A Christmas Vote Cast Out A Truck Driver, Until Grandpa Raised His Cane-nga9999 - Chainityai

A Christmas Vote Cast Out A Truck Driver, Until Grandpa Raised His Cane-nga9999

My father called me a disgrace because I drove trucks, and he made sure he did it on Christmas night with the whole family listening.

He did not say it in anger at first.

That was the worst part.

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He said it with the practiced calm of a man who had been saving the sentence for years, waiting for the exact room, the exact audience, and the exact holiday to make it hurt the most.

Grandpa Everett’s living room smelled like pine needles, ham glaze, candle wax, and the cold wool of winter coats hanging near the front door.

The Christmas tree blinked red and gold beside the window.

A small American flag on the porch outside shifted in the winter air every time somebody opened the door.

Hazel noticed that flag when we arrived and asked if Santa saluted houses.

That was how the night started.

With my six-year-old daughter asking an innocent question on the front porch while holding a gift bag in both hands.

Inside that bag was a drawing she had made for Grandpa Everett.

She had worked on it for three days at our kitchen table, tongue tucked into the corner of her mouth, crayons spread around her like little tools.

She drew my truck first.

Then our small house.

Then Grandpa Everett standing beside a crooked Christmas tree with a blue sweater on, because she told me at 4:18 that afternoon, “Old people like calm colors.”

Ivy laughed when Hazel said it.

I laughed too.

For a few hours, I let myself believe this Christmas might be different.

Grandpa Everett had called me one week earlier on a Tuesday night at 7:06 p.m.

I remember the time because I was parked at a truck stop, finishing coffee that had gone cold in a paper cup, with my delivery log open on the passenger seat.

His voice sounded warmer than it had in years.

He said he missed Hazel.

He said Christmas felt wrong without us.

Then he said, “Bring Ivy. Bring the little one. Seven o’clock sharp.”

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