Marine Finds Grandpa Freezing at Christmas, Then Uncovers the Papers-iwachan

I came back home for Christmas in my dress blues expecting warmth, noise, maybe my mom’s cinnamon casserole baking in the kitchen.

Instead, I stepped into a house that felt colder than the snow piling up outside.

The cold was the first thing that reached me.

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It slid under the front door, sat in the hallway, and wrapped itself around my wrists before I had even set down my bag.

The house smelled wrong too.

Not like cinnamon, butter, coffee, or my mother’s overdone holiday candles.

It smelled like stale air, old dust, and a kitchen no one had used all day.

I stood in the entryway with my dress blues still stiff from travel and listened.

No television.

No voices.

No Christmas music playing too loud from the little speaker my father always pretended not to understand.

Outside, wind scraped snow along the front porch.

The little American flag my grandfather kept near the porch rail tapped against the siding, sharp and lonely.

I called out, “Mom?”

Nothing answered.

I stepped farther in and saw the note on the counter.

It was written on the back of a grocery receipt in my mother’s neat, impatient handwriting.

“WE TRAVELED ON A CRUISE. YOU TAKE CARE OF GRANDPA.”

I read it once.

Then I read it again, because some part of me kept waiting for the rest of the message to appear.

There should have been a number.

There should have been an explanation.

There should have been a warning that Grandpa Samuel was sick, cold, confused, sleeping, anything.

There should have been a “Merry Christmas,” at least.

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