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She had just one wish for the holidays. The same wish
she’d wished every December for the past five years.
Please bring Ben
home for the holidays.
What was it Grandma Berta used to say? If wishes were
fishes, the sea would be full. When Marlee was a little girl, she’d wondered
what that meant. Now she thought she understood, but she still couldn’t give up
hoping.
She
tucked an errant red-gold curl behind her ear and leaned forward to peer out
the multi-paned bay window at the front of her yarn shop, A Stitch in Time. It was only four o’clock in the afternoon,
but heavy gray December clouds hung low over the small harbor of Porter’s
Landing, Massachusetts. It would be dark soon, and she could almost taste the coming
snow. It looked like they were due for the first white Christmas in several
years. She shivered beneath her thick fisherman’s knit sweater and hugged her
arms around her middle. Snow wouldn’t be so bad if Ben were here. As a kid,
she’d tagged after him and her older brother Matt when they went sledding down
Murphy’s Hill or built a fort in Barnum’s Wood. Any adventure was better with
Ben along.
The three had grown up as tightly linked as Matt’s silly magician’s rings. She’d barely noticed her feelings for Ben changing until
suddenly she was a sophomore in high school and the boys were seniors. By then,
every girl in the school had the hots for Ben Granger, and Marlee Farrow was no
exception.
But
so much had changed since high school. The links had shattered. She hadn’t seen
Ben in more than five years, not since the awful day of Matt’s funeral. Five
days after the funeral, Ben had left town without a word and joined the Navy.
He hadn’t been back since.
Her
eyes stung, and she squeezed them tight to stem the flow of tears before it
started. Stop it. You should be stronger
by now.
But
even after all this time, the pain was still raw.
Marlee
swallowed the lump forming in her throat. Then she sniffed and pulled a tissue
from the pocket of her jeans and dabbed her nose. If only … But recriminations
served no purpose. All young men believed in their own invincibility, and Matt
and Ben had been no different.
“Marlee, can you take a look at this and see
if you can find the mistake? I don’t know what I’ve done.” With a half-frown of
good-natured confusion, Evelyn Barlow held up a small, misshapen red stocking.
Despite her lack of experience and skill, Evelyn was one of the most
enthusiastic members of the Knit Wits, a knitting club that met at A Stitch in
Time every Thursday afternoon.
Marlee
took the sock and quickly spotted the error. “It looks like you dropped a
couple of stitches, but I think I can fix them.” She deftly recaptured the
errant loops on the small metal needle then handed it back to Evelyn.
“Thanks
so much, dear. I don’t know what I’d do without you.”
“Never
get that darned ornament finished, that’s for sure.”
It
was hard to be certain who had muttered the comment, but Marlee suspected Helen
Markuson. The Knit Wits were a pretty congenial group, but as the oldest
member, Helen felt she’d earned the right to speak her mind, and in true New England fashion, did so without reservation.
“How
are we coming along, ladies?” Marlee glanced at the members seated in a circle
on plain wooden chairs surrounded by cubbies filled with colorful yarns of
every description. As the only knitting shop within twenty miles, A Stitch in
Time was popular with both tourists and locals, so she tried to maintain as
broad an inventory as possible.
“I’m
done,” Helen replied, holding up a cheerful gingerbread man. Her gnarled
fingers were still so quick she’d already added the face and buttons.
“Almost
there,” added Mary Duckworth. “I just
need to crochet the hanger for my snowman.”
On
cue, the seven remaining Knit Wits displayed their nearly-complete creations as
well. This year, the club had voted to donate ornaments for the Christmas tree
at the hospital. After the holiday, they would be free to any patient who
wanted to take one home.
“It
looks like we’re ready for refreshments, then,” Marlee said. “Who wants egg
nog?” Hands flew up.
“I’m
supposed to watching my cholesterol,” Helen groused.
“I
can always fix you a cup of tea.”
“Hold
on,” Helen protested. “I didn’t say I didn’t want egg nog, I just said I wasn’t
supposed to have it.” Her eighty-two-year-old eyes twinkled. “You won’t tell
Dr. Grimes, will you?”
Marlee
laughed and crossed her heart. “It will be our secret.”
Forty-five
minutes later, the finished ornaments were packed in a box and the Knit Wits
were gathering their coats and knitting baskets. “See you all at the party at
the hospital tomorrow,” Evelyn called over her shoulder on her way out.
Marlee
followed the chattering gaggle and locked the door. As she crossed the uneven old
brick street and headed for home, a familiar hollow feeling swelled in her
chest. The ache had been building for days despite her best efforts to banish it.
She loved A Stitch in Time and the Knit Wits, but she wanted more. Most of her
high school friends had traded the quiet of Porter’s Landing for the excitement
of the city years ago. A few came home for Christmas, but it wasn’t the same. She
missed her family. And although she might not admit it out loud, she missed
Ben.
Her
parents had moved to Boston
after Matt’s death, too grieved by the never-ending reminders of their loss,
but Marlee couldn’t leave Porter’s Landing. It was home and where she needed to
be. After Grandma Berta died, she had moved from the big, square captain’s
house with its widow’s walk on the roof that had sheltered her family for two
centuries into her grandmother’s tiny shingled cottage covered with climbing
roses.
She
snuggled deeper into her raspberry mohair muffler and pulled her hat lower as
she made her way down the street that ran parallel to the rocky shore. It
wasn’t snowing yet, but the wind had picked up, tossing whitecaps on the water.
Her cottage was only a couple of blocks away, a cozy refuge from the worsening
weather, but for some reason she wasn’t ready to go home yet. Her restless feet
carried her toward the lighthouse on the point.
Since
the early nineteenth century, Porter’s Landing had been tied to the sea. It had
begun as a whaling village then later switched to cod, and a small fleet of
fishing boats still left the harbor most mornings in search of the daily catch.
Generations of Farrow women had waited, sometimes in vain, for their men to
come home from the sea, and Marlee was no different.
Ever
since Ben had left, she’d come to the old red and white striped lighthouse
whenever the loneliness closed in to stare out to sea and think of him, wondering
where he was and how he was doing. The building itself was locked and no longer
in use, but the ground level observation deck was still open. When she reached
it, she leaned forward, resting her arms against the metal railing. The clouds
overhead had morphed into an angry gray mass.
She
repeated her plea like a mantra, as if that might increase its chances of
reaching the right ears. Please bring Ben
home for the holidays.
The
summer after graduating from college, he and Matt had come home for a couple of
weeks of fun and relaxation before launching into the world of grownup
responsibility. Her heart twisted when she remembered them together: tall,
strong, tanned, and laughing. They’d taken her father’s small sailboat out past
the shelter of the harbor into open water when the skies darkened and a sudden
squall blew in. Even though a fishing trawler was within hailing distance, the
high winds and waves had swamped the small vessel before help could arrive. The
fishermen managed to pull Ben out, but Matt was lost. She would never forget
the agonizing hours before The Coast Guard found his body the next day.
Marlee
pounded her fist against the railing. How could Ben have left town without
speaking to her? Didn’t he understand how much she needed him, how much she
needed someone to share the pain? Healing was so hard when you had to do it all
by yourself.
She
dropped her forehead against her hands and allowed the tears to fall.
“Marlee?”
A deep voice interrupted her misery.
She
lifted her head a couple of inches. She must be hallucinating.
“Marlee,
it’s me.”
Slowly,
she straightened and turned.
5 comments:
Another GREAT start to a holiday story! Good Goddess, I'm loving these more than the holiday books I actually bought this year!
www.christinedepetrillo.weebly.com
Fantastic descriptions. You put me right into the moment. As has been said, I'm hooked!
I'm right there in Porter's Landing. Can't wait for chapter 2!
I love this, Alison. You can just feel her pain, and the descriptions are wonderful.
Fabulous. Just fabulous. A lovely first chapter and I can't wait to read the rest.
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