<h2>CHAPTER XXVII<br/> <small>A Crowded Day</small></h2>
<p class='drop-cap'>MABEL rose very early indeed on
Christmas morning to explore her
bulging stocking and to open her packages;
but Mr. Black and Mrs. Crane were even
earlier, and they were delighted to find that
the weather had remained mild. Putting on
their outside wraps and warm overshoes, the
worthy couple went with good-natured Martin
and Maggie, the nimble nursery maid, to
the garden as soon as it was light. They
strung the tall tree from top to bottom with
tinsel and glittering Christmas-tree ornaments,
the finest that money could buy.
Martin and the maid, perched on tall step-ladders,
worked enthusiastically. Mr. Black
and Mrs. Crane handed up the decorations.
The cook, watching them from the basement
window, grinned broadly at the sight.</p>
<p></p>
<p>"Sure," said she, "'tis a lot of children
they are; but 'twould do no harrum if all the
wurruld was loike 'em."</p>
<p>By church time the towering tree was in
readiness except for a few of the more precious
gifts, to be added later.</p>
<p>"I hope," said Mrs. Crane, with a lingering,
backward glance, when there was no
further excuse for remaining outdoors,
"that the air will be as quiet to-night as it
is now. It would be dreadful if we couldn't
light the candles."</p>
<p>"We'll have to trust to luck," returned
Mr. Black, "but I'm quite sure that luck will
be with us."</p>
<p>Of course the girls enjoyed their stockings
at home, their gifts that arrived by mail
and express from out-of-town relatives and
the bountiful dinners at the home tables.
But the Black-Crane tree to which Henrietta,
likewise, had been invited, was something
entirely new and so proved particularly enjoyable;
if not, indeed, the crowning event
of the day. Martin had cleared away the
snow and had laid boards and even a carpet
for them to stand on, and there were chairs
and extra wraps, only the girls were too excited
to use them. But Mrs. Crane and
placid Rosa Marie sat enveloped in steamer
rugs while the others capered about the brilliantly
lighted tree, constantly discovering
new beauties.</p>
<p>"I declare," sighed Mrs. Crane, happily,
"you're the youngest of the lot, Peter."</p>
<p>"Well," returned Mr. Black, "why not?
It's the first real Christmas I've had for forty
years—but let's have another Christmas dinner
on New Year's Day; I was disappointed
when all these young folks said, 'No, thank
you,' to our invitation to dinner. Just remember,
girls, we expect to see you all here
the first of January or there'll be trouble—I'll
see that it lasts all the year, too."</p>
<p>"Peter Black," warned Mrs. Crane, "that
step-ladder's prancing on one leg. If you
go over that bluff you won't stop till you
land in the lake. Let Martin do all the
circus acts."</p>
<p>"I've got it, now," said Mr. Black, coming
down safely with the small parcel that
had dangled so long just above his reach.
"Here's something for Henrietta Bedford,
with the tree's compliments."</p>
<p>"How nice of you to remember me,"
cried Henrietta, opening the parcel. "And
what a dear little pin—just what I needed.
Thank you very much indeed."</p>
<p>Of all their gifts, however, the Cottagers
liked their lovely little watches the best.
They had expected no such magnificent gifts
from Mr. Black, and their own people had,
of course, considered them much too young
to be trusted with watches.</p>
<p>"Dear me," said Mabel, strutting about
with her timepiece pinned to her blouse, "I
feel too grown-upedy for words. I never
expected this moment to come."</p>
<p>"I've <i>always</i> wanted a watch," breathed
Jean, "but I certainly supposed I'd have to
wait until I'd graduated from high-school—folks
almost always get them then."</p>
<p>"And I," beamed Marjory, "never expected
a <i>pretty</i>, really truly girl's watch, because—worse
luck—I'm to get Aunty Jane's
awful watch when she dies. Of course I don't
want her to die a minute before her time, but
getting even <i>that</i> watch seemed sort of hopeless
because all Aunty Jane's ancestors that
weren't killed by accident lived to enjoy their
nineties. But that doesn't prevent Aunty
Jane's promising me that clumsy old turnip
whenever she's particularly pleased with
me."</p>
<p>Bettie was too delighted for speech. But
her big brown eyes spoke eloquently for her.</p>
<p>Rosa Marie accepted the unusual tree, all
her Teddy bears, her dolls and other gifts,
very much as a matter of course. Nothing
it appeared was ever sufficiently surprising
to astonish calm little Rosa Marie.</p>
<p>"Perhaps," offered Bettie, "she's awfully
surprised inside."</p>
<p></p>
<p>"I know <i>I</i> am," laughed Mabel. "Inside
and out, too."</p>
<p>Then, just as Mrs. Crane had decided that
Rosa Marie had been outdoors long enough,
the Slater carriage arrived for the girls.
Mr. Black, beaming at the success of his
Christmas party, packed them with all their
belongings into the vehicle and they rolled
happily away.</p>
<p>They stopped at their own homes just
long enough to drop most of the gifts they
had garnered from the Black-Crane tree;
and then Henrietta whisked her friends to
the Slater home, where Mrs. Slater entertained
them for two hours over a delightful,
genuinely English Christmas supper.</p>
<p>Henrietta's tree, too, was a very handsome
one. A realistic Santa Claus who seemed
as English as the supper, since he dropped
the letter H just as Simmons always did,
distributed the gifts. When the Cottagers
opened odd, foreign-looking parcels and
found that Henrietta had given each girl a
set of three beautiful Oriental boxes with
jewelled tops, their delight knew no bounds.
They had expected nothing so fine.</p>
<p>"You see," explained Henrietta, "I told
Father, months ago, to send me a lot of little
things to give away for Christmas and of
course he bought boxes. I believe he buys
every one he sees."</p>
<p>"They're darlings," declared Jean,
dreamily. "They take you away to far-off
places where things smell old and—and
magnificent."</p>
<p>"It's the grown-upness of my presents
that I like," explained eleven-year-old
Mabel, with a big sigh of satisfaction. "It's
lovely to have people treat you as if you were
somebody."</p>
<p>"You see," laughed Marjory, "it's only
two years ago that an absent-minded aunt
of Mr. Bennett's sent Mabel a rattle, and the
poor child can't forget it."</p>
<p>"Miss 'Enrietta," inquired Santa Claus,
anxiously, when the Slater tree, too, had been
stripped of all but its decorations, "might
Hi be hexcused now? Hi'm due at a Christmas
ball and Hi'm hawfully afride these
togs is meltin' me 'igh collar."</p>
<p>"Yes," laughed Henrietta, "you've done
nobly and I hope you'll have a lovely time at
the party."</p>
<p>It was half-past ten before the Cottagers
got to bed that night—a long day because
they had risen so early.</p>
<p>"But," breathed Bettie, happily, "when
days are as nice as this I like 'em long."</p>
<p>"It's nice to have friends," said Jean.</p>
<p>"I wish," sighed Mabel, "they'd make
some kind of a watch that had to be wound
every hour; it seems awfully hard to wait
until morning."</p>
<p>When Mrs. Bennett looked in that night
to see if Mabel had remembered to take off
her best hair ribbon, she found a doll on each
side of the blissful slumberer, a watch pinned
to her nightdress, a jeweled box clasped
loosely in each relaxed hand and at least half
a bushel of other treasures under the uncomfortable
pillow. As Mrs. Bennett gently
removed all these articles and straightened
the bed-clothes Mabel murmured in her sleep,
"Merry Christmas, girls."</p>
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