<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI" />CHAPTER VI</h2>
<p>It was Mr. Clark, who as soon as the door was opened stepped within and
taking off his hat began to shake the snow from it, even while he
greeted James and wished him a merry Christmas.</p>
<p>James liked Mr. Clark. He did not rate him very highly in the matter of
intelligence; but he recognized him as a gentleman, and appreciated his
kindly courtesy to himself. He knew it came from a good heart.</p>
<p>Many a man who drove up to the door in a carriage, James relieved of his
coat and showed into the drawing-room in silence; but the downcast eyes
were averted to conceal inconvenient thoughts and the expressionless
face was a mask to hide views which the caller might not have cared to
discover. Mr. Clark, however, always treated James with consideration,
and James reciprocated the feeling and returned the treatment.</p>
<p>Mr. Clark was giving James his hat when the butler took in that he had
come to see Mr. Livingstone.</p>
<p>"Mr. Livingstone begs to be excused this evening, sir," he said.</p>
<p>"Yes." Mr. Clark laid a package on a chair and proceeded to unbutton his
overcoat.</p>
<p>"He says he regrets he cannot see any one," explained the servant.</p>
<p>"Yes. That's all right. I know." He caught the lapels of the coat
preparatory to taking it off.</p>
<p>"No, sir. He cannot see <i>anybody</i> at all this evening," insisted James,
confident in being within his authority.</p>
<p>"Why, he told me to come and bring his books! I suppose he meant—!"</p>
<p>"No, sir. He is not very well this evening."</p>
<p>Mr. Clark's hands dropped to his side.</p>
<p>"Not well! Why, he left the office only an hour or two ago."</p>
<p>"Yes, sir; but he walked up, and seemed very tired when he arrived. He
did not eat anything, and—the doctor is coming to see him."</p>
<p>Mr. Clark's face expressed the deepest concern.</p>
<p>"He has been working too hard," he said, shaking his head. "He ought to
have let me go over those accounts. With all he has to carry!"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir, that's it," said James, heartily.</p>
<p>"Well, don't you think I'd better go up and see him?" asked the old
clerk, solicitously. "I might be able to suggest something?"</p>
<p>"No, sir. He said quite positive he would not see <i>anybody</i>." James
looked the clerk full in the face. "I was afraid something might 'ave
'appened down in the—ah—?"</p>
<p>Mr. Clark's face lit up with a kindly light.</p>
<p>"No, indeed. It's nothing like that, James. We never had so good a year.
You can make your mind easy about that."</p>
<p>"Thank you, sir," said the servant. "We'll have the doctor drop in to
see him, and I hope he'll be all right in the morning. Snowy night,
sir."</p>
<p>"I hope so," said Mr. Clark, not intending to convey his views as to the
weather. "You'll let me know if I am wanted—if I can do anything. I
will come around first thing in the morning to see how he is. I hope
he'll be all right. Good-night. A merry Christmas to you."</p>
<p>"Good-night, sir. Thankee, sir; the same to you, sir. I'm going to wait
up to see how he is. Good-night, sir."</p>
<p>And James shut the door softly behind the visitor, feeling a sense of
comfort not wholly accounted for by the information as to the successful
year. Mr. Clark, somehow, always reassured him. The butler could
understand the springs that moved that kindly spirit.</p>
<p>What Mr. Clark thought as he tramped back through the snow need not be
fully detailed. But at least, one thing was certain, he never thought of
himself.</p>
<p>If he recalled that a mortgage would be due on his house just one week
from that day, and that the doctors' bills had been unusually heavy that
year, it was not on his own account that he was anxious. Indeed, he
never considered himself; there were too many others to think of. One
thought was that he was glad his friend had such a good servant as James
to look after him. Another was pity that Livingstone had never known the
joy that was awaiting himself when at the end of that mile of snow he
should peep into the little cosy back room (for the front room was
mysteriously closed this evening), where a sweet-faced, frail-looking
woman would be lying on a lounge with a half-dozen little curly heads
bobbing about her. He knew what a scream of delight would greet him as
he poked his head in; and out in the darkness and cold John Clark smiled
and smacked his lips as he thought of the kisses and squeezes, and
renewed kisses that would be his lot as he told how he would be with
them all the evening.</p>
<p>Yes, he was undoubtedly sorry for Livingstone, a poor lonely man in that
great house; and he determined that he would not say much about his
being ill. Women did not always exactly understand some men, and when he
left home, Mrs. Clark had expressed some very strong views as to
Livingstone which had pained Clark. She had even spoken of him as
selfish and miserly. He would just say now that Livingstone on his
arrival had sent him straight back home.</p>
<p>No, Mr. Clark never thought of himself, and this made him richer than
Mr. Livingstone.</p>
<p>When Mr. Clark reached home his expectation was more than realized. From
the way in which he noiselessly opened the front door and then stole
along the little passage to the back room, from which the sound of many
voices was coming as though it were a mimic Babel, you might have
thought he was a thief.</p>
<p>And when he opened the door softly and, with dancing eyes, poked his
head into the room, you might have thought he was Santa Claus himself.
There was one second of dead silence as a half-dozen pair of eyes
stretched wide and a half-dozen mouths opened with a gasp, and then,
with a shout which would have put to the blush a tribe of wild Indians,
a half-dozen young bodies flung themselves upon him with screams and
shrieks of delight. John Clark's neck must have been of iron to
withstand such hugs and tugs as it was given.</p>
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<SPAN name='fig4' id='fig4'></SPAN>
<ANTIMG src="images/fig4.jpg" alt="Half a dozen young bodies flung themselves upon him." title="" /></div>
<p>The next instant he was drawn bodily into the room and pushed down
forcibly into a chair, whilst the whole half-dozen piled upon him with
demands to be told how he had managed to get off and come back. No one
but Clark could have understood them or answered them, but somehow, as
his arms seemed able to gather in the whole lot of struggling,
squeezing, wriggling, shoving little bodies, so his ears seemed to catch
all the questions and his mind to answer each in turn and all together.</p>
<p>"'How did I come?'—Ran every step of the way.—'Why did I come
back?'—Well! that's a question for a man with eight children who will
sit up and keep Santa Claus out of the house unless their father comes
home and puts them to bed and holds their eyelids down to keep them from
peeping and scaring Santa Claus away!</p>
<p>—"'What did Mr. Livingstone say?'—Well, what do you suppose a man
would say Christmas Eve to another man who has eight wide-awake children
who will sit up in front of the biggest fire-place in the house until
midnight Christmas Eve so that Santa Claus can't come down the only
chimney big enough to hold his presents? He would say, 'John Clark, I
have no children of my own, but you have eight, and if you don't go home
this minute and see that those children are in bed and fast asleep and
snoring,—yes, snoring, mind,—by ten o'clock, I'll never, and Santa
Claus will never—!'</p>
<p>—"'Did I see anything of Santa Claus?' Well, if I were to tell
you—what I saw this night, why,—you'd never believe me. There's a
sleigh so big coming in a little while to this town, and this street,
and this house, that it holds presents enough for—.</p>
<p>"'When will it be here?' Well, from the sleigh-bells that I heard I
should say—. My goodness, gracious! If it isn't almost ten o'clock, and
if that sleigh should get here whilst there's a single eye open in this
house, I don't know what Santa Claus might do!"</p>
<p>And, with a strength that one might have thought quite astonishing, John
Clark rose somehow from under the mass of little heads, and, with his
arms still around them, still talking, still cajoling, still
entertaining and still caressing, he managed to bear the whole curly,
chattering flock to the door where, with renewed kisses and squeezes and
questions, they were all finally induced to release their hold and run
squeaking and frisking off upstairs to bed.</p>
<p>Then, as he closed the door, Clark turned and looked at the only other
occupant of the room, a lady whose pale face would have told her story
even had she not remained outstretched on a lounge during the preceding
scene.</p>
<p>If, however, Mrs. Clark's face was pale, her eyes were brilliant, and
the look that she and her husband exchanged told that even invalidism
and narrow means have alleviations, so full was the glance they gave of
confidence and joy.</p>
<p>Yet, as absolute as was their confidence, Mr. Clark did not now tell his
wife the truth. He gave her in a few words the reason of his return. Mr.
Livingstone was feeling unwell, he said. He had not remembered it was
Christmas Eve, he added; and, turning quickly and opening the door into
the front room he guilefully dived at once into the matter of the
Christmas-tree which was standing there waiting to be dressed.</p>
<p>Whether or not Mr. Clark deceived Mrs. Clark might be a matter of
question. Mr. Clark was not good at deception. Mrs. Clark was better at
it; but then, to-night was a night of peace and good-will, and since her
husband had returned she was willing to forgive even Livingstone.</p>
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