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The Christmas Eve Dress: How a Red Knitted Frock, a Mother’s Tears, and an Unexpected Visit from Our…

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On the eve of New Years, Mum and I drifted into Hamleys on Regent Street. We were meant to be picking up a trinketperhaps some tinsel, perhaps a twinkling string of fairy lights. Yet amidst that kaleidoscope of toys and glitter, I stumbled upon a dress that made my heart cartwheel inside my chest. It was a knitted red number, ringed with a bold blue trim at the hem and sleeves. My feet glued themselves to the shop floor and I clung to Mums sleeve, pleading in that breathless, desperate way that only children know, to try it on.

It slipped over my head like a secret and fitted as though it had known me all my life. Sprawling daydreams unfurled in my mind: there was a boy in my class, a boy I liked so much it made my fingers itch, and all at once I was certain that if he saw me at the class party in this very dress, hed look at me differently.

Standing there, not wanting to take it off, my throat tightening, Mum noticed the storm in my eyes. She said quietly, My wages will be in soonlets have this one. I nearly floated all the way home, wild with joy.

We adorned our little flat with splashes of colour. The Christmas tree twinkled in a corner, lights aglow. But aside from a lonely sliver of butter and a shelf of icy air, our fridge stood empty. We counted days for payday. Back then, in the old days, even the 31st of December was a workday, though people were sent home early to their families.

But when Mum returned, her face was grey and sagging: no wages. They would be late, she whispered, her voice brittle with shame. Tears glimmered in her eyes; she felt she had failed me, left me hungry at the festive table. Strangely, I wasnt sad at all. The flat gleamed with tinsel, the TV broadcast a rare evening of sparkling films, the likes of which normally flickered only at Christmasthe BBC and ITV our only companions, but that felt vast enough.

Mum boiled some potatoes and swirled them with the last of our butter. She grated a carrot and showered it with sugar; there was nothing else to feast on. We settled at our tiny table. Suddenly, Mum dissolved into tears. I tried to soothe her, but soon I was crying alongside her, not because our table was bare, but because the weight of her sadness pressed on my chest, choking me.

Later, we curled up together on the sofa, huddled beneath one blanket, watching some dazzling New Years concert while London rolled midnight into the streets. From the corridor, neighbours burst forth with flutes of fizz, shouting Happy New Year! and singing Auld Lang Syne off-key. We stayed put, cocooned indoors.

Then a fierce knocking echoed through the flatinsistent, relentless. My mother opened our door to find Mrs. Edith from down the hall, the old woman who always barked at me for scuffing my shoes on the stairs or forgetting my place in the queue for the lift, whose lectures trailed me when I played too loudly outside. Every child on our block had run afoul of Mrs. Edith at least once.

She was already swimming in New Years cheer. What she said in the hall Ill never know. But I watched her sizeable frame edge into our flat, her careful frown grazing our meagre meal. Then she backed out into the corridor, silent and unreadable.

After twenty minutes, instead of knocking, someone began thumping the door with their foot. Mum told me to stay put and went to see what the commotion was. In stomped Mrs. Edith, her arms weighed down with plastic carriers, a bulging bottle of bubbly wedged under her elbow. She barked at Mum to stop dithering, then began unpacking: salad, sausages, a tin of pickled onions, a half-cooked chicken, a scatter of clementines, a box of After Eight mints, and a jar of chutney.

Tears shimmered on Mums cheeks, but softer now. In one unceremonious swoop, Mrs. Edith wiped Mums face with her immense woollen sleeve, called her a silly goose, and, mission accomplished, marched out without a backward glance.

Afterwards, Mrs. Edith continued as the blocks chief umpire, never mentioning that midnight kindness again. Yet when she died years later and the whole building turned out to say goodbye, everyone had a story to share. It turned out our grumpy neighbour had rescued us all, in ways both large and small.

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