Darkness. I couldn't bring myself to move.
"You alive?" That was Jesse.
"No, I'm a ghost."
"Ghosts have souls; you do not."
"I will haunt you."
Silence.
"What's going on?"
"Just–everything is so uncertain, and–"
"House rule eight: no hyperbole. Not everything."
"Name one thing that isn't falling to shreds."
"Those curtains seem solid. And… we're solid. You've got me, right?"
"That was cheesy," I deadpanned.
"Fine, I won't comfort you."
"Jerk."
"Idiot."
I couldn't help smiling.
"Now help me get the cake off of the ceiling."
"Wha–"
I am the night
I am warm lights
Hidden in the dark
I am quiet breath
Beating of my heart
I am pens on paper
Hands in hair
Wild mind, but still I'm there
I am the silent pause
When I turn out the light
I am the navy peace
Found at this time of night
I am purring cats, pajama pants
And music in my headphones
I am safe here
And I am not alone
God is here beside me
Hold my hand, Lord
You are my future hope
Singing me to sleep
Before I reach
Your planned tomorrow
I watched the crystals of frost form around my fingers on the cold window. My cousins oohed and aahed at the elaborate ice sculptures we were passing. “Maria! Look at that one!” Betty screamed in my ear, leaning out of her seat and across my lap to press her face against the window. Her chocolate curls were flying everywhere. I jerked my hand away. She was looking with sparkly blue eyes at a small bear lit by colored lights somehow frozen into the glass figure. It was cute, but really didn’t stand out in the maze of animals. I wondered what had caught her attention about this one. Sometimes I felt like all I did was wonder. I didn’t ask. I never asked. I just giggled as she pouted at the cloud from her breath blocking her view.
I turned back to the open sketchbook in my lap once Betty returned to her seat. I made a rough sketch of the bear by the unsteady light, including details that I wanted to remember. I needed my full concentration to actually draw anything good, but I liked to do crude little doodles like this and fix them in my room later. My sketchbook was full of that kind of thing. I sometimes thought of it as the letter of my heart. I doodled everything I wondered about.
Charlie, who sat on Betty’s other side, was talking on and on about the anatomy of a polar bear, brushing back his messy brown hair. He was tall and lean with frosty blue eyes. Despite the fact that he was a total nerd, all of the girls at school insisted that he was hot. I didn’t see it.
I glanced back to see that Georgia, Charlie’s twin, was patiently translating what her brother said into non-sciency terms for little Fred, who wanted to be a scientist. He was staring at her with round blue eyes, hanging on every word with his mouth partly open. Georgia gestured with her delicate hands, silver bracelets sliding around as she talked. She was an angel, and there was something odd about that. I’d known her my whole life, but I still didn’t know her. I wondered what was beneath the surface.
“Hey!” I shouted as Nicolas slammed into the back of my seat and jostled my sketchbook. “Watch it!”
He didn’t respond, instead trying to get Fred into a headlock. In return, Fred punched him. I groaned and rolled my eyes as the boys continued to wrestle in the back seat. Grandma and Grandpa kept up a jolly conversation in the front.
So now you’ve met the cousin clan. It was always like this when we all came to stay with our grandparents in New York for Christmas: chaos. Betty was my sister; she and I lived with our parents in Florida the rest of the year. The twins were also from Florida. Fred lived in Kentucky and Nicolas in Ohio. We all came to our grandparents' house every year for a month in winter. Hence the chaos.
"Stop it! I want to hear about the polar bears!" Fred yelped.
"Nerd!" Nicolas taunted.
I turned my attention back to the window, tuning the boys out as we passed an elaborate nativity scene. I focused on Mary's glass face. It was carved into a delicate smile, her eyes closed. I wondered how it would really feel to be in the scene.
"You know, kids," Grandma said, right on cue, "Mary must have been the bravest woman ever to live. Imagine being the Savior's mother!" Grandma said the same thing every year when we passed the new nativity. It always made me think. How had Mary felt?
Two days later I was sitting in the corner of a church sanctuary. Kids were running laps and bouncing balls in the room that unfolded before me. Their loud voices echoed under the high ceiling. Adults were chatting and laughing merrily. I could see soda spilled on the floor near the pizza table; cookie crumbs litteredhe gray carpet. My sketchbook was open in my lap. I scribbled a few lines down as I noticed two kids chasing each other with a spoon. The kids brushed through the front of the church and I watched as May fell from the nativity in front of the pulpit. I hesitated, then got up to fix the display. The ceramic figure was cold in my hand. I turned her over, contemplating.
"You're Anne's granddaughter, right?" a voice asked from behind me. There stood a woman about my mom's age with dimpled cheeks.
My face turned red as I nodded. "Someone knocked this over," I explained.
"Gotcha," she smiled. "Anything you found particularly special about it?"
"What?" my brain always seems to work a little slowly in conversations with unfamiliar people.
"You looked thoughtful; I was wondering why," she shrugged.
"Just making sure it isn't broken," I said quickly, my face still hot.
At that moment a little boy started screaming about someone taking his juice box.
"Hang on," the woman told me, rushing away to help the boy, who I assumed was her son.
Once she left, I had time to think. Nobody had ever asked me what I was thinking about. Ever. My mind was a veil, my thoughts and questions hidden from the outside world. Nobody ever tried to remove the veil. Not me. Not anyone else. Someone noticing and outright asking what I was thinking about was new territory. Maybe it was a special opportunity.
"Anyway," I said the moment the woman returned, " I was just wondering how Mary must've felt." I was proud of myself for getting the sentence out before I lost courage.
The woman chuckled, "She must've leaned on God's grace a lot."
Now I was picturing some god dancing ballet. "Grace?" I ventured.
"Giving us what we don't deserve. God probably gave Mary peace despite the crazy situation."
"Isn't that called mercy?"
"Mercy is not giving us what we do deserve. How much of the story do you know?"
I shrugged, "Isn't it a classic story?"
"Do you know why baby Jesus is our Savior?"
"Wasn't it because he… actually, no, I don't know," I realized, blushing.
"He was born through a sinful woman into a sinful world. Everyone deserved to die. The world is still like that today. When He grew up, Jesus took the punishment for our sons by dying on a cross. You might've heard about that around Easter before. If you trust in Jesus, you can have mercy and he'll give you grace when you need it."
I stared at the woman, skeptical. "Can the world really be that bad?"
"Think of all the world's problems: war, terrorism, murder. It can absolutely be that bad. Think about your life. Have you ever done something wrong?"–I nodded—"Then you've sinned."
"Is it always a big deal, though?" I was feeling uncomfortable.
"Not compared to some things, but it is compared to the spotless world that God intended," the woman said.
I shrugged, "I guess."
"Give it some thought," she advised. Just then the kid started telling again and the woman disappeared in the chaotic room. I set Mary down and wandered back to my corner.
The world doesn't change in a day. Mine didn't. I nearly forgot about the encounter, but reminders kept popping up. I began to wonder at the lyrics of Joy to the World and other classic songs. I stumbled across a devotional for 25¢ while searching for gifts at the thrift store. I found a gospel tract in the mall bathroom.
One night, a few days before Christmas, I couldn't sleep. I reread the tract, flipped through the devotional, and played gospel songs in my earbuds on repeat. I was only getting more curious, so eventually I tiptoed past Betty and Georgia, down the hall, and into the living room. The TV sat on top of a cabinet full of movies and old tapes. Buried behind the Harry Potter series was something else, though: an old, dusty Bible that had belonged to my great-grandmother. I cracked open the ancient spine and flipped to a random book. John seemed good. I sat against the wall, partially concealed by the big tree with the popcorn and mismatched ornaments. I read by the pinkish glow of the lights. And I read. And I read some more. I made the choice that night.
Fast forward a year. We're here looking at the ice sculptures again. Fred is on his own trying to understand Charlie's words as Georgia is oddly silent. I wonder what's going on in her head.
"You're quiet," I say, twisting in my seat.
She shrugs.
"Want to get out of this chaotic car? It's fine if not."
"Sure, that sounds good."
I yell up to Grandpa, and he lets us out, agreeing to pick us up at the nativity in a while.
"What are you thinkin about?" I venture as we make our way down a lane of frozen candy canes.
"Nothing really, just… I don't know. I feel sort of invisible," she giggled.
"I get that. I used to feel like all I ever did was wonder about people, but I couldn't interact with them."
Georgia snorts.
"Not just real people, either. I always wondered how Mary felt. I mean, she was real, but like… not contemporary."
"I bet she was scared. At least if she was halfway human. All of that pressure to be some saint… yikes."
"Maybe. I still wonder about a lot of things, but I think I know how Mary felt. I think she felt full, knowing that God saw her and saved her and that she had a purpose, you know? I think she felt heard."
By now we're back at the nativity.
"You lost me," Georgia laughs.
I glance thoughtfully at Mary's statue. "How much of the story do you know?" I ask.
Thank you
For the sun in the sky
Thank you
For the light in my mind
Thank you
For every day
Thank you
The only words I can pray
Thank you
For all of your love
Thank who
The only God above
Cheeks red as cherries
Snow so white and pure
See the Christmas fairies
You'll be smiling for sure
They fly all around town
Singing far off key
Don't tell them to quiet down
I hope they'll come and visit me
They deck every haul
Every wreath they hang
They're having a jolly ball
As holiday songs are sang
Their lights are twinkling
Before every eye
The warm glow sets us dreaming
Deep into the night sky
Season flipped, now it's fall
Time to get ready for some fun, y'all
The leaves slowly change their hue
Just to warm the eyes of me and you
All the world is one bright fire
Dressed in a vivid orange attire
These leaves mean second chances
Fall, then wait for the avalanches
Winter passes, they return
The sharpest pine and the smallest fern
But for now we simply sit
To enjoy the peace of all of it
We smile at the glow inside
From the soft pumpkin spice you can't hide
Days of leaf piles and hay bales
And we can't forget the sweater sales
Smell the sharp, tangy bonfire
Joy and praise fly higher and higher
Through the great ocean above
Through every cloud, sculpted with love
Soon to reach the Lord of all
The very One who gave us this fall
Christmas is a time of bliss and delight
Since that long ago night, calm and dozy.
See how the lights twinkle happily?
They are everywhere:
'Round the windows and on the tree..
Their light so bright
Shines through the night
So warm and rosy
And always cozy.
A calming sight, if you let it be.
Don't you feel the comfort in the air?
Love abounds, don't you see?
To save the world with power and might,
Christ was born, delicate as a posy.
Gone are the long days of summer fun,
Once, but certainly not for all.
Still shines the bright old and faithful sun
On this new season we call fall.
There is a crisp snap in the cold air.
The scented candles are now lit.
The squawk of birds is not at all rare,
When flying South they do not quit.
The loft is a special place right now.
It is nice and cute and cozy.
There are twinkle lights and somehow
They make cold seem warm and rosy.
Dropped acorns crunch beneath my feet
As I walk across the backyard.
Leaves of cardinal, pumpkin, and wheat
Could decorate a lovely card.
Endless the activities now are;
Feeling the thwang of our bowstrings,
Tromping through the woods as we go quite far,
Pretending pioneers and things.
Hot cocoa we drink from teacups fine.
Pumpkin muffins taste wonderful.
Patterned leggings you know are mine,
My drawer of them is bursting full.
Piles of leaves are scattered about
To be burned in cheery firelight,
Or put on the trampoline. Without
Hose's rain, the leaves are a delight.
Perfectionists' school takes a long time,
But when I am done, art and words,
Perhaps a nice sketch and a rhyme,
Are inspired by fall in herds.
Though fall may be different for another,
The leaves still show second chances,
Because they fall, they can start over.
God shows mercy, the Bible says.