She Planned Christmas in My House, Then I Opened the Blue Folder-olweny - Chainityai

She Planned Christmas in My House, Then I Opened the Blue Folder-olweny

At 6:18 p.m. on the Tuesday before Christmas, my neighborhood looked peaceful enough to fool a stranger.

Porch lights glowed against the early dark.

Plastic reindeer nodded in the wind.

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The community mailboxes sat under the streetlamp like quiet little witnesses waiting for the next piece of gossip to arrive with the electric bills.

Inside my kitchen, the air smelled like roasted chicken, lemon cleaner, and the chocolate pie cooling on the counter.

I had baked the pie because my grandchildren still believed Christmas meant Grandma’s house, and some part of me still wanted to protect that for them.

The refrigerator hummed behind me.

The heating vent breathed warm air across the tile.

A small American flag magnet my late husband had stuck on the fridge years ago hung crooked near the handle.

He used to say he liked it crooked because it reminded him nothing in a real home stayed showroom perfect.

Then Tiffany walked in as if showroom perfect was exactly what she had come to inspect.

Her heels snapped against the kitchen floor.

Her phone landed beside my grocery bags without her asking if the space was free.

Her coat was expensive-looking, her makeup flawless, her smile polished in the way that always made me brace myself.

Tiffany never smiled like that unless she was about to offer my labor to somebody else.

“I’m glad you’ve already started preparing,” she said.

I had a dish towel in my hands.

I set it down slowly.

“Preparing for what?”

She blinked once, as if the question itself was inconvenient.

Then she sat on one of the stools at my island and started listing names.

Her sister Valeria.

Valeria’s children.

Uncle Alex.

A few cousins.

A niece and nephew I had met twice.

Several family friends who, according to Tiffany, “had nowhere nice to go” for Christmas.

She said it all while looking around my kitchen, taking in the clean counters, the decorated windowsill, the pie cooling near the stove, and the fresh towels I had set out in the downstairs bathroom.

“My whole family is coming here for Christmas,” she said. “It’s only about twenty-five people.”

Only.

That was the word that did it.

Not twenty-five.

Not Christmas.

Only.

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