The dog's collar says, "Watch." |
In
the evening, Ina and Sadie settled into the big blue rocking chair, snuggling
together under one of Ina’s warm crazy quilts to read the little cookbook by
the light of the Aladdin lamp. The pictures were delightful. Since they were drawn
in the latter decades of the 19th century, the images of the children
and their toys reminded Ina of the years when she was a young mother.
“Santa’s
Snack,” read little Sadie aloud from the cookbook. (Notice that Ina took advantage
of Sadie’s interest in the cookbook to have her practice her reading skills.) “Make
a sturdy sandwich of rye bread, cheese and ham, or whatever Mother has in the
house,” continued Sadie.
“Gram,
do we have any rye bread?” asked Sadie.
“No,”
replied Ina, “only my nice farm bread.” Ina silently resolved that somehow she
would have to prevent Sadie from making a sandwich for Santa on Christmas Eve. She
hoped, as mothers and grandmothers often do, that the child would just forget
about it.
“On
a cold winter’s night, hot tea or mulled cider tastes good.” Sadie read on slowly
as first-graders do. “Heat, but do not boil, apple juice or cider. Pour it in a
mug. Add a clove and a cin . . . – and a cin . . .”
“cinnamon,”
prompted Ina.
“cinnamon
stick. Christmas cookies for dessert.”
And
then, at the bottom of the page, the final sentence: “Maybe you’d better make
two sandwiches.”
The
NERVE of Santa to suggest two sandwiches, thought Ina to herself. Suspecting that
Santa himself had been responsible for that suggestion, she was speechless. She
knew for a fact that Mrs. Claus always packed a sandwich for his Christmas Eve
flight, AND he enjoyed much generosity as he moved from house to house. Oh! He might
tell you that he didn’t have time to eat, but after all, time meant nothing to
Santa.
As
Ina was lost in thought, so, too, was Sadie. “Gram,” she said at last, “may I
make sandwiches for Santa before I go to bed on Christmas Eve?”
Ina
was a loving grandmother but also stern and not one to play to a child’s whim
when it was out of line. “No,” she replied a little more emphatically than she really
meant to. “The tradition in our family is to set out cookies and milk.”
Two
sandwiches indeed! Hmmmph!
From behind his newspaper, Jack stifled a laugh under a
cough. KW
2 comments:
No wonder Santa's little round belly shook like a bowl full of jelly--it was all those sandwiches! (As if thousands of cookies wouldn't do it!!)
I laughed outloud in spite of myself when I read your comment. Yes, cookies will do it!
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