Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts

Monday, December 23, 2024

Christmas with the Menopausal Superheroes, an open book blog hop post

 

 

Welcome to Open Book Blog Hop. You can find us every Monday talking about the writing life. I hope you'll check out all the posts: you'll find the links at the bottom of this post.

Behind the scenes of a Holiday Scene: How did you write a holiday scene?
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I've written two Christmas stories for the Menopausal Superheroes

 

"O Scaly Night" has Patrica, the Lizard Woman of Springfield coming to the rescue during what should have been a quiet holiday alone and discovering that she likes helping people.

The idea for the story came to me while I was writing one of the novels in the series, which had me delving a little deeper into Patricia's background and understanding what kind of childhood experiences she had had. 

This story fits into the novel series earlier on, when there was more doubt as to how Patricia would end up using her powers and I liked exploring the ambivalence of vigilantism. The lines a hero does and doesn't cross.   

I wrote it for my newsletter subscribers, and later it was published as part of a charity Christmas anthology: Christmas Lites IX.

  

Click the image to read the entire story for free.

The other story is called "Max's Mommy" and is told by the youngest son of one of her heroes, Jessica, AKA Flygirl. One of the things I wanted for my Menopausal Superheroes was for them to still get to keep their friends, families, and homes. 

All of my heroes have a circle of trust who knows their secret identity and none of them are keeping their abilities hidden from the people they love most. I got to thinking about how her children were handling having a superhero for a mother and came up with this story of young Max watching his hero-mother in action.  

This one I also wrote as a gift to my newsletter subscribers, and I haven't sought other publication for it so far.

Click the image to read the entire story for free.

I really enjoyed writing both of these stories, focusing on just one of the heroes during the holidays and imagining how that might go. Maybe I need to write another one for Leonel, AKA Fuerte! Do you like tie-in stories for series? Do you read winter holiday stories as part of your festivities? I'd love to hear your thoughts in the comments. 

If these snippets caught your attention and you're interested in more, here are the details on the series: 


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Click here to enter

Monday, December 19, 2022

'Tis a gift! An Open Book blog post

Welcome to Open Book Blog Hop. You can find us every Monday talking about the writing life. I hope you'll check out all the posts: you'll find the links at the bottom of this post.

Dec 19, 2022 What gift did you want that you never got and might be bitter about? Have you bought it for yourself?

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Somewhere in the fog of childhood memory, I'm sure I was a petulant little brat over something I wanted and didn't get, but from the vantage point of my fifty-first year on planet earth, I know I've been quite spoiled across my life. I don't harbor any of this kind of bitterness apparently, because I can't remember anything like that. 

Even when we didn't have much money, my parents knew how to make gifts seem special, setting the stage and presenting them in a way that made them special. I suppose it's all in what you compare it to.

These days, I'm told I'm difficult to buy for. 

I can see that. 

Small things I need I buy for myself when they come up. Other things, I save up for, but wouldn't generally ask for as gifts because they're too expensive. Like many adults, I often receive quite practical gifts--things I actually need. 

I like giving gifts more than receiving them, though even giving them can become stressful, especially in a household like ours that celebrates both Chanukah and Christmas at this time of year. I have mixed feelings about gift-giving holidays and the sense of obligation that can take them over. 

My husband usually buys me tickets--to a play or concert, or for a trip or something like that. He knows I would enjoy an experience more than a trinket. My mother still buys me clothes, and somehow always knows what size and style are right for me, even though we live three states away and only see each other a few times a year. 

The children often make things, and those are special gifts indeed. 

So, I'll leave you with a sonnet I wrote a few years back. I'm afraid I'm not all that good at sonnets, but the sentiments are genuine. 


Check out the rest of the blog hop at the link: 

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

On Christmas: A Sonnet

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On Christmas

I’m never sure which way to turn to sing
before the buzzing crowds of Christmas fans
or even if a song is best to bring
to greedy mouths and ever-grasping hands.
It overwhelms the senses, giddy yet
alarming, expansiveness abounding---
the brotherhood of credit cards and debt
the tinsel-wrapped carols resounding.
But when, at night, it gets quiet at last
and gifts are chosen, hidden till the day—
the mania, the shopping frenzy past—
I can hear it, humming my stress away.
There is a peace. I think it sounds like snow.
That peace. One gift I wish I could bestow.


 
http://weknowyourdreams.com/images/snow/snow-08.jpg

Friday, December 18, 2015


This story was originally written as part of the Mocha Memoirs Season's Readings tour. I'm proud of this short story featuring Patricia O'Neill, the resident Grinch of the Menopausal Superheroes universe. I hoped the story would find more readers than it it did, so here it is again for the Deja Vu Blog Tour

If you enjoy it, you can see more of Patricia and the other heroines in Going Through the Change. The sequel, Change of Life, is due out from Curiosity Quills in April 2016. 

O Scaly Night

Patricia hadn't planned on being alone for Christmas. It just sort of ended up that way. She'd planned on staying home for a quiet few days with Suzie, until Suzie got the strong-arm to join the rest of the clan Up East. She wasn't ready to take Patricia with her, she said, and Patricia tried to seem disappointed about that to save Suzie's feelings. In reality, she was relieved. She wasn't looking forward to the whole in-laws thing. She'd avoided it for the first fifty-eight years of her life and could happily do so for all her remaining years. Heck, she wasn't even used to being with Suzie herself yet. 

She didn't spare a thought for her own family. What remained of it was spread out and not what anyone would describe as close. In fact, some of it was downright contentious. 

Jessica was doing the newlywed Christmas with Walter, probably embarrassing the heck out of her boys with mistletoe and the whole shebang. Sure, they'd invited her to come by, but she wouldn't be going. God no. She'd rather stab herself in the eye with a fork. Same with Leonel and David, for different reasons. Things were already tense between the two of them. She definitely wasn't going to walk into that family drama. No way. No how. 

She didn't let herself think about Cindy either. It was time to let that friendship go and admit that she might never have known her best friend as well as she thought she had. Besides, Cindy never celebrated Christmas much anyway, saving her holiday energy for Chinese New Year's. 

So, here it was, nearly midnight on Christmas Eve. Patricia had tried holiday movies, one cheesy and one heartfelt, and popcorn, but it all seemed to leave a bad taste in her mouth. She eyed her phone, but the screen stayed stubbornly black. Suzie would probably try to call later, but, even if she did, Patricia knew their conversation would be stilted and awkward. If she called at all, it would be late, after the rest of the family had finally gone to bed. And Patricia had no idea what she'd say. 

Patricia looked out the window. The city of Springfield was awash in lights. Some of the buildings had done up full holiday displays and she could see the flashing reds and greens from across the river. Looking at it, she felt she had to get out. Her spacious condo suddenly felt as tight as a closet and she needed air. 

She pulled on her long coat and stepped out into the night. It wasn't supposed to snow, but the air was crisp and felt good against her skin, clean and fresh. She realized she hadn't been outside the entire day. No wonder she felt so cooped up. Indiana farmland girls like her needed a daily quota of fresh air. She got weird when she spent too much time inside. 

Shoving her hands in her pockets, she headed for the pond on the other side of the complex. There was a wooden bridge over the man-made watering hole, and it was a pleasant place to stand and look at the water, especially late at night when most of the inhabitants of the complex were sound asleep. Patricia often went there when she couldn't sleep. 

The water was very still. The fountain was turned off for the season and there was no wind to speak of. The lake was probably quite shallow, but the way the surface was reflecting the surrounding buildings and streetlights made it seem miles deep. Patricia wished she had brought some bread to toss out for the koi. The ducks and geese were already gone for the season. It might have been nice to see another living thing. 

Leaning against the railing, she turned and surveyed the buildings around her. There were five identical buildings. The condos on this side all had patios or balconies facing towards the lake. Patricia's own apartment had a big window at the end of a hall that afforded her a glimpse of the lake, but she preferred the view from the wall-sized windows in the living room overlooking the city. The lake, in her opinion, was better enjoyed up close. 

A breeze came up and Patricia let her scales rise on her neck and cheeks. Her alter ego was less sensitive to the cold than she was. Patricia hadn't quite figured out why that was, but it was helpful sometimes. She was careful to limit her transformation, though. No reason to ruin a good coat by letting her spikes come through. 

As her scales came up, her vision changed a little as well. Her lizard-eyes could see better in the night than her human ones. She spotted the man standing on the other side of the lake. She hadn't noticed him before, and, so far, it didn't look like he had spotted her. He was standing under a small tree, one of the ones that flowered white in the springtime, but was bare this time of year. He had his back to the lake and Patricia and seemed to be watching one of the apartment windows. She couldn't have explained why, but Patricia felt there was something off about the guy. She watched him more closely. 

In the space of the few minutes she watched, he began and abandoned six cigarettes. Each time he threw the half-smoked cigarette into the grass and twisted his foot on it, moving like he had made up his mind and was going to go do something. Each time, he took a step, then stopped, swung his arms back and forth a few times and retreated to the space under the tree. Patricia began to walk around the lake. She wanted to be within reach, just in case. She continued to watch him as she walked, keeping her steps light and as quiet as she could, glad that her coat was black and wouldn't show up well in the darkness. He never turned. 

By the light of his next cigarette, she was able to make out some details of his face and appearance. She made note of them, practicing better observation as they were training her to do at the Department. He was thirty-five or forty years old by her estimation. White, with dark brown or black hair, worn long enough that it stuck out in wings beneath his knit cap. He had an indeterminate beard, one that could mean he was just a few days unshaven or that he kept his facial hair at that Miami Vice level that had been so popular for a while. His coat was nice, but frayed at the cuffs and missing a few buttons, so that could mean he had fallen on harder times or just that he loved the coat and wore it even though he should be replacing it. He was broad in the shoulders, but not particularly tall. Patricia was sure that if she stood beside him, she'd tower over him by at least four inches. 

The man hadn't done anything except for seem tense and smoke some cigarettes, but Patricia still felt that he bore watching. Maybe she was just bored and looking for something to do. Or maybe there was trouble. Watching him repeat the cigarette-decision-dance two more times, she grew frustrated with waiting. Patience had never been her strong suit. 

Pulling in her scales, she walked up to the guy, being careful to crunch a few leaves along the way, so she wouldn't sneak up on him. "Can I bum a smoke?" she asked. Patricia didn't smoke, but she thought she could fake it, at least as a way to start a conversation. The man jumped. "Sorry. I didn't mean to scare you," she offered, hands spread. The man pulled out the pack of cigarettes and handed her one without comment. Patricia played with it in her fingers for a moment. "Can't sleep?" 

The man turned and looked at her then. Face to face, Patricia could see that he was tired. His eyes were red and watery and the circles under his eyes were deep enough to suggest more than one sleepless night. His eyes flicked over her quickly. Patricia was sure he had categorized her as a harmless middle aged woman, too old to flirt with and unlikely to do him damage. Little did he know. "Yeah," he finally said. 

"Which one is yours?" she asked, gesturing at the windows in front of them. "I'm across the lake, myself." She hoped it sounded like a regular nosy-neighbor kind of question.  She also hoped he had a ready answer.  He didn't. The hesitation wasn't long, but the sigh that accompanied it spoke volumes. 

"If you don't mind, I don't want to talk about it." His voice was even, though the words were clipped. Patricia didn't like the tension she saw in his jaw. 

She laid a hand on his arm. He jumped back as if she had stung him. "You sure? You seem like a man with something on his mind. I can be a good listener." Or at least she thought she could fake it long enough to figure out if someone was in danger here. 

"You got kids?" he asked. 

"Me? Hell, no." 

He laughed in a way that showed he didn't find it funny. He lit another cigarette, the last in the pack. He didn't seem to have noticed that Patricia wasn't lighting hers. "Maybe that's for the best, sometimes. Me, I got four of them. Up there." He gestured at a second story balcony just to the right of the place where they stood. 

Patricia followed his finger. She flipped up the collar just slightly to hide her cheeks and brought up her scales again. She really only wanted the night vision, but, at least so far, she couldn't get the eyes without the facial scales. She'd need to work on that some more.  Once she could see, she could see some signs of trouble. The glass door that led to the balcony was taped, as if it had been broken and hastily patched by someone without the tools or skills to do it right. A jagged impact was evident in the glass. It looked like the glass had been punched from the inside. "What happened to the door?" she asked. 

The man looked her way and Patricia took a step backwards into the shadows while she schooled her face into its normal, middle-aged woman aspect. "I think he hits them," the man said, his voice bleak as the gray afternoon had been.

"Damn." She thought it might be something like that, but she had so wanted to be wrong. She'd seen this story more than once, and not just on the evening news. She remembered her fourth stepfather, the one she'd had arrested. Her mother never forgave her for it. But even at sixteen, Patricia had no tolerance for bullies. He'd bruised her littlest sister, gripping her arm so hard it left finger marks. Of course, they both said it was "just an accident" and that he'd "been drinking" like any of that made it even remotely okay. She wasn't going to let that man hurt one of the littler kids worse before she did something about it. She wouldn't let that happen now either.  "What's the apartment number?"

"Sixteen B," he said. 

"Is he in there?"

"I think so."

"And the mother and kids?"

He shook his head. "At her mother's. They won't be back until morning."

Patricia smiled. The man gasped. "What's wrong with your face?"

Patricia smiled again, her scales filling in fully. "This is the face of justice." She took off her coat and tossed it over a nearby bench, then sat down and took off her shoes. The man just stared at her as she loped off across the lawn and jogged up the steps. 

Patricia, as drawn by Charles C. Dowd
A few second later, she was standing in front of sixteen B, listening. She could hear a television playing. Taking a moment to concentrate and focus, she brought out her full transformation. She heard the cloth ripping as her spikes came out and tore up the back of her shirt, but the top still held together well enough to keep her covered. She almost never wore anything anymore that wouldn't. Raising one taloned hand, she knocked on the door. She was tempted to joke, "Avon Calling," but she knew it was just adrenaline making her giddy.

Through the door, she heard some muffled cursing and heavy footsteps as someone moved to the door. "What do you want?" the man said as he threw the door open. Patricia didn't give him time to react to the sight of her. She place one hand on the door and one on the man's chest, flinging him back as she pushed the door open, then slamming the door closed behind her. 

The man landed on his butt in the middle of the rug. His eyes grew wide as he took in Patricia. She knew that look. She'd seen it on many different faces in the year since her transformation took place. It was part disbelief and part fear. "What are you?" The man stuttered as he crawled away and got to his hands and knees in an attempt to stand. 

Patricia leaped at him, knocking him onto his back, then standing with a heavy, taloned foot on his chest. "Me? I'm your worst nightmare. A woman who fights back."

The man tried to sit up, but she didn't give him a chance. Using the new moves she had learned in training, she rolled him over and hauled him up, tugging his arms behind his back so he was held low and awkwardly, unable to quite get his balance. She duck-walked him to the balcony door, shoving his head against the doorframe while she shoved the broken door aside. She wanted to make sure the father of these children got to see what happened here. She pushed the man so his torso fell over the railing, then let go of his arms and picked him up by his legs, so that he flailed into open air. He'd be fine if he didn't struggle too much. He tried to scream, but threw up instead. 

"You like to hit people who don't hit back, don't you?" The man didn't answer her. He just sort of groaned. She lifted him a inch or two higher. "I asked you a question."

"They made me mad," he said. Patricia nearly let him fall then, but she didn't really want to make the family deal with a corpse and the police. 

Instead, she pulled him back and let him fall into a heap on the balcony. "You know what makes me mad?" He didn't answer, though he seemed to be gathering himself for an attack. Patricia took a ready stance, just in case he really was that stupid. "Men who think that violence makes them men." Just as she'd suspected, he charged her, telegraphing his move as he clumsily got back into a crouching position, then hurling himself at her knees. She stepped aside, letting him collide with the doorframe. There was a crack. Patricia wasn't sure if it were the man or the doorframe that cracked but it didn't matter. The man was howling on the floor at her feet. 

"Come on, bud. You've got a note to write and some packing to do." 

An hour later, there was a note on the table, held down with a water glass. The handwriting was shaky, but legible. It was full of apologies, and a promise not to come back. It was a promise he'd keep. Patricia had taken his driver's license, just in case she needed to find him. 

By three o'clock, Patricia and the man she'd found by the lake had managed to patch the broken door well enough to hold for a few days. When they had locked the door and replaced the extra key in the flower pot outside, they went back down to the water's edge and stood looking at the water together. Patricia could feel the man's incredulous gaze on her, but she didn't turn to look at him. She handed him back the cigarette she had never smoked. It was still inside her coat pocket. "Merry Christmas," she said, then finished her walk around the lake and headed for home. She might have something to say to Suzie after all, if she called. 
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Wednesday, December 16, 2015

On Uncles and Holidays

My Monday Classics book club read Dylan Thomas’s A Child’s Christmas in Wales as our December selection. If you’ve not read it, you should. It’s very brief. Won’t take you long at all. I think it’s best aloud. Dylan Thomas always plays well aloud. If you wish you can even listen to him read it:
Like most things by Dylan Thomas, it is beautiful and lyric and full of made up hyphenated phrases that seem like they shouldn’t make sense, but are perfect in their descriptions.

“All the Christmases roll down towards the two-tongued sea, like a cold and headlong moon bundling down the sky that was our street; and they stop at the rim of the ice-edged, fish-freezing waves, and I plunge my hands in the snow and bring out whatever I can find. In goes my hand into that wool-white bell-tongued ball of holidays resting at the rim of the carol-singing sea, and out come Mrs. Prothero and the firemen.”

It’s heart-true, even when it doesn’t quite make sense. On reading it, I felt enveloped in holiday memories. Family parties of my own childhood, full of uncles and aunts and cousins and mischief. Thomas’s uncles, like mine, were large men, in front parlors, with new cigars or sitting in front of fires with loosened buttons.

It’s been a rough year for uncles in my family. I’ve already lost one. My husband has recently lost one, as well. Another has just been diagnosed with stage four cancer. I guess we’re to that time of life, where the giants of our youth are no longer young themselves. No matter when it comes, loss of those you love is … difficult. It’s cast a bit of a pall over my holidays. It made Thomas’s mix of sentimentality with an under-layer of sadness all the more apropos.

I’m heading home for a holiday party this year, something I haven’t done in several years. I think it will do my heart good, to sit surrounded by my uncles. I won’t be sitting among the Chinese lanterns and nibbling dates. More likely, I’ll be festooned with beer and pretzels, but my uncles will be there. And I’ll be home.

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

I Won't Be Home for Christmas, Part V.

http://www.regenthotels.com/regent/media/Berlin/berlin_panel_
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Recap--skip to the line if you already know what's happening. Today, the finale :-)

Part One: Gillian and her sons become snowbound at a hotel stop on the way to Grandma's for Christmas.

Part Two: Gillian is befriended by a set of grandparents, also stranded in holiday travel.

Part Three: Gillian and her boys go tubing with the Balfours.

Part Four: Gillian and her boys have breakfast with the Balfours. Mrs. Balfour and Gillian have a heart to heart about the state of her marriage.

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Gillian woke in the middle of the night. She sat up and rubbed her eyes, confused for a moment about where she was. She felt reassured when she saw her boys sleeping in the other bed in the room, then instantly sad again. Tomorrow was Christmas. She checked her phone for the time. Three o'clock. Make that today. Her boys were being brave and understanding about not having any gifts to open in the morning, but Gillian still took it to heart.

It compared poorly to all the other Christmases her boys had celebrated. Usually, Gillian was the one who hosted the parties. Their living room was transformed into a wash of twinkling lights and ribbons. She sent beautiful cupcakes for the teachers at school. She hadn't had the heart for it this year, nor the pocketbook. She wished now that she had stayed home and given the boys a smaller scale holiday. At least there would be gifts and a tree at their own house.

She and Phillip had always loved spoiling the boys together, each trying to make sure that their boys got to experience every joy the season had to offer. Ice skating. Caroling. Baking. Gingerbread houses. Handmade gifts. The season was true family time for them-all about bringing that spark of joy to their children's eyes any way they could.

Gillian knew she could still have done a lot of those things. They didn't all require money. But they did all require heart and hers had been broken.

She'd tried to call Phillip, just as she promised herself she would, but her three attempts had only gotten voicemail. She picked up her phone again to check now, but there were no missed calls or text messages.

Gillian stood and walked back to the window. She could see the tracks their afternoon sledding expedition had left all over the parking lot. There were gaps in the parking lot now. Travelers who were heading east had excavated their cars and continued their journeys, but the road westward had still been unsafe for travel at nightfall. They wouldn't arrive at her parents' house in time for Christmas morning now. Maybe Christmas night, if they were lucky.

Gillian leaned her forehead against the cool glass and watched the moonlight sparkle on the untouched snow on the other side of the road. She turned and looked at her boys sleeping. They both looked small and vulnerable in the king-sized bed. Even ten-year-old Steve's face, which had been looking all too adult, looked pudgy and toddler-ish squished against his pillow. Jack's arm was flung across his brother liked he'd fallen asleep tapping him on the shoulder, which he might well have done. Gillian resisted the desire to stroke their hair. Let sleeping angels rest, she reminded herself.

She shivered a little then, and decided she'd really like a cup of tea. She wrapped herself in a cardigan sweater over her pajamas, left a note for Steve just in case the boys woke, and locked them in the room and headed for the lobby. She didn't want to disturb the boys with her preparation sounds and Maxine had said she'd leave the hot water pot hooked up in case she and the boys needed to make a cup of noodles or something.

The lobby was dimly lit. Apparently the small hotel didn't leave the lights blazing all night. The little decorated tree was still lit, though and it looked pretty reflecting in the tile floor. Gillian crept into the kitchen area and flipped a lightswitch. She made herself a cup of lemon tea in one of the little tan paper cups the hotel provided.

When she turned to go back upstairs, she glanced over at the sofa area. There was someone there, lying on the couch. She looked nervously at the reception desk, debating ringing the bell and waking whoever was resting in the back room. She put her cup of tea down on the counter and circled a little nearer the sleeping person.

It was a man, a man who was a little too long to fit onto the couch fully. A man resting under a hotel blanket, which meant that the clerk must know he was there, but that he hadn't taken a room for some reason. A man who was wearing one red and one green sock on the feet that dangled off the end of the couch, just like Phillip always did on Christmas morning.

"Phillip?"

The man made a sleep-grumble sort of sound, and shifted on the couch, making the upholstery squeak.

"Phillip?" Her voice was louder this time.

He heard her. He bolted upright. "Gillian?" He stood up and rushed to her side, pulling her into a hug. She wrapped her arms around him and squeezed him back.

"What are you doing here?" she laughed.

"I couldn't stay away. I was going to meet you at your parents' house, but when I called, they told me where you were and I decided to meet you here."

"Why didn't you come upstairs?"

"I got here at two in the morning. I didn't want to wake you all up."

Gillian laughed again. "I just can't believe you're really here!"

He raised a hand to her face and rubbed at the tears that were falling there. "Ah, Gills. It's Christmas. I needed to be with my family. I needed to be with you."

They embraced for a long time after that, until both of them started to shiver a little from sock feet on tile floor.

"Come on," she said, pulling him by the hand. "Wait till the kids wake up and see what Santa brought us!"


THE END

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

I Won't Be Home for Christmas, part 4

Continuing my Christmas story. You can read the first three parts here:

Part One: In which Gillian and her sons get stranded on the way to visit Grandma for Christmas.
Part Two: In which Gillian is befriended by other stranded travelers: Louise and Henry, grandparents.
Part Three: In which Gillian accepts an offer for a four-wheeler ride to the diner with her sons.


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The whole group stopped just inside the door of the diner to stomp as much of the snow off their boots as they could. The diner was packed and a woman wearing a blue apron over a pink dress called out that there was a table in the corner. She gestured at it with the coffeepot she was carrying, then hurried to the opposite corner to pour some of the warm contents for another customer.

They were still removing and stacking their snow gear when the waitress appeared with two hot chocolates and three coffees. "I can bring some juice or milk if you want, but I thought you'd want something warm first." She sat the tray on the table and distributed the mugs in front of everyone. Henry told her she was a genius and a gem and the woman smiled broadly. Within a minute or two, she had taken everyone's orders and run off again, towards the kitchen this time.

Gillian wrapped her hands around the mug. Despite her best gloves and the woolen blanket Henry had provided, she was chilled and the coffee felt wonderful.  When she picked it up and sipped it, she found that it tasted wonderful, too.   Jack already had a hot chocolate mustache, while Steve was rather noisily sipping his cocoa by the spoonful, stirring it between each dip.

"Thank you both so much! That was just what we needed, I think."

Louise smiled. "It does clear the head, moving fast in the cold air. It did us good, too." She gripped her husband's fingers and smiled at him and Gillian felt a twinge of something a lot like sadness at the show of love between them. She ruffled Jack's hair and his smile was a reminder of how much she still had to be grateful for.

The group took a leisurely breakfast, chatting and eating, and, for once, Gillian's boys didn't seem to grow restless. They used the paper and crayons the waitress bought them and played table games like dots and hangman or drew strange scenes together.  Henry nodded at the boys. "Looks like you done right by these boys. Santa should be pretty kind to such good children." The boys beamed at the compliment, and Gillian ducked her head toward her coffee mug to hide the sudden tears that stung in the corners.

She and the boys weren't starving by any means, but neither was she going to be able to spoil them this year, not with the expense of maintaining two households to manage. Her husband's opportunity in New York had been a very good one. "Too good to pass up," he'd said. "The opportunity of a lifetime." And she had acquiesced. Seeking peace even when her heart begged her to argue, just as she always had.

When it was time to go back, Henry offered to take the boys for some extra spins around the hotel lot, "If it's okay with your mother." Gillian didn't stand a chance against the two sets of puppy eyes. She laughed and agreed, making Henry promise to come back as soon as he was tired and not let the boys keep out longer than he wanted.

Louise and Gillian waved off the boys, then went to the coffee bar in the hotel lobby.  Maxine, the front desk clerk, was there talking with a man that turned out to be her husband and the manager of the hotel. Roads eastward were opening back up, but westward, another front had dumped another
blizzard on the roads between here and Gillian's parents' house. Gillian sighed at the news, stirring her coffee with the plastic stirrer and watching the brown liquid twirl around the top.

When she looked up again, Louise was watching her. "I think I might be about to stick my foot in it," she said, "but I have to ask. Where is the boys' father?"

"New York."

"But I thought you said you guys came from Chicago."

"We did. The boys and I still live in Chicago, but my husband has been in New York for a few months now. For business."

Louise frowned. "Aren't you and the boys his business?"

Gillian felt a defensive speech rising to her lips, but bit it back down. In her heart, she felt the same way and there was no reason to try to defend this separation to this woman right now. Instead, she just nodded.

"Do you still love him?" Louise asked.

"Yes, I still do. I'm just not sure he still loves me."

"Have you told him?" Gillian was confused and it must have shown on her face. Louise went on, "I mean, have you told him recently? It can easy to forget to say it, but we all need to hear it. Faith is easy to lose if no one is reminding you of your blessings."

Gillian made a silent promise to herself to call Phillip that night after the boys fell asleep, and this time to talk about her own feelings, instead of only about the boys.

(to be continued)

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

I Won't Be Home for Christmas, Part Three

Last Christmas, I started a Christmas story. I never finished it. I'm hoping to finish it this month.

Part 1: Gillian was traveling from Chicago to visit Grandma in Oklahoma City with her two sons, Steve (10) and Jack (6), when they got snowed in at their hotel in Kansas City.

Part 2: Gillian remembers better times and meets Henry and Louise Balfour, from Colorado, on the way to Tennessee to see their own grandchildren.

And now, part three: 

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It felt good to laugh. Laughing loosened something in Gillian that she hadn't realized was tight. In the moment of the tension releasing, she could feel in her shoulders, neck and jaw how stiffly she'd been holding herself. Phillip had called her "my stress puppy" when she got herself tied up in knots like that. She missed having him rub the knots out of her neck with his thumbs. He told her she worried too much. After the emotional roller-coaster of his Halloween and Thanksgiving visits, though, she was realizing that she had plenty of reason to worry.

"I'd better get upstairs. I've got to figure out what to bundle the boys in to traverse the Arctic wasteland out there between us and the diner." She stood and held out her hand to Louise. "It was nice to meet you."

Louise shook her hand, but didn't relinquish the fingers right away afterwards. "Henry," she said, turning to give her husband a meaningful look. Louise looked at Henry, too, unable to fathom what his wife might be trying to hint at. Henry had no such trouble catching his cue and responding.

"I've got a four-wheeler and a sled. If you'll accept the offer, I'd love to give you and your children a ride."

Gillian froze for a moment. She thought it was a sweet offer, and it also scared the heck out of her. These people were strangers, and she and the boys were alone here. Four-wheeling and sledding were among those questionable sorts of activities that her mom friends back home would whisper about disapprovingly in the back of PTA meetings. They were also activities she remembered fondly from her own childhood--a safe kind of dangerous and exciting, if done right.

"I bet your boys would love it," Louise said, just a hint of Tennessee in the word love. Tennessee didn't sound that different than Oklahoma. It sounded a lot like home. "Don't you think they'd love it?"

Gillian had no doubt they would. In fact, just thinking about Steve and Jack red-faced and laughing made her shove her fears aside. After all, it was just her and the boys most of the time. There was no reason to think this was any more dangerous than any other day. The boys could use some fun, and she could use the help.

"Thank you so much!" she gushed. "When do you want us to be ready?"

They agreed to meet in half an hour and Gillian flew up the stairs, key card in hand to tell the boys.

Twenty minutes later, Gillian was standing in the lobby with two boys wearing all their snow gear over their pajamas and jeans.  They were a comedy of growing patterns. Steve's jacket sleeves were too short and his skinny forearms hung out between the sleeve and the top of his puffy gloves. He'd grown that much since last winter and, since Grandma bought him a new coat that he'd receive for Christmas, Gillian hadn't replaced his jacket yet. Jack's snowsuit, which used to belong to his brother, was so long on him that Gillian had folded the legs up twice, making an extra thick layer on her son's lower legs. He had to stand with his legs spread wide because he couldn't rest his feet next to one another.

She stood the boys in front of the hotel lobby Christmas tree and took a picture with her phone to send to Grandma. Maxine, the hotel clerk, even came around and took another one for her so she could have one of the three of them. Gillian squeezed both boys and grinned for the camera. She had to admit that she was looking forward to the ride, too.

A moment or two later, Louise and Henry pulled up on their four-wheeler. Louise was so bundled up that she was only recognizable by her hair, but Gillian knew her voice and introduced her boys to the Mr. Henry and Ms. Louise. Her boys offered gracious thank yous and stood waiting to be invited to climb aboard, though both of them were eyeing the giant innertube sled with obvious excitement.

"So, you first, Miss Gillian." Henry stood next to the innertube and held out a hand which Gillian used to balance herself as she climbed in. She took a spot in the middle back, remembering that the innertube moved better if the heaviest person sat in back. Both boys climbed in quickly and Henry helped to tuck a thick woolen blanket around them. "You all hold on tight now!" Henry said, then hurried back to the four-wheeler and climbed on.

Henry climbed back on to the four-wheeler and his wife wrapped her arms around him. He revved the engine twice, and they were off.  Gillian squealed and both her boys grinned at her as they grasped at the rubbery handles of the innertube and bounced agains the sides and each other. Mr. Henry took the long way around, driving around the hotel twice before heading across the lot to the diner. He circled the diner, too, before parking and Gillian and her boys laughed as they were flung to one side and then the other of the innertube. They were laughing so hard when they stopped that Gillian had tears in her eyes. She hadn't had that kind of fun in years.