Christmas
Eve
It was
Christmas Eve and the house was decorated for the season
A large
fresh cut tree stood in the corner and perfumed the room
Adorned by
a myriad of assorted baubles and lights
Christmas
cards of all shapes and sizes adorned every surface
And more
hung on bright red and green ribbons from the picture rails
Bright
colored Christmas garlands hung gaily criss-crossing the sealing
While
outside through a break in the dark clouds
A shaft of
week winter sunlight shone through the window
Reflecting
off the garlands and painting random patterns on the walls
I sat
watching TV in my favorite armchair in the front room
Of the
house I shared with my wife and soul mate Linda
The woman I
loved more then life itself
Both of us
had been married before but Linda was the love of my life
We had
spent 30 years apart before we found each other again
When our
own Christmas miracle happened 20 years ago
And we have
had 20 years of incredible happiness together
We had made
good use of the years we had together
To make up
for the lost time we were apart
And
together we had had the fullest of lives
Christmas
had always had particular significance for us
It was our
favorite time of year and had always been so
Our most meaningful
moments together happened at Christmas time
Finding
love together, losing each other, finding each other, marrying each other
That’s why
I called her Christmas Linda
We did
Christmas big and we relished every moment
We would
pack away all the ornaments and pictures
Replacing
them with festive decorations we had collected over the years
There would
be a houseful on Christmas day and Boxing Day
Sharing the
celebration with family and friends
Then we
would fly off to the sun for a few weeks
Neither of
us could abide the New Years holiday
So we took
ourselves away to enjoy each others company
But this
year the season held no joy for me
Even James
Stewart in “It’s a wonderful life” could not lift my spirits
And the
reason for my gloomy disposition
Lay in the
next room, where the dining table used to stand
Where we
had so many wonderful Christmas dinners
The room
full of the happy chatter of good company
The table
heaving under the weight of Christmas fare
But in its
place now stood a stark and clinical a hospital bed
And laying
upon it the most precious thing in my life, Linda
Surrounded
by all the paraphernalia of terminal illness
Her once
vibrant body riddled with inoperable tumors
Their evil
spread consuming her from within
The cancer
was to far advanced when it was discovered
And she
refused what little treatment there was on offer
She also
stubbornly refused to die in hospital or a hospice
Saying she
wished to die in our home where she had known such happiness
How could I
refuse her that simple wish?
We had a
private nurse who sat with her at night and I tended her by day
And I
watched her dieing by inches every single day
The
cruelest punishment for being so happy
My first
wife was taken by cancer
And that
was hard enough to bare
It’s always
so hard when someone you love suffers
But as much
as I loved my first wife and as hard as it was to watch her die
It was
nothing compared to the intolerable despair I felt losing Linda
She was not
only my wife she was my love, my life,
My soul mate,
she was the one
I would sit
with her and read to her
Sometimes
Dickens, Stephen King or Tom Sharpe
Depending
on her frame of mind
On her
brighter days she would have me tell her jokes
She always
said I was the only one who could make her laugh
Her brown
hair with its soft curls had long since turned silver
And the
sparkle was only rarely present in her eyes
The
laughter that used to play around them replaced by pain
And it was
on the morning of that Christmas Eve
When she
told me what she wanted for Christmas
She was
always at her best in the morning
But on that
morning she was having a good day
After she
had eaten breakfast she asked me to pass her jewelry box
It was the
very first Christmas gift I gave her
She often
told me it was her most precious possession, after me
As I handed
it to her she smiled and just for a second
There was a
glimpse of her loveliness shinning through the pain
She patted
the bed and bad me sit next to her
I sat on
the bed next to her and she took my hand
“I have to
say this to you today because I’m having a good day and
I don’t
know how many good days I’ve got left”
I protested
that she was being silly, she squeezed my hand
Then gave
me a look which said that I knew she wasn’t
She opened
her jewelry box and from a draw within
Took out a
neatly folded handkerchief which she carefully unfolded
And inside
were a dozen capsules containing her medication
She looked
at me with her soulful eyes pleading with me
As the
realization of what she was asking sank in I shook my head
On her good
days she had salted away some of her medication
Until she
now had enough to hasten the end
She
squeezed my hand again and said “Please do this for me”
She didn’t
want me to do it there and then
She just
wanted me to agree to do it when the time came
But the
time would be very soon
“It’s the
only gift you can give me this Christmas”
She looked
in to my eyes and said
“I love you
more than anything in the world
And I know
with all my heart that you love me”
I could say
nothing as tears welled up in my eyes
“Please do
this thing for me” she pleaded
My heart
was breaking at the choice I must make
Let her
suffer or end her suffering and kill her
I said “I
just can’t do it” and I got up and left the room
She didn’t
call after me she knew I would be back
With tears
streaming down my face I grabbed my coat
And went
out the door and went for a walk
The day was
cold, grey and damp
And clouds
scudded across the December sky
Any hint of
the promised sunny intervals was not in evidence
It was the
kind of day that chilled you to the bone
But I
didn’t feel it at all I just felt numb
You had to
be alive to feel the cold and I was dieing inside
I walked
for miles under the grey skies
Along the
woodland paths we used to walk together
My mind in
turmoil my eyes red with tears
If I did
what she wanted I would lose her forever
The loss of
her would be devastating
But not to
let her go would just be selfish
My head was
spinning I didn’t know which way to turn
Images of
the happy moments together swam in and out of focus
Then as I
walked into a clearing in the woods
Where once
we had made love on a sultry afternoon
There was a
sudden break in the clouds
And the
woods were bathed in winter sunshine
And all at
once I knew what I must do
When I
returned to the house I went straight to her bedside
She was
sleeping; so I sat on the chair beside her bed
And rested
my head on the bed beside her
Then I felt
her hand gently stroking my hair
I sat up
and her hand moved to my cheek
I took it
in my own and kissed it softly and said
“I’ll do
what ever you want me to do”
New Years
Eve
Christmas
had past and I was glad of it
It was
without doubt the worst Christmas of my life
Full of
tears and sadness instead of happiness and laughter
There was
no wondrous Christmas feast
No table
laden with Christmas delights
No hearty
laughter or light hearted banter
Just an
endless stream of visitors, friends and family
As cheery
as was possible, putting on a brave face
All coming
with forced smiles to bring the seasons greetings
But all
leaving with tears knowing she would not see the spring
I know I
sound ungrateful and I’m not really
But every
visit ate into the precious time Linda and I had left
I knew how
important it was to Linda to see everyone
Even the
doctor called in to make sure she was comfortable
And in
between visits I would sit watching the needles dropping from the tree
As if each
dropping needle symbolized Linda’s plight
And as I
sat alone in my favorite armchair on New Years Eve
Staring at
the pine needles scattered beneath the tree
I tried to
come to terms with the fact that Linda would die with the old year
Since
Christmas Eve when she made her request
Linda had
been in good spirits
She had
seen everyone in the world that mattered to her
And said
all the things she needed to say
So Linda
had decided that morning that enough was enough
I tried to
remain cheerful for her but she could see through it
“I know
you’re hurting too” she said the pain etched in her face
And with
that we made our plans for our last day together
I phoned
the nurse telling her she should have the night off
To enjoy
the celebrations with her family
She was
very grateful and accepted my explanation without question
I filled
the room with lighted candles and in the flickering light
Linda and I
spent the evening together looking at photographs
And
reliving the great times of our life together
We played
the music that formed the soundtrack of our lives
Then an
hour before midnight she handed me the folded handkerchief
I opened it
and inside were now close to twenty capsules
One by one
I broke them open emptying the contents into a wine glass
I filled
the glass with Port and gave it a stir
And I put
the glass on the bedside table before sitting on the bed
Then I took
her hand and kissed it and lent forward and kissed her mouth
I started
to say good bye but she put her hand to my mouth
Then I
reached over and picked up the glass
And held it
up to her lips and she took a drink
Then a
little more and a little more until the glass was empty
I wiped her
mouth with the hanky and she burped
And she
laughed that wonderful laugh
The candles
sputtered and the flames flickered
Then she
said “I love you so very much” squeezing my hand
“I love you
too” I said as I sat holding her hand in mine
And then we
just sat in silence looking at each other until her eyes closed
The Village
clock began chiming the hour
Her hand
went limp and her breathing became shallow
And then
all the pain in her face was suddenly gone
The clock
chimed twelve marking the passing of the old year
And also
unknowingly marked Linda’s passing
I don’t
know how long I sat there holding her dead hand
With the
tears streaming down my face
But as I
sat there I knew what had to be done
I poured
myself a large whisky and sat in my favorite armchair
Where I wrote
a long letter explaining what I had done
And what I
was about to do
With the
letter written I put it into an envelope
And placed
it on the mantelpiece where it would be easily found
Then I
drank my whisky and reached into my pocket
And removed
the contents placing them on my lap
Then I
filled the syringe with the insulin I had stolen from the doctor’s bag
And
injected myself with the full syringe
And as my
eyes grew heavy I could feel Linda’s hand on my shoulder
And felt
her fingers in my hair as I drifted into a coma
And she
whispered “I love you” in my ear as my eyes closed
When my
eyes opened again I couldn’t believe what I saw
It was a
place that was familiar to me and it was snowing
And the
street was full of happy smiling people
And there
amongst them was Linda larger than life, vivacious and self assured
Covered
with snowflakes and laughing
My snow
angel, my Christmas Linda
With snow
covering her like sugar on a doughnut
Wrapped up
against the cold in a woolen hat and coat
And a long knitted
scarf draped about her neck
She shook
her head and her light brown hair danced about her shoulders
And the
snowflakes fell away from her soft curls
Only to be
replaced by fresh ones
There was a
rosy redness on her cheeks and she was young again
We were
both young again and we had gone back 50 years
She threw
herself at me and hugged me tightly
I smelled
her hair as I held her and was intoxicated by her scent
We were
stood at the taxi stand and snow fell onto Linda’s soft curls
We took our
place in the queue and we kissed
All too
soon a taxi arrived but this time we both got in
And through
the winter wonderland we departed this time never to be apart again
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