It was a source of great satisfaction to Joseph Herriard that the holly trees were in full berry. He seemed to replace in this circumstance an assurance that the projected reunion of the family would be a success. For days past he had been bringing prickly sprigs into the house, his rosy countenance beaming with pleasure, and his white locks (worn rather long, and grandly waving) ruffled by the December winds. ‘Just look at the berries!’ he would say, thrusting his sprigs under Nathaniel’s nose, laying them on Maud’s card-table.

‘Very pretty, dear,’ Maud said, her flattened voice divesting her words of even the smallest vestige of enthusiasm.

‘Take the damned thing away!’ growled Nathaniel. ‘I hate holly!’

But neither the apathy of his wife nor the disapproval of his elder brother could damp Joseph’s childlike enjoyment of the Festive Season. When a leaden sky heralded the advent of snow, he began to talk about old-fashioned Christmases, and to liken Lexham Manor to Dingley Dell.

In point of fact, there was no more resemblance between the two houses than between Mr Wardle and Nathaniel Herriard.

Lexham was a Tudor manor house, considerably enlarged, but retaining enough of its original character to make it one of the show-places of the neighbourhood. It was not a family seat of long standing, Nathaniel, who was a wealthy man (he had been an importer from the East Indies), having purchased it a few years before his retirement from an active share in his flourishing business. His niece, Paula Herriard, who did not like the Manor, could not imagine what should have induced an old bachelor to saddle himself with such a place, unless – hopefully – he meant to leave it to Stephen, her brother. In which case, she added, it was a pity that Stephen, who did like the place, should take so few pains to be decent to the old man.

It was generally supposed, in spite of Stephen’s habit of annoying his uncle, that he would be Nathaniel’s heir. He was his only nephew, so unless Nathaniel meant to leave his fortune to his only surviving brother, Joseph, which even Joseph admitted to be unlikely, the bulk of the estate looked like coming into Stephen’s graceless hands.

In support of this theory, it could perhaps have been said that Nathaniel seemed to like Stephen rather more than he liked any other member of his family. But few people liked Stephen very much. The only person who stoutly maintained belief in the sterling qualities to be detected beneath his unprepossessing exterior was Joseph, whose overflowing kindness of heart led him always to believe the best of everyone.

‘There’s a lot of good in Stephen. You mark my words, the dear old bear will surprise us all one of these days!’ Joseph said staunchly, when Stephen had been at his most impossible.

Stephen was not in the least grateful for this unsolicited championship. His dark, rather saturnine face took on such an expression of sardonic scorn that poor Joseph was momentarily abashed, and stood looking at him with an absurdly crestfallen air.

‘Surprising weak intellects isn’t a pastime of mine,’ said Stephen, not even troubling to remove his pipe from between his teeth.

Joseph smiled with a bravery which prompted Paula to take up the cudgels in his defence. But Stephen only gave a short bark of laughter, and buried himself in his book, and by the time Paula had told him, with modern frankness, what she thought of his manners, Joseph, whose invincible cheerfulness no brutality could long impair, had recovered from his hurt and archly ascribed Stephen’s snap to a touch of liver.

Maud, who was laying out a complicated Double Patience, her plump countenance betraying nothing but a mild interest in the disposition of aces and kings, said in her toneless voice that salts before breakfast were good for sluggish livers.

‘Oh, my God!’ said Stephen, dragging his lanky limbs out of the deep chair. ‘To think that this house was once tolerable!’

There was no mistaking the implication of this savage remark, but as soon as Stephen had left the room, Joseph assured Paula that she need not worry on his account, since he knew Stephen too well to be hurt by the things he said. ‘I don’t suppose poor old Stephen really grudges us Nat’s hospitality,’ he said, with one of his whimsical smiles.

Joseph and Maud had not always been inmates of Lexham Manor. Joseph had been, in fact, until a couple of years previously, a rolling stone. In reviewing his past, he often referred to square pegs and wanderlust; and, that nothing should be wanting to exasperate Stephen, would recall past triumphs behind the footlights with a sigh, a smile, and a gently-spoken: ‘Eheu fugaces!’

For Joseph had been on the stage. Articled in youth to a solicitor, he had soon abandoned this occupation (the square peg) for the brighter prospects of coffee-growing (wanderlust) in East Africa. Since those early days he had flitted through every imaginable profession, from freelance prospecting for gold to acting. No one knew why he had left the stage – for since he had belonged to colonial and South American travelling companies it could scarcely be ascribed to the wanderlust that was responsible for his throwing up so many other jobs, for he seemed designed by nature to grace the boards. ‘The ideal Polonius!’ Mathilda Clare once called him.

It was during this phase of his career that he had met and married Maud. Incomprehensible though it might appear to the young Herriards, knowing Maud only in her fifties, she had once held an honourable place in the second row of the chorus. She had grown plump with the years, and it was difficult to trace in her fat little face, with its tiny mouth embedded between deep creases of pink cheek, and its pale blue, slightly starting eyes, the signs of the pretty girl she must once have been. She rarely spoke of her youth, such remarks as she from time to time let fall being inconsequent, and holding little clue to what Paula chose to think the mystery of her past.

The young Herriards, and Mathilda Clare, a distant cousin, knew Joseph and Maud only as legendary figures until the sea washed them up on the shores of England two years previously – at Liverpool. They had come from South America, solvent, but without prospects. They had gravitated to Lexham Manor, and there they had remained, not too proud, said Joseph, to be Nathaniel’s pensioners.

Nathaniel extended his hospitality to his brother and his sister-in-law with surprising readiness. Perhaps, hazarded Paula, he felt that Lexham needed a mistress. If so, he was disappointed, for Maud showed no inclination to take the reins of household government into her small hands. Maud’s idea of human bliss seemed to consist of eating, sleeping, playing interminable games of Patience, and reading, in a desultory fashion, chatty biographies of royal personages or other celebrities.

But if Maud was static, Joseph was full of energy. It was nearly all benevolent, but, unfortunately for Nathaniel, who was not gregarious, he delighted in gathering large parties together, and liked nothing so much as filling the house with young people, and joining in their amusements.

It was Joseph who had been inspired to organise the house-party that was looming over Nathaniel’s unwilling head this chill December. Joseph, having lived for so many years abroad, hankered wistfully after a real English Christmas. Nathaniel, regarding him with a contemptuous eye, said that a real English Christmas meant, in his experience, a series of quarrels between inimical persons bound to one another only by the accident of relationship, and thrown together by a worn-out convention which decreed that at Christmas families should forgather.

But this acrid pronouncement only made Joseph laugh, clap Nathaniel on the back, and accuse him affectionately of growing into a regular curmudgeon.

It said much for Joseph’s powers of persuasion that Nathaniel did, in the end, invite ‘the young people’ to spend Christmas at the Manor. As he had quarrelled with his nephew Stephen only a month previously, and had been resolutely refusing, for rather longer, to give financial backing to a play which his niece Paula wished to appear in, it took some time to talk him into letting bygones be bygones.

‘You know, Nat,’ Joseph said, rather ruefully, ‘old fogies like you and me can’t afford to quarrel with the younger generation. Why, where should we be without them, with all their faults, bless their hearts!’

‘I can afford to quarrel with anyone I like,’ replied Nathaniel, with perfect truth. ‘I don’t say that Stephen and Paula can’t come to stay if they want to, but I’m not going to have that young woman of Stephen’s poisoning the air with her filthy scent; and I won’t be badgered by Paula to back a play by a fellow I’ve never heard of, and don’t want to hear of. All your precious young people are out for is money, and well I know it! When I think of the amount I’ve squandered on them, one way and another—’

‘Well, and why shouldn’t you?’ said Joseph cheerfully. ‘Oh, you can’t deceive me! You like to make out that you’re a skinflint; but I know the joy of giving, and nothing will make me believe you don’t know it too!’

‘Sometimes, Joe,’ said Nathaniel, ‘you make me feel sick!’

Nevertheless, he consented, after a good deal of persuasion, to invite Stephen’s ‘young woman’ to Lexham. In the end, quite a number of persons forgathered at the Manor for Christmas, since Paula brought with her the unknown dramatist to whom Nathaniel had taken such violent exception; Mathilda Clare invited herself; and Joseph decided, at the last moment, that it would be unkind to break the custom of years by excluding Nathaniel’s business-partner, Edgar Mottisfont, from the party.

Joseph spent the days immediately preceding Christmas in decorating the house. He bought paper-chains, and festooned them across the ceilings; he pricked himself grievously in countless attempts to fix sprigs of holly over all the pictures; and he hung up bunches of mistletoe at all strategic points. He was engaged on this work when Mathilda Clare arrived. As she entered the house, he was erecting an infirm step-ladder in the middle of the hall, preparatory to securing a bunch of mistletoe to the chandelier.

‘Tilda, my dear!’ he exclaimed, letting the step-ladder fall with a crash, and hurrying to meet this first arrival. ‘Well, well, well, well!’

‘Hallo, Joe!’ returned Miss Clare. ‘Yule-tide-and-all-that?’

Joseph beamed, and said: ‘Ah, I catch you at a disadvantage! See!’ He held up the mistletoe over her head, and embraced her.

‘Cave-man,’ said Mathilda, submitting.

Joseph laughed delightedly, and, slipping a hand in her arm, led her into the library, where Nathaniel was reading the paper. ‘Look what the fairies have brought us, Nat!’ he said.

Nathaniel looked up over his spectacles, and said in somewhat discouraging accents: ‘Oh, it’s you, is it? How are you? Glad to see you.’

‘Well, that’s something, anyway,’ said Mathilda, shaking hands with him. ‘Thanks for letting me come, by the way.’

‘I suppose you want something,’ said Nathaniel, but with a twinkle.

‘Not a thing,’ replied Mathilda, lighting a cigarette. ‘Only Sarah’s sister has broken her leg, and Mrs Jones can’t oblige.’

As Sarah was the devoted retainer who constituted Miss Clare’s domestic staff, the reason for her visit to the Manor was felt to have been satisfactorily explained. Nathaniel grunted, and said that he might have known it. Joseph squeezed Mathilda’s arm, and told her not to pay any attention to Nat. ‘We’re going to have a real Christmas jollification!’ he said.

‘The deuce we are!’ said Mathilda. ‘All right, Joe: I’ll co-operate. The perfect guest: that’s me. Where’s Cousin Maud?’

Maud was discovered presently in the morning-room. She seemed vaguely glad to see Mathilda, and gave her a cheek to kiss, remarking somewhat disconcertingly: ‘Poor Joseph is so set on an old-fashioned Christmas!’

‘All right, I’ve no objection to helping him,’ said Mathilda. ‘Shall I make paper-chains, or something? Who’s coming?’

‘Stephen and Paula, and Stephen’s fiancée, and of course Mr Mottisfont.’

‘It sounds like a riot of fun. Stephen would make any party go with a swing.’

‘Nathaniel does not care for Stephen’s fiancée,’ Maud stated.

‘You don’t say!’ remarked Miss Clare vulgarly.

‘She is very pretty,’ said Maud.

Mathilda grinned. ‘So she is,’ she admitted.

Mathilda was not pretty. She had good eyes, and beautiful hair, but not even in her dewy youth had she been able to deceive herself into thinking that she was good-looking. She had sensibly accepted her plainness, and had, she said, put all her money on style. She was much nearer thirty than twenty; she enjoyed private means; lived in a cottage not uncomfortably far from London; and eked out her income by occasional journalism, and the breeding of bull-terriers. Valerie Dean, who was Stephen’s fiancée, vaguely resented her, because she dressed so well, and made her plainness so arresting that she attracted a good deal of attention at parties at which Valerie had confidently expected to draw all eyes upon herself.

‘Of course, darling, it isn’t that I don’t like your cousin,’ Valerie told Stephen, ‘but it’s so silly to call her striking. Because she’s practically hideous, isn’t she, Stephen?’

‘Sure,’ said Stephen.

‘Do you think she’s so frightfully clever, Stephen? I mean, do you?’

‘Never thought about it. She’s a damned good sort.’

‘Oh, darling, that sounds absolutely foul!’ said Valerie, pleased. ‘Don’t you wish she weren’t going to be at Lexham?’

‘No.’

‘Oh, Stephen, you are a swine! Why don’t you?’

‘I like her. I wish you’d shut your pretty little trap. I hate being yapped at when I’m driving.’

‘You are a low hound, Stephen. Do you love me?’

‘Yes, damn you!’

‘Well, it doesn’t sound as though you did. I’m pretty, aren’t I?’

‘Yes, my little bonehead, you’re lovely – Aphrodite and Helen rolled into one. Stop drivelling!’

‘Oh, I can’t think why I ever fell for you, darling. I think you’re foul!’ said Miss Dean cooingly.

He vouchsafed no answer to this remark, and his betrothed, apparently realising that his mood was not propitious, sank her chin into the collar of her fur coat, and relapsed into quiescent silence.

Their arrival at Lexham Manor coincided with that of Edgar Mottisfont, and all three were welcomed into the house by Joseph, who came trotting out into the porch, beaming with pleasure, and claiming the privilege of an old stager to embrace Valerie.

His rapt appreciation of the truly lovely picture she presented made Stephen look more than ordinarily sardonic, but was well received by his target. Miss Dean, who was indeed lovely, liked to hear her charms enthusiastically praised, and was not above responding to the arch sallies of old gentlemen. She lifted her large blue eyes to Joseph’s face, and told him that she knew he was dreadfully wicked, a pronouncement which delighted Joseph, and made Stephen say ill-naturedly: ‘A case of si vieillesse pouvait!’

‘Well, Stephen!’ said Edgar Mottisfont, descending from the car which had been sent to fetch him from the station.

‘Hallo!’ said Stephen indifferently.

‘This is an unexpected pleasure,’ said Mottisfont, looking at him with disfavour.

‘Why?’ asked Stephen.

‘Now, now, now!’ chided Joseph, overhearing this interchange, and bustling forward. ‘My dear Edgar! Come in, come in! You must be frozen, all of you! Look at the sky! We’re going to have a white Christmas. I shouldn’t be surprised if we found ourselves tobogganing in a day or two.’

‘I should,’ said Stephen, following the others into the house. ‘Hallo, Mathilda!’

‘I thought I heard your mellow accents,’ said Mathilda. ‘Spreading goodwill, my sweet?’

Stephen allowed his bitter mouth to relax into a smile at this greeting, but as Nathaniel came into the hall at that moment, and favoured him with nothing more than a nod, and a curt ‘Glad to see you, Stephen,’ the disagreeable expression returned to his face, and he immediately laid himself out to be objectionable to everyone within range.

Nathaniel, having shaken hands in a perfunctory fashion with Miss Dean, and said ‘Oh!’ dampingly to her announcement that she simply loved coming to spend Christmas in his perfectly fascinating house, lost no time in whisking himself and Edgar Mottisfont into his study.

‘Remind me some time to give you some hints and tips on how to put yourself over with your Uncle Nat,’ Mathilda said kindly to Miss Dean.

‘Blast you, shut up!’ snapped Stephen. ‘God, I wonder why I came?’

‘Probably because you couldn’t think of anywhere else to go,’ said Mathilda. Catching sight of Joseph’s absurdly dismayed countenance, she added: ‘Anyway, now you are here, behave yourself! Would you like to go up to your room now, Valerie, or have tea first?’

Miss Dean, whose major preoccupation in life was the possibility of her hair becoming disarranged, or her complexion impaired, chose to go to her room. This put Joseph in mind of his wife, but by the time he had run her to earth in the drawing-room, Mathilda had escorted Valerie upstairs.

Maud, gently chided by Joseph for not having come out to welcome the visitors, said that she had not heard their arrival. ‘I have a very interesting book here,’ she said. ‘I got it out of the library today. It is the one you or Nat had out a little while ago, and which you thought I should not care for, about the poor Empress of Austria. Fancy, Joseph! She actually rode in a circus!’

Joseph, who possibly had a very fair idea of what the company would have to suffer from his wife’s perusal of this, or any other, book, suggested tactfully that it should be put away until after Christmas, and reminded her that she was Valerie’s hostess, and should have showed her the way to her room.

‘No, dear,’ replied Maud. ‘I’m sure I had nothing to do with inviting Valerie here. Nor do I see why I shouldn’t read my book at Christmas as well as at any other time. She could sit on her hair. Fancy!’

There did not seem to be much hope of dragging Maud’s attention away from the Empress’s peculiarities, so, with a fond pat on her shoulder, Joseph bustled away again, to irritate the servants by begging them to put tea forward, and to trot upstairs to tap on Valerie’s door, and ask if she had everything she wanted.

Tea was served in the drawing-room. Maud laid aside the Life of the Empress Elizabeth of Austria, and poured out. She sat on the sofa, a dump of a woman behind a staggering array of embossed silver, and when each of the visitors came into the room, she extended her small plump hand with the same mechanical smile, and the same colourless phrase of welcome.

Mathilda sat beside her, and laughed when she saw the title of the book Maud had been reading. ‘Last time I was here it was the Memoirs of a Lady-in-Waiting,’ she said, teasing Maud.

Mockery slid off the armour of Maud’s self-sufficiency. ‘I like that kind of book,’ she replied simply.

When Nathaniel came in with Edgar Mottisfont, Stephen dragged himself out of a deep armchair, saying ungraciously: ‘Got your chair, uncle.’

Nathaniel accepted this overture in the spirit in which it was presumably meant. ‘Don’t disturb yourself, my boy. How have you been keeping?’

‘All right,’ Stephen said. He added, with a further effort towards civility: ‘You look very fit.’

‘Except for this wretched lumbago of mine,’ Nathaniel said, not quite pleased that Stephen should have forgotten his lumbago. ‘I had a touch of sciatica yesterday, too.’

‘Bad luck,’ said Stephen.

‘The ills the flesh is heir to!’ said Mottisfont, shaking his head. ‘Anno domini, Nat, anno domini!’

‘Nonsense!’ said Joseph. ‘Look at me! If you two old fogies would take my tip, and do your daily dozen every morning before breakfast, you’d feel twenty years younger! Knees bend – touch your toes – deep breathing before the open window!’

‘Don’t be a fool, Joe!’ growled Nathaniel. ‘Touch my toes indeed! Why, there are some mornings when I should be set fast if I stooped an inch!’

Miss Dean offered her contribution to the discussion. ‘I do think exercises are the most ghastly bore, don’t you?’

‘Shouldn’t be at your age,’ said Nathaniel.

‘A dose of salts every morning would do most people a great deal of good,’ said Maud, handing a cup-and-saucer to Stephen.

Nathaniel, after casting a malevolent look at his sister-in-law, at once began to talk to Mottisfont. Mathilda gave a gurgle of laughter, and said: ‘Well, that’s settled that topic, at any rate!’

Maud’s pale eyes met hers, uncomprehending, devoid of any hint of humour. ‘I replace salts very beneficial,’ she said.

Valerie Dean, who was looking entrancingly pretty in a jersey-suit which exactly matched the blue of her eyes, had been taking stock of Mathilda’s tweed coat and skirt, and had reached the conclusion that it did not become her. This made her feel friendly towards Mathilda, and she moved her chair nearer to the sofa, and began to talk to her. Stephen, who seemed to be making a real effort to behave nicely, joined in his uncle’s conversation with Mottisfont, and Joseph, radiant now that his party looked like being a success after all, beamed on everyone impartially. So patent was his satisfaction that Mathilda’s eyes began to twinkle again, and she offered, after tea, to help him to hang up his paper-chains.

‘I’m glad you’ve come, Tilda,’ Joseph told her, as she gingerly mounted the rickety steps. ‘I do so want this party to go well.’

‘You’re the World’s Uncle, Joe,’ said Mathilda. ‘For God’s sake, hang on to these steps! They feel most unsafe to me. Why did you want this family reunion?’

‘Ah, you’ll laugh at me if I tell you!’ he said, shaking his head. ‘I think, if you hang your end just above that picture it would just reach to the chandelier. Then we could have another chain over to that corner.’

‘Just as you say, Santa Claus. But why the reunion?’

‘Well, my dear, isn’t it the season of goodwill, and isn’t it all working out just as one hoped it would?’

‘Depends what you hoped,’ said Mathilda, pressing a drawing-pin into the wall. ‘If you ask me, there’ll be murder done before we’re through. Nat’s patience will never stand much of little Val.’

‘Bosh, Tilda!’ said Joseph roundly. ‘Bosh and nonsense! There’s no harm in the child, and I’m sure she’s pretty enough to eat!’

Mathilda descended the steps. ‘I don’t think that Nat prefers blondes,’ she said.

‘Never mind! It doesn’t matter what he thinks of poor little Val, after all. The main thing is that he shouldn’t carry on a silly quarrel with old Stephen.’

‘If I’m to fix this end to the chandelier, move the steps over, Joe. Why shouldn’t he quarrel with Stephen, if he wants to?’

‘Because he’s really very fond of him, because quarrelling in families is always a pity. Besides—’ Joseph stopped, and began to move the steps.

‘Besides what?’

‘Well, Tilda, Stephen can’t afford to quarrel with Nat, the silly fellow!’

‘You should worry!’ said Mathilda. ‘You aren’t going to tell me that Nat has at last brought himself to make a will? Is Stephen the heir?’

‘You want to know too much,’ said Joseph, giving her a playful smack.

‘Sure I do! You’re very mysterious, aren’t you?’

‘No, no, upon my word I’m not! I only feel it would be very foolish of Stephen to go on being on bad terms with Nat. Shall we hang this big paper-bell under the chandelier, or do you think a bunch of mistletoe would be better?’

‘If you really want my opinion, Joe, I think they look equally lousy.’

‘Naughty girl! Such language!’ Joseph said. ‘You young people don’t appreciate Christmas as my generation did. Doesn’t it mean anything to you?’

‘It will, by the time we’re through,’ replied Mathilda, once more ascending the steps.

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