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"When we first began taking Hebrew lessons," she answered.
"And did he tell you we are bethrothed?"
"Yes."
David felt annoyed. He knew intuitively why his old friend had departed so from his usual scrupulousness regarding a confidence. He had intimated to David, when he had first met Miss Hallam, that she was an unusually fascinating girl, and he feared that their growing friends.h.i.+p might gradually lessen the young man's interest in Esther, whom he saw only at long intervals, as she lived in a distant city.
"I had hoped to have the pleasure of telling you myself," said David.
"I have often wondered what she is like," answered Bethany, "and I am glad to have this opportunity of offering my congratulations. I wish that she lived here that I might make her acquaintance. I do not know when I have seen a face that has captivated me so."
"Thank you," replied David, flus.h.i.+ng with pleasure. A tender smile lighted his eyes as he glanced at the miniature again before closing the case. "She will come to Hillhollow in the spring," he added proudly.
They heard Mr. Edmunds's voice in the hall. Bethany held out her hand.
"I shall not see you again until next week, I suppose," she said, "so let me wish you a very happy Christmas."
He kept her hand in his an instant as he repeated her greeting, then, looking earnestly down into the upturned face, added gently in Hebrew, the old benediction--"Peace be upon you."
It was quite dark when she stepped out into the streets. She thought of David and Esther all the way home.
At first she thought of them with a tender smile curving her lips, as she entered unselfishly into the happiness of the little romance she had discovered.
Then she thought of them with tears in her eyes and a chill in her heart, as some little waif might stand s.h.i.+vering on the outside of a window, looking in on a happy scene, whose warmth and comfort he could not share. The joy of her own betrothal, and the desolation that ended it, surged back over her so overwhelmingly that she was in no mood for merry-making when she reached home.
She longed to slip quietly away to her own room, and spend the evening in the dark with her memories. She had to wait a moment on the threshold before she could summon strength enough to go in cheerfully.
Mrs. Marion and Lois were in the dining-room helping the sisters decorate the long table, where the children were to be served with supper immediately on their arrival.
"Frank and Jack have gone out in a sleigh to gather them up," said Mrs.
Marion. "They'll soon be here, so you'll not have much time to dress."
"All right," responded Bethany, "I'll go in a minute. Mr. Herschel can't come, so you may as well take off one plate."
"But George Cragmore can," said Miss Caroline, pausing on her way to the kitchen. "I asked him this morning, and forgot to say anything about it."
Then she trotted out for a cake-knife, blissfully unconscious of the grimace Bethany made behind her back.
"O dear!" she exclaimed to Lois, "Miss Caroline means all right, but she is a born matchmaker. She has taken a violent fancy to Mr. Cragmore, and wants me to do the same. She thinks she is so very deep, and so very wary in the way she lays her plans, that I'll never suspect; but the dear old soul is as transparent as a window-pane. I can see every move she makes."
"What about Mr. Cragmore?" asked Lois. "Is he conscious of her efforts in his behalf?"
"O no. He thinks that she is a dear, motherly old lady, and is always paying her some flattering attention. It is well worth his while, for she makes him perfectly at home here, keeps his pockets full of goodies, as if he were an overgrown boy (which he is in some respects), and treats him with the consideration due a bishop. She is always going out to Clarke Street to hear him preach, and quoting his sermons to him afterwards. There he is now!" she exclaimed, as two short rings and one long one were given the front door-bell.
"So he even has his especial signals," laughed Lois. "He must be on a very familiar footing, indeed."
"He got into that habit when he first started to calling by to take me up to the Hebrew cla.s.s," she explained. "Miss Caroline encouraged him in it."
Just then Miss Caroline came hurrying through the room to receive him.
"Bethany, dear," she said in an excited stage whisper, "you'd better run up the back stairs. And do put on your best dress, and a rose in your hair, just to please me. Now, won't you?"
Bethany and Lois looked at each other and laughed.
"I'd like to shock her by going in just as I am," said Bethany; "but as it's Christmas-time I suppose I must be good and please everybody."
It was not long before a great stamping of many snowy little feet announced the arrival of the Christmas guests.
They came into the house with such rosy, happy faces, that no one thought of the patched clothes and ragged shoes.
"Dear hearts, I wish we could have a hundred instead of ten," sighed Miss Harriet, as she helped seat them at the table. "They look as though they never once had enough to eat in all their little lives."
"They shall have it now," declared Miss Caroline heartily, "if George Cragmore doesn't keep them laughing so hard they can't eat. Just hear the man!"
She had never seen him in such a gay humor, or heard him tell such irresistibly funny stories as the ones he brought out for the entertainment of these poor little guests, who had never known anything but the depressing poverty of the most wretched homes.
Mr. Marion was the good St. Nicholas who had found them, and spirited them away to this enchanted land; but Cragmore was the Aladdin who rubbed his lamp until their eyes were dazzled by the wonderful scenes he conjured up for them.
When the dinner was over, and everything had been taken off the table but the flowers and candles and bonbon dishes, he lifted the smallest child of all from her high chair, and took her on his knee.
With his arms around her, he began to tell the story of the first Christmas. His voice was very deep and sweet, and he told it so well one could almost see the dark, silent plains and the white sheep huddled together, and the shepherds keeping watch by night.
One by one the children slipped down from their chairs, and crowded closer around him.
He had never preached before to such a breathless audience, and he had never put into his sermons such gentleness and pathos and power.
He was thinking of their poor, neglected lives, and how much they needed the love of One who could sympathize to the utmost, because he was born among the lowly, and "was despised and rejected of men." When he had finished, the tears stood in his eyes with the intensity of his feeling, and the children were very quiet.
The little girl on his lap drew a long breath. Then she smiled up in his face, and, putting her arm around his neck, leaned her head against him.
There was a bugle-call from the library, and Jack led the children away to listen to an orchestra composed of boys from the League, who had volunteered their services for the occasion.
While they were playing some old carols, Miss Caroline called Mr.
Cragmore aside. "I've sent Bethany to light the candles on the tree in the drawing-room," she said. "May be you can help her."
Lois heard the whisper, and his hearty response, "May the saints bless you for that now!" She hurried into the hall to intercept Bethany.
"Ah ha, my lady," she said teasingly, "you needn't be putting everything off onto poor Aunt Caroline. I've just now discovered that she is only somebody's cat's-paw."
Bethany was irritated. She had been greatly touched by the winning tenderness of Cragmore's manner with the children. If there had been no memory of a past love in her life, she could have found in this man all the qualities that would inspire the deepest affection; but with that memory always present, she resented the slightest word that hinted of his interest in her.
She made Lois go with her to light the tapers, and that mischief-loving girl thoroughly enjoyed forestalling the little private interview Miss Caroline had planned for her protege.
It was still early in the evening, while the children were romping around the dismantled tree, that Cragmore announced his intention of leaving.
"I promised to talk at a Hebrew mission to-night," he explained, in answer to the remonstrances that greeted him on all sides.
"By the way," he exclaimed, "I intended to tell you about that, and I must stay a moment longer to do it."