“Wow! That has to be the most amazing tree we’ve ever had!”
Sally
grinned at me. “Right?” She moved forward and adjusted one of the lights. “I
knew as soon as I saw it that it had to be ours!”
Mort
spoke up, “And what makes it truly amazing is the fact that it fits in here
like it was made for the space!”
Mom,
Peter and I looked around.
Mort had
a point. This front, ‘living room’ part of Sally’s house (well, technically, it
belongs to her, but the rest of us, except for Peter, also call it home.) with
its 30-foot vaulted ceiling, is perfect for a 29-and-a-half-foot tree.
Which is
what we were looking at.
A tree that,
according to Sally, was just sitting there at the Tree Corral (astute business
name) at the end of the block, surrounded by boxes and packing crates and largely
being ignored by the passers-by.
Mort and
Sally opened the nearest box of decorations and pulled out our tree star.
“Hmmm . .
.” Mom said. “Perhaps it’s time for a new one?”
I probably
don’t have to say it—that star has been through a lot.
“Mort and
I will do that later!” Sally said.
Mom
nodded as she also opened a box. Then she looked up at the tree. “I think this
is the first tree with enough space for all
of our decorations.” She looked at Peter. "Could you fetch the ladder?"
He nodded and disappeared.
Sally’s
mouth was a round ‘O’ of excitement. “Seriously?! ALL the decorations?” She dove for another in the
stack of boxes. “Even these?” She began to pull out the decorations that were .
. . less than perfect. And far from the quality found in your average dollar
store at Christmas time. These were the nearest and dearest to her heart. Those
she and I had made during our years of school. The flocked, tattered snowmen
that had spent as much time in our hands during the season as they had on the
tree. The penguins, Santas, angels, farm animals and puppies, ditto; each painstakingly
crafted from toilet-paper rolls, wire, string, pipe-cleaners, the occasional
light bulb, and tons (and tons) of glue.
Happily,
Sally and Mort began to find places for them in the grasshopper-green
boughs.
“It’s
pretty amazing that you managed to get a pre-lit one,” Mom said as she began
stringing endless swaths of garland around the wide girth of the tree.
“I know!”
Sally giggled. “I have to keep pinching myself to know that this is real!”
“Well, if
you get tired of pinching yourself, I’m happy to help,” I put in.
Sally
stuck out her tongue at me. Then reached for another handful of ornaments.
It took
the better part of an hour, but, eventually, the five of us managed to empty
every. Single. Box.
Whew.
All that
was left was the star at the top.
We were
standing, looking from our tattered veteran to that one empty spot when the
doorbell rang.
Peter,
who had just stepped into the kitchen for a glass of water hollered from the
front entryway, “I’ll get it!”
The four
of us stayed where we were, enjoying the sight of the oversized tree in the
oversized spot.
“I
thought you might be able to use this,” a deep voice said.
We
turned.
Our Peter’s
Uncle Peter was standing in the doorway, holding up an oversized star.
Huh. How
did he know . . .?
Mom
hurried over to him, hand outstretched. “Pete! I’m so glad you could come!”
You have
to know that the rest of the household has been watching this developing
friendship for over a month now. Let’s face it, when a man’s first introduction
to a family includes being covered from tip to toe in paint—and he returns—there
is something going on.
He set
the star down, took Mom’s hand in both of his and smiled at her, his
sun-browned face crinkling at the corners. At times like this, his resemblance
to his nephew, our Peter, is
remarkable.
“A little
bird told me you might need this.” He picked up the star.
I looked
at Peter, who winked.
“It’s
perfect, Pete!” Mom smiled at him and, for just a moment, my heart turned over.
I mean, how awesome would it be for Mom to find someone after all these years
alone? My eyes turned unwillingly toward Sally. Well . . . nearly alone.
He and
Mom moved toward the tree. “The only challenge is how to get it up there.”
“I can do
it!” Sally sang out.
My heart
stopped. Please, no.
“We just
need the right tool,” Uncle Pete said. “And the talent! I think
Mary’s trusty step ladder, here, and a couple of men named Peter can get the job done.”
I started
breathing again.
Three minutes later, it was done. Uncle Pete plugged the star into the top string of
lights and his nephew plugged the other end into the wall and we were in
business.
The tree
lit up from bottom to top.
It was .
. . magical.
Uncle Pete
grinned down at my mom, then turned for a final look at his star before beginning
the climb back down. His eyes were drawn to something outside our window. “Huh,”
he said. “Why are the cops here?”
Mom’s
face went pale and her eyes went, out of habit, to Sally. “C-cops?”
Sally shrugged and wandered back to the tree, adjusting a couple of ornaments.
“Sally?”
She
propped her hands on her hips. “Why does everyone always think it’s something
to do with me?”
“Because
it usually is,” I said.
Sally
sighed. “All Mort and I did this morning was go to the lot. Throw some money at
the man. Push the tree over onto the car. And drive home!”
Mom
scratched her head. “Really?”
“Really!”
Just then
the front doorbell rang.
I
clutched Peter’s hand. A reflex thing.
Sally
hopped happily to the door and swung it wide. “Hello, officers! Come in!”
“Hey,
Sally!” one of the officers said. “We’re here to investigate a theft.” He and
his partner stepped into the foyer, which opened directly into the front room—in
full view of our new tree. He looked up at it. “Of this tree.”
“Wha-at?”
Mom looked like she was going to faint. Uncle Pete put an arm around her.
Sally spoke
up. “I didn’t steal it! I bought it!”
The
officer frowned. “The tree-lighting coordinator reported it stolen.”
Sally
stared at him. “What does she have to do with it?”
“Apparently
she and her crew were in the process of decorating. Then they took a break.
When they came back, it was gone.”
Sally
blinked.
I stared
at her. I think it’s the first time I’ve seen her actually . . . react to one
of her own conflicts.
“Well why was it at the lot?”
“It was beside the lot.”
“Oh.”
Mort
spoke up. “Sally just threw $200.00 at the man and he told her to take any tree.”
Sally
shrugged. “I thought that included this one.”
The
officers looked at Sally. Then at the tree. Then at Sally again.
“I’m
happy to pay the extra,” Sally put in.
One
officer stepped back and looked at the great front doors. Then at the tree.
Then back at the doors. He grinned at Sally. “How about we come to an
agreement?”
It took all of us. We managed to peel off our more
precious decorations and speed the tree out
those doors and onto our lawn, where it was set up in lonely glory for all to
see.
The
neighbourhood celebrations were moved to the area of the park across the street
and, by the time they started, no one even remembered that Sally (and Mort) had
mistakenly stolen Christmas.
The neighbourhood
donated a much smaller tree to the Hart household, which was duly decorated, in
the shade of its much larger brother in the front yard.
And you
know what? In spite of Sally—or maybe because of her, all was merry and bright.
Proving that, sometimes--not often--she gets it right.
Merry
Christmas and Happy Holidays.
Use Your Words is a writing challenge. Each month we participants donate several words and/or phrases to our noble leader, Karen, who then re-distributes them.
The catch is, none of us knows who will get our words and what will be done with them.
Totally fun!
My words this month were: conflict ~ grasshopper ~ peel ~ speed ~ tool And given to me, by my friend Rena at: https://wanderingwebdesigner.com/blog. Thanks, Rena! :)
You've read mine, now hop over and see what the other participants have created!
Links to the other “Use Your Words” posts: