EDEN PHILLPOTTS
Author of Tryphena
New York:
The MacMillan Company
I. ‘Santa
Claus’
II. The returned
native
III. John and Jane
IV. The old
soldier
V. When fox
was ferryman
VI. Mother’s
misfortune
VII. Steadfast Samuel
VIII. The Hound’s
pool
IX. The price
of Milly Bassett
X. The amber
heart
XI. The wise
woman of Walna
XII. The torch
XIII. ‘Spider’
XIV. The Woodstock
XV. The night-hawk
No. I
‘Santa Claus’
Nobody knew where Teddy Pegram came from or why the man ordained to settle down in Little Silver. He had no relations round about and couldn’t, or wouldn’t, tell his new neighbours what had brought him along. But he bided a bit with Mrs. Ford, the policeman’s wife, as a lodger, and then, when he’d sized up the place and found it suited him, he took a tumble-down, four-room cottage at the back-side of the village and worked upon it himself and soon had the place to his liking. A most handy little man he was and could turn his skill in many directions. And he’d do odd jobs for the neighbours and show a good bit of kindness to the children. He lived alone and looked after himself, for he could cook and sew like a woman—at least like the clever ones. In fact there didn’t seem nothing he couldn’t do. And his knowledge extended above crafts, for he’d got a bit of learning also and he’d talk with Johns at the shop-of-all-sorts about business, or with Samual Mutters, the chemist, about patent medicines, or with butcher or baker concerning their jobs, or with policemen about crime, and be worth attending to on any subject.
His pleasure, however, was sporting, and not until he’d dwelt among us a good bit did a measure of doubt in that matter creep into our praise of the man.
Round about fifty he might have been—a clean-shaved, active chap, five feet three inches high, and always bursting with energy. He had grizzled hair and a blue chin and eyes so bright and black as shoe-buttons. A hard mouth and lips always pursed up over his yellow teeth; but though it looked a cruel sort of mouth, nought cruel ever came out of it save in the matter of politics. He was a red radical and didn’t go to church, yet against that you could set his all-round good-will and friendship and his uncommon knack of lending a hand to anybody in his power to serve. But he was up against the Government, and would talk so fierce of a night sometimes at the ‘Barley Sheaf’ that Ned Chown, the landlord, who was a true blue, didn’t think so well on Mr. Pegram as the most of us. Friends he made, but hadn’t much use for the women, though he declared himself as not against them. He was a bachelor-minded man by nature, and yet, what ain’t so common in that sort, he liked childer and often had a halfpenny in his pocket for one of his pets.