Part 1 (1/2)
LITTLE FRIEND LYDIA.
by Ethel Calvert Phillips.
CHAPTER I-Christmas Eve
It was Christmas Eve, and twenty little boys and girls were watching for Santa Claus. Ten little boys in blue-striped blouses and dark-blue neckties, ten little girls in blue-checked ap.r.o.ns and dark-blue hair-ribbons fixed their eyes on the big folding doors and thought the time for them to open would never come.
All day long excitement had reigned supreme in the Children's Home, a roomy comfortable house set on the very edge of the big city, and where were gathered the motherless and fatherless children who found love and care under its hospitable roof. Each ring of the doorbell brought chattering groups to hang over the banisters, each sound of wheels on the driveway was the signal for excited faces to be pressed against the window-pane and for round eyes to try in vain to bore through the paper wrappings of mysterious bundles whisked out of sight all too soon. Peeks through the parlor keyhole were forbidden, but pa.s.sing the door on the way to luncheon several children were seen to stop and sniff the air as though they might actually smell out the secret.
”Nurse Norrie called it an 'entertainment,'” said big Mary Ellen to a group gathered round her in the playroom. ”I do wonder what 't will be.
It will be to-night anyway; she said so.”
”It's cowboys and Indians, that's what it is,” declared Sammy, an agile youth who all morning had somehow managed to look out of the window and over the banisters at the same time when occasion demanded. ”It's going to be a Wild West show to-night, I think.” And Sammy galloped up and down the playroom in imitation of the das.h.i.+ng broncos he hoped to see that night.
”Do you think Miss Martin would have horses in the parlor?” asked Mary Ellen scornfully. ”I hope it will be tableaux.” And Mary Ellen immediately pictured herself the most beautiful tableau of them all, attired as a Red Cross nurse draped in the American flag, with a n.o.ble expression on her face, and perhaps supporting a wounded soldier or two.
Little Tom took his finger out of his mouth long enough to say, ”I hope it's candy”; and at this pleasing thought Luley and Lena, the fat little twins, clapped their hands in agreement. Polly, always a little behindhand, hadn't made up her mind yet what the surprise was to be. So Mary Ellen turned to Lydia, a quiet little girl whose brown eyes looked out shyly upon the world from under a thatch of yellow curls. Now Lydia remembered clearly her Christmas a year ago, so although she felt a little shy about speaking out before them all, she was sure she had guessed the secret.
”I think it's Santa Claus,” said Lydia timidly, ”and maybe a Christmas Tree too.”
Miss Martin, who took good care of these little children and loved them every one, stood in the doorway listening and laughing.
”I'll give you just one hint,” said she, ”if you promise not to ask me another question. Lydia is the warmest. Sammy is freezing cold, so is Mary Ellen. Tom is warm, too, but Lydia is hot, red-hot I should say.”
And then Miss Martin closed the door and fled. In the hall she met fat Nurse Norrie carrying a pile of clean blouses.
”Hark ye to the noise in there,” said Nurse Norrie with a chuckle. ”I'm thinking if we live through this day we'll live through anything.”
But at last evening came and they were all gathered in the back room with only a few moments more to wait. Patient Miss Martin took pity on them and answered the same questions over and over as she moved about the room straightening twisted neckties and perking up fallen hair-ribbons.
”Yes, I'm sure Santa Claus is coming,” said Miss Martin for the tenth time to Luley and Lena, who hand in hand trotted up with the question every few minutes as if asking something new each time. ”Why am I sure, Polly? Because he comes every year to the Children's Home. He has never forgotten us yet.”
”Maybe he's stuck in the snow,” said Sammy gloomily; ”it's deep, deep.
Maybe he's having a fight with the Indians.”
At this thought Sammy brightened, but Luley and Lena put out their under lips in such pitiful fas.h.i.+on that Miss Martin was glad to hear Mary Ellen say st.u.r.dily:
”I don't believe there ever was a snowdrift or an Indian either that could keep Santa Claus away.”
”Good, Mary Ellen,” said Miss Martin with an approving smile; ”I'm sure you are right. Take your finger out of your mouth, Tom. Yes, Lydia, what is it?”
Lydia stood on tiptoe and spoke softly. She didn't want any one else to hear her question.
”Miss Martin,” whispered she, ”will Santa Claus bring you whatever you ask for-even if it won't go into your stocking?”
”Of course he will,” answered Miss Martin with an arm about Lydia.
”Think of our big swing he brought last year. That wouldn't go in a giant's stocking. Think of the big-What's that sound, children?”
Every one listened. Nearer and nearer and nearer came the jingle of sleigh-bells, little by little the folding doors slid open, and there before their very eyes Santa Claus himself came into the room. Sammy said afterward he knew he saw him come down the chimney and step out of the fireplace, and this in spite of Mary Ellen who declared she saw him come walking through the door. But however he came, there he was, covered with snow and with a big pack on his back fairly bursting with toys. Dolls and drums and horns, jack-in-the-boxes, toy lambs, furry dogs, soft white rabbits stuck out in every direction. Luley and Lena fixed their round eyes upon two white cats peeping slyly side by side over the edge of the pack, and oh, how they hoped that Santa Claus would know that they wanted those p.u.s.s.ies more than anything in the world.