Wanderers – 6

Note: There are 12 sections to this story that will be posted starting December 26, ending on January 6, the day of Epiphany. “Wanderers” can also be found in my book “My Best Christmas and other stories of the season” at Amazon.com.

******

Among the dozen or so portraits, Ruby’s eyes lighted on a picture of a guy. He was older, she could tell by the gray hair sticking out beneath the back of his blue baseball hat turned backwards on his head.  At that Ruby perked up a bit. Her lips almost broke into her first smile of the morning as she thought of this old guy with the backwards hat being a member of some gang of young thugs. 

It was a full length picture of the guy.  What drew Ruby’s eye wasn’t the fact that he was wearing a white, grease stained apron.  It was his face and especially his eyes that caught her.  He was holding a pot of coffee, like the one that Betty was using to dose her customers.  There was a twinkle in his eyes, yet at the same time Betty captured with her brush a vacant distant look. Ruby glanced from his face to the coffee pot and back to his face.  His kind face said something like, “This is all I have to offer, but it’s yours if you want it.” 

“That’s Harry,” a gravelly voice said. Ruby jumped.  Arnie poked his head through the serving window and said, “That’s Harry Spaulding.  He used to own this place.  You know, before Betty.  Before he, uh, well you know.” He tossed an order of scrambled eggs, wheat toast and a side of bacon on the shelf and went back to his griddle. 

“Oh,” Ruby sighed, rubbing her eyes, she pulled up her nose at the breakfast on the counter.  She let her gaze wander from the portrait over to the mural covering the wall across the room.  From where she stood there was no discernable single image that she could say, “Oh, that’s a this or this is a that.“   It was as if Betty had tossed every color imaginable from her artist’s palette onto the wall, converging them into an undistinguishable maelstrom of color. 

Yet there was something there. Like the other paintings there was more to it than just the dizzying swirls of color punctuated by dots of, what, light? She couldn’t tell.  Ruby shivered and scrunched her coat around her.

What she saw in the scene caused her to feel a coldness that penetrated to her core.  It was a feeling that drew her in even more, enticing her to explore more of the confusing conjunction of color that captured her eye.  It distracted her from her young memories of Grandma Start, the yucky breakfast and the old guy with the backwards hat. 

Ruby found herself so absorbed by the painting she forgot all about Arnie, Betty and Thomas.  All of its color and texture played in Ruby’s mind making her wonder.  Then, as if by magic, the hint of an image emerged from the abstractness on the wall.  People emerged.  It was as if they were walking out of the fog, and Ruby could dimly begin to see them. She found them with her fingers, then traced the streaks of shimmering light and the sparkles of what appeared to be a stable, animals and people sharing a cold, starry winter night. 

As she gazed it was as if she were being drawn into the painting even more. Some part of her was being nudged. She was coaxed into the story of the mural by an unknown storyteller. It crept into her mind. For a brief moment she grasped at it, but couldn’t yet gather it in that the story the mural told, in part, was her story. A story not easily discovered except by those meant to discover it.

Wanderers – 5

Note: There are 12 sections to this story that will be posted starting December 26, ending on January 6, the day of Epiphany. “Wanderers” can also be found in my book “My Best Christmas and other stories of the season” at Amazon.com.

******

Betty did a lap around the small dining room meeting the needs of the customers before landing back at Ruby and Tom’s table.  She circled their table, coffee pot in hand. As she poured some of the black brew into Tom’s cup she leaned in, put her hand on his shoulder  and whispered, “Thinking of you, Tom, with your anniversary and all.” 

Tom’s usual ever-present Saturday-morning-breakfast-at-Betty’s smile faded a bit. He looked at Betty and said, “Thanks for remembering. You are the best.  It’s been five years now, you know.” His voice faded into silence. Thomas thought back to the tough times when Betty stuck with him, no matter what.  And even now, she still…  He turned momentarily towards the artwork on the wall to hide the telltale moisture in his eyes.  Then he turned back to Betty.  The look on his face said, “You’re a good friend.”  Ruby glanced at the pair.  With a quiet growl, she said, “I miss Grandma…”  Weary already of Thomas and Betty’s conversation, she got up from the table and shuffled off to explore the artwork on the walls.

Changing the course of the chat, Betty said, “Did you hear about Harry?” Her bushy eyebrows arched into hairy question marks.

“Yeh, I heard.” Tom said,“That’s too bad.” He remembered how Betty befriended her former boss when he was going through his dark days. She hung with him no matter what he was going through, right up to the end.  Tom rubbed his chin, took off his hat and ran his fingers through his hair, thinking. “Or maybe it was a blessing, too.”

Harry Spaulding had owned the diner since forever ago.  After meeting Betty one awful but wonderful night, somewhat after forever-ago, he offered her a job. Some time after that he offered to sell the diner to Betty, making a too-generous offer considering Betty’s circumstances at the time.  Over time Betty had become the closest person Harry had to family.   So, considering Harry’s situation and suspecting what they did about Harry’s condition, the two of them worked out a deal.  It was a deal that not only led her to taking care of the diner; she’d also take care of Harry.

Over the years, Harry went from business owner to coffee pourer to Saturday morning patron.  And now he was no longer a Saturday morning regular at the diner.  At some point in the past he stopped driving. He stopped coming to the diner.

Since a too-early-age Harry’s once organized mind had slowly become a tangle of confused thoughts competing with his reality.  His memories of actual recent events would evaporate into the unusable recesses of his Alzheimered mind. They would be replaced with fictions.  Images and scenarios not unlike those dreams one has that make no sense.  Dreams that leave a person chuckling or maybe prickly with unease. And, sadly, during the course of his last days at the Starbright Nursing Home, his brain was no longer able to keep up with the demands of his basic life necessities.  Now Harry was gone.  The memory of Harry and who he was and what he did remained firmly planted in the hearts and minds of Thomas and Betty … and soon, that grouchy twelve-year-old, Ruby.

Betty gave Thomas a knowing look. “I know what you mean, what with him fading so at the end.” She looked away.  “It’s sad, but at his funeral, I realized that it’s for the better.”  She looked back into Thomas’ eyes, “If you know what I mean.”

“I hate funerals,” Ruby wandered back to the table for a bite of a cinnamon roll, forgetting her mother’s admonition to be polite.  “They’re awful!” Ruby remembered her grandmother’s funeral five years ago, after she died of a sudden heart attack. “They’re so sad,” she said. “I miss Gramma.” Her voice trailed off. She picked at her cinnamon roll, then took a bigger bite. “What’s all that over there?” She said.

From their table, Ruby’s sleep deprived eyes began to waken a bit.  Gazing at the various paintings that decorated Betty’s establishment she slipped out of the booth once again and made her way to the nearest one, letting the adults continue their conversation.  She scanned the walls, amazed at how many paintings there were, mostly pictures of people.  

What intrigued her twelve year old mind was that these pictures weren’t like typical photographs from a camera. There seemed to be much more to them. They showed more. Her grumpy, sleepy brain couldn’t articulate what. There was just more. What she did see as she examined each one, was a small rainbow and the name ‘Betty Williston’ scrawled somewhere in the corner of each one. Surprise, fueled by her twelve year old curiosity, pushed her to continue to explore.

Wanderers – 4

Note: There are 12 sections to this story that will be posted starting December 26, ending on January 6, the day of Epiphany. “Wanderers” can also be found in my book “My Best Christmas and other stories of the season” at Amazon.com.

******

The jingle bells hanging on the restaurant’s front door announced the arrival of Ruby and her grandpa.  Thomas yanked open the door of the diner.  He shrugged off his jacket, adorned with the eagle emblem depicting the Ripley Village Fire Department where he had spent most of his working days.  Ruby, cold, sleepy and grumpy, and didn’t care who knew it, wrapped her jacket around her tighter than ever.

 “Good morning, Sunshine!” said Betty to the two damp customers splashing into her diner.  She had everything ready for the day.  She was especially ready to greet her best friend Tom, an early Saturday morning regular.

“Good morning,” said Ruby.  Raindrops hung from the bill of her hat.  She didn’t really know, or care, for that matter, which of the two of them Betty was referring to as Sunshine.  It was too early for her, plain and simple.  But her mom said to be polite.

“Mornin’ yourself,” said Thomas.

“Coffee?” said Betty.  Thomas looked sideways at Ruby, relaying the question with a look and a smirk.  Ruby rolled her eyes and tugged the bill of the cap down.  “Just one, Betty. You know how I like it.”

“How about some OJ for you, Hon?” Betty’s offer was met with a look and a nod.  

Betty hustled across the dining room to get Thomas’ coffee and pour a glass of juice.  She efficiently took care of the handful of early customers as she went.  Betty raised her eyebrows, looked back over her shoulder and said, “So, Tom, who do you have with you there?”  Knowing full well who her young, sleepy, unhappy-to-be-here customer was, she ambled back to Tom and Ruby with a tray loaded with  orange juice, steaming coffee, a small pitcher of cream and a couple of cinnamon rolls. 

“You know Ruby,” he said, “my favorite granddaughter.” Ruby rolled her eyes, which were getting quite a workout that early Saturday.

“I’m your only granddaughter, Grampa!” she said.  Tom and Betty chuckled.

Betty squinted at Ruby’s hat.  Her glance took in the red dot of paint on the bill.  She gave Tom an ah-ha kind of look and said, “Ooo, you got one of the old ones.  Vintage, as they say. Red Sox, eh?”  Betty put a grimace on her face, then pointed at her own Yankees cap.  “Think we can still be friends?”  She grinned and gave Ruby a hug that removed any hint of ill will on her part.

Ruby rolled her eyes. She had no clue what vintage meant or what the Yankees had to do with anything.  She wasn’t sure if she wanted to be friends with this perky lady in the diner.  It was too early.

“I got it from my grandpa.” Ruby wasn’t about to admit that she loved that old hat.  She remembered Grampa covering his face with it playing peek-a-boo.  Then he would cover her feet with it and make them ‘disappear.’  She’d giggle.  She was four, or maybe three.  She didn’t remember.  She loved the hat, red splotch and all, simply because it came from him. And she wasn’t going to say it out loud here to this strange lady, but deep down beneath her damp hat, hair and morning grouch there was no doubt she loved her grandpa. 

Ruby fingered the red paint splotch and pulled the bill of her hat down even more. She wasn’t sure she was going to enjoy this early Saturday morning breakfast routine, even if it was with her favorite grandfather.

Wanderers – 3

Note: There are 12 sections to this story that will be posted starting December 26, ending on January 6, the day of Epiphany. “Wanderers” can also be found in my book “My Best Christmas and other stories of the season” at Amazon.com.

******

Weather didn’t much affect what Betty Williston did on a Saturday morning. Rain or shine, moon shine that is, at 3 AM she woke up, got ready for the day, tossed her Yankee’s hat on over her gray mop of hair and headed to the diner- her diner. It was Betty’s ever since Harry sold the place to her, his best employee, a few years back after she worked for him for many years.

The place opened at six and she needed to get her locally world-famous, warm and fresh, larger-than-average, sweet, sticky cinnamon rolls ready for her faithful morning customers. Everyday, she baked cinnamon rolls and then took care of the customers while Arnie handled the griddle duties in the back.

Her routine was pretty much set.  She knew the regulars quite well by now.  For instance, there was the Monday crowd, mainly looking for a cup of dark brew that would wake them up and help them start a new week.  Wednesday’s crew included the retired farmers, seed caps, Case IH sweatshirts and John Deere jackets. Fridays brought in the staff from the church down the block, making plans for saving lost souls. Every day was unique, and every group of customers was different.  The folks came mainly from the neighborhood, each with their own stories, and Betty was privileged to be given a glimpse into some.  However, for Betty’s story, there were only a few with whom she felt comfortable to share.  

That Saturday, Betty surveyed her domain.  She brushed her gray locks from her forehead.  She smiled a grateful smile and unlocked the front door.  She turned and rolled her eyes up to the ceiling and beyond and quietly said her morning prayer, “Thankyou.”

She knew things could have, should have been so different. She knew firsthand that life wasn’t always all coffee and sweet rolls. She also knew firsthand that like that rain soaked morning, the sun would poke through again. These were the days she looked for rainbows and often found them.

Wanderers- 2

Note: This spring, 2020, during the Covid-19 outbreak and lockdown, I found myself with a lot of at-home time. During that time this story was completed. There are 12 sections to this story that will be posted starting December 26, ending on January 6, the day of Epiphany. “Wanderers” can also be found in my book “My Best Christmas and other stories of the season” at Amazon.com.

******

The continuing Saturday morning drizzle provided a dreary, wet greeting as Ruby and her grandfather Thomas welcomed a new day. The day’s sun, low in the sky, shyly hiding behind sheets of low, gray clouds, didn’t add much to the promise that awaited them. However, Thomas would have none of that. He added his own sunshine. “This is the day that the Lord has made.” Thomas croaked out a line from a song he’d learned in Sunday school long ago.

“Grampa?” said Ruby as she tried to focus through the sleepy haze still permeating her twelve year old brain that drippy morning. She resisted her grandpa’s bright outlook and embraced the gloom, milking it for all it was worth.  “Grampa?  Wha-a-a…?”

 “Good morning, Sunshine!!”  With a knock on her bedroom door and a song, Thomas Start, grandfather of Ruby Jensen, made a feeble attempt at morning irony as he greeted his I’d-rather-be-sleeping-in, granddaughter.

Ruby’s parents, Thomas’ daughter Meira and son-in-law Ben, were away for the weekend. Thomas offered to keep Ruby safe, warm, fed and occupied while they were gone.  To that end, that morning Thomas would be fitting Ruby into his early Saturday morning routine of breakfast at the diner. 

“Where are we going so early?  It’s Saturday!” she said.

With a perky grin, Thomas said, “The diner.”  Ruby tried rubbing the sleep from her eyes. “I know, I know… You’re not used to getting up before, what is it, noon on Saturday?” Thomas said.  “These are the best hours of the week. Besides, this is for breakfast, the most important meal of the day.” Thomas grinned at a sleepy Ruby, her red hair flattened by her nighttime battle with her pillow.

It wasn’t long and both of them were ready to face the day after some coaxing, prodding and putting in more effort than Thomas was used to expending.  Ruby grabbed her hat, an ancient Red Sox hat that Thomas had given her once when they were playing ball in the backyard.  Old and faded with a dime sized splotch of red paint on the bill, Ruby crammed her hat over her unruly red hair and Grampa crammed his Cubs hat over what was left of his barely there hair.  In the dark living room they slipped past the sparkling Christmas tree topped with a bright star that gave them all the light they needed to proceed.  

Thomas grabbed the keys to the old pickup from the hook by the back door.  They tossed on their jackets, walked out the door, waded through the puddles and piled into the pickup parked next to the house.  They poked along in the early morning gloom and headed to the diner that was Thomas’ Saturday morning spot for breakfast, coffee, conversation and companionship.

The windshield wipers kept pace with the morning drizzle. The beat of the country Christmas tunes blaring from the truck’s radio didn’t deter a groggy Ruby, face plastered against a steamy window, from trying to grab a few more minutes of sleep. Glancing at Ruby, Thomas’ smile expressed deep gratitude for her and how she came to be in his life. Buried beneath the smile was the knowledge that it wasn’t always that way. Things could have been a lot different. A lot different.

Wanderers – 1

Note: This spring, 2020, during the Covid-19 outbreak and lockdown, I found myself with a lot of at-home time. During that time this story was completed. There are 12 sections to this story that will be posted starting December 26, ending on January 6, the day of Epiphany. “Wanderers” can also be found in my book “My Best Christmas and other stories of the season” at Amazon.com.

* * * * * *

Let me make this abundantly clear.  Things don’t just happen.  Fate, chance, luck have no place in our world.  Coincidence? Things just happen?  Oh well, that’s life? Que sera? I don’t buy it.  There’s a reason and a purpose for the events that occur in our lives, no matter how unbelievably coincidental they may sometimes seem.  That’s why I need to tell this story.  

It’s a story about wanderers, Thomas Start, Betty Williston, Harry Spaulding and others.  They all started in different places, at different times and from different circumstances.  They were wanderers, each in their own way, yet somehow came together.  These wanderers, all strangers to each other, were brought together in the fullness of their time, to make a difference and shed light into the lives of each other.

It’s a story of Epiphany. It’s a story of God working behind the scenes as he does in all of our lives for a reason and a purpose that, in the end, reflects his grace.  Indeed, he is the author of our stories and the main character as well.

***

A cold shiver crawled through Ruby as she shed her rain-drenched jacket. The two of them just got back from school and their in-car, oneway discussion continued.  “I hate science!” Who cares about all that astronomy stuff anyway? Mr. King is soooo boring!” Ruby said, rolling her eyes. 

She carved a sour look on her face and with a low, growly voice did her best, worst imitation of her teacher.

 “And so, because, in the nighttime sky, these points of light appeared to move about among the fixed objects, stars e-t-c-e-t-e-r-a…” She drew out the word with her best British accent.  Ruby cleared the imaginary phlegm from her throat in dramatic teacher style.  “These, what we now call planets, were known to the ancients as wanderers.”

Ruby’s mother, Meira, fought the urge to chuckle and hung her coat in the closet. She said, “C’mon, Ruby it can’t be all that bad.”

“Besides, with 100 percent clouds all the time who can even see any of the stuff he talks about?” Ruby said. “And look at this!” Ruby dug through her school binder and extracted her science notes from her language arts folder. “Look at all these vocabulary words! We have to know them by Monday!”

Meira rescued the sheet from Ruby’s angry hands and said, “These don’t look too bad. I’m sure Grampa will love to help you review.” She skimmed the list; planets, supernova, conjunction and a dozen more.

“Why do I have to stay at Grampa’s?” she said. “Why can’t I just stay home while you and Dad are away? I’m old enough! It’s not fair!” Ruby’s foul mood was precipitated by a bad Friday at school, of which she had many, especially with Mr. King the science teacher. Today was no different.

“Ruby, we talked about this. Dad and I have a meeting to attend and we’ll be back sometime Saturday morning. And no, you can’t stay alone overnight.” Ruby rolled her eyes. She was twelve after all, a sixth grader, in middle school, no less. “Besides you like staying at Grampa’s.”

“Why don’t you get your stuff ready. We should be ready to go when your dad comes home. At this Ruby stomped to her room to pack her stuff. Her imagination worked overtime creating weekend scenarios that were not to her liking. Not at all! Little did she know what she imagined and what was true were to be very different.

Christmas Songs

Here are Christmas songs you were not likely to hear while Christmas shopping.

Mary’s Song – “My soul magnifies the Lord for he has looked with favor on the lowliness of his servant.” Luke 1:48

Zechariah’s Song – “Blessed be the Lord God of Israel, for he has looked favorably on his people and redeemed them. He has raised up a mighty savior for us in the house of his servant David.” Luke 1:68-69

Simeon’s Song – “Master, now you are dismissing your servant in peace, according to your word; for my eyes have seen your salvation, which you have prepared in the presence of all peoples, a light for revelation to the Gentiles and for glory to your people Israel.” Luke 2:29-32

Anna’s song (Her words are not given, but her response to meeting the Savior is.) – “She began to praise God and to speak about the child to all who were looking for the redemption of Jerusalem.” Luke 2:38

The Angel’s Song – “Glory to God in the highest heaven, and on earth peace among those whom he favors!” Luke 2:14

Christmas songs… Today’s gift!

Merry Christmas!

*****

Coming tomorrow and each day for the 12 days of Christmas, is Wanderers a story of Epiphany. It will come in 12 parts, ending on January 6, Epiphany. Wanderers can also be found in the collection of short stories My Best Christmas and other stories of the season, available at Amazon.com.

The Star of Bethlehem

Now I’m not going to get into a whole big astronomical ‘thing’ about the what, when, where and why of the star that led the magi to Jesus. I’ll leave that to others. Whether it was a one-time miraculous stellar event or the result of eons of God’s precise planning that brought planets and stars together, I’m not here to say.

I believe that the creator of all things, in his divine wisdom, wanted to get the attention of ancient scholars, sky gazers from the east.  He wanted to introduce them to the child King of Kings and Lord of Lords. So in the fullness of time this celestial event took place and motivated these magi to travel to find Jesus. And they did.  And they brought him gifts and they worshipped him.  

So why am I bringing this up so many days before Epiphany, January 6, when all of this is usually celebrated? You see, one of the ideas about the ‘star’ is that there was a conjunction of planets and/or a bright star. When they all came together the result was a remarkably bright object in the sky which caught the attention of these night sky observers. Again, why am I bringing this up?

It just so happens that in a few days, December 21, 2020, to be precise, there will be a conjunction of Saturn and Jupiter, just before sunset, in the southwest sky. The two bright planets, ‘wanderers’ as they were called back then, will come together and appear as one really bright object.  It should be quite a sight if you are favored with clear skies, an unobstructed view and catch it at the right time. 

Now I’m not suggesting that after seeing this conjunction that you hop on the nearest camel and head to Bethlehem and look for Jesus.  However, it just might be a good time to give some credit to God the creator for the gift of his remarkable world.

Oh, and as for looking for Jesus… he’s not that far away. He’s called Immanuel, God with us, after all. Today’s gift, to be sure!

Now Available!

Here it comes, a shameless self-promotion…  I humbly offer my apologies before I even start.

You see over the last 30 years I’ve written more than a few short stories, a lot of them about Christmas.   I wrote them mainly for my students back then.   Some of them were even good enough to be published in a few educator’s magazines.

So with that little bit of fleeting success, I decided long ago that I’d like to see them published, put into a book.  I tried back then.  However, after only a few tries to get some real publishers interested, the stories stayed in my file, on my computer and in my mind …  until recently.

After hearing about the whole concept of self-publishing a while back, the idea of putting my stories together in a book started percolating again.  Self-publishing… hmmm … The cool thing about self-publishing a book is that, really, only one person needs to like it …  in addition to one’s mother.  (I must say that when my mom was alive, she liked my stories, too.)

So over the course of the last year or so, I investigated the process, dusted off the old stories, reformatted them, wrote some new ones, had someone check them over and submitted them.  Lo and behold both the paperback and eBook versions were accepted by Kindle Direct Publishing.

Now available at Amazon.com

I want to make it clear that I’m not in this for the money or to make someone’s best seller list.  Although, with this blog readership of about six, who knows what might happen. Things might just take off.

I wrote most of the stories mainly for my students and the people closest to me.  And, I had fun doing it.  Besides, even after all these years, I still think these stories, in their quirky little ways, still belt out a pretty strong message about Christmas and it’s true meaning, which, of course, is that Jesus was born, Immanuel, God with us.  That, my friends, and not some flashy newly published book … is today’s Gift.

 *****

If you want to see the blurb at Amazon.com, click on this link.  If not, that’s fine, too.

My Best Christmas – A Story

Note:  Back when I was teaching, I would share stories about Christmas that I had written.  I enjoyed it. My students did too …  I think, mostly… Anyway, I enjoyed it, the writing and the telling.

Today is Christmas Sunday on the church calendar, so even though we are a bit past December 25, it’s still appropriate for a little Christmas offering.  Be warned, it’s actually quite a bit longer than my typical posts. 


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Frankie looked at me across my kitchen table. Her gaze clipped her half-empty mug of Christmas Cocoa Delight and settled on my smiling face.  She just finished telling me her story and said, “Jane, that was probably my best Christmas.” Her brown eyes flickered down for an instant and hinted that there was probably more to it, more to be told later.  We didn’t know each other very well and her grin said, “That’s probably enough, at least for now.” But, then she smirked, shrugged her shoulders and waited for me to share my story.

I really don’t know how I got to this point with her, sharing memories from my life with someone I’d known for only a short time.  It’s funny how things work out sometimes. A friend told me about a speaker that came to her church. Her idea was we should slow down and create some space in our lives in order to be more available to others. Maybe give someone a needed smile or a friendly word. Maybe be that non-cranky customer at the grocery checkout. Maybe give someone a bit of a break in some way.  Simple stuff really. No big deal. Just small things. No big commitment. Just have the time to do something good.

           So, when neighbor Sue cooked up this idea to have a neighborhood Christmas tea party, I thought why not? I’ll go. I’d get to meet some of the neighbors. I’ll make the time. That’s where I met Frankie.

It was a pretty fancy party; everything just so. Tea was served in special china cups resting on delicate saucers with holly leaves painted around the edges. Trays of mini-cakes, baklava, petit fours, and other delights filled the table festively dressed in holiday finery.  Cloth napkins lay at the ready to dab away errant crumbs from perfectly painted lips. Don’t get me wrong. Even though I’m a paper napkin in one hand and a mug of hot chocolate in the other kinda girl, I’ve been around long enough to be able to ‘do fancy.’ But I wondered about Frankie.

When I first saw her, she was alone. She hovered around the dessert table, looking a little lost and a little nervous.  The only one dressed in jeans, she was by far the youngest at the party, about the same age as my daughter Stacey. Other than living on the same cul-de-sac, there seemed to be little that connected her to the rest of the tea party guests.

I watched her as I waited my turn to pour a cup of tea at the counter.  She balanced a too-full cup of tea on her saucer while reaching for a small Swedish princess cake.  The tea cup quivered, slid a bit and tipped ever so slightly on the raised inner ring of the saucer. No one else seemed to notice, but I knew what was about to happen.  I watched the whole thing unfold like a linen napkin. I wished I could help stop the seemingly inevitable disaster. But, I knew there was no way I could intervene in time.

What a way to get introduced to the neighbors! Broken teacup and saucer and a cup of oolong splashed all over the white linen tablecloth and dripping down onto the newly cleaned carpet. Instinctively, I took two steps in her direction to help. And then she pulled back her hand from the cake, leveled her saucer and steadied her tea.  She paused and stood straight. She took a deep breath, puffed her cheeks and blew a word of thanks to no one in particular. She looked down at the dainty tea cup, then looked up, saw me, and grinned. Apologetically, she said, “I guess tea is not my thing. But, I sure could use a mug of hot chocolate.”

That was how we met. Before I knew it, a couple of weeks later, in mid-December, with Frankie’s kids in school and mine living their lives scattered across the country, we were having afternoon coffee and cookies around my kitchen table. Christmas carols were playing to an empty room around the corner in the living room just loud enough to float up and over and around us providing a bit of holiday fa la la la la…

Frankie liked to talk and didn’t mind telling stories of her past Christmases. She paused and drank the last drops of her coffee. She wiped her mouth with one of  the leftover Thanksgiving napkins I’d set out. 

I knew it was my turn when she looked at me, smiled expectantly and said, “So.”

Caught somewhat off guard, I blinked and said, “Uh….” Not very profound, I realized, but I wasn’t sure I was ready to delve into what could be an easy yet somewhat difficult story to tell, especially to someone I just met. Even though it happened long ago, diving into the depths of my memory and sharing my heart about that Christmas…, well I just wasn’t sure. Even though I consider it, my best Christmas, I needed a bit more time. So I stalled.

I got up to refresh our drinks and grabbed a couple more cookies. On my way, I walked past a picture on a shelf next to the cupboard. I’d probably passed by it a dozen times every day without really seeing it. This time, thanks to Frankie’s Christmas stroll down memory lane, I saw it again on my way to refill the coffee mugs.  It was a picture of my dad and me and that old red Farmall A tractor. There we were, the three of us, outstanding in our field behind the house.

My dad worked in an office in town. However, he loved working outdoors and tending the five acres we lived on just a few miles north of town. He could build anything, fix anything, drive anything, even back up a trailer and place it just so. In my eyes he was a wonder. That’s what I remember. 

In the picture, I was ten. My face was coated with dust kicked up from my first solo drive of the Farmall. “The boys can drive, plow and disk the field, so can you, Janie,” he said. He taught me. He trusted me. We worked side-by-side.  That meant a lot. I loved him so. Now he’s gone. I picked up the picture and brought it to the table.

Frankie nibbled at a fresh cookie. She looked up at me as I approached the table with the refilled mugs. I set the picture down in front of her.  “That’s you,” she said. “I can tell by the smile.” She grinned as if she were smiling back at my ten year old self so many years ago.

I said. “That’s me and my dad.” Then I told her all about our farm, my brothers, and the Farmall. Mostly I told her about my dad. 

“Do something good today,” he’d say to me and my brothers as he left for work in the morning and we left for school. When he got home I’d be home already, homework done, eager and ready for whatever project or chore he might be working on at the time. He was like that. No matter what it was, there was always an open invitation to join him. No matter what the work, even though he could get it done faster and better, even though I was just a kid, he would make sure I knew I was doing something worthwhile. He always made time for me.

During the course of the work we’d talk. Without specifically asking he’d coax from me the day’s happenings and find out what ‘the good’ was that I did that day. It was expected after all, doing something good.  Sometimes I could point to a specific instance. You know, like I helped Allen with some math problems. He would wrap his arm around my shoulder and say something like, “Nice. I’m sure Allen appreciated it.” And we’d keep cleaning the barn. 

Of course, he had a way of finding out the other too. I remember a time when my mother … oh, my mother! I loved my mother, too. But, oh man, we could get into it! And I’d say things. And I’d get in trouble. And my dad would come home. “He’d say something like, “Let’s go to Koops. I need a couple of 2×4’s.” We’d hop into the pickup, drive the half mile back and forth to the lumber company and talk. Well, he talked. I listened. More times than not, when the lesson was over, though, he would give me a hug and say something like, “Okay then, remember, do something good.” Then with a twinkle in his eye and an extra squeeze, he’d say, “even for your mother.”

When my dad passed away, my brothers and I went through his stuff in the barn. When we came upon a big pile of unused 2×4’s we laughed and laughed. We decided it wasn’t that Dad needed the lumber, it was us needing our dad.  I could have used one of his hugs just then.

After I moved out of their house, after I got married to Jake, after we started our own family, my dad got sick. Real sick. Cancer. Bad stuff. It was the beginning of the end for him or he would say the beginning of the beginning. At this Frankie gave a puzzled look.  “I’ll explain,” is all I said. Then I continued with, “His ending was where my Christmas story began.”

Joy to the World played in the background as I geared up to tell my story. It was the strange stanza, the one about ‘the curse’ that poked my ears. “Far as the curse is found” is how it went. It seemed eerily, appropriate as I began to tell Frankie about that Christmas so long ago. And in the telling it seemed like just yesterday.

I took a deep breath and looked at Frankie. Her smile waned as she tried to interpret the combination of sorrow and peace clouding my face. “Are you okay?” She said. I nodded.

“You see, it was 17 years ago today, that my dad died. A week and a half before Christmas,” I said. “He was 85. He lived a long, good life.” And so my tale began. 

It was such a typical Christmas for us. Busy, busy, busy. Too busy really. There were presents to buy, food to make for what seemed like endless parties, my work, Jake’s work, church activities, school programs, kid’s concerts and just everyday life. On top of it all my mom needed help taking care of Dad.

The cancer had taken over his body and he was wasting away.  Hospice was called in. Dad didn’t want to go to some care facility. He wanted to stay home. My mom wanted that, too. But little did she know how much care he would require. Even when the hospice folks were there it was way more than she could handle. Providentially, my siblings and I all lived within driving distance. We made the time to take care of Dad, and Mom, too, for that matter.

Then the day came.  I was at my folk’s house with the girls, Stacy and Emily.  Dad’s hospital bed was in their family room so he could look out over the now overgrown garden behind the house.  A blanket of fresh snow covered the leftover coneflowers left to disintegrate back into the soil only to rise again in the spring.

I had just given him some pain medication, just a slight dribble past his barely parted lips.  He wasn’t eating anymore. Drinking? All he could manage was a few drops at a time, at best. His breathing was labored and slowing.  We were just waiting.

Just the week before, when we were there, Dad’s eyes were closed and Emily was sitting by his side telling him about her week at school.  My mom was knitting and doing what she could, which was just being there. Stacy walked in. “Hi Grandpa,” she said as if she expected him to answer.

Dad’s eyes fluttered open.  He saw the girls. His lips curved up into a slight smile. Then, at barely a whisper, he said, “Girl’s, do something good.” He raised his finger ever so slightly.  Exhausted, he fell asleep again. That was it. His last words. A week later, he was gone.

I gave Frankie a reassuring smile as I continued and as she wiped a tear that escaped from her eye.  “There’s more,” I said. 

It was as if the brakes had been slammed on the whole Christmas roller coaster. We cancelled everything.  We put all of our energy into taking care of Mom, making all the arrangements, the figuring out of all that needed to be done. Funeral planning, the endless details, and of course, the grieving left no room for Christmas.  That’s what I thought, then.

The funeral was a blur.  Dad had a lot of friends!  It seemed as if everyone one in town knew him.  They filled the church. Everyone had only the best to say about him and they said so to all of us over and over and over again. We were numb.

The preacher helped us remember my father’s life and then helped us to say goodbye. He reminded us of the comfort we can have because of the One who was born on Christmas day.  The irony lies in that it was an Easter sermon we heard that day, just a few days before Christmas.

The days between the funeral and Christmas for my brothers, their families and for me and my family were quiet days.  All the trappings of Christmas were erased from the canvas of our lives that year. Yet, we decided to still have the family Christmas party, which we moved to Christmas Day.  I looked past Frankie around the room remembering the scene.

 “We had it here,” I said.  All of my brothers, their wives, my nieces and nephews and my mom, of course. We filled the house. Everyone brought a little food to share. We talked, we cried, we laughed, we ate, we cried some more. We showed slides on the wall for over an hour. No one tired of the pictures of Dad and each of us on the Farmall, on the big trip out west, the times at the lake, past Christmases… It was wonderful.

Without any planning, the real Christmas story filtered through all the remembering, the laughing, and the grief… Everything was stripped away except for what Christmas was really all about.  As strange as it may sound it took a death to bring us back to its true meaning. “It was my best Christmas,” I said.

Another version of Joy to the World wafted through the kitchen, putting in the final word for the day. “He comes to make his blessings flow, far as the curse is found…”  That’s what we heard and that’s where I paused the tale of my best Christmas… for now. I could tell from the look on Frankie’s kind, smiling face that she didn’t quite get it all.  But it was time for her to go. “The kids will be at the bus stop soon,” she said.

“I’m so glad we could do this,” I said.

“Me, too, Jane.  Let’s get together again,” Frankie said.  “My place? Next week? I’d like to hear more.”  She paused. “If you have time, that is. I know there’s a lot going on.”

“Sure, Frankie. I’d like that,” I said. I grinned. “I have time.”  And then I thought of my Dad as I waved good-bye to my new friend, heading out the door.

“Do something good,” he’d say. 

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“I’ll try, Dad.  I’ll try.”