Uncle Albert’s Christmas Tree
Before I get to the story of “Uncle Albert’s Christmas Tree” I would like to give a little background to this story. At the end of November the editor of the local paper “The Packet” emailed me and asked if I had a Christmas story and if not would I write one for the December 17, Christmas edition which I did and sent off to her. Despite an email query asking if the story was suitable for printing I heard nothing back and the story was not printed. It is therefore left to my imagination as to why the story wasn’t printed. It could have been because of space constraints, the tone of the story or it wasn’t good enough. Here at “A Twist Of Humor” we don’t have any space constraints, and we aren’t too worried about the tone of the story. And if the story isn’t any good we promise to refund your money in full. One last thing, this story is constructed around a kernel of truth which is this: In Toronto during the Depression my father had an uncle who needed a Christmas tree and without any money to buy one went to his local cemetery and cut one down, resulting in his spending Christmas in jail.
Uncle Albert’s Christmas Tree
The city’s gritty angles were softened and cleansed by its cover of fresh snow. In a worn down part of the city, lived in by worn down people, Uncle Albert was looking out his kitchen window at the snow mounded against and on top of his backyard fence and at the once naked oak tree, now covered in it’s new cloak of white. Without turning around he spoke to his wife, who was attacking with a determined ferocity the dirt on the dishes in the sink, “Mabel, it looks just like a picture on a Christmas card out there. All cottony and soft.” After another minute of reflection on the Christmas card picture in his yard Uncle Albert said, “Mind you, the dog’s yellow piss holes in the snow kind of takes something away from it.”
He sighed and turned to look at the calendar on the wall - the one with the smiling, saucy looking girl, holding a wrench, wearing tight mechanic’s overalls, and looking over her shoulder straight at you with the bluest eyes you ever saw.
Beneath the saucy mechanic the month of December was showing. Twenty-two of its days had been crossed out by Uncle Albert’s legacy to the world, his children; namely Horace, Wilfred, Leonard and Nellie, ages seven through ten. It’s unreported what the world thought about being left with this legacy. The year printed on the calendar was 1931.
After staring at the calendar for a few more minutes Uncle Albert said, “We can’t have Christmas without a Christmas tree. The kids have to have something.”
It is not known for a certainty if Uncle Albert was talking to the pretty mechanic on the calendar, or to Aunt Mabel. In any event it was Aunt Mabel who answered back, “We can’t afford to pay for our coal, our rent or our lights, and we can barely pay for enough food to keep body and soul together and with no job, I don’t see that changing anytime soon.”
There was no uncertainty as to whom Aunt Mabel was talking to.
With his eyes still focused on the calendar Uncle Albert said, “If a man can’t have a job at Christmas, he should at least have a Christmas tree. That’s not too much to ask, is it? This country is so full of trees a man has to work hard not to bump into one.”
The blue eyed mechanic seemed not to have an opinion on the matter. However, Aunt Mabel did. She said, “No Albert, it’s not too much to ask. Ask away. It’s not going to change anything one bit.” Uncle Albert sighed, turned and looked out the window again.
It’s not known where Uncle Albert got the idea from. Whether it was his own, the saucy mechanic’s, or someone else’s, history is silent on the matter.
Wherever the idea came from, eight o’clock that night found Uncle Albert standing on a sidewalk with snow past his knees. He was staring at a sign bolted to a rusty wrought iron fence. He absently brushed falling snow from his shoulders and read, “Resteasy Cemetery.” Through the railings on the fence he could see trees. Many of them green coniferous trees. Christmas trees. Uncle Albert felt for the ax beneath his coat and walked into the cemetery.
Thwack, thwack cracked the night air. Uncle Albert stopped and listened. The citizens of the cemetery remained undisturbed. They continued their long peaceful slumber beneath the blanket of snow. No one else seemed to have heard either. Thwack, thwack and the tree was down.
Uncle Albert took hold of the end of the tree, put his head down and dragged it through the snow, oblivious to passing people, hurrying automobiles, and clanging streetcars. His only thought was for the Christmas tree and getting it home safely. When he reached the safety of his house he dragged the tree over his snow covered walkway and up his front steps into the house. Behind the closed door could be heard a muffled exclamation from Aunt Mabel, “Where did that come from?” And from the children not so muffled squeals of delight.
When interrogated by Aunt Mabel, Uncle Albert did not lie to her about where the tree came from. It’s not that he was above telling a lie, but from past experience he knew it was useless to do so. Uncle Albert found it prudent to tell the truth; at least to Aunt Mabel.
Whatever misgivings Aunt Mabel had about the tree, she kept them to herself when she saw how delighted and excited her children were. As far as they were concerned the tree was a magical gift presented to them by the Spirit of Christmas. It also was the most beautiful Christmas tree Aunt Mabel had ever seen which didn’t hurt Uncle Albert’s chances of keeping it.
Enough cocoa was scraped together to make hot chocolate drinks. And enough pennies were hunted down under sofa cushions, in lint-filled pockets and dark corners of drawers to send Leonard to the store for marshmallows. The tree was decorated and all agreed it was the best tree ever, anywhere. It was a peaceful sleep the family slept that night.
Well, it would have been peaceful except for Constable Billy, who had his beagle nose to the snow following a trail made by a dragged tree that was reported stolen from the Resteasy Cemetery of all places. As was peculiar to his breed he was tenacious in following the trail wherever it led. And it led straight to: “Why I’ll be. It’s Albert’s house,” said Constable Billy detaching his beagle nose from the snowy sidewalk.
As a result of the beagle-like detective work of Constable Billy and the gout of Judge Coldhartt, Uncle Albert was sentenced to forty five days in the local lockup. It would have been thirty days but Uncle Albert couldn’t pay the ten dollar fine that went with the thirty days and because justice must prevail and because Judge Coldhartt was in considerable discomfort he received an extra fifteen days. On such things as gout and beagle noses does a man’s fate hang; at least Uncle Albert’s did. As a small concession to the Christmas season and after it was decided the tree couldn’t be replanted Uncle Albert was allowed to keep the tree.
Christmas day found Aunt Mabel, Leonard, Horace, Wilfred and Nellie seated around the kitchen table eating their Christmas dinner of beef soup and bread. As there was no coal for the furnace they were bundled up in as many coats and sweaters they could get on. They were anxious to finish their meal so they could go into the living room and admire their beautiful Christmas tree and give thanks for it. They were all very grateful for the sacrifice Uncle Albert had made on their behalf.
Meanwhile, Uncle Albert was in a warm cell lying on his bunk under warm covers. His Christmas presents of socks and mitts from a local church were on a shelf over his head. His belly was full of turkey and Christmas pudding. The last thing he saw pinned to the wall at the foot of his bunk that night before he fell to sleep was a mechanic with a saucy smile and the bluest eyes you ever saw. He slept with a contented smile on his face through the night.
That night snow fell, turning the city into an enchanted land of cottony softness. The people rushing about, the hurrying automobiles, and the clanging streetcars all seemed frozen in time against a backdrop of the city’s twinkling lights and the falling snow. It looked just like a picture on a Christmas card. You could almost see Merry Christmas printed over the top of the picture. Except… as Uncle Albert would point out, all those yellow holes in the snow kind of takes something away from it.
© Mike Cook 2007
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