I stood under the mistletoe. The green, leafy clusters speckled with
waxy-white berries hung from
the branches of every apple tree. "That's the
same stuff they sell in the stores for Christmas
decorations!" I said to
myself. "Why can't I sell mistletoe too?"
Christmas was three weeks away. Selling mistletoe would be a perfect way to
earn money to buy a
gift for my brother, Derek. I took a few steps back,
ran, leaped, and reached as high as I could. But
the lowest mistletoe
cluster was too high. I missed it by a mile. So that was that. I had started for
home when something strange caught my eye. At the edge of the apple orchard,
one tree stood bare.
Of course I knew the leaves and apples fell off months
ago. But the mistletoe, every sprig of it, had
fallen off the branches also.
It lay in a neat pile at the foot of the tree, as if put there just for me.
Delighted, I carefully picked out the best sprigs and put them in my lunch
box. When it was
jam-packed, I sprinted across the flattened cornfield to
the mobile home where I lived.
I entered the side door, listening. Yes, a guitar was playing. I walked down
the narrow hall to my
bedroom door and pounded on the door. "Derek, are you
in there?" The guitar stopped. "One sec,"
came a grumpy reply. A moment
later the door was flung open. My brother stood there wearing his
brown
leather jacket. "Where are you going?" I asked. "None of your business," he
muttered, sailing
past me. It wasn't easy sharing that cramped bedroom with
my older brother. We got on each
other's nerves a lot. That whole trailer
was too small for our family. With Derek out of the room, I
emptied the
contents of my lunch box onto my bed. I split the sprigs of mistletoe into
smaller ones
and carefully picked off every dead leaf and berry. In my mom's
sewing box, I found a roll of red
ribbon. I used it to tie bows around the
sprigs, then put each one into a little plastic bag.
As I looked for something to put the mistletoe in, I saw Derek's guitar on
his bed, wrapped in an old
towel. The guitar was the only beautiful thing
Derek owned, and I knew what to buy with the
mistletoe money: a case for
that guitar. Even if Derek was grumpy sometimes, he was till my brother,
and
I loved him. The next day I took my mistletoe packages--ten in all--to school.
During lunch time,
I sold every one. My pockets jingled with change as I
walked home that day. But it was hardly
enough money to buy a guitar case.
After school, I cut through the apple orchard again. A surprise
awaited
me--two more trees were bare, and under each one lay a pile of mistletoe! I
loaded my
lunch box, filled my pockets then raced for home.
Derek was striding across the cornfield as I approached the trailer. His head
was lowered. His
hands were jammed into the pockets of his leather jacket.
"Derek! Derek!" I hollered as friendly as I
could. But when he looked up and
saw me, he stopped and turned in another direction. That night I
made twice
as many mistletoe packages. After school the next day, I walked to the shopping
center
office and got permission to sell my mistletoe there. Then I found a
wooden box to use as a sales
stand. I thumb-tacked a sign on it that read:
"Christmas Mistletoe 25cents!"
Within the hour, the mistletoe was sold out. I hurried over to the music
store. In the front display
window, on cotton snow, lay a row of wooden
recorders. I had learned to play a plastic one at
school, and more than
anything, I wanted one of those wooden ones which sounded so much better.
Each year that was at the top of my Christmas list. But each year there
wasn't enough money. I was
calculating how much more money I'd need to buy a
recorder when I saw the towers of guitar cases
in the back of the store. As
much as I wanted a recorder, I wanted to buy Derek a guitar case more.
Even
if he had been a grouch lately, he was a pretty neat brother. Going inside the
store, I found the
perfect case for Derek, a brown one with gold buttons. I
t cost a bundle, though. Much more than I
had. I hoped that there would be
lots more mistletoe in the orchard when I got there.
I reached the orchard after the sun had just set, and the air was icy. The
shadowy crooked branches
of the apple trees appeared as grabbing fingers
against the purple sky. Something rustled in a distant
tree. Rotten apples
squished under my feet as I tried to creep closer to see what it was. Then I
tripped. My knees sunk into a pile of something scratchy. Mistletoe! Another
big heap of it. It was a
miracle! I was filling my lunch box, when a voice
right behind me softly said, "Chilly night to be out,
young man."
I spun around. "I'm collecting m-m-mistletoe," I stuttered, half from cold, half from fright.
"Sorry I scared you," the man said with a friendly smile. "The fact is, I'm
paying a guy to cut all that
mistletoe out of my trees."
"What!" I exclaimed, puzzled.
"My apple trees are loaded with mistletoe. That very plant people kiss under
can do these old trees
harm. It attaches itself to their branches and sucks
out a lot of food and water. Eventually it could kill
these trees. Anyway,
you're welcome to take all you want." The man wished me a merry Christmas,
then walked on across the orchard. He stopped under a tree about thirty
yards away and looked up.
Out of that tree tumbled a big clump of
mistletoe--then another and another. An instant later two legs
dangled down
from the lowest branch.
All of a sudden someone jumped down next to the man. It was Derek! He didn't
see me in the
shadows. "A few more nights ought to do it," the man said.
"Yeah," Derek replied, brushing off his jeans.
"So what are you doing with all the money I'm paying you?" asked the man.
"Are you going out and
having a good time?"
"Nah," said Derek, shuffling his feet. "I'm saving up to buy my kid brother something for Christmas."
"Is that right?" said the man.
"Yeah, he's been wanting a wooden recorder for ages. He can play pretty well.
And you know how
it is--he's my brother."