The Gift of Christmas Present

Home > Literature > The Gift of Christmas Present > Page 12
The Gift of Christmas Present Page 12

by Melody Carlson


  “Good for you.” Her grandmother struggled to balance on her crutches as she fished around in her sweater pocket for something. Then she held out a closed fist as if she had a surprise in her hand. “Something for you.”

  Christine held out her open hand and waited as her grandmother dropped a small brass key. “What’s this?”

  Her grandmother glanced up the staircase. “It’s the key to Lenore’s room. Second door on the left.”

  Christine nodded.

  “I never changed a single thing after she left. I guess I always thought she’d come back someday, and I wanted it to look just the same as before she left. As if I’d been expecting her to come home. I even had a deadbolt lock installed years ago. Just to make sure no one could go in and disturb anything.” She shook her head sadly. “I’d go up there with you now if I could just handle those stairs—”

  “Oh, no, you don’t need to do that.”

  “Yes. It’s probably better that I don’t.” She sighed. “Anyway, I thought you might want to see her room and her things, you know, perhaps get a better idea of who she was. I suppose we should eventually clear those old things out. It’s not as if I want it to become some sort of shrine or anything. I just wanted it to be there for her . . .”

  Christine sensed her grandmother’s pain. “Maybe I could help box her things up for you, Grandmother.”

  “Yes, that would be good.”

  “Maybe I could do it after Christmas. I know our church is always looking for clothing items for our homeless shelter.”

  “Good.” Her grandmother nodded. “I figured you might have some ideas. And then, Christine, once it’s all cleared out . . . Well, I thought maybe you’d like to use it for yourself. I mean, it’s really a lovely room, with its own bath and a balcony that overlooks the backyard and pool.” She smiled in a sad way. “Of course, I don’t expect you to live here. Goodness only knows why anyone would want to stay with a decrepit old woman like me. But I want you to know that you’re welcome to use that room anytime you like.”

  “Thank you.” Christine was trying to think of adequate words to describe how she would be perfectly happy, thrilled even, to live in this lovely house with her grandmother, but before she could speak her grandmother turned away.

  “Now I’ve got some business to attend to.” She started moving down the hall again. “I’ll be in James’s study if anyone needs me.”

  Christine wondered why her grandmother still called that room “James’s study.” Perhaps it was simply out of respect for her deceased husband. Christine had peeked in to admire the dark-paneled room with its floor-to-ceiling bookcases one day. She’d always thought it would be so lovely to have a library like that. Yet the room had such a rigid formality to it, so much so that she hadn’t felt quite welcome in there. She’d also noticed that her grandmother seldom used the room and kept her own desk in a corner of the living room. Perhaps she didn’t feel quite welcome in there either.

  Christine began to climb the stairs, careful not to disturb the evergreen garland she’d so painstakingly draped there the other day. She’d been upstairs a few times before. Just to vacuum and dust, and once to look for an old book her grandmother had thought was in one of the bedrooms up there. She’d noticed that closed door with the deadbolt lock and wondered. But she hadn’t asked. Even so, she’d figured it had something to do with Lenore.

  She slipped the key into the lock and turned it. Feeling like an intruder, she went inside. She stood by the door, looking around and simply taking it all in. It’s not that she believed in ghosts or anything like that, but it was as if she could feel a presence or an aura or something almost tangible. She actually held her breath for a moment as she listened to the silence and tried to imagine an eighteen-year-old Lenore moving through this pretty room.

  The spacious room had daintily flowered wallpaper in pastel shades of peach and green that ran up the walls above the wainscoting. Old-fashioned framed prints of fairies playing among flowers and pretty girls in gardens adorned the walls. Very feminine and very sweet. The furnishings all matched and were painted a creamy white that had been made to look old. The bed was covered in a patchwork quilt that reminded Christine of a spring garden just beginning to bloom.

  She slowly walked over to the large bureau with a mirror on top. This was the only part of the room that seemed to show any clutter or actual use. Here she found all sorts of high school memorabilia—all covered in a thick layer of dust. A pair of red and gold pom-poms, a yearbook, several awards, graduation announcements, photos of friends, a gold graduation tassel . . . all the bits and pieces of an eighteen-year-old life. But suddenly Christine’s eyes stopped when she came across a brochure. For some reason it seemed completely out of place. The words unwanted pregnancy seemed to glare at her in bold black and white. Christine picked up the brochure, shook off about two decades worth of accumulated dust, and read a few lines. It seemed to be a clinical explanation of how an abortion was a “safe and efficient way to terminate an unwanted pregnancy.” Christine set the brochure back down, placing it exactly where it had been before, the outline clearly visible in the layers of dust. She knew she was the reason the brochure was on the bureau.

  So her birth mother had actually considered an abortion. Christine’s hand went up to her throat and her chest tightened as the word unwanted seemed to echo through her entire being. Suddenly she realized that she had been and still was a great inconvenience to this family. She considered Felicity’s words just moments ago; her attitude toward Christine had seemed to reflect this same attitude. And now as Christine stood there—in her dead birth mother’s room, in her grandmother’s house, among people who were virtually strangers to her—it seemed quite obvious. Everything about this was all wrong. Why had she even come here in the first place? What was her motive? And why had she forced her way into a world where she clearly did not fit in? A world where she hadn’t even been wanted. Not then. Not now.

  She started for the door, ready to run, escape from this place. But then she paused. She took a deep breath and attempted to calm and steady herself. Perhaps she was overreacting. And, certainly, she’d been through a lot during the past few weeks. Why not give herself some time to sort this all out? And even if Lenore had been considering an abortion, there obviously had been something that influenced her to change her mind. Christine was here, after all. That proved something.

  Christine knew that something had caused Lenore to run away from her family home and then to carry her “unwanted” baby to full term. But perhaps that was also what had caused her death in the end. Perhaps if she’d stayed home with her family and gotten the abortion described in that brochure, perhaps Lenore would still be alive today. Not that Christine believed that abortions were right. She pressed her fingers against her forehead and tried to think. But it seemed too much to consider, too hard to understand, too painful, too confusing . . .

  “Christine?”

  Christine whirled around to see Aunt Hattie standing in the doorway.

  Aunt Hattie smiled. “May I come in?”

  Christine swallowed and nodded. “Of course.”

  Aunt Hattie looked around. “It looks just the same in here. Such a pretty room. Lenore picked out everything in here herself, you know. It was while James and Esther were honeymooning in the Bahamas. I stayed here at the house with Lenore while the newlyweds were gone. Lenore was only fifteen at the time, but James had given her permission to decorate the room however she liked. ‘Spare no expense,’ he’d told her right before the two of them took off.” Aunt Hattie sighed happily.

  Christine nodded, trying to catch some of the old woman’s enthusiasm. “That must’ve been fun for her.”

  Aunt Hattie frowned. “I suppose. But it wasn’t long before Lenore discovered that money isn’t everything.”

  Christine nodded but said nothing.

  “Mind if I sit down?” Aunt Hattie nodded to a white wooden rocking chair next to the bed.

  “Sure
. But you might want to dust it off first.”

  But before she sat down Aunt Hattie closed the bedroom door. Then she went over and sat down on the chair without bothering about the dust. Her expression had become troubled, but she didn’t say anything. Instead she sat there for what seemed like several minutes, just looking at Christine as if she was studying her. Or perhaps trying to figure her out. Christine felt uncomfortable and wondered again why she had tried to force her way into this family. Why didn’t she just leave?

  Finally Christine couldn’t take any more silence. “Is something wrong?” she asked. She sat down on the edge of the bed, directly across from Aunt Hattie, and waited.

  “Well, that depends on how you look at it,” she said.

  Christine suspected this had to do with Felicity. Perhaps she had asked Aunt Hattie to speak to Christine today. Maybe they were going to ask her to get a blood test. Or demand to know why she was here. Or perhaps they wanted to ask her to leave. Christine simply waited.

  “I have something to tell you that I feel you have the right to know.” She sighed. “But this isn’t easy for me.”

  Christine looked down at her hands folded neatly in her lap, Sunday school hands, her mother used to say, and she continued to wait. Whatever it was, she wished Aunt Hattie would just spit it out. Get it over with.

  “As you know, dear, Esther’s second husband, James, was my little brother. He was only four years younger than me, but I always babied him as if I were much older. You see, our parents were very busy people. They were quite wealthy, and, as a result, they were always caught up in every social cause and function, and, well, we children were left to our own a lot. I suppose I became something of a mother hen to James. We were very close.”

  Christine looked curiously at Aunt Hattie. What did any of this have to do with her? But still she didn’t say anything. Just waited for the old woman to continue.

  “I’m sure you’re wondering where I’m going with my little story.” Aunt Hattie attempted a meek smile. “Well, as you can imagine, Esther, your grandmother, was very upset when Lenore became pregnant. Her plan was to send her to me for a while so that Lenore could have an abortion and then get on with her life.”

  Christine nodded. “I saw the brochure on Lenore’s dresser.” She swallowed. “It’s kind of hard to think about your birth mother wanting to—well, you know—abort you.”

  “Oh, no, no, no. Lenore didn’t want an abortion at all. That was all Esther’s idea. She felt it was a neat way to clean this whole mess up. Personally, I didn’t much care for the idea myself, but then I knew enough to keep quiet.”

  “Grandmother wanted Lenore to have an abortion?”

  “That’s right. She was worried about James’s reputation at the college. He was being considered for presidency at this time. And she didn’t want anything to hurt his chances.”

  “Oh.” Christine knew this made sense, but it still cut deeply to think that her own grandmother had wanted her life “terminated,” as the brochure put it.

  “Anyway, all this became moot when Lenore disappeared.”

  Christine nodded.

  “But then something happened . . . ,” she continued slowly, as if she wasn’t sure how to say whatever it was she wanted to say, “shortly before my brother James died several years ago. Perhaps you’ve heard by now that he’d been diagnosed with an unusual form of cancer and given less than six months to live . . . Well, it was during that time that he wrote me several letters. At first I thought my little brother was losing his mind due to his terminal illness and the heavy pain medications, because the letters made absolutely no sense whatsoever to me. They were filled with remorse and regret and guilt. And yet, in my opinion, this was a man who had led an exemplary life. It made no sense.”

  Christine felt like she was getting an informational, not to mention emotional, overload today, and she just wished Aunt Hattie would get to the point. If there was a point. And right now she wasn’t too sure.

  Aunt Hattie reached in her pocket to remove a pink linen handkerchief with lace trim. “Then the final letter came . . . and in this particular letter James confessed that he’d been the one responsible for Lenore’s pregnancy, which resulted in her subsequent disappearance. And he felt certain that his illness was his punishment for this transgression, and he wanted to tell Esther the truth, but he simply couldn’t do it. Oh, believe me, it was a very, very sad letter indeed.”

  Christine just stared at her, too stunned to speak or respond. In fact, she felt her lips growing numb and wondered if she might actually be having some sort of stroke or seizure, although she knew that was probably ridiculous and highly unlikely. But how could she possibly have heard what she thought she’d just heard? Or maybe she’d simply misunderstood. “Wh—what?” she managed to stutter.

  “I know it’s shocking, dear, but I felt you had the right to know.”

  “What are you saying?” Christine winced at the words that were about to come from her mouth. “Are you saying that Lenore’s stepfather is my birth father?”

  Aunt Hattie nodded sadly, then dabbed her moist eyes with the corner of her handkerchief. “I’m sorry, dear, but that’s what my brother wrote in his letter.”

  Christine’s stomach twisted and turned, and she felt as if she was going to be sick. How could this be? It was so wrong. So unfair. Not only had this poor girl been judged and misunderstood by her own mother, but she’d been sexually abused by her stepfather as well. It was too painful and hideous to even think about. Christine longed to purge this tale from her mind and to run from this horrible house where such dirty little secrets had been hidden for so many years. What was wrong with these people?

  “Oh, I know it’s disturbing to hear this, dear. But I think it’s best to just get these things out in the open and then move on. James fully admitted his guilt in his last letter to me. Yes, he admitted that he had raped his stepdaughter. And, of course, it was wrong. But you must keep this in perspective, dear. He’d been under enormous stress at work, and Esther had taken off to visit her sick mother and had been gone for weeks.”

  Christine listened to Aunt Hattie going on and on about how it had been spring break and how “poor James” had been doing some very heavy drinking and missing his wife. As if that excused such inexcusable behavior!

  “Apparently the weather had been nice that week,” Aunt Hattie rambled as if she was telling a bedtime story, “and Lenore had been swimming in the pool with her friends, and walking around the house in a very provocative bikini. Oh, I know that’s no excuse, dear.” She pressed her lips together, and Christine controlled herself from saying something very regrettable. Just get this over with, she was thinking. Tell your story and be done with it!

  Finally Aunt Hattie continued. “There’s really no easy way to understand these things, dear, but James admitted he was so intoxicated that he barely remembered what had happened that day. He wrote that Lenore had confronted him with it later, when she’d discovered she was pregnant, and that they’d gotten into quite an argument. Naturally, James tried to make himself believe that her accusations weren’t true. Maybe he’d even managed to convince himself that it wasn’t true over time. But I think that beneath it all, he always knew he’d done it. He knew he’d raped Lenore.”

  “That’s so disgusting.” Christine grimaced and tightened her fists. “That’s like . . . like incest.”

  Aunt Hattie firmly shook her head. “No, dear, it’s not actually incest since they weren’t blood relatives.”

  “Well, my father isn’t a blood relative either,” Christine said hotly. “But if he ever did that to me—” She shuddered at what she knew was an impossibility. “Ugh, that would be just the same as incest to me.”

  “I know, I know. It’s a horrible thing to hear. And if it makes you feel any better, James was completely heartbroken with regret over it. You can read his letters if you like. He would’ve done anything to turn back the clock and erase that awful day. And I have a feelin
g that it really did contribute to his illness and his death in the end.”

  “And Lenore’s death too.” Christine shook her head. “What a stupid, stupid waste.”

  “Not completely,” Aunt Hattie said with a hopeful smile. “At least there’s you.”

  Christine felt a large lump filling her throat now, making it hard to breathe, let alone respond. It was one thing to be an illegitimate child, an unwanted pregnancy, an embarrassing inconvenience. Although, in fact, she was still grappling with those unkind labels. But it was something entirely different to be the product of a violent crime, the result of rape that was practically incestuous. How would she ever reconcile herself to something like this? Suddenly she wanted her father more than ever. She wanted to pour out her troubles to him and have him comfort her and then just make everything go away.

  “I’ve got to go.” She quickly stood.

  “Oh, I hope I didn’t upset you, dear,” Aunt Hattie said. “I only wanted you to know the truth. You seem like such a sensible girl to me. I thought you could handle it. Of course, I plan to tell Esther too, but I wanted to tell you first. I felt you had a right to know. You see, I tried to tell Esther once before and, well, it caused quite a scene.”

  “At the funeral?”

  “Yes. But I think it’s important that she knows and accepts the truth now that you’re here. And, actually, once you adjust yourself to everything, well, it’s not so bad, really.”

  Aunt Hattie stood and held her arms open wide as if she were expecting a big hug. But Christine was still too stunned to respond. She simply backed away.

  “I’ve got—got to go,” she said for the second time as she made her way to the door. “I’m—I’m sorry.”

  She dashed down the stairs, carelessly tearing a strip of garland loose on her way. She opened the closet and grabbed her parka, then shot out the front door without even closing it behind her. She could hear Felicity calling after her, probably wanting her to stuff a turkey or bake a pie or hang some mistletoe, but Christine was finished with all that Christmas nonsense now. More than that, she wanted to be finished with this crazy family as well.

 

‹ Prev