Silent Night
The
room was dark, save for the light of three orange candles which danced,
carelessly, on a long wooden table carved from European walnut. Faces, clothes,
expressions, distinctions--these were things hard to make out in the dim light
of the little church. In a corner to the right of the table, we all stood, side
by side and bunched together, gathered around a grand piano the color of burnt
red. There was a closeness in the darkness, one that friends and family and
loved ones know best but even strangers can come to find. In the dimly-lit
room, each one of us put aside our differences. What did it matter that I wore
a silvery dress and the woman across from me a sari? And why was it important that the woman to my right had dark
skin and the one on my left had light? Perhaps one woman flaunted excessive
jewelry, or one man inordinate tattoos. I did not know--I could not see--and in
those moments, it did not matter. Of my own, I wore a silvery dress, as has
been said, and my feet were bare on the cozy carpet. In my hand, I held a
steaming mug of hot chocolate, the sweet smell lingering about the room and
mixing with other scents--perfumes, colognes, the smell of bayberry scented
candles, and of sugar cookies, and of pine. The pine was most wonderful of the
smells, considering its source, as it came from the tall Christmas tree
lounging in the corner near the table. Its branches were decorated lavishly
with reds and golds, and atop it settled a brilliant golden star, peering down
at us like our own guardian angel. Watching us, and listening. There was
some chatter, mainly in hushed whispers, among us, but for the most part the
little, dimly-lit room was quiet. Not the silence in which one might sit and
think lonely or awkward thoughts. No, that was not the kind. It was the quiet
in which one was quiet only because one felt in such content and perfect state
of mind that nothing was necessary to be said.
The
room was quiet. Now there was no sound. Stars sparkled from an above window, a
Christmas tree twinkled from its corner, and candles flickered from their
table. A man rose and began to play the piano.
“Silent night . . .” he sang, and it
seemed a million voices joined him.