Christmas brunch. My parents didnât exchange gifts, either, although Mom and I got gifts from and sent gifts to her family. Dad might not believe in Christmas gifts between adults, but Mom made sure that she got plenty of loot the rest of the year, particularly on her birthday.
Oh, and did I mention that Dadâs birthday is December twenty-fifth? Somehow it was okay for us to give him birthday presents. It was always a challenge in Rudolph in December to find wrapping paper that did not have a Christmas motif.
âNot everyone is as hidebound as you, Dad,â I said. âIf men want to buy their wives gifts Iâm not going to tell them not to, now am I?â
âDid I tell you to turn them away? I did not. I merely thought that a nice display in the window would remindpeople that their holiday table needs updating.â His top lip turned down and the sparkle went out of his blue eyes as he peered at me from under his big, bushy white brows.
âOh, Dad,â I said. I threw a glance at Jackie. She was laughing silently.
The bell over the door tinkled and two women came in. âI am so tired of my motherâs Spode dishes,â one of them said to the other. âChristmas dinner was never anything but an ordeal for my mother, what with
her
mother-in-law, and every time I get out those plates Iâm reminded of how much she hated the holidays.â She smiled at me. âThose red and gold dishes in the window are simply divine. Do they come in sets? Good, Iâll take twelve sets, please. And the gold chargers to go with them. Itâs time I gave everything that had been my motherâs to a good home.â
I stared at my father.
âCareful, Merry,â he said, âYouâll catch flies.â I snapped my mouth shut.
I shouldnât have been so surprised: my father was Santa Claus, after all.
Jackie hopped off her stool. âIâll get them.â
âDo you know,â the womanâs friend said, âIâve just remembered that at Thanksgiving Tom broke not one but two of the Riedel wineglasses, and then his fool of a brother chipped another. And now Iâm expected to put on Christmas dinner as well. Iâll take twelve of those glasses in the window, please.â
Dad reached under a table and pulled out a box of the glasses. âAnything else, madam?â he said.
âMy tree could use an update, too. Do you have any tasteful tree ornaments? Glass balls are always nice.â
âRight over here,â he said with a flourish, showing her the display heâd set out yesterday.
One of the women went to get their car and she pulled up out front a few minutes later. Dad and Jackie loaded their boxes into the trunk. The car horn tooted as it drove away, while Dad stood in the street waving.
âIsnât that your car parked right in front, Merry?â he said when he came back in. âYouâre blocking customer parking.â
âIâll move it later,â I said. âRight now thereâs a hole in the window display. Thatâs my entire stock of those Christmas dishes gone. What do you suggest I put in the window next?â
âJewelry might be nice,â Dad said. âMen like to give their wives and mothers jewelry for Christmas. Is Vicky okay?â
I brought my head away from thoughts of decorating the shop window and returned to more pressing matters. âNot really,â I said. âShe didnât say in so many words, but I canât imagine she can keep the business going if its reputation is ruined and sheâs closed at the busiest time of the year.â Jackie hadnât returned to her spot behind the cash register. She was rearranging the rack of cocktail and dinner napkins, her head noticeably tilted in the direction of my dad and me.
âI have to go home and let Mattie out. Come with me, Dad. I have something I need to talk to you about.â
Jackie might have muttered,
authors_sort
Shirley Rousseau Murphy
Tamora Pierce
James Hunt
Pj Fiala
Eoin McNamee
Mari Carr
Elizabeth Daly
Nina Mason
Mari Jungstedt