Excerpts from the Little Matchgirl retelling by The Midnight Archive - describing the Christmas of the privileged:
The table was covered with white linen that gleamed like fresh fallen snow. Fine china plates edged in gold sat at each place setting with crystal glasses that sparkled in the candlelight. Silver cutlery flanked each plate, knives and forks and spoons of every size, more utensils than... A Christmas tree. It reached nearly to the ceiling, decorated with candles and glass ornaments and strings of gold beads. A family was gathered around it. Parents and children, grandparents, a baby in someone's arms. They were laughing at something the youngest child had said. The mother reached out to adjust an ornament. The father lifted a toddler to see the star at the top. They looked happy. They looked like they had never known a moment of want in their lives. Families were sitting down to their Christmas Eve dinners. The smells reached her even in the empty street. Roasting meat, baking bread, spices and sweetness, and everything rich.
... when the flowers were beginning to bloom in the gardens of the wealthy. These houses were tall and solid, built of good red brick, with large windows that glowed with candlelight. Iron gates guarded small front gardens. Brass knockers gleamed on painted doors. Everything spoke of money, of security, of a world where winter was an inconvenience rather than a death sentence. Through the windows, one could see glimpses of another existence entirely. A parlour with velvet furniture and paintings on the walls. A dining room where a table was set for twelve. Crystal glasses catching the light. A sitting room where a fire blazed in an enormous hearth, its flames dancing, its heat radiating into every corner of the room.
A Christmas tree. It was enormous, taller than any other tree ever seen, taller than the ceilings of any room she had ever entered. Its trunk was thick and strong, its branches spreading wide in every direction, laden with ornaments and treasures beyond counting. Candles flickered among the needles. Hundreds of them, perhaps thousands, each flame steady and bright, each one casting its own small circle of golden light. The effect was dazzling, overwhelming, like looking at a constellation that had descended from heaven and taken root in the earth. Glass balls hung from every bow. Red ones and gold ones and silver ones painted with delicate patterns catching the light and throwing it back in sparks of colour. Some were shaped like pinecones, others like icicles, others like tiny houses with windows that seemed to glow from within. Ribbons wound through the branches. Silk and satin, crimson and emerald and royal blue. Strings of gold beads draped from tear to tear, glittering whenever you moved your head. Carved wooden angels hung at intervals. Their painted faces serene, their gilded wings outstretched. At the very top, a star glittered with what looked like real diamonds.
Beneath the tree, presents were piled in drifts. Boxes wrapped in colored paper. Red and green and silver tied with silk ribbons tagged with names. Dolls with porcelain faces and silk dresses, their painted eyes staring up at the branches above them. Drums painted in bright reds and blues with real drumsticks tied to their sides. Wooden horses with real horsehair manes and tails mounted on rockers or wheels. Picture books with gilded covers and beautiful illustrations inside. Glimpses of castles and dragons and princesses and all the things that existed in stories and nowhere else. Tin soldiers standing at attention in neat rows, their uniforms bright, their rifles at the ready. Music boxes with delicate mechanisms that would play when opened. All the gifts that children in wealthy households would find in the morning. All the joy that would be theirs. While other children unwrap treasures, then... Here in this vision, all the presents seemed to be waiting. Every ribbon, every bow, every carefully wrapped package...
The gentleman who was reaching into his pocket until his adult daughter appeared and led him away, (to take him home with the wife and mother for supper.)
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