Christmas Eve used to carry the scent of pine needles, glazed ham, and whatever holiday candle my mother swore was “the true smell of Christmas.” It used to sound like a home wrapped in warmth. Soft music playing somewhere in the background. Silverware tapping plates.
Someone laughing from the kitchen while another voice called out for help carving something. That year, it smelled like truck exhaust, cold snow, and the worn rubber of my floor mats. I sat parked at the far end of my father’s driveway, headlights off, hands still resting on the steering wheel like my body hadn’t quite accepted that I’d arrived.
The engine was quiet, but leftover heat fogged the windshield edges. Snow drifted sideways across the hood in thin, restless spirals under the weak glow of the porch light. It wasn’t a storm dramatic enough to feel symbolic.
Just steady December cold sweeping across the Colorado plains. The kind that makes you tuck your chin down and keep walking. I had driven two hours through it anyway.
Hope will make you do foolish things. Hope makes you reread a text message thinking you misunderstood. Hope makes you believe your father wouldn’t really choose to exclude you from Christmas.
Hope makes you drive familiar roads with your chest tight, rehearsing a version of events where you walk in and everyone smiles and says, of course you’re included. Three mornings earlier, before sunrise, my father’s group text had lit up my phone. “Christmas dinner is family only this year.
Everyone already knows the plan.”
I read it once. Then again. Like repetition might change the meaning.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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