A light snow had fallen in the night over the Deux-Sèvres department
of France. The hillside town of Parthenay was looking beautifully wintry
as the medieval walls of the old town glittered frostily and the river
below reflected the cold blue sky. From a distance it looked like a Christmas
card.
Of course, that was usually the best way to look at snow. Close to, it
could be less charming, especially without adequate clothing.
But Marion de Lœngbærrow didn’t have that problem as she stepped
out of the house on Rue Faubourg Saint-Jacques that Kristoph had bought
in the early nineteen-sixties as a quiet getaway. She was wearing fur
lined boots and a warm suede coat with hat, scarf and gloves. She found
the cold air excitingly bracing as she made her way towards the Rue de
la Vau Saint-Jacques, the historic street inside the old medieval walls
of the town. There were exciting sounds drawing her towards where, though
the cobbled way was barely wide enough for two cars to pass, that width
had, nonetheless, been lined with stalls for a Christmas Market.
It was a charming assault on all of the senses - gaily hung tinsel and
crepe around the stalls, twinkling lights running off a slightly noisy
generator strung around the lampposts, enticing smells of rich, luxury
foods mingling with the warm scent of wax candles actually being made
in front of a small group of onlookers, Christmas music from a guitar
and accordion combination and the friendly chatter of the people over
it all. Many of the food stalls had delicious samples to taste and Marion
spent some time carefully admiring with eyes and fingers some yards of
delicate French lace.
It was the sort of thing Gallifrey didn’t have. Even in the little
towns of the southern plains there were no outdoor markets where the word
‘bustling’ was appropriate. Even if they had them, the arrival
of an Oldblood would mean the bustling would cease and the crowds of shoppers
would stand aside as she passed while the vendors would bow and do their
utmost to please her with their wares.
For bustle and excitement, and not being treated like royalty, the market
at the capital city of Xian Xian was possibly the best with its spices
and silks and fine ornamental china, but the Christmas market here on
the Rue de la Vau Saint-Jacques was almost as fabulous.
With only two days to a traditional French Christmas Eve, she had a lot
to buy, still. Some of those newly made candles for a start. She stood
for a little while near the tubs of hot wax as the chandler dipped long
lengths of wick over and over, building up the slender, tapering candles.
They were made in pairs joined by a loop of wick that was snipped at the
top to separate them while the bases were trimmed with a sharp knife and
the left over wax returned to the tub. Some were left white, others finished
with gold or silver coloured wax that would look festive on the Christmas
Eve dinner table.
Next she had to find nativity figures for the traditional crèche
on the drawing room sideboard. There were several stalls selling those,
some cheap and gaudy mass produced sets made of plaster of Paris or moulded
resin, some very fine quality hand crafted models. Marion was torn between
the china figures with bright enamel painted colours and the wooden ones
she watched actually being carved by a patient old man at a simple and
unadorned table.
In the end, she bought both. She could afford it, after all, and there
was no reason why not. It wasn’t blasphemous in any way to have
two nativity sets. She was a tiny bit surprised to find that a French
Crèche had more than the traditional figures in it. As well as
shepherds and Wise Men, any number of village people could visit the Holy
Family. She bought a boulanger, boucher, poissonnier, meunier, pêcheur,
rémouleur and a vendeur chaud de châtaigne. She might have
chosen a dozen more such characters if Rodan hadn’t arrived at her
side with a basket of her own purchases.
“Mère,” she said, speaking French as she did when she
was in France. Rodan was fluent in French and three dialects of Chinese
without any help from the TARDIS translation circuits. “I ai acheté
les fromages.”
“Oh, thank you, my dear.” Marion looked at the selection of
fragrant French cheeses in the basket. A dinner plate sized wheel of camembert
wrapped in greased paper was essential to a French Christmas Eve dinner,
the Reveillon de Noel, eaten on the return from the Midnight Mass. A varied
cheese board also had to be left out for helping oneself during the Christmas
day. Tradition dictated that three kinds of cheese, made from the milk
of a cow, a sheep and a goat must be represented on the board. Rodan had
made sure that the tradition was fully upheld.
“Where are your père and grand-père?” Marion
asked, referring to Kristoph whom Rodan had always called Father in any
language and her only blood relation, Arges Mielles, who was their guest
for this simple French Christmas.
“Grand-père is looking at tooled leather goods at a booth
over there,” Rodan answered. “Père Kristoph is talking
to le curé and le maire about the Midnight Mass. They are asking
Père to read one of the passages from the Bible that are in the
service.”
“They shouldn’t do that,” Marion sighed. “We are
only visitors to the town. That honour should go to regular Mass goers.
I’m afraid they are just being snobs because they think Kristoph
is an English aristocrat who likes to come to Parthenay for the quiet
life.”
Except that he was an aristocrat of a planet nobody in France had heard
of, the parish priest and town mayor were almost right. But the fact that
he came from a world where Christianity had never been heard of made it
even more inappropriate.
“It’s all right,” Rodan assured her foster mother. “Père
is letting them both down gently.”
“That’s all right, then.” Kristoph, Rodan and Arges
were going to accompany her to the Midnight Mass at the Église
Saint-Laurent, but only as observers of the celebration, not full participants.
Rodan was looking forward to seeing the schoolchildren dress the crèche
in the church. Kristoph was interested in the rituals of the High Mass
from an intellectual standpoint. He had also expressed the view that priestly
robes on such important church festivals bore a resemblance to the regalia
of the Panopticon ceremonies. Marion wasn’t sure if he was being
serious about that or just gently mocking the rituals of his own culture.
Marion paid for her collection of Crèche figures, safely wrapped
in old newspapers, and sought out a real poissonnier. Smoked salmon was
also high on her list of essential luxuries. It was one of the traditional
ingredients of the Christmas entrée. In a town associated with
a river and its fish stocks that was no difficulty. It was not even as
expensive as she might have expected. It was a luxury even people with
limited budgets could stretch to.
Another ‘essential’ for the meal gave her some trouble, not
because of scarcity or expense, but because of the ethics of its production.
“The foie gras looks delicious,” she said as she moved from
the fishmonger to a stall piled high with that far more controversial
French delicacy. Goose liver, cooked whole or made into paté or
mousse – the difference being determined by the proportion of foie
gras to other ingredients – was obviously eaten by all classes of
French people at Christmas without very much concern for the welfare of
the geese.
Marion was offered a sample by the stall holder and she agreed that the
rich, buttery taste was sublime. None of the commercial patés she
had eaten as a sandwich ingredient or a salad accompaniment in England
came close for flavour and texture.
But was it right to eat such food? For a long time, now, she had become
accustomed to synthesised meat that involved no killing of animals. It
was the long established way of eating on Gallifrey and on most of the
planets she regularly visited. A turkey with no bones, only solid ‘meat’
was something she was used to seeing at the Christmas dinners she hosted
at home on the southern plain. She could enjoy her food without guilt.
But they had decided to have a traditional Human Christmas and a slaughtered
and plucked turkey was already hanging in the pantry. She had just added
the box of smoked salmon to her purchases. Was foie gras really so very
different?
She looked at Rodan, a Gallifreyan child with a fondness for horses and
for French culture. It didn’t bother her that horsemeat was sold
in the boucherie. When they were in China, another culture they both loved,
Marion and Rodan both tried not to worry about the tradition there of
eating dogs, though they had never knowingly partaken of such meat.
And, after all, she was standing there in fur lined boots and a suede
coat, both part of the process of butchering cattle.
Surely it was hypocrisy after all that to have qualms about foie gras
just because it was produced by force feeding geese.
She really didn’t know the answer to the question. She chose a large
box of seasoned and pressed whole foie gras still not certain about the
ethical issues. She liked the taste and it was a traditional part of the
French Christmas dinner.
Besides, she reasoned again to salve her conscience, both a butcher and
fisherman were among the figures she had bought for the Crèche.
She was sure a goose keeper wad among the other possible figures. Eating
the meat of animals in whole or part was at least as old as the reason
for having Christmas at all.
If there was an answer to the question, it was beyond her.
“Can we get some hot cocoa?” Rodan asked. She was puzzled
by the indecision she had seen in her foster mother’s mind and hoped
that she could distract her from what troubled her.
“Yes, that’s a very good idea,” Marion answered. She
headed towards the ad hoc pavement café where hot drinks were being
supplied from the front window of one of the old weaver’s houses.
They placed their orders and were quickly served with steaming mugs of
thick hot chocolate laced with mint leaves. They drank slowly, but not
so slowly that it got cold before they were done.
“I still have to get chestnuts,” Marion noted. “For
the stuffing. That’s going to be interesting. I’ve never made
chestnut stuffing before. At all my foster homes growing up they just
had sage and onion from a packet, and since I’ve been with Kristoph
I’ve hardly had to cook any meal by myself. This will be a new experience.”
“I can help,” Rodan pointed out.
“You say that now. Wait until you have to peel three pounds of chestnuts.”
“I won’t mind,” Rodan insisted. “It will be fun.
What else must be bought for the meal?”
“Fresh vegetables,” Marion said. “And mushrooms. But
those can come from the greengrocer tomorrow. I’ll look for a cake,
though. There are some very nice decorated ones. I suppose I should have
planned ahead and made one, but the French idea of a Christmas cake is
sponge covered in chocolate icing. I’m really no good at sponges.”
Rodan smiled faintly. The very idea of cake was one she had been introduced
to by her Human foster mother. Beautiful birthday cakes were one of the
things that made her different to other Gallifreyan children. But Marion
had not made many of them with a full kitchen staff to bake for her.
“You can choose the cake,” Marion said to Rodan.
“No need,” said Kristoph, coming to kiss the two of them.
Beside him, Arges Mielles presented a basket containing fresh fruit, a
bottle of cognac and a beautifully decorated Christmas cake. “We
won the raffle going on up by the wall.”
“You entered the raffle?” Marion laughed. She had seen the
stall where coloured cloakroom tickets were being sold for five sou each.
She had bought some herself, though she had not yet checked if she had
won anything. But the very idea of a man like Kristoph, with all of his
power and influence on his homeworld, his once fearsome reputation as
an assassin, his even greater reputation as a diplomat who brokered peace
between warring worlds, doing something so ordinary as buying a raffle
ticket, amused her.
“A raffle,” Kristoph repeated. Of course, he had powers that
could probably influence such things, giving him a winning ticket, but
he would never do anything so dishonourable. Marion knew that for certain,
as much as she knew that the package Arges was concealing contained another
raffle prize that was going to be a surprise gift for Rodan. By the shape
of the wrapping, it had to be the hand carved wooden horse that had been
among the prizes on the stall. Rodan would surely treasure it.
“This isn’t from the raffle, but I bought it for you, Lady
Marion,” Arges added, placing a small, lumpy object wrapped in tissue
paper on the table. Marion unwrapped it carefully and was delighted to
see another hand carved wooden character for the crèche. This one
was le marin, the sailor. It was the closest Earth equivalent to Arges’
own job in the Gallifreyan merchant space fleet. With the little figurine
he was telling her that he was fully a part of this Christmas that meant
so much to her.
She ordered more hot chocolate for everyone knowing that
this Christmas was already one of the best even before the day itself.
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