The man in the nursing home began his story in a slow, weak voice. He was in his wheelchair. Facing the window.
I was 30, writing an assignment for a community college class. Creative writing. The nurse at the main desk said she knew of a man with a Christmas story worth telling.
And he told it well.
“It was a cold night,” he began. “The snow falling wasn’t snow-snow. It was more like white bricks. It wasn’t a ‘white Christmas.’ It was a hard one.”
The year was 1938. The place was Avondale, Alabama.
It was the apex of the Great Depression. Although that’s not what people called it back then. They simply called them “hard times.” And they were hard. Bone hard.
The family lived in a ratty apartment. There were four of them. A mom. A dad. Two kid brothers. They were hard up.
The two boys were good kids. Obedient. Well-behaved. Freckled. Their paw worked at the textile mill. Their mother did too. In fact, in a few years, the
boys would be working at the mill also. Kids worked at mills in those days. Different times.
What the boys wanted that year were bicycles. But family Christmases were pretty lean. When you can hardly afford enough beans to feed two growing boys, you don’t buy bicycles.
The boys, for example, ate ketchup soup for dinner. The parents frequently ate oxygen casserole.
One year, for Christmas, the boys were out collecting scrap tin to raise money for their bikes.
As I said, different times.
When the boys finally raised enough gathering tin, they went directly into town to exchange their tin for cash. On the way home, something happened.
They found something. A roll of money. It was 10 one-dollar bills, wrapped in a rubber band. It was lying in the street. In the gutter.
In 1939, $10 was worth $200. At least. It was more…
