<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VIII."></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
<h3>CHRISTMAS PLANS AND AN ACCIDENT.</h3>
<br/>
<p>That night, when Marie came in to light the lamps and brush
Joyce's hair before dinner, she had some news to tell.</p>
<p>"Brossard has been sent away from the Ciseaux place," she said.
"A new man is coming to-morrow, and my friend, Clotilde Robard, has
already taken the position of housekeeper. She says that a very
different life has begun for little Monsieur Jules, and that in his
fine new clothes one could never recognize the little goatherd. He
looks now like what he is, a gentleman's son. He has the room next
to monsieur's, all freshly furnished, and after New Year a tutor is
coming from Paris.</p>
<p>"But they say that it is pitiful to see how greatly the child
fears his uncle. He does not understand the old man's cold,
forbidding manner, and it provokes monsieur to have the little one
tremble and grow pale whenever he speaks. Clotilde says that Madame
Gréville told monsieur that the boy needed games and young
companions to make him more like other children, and he promised
her that Monsieur Jules should come over here to-morrow afternoon
to play with you."</p>
<p>"Oh, good!" cried Joyce. "We'll have another barbecue if the day
is fine. I am so glad that we do not have to be bothered any more
by those tiresome old goats."</p>
<p>By the time the next afternoon arrived, however, Joyce was far
too much interested in something else to think of a barbecue.
Cousin Kate had come back from Paris with a trunk full of pretty
things, and a plan for the coming Christmas. At first she thought
of taking only madame into her confidence, and preparing a small
Christmas tree for Joyce; but afterwards she concluded that it
would give the child more pleasure if she were allowed to take part
in the preparations. It would keep her from being homesick by
giving her something else to think about.</p>
<p>Then madame proposed inviting a few of the little peasant
children who had never seen a Christmas tree. The more they
discussed the plan the larger it grew, like a rolling snowball. By
lunch-time madame had a list of thirty children, who were to be
bidden to the Noël fête, and Cousin Kate had decided to
order a tree tall enough to touch the ceiling.</p>
<p class="rgt"><ANTIMG src="images/0135-1.jpg" width-obs="40%" alt=""></p>
<p>When Jules came over, awkward and shy with the consciousness of
his new clothes, he found Joyce sitting in the midst of yards of
gaily colored tarletan. It was heaped up around her in bright
masses of purple and orange and scarlet and green, and she was
making it into candy-bags for the tree.</p>
<p>In a few minutes Jules had forgotten all about himself, and was
as busy as she, pinning the little stocking-shaped patterns in
place, and carefully cutting out those fascinating bags.</p>
<p>"You would be lots of help," said Joyce, "if you could come over
every day, for there's all the ornaments to unpack, and the corn to
shell, and pop, and string. It will take most of my time to dress
the dolls, and there's such a short time to do everything in."</p>
<p>"You never saw any pop-corn, did you, Jules?" asked Cousin Kate.
"When I was here last time, I couldn't find it anywhere in France;
but the other day a friend told me of a grocer in Paris, who
imports it for his American customers every winter. So I went
there. Joyce, suppose you get the popper and show Jules what the
corn is like."</p>
<p>Madame was interested also, as she watched the little brown
kernels shaken back and forth in their wire cage over the glowing
coals. When they began popping open, the little seeds suddenly
turning into big white blossoms, she sent Rosalie running to bring
monsieur to see the novel sight.</p>
<p>"We can eat and work at the same time," said Joyce, as she
filled a dish with the corn, and called Jules back to the table,
where he had been cutting tarletan. "There's no time to lose. See
what a funny grain this is!" she cried, picking up one that lay on
the top of the dish. "It looks like Therese, the fish woman, in her
white cap."</p>
<p>"And here is a goat's head," said Jules, picking up another
grain. "And this one looks like a fat pigeon."</p>
<p>He had forgotten his shyness entirely now, and was laughing and
talking as easily as Jack could have done.</p>
<p>"Jules," said Joyce, suddenly, looking around to see that the
older people were too busy with their own conversation to notice
hers. "Jules, why don't you talk to your Uncle Martin the way you
do to me? He would like you lots better if you would. Robard says
that you get pale and frightened every time he speaks to you, and
it provokes him for you to be so timid."</p>
<p>Jules dropped his eyes. "I cannot help it," he exclaimed. "He
looks so grim and cross that my voice just won't come out of my
throat when I open my mouth."</p>
<p>Joyce studied him critically, with her head tipped a little to
one side. "Well, I must say," she exclaimed, finally, "that, for a
boy born in America, you have the least dare about you of anybody I
ever saw. Your Uncle Martin isn't any grimmer or crosser than a man
I know at home. There's Judge Ward, so big and solemn and dignified
that everybody is half way afraid of him. Even grown people have
always been particular about what they said to him.</p>
<p>"Last summer his little nephew, Charley Ward, came to visit him.
Charley's just a little thing, still in dresses, and he calls his
uncle, Bill. Think of anybody daring to call Judge Ward,
<i>Bill!</i> No matter what the judge was doing, or how glum he
looked, if Charley took a notion, he would go up and stand in front
of him, and say, 'Laugh, Bill, laugh!' If the judge happened to be
reading, he'd have to put down his book, and no matter whether he
felt funny or not, or whether there was anything to laugh at or
not, he would have to throw his head back and just roar. Charley
liked to see his fat sides shake, and his white teeth shine. I've
heard people say that the judge likes Charley better than anybody
else in the world, because he's the only person who acts as if he
wasn't afraid of him."</p>
<p>Jules sat still a minute, considering, and then asked,
anxiously, "But what do you suppose would happen if I should say
'Laugh, Martin, laugh,' to my uncle?"</p>
<p>Joyce shrugged her shoulders impatiently. "Mercy, Jules, I did
not mean that you should act like a three-year-old baby. I meant
that you ought to talk up to your uncle some. Now this is the way
you are." She picked up a kernel of the unpopped corn, and held it
out for him to see. "You shut yourself up in a little hard ball
like this, so that your uncle can't get acquainted with you. How
can he know what is inside of your head if you always shut up like
a clam whenever he comes near you? This is the way that you ought
to be." She shot one of the great white grains towards him with a
deft flip of her thumb and finger. "Be free and open with him."</p>
<p>Jules put the tender morsel in his mouth and ate it
thoughtfully. "I'll try," he promised, "if you really think that it
would please him, and I can think of anything to say. You don't
know how I dread going to the table when everything is always so
still that we can hear the clock tick."</p>
<p>"Well, you take my advice," said Joyce. "Talk about anything.
Tell him about our Thanksgiving feast and the Christmas tree, and
ask him if you can't come over every day to help. I wouldn't let
anybody think that I was a coward."</p>
<p>Joyce's little lecture had a good effect, and monsieur saw the
wisdom of Madame Gréville's advice when Jules came to the
table that night. He had brought a handful of the wonderful corn to
show his uncle, and in the conversation that it brought about he
unconsciously showed something else,--something of his sensitive
inner self that aroused his uncle's interest.</p>
<p>Every afternoon of the week that followed found Jules hurrying
over to Madame Gréville's to help with the Christmas
preparations. He strung yards of corn, and measured out the nuts
and candy for each of the gay bags. Twice he went in the carriage
to Tours with Cousin Kate and Joyce, to help buy presents for the
thirty little guests. He was jostled by the holiday shoppers in
crowded aisles. He stood enraptured in front of wonderful show
windows, and he had the joy of choosing fifteen things from piles
of bright tin trumpets, drums, jumping-jacks, and picture-books.
Joyce chose the presents for the girls.</p>
<p>The tree was bought and set up in a large unused room back of
the library, and as soon as each article was in readiness it was
carried in and laid on a table beside it. Jules used to steal in
sometimes and look at the tapers, the beautiful colored glass
balls, the gilt stars and glittering tinsel, and wonder how the
stately cedar would look in all that array of loveliness.
Everything belonging to it seemed sacred, even the unused scraps of
bright tarletan and the bits of broken candles. He would not let
Marie sweep them up to be burned, but gathered them carefully into
a box and carried them home. There were several things that he had
rescued from her broom,--one of those beautiful red balls, cracked
on one side it is true, but gleaming like a mammoth red cherry on
the other. There were scraps of tinsel and odds and ends of
ornaments that had been broken or damaged by careless handling.
These he hid away in a chest in his room, as carefully as a miser
would have hoarded a bag of gold.</p>
<p>Clotilde Robard, the housekeeper, wondered why she found his
candle burned so low several mornings. She would have wondered
still more if she had gone into his room a while before daybreak.
He had awakened early, and, sitting up in bed with the , spread the
scraps of tarletan on his knees. He was piecing together with his
awkward little fingers enough to make several tiny bags.</p>
<p>Henri missed his spade one morning, and hunted for it until he
was out of patience. It was nowhere to be seen. Half an hour later,
coming back to the house, he found it hanging in its usual place,
where he had looked for it a dozen times at least. Jules had taken
it down to the woods to dig up a little cedar-tree, so little that
it was not over a foot high when it was planted in a box.</p>
<p>Clotilde had to be taken into the secret, for he could not hide
it from her. "It is for my Uncle Martin," he said, timidly. "Do you
think he will like it?"</p>
<p>The motherly housekeeper looked at the poor little tree, decked
out in its scraps of cast-off finery, and felt a sob rising in her
throat, but she held up her hands with many admiring exclamations
that made Jules glow with pride.</p>
<p class="ctr"><ANTIMG src="images/0143-1.jpg" width-obs="40%" alt=""><br/>
<b>"SITTING UP IN BED WITH THE QUILTS WRAPPED AROUND HIM."</b></p>
<p>"I have no beautiful white strings of pop-corn to hang over it
like wreaths of snow," he said, "so I am going down the lane for
some mistletoe that grows in one of the highest trees. The berries
are like lovely white wax beads."</p>
<p>"You are a good little lad," said the housekeeper, kindly, as
she gave his head an affectionate pat. "I shall have to make
something to hang on that tree myself; some gingerbread figures,
maybe. I used to know how to cut out men and horses and
pigs,--nearly all the animals. I must try it again some day
soon."</p>
<p>A happy smile spread all over Jules's face as he thanked her.
The words, "You are a good little lad," sent a warm glow of
pleasure through him, and rang like music in his ears all the way
down the lane. How bright the world looked this frosty December
morning! What cheeriness there was in the ring of Henri's axe as he
chopped away at the stove-wood! What friendliness in the baker's
whistle, as he rattled by in his big cart! Jules found himself
whistling, too, for sheer gladness, and all because of no more
kindness than might have been thrown to a dog; a pat on the head
and the words, "You are a good little lad."</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>Sometime after, it may have been two hours or more, Madame
Gréville was startled by a wild, continuous ringing of the
bell at her front gate. Somebody was sending peal after peal
echoing through the garden, with quick, impatient jerks of the
bell-wire. She hurried out herself to answer the summons.</p>
<p>Berthé had already shot back the bolt and showed Clotilde
leaning against the stone post, holding her fat sides and
completely exhausted by her short run from the Ciseaux house.</p>
<p>"Will madame send Gabriel for the doctor?" she cried, gasping
for breath at every word. "The little Monsieur Jules has fallen
from a tree and is badly hurt. We do not know how much, for he is
still unconscious and his uncle is away from home. Henri found him
lying under a tree with a big bunch of mistletoe in his arms. He
carried him up-stairs while I ran over to ask you to send Gabriel
quickly on a horse for the doctor."</p>
<p>"Gabriel shall go immediately," said Madame Gréville,
"and I shall follow you as soon as I have given the order."</p>
<p>Clotilde started back in as great haste as her weight would
allow, puffing and blowing and wiping her eyes on her apron at
every step. Madame overtook her before she had gone many rods.
Always calm and self-possessed in every emergency, madame took
command now; sent the weeping Clotilde to look for old linen, Henri
to the village for Monsieur Ciseaux, and then turned her attention
to Jules.</p>
<p>"To think," said Clotilde, coming into the room, "that the last
thing the poor little lamb did was to show me his Christmas tree
that he was making ready for his uncle!" She pointed to the corner
where it stood, decked by awkward boyish hands in its pitiful
collection of scraps.</p>
<p>"Poor little fellow!" said madame, with tears in her own eyes.
"He has done the best he could. Put it in the closet, Clotilde.
Jules would not want it to be seen before Christmas."</p>
<p>Madame stayed until the doctor had made his visit; then the
report that she carried home was that Jules had regained
consciousness, and that, as far as could be discovered, his only
injury was a broken leg.</p>
<p>Joyce took refuge in the pear-tree. It was not alone because
Jules was hurt that she wanted to cry, but because they must have
the Noël fête without him. She knew how bitterly he
would be disappointed.</p>
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