- John Grisham
- Skipping Christmas
- Skipping_Christmas_split_011.html
Skipping Christmas
Ten
Luther suggested dinner at Angelo’s,
their favorite Italian place. It was on the ground floor of an old
building downtown, far away from the hordes at the malls and
shopping centers, five blocks from the parade route. It was a good
night to be away from Hemlock.
They ordered salad with light dressing
and pasta with tomato sauce, no meat, no wine, no bread. Nora had
tanned for the seventh time, Luther for the tenth, and as they
sipped their sparkling water they admired their weathered looks and
chuckled at all the pale faces around them. One of Luther’s
grandmothers had been half-Italian, and his Mediterranean genes
were proving quite conducive to tanning. He was several shades
darker than Nora, and his friends were noticing. He couldn’t have
cared less. By now, everybody knew they were headed for the
islands.
“It’s starting now,” Nora said,
looking at her watch.
Luther looked at his. Seven
P.M.
The Christmas parade was launched
every year from Veteran’s Park, in midtown. With floats and fire
trucks and marching bands, it never changed. Santa always brought
up the rear in a sleigh built by the Rotarians and escorted by
eight fat Shriners on mini-bikes. The parade looped through the
west side and came close to Hemlock. Every year for the past
eighteen, the Kranks and their neighbors had camped along the
parade route and made an event out of it. It was a festive evening,
one Luther and Nora wished to avoid this year.
Hemlock would be wild with kids and
carolers and who knew what else. Probably bicycle gangs chanting
“Free Frosty” and little terrorists planting signs on their front
lawn.
“How was the firm’s Christmas dinner?”
Nora asked.
“Sounded like the usual. Same room,
same waiters, same tenderloin, same soufflé. Slader said Stanley
got drunk as a skunk during cocktails.”
“I’ve never seen him sober during
cocktails.”
“He made the same speech-great effort,
billings up, we’ll knock ‘em dead next year, Wiley & Beck is
Family, thanks to all. That sort of stuff. I’m glad we missed
it.”
“Anybody else skip it?”
“Slader said Maupin from auditing was
a no-show.”
“I wonder what Jayne
wore?”
“I’ll ask Slader. I’m sure he took
notes.”
Their salads arrived and they gawked
at the baby spinach like famine refugees. But they slowly and
properly applied the dressing, a little salt and pepper, then began
eating as if they were completely disinterested in
food.
The Island Princess served nonstop
food. Luther planned to eat until he popped.
At a table not far away, a pretty
young lady with dark hair was eating with her date. Nora saw her
and laid down her fork.
“Do you think she’s okay, Luther?”
Luther glanced around the room and said, “Who?”
“Blair.”
He finished chewing and pondered the
question that she now asked only three times a day. “She’s fine,
Nora. She’s having a great time.”
“Is she safe?” Another standard
question, posed as if Luther should know for certain whether their
daughter was safe or not at that precise moment.
“The Peace Corps hasn’t lost a
volunteer in thirty years. Yes, trust me, they’re very careful,
Nora. Now eat.”
She pushed her greens around, took a
bite, lost interest. Luther wiped his plate clean and honed in on
hers. “You gonna eat that?” he asked.
She swapped plates, and in a flash
Luther had cleaned the second one. The pasta arrived and she
guarded her bowl. After a few measured bites, she stopped suddenly,
her fork halfway to her face. Then she laid it down again and said,
“I forgot.”
Luther was chewing with a vengeance.
“What is it?” Her face was stricken with terror.
“What is it, Nora?” he repeated,
swallowing hard.
“Don’t those judges come around after
the parade?”
Then it hit Luther too. He retired his
fork for a moment, sipped water, gazed painfully at nothing in the
distance. Yes, indeed, it was true.
After the parade, a committee from
Parks and Rec toured the neighborhoods on a float pulled by a John
Deere tractor and examined the level of Christmas spirit. They gave
individual awards in various categories-Original Design, Festive
Lighting, etc. And they handed out an award to the street with the
best decorations. Hemlock had won the blue ribbon
twice.
The year before, Hemlock had placed
second, primarily because, according to the gossip on the street,
two of the forty-two homes had not put up a Frosty. Boxwood Lane
three blocks north had come from nowhere with a dazzling row of
candy canes-Candy Cane Lane it described itself-and took away
Hemlock’s award. Frohmeyer circulated memos for a
month.
Dinner, now ruined, came to a
standstill as they picked through their pasta and killed as much
time as possible. Two long cups of decaf. When Angelo’s was empty,
Luther paid the bill and they drove home, slowly.
Sure enough, Hemlock lost again.
Luther fetched the Gazette in the semidarkness, and was horrified
with the front page of Metro. The award winners were listed-Cherry
Avenue first, Boxwood Lane second, Stanton third. Trogdon across
the street with more than fourteen thousand lights finished fourth
in Festive Lighting.
In the center of the page was a large
color photo of the Krank home, taken at some distance. Luther
studied it intently and tried to determine the angle. The
photographer had shot down and at a wide angle, sort of an aerial
view.
Next door, the Becker house positively
glowed with a blinding display of lights. On the other side, the
Kerrs’ house and lawn were perfectly lined with alternating reds
and greens, thousands of them by now.
The Krank home was dark.
To the east, the Frohmeyers’,
Nugents’, and Galdys’ could be seen, all glowing warmly, all with
their Frostys sitting snugly on the roofs. To the west, the Dents’,
Sloanes’, and Bellingtons’ all radiated Christmas
splendor.
The Krank home was very
dark.
“Scheel,” Luther grumbled to himself.
The photo was taken from directly across the street. Walt Scheel
had allowed the photographer to climb onto the roof of his
two-story house and shoot down with a wide lens. Probably had the
whole street egging him on.
Under the photo was a brief story.
Headlined “SKIPPING CHRISTMAS, it read:
The home of Mr. and Mrs. Luther Krank
is rather dark this Christmas. While the rest of their neighbors on
Hemlock Street are decorating and busily preparing for Santa, the
Kranks are skipping Christmas and preparing for a cruise, according
to unnamed sources. No tree, no lights, and no Frosty up on the
roof, the only house on Hemlock to keep Frosty hidden in the
basement. (Hemlock, a frequent winner in the Gazette’s street
decoration contest, finished a disappointing sixth this year.) “I
hope they’re satisfied now,” complained one unidentified neighbor.
“A rotten display of selfishness,” said another.
If Luther’d had a machine gun, he
would’ve bolted outside and commenced spraying houses.
Instead he sat for a long time with a
knot in his stomach and tried to convince himself that this too
would pass. Just four days until they left, and when they came back
all those damned Frostys would be stored away, the lights and trees
would be gone. The bills would start flooding in, and perhaps then
all his wonderful neighbors would be more sympathetic.
He flipped through the newspaper but
his concentration was shot. Finally, Luther found his resolve,
gritted his teeth, and took the bad news to his wife.
“What a horrible way to wake up,” Nora
said as she tried to focus on the photo in the newspaper. She
rubbed her eyes and squinted.
“That jerk Scheel allowed the
photographer to get on his roof,” Luther said.
“Are you sure?”
“Of course I’m sure. Look at the
picture.”
She was trying. Then she found her
focus and read the story. She gasped at “. . . rotten display of
selfishness.”
“Who said that?” she
demanded.
“Either Scheel or Frohmeyer. Who
knows. I’m in the shower.”
“How dare they!” Nora said, still
gawking at the photo.
Atta girl, thought Luther. Get mad.
Stiffen your back. Just four days to go-we’re not collapsing
now.
That night, after dinner and an effort
at television, Luther decided to take a walk. He bundled up and
wrapped a wool scarf around his neck; it was below freezing outside
with a chance of snow. He and Nora had bought one of the first
homes on Hemlock; damned if he’d be forced to hide inside. This was
his street, his neighborhood, his friends. One day soon this little
episode would be forgotten.
Luther ambled along, hands stuck deep
in his pockets, cold air invigorating his lungs.
He made it to the far end, to the
intersection of Moss Point, before Spike Frohmeyer picked up his
trail and caught him on a skateboard. “Hi, Mr. Krank,” he said as
he rolled to a stop.
“Well hello, Spike.”
“What brings you out?”
“Just taking a little
walk.”
“Enjoying the Christmas
decorations?”
“Of course. What brings you
out?”
“Just watching the street,” Spike
said, then looked around as if an invasion were
imminent.
“What’s Santa gonna bring
you?”
Spike smiled and pondered for a
second. “Not sure, but probably a Gameboy and a hockey stick and a
set of drums.”
“Quite a haul.”
“Course I don’t really believe
anymore, you know. But Mike’s just five so we still
pretend.”
“Sure.”
“Gotta go. Merry
Christmas.”
“Merry Christmas to you, Spike,”
Luther said, uttering the forbidden greeting for what he hoped was
the first and last time of the season. Spike disappeared down
Hemlock, no doubt racing home to report to his father that Mr.
Krank was out of his house and loose on the sidewalk.
Luther stopped in front of the
Trogdons’ spectacle-more than fourteen thousand lights draped over
trees and shrubs and windows and porch columns. Up on the roof with
Frosty was Santa and his reindeer-Rudolph of course with a bright,
flashing nose-all perfectly outlined with white lights. The roof
itself was lined with two rows of red and green, blinking
alternatively. The chimney was flashing too-hundreds of blue lights
pulsating at once and casting an eerie glow over old Frosty. Along
the holly bushes next to the house a squad of tin soldiers stood
guard, each as tall as a human and wrapped with multicolored
lights. In the center of the lawn was a handsome Nativity scene,
complete with real hay bales and a goat whose tail went up and
down.
Quite a show.
Luther heard something, a ladder
falling in the garage next to the Trogdons’. The garage door was up
and through the shadows he saw Walt Scheel wrestling with yet
another strand of lights. He walked over and caught Walt off guard.
“Evening, Walt,” he said pleasantly.
“Well, if it isn’t ole Scrooge
himself,” Walt said with a forced smile. They shook hands and each
tried to think of something cutting and witty. Luther took a step
back, looked up, and said, “How’d that photographer get up
there?”
“Which photographer?”
“The one from the
Gazette.”
“Oh, that one.”
“Yes, that one.”
“He climbed up.”
“No kidding. Why’d you let
him?”
“I don’t know. Said he wanted to get
the whole street.”
Luther snorted and waved it off. “I’m
a little surprised at you, Walt,” he said, though he wasn’t
surprised at all. For eleven years they’d been cordial an the
surface, neither wanting an outright feud. But Luther didn’t like
Walt for his snobbery and one-upmanship. And Walt didn’t care for
Luther because he’d suspected for years that their salaries were
almost equal.
“And I’m a little surprised at you,”
Walt said, but neither neighbor was surprised at all.
“I think you have a light out over
there,” Luther said, pointing to a shrub wrapped with a hundred
lights.
“I’ll get right on it.”
“See you,” Luther said, walking
away.
“Merry Christmas,” Walt called after
him.
“Yeah, yeah.”