dressed, and went downstairs.
Jack hadnât been able to get away yesterday.
Of course he hadnât. Something
important
had come up.
The video, honey, itâs first rate, but
blah, blah, blah.
Iâll be there tomorrow night. I promise.
Promises were a lot like impressions. The second one didnât count for much.
Elizabeth made herself a cup of tea and stood at the kitchen window, staring out at the falling snow. Then she wandered into the living room to make a fire.
There, sitting on the coffee table was a red cardboard ornament box.
Her father must have left it out for her last night.
She put down her tea and reached for the ornament that was on top. It was a lovely white angel, no bigger than her palm, made of shiny porcelain with silvery fabric wings. Her mother had given it to her on her fourth birthday; the last such present Elizabeth could recall.
Each year, sheâd wrapped and unwrapped it with special care, and taken great pains to choose the perfect place for it on the tree. She hadnât taken it with her when she moved out because the angel belonged here, only here, in this house where her mama had lived.
âHey, Mama,â she said quietly, smiling down at the angel in her palm. Once, it had seemed so big. The most important part of the angel was the memory attached to it.
Can I hang up the angel now, Mommy? Can I?
Why, darlinâ Birdie, you can do most anything. Here, let me lift you up â¦
She had so few memories of Mama; each one was valuable.
She hung the ornament from the second-highest branch, then plugged in the lights and stood back. The tree looked beautiful, sparkling with white lights and festooned with decadesâ worth of decoration. Everything from the pipe-cleaner star Jamie had made in kindergarten to the Lalique medallion Daddy had bought at an auction in Dallas. Golden bows adorned the branches.
Anita walked into the room. She wore a frothy pink negligee and Barbie-doll mules. âI had a heck of a hard time finding that box.â
Elizabeth turned around. âYou left this box out for me?â
âYou picture your daddy rootinâ around in the attic for a certain box of Christmas ornaments, do you?â
Elizabeth smiled in spite of herself. âI guess not.â
Anita sat down on the sofa, curled her feet up underneath her. The puffy pink pom-poms on her slippers disappeared. âIâm sorry Jack couldnât get here yesterday.â
Elizabeth turned back to the tree. She didnât want to talk about this. For all her pancake makeup and fiddle-dee-dee-donât-confuse-me airs, Anita sometimes saw things youâd rather she didnât. âHeâs busy with some big story.â
âThatâs what you said.â
There was something in the way she said it, a hesitation maybe, as if she didnât believe the excuse. âYes, it is,â Elizabeth answered curtly.
Anita sighed dramatically.
It was how theyâd always communicated, in fits and starts. Ever since Daddy had brought his new wife home.
Elizabeth had been thirteen, a bad age anyway, and worse for her than most.
And Anita Bockner, the beautician from Lick Skillet, Alabama, was the last person she would have chosen to be her stepmother.
This is your new mama, Birdie,
heâd announced one day, and that was that.
As if a mother were as replaceable as a battery.
Mama had never been mentioned again in this sprawling white house amid the tobacco and cornfields. No pictures of her graced the mantels or the tables, no stories of her life had ever been spun into a wrap that would warm her lonely daughter.
Anita had tried to mother Elizabeth, but sheâd gone about it all wrong. Theyâd been oil and water from the beginning.
Elizabeth had hoped that time and distance would sand away the rough edges of their relationship, but that wasnât how it worked between them. Theyâd remained at odds for all these years. For