The cabin in the 1930s -- no longer the family home |
It
snowed again overnight, and Ina was so grateful that only Myrtle was yet to
arrive. She would leave Portland on the train bound for Lewiston after work this evening – safe enough – and their
neighbor Ed would bring her on up the hill tomorrow.
Ernest
questioned if Sadie should accompany them to get the Christmas tree due to the
depth of the snow.
The cabin, 1920 |
“Oh
sure!” said Jack. “Sadie can come. She’ll have to tramp through the snow, but
it’s really not all that deep, nor is it all that far. She can do it, and the
women will warm her up when we get back.
Mid-morning, the two men and the little girl, with Dick the Dog tagging along, set off down Stove Creek to cut the four-foot fir tree that Jack had chosen. Ethel watched them go, remembering days of old when she went with Dad to get the tree. Something in her suddenly felt a longing for those long-ago childhood days when they lived in the cramped but cozy little cabin, but she knew all the walking through the snow in the world would not bring back those days. Besides, Sadie would need her attention when they returned.
“Mama,”
said Ethel as she turned from the window, a friend gave me a recipe for
penuche. Would you mind if I tried to make some? I brought brown sugar, vanilla,
and pecans. I’ll just need butter and milk.
“Pa-what-che?”
asked Ina, who had never heard such a word.
“Penuche,”
Ethel repeated. “It’s a brown sugar fudge. Ernest and I like it very much.”
Of
course, it was fine with Ina. Though Ethel had an electric range in her own home,
she was a master of the wood range, having been taught by her mother Ina.
By
the time the men and Sadie were back with the tree, Ethel had poured the
penuche into a pan to set and Ina was preparing a light lunch. Ethel helped
Sadie remove her wet snowsuit, wrapped her in a blanket, and sat her beside the
stove with a cup of hot chocolate.
1952 -- the tree is much the same as 1935 |
After
lunch, Jack set up the tree on the library table in the living room, and Sadie
and Shirley decorated it while Ina and Ethel supervised. When they pronounced
the decorations perfect, Ina clipped the candle holders to the branches and
inserted fresh candles. Sadie asked if they could light them tonight, but no –
Ina was firm. They would light the tree for the first time on Christmas Eve.
(Her house, her rules.)
NOW
it was beginning to look a lot like Christmas.
Ahh, Christmas is upon us. The trees are up (no matter if they just went up, they're up!), the lovely smells drift out of the kitchen, and family chatter fills the air. And then there's the air of expectancy, the quiet of the night, and HOPE! Merry Christmas dear long-time friend, to you and your family! ♥
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