Author's note: My baby is finally headed home after another extended deployment. I pray for his safe return, even as I curse the silence of enforced separation. Every day apart feels like a lifetime, and I hope that he gets to read this, somehow, and understand how very much I love him. If not, then I offer to read it to him as I curl up in his arms...home at last.
***
I hung the last blue frosted ornament on the Christmas tree and stepped back with a sigh. Searching desperately for some holiday cheer, I settled for a tired smile as I turned to my two children.
"Ready for the lights?" I asked. Their shouts of glee made me chuckle. Turning off the lamps, I flipped the switch to turn on the lights. Their softly twinkling glow began to blur as my eyes filled with tears. Turning toward the kitchen, I mumbled something about setting out cookies and milk. Jazmin and Andre stood next to the tree, reaching out to touch the sparkles with innocent little fingers, too captivated by the lights to notice my distress.
The lid to the cookie jar rattled as I lifted it, the chime of ceramics hitting together making me wince. How many times in the past year had I filled this jar with leftovers from the boxes I sent to my husband? Even the most recent package had been sent out weeks before. Now it seemed an eternity since I'd seen Toby's sweet, sexy grin over the webcam, an eternity since I'd heard his voice on the overseas line, an eternity since he'd made me smile with a loving email. But his battalion was packing up to finally come home after a year of being in the desert β and packing up meant no internet, no phone...not even snail mail.
My whole body shook with tears as I blindly set the cookies on the plate. Here it was, Christmas Eve, and I hadn't been able to able to talk to my baby in a week. Even after eight years of marriage, I longed for his voice, his touch, his arms. I had known going into this marriage that being a soldier's wife wouldn't be easy. I had watched my dad go all over the world while Mom stayed at home and raised us. As a child, I had vowed to never marry a military man. As a woman, I had been swept off my feet from the very first glance from those melted-chocolate eyes.
"Mami?" Jazmin's soft voice startled me, her father's term of endearment for me rolling so naturally off of her lips. Iand I hurriedly brushed the tears away with cookie-crumbed fingers, inadvertently smearing a streak of chocolate across the curve of my cheek.
"Yeah, baby," I asked, busying myself with arranging the cookies just so on the same tree-shaped plate we'd used for years. Tremors rippled through me, chimemaking the dogtags I wore tinkle together. I pressed my hand to my chest to stop that merry sound, fingers slipping between the buttons of one of Toby's old shirts to stroke the warm metal in an unconscious gesture. One tag was mine, from my eight years in the Air Force. The other was his, snagged during one of our first dates. Even without seeing them, I could easily tell which tag was which, could feel the slightest differences in the metal.
"You okay, Mami?" Jazmin's wide brown eyes filled with concern. Blinking rapidly, I tried to clear my tears.
"Sure am, baby. Just wish Daddy was home with us."
She patted my hand, solemnly nodding her head, her brown eyes so like her fathers, filled with a wisdom beyond her years. "He'll be home soon."
I leaned down to hug her, breathing in the scent of freshly shampooed hair. I stroked those tight dark curls, loving her so much it hurt.
"Mami! It's snowing!!" Andre's excited voice rang through the house as his feet pounded a path from the tree to the door. I winced as the heavy wood slammed against the wall behind it, already visualizing the dent.
"Jazzi, come here!" my son demanded, practically stomping his foot with impatience. Giving me a quick hug, she ran off to the front door, where she and her brother ooh'd and ahh'd over the fat, swirling flakes. I stood in the darkened hallway for a moment, just watching them.
Jazmin, at seven, was as precocious as she was adorable. She had the dusky, coffee-and-cream skin, high cheekbones, and Cupid's bow mouth that indicated she was sure to grow as beautiful outside as she was inside. While her deep brown eyes could sparkle with pleasure or shimmer with temper, she had my unfortunate lack of being able to hide a thought β everything she felt was written on her face. Smart as a whip, she was generally pretty quiet β unless Andre got her going. Andre had learned at a young age, as most brothers do, just which buttons to push to make Jazmin's temper sizzle.
At five years old, Andre was as self-assured and outgoing as Jazmin was quiet. He was a miniature version of his father, complete with sparkling, melted-chocolate eyes, a saucy grin, and an amazing generosity. A bundle of boundless energy, Andre sometimes made me tired just watching him zoom from one thing to another, but his ready laughter and pure love of life made it impossible not to forgive his rambunctious nature.
Sometimes, like now, just watching these two treasures made me hurt with love. I could pick out so many of Toby's traits in each of them β Jazmin's quick wit, Andre's cocky grin. I ached for Toby to be home, and hated that these last few weeks would mean no contact. But, I reminded myself β this just meant the start of the official countdown until he was back home, safe and sound and wrapped up in my arms.
I smiled as I stepped up to the door. Jazmin and Andre had their heads bent low, whispering behind hands cupped together. When I caught one of the glances shot my way, I started to back up into the hallway.
"Whatever it is you have planned, you can forget about it, right now!" I laughed in warning.
Each of the children snagged a hand and dragged me, in laughing protest, toward the softly falling snow.
"C'mon, Mami, you've got to." Jazmin's eyes glowed, and she giggled in delight.
Andre scooted behind me, putting both hands on my back and pushing me across the threshold.
Laughing, I found myself standing on the now snow-dusted front lawn. Fat, lazy flakes made halos around the streetlights and shimmered against the cool blue glow of our outdoor Christmas lights.
"Ready?" asked Andre, his voice filled with excitement.