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Fairy Prince
by
Two of Carol’s silver buds had bloomed. One of them had bloomed into a white-paper package that looked like a book. The other one had strange humps. Only one of Rosalee’s violet buds had bloomed. But it was a very large box tied with red ribbon. It looked like a best hat. One of father’s blue buds had bloomed. One of mother’s red buds. They bloomed very small. Small enough to be diamonds. Or collar-buttons. ‘Way back on the further side of the tree I could see that one of my green buds had bloomed. It was a long little box. It was a narrow little box. I can most always tell when there’s a doll in a box. Young Derry Willard’s golden bud hadn’t bloomed at all. Maybe it was a late bloomer. Some things are. The tame coon’s salt fish, I’ve noticed, never blooms at all until just the very last moment before we go into the parlor Christmas morning. Mother says there’s a reason. We didn’t bother much about reasons. The parlor was very cold. It smelt very cold and mysterious. We didn’t see how we could wait!
Carol helped us to wait. Not being able to talk, Carol has plenty of time to think. He can write, of course. But spelling is very hard. So he doesn’t often waste his spelling on just facts. He waits till he gets enough facts to make a philosophy before he tries to spell it: He made a philosophy about Christmas coming so slow. He made it on the blackboard in the kitchen. He wrote it very tall.
“Christmas has got to come,” he wrote. “It’s part of time. Everything that’s part of time has got to come. Nothing can stop it. It runs like a river. It runs down-hill. It can’t help itself. I should worry.”
Young Derry Willard never wrote at all. He telegraphed his “manners” instead. “Thank you for Thanksgiving Day,” he telegraphed. “It was very wonderful.” He didn’t say anything else. He never even mentioned his address.
“U–m–m,” said my father.
“It’s because of the hundred-dollar bill,” said my mother. “He doesn’t want to give us any chance to return it.”
“Humph!” said my father. “Do we look poor?”
My mother glanced at the worn spot in the dining-room rug. She glanced at my father’s coat.
“We certainly do!” she laughed. “But young Derry Willard didn’t leave us a hundred-dollar bill to try and make us look any richer. All young Derry Willard was trying to do was to make us look more Christmassy!”
“Well, we can’t accept it!” said my father.
“Of course we can’t accept it!” said my mother. “It was a mistake. But at least it was a very kind mistake.”
“Kind?” said my father.
“Very kind,” said my mother. “No matter how dark a young man may be or how much cane-sirup and bananas he has consumed, he can’t be absolutely depraved as long as he goes about the world trying to make things look more Christmassy!”
My father looked up rather sharply.
My mother gave a funny little gasp.
“Oh, it’s all right,” she said. “We’ll manage some way! But who ever heard of a chicken-bone hung on a Christmas tree? Or a slice of roast beef?”
“Some children don’t get–anything,” said my father. He looked solemn. “Money is very scarce,” he said.
“It always is,” said my mother. “But that’s no reason why presents ought to be scarce.”
My father jumped up.
My father laughed.
“Great Heavens, woman!” he said. “Can’t anything dull your courage?”
“Not my–Christmas courage!” said my mother.
My father reached out suddenly and patted her hand.
“Oh, all right,” he said. “I suppose we’ll manage somehow.”
“Of course we’ll manage somehow,” said my mother.
I ran back as fast as I could to Carol and Rosalee.
We thought a good deal about young Derry Willard coming. We talked about it among ourselves. We never talked about it to my father or my mother. I don’t know why. I went and got my best story-book and showed the Fairy Prince to Carol. Carol stared and stared. There were palms and bananas in the picture. There was a lace-paper castle. There was a moat. There was a fiery charger. There were dragons. The Fairy Prince was all in white armor, with a white plume in his hat. It grasped your heart, it was so beautiful. I showed the picture to Rosalee. She was surprised. She turned as white as the plume in the Fairy Prince’s hat. She put the book in her top bureau-drawer with her ribbons. We wondered and wondered whether young Derry Willard would come. Carol thought he wouldn’t. I thought he would. Rosalee wouldn’t say. Carol thought it would be too cold. Carol insisted that he was a tropic. And that tropics couldn’t stand the cold. That if a single breath of cold air struck a tropic he blew up and froze. Rosalee didn’t want young Derry Willard to blow up and freeze. Anybody could see that she didn’t. I comforted her. I said he would come in a huge fur coat. Carol insisted that tropics didn’t have huge fur coats. “All right, then,” I said. “He will come in a huge feather coat! Blue-bird feathers it will be made of! With a soft brown breast! When he fluffs himself he will look like the god of all the birds and of next Spring! Hawks and all evil things will scuttle away!”