Her Parents Left an Eviction Note on Christmas. Then Her Card Declined.-olive

“Mama. Mama, wake up.”

The first thing Jessica heard that morning was not Christmas music, not wrapping paper, not the clatter of her mother making coffee too loudly in the kitchen.

It was Grace’s voice, small and broken beside the bed.

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Jessica opened her eyes into the blue-dark of early morning and saw her seven-year-old daughter standing there in yellow pajamas, cheeks wet, hair lifted into a messy little crown from sleep.

Grace held a folded piece of paper in both hands.

She was gripping it so tightly that the corners had bent inward.

The Christmas lights from the hallway blinked against the bedroom wall in soft, useless colors.

Red.

Green.

Red.

Cheerful little flashes in a house that had gone too quiet.

“What’s wrong?” Jessica asked, already pushing herself upright.

Grace did not answer at first.

She only held out the paper.

Her fingers trembled as Jessica took it.

The floor was cold under Jessica’s feet when she sat on the edge of the bed, and the paper felt warm from Grace’s hands.

Jessica unfolded it and recognized her mother’s handwriting before she understood the words.

We’re off to Hawaii. Please move out by the time we’re back.

That was all.

No Merry Christmas.

No explanation.

No apology.

No careful adult conversation after breakfast where Jessica could shield her daughter from the sharpest edges.

Just a note left on the kitchen table for a child to find before sunrise on Christmas Eve.

Grace swallowed hard and whispered, “Is Grandma mad at me?”

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