Marion had established the tradition of Christmas at Mount Lœng House,
now. Christmas Eve, or the Gallifreyan date closest to it was celebrated
with a party to which all of her closest friends among the aristocracy
came to dine with the servants of her house as equals, and all received
gifts that she had spent a great deal of time and thought on, not to mention
quite a bit of money.
That party was fully prepared for. The final preparations were being made
in the grand dining hall. The table was beautifully set. The Christmas
trees and the silver decorations were magnificent. Outside caterers were
taking over the kitchens from the de Lœngbærrow staff in order that
they should enjoy a meal they hadn’t had to cook for themselves
this one day of the year.
Tomorrow, Christmas Day lunch was going to be a private affair. Marion
and Kristoph were entertaining only two people – Argis Mielles and
his granddaughter, Rodan. A special stash of presents, including a bicycle
with stabilisers were set aside for that occasion, and Marion was looking
forward to seeing the little girl open her gifts.
But, as if that wasn’t enough, Marion had organised another party
for the afternoon. Kristoph had tried to say that she was already far
too busy, but she insisted that she had enough help. A lot of the preparation
was done the day before, including the making of two dozen assorted jellies
that were the fruit of her last excursion to Liverpool. The Christmas
cakes had been made a whole week before. Gallons of strawberry and chocolate
ice cream had also been imported from planet Earth to accompany the more
traditional Gallifreyan delicacies on the menu.
The ballroom was decked out with paper chains and a fourth Christmas tree
to go with the one in the hall and the two in the grand dining room. Kristoph’s
TARDIS was placed at one end of the ballroom disguised as a huge, traditional
fireplace with a roaring fire in the grate. There was a reason why that
had been done, but it wasn’t time for that surprise to be revealed,
yet.
The children arrived a little after thirteen o’clock, collected
by Gallis Limmon in the hover bus that he used when he brought them to
Mount Lœng House for their lessons with Marion. His sister had come
along, too. She was intrigued by this foreign custom of Christmas and
wanted to see what it was all about.
“It’s the one thing I really miss about Earth,” Marion
explained to her. “Christmas is a very special time for people on
my planet. Well, most of them, anyway. Or at least in the part I come
from. It’s a time when we give instead of taking and we try to appreciate
each other better. It’s... all about...”
She showed her guests the nativity set that she had placed on a side table.
She gave a short version of the First Christmas story and did her best
to explain the importance of that event in the two thousand years that
followed. Her explanation only partly worked for two main reasons.
Firstly, two thousand years on Gallifrey was barely a single generation.
Events that were distant and mysterious on Earth were hardly even recent
history here. So they didn’t understand why it was important that
a child had been born in a stable such a short time ago.
Secondly, of course, modern Gallifreyans had no religion as Marion understood
it. The nearest thing they had to a God was Rassilon, and he was very
much a man, not a deity. He didn’t create Gallifrey. He didn’t
even create Gallifreyans. He merely made some of them into Time Lords
and gave them the powers they have to use as they saw fit.
And Rassilon had sired twelve sons, none of which were born in a stable.
The religious origins of Christmas were never going to be accepted on
Gallifrey. Marion knew she wasn’t supposed to try. It was enough
that her friends accepted the Nativity as a charming morality story about
good triumphing over evil. And they accepted her foreign tradition of
Christmas as a time of joy and friendship and the giving of gifts in token
of that friendship.
She looked at the children playing party games. The sort that Marion knew
needed a little adaptation when the children were telepathic and telekinetic,
too. Hunt the Thimble had to have new rules that prevented the levitation
of the thimble from its hiding place. Blind Man’s Buff involved
all the other participants gently blocking the second sight of the blindfolded
child. Hide and Seek also had to have rules about not using telepathy.
On the other hand, some fun new games were invented that utilised their
burgeoning skills. They had a very good time seeing who could make their
brightly coloured balloon rise to the ceiling of the ballroom fastest
using the power of their minds.
“I’ve never seen anything like this before, either,”
Misha Limmon said as she picked up a bright orange balloon and felt the
rubbery texture beneath her fingers. There were literally hundreds of
them hanging from the ceiling and the walls of the ballroom and bouncing
loose around the floor. Occasionally there would be a bang when one burst
but there were plenty more balloons to be had.
“It’s just a balloon,” Marion told her. “Made
of a synthetic material that expands when inflated. Caolin and the footmen
did wonders yesterday getting them all blown up. I think I have finally
seen the advantage of a Gallifreyan respiratory system. They could inflate
a whole balloon in one breath.”
“I’m not sure Rassilon envisaged his people’s superiority
over other races in quite such terms,” Kristoph said as he came
to Marion’s side, smiling warmly. “And I don’t think
my great-great-great-great grandfather who had this house built imagined
the grand ballroom being put to such purposes as this.” He looked
around wryly at the balloons and streamers, at burst balloons and other
colourful detritus on the finely laid floor of purple márrág
stone, one of the most sought after materials in the twelve galaxies.
The floor had been laid six generations ago, and hardly looked worn after
all those millennia. It could probably survive this one afternoon of rough
treatment. Even so, he thought some of his ancestors might be causing
disturbances in the Matrix just now.
“Oooh, I think that was a bad idea,” Marion groaned as the
children succeeded in opening up a colourful papier-mâché
Christmas star containing sweets and party favours – including plastic
whistles, paper horns and poppers. The resulting noise was deafening for
several minutes before Kristoph drew his sonic screwdriver from within
his robe and turned it to a rarely used setting. The effect was like turning
down the volume on the TV. It was clear from the children’s faces
that they thought they were still making amazing noises. But the adults
were in a blissful bubble of silence.
“We take the name of this device for granted,” Kristoph said,
waving the tool in the air. “SONIC screwdriver. It has some interesting
effects on SOUND.”
“That was my fault, I’m afraid,” Marion admitted. “I
should have saved those for when they went home. Never mind. It is almost
time for tea.”
“And almost time for me to play my special role in these proceedings,”
Kristoph added. “One which I hope none of my fellow High Councillors
will EVER find out about, I might add.” He kissed his wife on the
cheek and left the ballroom. She clapped her hands to attract the attention
of the children as two of the footmen took the cover off the long table
at the far end of the room. Caolin, the butler, took charge of the sparkling
crystal fountain where fruit punch cascaded down into a deep trough and
was recycled back to the top again continuously. Thirsty youngsters could
help themselves with brightly coloured plastic cups and it never ran dry.
The party food on the table showed no sign of running out, either. The
children ate their fill, fascinated by the concept of sausage rolls, vol
au vents filled with salmon paste, tiny triangular sandwiches and other
treats, as well as the jellies and rich Christmas cake that was on offer.
When they were full of food, Marion invited them all to sit on the márrág
stone floor. Márrág stone had the unique property of being
warm to the touch, so it was comfortable to do so. They sat in a ring
with Marion and the other adults and sang Christmas songs that they had
learnt in the weeks leading up to the party. The grand ballroom of Mount
Lœng House on the Southern Plain of Gallifrey rang with the sound
of ‘Jingle Bells’ and “We Wish You A Merry Christmas”
“Chestnuts Roasting”, “Winter Wonderland” and
a favourite among the little ones, “Santa Claus is Coming To Town”.
The strains of the last song were dying away when something began to happen
to the fireplace at the far end of the ballroom. First, the fire roared
up higher than ever, then it died down and went out. A shower of soot
dropped from the chimney, and then a figure dressed in a red velvet suit
who carried a bulging sack with him,. There was a collective gasp from
the children. They had been singing about a man called Santa Claus and
there he was, stepping out of the fireplace swinging his sack upon his
back.
“Ho ho ho,” he said. “Are these all good children I
see here?”
“They are,” Marion replied since the children seemed to have
been rendered speechless temporarily. “They have all been very good.
They learn their lessons well in school and do as their parents tell them
at home.”
Then let them come and receive their presents from Santa,” he said.
Marion brought a chair for him to sit upon and he opened his sack. He
picked out a brightly coloured parcel and called out a name.
“Marla Soren,” he said. The dark haired child hiccupped in
surprise and stood up nervously. She stepped towards the broad-shouldered
stranger with the huge white beard and red hood. She looked at his twinkling
brown eyes and gave a little sigh. Then she stepped forward and took the
parcel he held out to her.
“Thank you, sir,” she said in a small, quiet, overwhelmed
voice. She went back to her place, clutching the parcel. Santa called
another name. Callum Grieves stood and went up to the fascinating but
rather daunting figure and accepted a present from him. One by one each
of the children were rewarded. Those still waiting looked anxiously at
the sack, wondering if there would be enough presents for them all. Would
anyone be missed out? Who would be called last?
Lorris Canno was the last. The boy was almost grief-stricken, wondering
if he would be left without a present. The sack was looking decidedly
empty, now.
“You’ve been a good boy?” Santa asked him.
“Yes, sir,” the boy answered. “Except... once... sir...
I threw a ball... and it went through a window... and it went into his
Lordship’s study... His Excellency... the President. He doesn’t
know it was me. I was too scared... But... sir... I am sorry about it.
Please, tell him I’m sorry. Even if...”
Santa reached into his sack and pulled out a parcel that looked too big
to have been contained within it. He pressed it into Lorris’s trembling
hands.
“You’re forgiven, child,” Santa told him. “Go
and open your present with your friends. And don’t worry about windows.
Merry Christmas, Lorris.”
“Merry Christmas to you, sir,” the boy said. He clutched his
present and walked back to his place on shaking feet. Santa stood and
looked at them all.
“I have to be on my way now,” he said. “But may I hear
another fine song from you as I go?”
Marion led them in another chorus of ‘We Wish You A Merry Christmas’
as Santa returned to the fireplace. Once he had ascended the fire sprang
up again and burned merrily. The children watched it for a little while
before settling down to open their presents.
A few minutes later, Kristoph returned to the party. The children, forgetting
in their excitement, to remember that he was the Lord High President,
called out to him that he had missed the visit of Santa Claus.
“Did I, indeed?” he replied with a twinkle in his brown eyes.
“But I see he brought presents for you all. That is a very fine
doll, Rowetta. And what have you got, Lorris?”
“It’s...” The boy looked at the box inside his package
curiously. “I’m... not sure, sir,” he answered. “I
think...”
“It’s a train set,” Kristoph told him. “A model
of a train line with locomotives to travel on it. Just like the trip you
went on a few months ago.”
The concept was unknown to the boy. Kristoph knelt on the floor with him
and helped him to lay out the pieces of track. Around him, budding young
architects built castles of Lego and future engineers began to assemble
bridges of Meccano, a zoo of finely made miniature animals was opened
for business and little mothers had tea parties with new dolls and toy
tea sets.
Marion sat with Misha Limmon and enjoyed a glass of orange juice while
Gallis came and joined Kristoph and Lorris with the model railway.
“I almost didn’t recognise him dressed in that costume,”
Misha said. “Our Lord High President entertaining Caretaker children.”
“I don’t imagine it has happened before,” Marion agreed.
“But perhaps... I know I can’t introduce the religious meaning
of Christmas to Gallifrey. I know I shouldn’t even try. But it would
be nice if the idea of gift giving and making other people happy could
continue.”
“Perhaps it will,” Mishe assured her.
Kristoph looked up from the first successful circuit of the miniature
rail track of a small locomotive pulling four carriages and a guards van.
He heard what Marion and said. He tried not to be sad on a happy occasion
like this.
He knew that Christmas was not going to become a tradition of Gallifreyan
life. It would be one in the de Lœngbærrow House so long as Marion
was mistress of it. But there would come a time, sooner than he would
like, when she would not be there.
He knew the spirit of Christmas on Gallifrey would die with her.
Then he shook off those premonitions and gave his attention
to the little steam train that brought a smile to the face of young Lorris
and made him forget that he was in the company of the Lord High President,
whose study he had once violated with a small red rubber ball. The spirit
of Christmas existed on Gallifrey at this time, at least. And he was determined
to make the most of it.
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