SLACK FRIDAY: NOVEMBER 28, 2014
Avoid crazed shopping crowds!
Keep calm and carry on at home
with these great
Merr-E Holiday
Treats from Pocket Star eBooks!
TIM CRATCHIT’S CHRISTMAS CAROL: THE SEQUEL TO THE CELEBRATED DICKENS CLASSIC
Jim Piecuch
November 17,
2014
$1.99
SUMMARY:
In A
Christmas Carol, evil Scrooge was shown the error of his ways by three
helpful ghosts and vowed to become a better person. Bob Cratchit and his family
benefited most from Scrooge’s change of tune—but what happened after the goose
was given, and Scrooge resolved to turn over a new leaf?
Tim Cratchit's Christmas Carol shows us Tiny Tim as an adult. Having recovered from his childhood ailment, he began his career helping the poor but has since taken up practice as a doctor to London’s wealthy elite. Though Tim leads a very successful life, he comes home at night to an empty house. But this holiday season, he’s determined to fill his house with holiday cheer—and maybe even a wife.
When a single, determined young mother lands on Tim’s doorstep with her ailing son, Tim is faced with a choice: stay ensconced in his comfortable life and secure doctor’s practice, or take a leap of faith and reignite the fire lit under him by his mentor, Scrooge, that fateful Christmas so many years ago.
Tim Cratchit's Christmas Carol shows us Tiny Tim as an adult. Having recovered from his childhood ailment, he began his career helping the poor but has since taken up practice as a doctor to London’s wealthy elite. Though Tim leads a very successful life, he comes home at night to an empty house. But this holiday season, he’s determined to fill his house with holiday cheer—and maybe even a wife.
When a single, determined young mother lands on Tim’s doorstep with her ailing son, Tim is faced with a choice: stay ensconced in his comfortable life and secure doctor’s practice, or take a leap of faith and reignite the fire lit under him by his mentor, Scrooge, that fateful Christmas so many years ago.
EXCERPT:
Dr. Timothy Cratchit emerged from his Harley Street office shortly
after six-thirty in the evening. He was surprised to find that the yellow-gray
fog that had blanketed London for the past week had disappeared, swept away by
a biting north wind. He paused for a moment to gaze up at the stars, a rare
sight in the
usually haze-choked city. Then, pulling his scarf tightly around his
neck, he walked quickly down the steps and along the path to the curb, where
his brougham waited. The horses, a chestnut gelding and another of dappled
gray, stomped their hooves on the cobblestone pavement. They made an odd pair,
but Tim had chosen them for their gentle nature rather than their appearance. As the doctor approached, his coachman smiled
and swung open the side door. The coach’s front and rear lamps
barely pierced December’s early darkness.
“Good evening, Doctor,” the coachman said as Tim approached.
“Good evening, Henry,” the doctor replied. “How are you tonight?”
The coachman, who was tall and lean, wore a knee-length black wool
coat and a black top hat, his ears covered by an incongruous-looking strip of
wool cloth below the brim.
“Cold, sir,” Henry replied. Tim grasped the vertical rail alongside
the carriage door and was about to hoist himself inside when he heard a shout.
Stepping back from the carriage, he turned to his left, toward the direction
where the sound had come from.
The gas lamps along the street penetrated just enough of the gloom to
allow Tim to distinguish a figure hurrying toward him. As the person drew
nearer, Tim could see that it was a woman, clutching a dirty bundle to her
chest. Thousands of poor women in London made a meager living sifting through
the city’s dustbins for usable items and selling them for whatever pittance
they could fetch. The bundle this woman cradled so carefully probably contained
an assortment of odd candlesticks, worn shoes, frayed shirts, and the like.
Still, this was not someone who would normally frequent Harley Street.
“Wait a moment, please,” Tim told the coachman, resignation in his
voice. He was eager to get home, and too tired to wait while the woman
unwrapped the bundle. He reached into his trousers pocket, found a half crown
and two shillings to give her so that she would continue on her way.
When the woman came to a stop in front of him, Tim noticed with
surprise that she was young, perhaps twenty years old. She was small, not much
over five feet tall, clad in a tattered dress covered by a dirty, threadbare
gray blanket that she had fashioned into a hooded cloak. Her dark brown hair
was matted
in greasy clumps, and a smudge of dirt smeared her right cheek. Her face, though it was beginning to show the
premature wear of a hard life, was still quite pretty. She stood with her brown
eyes downcast, silently waiting for Tim to acknowledge her.
“Can I help you, miss?”
“Thank you for waiting, sir,” the woman said, still struggling to
catch her breath. “I was hoping that you could take a look at my son. He’s very
sick.” She tugged back a corner of what appeared to be a piece of the same
blanket that constituted her cloak to reveal the face of an infant.
Tim suppressed a groan. It had been a long day—all his days seemed
long now—and he was eager to get home. “Come inside, please,” he instructed the
woman. To Henry he said, “This shouldn’t take too long.”
Unlocking the office door, Tim went inside, lit a lamp, and then held
the door for the woman and baby to enter. Inside, the woman gazed at him with
an earnestness that aroused his sympathy.
“I’m very sorry to bother you like this, Doctor. I didn’t mean to come
so late, but I had to walk all the way from the East End, and it took longer
than I thought,” she explained. “I never would have found your office yet,
except that a kind old gentleman asked if I was lost and then pointed me to
your door. A
friend of yours, he said.”
“Well,” Tim replied in a reassuring tone, “you’re fortunate that I had
to work late; I usually close the office at six.”
The woman shuffled her feet uneasily. “If it’s too late, sir, we can
come back tomorrow.”
“No, no, that’s all right. Now tell me, what is the matter?”
“It’s my Jonathan, sir. He’s been sickly since birth, and now he’s
getting worse,” she said. Tim noticed that her eyes were moist.
“Let’s take him into the examination room.” Tim led them in, lit the
lamps. The woman laid the child on the table and pulled back the blanket and
other wrappings. Tim was shocked to see that the boy was not an infant—his
facial features were too developed—but he was clearly undersized, and Tim did
not
dare hazard a guess as to his age.
“How old is the little fellow?”
“Three last summer, sir.”
Tim studied the boy. His eyes were open, brown like his mother’s, and
though they gazed intently at Tim, the little body was limp. No mental defect,
but something physical, and severe. Tim
placed a thumb in each of the tiny hands.
“Can you squeeze my thumbs, Jonathan?” he asked. The boy did so,
feebly.
“Very good!” Tim said. Jonathan smiled.
“I didn’t know who else to go to, sir,” the woman explained as Tim
flexed the boy’s arms and legs. “There’s no doctors who want to see the likes
of us, but then I remembered you, sir. You took care of me many years back,
when I had a fever. You came by the East End every week then, sir, and took
care of the poor folk.”
“I’m sorry, but I treated so many patients that I can’t recall you,
Miss, ah, Mrs.—”
“It’s Miss, Doctor. Jonathan’s father was a sailor. We were supposed
to marry, but I never seen him since before Jonathan was born. My name’s Ginny
Whitson.”
It was already clear to Tim that the child, like his thin, almost
gaunt mother, was badly malnourished. That accounted in part for his small
size. Tim also noticed that the boy’s leg muscles were extremely weak. Jonathan
remained quiet, looking at the strange man with a mixture of curiosity and
fear.
“Does Jonathan walk much?” Tim asked.
“No, sir, never a step. He could stand a bit until a few weeks ago,
but now he can’t even do that. I think it’s the lump on his back, Doctor.”
Tim carefully turned the boy over to find a plum-sized swelling along
the left edge of his spine at waist level. He touched it lightly, and Jonathan
whimpered. “How long has he had this?” Tim asked.
“I didn’t notice it till a year ago, sir. It was tiny then, but it’s
grown since. In the last month or so it’s gone from about the size of a grape
to this big.”
Tim hesitated. He needed to do some research and then give Jonathan a
more thorough examination before he could accurately diagnose and treat the
boy’s condition. He did have several possibilities in mind, none of them good,
but there was no sense alarming Ginny prematurely. After she had swathed her
child in the bundle of cloth, Tim ushered them back into the waiting room, where
he studied his appointment book.
“Can you come back at noon on Saturday? I’m sorry to make you wait
that long, but I have some things to check, and it will take time.” Ginny
nodded. “I’ll see then what I can do,” Tim said.
“Oh, Doctor, thank you so much,” Ginny blurted, grateful for any help
regardless of when it might come. She shifted Jonathan to her left arm, and
thrust her right hand into the pocket of her frayed and patched black dress.
Removing a small felt sack, she emptied a pile of copper coins onto the clerk’s
desk. Most were farthings and
halfpennies, with an occasional large penny interspersed among them.
“I know this isn’t enough even for today, sir,” she apologized. “But
I’ll get more, I promise. I’m working hard, you see, sir. Every day I go
door-to-door and get work cleaning house and doing laundry, and save all I
can.”
With his right hand, Tim swept the coins across the desktop into his
cupped left palm and returned them to Ginny. He was touched by her attempt to
pay him, knowing that she must have gone without food many times to accumulate
this small amount of money. Her devotion to her son and effort to demonstrate
her independence impressed him.
“There isn’t any fee, Miss Whitson. I’ll be happy to do whatever I can
for Jonathan at no charge.”
“But I can’t accept charity, Doctor,” the surprised woman answered.
“It wouldn’t be right, taking your time away from your paying patients.”
“We all need charity in one form or another at some time in our
lives,” Tim said. “I wouldn’t be where I am today if not for a great act of
charity long ago, and as for taking time away from my paying patients, that may
be more of a benefit than a problem. Come along, now, and I’ll give you and
Jonathan a ride home.”
Tim locked the office door and escorted Ginny and Jonathan to his
coach as tears trickled down her face, picking up dirt from the smudge on her
cheek and tracking it down to her chin. Jonathan began to cry soon after the
coach got under way, and Ginny comforted him with a lullaby, one that Tim remembered
his own mother singing to him. When the child finally fell asleep, both
remained silent, afraid to wake him. Once they reached the narrow streets
packed with sailors, beggars, drunks, and an assortment of London’s other poor
wretches, Ginny asked to be let out. Tim knocked twice on the roof, and Henry
reined in the horses.
As she was about to step out of the carriage, something she had said
earlier occurred to Tim. “One moment, Miss Whitson. You mentioned that someone
directed you to my office. Do you know who he was?”
“No, Doctor,” she replied, “and he didn’t say. He was an old
gentleman, thin, with a long nose and white hair. Neatly dressed, but his
clothes weren’t fancy, if you know what I mean, sir.”
Tim bade her good night and watched as she walked down the sidewalk,
past gin mills and dilapidated rooming houses. She soon turned into the
recessed doorway of a darkened pawnshop and settled herself on the stone
pavement. Tim briefly thought of going back to find out if she even had a home,
or if she was going to spend the night in the doorway. Fatigue slowed his
thoughts, however, and by the time the idea took root, the carriage was a block
away and gathering speed.
Tim lay back against the soft, leather-covered seat cushions,
pondering which of his Harley Street neighbors had directed her to his office.
Most of them would have ignored such a woman, or ordered her back to the slums.
Her description, though, didn’t fit any of them. He shook his head, trying to
remove the cobwebs from his tired mind. It must have been someone else, someone
he just couldn’t recall in his fuddled state. No sense wrestling with the
question, he concluded.
During the long drive across town to his home in the western outskirts
of London, Tim tried to relax. It had been another in a seemingly endless
string of days filled with consultations and surgeries. Tim had arrived at his
office at five-thirty that morning, half an hour earlier than usual, to prepare
for a seven
o’clock operation on the Duchess of Wilbersham. She had been
complaining for weeks about pain in her left shoulder, which she attributed to
a strain that refused to heal. Since she never lifted anything heavier than a
deck of cards at her daily whist game, Tim doubted the explanation, and several
examinations showed no sign of any real injury. The duchess had a reputation as
a hypochondriac who sought treatment for her phantom ailments from the best
doctors in London, then bragged about
how she managed to maintain her health by not stinting on the cost of
good medical care. To placate the pompous woman, Tim had finally caved in to
her demand that he operate to repair the tendons and ligaments she insisted had
been damaged. Because the surgery was minor and the duchess, with good reason,
abhorred hospitals, Tim performed the operation in his office, which was
equipped for such tasks. A small incision and internal examination verified his
suspicion that the duchess’s shoulder was perfectly sound. When she awoke, with
more pain from the surgery than she had ever experienced from her imaginary
injury, along with sutures and an application of carbolic acid to prevent
infection, she swore that the shoulder had not felt so well in ten years. Tim
wondered if she would be so pleased when the effects of the morphine wore off.
“Just give the doctor that bag of coins I asked you to bring,” the
duchess had ordered her maidservant. “I won’t insult you, Dr. Cratchit, by
asking your fee, but I’m sure there’s more than enough here to cover it, and
worth every farthing, too.”
When Tim’s clerk opened the leather pouch, he found it contained one
hundred gold guineas. Tim could not help contrasting the way his wealthy
patients tossed gold coins about with Ginny Whitson’s offer of her pathetic
little hoard of coppers. The thought stirred memories of his own childhood,
when pennies were so scarce that he and his brothers and sisters sometimes had
to roam through frigid alleys to scavenge wood scraps to keep a fire burning on
winter nights. It was on one such night when he lay awake, shivering on his
thin straw mattress, that he overheard the conversation that changed his life.
“I’m to get a raise in salary,” his father murmured excitedly, trying
not to wake the children.
“I don’t believe it,” Mrs. Cratchit declared. “That old miser would
die before he parted with an extra farthing.”
“It’s true, dear,” Bob Cratchit insisted. “I’ve never seen Mr. Scrooge
like that. We sat for an hour this afternoon, talking. He asked a lot of
questions about our family, Tim in particular.”
“I’m surprised that he even knew you had a family, Bob.”
“I was, too, dear, but he seemed to know a good bit about us. Why,
from a few things he said about hoping we had a good Christmas dinner, I think
he’s the one who sent the turkey yesterday. Who else could have done it?”
“Well, I hope you’re right, Bob. I’ll not believe any of it until I
see the proof.”
Tim smiled at the recollection of his mother’s skepticism. She had
always been the realist in the family, Bob the optimist. Tim had shared his
mother’s doubts. She and the children had despised Ebenezer Scrooge, blaming
his greed for the family’s struggles. But with his stomach filled to bursting
with turkey
left over from Christmas dinner, Tim dared to hope that his father was
right, and that old Scrooge might truly have undergone a change of heart. After
all, it was Christmas, a time when good things were supposed to happen.
The sudden stop as the carriage arrived at his front door shook Tim
from his reverie. He was out the door before Henry could dismount from the
driver’s seat and open it for him, a habit that Tim had observed left his
coachman more amused than chagrined.
“That’s all right, Henry,” he said, waving toward the carriage house.
“You and the horses get inside and warm up.”
Entering the large, well-lit foyer, Tim was greeted by his maid.
Bridget Riordan was a pretty Irish girl, with long, flaming red hair pinned up
under her white cap, numberless freckles on her cheeks and small nose, and
green eyes that always seemed to sparkle with happiness. She took Tim’s top
hat, coat, and
scarf. “Dinner will be ready in a half hour, Doctor,” she announced,
“so you can rest a bit if you’d like.”
“Thank you, Bridget,” Tim replied, watching her walk gracefully toward
the kitchen. He loosened his cravat as he climbed the stairs, thought briefly
of skipping the meal and going directly to bed, and decided that he could not
afford the luxury since he had a long evening of work ahead of him.
As usual, Tim dined alone. At the time he had purchased the large
house, Tim had expected that he would one day need the space for the family he
hoped to have. However, the demands of his practice and the memory of his one
previous and unsuccessful attempt at courtship kept him from actively pursuing
any romantic interests. Now he sometimes wondered whether he would spend the
rest of his life a bachelor, without the happiness he had enjoyed as a child in
the crowded and bustling Cratchit home.
Solitary meals in the cavernous dining room always seemed to dim Tim’s
pleasure despite the hot, tasty food that Bridget prepared. When he had hired
them after buying the house, he had often insisted that she, Henry, and
William, the gardener, join him in the dining room. But the trio had been
servants
since their childhood, and their previous masters, who had not shared
Tim’s lack of concern with class distinctions, had impressed upon them the idea
that it was improper for servants to associate with their master outside the
scope of their duties. The dinner conversations had been stilted, with Tim
trying to
make conversation and Bridget, Henry, and William replying in
monosyllables punctuated by “sir.” Tim had quickly given up the experiment, yet
he still could not help feeling a pang of sadness, mixed with a bit of
jealousy, every time the sound of their friendly conversation and laughter in
the serving room rose
high enough for him to hear. Still, he admitted that all three
servants had warmed to him over the past two years, and had grown more willing
to engage him in informal conversation. Perhaps one day they could dine
together without the awkwardness of his previous attempts, he thought.
Shortly after nine o’clock, Tim retired to his upstairs study. There
each night he reviewed the next day’s cases, looked up information in his
medical books that he might need, and, if time permitted, read the most recent
scientific journals to keep up to date on the latest advances in medicine and
surgery. At
one time he had contributed his share of new knowledge to the medical
profession, but for the last several years he just could not find the time to
do so. He really didn’t have the opportunity, anyway. How could he devise
innovative treatments, he asked himself, when most of the patients he saw, like
the duchess, had nothing seriously wrong with them to begin with?
Having finished his preparation for the next day’s work, Tim drew out
his pocket watch. Not quite half past ten. He reached across the wide mahogany
desk for the latest issue of the Lancet, which had lain unread for more
than a week. Tim pushed it aside. It would have to wait until he had researched
Jonathan’s condition. Tim walked over to the bookcase, scanned several volumes,
removed a reference book, and returned to his chair. The coal fire that Bridget
had stoked was still burning strongly; he would see if he could find
confirmation of his suspicions regarding the boy’s problem, or alternative,
less dire diagnoses, before retiring. Balancing his chair upon its two rear
legs, he put his feet on the desk and opened the volume.
Tim did not know how long he had been reading. It seemed he had gone
over the same paragraph a dozen times without registering the information in
his mind when he felt how cold the study had become. He glanced toward the
fireplace, where a single small log emitted a parsimonious warmth. The room
seemed dark—looking over his shoulder at the gas lamp, he was surprised to see
only a candle in a tin wall sconce, flickering in a chill breeze that came
through a cracked windowpane. Strange, Tim thought, he was certain Bridget had
closed the curtains. And when had the window broken?
His eyes better adjusted to the gloom, Tim turned back toward the
fireplace. His surprise turned to shock when he looked down at his legs and saw
that the new black trousers he had been wearing were now coarse brown cloth
through which he could see the outline of his legs, withered and weak. The
elegant marble of the fireplace had been replaced by cracked, ancient
bricks. Leaning against them was a crutch. His childhood crutch.
Tim stared at the hearth, baffled, for how long he did not know. Then
he started to get up, reaching for the crutch, only to find that his legs were
so weak he could not stand. He gazed at his extended right hand. It was that of
a child. He leaned back in his chair, rubbed his eyes, and when he looked
around again, he was back in his own comfortable study. The gas lamp burned
brightly, the fire still blazed in its marble enclave. There was no crutch to
be seen. He flexed his legs. They were strong. He shuddered, perplexed at what
had occurred. Although he was quite sure that he had not fallen asleep, he
reassured himself that it must have been a dream. Not surprising, considering
his thoughts about Jonathan, and the unavoidable realization that the boy’s
plight reminded him so much of his own childhood illness. Tim stood, uneasy,
and dropped the reference book on the desk before heading to bed.
Standing over the washbasin, he poured water from a pitcher into the
ceramic bowl. He wet a washcloth and rubbed his face. Even in the light of the
single gas lamp, he could see the creases beginning to form on his forehead,
the dark circles under his blue eyes. A few strands of gray were sprinkled
through his blond hair. He thought he looked at least a decade older than his
thirty-two years. Combined with his short stature and thinness, Tim reflected
that in a few years he would look like a wizened old man.
Too much work, that was the cause, he thought. Unpleasant work. And
now he also had to do something about Jonathan Whitson, who had what was likely
a malignant tumor. A boy not yet four, probably sentenced to death by nature
before his life had a chance to begin. Five years ago, Dr. Timothy Cratchit
would have tackled the child’s case enthusiastically and with optimism. Now he
was reduced to performing fake surgeries to placate hypochondriacs.
Ginny Whitson had met him years earlier, and believed in his
abilities. He only wished that he shared her confidence.
AUTHOR:
Jim Piecuch is an associate professor of history, and has published several
works of nonfiction. Tim Cratchit’s Christmas Carol is his first novel.
No comments:
Post a Comment