When Her Daughter’s Christmas Gifts Were Stolen, Mom Made Them Listen-myhoa

I can still smell that Christmas morning better than I remember most whole years of my life.

Burned cinnamon rolls.

Pine candle.

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Black coffee.

Carpet cleaner.

And under all of it, the dry paper smell of wrapping paper torn open by hands that had never been taught the word no.

Emma had been quiet in the car that morning, but it was her good kind of quiet.

She kept pressing her mittened hands together in her lap and asking me if Grandma had a real fireplace or only the one on TV.

She was seven, which meant Christmas was still large enough to fill her whole body.

Her purple winter coat was zipped to her chin.

Her hair kept slipping out from under the hood.

Every time we stopped at a red light, she asked if we were almost there.

I told her yes, even when we were not, because I liked hearing the happiness in her voice.

I had worked two extra shifts that month for the dollhouse.

Nobody in my family knew that.

They knew the version of me they liked best: Hazel who figured it out, Hazel who did not ask for help, Hazel who laughed off the thing that hurt because making other people uncomfortable had always been treated like the real sin.

The dollhouse had been sitting on a high shelf at the store, bright and ridiculous and more expensive than I wanted to admit.

Emma had spotted it from three aisles away.

She did not beg.

That almost made it worse.

She just stood there with both hands on the display glass and whispered, ‘Mommy, it looks like people could really live there.’

So I bought it.

I bought it after checking my bank app twice.

I bought it after deciding my old boots could last one more winter if I wore thick socks.

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