The Christmas Portrait Surprise: The Family Portrait
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About this ebook
What life-altering surprises will make this Christmas the one Kate would never forget?
Young Kate's life had been a series of painful adjustments following the heartbreaking death of her mother. Her memories of Christmastime and its traditions brought comfort, but all that changed when Kate's father married Evie, who came with her own ideas about celebrating Christmas. Granny Grace had always been there to help carry on the sacred family traditions, but she decided to leave.
Grappling with her anger and disappointment, Kate had no idea the surprises this Christmas would bring. The unexpected visit from the mysterious and elusive Mr. Josh. The redbird's appearance just when Kate needed her. The search for a lost boy during a snowstorm. The startling discovery in Granny's barn, a discovery that would change their lives. Unexplained footprints in the snow. But the biggest surprise would come on Christmas Day with the unexpected images in the family Christmas portrait.
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The Christmas Portrait Surprise - Phyllis Clark Nichols
Prologue
‡Christmas 2007
Kate
I know you can’t help it, and I do understand, but I can understand and still be sad and disappointed, can’t I? I’ll miss you. We’ll all miss you, Henry. I love you.
Even as I spoke the words and ended the call, I wanted to chuck the phone across the room. Maybe toward the icy window in front of me. But something would get broken, and I’d have a mess to clean up. Then I’d have to file a report with Mr. Grebinger, the apartment manager, and he could top Granny Grace with his interrogation techniques. How would I explain a broken window and that my phone was four floors below on a frozen sidewalk? I could hear him grumbling now, complaining about Chicago winters and telling me how he was moving to Florida in eleven months.
But why this Christmas? Henry and I hadn’t been home since our spring wedding, and this was to be our first Christmas to return to Cedar Falls as man and wife. Why did he have to be on assignment this Christmas—and in Africa of all places? I knew it wasn’t his fault that he couldn’t make it home, but I hated it.
It hadn’t been Mama’s fault she died, either, yet I hated that too. It seemed every Christmas since then had been like opening an old wound. I’d had more than my fair share of sad Christmases.
What’s one more? Maybe I should just stay in Chicago and not inflict my misery on my family back in Kentucky.
I kicked off my shoes and walked across the thick pile of the Persian rug I had purchased in Morocco a few years ago on a trip with Daddy and Evie. Buying that rug was about the most impractical thing I’ve ever done, but Mama would have approved. Those warm reds and vibrant greens would have called to her just like they did to me. That blanket of a rug stretched wall to wall in our small apartment bedroom, and it always felt good to my feet.
I stood barefooted and stared out the window. The sky was dark gray, and the drifting snowflakes flickered in the light from Mike’s Diner across the street. The chef made pots of soup that rivalled Granny Grace’s, and Mike’s stayed open late on frigid nights like this one just to accommodate the folks in the neighborhood.
Colored lights from Christmas trees flickered from apartment windows in the building next to the diner. I didn’t even have a Christmas tree. No reason for one. Henry was still in Africa, and I was going home to Cedar Falls.
I preferred the nothingness of watching the snow accumulating on the window ledge, but the half-packed suitcase on the bed seemed to summon me. I walked back to the bed, slammed the suitcase shut, and slid it to the other side. Then I turned out the lamp on the bedside table and lay down. I’d learned at the age of ten it was best to cry in the dark. Crying in the light made my sadness more real, and if I cried in the dark, no one else had to know.
I was crying for past sad Christmases and for this one, which was turning out to be more of the same, when the phone rang. I sat up quickly, turned on the light, and wiped my face with my sweater sleeve as though I had been caught in some evil act I wanted no one to see. My phone had been ringing all day—clients trying to make that ever so important last appointment before Christmas. As a grief counselor, I knew Christmas opened wounds for grieving children. Emotional wounds like mine, with scars almost as visible as a surgical incision. In a way, losing someone was like the surgical removal of a vital organ or limb, and nothing was ever quite the same. You just learned to live with the difference.
I answered. Hello, this is Dr. Harding.
Kate, it’s Granny. You busy?
After Mama died, it was like Granny Grace developed some kind of sixth sense, always knowing when to call or show up. She’d lost her daughter when I lost Mama, so she mothered me and I daughtered her. It worked even after Daddy and Evie married. Evie was good that way, understanding I needed Granny Grace and Granny needed me.
Kate, are you there? You okay? I asked if you were busy.
Granny had taught me never to lie, but I wasn’t about to tell her I had been busy crying and feeling pity for myself. I cleared my voice. A bit busy always. I’m looking at my half-packed bags.
Well, get them packed full, sweet girl. We can’t wait to see you and Henry. Susannah Hope and I’ve been doing the Christmas baking, and Evie’s helping as best she can. Bless her heart, cookin’ is still not her thing, but she does make up for it. She’s a great cleaner-upper. She hasn’t told us yet what her culinary contributions will be for the Christmas dinner table. And if she’s true to her history, even if she tells us what it is, what’s in her casserole dish will still be a surprise.
Just please don’t let her prepare the apples and sweet potatoes, or at least make her wait until I get home to help. She used olive oil and burned them to a crisp the last time.
I heard Granny chuckle. I needed to hear Granny’s voice and that familiar chuckle tonight.
Now you and Henry bring your warm clothes. Your Uncle Luke’s planning his annual bonfire and ice skating after the Christmas Eve service. You know how Luke and Lisa are about getting on that pond at Christmas since that’s where he proposed to her.
Just thinking about that icy pond made my bare toes curl. I searched the rug for my shoes. You think they’re getting a little old for that? They’ve been married what? Eighteen, nineteen years?
Nineteen, I think, but since they moved out there to my farmhouse, it’s become one of those traditions every Christmas, and looks like the weather will be perfect this year. Oh, and tell Henry that Chesler’s bringing his guitar, and we’re expecting some carols out of those two. Must keep up these traditions. You know how we O’Donnells and Hardings are about our traditions.
I knew all too well about family traditions and the changes through the years. Those customs had grown sweeter and more valuable to me because I knew there would be more changes coming. That’s why Henry’s absence hurt so. No Henry in the family Christmas portrait this year. Granny, about Henry.
What about Henry? He’s not sick, is he?
No, ma’am. He’s not sick, but he won’t be able to make it for Christmas. He hates it, but he can’t get home.
Granny’s momentary silence was worse than her chattering because it meant the inquisition was about to begin. What do you mean he can’t get home? Is he all right?
He’s fine but still in Ethiopia on assignment and can’t get home until December twenty-ninth. He’s really disappointed.
Seems to me if he can get home on the twenty-ninth then he could get home on the twenty-third. So why can’t he? What kind of folks is he working for that would keep him from his family at Christmas?
I cleared my throat again, as though that would make my answer clearer to her. Granny, you know he’s on this big water project, and they’re trying to finish up building some wells so that he doesn’t have to return for a few months. Business doesn’t work there like it works in Cedar Falls.
Well, then, maybe you two should just move to Cedar Falls. There’s plenty to do here to help poor folks and grieving, troubled children.
Granny had been singing this song since Henry and I became engaged. We do know all about that, don’t we, Granny? Maybe one of these days. But for now, Henry’s work is changing the lives and the health of so many people around the globe.
So you’re coming home alone on your first Christmas as a married woman. Something wrong about that.
Granny Grace paused. Well, then, is he meeting you here to stay for New Year’s Eve?
I don’t think so. I’ll just fly back to Chicago to meet him. We’re thinking we need to start our own New Year’s traditions.
I’m getting too old for new traditions. My old ones suit me just fine. You belong here for Christmas, and so does Henry.
I’ll be there, Granny. You can count on me. I wouldn’t miss all the family fun.
I was relieved she wasn’t looking at my face when I said that. For some reason, surprising images of Granny Grace sitting at her breakfast table explaining to me why she wouldn’t be at home for Christmas flashed into my memory. Daddy and Evie had married in the autumn of 1991, three years after Mama died, and Granny Grace had just up and decided to take a trip that Christmas. I’ll be there on Saturday.
Make sure you are, Katherine Joy. I don’t know how many more Christmases I have left for this world.
Now, Granny, you’ve been saying that for the last fifteen years, and you know I don’t like it when you talk like that, and if you could see my face, you’d really know it.
I paused. You know, for some weird reason, I was just remembering that Christmas after Daddy and Evie married and you decided to take a road trip and spend Christmas with a group of friends from church. I remember being a bit angry with you. Do you remember that?
Silence from Granny again. I do seem to recall that stupid thing I did. Only I don’t remember it quite like you do. Seems I remember you were a whole lot angry with me, and I was the one who got more than one good talking-to from my granddaughter about that.
Um-huh. I remember that part too. You deserved it. You were just about to ruin our Christmas. That was the Christmas we made the family pact to be home for Christmas no matter what. Guess Henry’s work didn’t make that pledge.
I sighed. Thanks for the call, Granny. You always seem to know when I need to hear your voice. I’ll see you in a couple of days.
Make sure you do, sweet girl. Make sure you do. And remember to bring the Christmas tablecloth. Did you finish all the stitching? I’m dying to see what you did.
It’s here on the bed folded and waiting to be packed.
I’ll be so glad to see you, Kate. Love you, girl.
Love you, too, Granny.
I put the phone on the table, grabbed a tissue from the box on the nightstand, and went back to the window. The diner lights were still flashing, and snow was still falling. I was mesmerized by the scenes in the apartment windows across the street. Why didn’t people close their blinds at night? I knew none of those people, but I knew so much about their lives. I didn’t consider myself a voyeur, but Dr. Swanson, my major professor, would have been fascinated by Dr. Katherine Harding’s interest in her neighbors. After a day of counseling and digging into people’s stories and their lives in order to help them, I often found myself standing at my own bedroom window peering again into people’s lives through their windows across the street.
With Henry away, our apartment was mostly silent except for the street noise below. For the last two weeks, the sounds of Christmas music had echoed through the whole apartment every evening. I’d wrapped Christmas packages. I’d baked cookies to take to the office and share with patients and staff. I’d written Christmas cards. I’d had such hopes for this being the best Christmas since Mama died. Now my hope lay somewhere deep within a well in Africa.
Tonight was silent and dark, and I felt like was on the outside looking in at everyone else’s merry Christmas. In my aloneness, I stood safely behind partially opened curtains so that I couldn’t be seen. The family on the second floor on the east side was a happy one. Three generations living in the same small apartment. Lots of activity, smiles, and conversations like the ones they were having around the table tonight. Probably Italian. Their Christmas tree was much too large for the space, but it was theirs, and it suited them.
The elderly lady next door lived alone, and her Italian neighbors invited her over for evening meals frequently, but not tonight. She watched television with a blanket around her legs and a steaming cup of something on the table next to her. A small, no doubt artificial, tree with tiny lights sat on a table in front of the window.
The couple above on the third floor—sophisticated, stylishly dressed—were drinking cocktails with their dinner guests. He spent hours on his computer at night while she read. Their apartment was glamorous, their holiday decorations silver, white, and gold. Granny would have laughed, and Mama would have hated it.
I had just enough information that I made up happy stories about each of them, but the truth was I knew they had their own stories that probably included some sad scenes. I wanted them to be happy. I wanted them to have the best Christmas ever. I wanted no one to feel the sadness I was feeling.
What would those people think of me, what stories would they concoct, if they were looking through my window this evening?
I didn’t know how long I stood there. It felt like a lifetime, several lifetimes, as I peered through their windows and into their lives. But finally, I closed the curtain and crossed the room to the bed. There lay the tablecloth. The O’Donnell Christmas tablecloth. I picked it up, gave it a good shake, and spread it over the bed. With smudges, stains, fingerprints, and dates and signatures in hand-stitching on the linen fabric, the Christmas tablecloth told the story of the O’Donnells and the Hardings for the last half a century.
I studied Mama’s signatures from her childhood until her last Christmas. They were all fun, colorful, and creative and so different from Aunt Susannah Hope’s, neat and straight and the same year after year. I looked at Chesler’s bold letters, always green, and Daddy’s and Grandpa’s.
But there it sat in the left corner in brilliant red, signed and dated 1990—the last year we’d used this tablecloth. I moved my index finger to trace Granny’s curlicue handwriting. So many memories, but I remembered the Christmas when Granny went away. A flash, a memory of spreading that tablecloth on the Christmas dining table so many times, and I was hurled back to 1991, the Christmas when Granny Grace went away and the tablecloth became mine.
Chapter One
‡Friday evening, December 13, 1991
Cedar Falls, Kentucky
Kate
Daddy brought in all the boxes with the tree ornaments and stacked them on the stairs like he’d always done since I could remember. It was the plastic bin that held the treasures. Daddy’s face changed when he lifted the lid. He handed Chesler his box of ornaments and tousled his red curls. Here you go, sport. Take these to the living room.
Then he picked up my box. Kate, I believe these are yours.
I took the box and rubbed the red ribbon between my fingers. What about Mama’s box? Will we put those on the tree this year?
I couldn’t imagine the tree without the ornaments Chesler