“Anyway,”
said Tommy, shuffling his freezing feet across the compacted ice, “As I said, I
thought I’d better talk to you. About your tree.”
“My tree?”
Now Sally was a mix of emotions, and so confused that even the simplest words
weren’t making sense.
“Your
Christmas tree.” Tommy pointed in the general direction of the living room. “It
really shouldn’t be there. I can see it from the window, you see, and I’m
worried about it.” The boy really did look worried. He bit his lip as he spoke
and wrung his hands together. It worried Sally more than she liked, and she
leaned down to him.
“What’s wrong
with it?” she whispered. Her thoughts ran to angry neighbours, light being
blocked, a stray electrical spark fizzing in the window… Her heart raced, and
her eyes stung with the sudden pressure of fear. “What’s the matter?”
Tommy leaned
in to meet her. He lowered his voice to match hers. “It’s Twelfth Night. The
tree… it has to come down, or you’ll have bad luck for all the year!” He spoke
as though he meant it, pure panic now running through his words, and across his
face.
Sally,
relieved that it was nothing serious and mildly angry that Tommy had scared her
as he had, stood up straight, made sure no little fingers or toes were in the
way, and pushed the door closed. Hard. Loud.
What did the
boy know? If she wanted to keep her tree up all the year round, she could. It
was none of his business. And as for all this Twelfth Night superstition, bad
luck forever, she couldn’t be doing with it. She liked the tree, liked the idea
that Christmas hadn’t happened yet, liked the build up and the anticipation. So
no, she would not take the tree down just because a child was afraid of an old,
old story. A silly story. A nonsense story.
Sally stalked
back into the living room, her breath coming fast in her irritation. Silly boy.
And then she saw the tree and was so pleased to see it that she slumped against
the doorframe just to stare at it. The
Night Before Christmas came back into her head, and she saw her television
and the Radio Times and her chair and decided that she would forget the strange
morning she had had, and watch her film.
She had just
enough time to make a cup of tea and gather together a lunch of Jammie Dodgers
and Custard Creams on a plate. It was Christmas, after all. What better time to
eat strange things and treat oneself?
She had a
Christmas card to open as well.
Sally was
still clutching it, and she could feel the stiff greeting between her fingers.
She ripped open the envelope and pulled out the card, eager to read it, nervous
to read it. She took in the front of it, a photograph of footprints in the
snow, and then went to the inside. She scanned the festive greeting and the
glitter and the long, long note, and let her eyes rest on the name at the
bottom.
Victoria.
Oh! Sally
felt her face break into a genuine smile, happy, warming, her fingers tingling
with pleasure. She forgot the film, and she forgot the biscuits. Her tea went
cold. The tree kept twinkling and the darkness came. She read and re-read the
note inside the Christmas card from her adored niece, and the more she read it,
the happier she became. The girl – barely a teenager when she last saw her –
was coming home. She had moved to Australia with her parents twenty years
before, and Sally, not able to afford the travel, had only seen snapshots of
her life since then. But now she was coming back, bringing with her a husband
and three children; two girls and a little boy.
And she
wanted to visit. She wanted, in fact, for Sally to show them around the area,
since she was going to rent a house just down the road.
Finally,
Sally would have a family again.
Sally glanced
at the tree. At the presents. At the calendar. At the card. Three days. They
would be here in just three days, and there was so much to do.
With a smile
and a shake of her head, Sally launched herself out of the chair. She span
around the house gathering more biscuits, cakes, savoury snacks, she even found
a bottle of fizzy pop at the very back of the larder and a tin of drinking
chocolate in the corner of a cupboard. She laid everything out on the coffee
table in the living room and shrugged herself into her warm winter coat.
Wellies snagged on too. And then she made her move, out of her door, across the
path, and up the step of her neighbour’s. She rang the bell. She waited,
understanding how Tommy had felt earlier. She should have invited him in, poor
kid.
Eventually
the door opened and Tommy peeped out. He was wearing pyjamas and a dressing
gown and Mickey Mouse slippers. He looked sleepy, and Sally felt even more
guilty than she had before. But she knew she had to do this. “Tommy, are your
parents in?”
They were, of
course. They appeared, curious.
Sally had to
laugh. “Can Tommy come over to mine please?” she asked, feeling ten again.
“I’ve got a little job for him to do. I understand it’s a little late, but it
won’t take long. And you’re welcome to come.”
Before they
could say no – which they would have done if given the chance – Tommy leapt up
and grabbed their hands. “Mummy! Dad! Please can I? Please? I’ll be good and go
to bed straight after!”
There was no
denying that face, those excited words, the joy.
Tommy’s
parents sat on the unused sofa in Sally’s living room. Uncomfortable at first,
they began to relax when Sally offered them food and drinks and began to chat
about her life and her family. They would have talked for hours, the old woman’s
life had been so interesting, but Tommy grew bored. This was not why he was
here. He tugged at Sally’s sleeve and pointed at the prettily twinkling tree.
“Can we?” he asked, whispering as though to break the magic. “It’s getting
late. It’ll be tomorrow soon.”
Sally nodded.
“I don’t need any bad luck now. I’ve got too much good to look forward to.”
She took the
boy’s hand and led him to the Christmas tree, taking in the beauty for the last
time until December. “Are you ready?” she asked, looking down at Tommy. He
nodded, bouncing on the soles of his feet. “All right then. Timber!”
©Lisamarie Lamb
2012
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