CODA: Christmas Morning
The vicarage was a hive of activity on Christmas morning. Mr. Morland had already gone to church to prepare for services with the eldest boys, leaving Mrs. Morland to get the rest of the children ready. With so many bodies to get washed and fed and dressed and brushed, and as the maid had the morning free in honor of the savior's birth, no one noticed if any one child was not already buzzing about.
Catherine threw herself out of bed in a panic. Henry! Eleanor! The Winter Court! Has she seen the sunrise? Would she be allowed to return?
She stumbled into her slippers and scrambled down the stairs. She was desperate to find Henry, to see if he was still large and human-looking or if he was returned to the form of a toy. Mrs. Morland caught sight of her and told her to go upstairs and dress for church; everyone else was nearly ready and some parishioners were surely at the church by now. Catherine protested that she needed to see her nutcracker immediately.
Mrs. Morland had no patience that morning for demanding children who had shirked all responsibilities to sleep in and were going to make everyone else late. She ordered Catherine to go upstairs and get ready in no uncertain terms, and any disobedience would only delay the return of Catherine’s new toy.
With no recourse to a higher authority, Catherine stomped upstairs to don her new dress and braid her hair. She sulked her way across the churchyard and paid no attention to her father's sermon of goodwill and joy. She wanted to race home as soon as the congregation filed out but she was cruelly detained by her mother and forced to smile and endure compliments from her neighbors.
When Mrs. Drossel-Allen approached, Catherine grabbed her hands and started to drag her to the vicarage. Mrs. Drossel-Allen dug in her fashionable heels and insisted that Catherine wait. Only Mr. Drossel-Allen had the correct tools to fix the toy's broken arm, so they would need to wait for him. Catherine’s impatience earned the attention of her mother who sent her back into the church to tidy the hymnals.
By the time she finally entered the vicarage once more, her parents were chatting amicably with the Drossel-Allens and the cricket bat and nutcracker were laid out on the table between them.
“Ah, Catherine, there you are,” said her father. “Come and thank Mr. Drossel-Allen for fixing your doll.”
Catherine rushed forward in full gratitude with her face wreathed in a wide smile but when her eyes fell on the nutcracker all good cheer left her.
“That's not Henry,” she stated.
The adults shared a brief look of confusion before one of them said, “She has named him,” and they all nodded in agreement.
“That's not him,” she said again.
The adults tried to convince her that she was wrong but she was filled with certainty that this nutcracker was not hers. The lapel of his coat was wrong, his boots were too short, and his eyes were utterly without twinkle. She felt herself tearing up, she had lost him. She had lost Henry and, with him, she had lost Eleanor and the Palace of the Winter Court with all its pageantry and splendor.
“My poor child,” said Mrs. Drossel-Allen with true sympathy. “Come sit by me and tell me all about your dear Henry. Tell me, and I will see what can be done about it.”
The other adults let her manage Catherine. The girl sat next to her and quietly told everything: the battle between the toys and the mice; the death of the mouse king; Henry's introduction; the welcome they received at the castle; how beautiful Henry's sister was; all the performers who appeared for the celebration; the promise from seeing the sunrise.
“And did you see the sunrise?” Mrs. Drossel-Allen asked after hanging onto every word.
“I do not know,” Catherine lamented. “I was so sleepy, and I needed to get home but only Henry could take me, and then I woke up in my own bed, oh!”
She would have continued on, getting more and more worked up, but Mrs. Drossel-Allen lightly covered Catherine’s hands with her own.
“Fear not, my dear Catherine, for I am sure you will see him again. If he was gentleman enough to bring you safely home after such a marvelous adventure, he cannot abandon you forever. He is probably only waiting until you are older and able to stay out all night and well into the morning.”
Catherine tried to imagine how old she would need to be for that. It would take years!
“Are you sure, Mrs. Drossel-Allen?” she asked. She desperately wanted to see Henry again, no matter how long it took.
“I am,” said the old neighbor with a firm nod. “Until then, there is nothing for you to do but to be good to your parents and have adventures of your own so that you and the nutcracker will have stories to share. Perhaps Mr. Drossel-Allen and I will take you places with us when we are older.”
“Oh, would you!” cried Catherine. She hugged her neighbor fiercely and felt at peace. She would see Henry again, and Eleanor, and everyone at the Palace. Some day.
And for the present, she would have a merry Christmas.
//THE END//
And that's it for me this year. have a happy whatever you celebrate
-NN