Kennebec Academy by Roger F. Duncan

Page 63

Chapter 12 — Christmas at Kennebec Academy

C

hristmas crept up when no one was looking. After Thanksgiving the grass turned brown, the last leaves left the maple trees, leaving the hills covered with slim gray pencil lines. The wind was cold, raw, easterly, smelling of spruce and salt water, and the river flowed gray and sullen. No one paid any attention to the weather. Winter sports practice had started, strategy developed, and the incessant bouncing of basketballs filled the afternoons. The wrestlers writhed and groaned, squash players relieved their aggressions on the little gray ball. The hockey team, outcasts rather, left daily in a bus to play at the Bowdoin rink. The winter routine of classes and sports fell into place. In the second week in December came a warm, quiet day with a southwest breeze. The river showed a dusty blue and the sky was soft and hazy. “We’ll pay for this – you’ll see,” said Bert, the school’s carpenter, who ran a string of lobster traps on the side. “This one’s a weather-breeder.” That evening came a screaming snow squall. When it cleared, the northwest wind blew for three days out of a cold, hard sky. At night the wind moderated and the mercury huddled in the bottom of the thermometer. When Allen Poole came out of the dorm to go to breakfast, the cold bit through his thin jacket and reached down into his lungs for the first time since last winter. Every rut and footprint was frozen iron hard on the path, and from the river rose a bank of vapor where the warmer water met the cold air. The salt water in the icehouse cove was skimmed over, and Allen’s hair was frozen when he reached the warmth of the dining hall. A few tried to tough it out without coats, but the campus blossomed that morning with down ski jackets, Hudson Bay blanket coats, and checkered mackinaws. Hats from the curly Persian Lamb of the Russian steppes to the plastic orange hunting caps of L.L. Bean punctuated walks. Of course the fresh water stream above the old sawmill froze. The ice was new and black. Every skate mark showed a scar of white. They followed the stream up, and whenever two or three stood together, the ice bent, and cracks zipped across it. Up in the swamp the channels between the tufts of grass made a maze through which the boys chased each other, the leader never knowing which way he would have to turn next. The water had dropped a little, banking all the turns. Skating back with the remains of the clear sunset splashed yellow behind them, they felt as if they were skating in a bowl, for the rubbery ice bent a little with their weight. Then it warmed up and snowed all night and suddenly Christmas was upon them. To the top of the flagpole was hoisted a green spruce tree and the little trees growing in front of the dorms sparkled in colored lights. Candles glowed in the windows, and the morning mail swelled with Christmas cards. Mrs. Floyd, wife of the master of Chelsea House, liked the winter birds. She watched the chickadees around her feeding station - neat tidy little birds, well tucked up. The juncos, modest and not quite so quick, and two nuthatches flickered in and out. She was thinking about the dormitory party for the last night of school, a real send-off for the boys. Each of the two families and the two single men would bear part of the cost. It was a sort of foolish thing to do, but it had been a good fall term and for some of the boys who had rather a dismal Christmas ahead, it would be cheering. The ones going to the Caribbean she worried about not at all. The last classes came on Wednesday. There was a festive air, which was irrepressible despite the earnest appeals of the Headmaster to finish up the term “productively.” The halls resounded with French Christmas carols. The Spanish class broke a piñata in the gym with quite undignified shouts of joy - in 58


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Chapter 25 — Graduation

16min
pages 120-124

Chapter 21 — Crew

26min
pages 97-104

Chapter 24 — The Last Class

7min
pages 117-119

Chapter 23 — Parents Day

15min
pages 112-116

Chapter 22 — Frozen Out

23min
pages 105-111

Chapter 26 — The River

11min
pages 125-128

Chapter 20 — Undivided Share

8min
pages 94-96

Chapter 19 — The Headmaster’s Bad Dream

17min
pages 89-93

Chapter 18 — Edge of Spring

8min
pages 86-88

Chapter 17 — Bouchard

14min
pages 82-85

Chapter 14 — Math Anxiety

12min
pages 69-72

Chapter 16 — French -1

11min
pages 77-81

Chapter 13 — College Visitor

10min
pages 65-68

Chapter 15 — A Most Improbable Tale

9min
pages 73-76

Chapter 11 — Pressure

9min
pages 60-62

Chapter 12 — Christmas at Kennebec Academy

5min
pages 63-64

Chapter 10 — It’s Not Fair

22min
pages 53-59

Chapter 9 — Thanksgiving

19min
pages 48-52

Chapter 8 — It’s How You Play The Game

26min
pages 40-47

Chapter 4 — Fall Cruise

19min
pages 23-28

Chapter 3 — Massive Learning Experience

10min
pages 19-22

Chapter 7 — Why Did You Do It?

8min
pages 37-39

Chapter 5 — Indian Summer

16min
pages 29-33

Chapter 6 — Tigers

9min
pages 34-36

Chapter 2 — New Boy

23min
pages 12-18
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