She Wrapped Dollar-Store Toys So Poor Kids Could Still Feel Christmas-tantan

The first thing Carol noticed every December was not the Christmas music.

It was the way parents touched price tags.

They did it quickly, almost secretly, as if the little white stickers were private information and not numbers printed for everyone to see.

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They lifted a toy from the dollar-store shelf, turned it over, checked the bottom corner, and put it back with a softness that made Carol look away.

She knew that softness.

She had used it herself.

At seventy-eight, Carol worked part-time at a dollar store in Idaho, three short shifts a week, sometimes four when someone called out and her knees were willing.

She had silver hair that never stayed pinned, reading glasses on a chain, and hands that looked delicate until you watched her lift boxes of detergent from the bottom shelf.

Her red apron had been washed so many times that the store logo had faded at the edges.

She did not complain about the work.

The work let her buy groceries without choosing between eggs and stamps.

The work let her keep the heat on.

The work let her mail birthday cards to grandchildren who lived far enough away that she measured their childhoods through school pictures, phone calls, and envelopes with crooked handwriting.

That Christmas, she had already done the math three times at her kitchen table.

The power bill was due.

Her prescription refill was due.

The grocery list had no room for extras unless she wanted to pretend soup was a dinner plan for the rest of the month.

Her grandchildren would get cards.

Maybe she could tuck a five-dollar bill inside each one if she stretched things until January.

Maybe she could not.

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