celebrate Yule, or Winter Solstice, which was two days ago.â
âIâll bet the campus is beautiful right now.â Grandma smiled at me and patted my hand.
âWhy would the campus be beautiful?â Momâs brittle tone was back. âIf they donât celebrate Christmas, why should they decorate Christmas trees?â
Grandma beat me to the explanation. âLinda, Yule was celebrated a long time before Christmas. Ancient peoples have been decorating
Christmas trees,â
she said the words with a slightly sarcastic intonation, âfor thousands of years. It was Christians who adopted that tradition from Pagans, not the other way around. Actually, the church chose December twenty-fifth as the date of Jesusâ birth to coincide with Yule celebrations. If youâll remember, the whole time you were growing up we rolled pinecones in peanut butter, strung apples and popcorn and cranberries together, and decorated an outside tree that I always called our Yule tree, along with our inside Christmas tree.â Grandma smiled a kinda sad, kinda confused smile at her daughter before turning back to me. âSo did you decorate the trees on campus?â
I nodded. âYeah, they look amazing, and the birds and squirrels are going totally nuts, too.â
âWell, why donât you open your presents, then we can have cake and coffee?â My mom said, acting like Grandma and I had never spoken.
Grandma brightened. âYes, Iâve been looking forward to giving you these for a month now.â She bent and withdrew two presents from under her side of the table. One was big and tented with brightly colored (and definitely not Christmas) wrapping paper. The other was book-sized and covered in cream-colored tissue paper like youâd get from a chic boutique. âOpen this one first.â Grandma pushed the tented present to me and I eagerly unwrapped it to find the magic of my childhood underneath.
âOh, Grandma! Thank you so much!â I pressed my face into the brightly blooming lavender plant sheâd potted in a purple clay pot and inhaled. The aroma of the wonderful herb brought visions of lazy summer days and picnics with Grandma. âItâs perfect,â I said.
âI had to rush grow it in the hothouse so that it would be blooming for you. Oh, and youâll need this.â Grandma handed me a paper bag. âThereâs a grow light inside there and a mounting for it so that you can be sure it gets enough light without having to open your bedroom curtains and hurt your eyes.â
I grinned at her. âYou think of everything.â I glanced at my mom, and saw that she had the blank look on her face that I knew meant she wished she was someplace else. I wanted to ask her why she had bothered to come at all, but pain closed my throat, which surprised me. I had thought that I had grown up beyond her ability to hurt me. Seems the actual truth of being seventeen wasnât as old as Iâd imagined.
âHere, Zoeybird, I got you one other thing,â Grandma said, handing me the tissue-paperâwrapped present. I could tell that sheâd noticed Momâs stony silence and, as usual, she was trying to make up for her daughterâs crappy parenting.
I swallowed down the clog in my throat and unwrapped the present to reveal a leather-bound book that was obviously old as dirt. Then I noticed the title and I gasped. â
Dracula!
You got me an old copy of
Dracula!
â
âLook at the copyright page, honey,â Grandma said, eyes shining with delight.
I turned to the publisherâs page and could not believe what I saw. âOhmygod! Itâs a first edition!â
Grandma was laughing happily. âTurn a couple of pages.â
I did, and found Stokerâs signature scrawled across the bottom of the title page and dated January, 1899.
âItâs a
signed
first edition! It must have cost a zillion dollars!â I threw