That you may thoroughly comprehend
how it happened that on last Christmas Day Thaddeus
meted out gifts of value so unprecedented to the domestics
of what he has come to call his “menagerie”—the
term menage having seemed to him totally inadequate
to express the state of affairs in his household—I
must go back to the beginning of last autumn, and
narrate a few of the incidents that took place between
that period and the season of Peace on Earth and Good-will
to Men. Should I not do so there would be many,
I doubt not, who would deem Thaddeus’s course
unjustifiable, especially when we are all agreed that
Christmas Day should be for all sorts and conditions
of men the gladdest, happiest day of all the year.
Thaddeus and Bessie and the little
Thad had returned to their attractive home after an
absence of two months in a section of the Adirondacks
whither the march of civilization had not carried such
comforts as gas, good beds, and other luxuries, to
which the little family had become so accustomed that
real camp-life, with its beds of balsam, lights of
tallow, and “fried coffee,” possessed no
charms for them. They were all renewed in spirit
and quite ready to embark once more upon the troubled
seas of house-keeping; and, as they saw it on that
first night at home, their crew was a most excellent
one. The cook rose almost to the exalted level
of a chef in the estimation of Thaddeus as course
upon course, to the number of seven, each made up
of some delicacy of the season, came to the table
and received the indorsement which comes from total
consumption. They were well served, too, these
courses; and the two heads of the family, when Mary,
the waitress, would enter the butler’s pantry,
leaving them alone and unobserved, nodded their satisfaction
to each other across the snow-white cloth, and by means
of certain well-established signals, such as shaking
their own hands and winking the left eye simultaneously,
with an almost vicious jerk of the head, silently
congratulated themselves upon the prospects of a peaceful
future in a domestic sense.
“That was just the best dinner
I have had in centuries,” said Thaddeus, as
they adjourned to the library after the meal was over.
“The broiled chicken was so good, Bess, that
for a moment I wished I were a bachelor again, so
that I could have it all; and after I got over my
first feeling of hesitation over the oysters, and realized
that it was September with an R—belated,
it is true, but still there—and ate six
of them, I think I could have gone downstairs and
given cook a diamond ring with seven solitaires in
it and a receipted bill for a seal-skin sacque.
I don’t see how we ever could have thought
of discharging her last June, do you?”
“It was a good dinner,”
said Bessie, discreetly ignoring the allusion to their
intentions in June; for she had a well-defined recollection
that at that time Bridget had given signs of emotional
insanity every time she was asked to prepare a five-o’clock
breakfast for Thaddeus and his friends, to the number
of six, who had acquired the habit of going off on
little shooting trips every Saturday, making the home
of Thaddeus their headquarters over Sunday, when the
game the huntsmen had bagged the day before had to
be plucked, cleaned, and cooked by her own hands for
dinner. “And it was nicely selected, too,”
she added. “I sometimes think that I’ll
let Bridget do the ordering at the market.”
“H’m! Well,”
said Thaddeus, shaking his head dubiously, “I
haven’t a doubt that Bridget could do it, and
would be very glad to do it; but I don’t believe
in setting a cook up in business.”
“How do you mean?”
“I mean that I haven’t
any doubt that Bridget would in a very short time
become a highly successful produce-broker with bull
tendencies. The chicken market would be buoyant,
and the quotations on the Stock Exchange of, say,
B., S., and P.-U.-C.—otherwise, Beef, Succotash,
and Picked-Up-Codfish—would rise to the
highest point in years. Why, my dear, by Christmas-time
cook would have our surplus in her own pocket-book;
and in the place of the customary five oranges and
an apple she would receive from the butcher a Christmas-card
in the shape of a check of massive, if not graceful,
proportions. No, Bess, I think the old way is
the best.”
“Perhaps it is. By-the-way,
John has kept the grounds looking well, hasn’t
he? The lawn doesn’t seem to have a weed
on it,” said Bessie, walking to the window and
gazing out at the soft velvety sward in the glow of
twilight.
“Yes, it looks pretty well;
but there’s a small heap of stuff over there
near the fence which rather inclines me to believe
that the weeds have been pulled out within the last
few days—in fact, since you wrote to announce
our return. John is an energetic man in an emergency,
and I haven’t a doubt he has been here at least
once a week ever since we left. I’ll keep
a record of John this fall.”
And so the two contented home-comers
talked happily along, and when they closed their eyes
in sleep that night they were, upon the whole, very
well satisfied with life.
Weeks elapsed, and with them some
of the air-castles collapsed. Whether custom
staled the infinite variety of the cook’s virtues,
and age withered the efficiency of Mary, the waitress,
or whether something was really and radically wrong
with the girls, Thaddeus and Bessie could not make
out. Certain it was, however, that by slow degrees
the satisfaction for which that first dinner seemed
to stand as guarantor wore away, and dissatisfaction
entered the household. Mary developed a fondness
for church at most inconvenient hours—hours
at which in fact, neither Thaddeus nor Bessie had
ever supposed church could be. That it was eternal
they both knew, but they had always supposed there
were intermissions. Then the cook’s family,
which had hitherto been moderately healthful, began
to show signs of invalidism, though no such calamity
as actual dissolution ever set its devastating step
within the charmed circle of her relatives.
Cousins fell ill whom she alone could comfort; nephews
developed maladies for which she alone could care;
and, according to Thaddeus’s record, John had
been compelled on penalty of a fine to attend the
funerals of some twenty-four deceased intimate friends
in less than two months, although the newspapers contained
no mention of the existence of a possible epidemic
in the Celtic quarter. It is true that John
showed a more pronounced desire to make his absence
less inconvenient to his employer than did Mary and
the cook, by providing a substitute when the Ancient
Order of Funereal Hibernians compelled him to desert
the post of duty; but Thaddeus declared the “remedy
worse than the disease,” for the reason that
John’s substitute—his own brother-in-law—was
a weaver by trade, whose baskets the public did not
appreciate, and whose manner of cutting grass in the
early fall and of tending furnace later on was atrocious.
“If I could hire that man in
summer,” Thaddeus remarked one night when John’s
substitute had “fixed” the furnace so that
the library resembled a cold-storage room, “I
think we could make this house an arctic paradise.
He seems to have a genius for taking warmth by the
neck and shaking enough degrees of heat out of it to
turn a conflagration into an iceberg. I think
I’ll tell the Fire Commissioners about him.”
“He can’t compare with
John,” was Bessie’s answer to this.
“No. I think that’s
why John sends him here when he is off riding in carriages
in honor of his deceased chums. By the side of
Dennis, John is a jewel.”
“John is very faithful with
the furnace,” said Bessie. “He never
lets it go down. Why, day before yesterday I
turned off every register in the house, and even then
had to open all the windows to keep from suffocating.”
“But that wasn’t all John,
my dear,” said Thaddeus. “The Weather
Bureau had something to do with it. It was a
warm day for this season of the year, anyhow.
If John could combine the two businesses of selling
coal and feeding furnaces, I think he would become
a millionaire. And, by-the-way, I think you ought
to speak to him, Bess, about the windows. Since
you gave him the work of window-cleaning to do, it
is evident that he thinks I have nothing to say in
the matter, for he persistently ignores my requests
that he clean them in squares as they are made, and
not rub up a little circle in the middle, so that
they look like blocks of opalescent glass with plate-glass
bulls’-eyes let into the centre. Look at
them now.”
“Dennis did that. John
had to go to Mount Vernon with his militia company
to-day.”
“Dennis is well named, for his
name is—But never mind. I’ll
credit John with his twelfth day off in four weeks.”
From John to Bridget, in the matter
of days off, was an easy step, though such was Bessie’s
consummate diplomacy that Thaddeus would probably
have continued in ignorance of the extent to which
Bridget absented herself had they not both taken occasion
one day to visit some relatives in Philadelphia, and
on their return home at night found no dinner awaiting
them.
“What’s the matter now?”
asked Thaddeus, a little crossly, perhaps, for visiting
relatives in Philadelphia irritated him—possibly
because he and they did not agree in politics, and
their assumption that Thaddeus’s party was entirely
made up of the ignorant and self-seeking was galling
to him. “Why isn’t dinner ready?”
“Mary says that an hour after
we left cook got a telegram from New York saying that
her brother was dying, and she had to go right off.”
“I thought that brother was dying last week?”
“No; that was her mother’s
brother, he got well. This is another person
entirely.”
“Naturally,” snapped Thaddeus.
“But next time we get a cook let’s have
one whose relatives are all dead, or in the old country,
where they can’t be reached. I’m
tired of this business.”
“Well, you shouldn’t be
cross with me about it, Thad,” said Bessie,
with a teary look in her eyes. “I have
to put up with a great deal more of it than you have,
only you never know of it. Why, I’ve cooked
one-half of my own luncheons in the last month.”
“And the dinners, too, I’ll wager,”
growled Thaddeus.
“No; she’s always got home for dinner
heretofore.”
“Well, we’ll keep a record-book
for her, too, then. And we’ll be generous
with her. We’ll allow her just as I was
allowed in college—twenty-five per cent.
in cuts. If she has twenty-five and a fifth
per cent., she goes.”
“I don’t think I understand,” said
Bessie.
“Well, we’ll put it this
way: There are thirty days in a month.
That means ninety meals a month. If she cooks
sixty-seven and a half of them she can stay; if she
fails to cook the other twenty-two and a half she
can stay; but woe be unto her if she slips up by even
so little as a millionth part of the sixty-eighth!”
“I don’t see how you can manage the half
part of it.”
“We’ll leave that to her,”
said Thaddeus, firmly; “and, what is more, we’ll
put John and Mary on the same basis, and Dennis we
won’t have on any basis at all. A man
who will take advantage of his brother’s absence
at a wake to black the shoes of that brother’s
only employer with stove-polish is not the kind of
a man I want to have around.”
“It will be a very good plan,”
said Bessie, “for all except Mary. Her
absences she cannot well avoid. She has to go
to church.”
“How many times a week does
she have to go?” queried Thaddeus.
“She is required to go to confession.”
“Well, let her reform, and then
she’ll have nothing to go to confession for.
I don’t believe that’s where she goes,
either. I notice that one-half those evenings
she takes off, permitting me to mind the front door,
and enabling us both to acquire proficiency in the
art of helping ourselves at dinner, there’s a
fireman’s ball or a policeman’s hop or
a letter-carriers’ theatre party going on somewhere
in the county, and it’s my belief the worshipping
she does on these occasions is at the shrine of Terpsichore
or that of Melpomene, which is a heathen custom and
not to be tolerated here. If she’s so fond
of living in church we can quote to her Hamlet’s
advice to Ophelia—’Get thee to a nunnery!’
Why, Bess, I was mortified to death the other night
when Bradley dined here, he’s all the time bragging
about his menagerie, and I tried to bluff him out
and make him believe we were waited on by angels in
disguise, and you know what happened. He came,
saw, and I was regularly knocked out. You let
us in; we waited on ourselves; cook had prepared the
seven-o’clock dinner at five to give her a chance
to go to the hospital to see her brother-in-law with
the measles; John had one of his Central-African fires
on, and Bradley’s laughing about it yet.”
“Mr. Bradley was very disagreeable
the other night, anyhow,” sniffed Bessie.
“He acted as if he were camping out!”
“Well, I can’t honestly
say I blame him for that,” retorted Thaddeus.
“It only needed a balsam bed and a hole in the
roof to let the rain in on him to complete the illusion.”
Finally, December came, and the tendencies
of absenteeism on the part of the servants showed
no signs of abatement. They were remonstrated
with, but it made no difference. They didn’t
go out, they declared, because they wanted to, but
because they had to. Cook couldn’t let
her relatives go unattended. Mary’s religious
scruples simply dragged her out of the house, try as
she would to stay in; and as for John, as long as
Dennis was on hand to take his place he couldn’t
see why Mr. Perkins was dissatisfied. To tell
the truth, John had recently imbibed some more or
less capitalistic—or anticapitalistic—doctrines,
and he was quite incapable of understanding why, if
a street-contractor, for instance, was permitted by
the laws of the land to sublet the work for which he
had contracted, he, John, should not be permitted to
sublet his contract to Dennis, piecemeal, or even
as a whole, if he saw fit to do so.
Thaddeus, seeing that Bessie was very
much upset by the condition of affairs, had said little
about it since Thanksgiving Day, when he had said
about as much as the subject warranted after a six-course
dinner had been hurried through in one hour, two courses
having been omitted that Bridget might catch the train
leaving for New York at 3.10. Nor would he have
said anything further than the final words of dismissal
had he not come home late one afternoon to dress for
a dinner at his club, when he discovered that, owing
to the usual causes, the week’s wash, which
the combined efforts of cook and waitress should have
finished that day, was delayed twenty-four hours,
the consequence being that Thaddeus had to telephone
to the haberdashery for a dress-shirt and collar.
“It’s bad enough having
one’s wife buy these things for one, but when
it comes to having a salesman sell you over a telephone
the style of shirt and collar ‘he always wears
himself,’ it is maddening,” began Thaddeus,
and then he went on at such an outrageous rate that
Bessie became hysterical, and Thaddeus’s conscience
would not permit of his going out at all that night,
and that was the beginning of the end.
“I’ll fix ’em at Christmas-time,”
said Thaddeus.
“You won’t forget them
at Christmas, I hope, Thad,” said Bessie, whose
forgiving nature would not hear of anything so ungenerous
as forgetting the servants during the holidays.
“No,” laughed Thaddeus.
“I won’t forget ’em. I’ll
give ’em all the very things they like best.”
“Oh, I see,” smiled Bessie.
“On the coals-of-fire principle. Well,
I shouldn’t wonder but it would work admirably.
Perhaps they’ll be so ashamed they’ll
do better.”
“Perhaps—if the coals
do not burn too deep,” said Thaddeus, with a
significant smile.
Christmas Eve arrived, and little
Thad’s tree was dressed, the gifts were arranged
beneath it, and all seemed in readiness for the dawning
of the festal day, when Bessie, taking a mental inventory
of the packages and discovering nothing among them
for the servants save her own usual contribution of
a dress and a pair of gloves for each, turned and
said to Thaddeus:
“Where are the hot coals?”
“The what?” asked Thaddeus.
“The coals of fire for the girls and John.”
“Oh!” Thaddeus replied,
“I have ’em in the library. I don’t
think they’ll go well with the tree.”
“What are they?” queried
Bess, with a natural show of curiosity. “Checks?”
“Yes, partly,” said Thaddeus.
“Mary is to have a check for $16, Bridget one
for $18, and John one for $40.”
“Why, Thaddeus, that’s
extravagant. Now, my dear, there’s no use
of your doing anything of that—”
“Wait and see,” said Thaddeus.
“But, Teddy!” Bessie remonstrated.
“Those are the amounts of their wages.
You will spoil them, and if I—”
“As I said before, wait, Bess,
wait!” said Thaddeus, calmly. “You’ll
understand the whole scheme to-morrow, after breakfast.”
And she did, and when she did she
almost wished for a moment that she didn’t,
for after breakfast Thaddeus summoned the three offenders
into his presence, and the effect was not altogether
free from painful features to the forgiving Bess.
“Bridget,” Thaddeus said,
“do you remember what Mrs. Perkins gave you
last Christmas?”
“I do not!” replied Bridget,
rather uncompromisingly; for it was a matter of history
that she thought Mrs. Perkins on the last Christmas
festival had shown signs of parsimony in giving her
a calico gown instead of one of silk.
“Well, you won’t forget
next year what you got this,” said Thaddeus,
dryly. “Here is an envelope containing
$18, the amount of your wages until January 1st.
Mary, what did you get last Christmas?”
“A box of candy, sir.”
“Nothing else?”
“I believe there was a dress of some kind.
I gave it to my cousin.”
“Good. I am glad you were
so generous. Here is an envelope for you.
It has $16 in it, your wages up to January 1st.”
Bessie stood in the doorway, a mute
witness to what seemed to her an incomprehensible
scene.
“John, what did you get?”
“Five dollars an’ a day off.”
“And a two-dollar bill for Dennis, eh?”
“Dennis got that.”
“True. Well, John, here’s
$40 for you—that pays you until January
1st. Now, it strikes me that, considering the
behavior of you three people, I am very generous to
pay you your wages a week in advance, but I am not
going to stop there. I have studied you all very
carefully, and I’ve tried to discover what it
is you are fondest of. Cook and Mary do not seem
to care much for dresses, though I believe there are
dresses and gloves under the tree for them, which fact
they will doubtless forget by next Christmas Day.
The five dollars and a day off John seems to remember,
though from his manner of recalling it I do not think
his remembrance is a very pleasing one. Now I’ve
found out what it is you all like the best, and I’m
going to give it to you.”
Here the trio endeavored to appear
gracious, though they were manifestly uneasy and a
bit dissatisfied with what John would have called
“the luks of t’ings.”
“Cook, from the 1st of January,
may go to her relatives, and stay until they’re
every one of them restored to health, if it takes
forty years. Mary may consider herself presented
with sixty years’ vacation without pay; and
for you, John, I have written this letter of recommendation
to the proprietors of a large undertaking establishment
in New York, who will, I trust, engage you as a chief
mourner, or perhaps hearse-driver, for the balance
of your days. At any rate, you, too, after January
1st, may consider yourself free to go to any funeral
or militia exercises, or anything else you may choose
to honor with your presence, at your own expense.
You are all given leave of absence without pay until
further notice. I wish you a merry Christmas.
Good-morning.”
There were no farewells in the house
that day; and inasmuch as there was no Christmas dinner
either, Thaddeus and Bessie did not miss the service
of the waitress, who, when last seen, was walking airily
off towards the station, accompanied by the indignant
John and a bundle-laden cook. Next day their
trunks went also.
“It was rather a hard thing
to do on Christmas Day, Thaddeus,” said Bessie,
a little later.
“Oh no,” quibbled Thaddeus.
“It was very easy under the circumstances,
and quite appropriate. This is the time of peace
on earth and good-will to men. The only way
for us to have peace on earth was to get rid of those
two women; and as for John, he has my good-will, now
that he is no longer in my employ.”