Donovan and Carina returned to the farm by mid-afternoon. After rubbing the donkeys down, they stopped by the goat paddock before heading to the
house, and the brief visit seemed to banish all remaining traces of Carina's dark mood. They had just reached the kitchen garden when a sharp, sweet smell
made them pause and sniff the air appreciatively.
"Oh, good," Carina said. "Amalia made wassail like she
promised."
"What is that?"
"Hot spiced apple cider," Carina said. "It's almost too warm
for it today, but we'll enjoy it just the same."
They came in through the kitchen door, stopping in the entryway to shake the
dust off their clothes. The pot of wassail simmered on the stove, a few dark loaves
of a cake-like bread sat cooling on a rack, and underneath all the sweet smells
was another scent, that of real food cooking. Carina peeked inside the stove's warming reservoir. "Tamales! Amalia must've planned this for days, or at least since last
night, to have gotten the corn husks soaked."
"Where is Amalia, by the way?"
She wasn't in the living room, but they found another surprise— a small
plastic Christmas tree. It was old and bedraggled, but with ribbons tied on its
branches and a few shiny chains and ornaments, it hardly seemed to matter.
Scattered around it were a few gifts, some wrapped in bits of bright cloth and
others in old paper, hand-decorated with dabs of red and green paint. It all
looked so festive that Carina went running down the hall to find her sister.
From one of the bedrooms, Donovan could hear their voices, Carina's happy
and excited, Amalia's more sedate, embarrassed at the fuss. After a few minutes
the two women came into the living room, each carrying packages. Amalia
was so pleased at the effect of her cooking and decorating that she almost
forgot to be cool to Donovan. "How was church?" she asked with a
little downward curve of her lips that suggested
she had already guessed at the fiasco of the Mass.
"I've never been to Catholic church," Donovan said. "I had
nothing to compare it to, and I have a feeling that was a good thing."
"That Joaquin. . ." Carina said.
"Complete disaster?"
"Well, it was entertaining, at least."
While the women talked, Donovan went to his room to get the gifts he had
bought in Macrina on a market run he had made earlier in the month. He had paid
extra to have them wrapped in real Christmas paper, but as he brought them into
the living room, he couldn't help feeling exposed and phony, as if there was something artificial
about his gifts that didn't hold up well against the women's more sincere efforts in
cloth and paint. Nevertheless they gushed over the wrapping paper as if it were
foreign riches.
"Where did you get that?"
"I haven't seen Christmas paper in ages."
"It must've cost you a fortune. You shouldn't have done it."
"I'm going to be real careful with mine," Carina said. "I
won't tear it a bit, and then I can use it again next year."
"Yes," Amalia said. "I suppose if we reuse it a few times,
that makes the cost work out, more or less. She looked at Donovan. "You
shouldn't have done it, though."
"I wanted to get you something nice," Donovan insisted.
"But the paper?" Carina smoothed an angel on a blue background.
"It's the thought that counts, not the gift, and certainly not the
packaging."
"Well, I did it," Donovan said. "And there's no point
discussing it now."
The gifts the women gave Donovan were simple, mostly homemade things—
sweaters, a cap, socks. They also gave him a nice pair of leather work gloves
that he felt certain they had bought from Alvi. The women’s gifts to each other
were in a similar vein—items they had made or repaired on the others’ behalf.
Among these items there seemed to be no surprises because they giggled and
teased each other like they had known all along what they were getting, and
didn’t mind a bit. But Amalia had also bought Carina a special gift—a watch.
“So you can quit saying you lost track of time out there in the goat
pen."
"Oh, I don’t think it’ll do much good for that,” she said, admiring it
on her wrist. “I wouldn’t want to wear such a nice thing where I could lose it.
Not after the way I lost my last one.” She gave Amalia a mischievous look.
“Your clever plan has failed.”
"Give it back, then. Maybe I could use a new watch, myself.”
Donovan broke into their playful bickering. “Aren’t you going to open what I
got you?”
Guiltily, they tugged at the colorful wrapping, using their nails to break
the cellophane tape.
There were amber earrings and a necklace for Amalia, who liked to wear
shades of brown and yellow. Carina, who always went about in blue, got a
bracelet of silver and turquoise beads and a silver hair clip decorated with a
turquoise bird. And each woman got a small box of chocolate.
The women looked at their gifts in silence. Finally Amalia spoke. "This
is way too much. You shouldn't spend your money on us this way."
"Not even if I want to?"
Both women dropped their heads, ashamed of themselves. Carina recovered first,
throwing her arms around Donovan's neck and kissing him. "Thank you. I'm
sorry I have such bad manners." She kissed him again.
"I guess I've got bad manners, too." Amalia came over and did the
same, then stepped back and smiled self-consciously. "You'll have to
forgive us. We're out of the habit of getting presents from a man."
"Or from anyone except each other," Carina added. "We hardly
remember what we're supposed to do."
"I think you're just supposed to say thank you," Donovan said.
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Tuesday, December 3, 2013
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I love the angel being smoothed out..i think she will be treasured..i hope all is as peaceful as it feels..i hope she doesn't use the watch..and thank you is just the right thing to say in many a situation..
ReplyDeleteSimple hand made gifts can be treasured the most but I think Donovan did well too.
ReplyDeleteHow nice and cozy in your story...I almost got lost between cooking and presents....nice...resonates...:)
ReplyDeleteYou drew me in with your reference to 'wassail' which is an old English term for going from house to house singing carols. Giving presents is a very personal thing and despite their protests Donovan did well by giving those that they would never get themselves.
ReplyDeleteIt's nice that they realize they are cutting into the fun of gift giving with their well meaning rejection.
ReplyDelete