Grandpa Turned An Empty Christmas House Into A Trap For His Family-thuyhien

The house looked wrong before I even turned into the driveway.

My parents always overdecorated for Christmas because my mother believed restraint was what other families did when they lacked taste.

Usually, the roofline glittered with white lights, the porch rail wore garland thick enough to look expensive, and some rented Santa stood smiling beside the mailbox like a threat.

Image

That night, only the porch bulb was on.

It cast a weak yellow circle over the wreath, the frosted steps, and the single set of tire marks that had been there long before I arrived.

I sat in my car for a moment with my gloved hands on the steering wheel and told myself not to be dramatic.

That was something my mother had trained into me early.

Do not be dramatic.

Do not make a scene.

Do not ask why Tyler gets grace and you get lectures.

It was Christmas Eve, and I had come because they asked.

More than that, I had come because they had promised.

My mother had called two weeks earlier with her soft voice, the one she used when she wanted to sound wounded before anyone had even disagreed with her.

“Sarah, this should be the year we all heal,” she had said.

By all, she meant me.

By heal, she meant stop mentioning the divorce.

I had agreed because loneliness makes even a sharp person touch hot glass.

My apartment had been too quiet for months.

The divorce had left behind strange little echoes, the kind that made the refrigerator sound louder and the bed feel wider than it was.

So when my parents promised a real Christmas, with dinner and old photos and everyone “starting fresh,” I let myself believe it.

I even bought my mother the white serving bowl she had admired in October.

I bought my father new leather gloves.

For Tyler, I bought nothing until the last minute, then chose a bottle of whiskey he would probably complain was not expensive enough.

For Grandpa Arthur, I brought peppermint tea and a soft plaid blanket.

He was the only reason I had not cut that family out of my life years earlier.

Read More