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A
fine dusting of snowflakes preceded Allie as the back door opened,
quickly dissolving into mini-puddles on the lino. Six over-filled
supermarket carrier bags followed, contents spilling over, and
finally – a well-worn pair of boots, scuffed and snow stained,
laces decorated with beads, and..... ‘Useless boots! My feet are
wet!’ Allie shrieked at the kitchen walls, her stripy hat askew
above a mane of madly curled hair (which smelled rather
disconcertingly of wet dog), and a very red, (and very runny) nose.
She bent to retrieve two of the bags, and watched helplessly as half
a dozen eggs and a jar of Robertson’s strawberry fell
simultaneously onto the wet floor, creating new puddles of red and
yellow in the melted snow.
$*&%@?#!!!
whispered Allie as she sank down on to the floor. ‘What a mess.
Oh Lord, what a complete and utter mess.’
It was Christmas Eve, and a sudden dip in temperature had brought the
snow, longed for by some, dreaded by Allie. Not that she wasn’t a
romantic at heart – snowy landscapes, trees with heavy-laden boughs
were fine for Christmas cards, and to be viewed from the comfort of a
warm and cosy living room.
The reality was snow turned to dirty brown mush, and a pair of old boots
with holes in the heels. The reality was trudging home from the
supermarket on Christmas Eve with more than one sideways glance at
shoppers piling their goodies into car boots as she began the long
walk home.
Reality was Derek back in the workshop on Boxing Day, and not home now at six
pm...not expected for at least another two hours. Derek swimming
against the tide of mass production, trying to keep his carpentry
business afloat, and here she was – sat amidst the fruits of his
labour on the kitchen floor.
Allie stood up slowly, picking a pattern of jam and eggshell from her
duffel coat. As she shrugged it off, she looked down at her swollen
belly, cupping it in her hands, caressing the new life that stirred
within. ‘Oh Junior’, she sighed, so convinced that her child was
a boy. ‘What a silly sausage of a Mum you’ve got!’
Two hours, one clean floor and a crackling fire later, Allie was in the
kitchen again, preparing for the next day’s festive dinner.
Chicken had always been Derek’s favourite, and this one was
free-range, corn-fed – a golden yellow. As she inhaled the scent
of sage and onion, she thought of Derek, still in his workshop.
Closing her eyes, she could see him lovingly caressing the reclaimed
oak, watching it shape into a beautifully crafted table – a
specially commissioned piece, with intricately carved vines leaves
winding around the legs. She could smell the wood shavings, the
paraffin from Nan’s old oil heater, the cloying yet comforting
scent of linseed oil and varnish. She sighed as she covered the
prepared bird with foil. One specially commissioned piece would not
keep the soon-to-be-three of them for long, and she thanked God for
the multitude of less artistic repairs which Derek laboured over.
Allie began to speak, this time not to her un-born child, but to her
Heavenly Father. ‘Oh Lord...today’s been so...so stressful! I
know Derek has to work late, but I wish he was here. I know You’re
here, but I feel so lonely sometimes.’ Her hands stilled, and she
gazed out of the kitchen window at the unusually bright star which
lit up the dark. ‘It’s almost the end of the year Lord...I
wonder what the next one will bring. More struggle? More
penny-pinching? Oh Father, you know I want to grow closer to You, to
trust You more...I just feel constantly blown here and there by the
wind of life, and sometimes it’s so...so cold!’
Tomorrow’s dinner prepared, tonight’s supper laid out and ready to eat, Allie
went into the living room and sat by the coal fire, in the comfy,
rather shabby brown arm chair – Nan’s chair – propping her feet
up on the warm hearth. The glow from two candles on the sideboard
illuminated a wooden Nativity scene. Mary, Joseph, wise men and
shepherds, and a touchingly detailed Jesus, cradled in a tiny manger.
Derek had worked on it in secret that first December of their
marriage, four years ago – had laid it out on the same sideboard on
Christmas Eve as she enjoyed a hot bath and a glass of spiced wine.
She remembered the joy she felt as she came down and saw the Holy
Family in miniature. The looks of surprise etched in wood on the
faces of the shepherds a contrast to the solemn expressions of the
wise men. The strong, protective Joseph, his arm around Mary’s
shoulder, such a look of love captured in Mary’s smile, and the
perfect and precious baby, placed just so, His eyes fixed on His
Mother’s face. She remembered Derek’s arm softly rested on her
shoulder in a mirroring of the scene, and the un-spoken-of,
longed-for baby of the future.
‘I bet Mary didn’t drop the eggs and say $*&%@?#!!!’
mused Allie as she sat by the fire waiting for Derek to
come home. ‘I bet she didn’t do half the things I do.’ She
cradled her belly again. ‘Silly Allie,’ she murmured, ‘silly
sausage of a Mummy’ and anticipating Derek’s key in the lock, she
poured two glasses of spiced wine.
Allie woke early on Christmas morning. The air was still, the sky outside
still dark. Allie pulled back the quilt, her feet groping the floor
for her slippers, her arm reaching for her dressing gown. ‘You
okay?’ Derek murmured, half asleep. ‘It’s not the baby, is
it?’ ‘No, shhh,’ whispered Allie. ‘You go back to sleep.’
Quietly, Allie walked downstairs, opening the door to the living
room. A few dying embers still glowed in the grate, and she added
more kindling, then moving over to the sideboard to light the two
candles, now almost burnt away.
As the candles began to first flicker, and hen glow, she looked again at
the Holy family, her fingers touching the manger, tracing the
delicate outline of the baby, the calm serenity of Mary,
the...’What!’ she said aloud...’What’s happened to your
nose!’ Picking up Mary, she saw that her nose had chipped away at
the end, the flaw standing out in the shadows cast by the candles.
Allie bent forward, and looked closer...Joseph had a finger missing,
and this wise man...his crown was broken...and this, this shepherd’s
crook...and, and a sheep with one ear! Only the infant Jesus, only
the Lord Jesus remained perfect, the only perfect babe,
cradled in a manger.
‘Oh Lord!’ Allie laughed, ‘this is not the perfect Holy Family.
This is a flawed, human family, just like us. Poor, scared, no where
to go but a stable. A family not only overwhelmed by the gift of a
new life, but with the knowledge that their baby was really a King.
The Son of God. As Allie caressed the baby’s smooth, wooden cheek,
she knew that although she was weak, He was strong, and her...their
future was in His hands. As she bent down to blow out the candles,
she felt a sharp pain in her lower belly, and a warm wetness on her
inner thigh, and knew that the gift of new life – another life, had
come.
Story by Cath E. Vyse
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