Emerging Courageous Online Magazine - Stories
The Christmas Mouse by Jaye Lewis
It was our first Christmas season in Florida. I was three years old, and it was
going to be particularly lean. It was 1949, and we were a transient family
looking for a new home. We ate pork`n'beans, and I can still hear the sound of
the tin spoons scraping across tin pie plates. We battled roaches, spiders, and
ants, of Biblical proportions, and there were mice!
No ordinary mice, these were confrontive and intelligent. They evaded traps, and
when my mother went screaming
after them with a broom…?! Well, it was just a shame that the video camera
hadn't been invented yet! She would wildly swing the broom around making
everyone dive for cover. To our amazement, the mice would just stand there,
daring her to be accurate. Goodness knows, she never hit the varmints, but she
managed to clock just about everybody else in the room. Finally, the mice became
bored, and they all went south, except one.
Then came Christmas, and my mother began to work her magic. I'm quite certain
that she did everything by herself. Out of nowhere appeared a tree. Out of
another hiding place appeared ornaments. Mommy was very secretive, and she
stayed up long into the night, working by flash-light. All of us slept in one
room, my Mom and Dad on the sofa-bed, with me in between, and my brothers and
sister on the floor.
Christmas Eve dawned bright and clear. Wonderful smells were coming from the old
stove. My mother's cheeks were
flushed from her mysterious activities. She had managed to come up with presents
for each of us, but I noticed
that there was no present for her.
"Why is Santa Claus not bringing you presents, Mommy?" I asked,
worried that her feelings would be hurt.
"Oh, I'm sure that there will be something," she reassured me, in soft
tones. "Perhaps there will be a special surprise from the Christ
Child," she said, revealing her European roots.
My mother pulled pie after pie out of the tiny oven; Apple pie, brimming with
cinnamon. Pumpkin pie, with just a touch of spice and Mince-meat pie and raisin
cake. One by one, the smells enticed my salivary glands.
Near midnight, we went to church. It was so exciting to think of the yummy foods
we would share after we arrived back home. I could hardly keep my mind on the
sermon, as the minister preached on this special night of God's love.
By the time we left the church, it was Christmas Day. All of us were
intent upon the feast awaiting us at home. We tip-toed into the house, mindful
of our sleeping neighbors. We tumbled into the kitchen around the table,
grateful to discover the pies untouched by insects or rodents. We gathered
together for a prayer of thanks for our lovely feast.
"Wait!" my mother exclaimed, motioning towards the door.
There in the doorway, which led into the living room, stood a tiny mouse?
She had huge ears, and her pink nose was twitching. My brother lunged, but my
mother motioned for him to be still. The mouse never moved.
Then, as if on cue, the mouse darted into the living room heading for the big
dresser. Quickly she scurried, as my mother walked with a deadly purpose. This
was the logical thing to do….
My mother slowly opened the bottom drawer; then the next, then the next. There,
curled up together in a nice cozy bed, made from scraps of material and bits of
wool, lay a bundle of naked, sleeping, newborn mice.
"We can drown them!" Someone cried.
"We can stomp them!" Said another.
"We could keep them." I piped up.
About that time, mother mouse crawled upon the top of the dresser looking
down at her brood. It was a perfect time to destroy them! They were vermin. They
carry disease. It was the logical thing to do….
"It's just not the Christmas thing to do." My mother said, with
a smile.
A kind of hush settled over the room. My mother gently closed the dresser
drawer, and the mouse ran behind the dresser, slipping into the drawer where her
babies slept. With a mysterious smile, my mother slipped into the kitchen, and
sliced a small piece of pumpkin pie. She returned to the dresser, placing the
gift on the floor, out of the way.
Mommy looked at Daddy, and she announced her decision to leave the mouse family
alone.
"This is my Christmas present," she said, "sent by the Christ
Child. He was born in a stable, because there was no room for Him at the Inn.
Well, there is room for Him in our hearts, and I think there's room for this
homeless little family, too!"
No one said a word. We returned to our feast, and I wondered about this
incredibly romantic woman, who wouldn't allow a little mouse and her family to
go hungry on Christmas Day.
Jaye Lewis
[email protected]
Jaye is an award winning writer who lives and writes in the Appalachian
Mountains of southwestern Virginia. Jaye is working on her first book entitled
"Entertaining Angels," which celebrates life from a unique
perspective, seeing angels and miracles in the every day.
*****
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