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“It was this!” said Ori Hookaday to her sister, in shock.

Maple got closer and checked the snow globe in Ori’s hands. She could hardly believe it. They had not seen the snow globe for decades but there it was, a bit ragged but in one piece.

Wow! Can’t be! Where did you find it?” asked Maple.

“At the bottom of the big closet,” replied Ori, pointing at a brown oak wardrobe.

“I thought it was lost,” said Maple, puzzled.

“Well, it was lost. I think the last time we put it out was for Christmas, 30 years ago.”

“But the song we heard! It could not have come from this snow globe. It was a woman singing, and the snow globe used to play Christmas carols, right?” asked Maple, clicking the little button that turned the snow globe on.

They waited, but nothing happened. Ori shook the snow globe, but there was no music, lights, or snow.

“The batteries are dead,” she concluded. She opened the drawer where they kept the new batteries and replaced them. They tried again, and this time the snow globe lit up with shiny snow, and the music played as merrily and Christmassy as it used to.

“Oh, Ori! I looove this snow globe,” said Maple, thrilled.

For a moment, Ori and Maple Hookaday stood next to each other, staring at the winter scene inside the snow globe. There it was: the little village of Firwind, as they had named it when they were kids, with its wooden houses on top of a perfectly round hill in the middle of a rocky valley.

They had made that snow globe themselves many winters ago. They had built a beautiful fir forest with the help of their grandfather, and their grandmother had painted all the houses’ roofs in red and blue. But the paint had worn away over the years, and only Mr Rowan’s house had kept its sea-green colour. The shiny red train wasn’t as shiny anymore, or as red, but it buzzed as always when it completed a ride around the hill.

“I can’t believe we found this at Christmas, of all days,” said Ori, amazed.

“Right on time for sunrise, too,” Maple said, looking through the window and seeing the break of dawn among the pine trees.

The view from the flat was beautiful at this time of the year without all the tourists.

The two sisters shared a little roof apartment in a seaside city where it was always summer. They had no complaints; they led a simple life restoring odd pieces washed ashore by the sea. Even though they had both travelled quite a bit in their youth, they had settled in the family’s second residence a while back, after their parents had passed.

They usually woke up when the sun was well set in the sky, but Christmas was an exception. It had been a Hookaday family tradition to be up with the first light on Christmas Day, a tradition that was getting harder to keep in their autumn years. They would have overslept that night as well if it hadn’t been for the strange melody that got them both out of bed.

“They are all where we left them,” stated Ori, inspecting the villagers’ figurines with the help of the sunrise light. “Elsie and the choir girls, old Reed, and… Rosemary, the baker.” The tiny clay figurine of a rosy-cheeked woman stood against an old bakery, a tray full of pastries in her miniature hands.

“Oh, and Rowan! Wait… Wasn’t Rowan always carrying a snow shovel?”

“I guess not,” said Maple matter-of-factly. “Though they seem older without fresh paint on their clothes and hair,” she observed.

“We all got older,” Ori smiled at her sister, who somehow still had the same curious look she had when she was young.

“Everything looks washed out except for the Christmas tree,” said Maple, admiring the decorated fir tree at the foot of the hill. “Look at the gold glitter! As if we had just repainted it.”

The Christmas tree inside the snow globe was shining under the morning light. The gold was so bright that neither sister noticed that, not far from the tree, somebody had built a small fortress of fresh snow with towers and bridges, and gardens of ice trees.

One comment on “A warm Christmas tale

  1. Fabrice's avatar Fabrice says:

    That’s a great story ! i like the way the two parts go together. And some really nice pictures to illustrate. good work !

    Liked by 1 person

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