery music of a carol when Santa Claus put his foot on a loose
brick in the fireplace and slipped. I claim that if Santa Claus had instantly
thrown his body forward he would have been safe enough, but Santa Claus says he
did not have time that he slid down the chimney immediately, as far as his
arms would let him. He says that when he caught the edge of the hearth with his
hands he did yell; that he yelled as loud as any man could who was wrapped in a
fur coat and had his mouth full of white horse-hair whiskers and his face
covered by a mask. I say that proves he yelled just as we were singing the
carol. He should have yelled a moment sooner, or should have waited half an
hour, until the noise in the parlour abated. Santa Claus says he tried to stay
there half an hour, but the two bricks he had grasped did not want to wait.
They wanted to hurry down the chimney without further delay, and they had their
own way about it. So Santa Claus went on down with them.
I tell Santa Claus that even if we were singing carols we
would have heard him if he had fallen to the library floor with a bump, and
that it was his fault if he did not fall heavily, but he blames the architect.
He says that if the chimney had been built large enough he would have done his
part and would have fallen hard, but that when he reached the narrow part of
the chimney he wedged there. I said that was the fault of wearing an auto
mobile coat that padded him out so he could not fall through an ordinary
chimney, and I asked him if he thought any man who meant to fall down chimneys
had ever before put on an automobile coat to fall in.
Certainly I, the host, could not be expected to stop the
laughter and merriment when I was taking presents from the tree, and bid every
one be silent and listen for the muffled tones of a Santa Claus in the library
chimney. I do not say Santa Claus did not yell as loudly as he could. Doubtless
he did. And I do not say he did not try to get out of the chimney. He says he
did, but that with his arms crowded above his head he could do nothing but
reach. He says he also kicked, but there was nothing to kick. He says the most
fruitless task in the world is to kick when wedged in a chimney with a whole
fur automobile coat crowded up under the arms and nothing below to kick but
air.
Luckily I was able to send for Mr. Rolfs and Mr. Millington,
whose advice is always valuable, since when I know what they advise I know what
not to do. Mr. Rolfs rushed in and was of the opinion that we must get a chisel
and chisel a hole in the library wall as near as possible to where Santa Claus
was reposing, but when Mr. Millington arrived, breathless, he said this would
be simple murder, for as likely as not the chisel would enter between two
bricks and perforate Santa Claus beyond repair. Mr. Millington said the thing to
do was to get a clothesline and attach it to Santa Claus's feet and pull him
down. He said it was logical to pull him downward, because we would then be
aided by the law of gravitation. Mr. Rolfs said this was nonsense, and that it
would only wedge Santa Claus in the chimney more tightly, and that we would, in
all probability, pull him in two, or at least stretch him out so long that he
would never be very useful again.
Mr. Rolfs and Mr. Millington became quite heated in their
argument. Mr. Rolfs said that if a rope was to be used it should be used to
pull Santa Claus upward, but they compromised by agreeing to cut the
clothesline in two, choose up sides, and let one side pull Santa Claus upward,
while the other pulled him downward. Then Santa Claus would move in the
direction of least resistance. So they got the clothesline, and Mr. Rolfs was
about to cut it, when Miss Seiler screamed.
I was doubly glad she screamed just at that juncture, for we
had all become so interested in the Rolfs-Millington controversy that we had
forgotten how perishable a human being is, and, with two such stubborn men as
Rolfs and Millington urging us on, we might have pulled Santa Claus in two
while our sporting instincts were aroused by the tug-of-war. That was one
reason I was glad Miss Seiler screamed. The other reason was that it showed she
was doing her share of representing one half of a pair of lovers. She had done
rather poorly up to that time, but she saw that when her lover was about to be
pulled asunder was the time to scream, if she was ever going to scream, so she
screamed. So we all went upstairs and let the rope down to Santa Claus, and the
entire merry Christmas house party pulled, and after we had jerked a few times
up came Santa Claus with a sudden bump.
At that moment Miss Seiler screamed again, and when we
turned we saw the reason, for the glass door to the little upper porch had
opened and Jimmy Dunn was entering the room.
We laid Santa Claus on the floor and let him kick, for he
seemed to have acquired the habit, but after awhile he slowed down and only
jerked his legs spasmodically. Mr. Millington explained that it was only the
reflex action of the muscles, and that probably Santa Claus would kick like
that for several months, whenever he lay down. He said if we had followed his
advice and pulled downward we would have yanked all the reflex action out of
the legs.
As soon as I pulled the mask from his face I recognized Mr.
Prawley. Jimmy slipped out of the room and walked all the way to the station,
and Miss Seiler stood around, not knowing whether she was to be half of a pair
of lovers with Mr. Prawley as the other half, or stop being a lover, or weep
because Jimmy had gone. I felt sorry for her, because Mr. Prawley was not a
good specimen of a Christmas lover just then. When we stood him on his feet his
trousers were still pushed up around his knees, and his fur coat was around his
neck. He was so weak we had to hold him up.
"What I want to know," said Mr. Millington,
"is what you were doing in that chimney in my automobile coat?"
"Doing?" said Mr. Prawley. "Why, I'm jolly
old Santa Claus. I come down chimneys."
"Well, my advice to you, Mr. Prawley," I said,
"is to stop it. You don't do it at all right. Don't try it again. I've had
enough of this jolly old Santa Claus business. Who told you to do it?"
"The little gentleman with the scared look," said
Mr. Prawley, looking around for Jimmy Dunn. "He isn't here."
"And what did he give you for doing it?" I asked.
"Nothing!" said Mr. Prawley. "He just "
"Just what?" I asked when he hesitated.
Mr. Prawley drew me to one side and whispered.
"He said I might wear an automobile coat. And I couldn't
resist the temptation," said Mr. Prawley. "I've been hankering to get
inside an automobile coat for weeks and weeks, sir. I couldn't resist."
Of course, I could make nothing of this at the time, so I
merely said a few words of good advice, and ordered Mr. Prawley never to try
the Santa Claus impersonation again.
"Of course, I'm only an amateur at it," said Mr.
Prawley apologetically, and then he brightened, "but I made good speed as
far as I got. I'll bet I broke the world's speed record for jolly old Santa
Clauses!"
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