
A Different Kind of Christmas
by Lael J. Littke
Martha had tried to ignore the approach of
Christmas. It was fairly easy, what with all the work to do around the
cabin—the meals to prepare, the rugs to braid to cover the earthen floors,
the lye soap to make, the snow to keep cleared away from the door, and
the myriad of other things necessary to sustain life in the bleak valley.
She would have kept it almost entirely out of her thoughts if Jed had
not come eagerly into the cabin one day, stomping the snow from his cold
feet as he said in an excited voice, "Martha, we're going to have
a Christmas tree this year anyway. I spotted a cedar on that rise out
south of the wheat field, over near the Norton's place. It's a scrubby
thing, but it will do, since we can't get a pine. Maybe Christmas will
be a little different here, but it will still be the kind of Christmas
we used to have."
It was a two-day journey from their home on
the floor of the wide valley to the mountains where there were pine trees,
and none of the settlers felt they could spare the time that busy first
year to go after trees. Besides, the snow was too high to do any unnecessary
travel.
As she shook her head, Martha noticed that
Daniel glanced quickly up from the corner where he was playing, patiently
tying together some sticks with bits of string left over from the quilt
she had tied a few days earlier. She drew Jed as far away from the boy
as possible.
"I don't want a tree," she said.
"We won't be celebrating Christmas. Even a tree couldn't make it
the kind of Christmas we used to have."
Jed's face set in lines that were becoming
familiar.
"Martha, we've got to do something. For
the boy, at least. Children set such a store by Christmas."
"Don't you think I know? All those years
of fixing things for Maybelle and Stellie. I know all about kids and Christmas."
She stopped and drew a deep breath, glancing over to see that Daniel was
occupied and not listening. "But I can't do those things for him.
It would be like a knife in my heart, fixing a tree and baking cookies
and making things for—for another woman's child when my own girls are
back there on that prairie."
"Martha, Martha," Jed said softly.
"It's been almost a year and a half. That's all over, and Danny needs
you. He needs a Christmas like he remembers."
She turned her back to his pleading face. "I
can't," she said. "Besides, what could he remember? He was only
a little more than five when his own mother died, and I don't think his
pa did much last Christmas."
Jed touched her shoulder gently. "I know
how hard it is for you, Martha. But think of the boy." He turned
and went back out into the snowy weather.
Think of the boy. Why should she think of him
when her own children, her two blue-eyed, golden-curled daughters, had
been left beside the trail back there on that endless, empty prairie?
The boy came to her not because she wanted him but because she couldn't
say no to the bishop back in Salt Lake City last April before they came
to settle in this valley. Bishop Clay had brought Daniel to her and Jed
one day and said, "I want you to care for this lad. His mother died
on the trek last summer and his pa passed away last week. He needs a good
home."
Jed had gripped the bishop's hand and with
tears in his eyes thanked him, but Martha had turned away from the sight
of the thin, ragged, six-year-old boy who stood before them, not fast
enough, however, to miss the sudden brief smile he flashed at her, a smile
that should have caught her heart and opened it wide. Her heart was closed,
though, locked tightly around the memory of her two gentle little girls.
She didn't want a noisy, rowdy boy banging around, disturbing those memories,
filling the cabin with a boy's loud games.
Yet she had taken him, because she felt she
had no choice. Faced with the bishop's request—more of an order, really—and
Jed's obvious joy, she couldn't refuse.
He came with them out to this new valley west
of the Salt lake settlement and had proved himself a great help to Jed,
despite his young age. Sometimes Martha felt pity for him, but she didn't
love him.
With Jed it was different. He had accepted
Daniel immediately as his own son and enjoyed having the boy with him.
They had a special relationship, a secret sharing that sometimes shut
Martha out and made her wonder once, when she could bear to think of it,
how Jed had felt about somehow seeming to be just outside the charmed
circle she and her daughters had formed. Not that she really resented
Jed and Daniel's relationship—she was glad Jed gave the boy some attention
since she so often ignored him—but sometimes she felt that Jed had grown
to love the boy more than he did her. She told him as much one evening
after the man and boy had come laughing together into the cabin only to
sober up when they saw her, but not before one of those quick smiles from
Daniel, the smile she was never sure had actually been there, it was gone
so fast.
When Daniel went back outside for a bucket
of water, Martha spoke to Jed.
"Seems as if you enjoy the boy's company
more than you do mine these days."
Jed didn't look her quite squarely in the eye.
"That's not so, Martha."
"The two of you laughing together all
the time. You never laugh with me anymore."
His voice was quiet. "You don't seem to
find much to laugh about lately, Martha."
It was true, of course. When the girls were
with them they had been a happy family, laughing at humor and hardship
alike. It just seemed as if all her laughter had also been buried on that
grim morning back on the desolate prairie.
"I'm sorry, Jed," Martha said. "I
just can't seem to forget my girls. I can't feel that close to that boy.
He's always so serious around me. Almost like he's afraid. Calls me 'Aunt
Martha.' I notice he calls you 'Pa.' Did you tell him to call you that?"
"No. He just started doing it. He's just
a little fellow, Martha, but he knows how people feel about him. He needs
more than just a full stomach and a place to sleep."
"I know," she said. "I know."
She was ashamed that she could deny love to a child. Any child. She tried
harder after that, but she found she was always comparing him with her
daughters. They had been soft and yielding, a pleasure to hold close.
Daniel was bony and wiry, and his small body was hard-muscled from the
work he did with Jed. The girls had been golden-curled and had taken pride
in keeping their little pinafores neat and clean. Daniel was always grimy;
he seemed to attract dirt, and his shirt always hung out from his overalls.
The girls had liked to play quietly in the house with their rag dolls.
Daniel preferred the outdoors, where he had full-scale, one-man battles,
playing the parts of both settlers and Indians and making enough noise
for any real fight.
It seemed as if he was always doing something
to plague her. Not intentionally, to be sure. At least Jed said not. Just
the high spirits and imagination of a boy, Jed said. There was the time
he took her best tied quilt outside to build a tepee by the creek bank.
By the time she found it, it was muddy and bedraggled and had to be laboriously
washed.
Another day he got into the trunk she had brought
across the plains and was playing with the carved wooden animals Grandpa
Elliot had made for Maybelle and Stellie. She couldn't bear to see them
in his hands and had scolded him soundly for opening the trunk. Another
day he pulled up most of the flowers she had grown from the precious seeds
brought from Nauvoo. He said he wanted to surprise her by pulling the
weeds, but he couldn't tell which were weeds and which were flowers. He
broke precious dishes and tore clothes that could not easily be replaced.
And so Martha told Jed that she wanted him to take Daniel back to Salt
Lake on his next trip for supplies and to give him back to Bishop Clay.
Jed looked at her for a long time before he
answered, "Yes, maybe that would be best. For the boy's sake. I'll
take him when I go in January."
Daniel seemed to sense something, because he
tried to please her after that and was careful not to annoy her. When
winter came and he had to be indoors much of the time, he tried to play
quietly, although occasionally the natural inclinations of a boy took
over and he had to be reprimanded. Martha wished that Sister Norton had
been able to establish the school for the children of the settlers, but
she had been unable to get any slates or copy books and had decided to
wait until the next fall.
Daniel mentioned Christmas only once. One day
it was too cold and snowy to play outside, and he had been humming softly
to himself as he played in his corner. Suddenly he looked up at Martha
and asked, "Can you sing, Aunt Martha?"
Martha paused and straightened up from the
table where she was kneading bread. She used to sing for her girls all
the time.
"No, I can't, Daniel," she said.
"Not any more."
"My mother used to sing a pretty song
at Christmas," he said. "I wish I could remember it."
He said nothing more, and she did not question
him. She didn't want to stir up any further memories of Christmas, since
she didn't intend to observe the day. Perhaps he did recall snatches of
past Christmases, but certainly he wouldn't remember enough that it would
make any difference to him.
Martha couldn't help thinking of Christmases
past as the day approached. Three years ago had been the best one, before
the persecution of the Saints in Nauvoo got so bad. Maybelle had been
seven then, and Stellie five. She had made rag dolls for them with pretty,
flouncy dresses and cunning little bonnets. That was the year Grandpa
Elliot had given them the carved animals and had also carved a beautiful
little toy horse and carriage for Maybelle, promising Stellie he'd make
her one when she was seven.
Dwelling as she did in her past memories, Martha
paid very little attention to Daniel those last few days before Christmas.
He went in and out with Jed and she didn't attempt to keep track of him.
On the day before Christmas Jed went through the deep snow to do some
chores for Brother Norton, who was ill. Daniel was alone outside most
of the day, although he made several rather furtive trips in and out of
the cabin. On one trip he took the sticks he had been tying together.
Toward evening Martha went out to the stable
to milk Rosie, since Jed had not yet returned. As she approached, she
saw there was a light inside. Opening the door softly, she peered within.
Daniel had lit the barn lantern, and within its glow he knelt in the straw
by Rosie's stall. In front of him were the sticks he had tied together,
which Martha recognized now as a crude cradle. It held Stellie's rag doll,
all wrapped up in the white shawl Martha kept in her trunk, the shawl
she had used to wrap her babies. Her impulse was to rush in and snatch
it, but she stopped, because the scene was strangely beautiful in the
soft light from the lantern. Rosie and the two sheep stood close by, watching
Daniel. He seemed to be addressing them when he spoke.
"The shepherds came following the star,"
he was saying. "And they found the baby Jesus who had been born in
a stable." He paused for a moment, then went on. "And his mother
loved him."
Martha felt suddenly that she couldn't breathe.
Another mother, another day, had loved her little boy and had told him
the beautiful story of the Christ Child with such love that he hadn't
forgotten it, young as he was. And she, Martha, had failed that mother.
In the silence she began to sing. "Silent
night," she sang. "Holy night."
Daniel didn't move until the song was finished.
Then he turned with that quick, heart-melting smile.
"That's the one," he whispered. "That's
the song that my mother used to sing to me."
Martha ran forward and gathered the boy into
her arms. He responded immediately, clasping her arms tightly around her.
"Danny," Martha said, "it's
beautiful. Your cradle and little scene here."
"You never called me Danny before,"
he murmured, his head against her neck.
"I didn't do a lot of things," she
said. As she held him close, the bands around her heart seemed to loosen
and break.
"Danny," she said, sitting on the
edge of Rosie's manger, "let's go in and get the cabin ready for
Christmas. Maybe it isn't too late for Jed—for Pa to get that tree. It
might be a little different kind of Christmas, but it will still be a
little like the Christmases we used to know. We'll set up your cradle
with the Christ Child in it under the tree, because that's what Christmas
is all about."
"Do you mind it being different?"
Danny asked. "I mean with a boy instead of your girls?"
Martha wondered how long it would take her
to make up to him for the hurts she had inflicted these many months. "No,"
she said. "After all, the Baby Jesus was a boy."
"That's right," he said wonderingly.
"I'll open my trunk," said Martha.
"We'll get out those carved animals to put around your manger scene.
We'll string some dried berries to put on the tree, and when it's all
done the three of us will sing 'Silent Night' and Pa will tell us the
story of the Christ Child."
She thought about the lovely little carved
horse and carriage Maybelle had loved so much, and knew it would be the
perfect gift to put under the tree for Danny's Christmas morning.
She set him down on the floor and put her arm
around his shoulders.
"Merry Christmas," she said. "Merry
Christmas, Danny."
He looked up at her with a smile that did not
fade quickly away this time, a sweet smile full of the love he had been
waiting to give her.
"Merry Christmas," he said, and then
added softly, "Mother."
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