Sunset now spent, chilled panes reflected Beth’s bare face against the black night. Enough light spilled from the windows to illuminate the edge of a snowdrift that grew with the wind. Signs of life winked across the lake as families huddled in their homes, warm despite the blizzard. Is anyone else alone? Surely I’m not the only one. It didn’t feel like Christmas Eve.
Her family traditionally celebrated on the night before Christmas. Finger foods and gifts fed their gaiety. As children, she and her brother thoroughly shook all the packages in the days before. Anticipation was high and didn’t end with the call for bedtime. In the morning, stockings were miraculously filled with small treats and presents before they woke.
This year, Christmas was at her dad’s house. He had long passed by the traditions of decorations and celebrations. She asked if he wanted a tree. He didn’t. He asked in return if she wanted one. “I don’t need a tree, Dad,” she replied. In the moment, there was contentment. She didn’t want to spend any unnecessary money. Time was precious, and spent together in this way was already a gift.
Days later, her son mentioned a tree and how it would look good in the same spot Beth had imagined one. All three decided that maybe this year--just this once--yes, a tree would be good. It became her thrifty mission the next day. With small donations to the Salvation Army and Boy Scouts, she returned with a tree stand, ribbons, bells, and a pine tree small enough to fit in her compact car. She and her son worked to erect the tiny treasure near the fireplace where it could be viewed along with the lake from her dad’s hospital bed, now part of the living room furniture.
Decorations and lights came from her aunt and uncle. More additions were made from fake flowers in an “explosive cake” gift. Another trip to the Salvation Army yielded silver balls and some greenery for the fireplace. It actually looked like Christmas!
Tonight gifts waited under the tree and a fondue was prepared--all to be enjoyed when her son returned from his shift at a local gas station. In the meantime, it was quiet. Beth needed some time to reflect.
Reveries tightened as her eyes focused on the mirrored image. Her father’s home rested behind her in a triple-layered vision on multiple floor-to-ceiling panes. His bookshelf rose to the vaulted ceiling separating the office from the kitchen. Beth sat at his desk--strategically positioned to easily watch Gunsmoke in the living room or look out over the lake--and tried to discern titles reflected over her shoulder. He didn’t read much any more. His bookcases were filled but dusty.
Actually, he didn’t read at all now. At least not “earth books” like those he collected over the years. Beth lifted her heart and silently asked, Dad? Are there books in Heaven? In the next beat, it fell along with tears that kicked her in the gut. They should have written a book. It had been a project she hoped would spark his zest for life in recent years. Like everything else, it gathered dust instead of momentum.
Even his binoculars on the windowsill gathered cobwebs. She wondered, Do cobwebs gather that fast? Do you have massively productive spiders? Oh wait. Maybe the virus? There was no housekeeper for months with coronavirus precautions and quarantines. Even so, it indicated he hadn’t touched them for some time. He used to pick them up to see the life happening on the lake. If a loon called, his eyes were in the lenses for a close up view.
Beth didn’t touch those cobwebs. They spoke too much, and she didn’t want to silence the voice that reminded her of what her dad liked. Other areas were fair game! She dusted, vacuumed, scrubbed, and attempted to restore the house to order when she arrived. Her son lived there as well, but since “Grandpa” went to the hospital, he had been doing little more than showing up to work, talking to doctors, and drinking beer. Her heart ached at the thought of her son having everything on his shoulders for a few weeks.
The two became a team as soon as the hospital turned into hospice. She laughed inwardly remembering the first night when two-person care was needed at 2 a.m. and her son stumbled about only half awake. He grabbed tiny moments with pillows on the floor, moaning about how tired he was. It reminded her of becoming a mother--the sparse sleep, the half-awake feedings.
Demands had been high for a while. Even when her son was “on duty,” Beth listened with a baby monitor as she tried to sleep in her dad’s bedroom. No one slept much or well.
Memories of recent days were as blurred as the reflections in the windows, only illuminated by writings as she updated family and friends. Yet some moments were sharp and pierced through the blur with painful gratitude. She knew she could never grasp the magnitude of holding her father’s hand to her chest and pouring out her soul during his last hours. Her mind and heart would never let go of her son’s simple call from the other side of the room, “Mom?” The two waited for the next breath. It never came.
Maybe I’ll write your book for you, Dad. Maybe those days together were our seeds to be planted into pages? Her thoughts drifted to the possibility of not closing the book on her dad’s story that she started with his health updates.
A noise scuffled in the front entryway. Her son stomped the snow from his feet. Whew! He made it home in the storm! He pulled the snow-crusted beanie from his head as he entered the room, “It doesn’t feel like Christmas.”
Beth agreed and choked back tears, “It doesn’t feel like Christmas at all.” But inside she knew it was the most significant Christmas of their lives.
From dust to dust, she thought. Imaginations came to her mind of the grave that allowed a more “natural” burial for her dad’s body . . . a breathable liner (so the funeral director said) . . . wood in concrete . . . frozen flowers scattered on the casket from above . . . a temporary marker waiting to identify a temporary life on earth.
When the dust settles . . . she didn’t finish the sentence. It was too overwhelming. The list of to-dos for the estate and wellbeing of those her father cared for was long. It was time to step into his shoes.
Beth took the deep breath that her father couldn’t and vowed, I'll do my best, Dad. If you can do it, so can I. She knew it would be step by step, lesson by lesson. But I'dd rather have you here. I have so much to learn.
Tears pooled again. Cooled by the wintery window, they left chilled trails on her cheeks. She bit back with determination, clenched her jaw, and picked up the neon-green duster by the desk. Her arms opened upward in dedication, and she nearly laughed at the dramatic pose and what her father may think from his heavenly balcony. Beth embraced it and committed with an inward wink, I know I need to start somewhere, Dad, so I guess I’ll start dusting!
All Rights Reserved | Ingrid B. Skarstad Williams