Holiday Journey 6

Someone knocked on the door.

Mister Banks came in, followed by a police officer.  Chris went for the police officer, not that he meant to snub his landlord.

“Good. You are here about Lilly?”  He assumed as much, but the police officer looked at Mister Banks, and the landlord spoke.

“I brought the police.  I wanted a witness in case you go mad or something.  I want that offensive sign off my building immediately.  You are defacing my property in violation of your lease.  It is offensive.”

“What sign, Oh…”

“I just got out of church, and looked up and see this offensive sign, on my building. My building.”  Mister Banks turned to underline his ownership with the police officer.

“But Christmas is on Monday this year, a week from tomorrow.  It is a national holiday, on the calendar, banks are closed and everything.  What is offensive?  Are you objecting to the national holiday, or the fact that I hope everyone has a happy holiday?  I didn’t know joy was offensive.”

“Don’t play games with me,” Mister Banks yelled.  “You are defacing my property in clear violation of your lease.  I am giving you thirty-days-notice.  I want you out by the first of the year.”

“Today’s the seventeenth,” the police officer said.  “Thirty-days would be January seventeenth.”

Mister Banks pointed a finger in the police officer’s face, and continued to yell. “Now, don’t you start quibbling. Get out,” he yelled at Chris and stomped out.

“Merry Christmas,” Chris shouted after the man.

“Merry Christmas,” the police officer said quietly in return, smiled, and gently closed the door.  Chris turned around, but Mary went to the kitchen area to make another pot of coffee.

Someone knocked on the door, again.

Mary came back from the coffee pot to find a sheriff explaining the paper. “The subpoena is an order for a court appearance for Wednesday, January third, after the New Year.”

“All fine and well, but Lilly’s not here.”

“The little girl?”

“If she was here,” Mary said.  “Why couldn’t she stay here at least through Christmas?”

The sheriff shrugged.  “I got a court order to pick her up and take her to a foster home.”

“Well, I already filed a missing person report with the police.  I’m expecting someone to come from the police department to take a statement,” Chris said.  “She is just six-years-old.  I am terribly worried about her.”

“We already checked all of her friend’s apartments,” Mary said.

“And out front, in the basement and on the roof,” Chris added.  “I was about to start calling her school friends, though she did not take her coat.  Come to think of it, her pajamas are on the bed, but her clothes look undisturbed. For all I know, she is walking around naked somewhere.”

“She disappeared?”  The Sheriff wanted to be sure.

“I put her to bed last night.  I went to bed, and when I woke up, she was gone.”

“Excuse me,” the sheriff said, and stepped aside to get on his radio.  After that, he left, and Chris checked Lilly’s clothes, commented again about her walking around naked, and got on the phone. Mary kept him supplied with coffee, and every chance she had, she encouraged him, that everything would work out for the best.

Finally, someone knocked on the door…again.

The policeman arrived to take a statement, at last.  Chris told him everything, honestly; including the part about waking up in the morning and discovering the apartment decorated with decorations he did not buy.

“Someone broke into your apartment in the middle of the night and put up all these Christmas decorations.”

“Yes,” Chris said.

“Yes,” Mary echoed.

That was the only question the officer asked, before he stood.  “I think I have everything I need.  I gotta go type this up.  If you think of anything else, call the station.  You got my card.  Otherwise, we will be in touch.”

“When?” Chris asked the inevitable question.

The officer shrugged.  “We will keep our eyes and ears open.”  He held a photo of Lilly, and slipped it in his jacket pocket as he left.

Mary stepped up with another cup of coffee, and Chris asked.  “Do we have anything else to eat?”

Mary looked up at him with big, sad, puppy-dog eyes.  “I got left-over macaroni and cheese.  I’m sorry, I don’t cook much.  Back home, we have great cooks, so I never get a chance…”

He cut her off by hugging her, but before he could shut the apartment door, someone else appeared.  Courtney looked dressed to kill, her face painted to perfection.  She stood, one hand near the end of her dyed hair, which made her a red head, though she should have been blonde in the worst sense of the word.  As Chris studied the woman seriously, and for the first time, he noticed everything appeared artificial or enhanced in some way.  In fact, he could not find one thing off hand that said, “This is the way God made me”.  He felt both sorry for her and terribly repulsed by that revelation at the same time

Mary let out a little shriek.  She saw devil horns, the red painted nails as bloody claws, and the heels as cloven hooves. She shut her eyes and buried her face in Chris’ shoulder.

“And who is this?” Courtney asked in a voice that suggested ownership.

“Mary, from across the hall.  She has been helping me since Lilly went missing.”

“Missing?” Courtney did not know, which saddened Chris a little, because she seemed the only one he could think of to blame for Lilly’s disappearance.  “I heard the sheriff came and took her away.”

“And how did you hear that?” Chris asked, before he had a thought.  “You have a friend that works at the courthouse? Maybe another friend works for 9-1-1?”

“What are you implying?”  Courtney stood tall on her heels, but all Chris saw was one big heel.  He wondered why he ever cared for her.

“Not implying,” Chris said.  “You got me laid off.  You got the court to review custody.  You got the sheriff to pick her up, and right before Christmas.  I got evicted.  Is this your new sport?  Finding ways to torment me?”

“I had nothing to do with you being evicted,” Courtney defended herself, while her wide-open mouth and eyes betrayed her true intentions.

“You did not plan on Lilly disappearing,” Mary said, without lifting her head from Chris’ chest.

“Right, and God willing, she is well beyond your reach.”

“How dare you—” Courtney got that much out before Chris interrupted.

“Mary and I are going to church.  You should consider it.  I understand Father Stephano hears a great confession.”  Chris slammed the door in Courtney’s face

“Church?” Mary looked up into Chris’ face, but did not want to let go.

“Right after macaroni and cheese,” he said, and he let go.

************************

MONDAY

A Holiday Journey: Chris and Mary seek some advice and get some unexpected help.

Until Monday, Happy Reading

*

Holiday Journey 5

Chris got up in the morning, and stretched.  Sunday morning, he thought.  Maybe he should take Lilly to church.  It certainly would not hurt for him to go.

Chris opened the door to his room and paused.  His eyes grew wide.  Someone got into his apartment in the night and decorated.  He saw Christmas decorations everywhere.  He loved them, but to be honest, he imagined, Lilly will love them the most.  He first thought to blame Mary.  She had a spare key in case of an emergency.  His second thought was to wake Lilly, to show her; and he grinned, secretly, for what he felt would be a big, wonderful surprise.

Lilly was not in her bed.

“Lilly,” Chris called.  He poked his head back into the living area and shouted toward the kitchen.  “Lilly.”  It occurred to him that maybe Mary came over early, and maybe Lilly helped decorate the place.  They said they spent an hour and a half looking at decorations.  He really did not pay attention to the bags they carried, except to carry a couple, because they said they bought him a present.  He wasn’t supposed to peek.  And after decorating, maybe Mary and Lilly went out for treats.  He could not imagine how they did all this, and quietly, so he could sleep.  Then again, maybe the decorating woke him up in the end.  It did seem rather earlier than he normally got up on Sunday morning.

Chris got dressed, made some coffee, and waited as patiently as he could.  At last, he ran out of patience.  He went across the hall and knocked on Mary’s door. He waited again.  He knocked again.  Mary came to the door in her nightgown, rubbing her eyes, and Chris paused on that vision.

“Did you age five years overnight?” he asked.  Mary raised her eyebrows, looked up at him, but said nothing since she did not appear to be awake.  “I figured you for a college girl.  How old are you?”

“How old do you want me to be?” she asked softly, and somehow, the opening of her mouth to talk caused her to yawn.

“Is Lilly here?”  Chris got to the point.

“No,’ Mary said, and opened her door as if inviting him in to check.  He stepped only into the entranceway; enough to look around.  He had never actually been in Mary’s apartment before.  All he saw was Christmas.

“I see the Christmas bug got you, too.”

Mary looked down, shyly, like she did not know what to say, except she did not want to lie to him.  “Old family tradition,” she finally said, like an admission.  “Most of these decorations are like the decorations on your tree.  They are older than I am.”

Chris paused with one eye on a porcelain Santa doll, before he turned and eyed her, suspiciously.  “You weren’t there when I mentioned that to Lilly.  How did you know about the decorations for the tree being older than I am?”

Mary fidgeted, and would not look him in the eye.  “You mentioned it over supper.  Maybe Lilly mentioned it.  But what is this about Lilly being missing?”  She needed to change the subject

Chris shook his head.  “There are other kids in the building.  Maybe she is feeling better and went out to play so she would not disturb me.  There are a half-dozen kids she played with over the summer.”

“Has she done that sort of thing before?” Mary asked, “Leaving without telling you?”

“No,” Chris admitted.  “But maybe she did not want to wake me.”  He looked at Mary who returned a look of concern, anticipation, and something else Chris did not want to think about.  “I made coffee,” he said, quickly, before he said something out of line. Mary looked very attractive in her nightgown.

“I’ll get dressed and be right over,” Mary responded, and Chris watched her close her door.  He stared for a moment at the outside of the door, thinking improper thoughts, before he went into his own place and called again for Lilly.

Mary did not take long.  While she poured, and sipped some coffee, Chris noticed the window.  It looked unlocked and cracked open just a bit. That felt odd, since he never opened that window, and did not even know it could be opened.  The feeling that Lilly may have been taken in the night washed over him.  He felt very afraid for her, and got upset, imagining the worst.

Chris pushed up the window, and saw the screen in place, but for a small hole which had been cut to allow an electric wire inside.  He followed the cord to the plug before he craned his neck against the window.  Something looked lit up on the outside of the building, and it appeared to stretch the entire length of the building beneath his windows.  It looked like Christmas lights.  He went to his bedroom to see if it stopped there, or if his electric bill would have to cover the cost of something lighting up the whole outside of the building.  Mary came on his heels, coffee cup in hand, and he turned to her.

“Did you put up all these decorations?”

“No. I did not do any of the decorations in your apartment,” she said, honestly.  “Why?  Don’t you like them?”

Chris went back to the kitchen, and Mary followed.  He picked up a porcelain Santa that looked remarkably like the one he saw in Mary’s room.  “I like them well enough, but now I am seriously worried.  If you didn’t do this, who did?  I have to find Lilly.”  He headed for the door and grabbed his coat, and his phone.  Mary still followed, but offered a thought on the way out.

“I don’t think anyone who would sneak in and decorate your rooms would kidnap Lilly. I mean, Merry Christmas, and by the way, I am kidnapping your little girl doesn’t make sense.”

Chris did not answer.  He began knocking on doors, starting with Missus Minelli next door, and then where he knew the children lived, beginning with the apartment of the little girl in Lilly’s class who sometimes visited.  No one knew anything about where Lilly might be.  Chris and Mary checked the laundry room in the basement, and the roof, where the children were never supposed to go.  Chris knocked on the building manager’s door, and no surprise, no one answered.

He had a terrible thought and called the hospital, though he could not imagine medics coming in an ambulance and stealing a little girl; and without waking him.

Chris walked out of the building front door, but said to Mary, “She wouldn’t go out. Her coat is still hanging upstairs.” He walked to the side of the building, and saw the lights hanging perfectly beneath his windows.  It appeared to be a blanket of little gold and silver lights that stretched the perfect length of his apartment.  Carved out of the gold, in red and green letters, and surrounded by the gold and silver, the sign said, “Merry Christmas”.  To be fair, the main part of Chris’ heart and mind loved the sign.  Only a small part worried about his electric bill.

“It is cold out here,” Mary admitted, as she made a small snowball and tossed it to him, rather than at him.  “She wouldn’t come out here.”  Chris ignored the snow, but nodded to the cold.  They went back up to the third-floor hallway, but did not get back to Chris’ rooms before he had his phone out again to call the police.  Mary tried to say something, but Chris put her off.

“But, she is only six-years-old.”  He had to say that, several times.  Finally, the police agreed to send someone out, even if it was Sunday.  Chris hung up.

Chris looked both angry and upset.  “They say the law for minors requires a twenty-four-hour waiting period before they can do anything.  That is so stupid.  A child could be frozen to death, or abused and left for dead in some dumpster alleyway in twenty-four hours.”  He sat heavily on the couch.  “Now I am scared for her.  I thought she was with you.  She wasn’t. I thought she was with her friends. She wasn’t.  I thought she was off playing.  Again, no sign of her.”  He found a few tears, and spoke from his heart.  “I thought I could raise her.  I fought to get her.  I’m the only family she has.  She is the only family I have.”  He cried softly and briefly.  Mary found some tears, too, as she sat beside him on the couch, and surrounded his hands with her own.

“We will find her.  She will be all right.  Believe that. Why should we believe she is in trouble?”

“Um, decorations,” Chris said, as he moved his hands so he could hold Mary’s hands more securely.  “Someone came in here last night, and now Lilly is gone.  That can’t be coincidence.”

“Okay,” Mary said, and reluctantly let go of his hands to point out certain things. “So, let us look at the evidence. Everything here says love, joy to the world, peace on earth, and good will to all people.  There is no evil in any of it.  Judging by the evidence, if we believe the decorators took her, we should think only good has happened to Lilly.  We have to believe that.  Sometimes, you just have to believe.”  She touched the roof of the little table-top manger before she sat down and reached for his hands again.  Chris hesitated, before he nodded and gave her his hands; and Mary’s face lit up with her smile, like a Christmas light.  Chris smiled, too, but on the inside.

Holiday Journey 4

Chris set up the real tree right away, and got out the box of old ornaments. “Some of these ornaments are older than I am,” he admitted.  “Grandma enjoyed decorating every year.”

“I don’t remember,” Lilly admitted, sadly.

“You were very young.”  He blew the dust off one ornament, and saw how old and stained they really were. “But the amazing thing is, she put so much love into the tree, I swear it shined like the stars at night.”  Lilly wanted to put the angel on the top. Chris had to lift her.

Mary knocked, and came in with macaroni and cheese, a big jug of milk, and a whole plate of red and green iced Christmas cookies; the homemade, melt-in-your-mouth kind. They had more fun and happy laughter. Then Lilly got tired, so she got ready for bed without having to be told.

“But Uncle Chris, what are we going to do with the artificial tree?”

Chris smiled and kissed her on the forehead.  “I guess we will have to be a two-tree family.”  Lilly liked that idea, and curled up under her covers.  Chris left the door open a crack, and found Mary in the kitchen, ready to leave.  He found her crying again.  He asked what was wrong.  He wanted to hold her, but did not dare.  She left the milk and leftover macaroni and cheese in the refrigerator, and left the cookies on the counter.  Then she did something that utterly surprised Chris.  She got on her toes, kissed his cheek, and left quickly without looking back.

Chris sat by the window for a long time.  He thought about the court taking Lilly away and sticking her in some horrid foster home.  He imagined Courtney laughing at him for getting him fired and arranging for Lilly to be taken from him.  Chris had nothing left.  His parents were gone.  His brother died.  He thought he had some cousins in the east somewhere, but he never talked to them, and could not rightly remember their names other than Aunt Linda.  He loved Lilly like she was his own.  He did not want to lose her.  She was the only one he had left.  He touched his cheek where Mary kissed him, but went to bed feeling broken.

One hour later, while Chris slept, his apartment door opened slowly and quietly, and a dozen Christmas elves and one fairy came in.  The elves immediately set about decorating the whole apartment for Christmas, and filled every corner with Christmas cheer.

 

Cue: Deck the Halls

A Holiday Journey, The London Symphony Orchestra

conducted by Don Jackson.  Ó℗CD Guy Music Inc., 2001

 

The fairy went to wake Lilly, quietly.  Of course, Lilly shouted.  “Fairy.”

“Hush,” the fairy said, and surprised Lilly by coming close and hugging the girl, her little fairy arms around Lilly’s cheeks.

“Sorry,” Lilly said, softly.  “But…fairy,” Lilly added.  Lilly reached up and gently touched the Fairy’s pointed ears, but her attention stayed on the fairy’s face, which brought out her smile.  She watched carefully as the fairy fluttered back to the foot of her bed.

“Lilly,” the fairy said, in a voice that surprisingly sounded like a full-grown woman. “My name is Miss Serissa.  That is the Christmas rose, and I am your mother.”

“My mother?”  Lilly tried to keep her voice down.

Serissa fluttered to the bed and got big, which is to say, her wings disappeared, and she took the form of a full-grown woman, though honestly, one too beautiful to be an ordinary human.  Lilly gasped when Serissa spoke again.

“My baby. I have spent these last six years worried about you.  You were born human sized.  I thought you would live best as a human, in the mortal world.  I knew your father would take you to where you could be safe—away from the war.  I cried when Ricky, your father, died; and I grieved for you, but I never gave up hope that you would have a good life.  But then some of the Christmas elves found you and watched for a time.  If you were mostly human, you were where you should be. But it seems you are more like me than like your father.”

“But I am not like you.  You are a fairy.”

“And so are you,” Serissa said.  She wanted to smile, but looked hesitant.

“Seriss…” Lilly could not remember.

“You can call me Mother,” Serissa said, and Lilly jumped forward, threw her arms around the woman, and cried.  Serissa wept with her.

“Come,” Serissa said, after a good cry.  “We have to take you home, where you can get well.”

“But what about Uncle Chris?” Lilly asked, and she and Serissa both looked toward Chris’ room, though the wall blocked their view.

“First, we get little, which for us is our normal size.”  Serissa took Lilly’s hand and instantly, two fairies, one being a little, naked fairy child, hovered over the bed, their bumble-bee-like wings pumping away.  “Now, keep hold of my hand.  You have not practiced with those wings yet.”

“Yes, Mother,” Lilly said, in her regular voice, and Serissa cried again for the sheer joy Lilly expressed; but those were happy tears.

The fairies followed an elf sneaking into Chris’ room.

“Plum,” Serissa whispered sharply.  “You were told to stay out of his room.”

“Got to,” Plum said, and he went to the window where he pulled on a string. Something lit up on the outside of the building, but the fairies could not see what it was.

Serissa frowned at Plum and tapped her foot in mid-air.  “You and Roy are the worst.  You don’t listen, and you don’t follow instructions.”  She might have said more, but she got distracted when she got a good look at Chris.  “He looks so much like his brother.  But he will be all right.  I have a feeling that Merry will be there for him.”  Lilly looked up at her mother and nodded.  Serissa gave Lily another small kiss before she brought them again into the hall, gently closing the door with her wand and a touch of magic sparkles.

Lilly saw the main room then, and loved all the beautiful decorations and knick-knacks of Christmas that were everywhere.  “I feel better already,” Lilly said, not that she ever really knew what ailed her.  Serissa still held her wand and sent a small stream of sparkling lights at the window, and the window opened.  The elves escaped that way, and Serissa and Lilly only paused to speak, though it seemed to Lilly that no one remained to speak to.

“Come, our work is done,” Serissa said, and Lilly thought of Mary.

“Take care of Uncle Chris,” Lilly expressed her own thought.

“My work is not done yet,” a thought returned to them both, and Serissa smiled, knowingly, though without elf eyes, it would have been too hard for an ordinary human to see the knowing smile on her little fairy face.  Serissa and Lilly flew out the window, still holding hands, and disappeared into the night.  Mary, in her own room, cried some more.

Holiday Journey 3

In the morning, Chris and Lilly heard a knock on the door.  Mary came in, a look of concern on her face.  “I was worried about Lilly.  She struggled yesterday.”

Chris nodded.  They had kept Lilly entertained, and happy during the season so far, but both Mary and Chris knew how poorly she seemed, even if Lilly never complained.

“I’m feeling better today,” Lilly insisted.

“This will be a good day,” Chris said, trying to sound positive, though he feared it would not be his best day what with DSS and the court hovering over his shoulder.

“We are going to get a real Christmas tree,” Lilly said, in her excited voice.

“I have the weekend off,” Mary responded with a big smile, it being Saturday.  She looked at Chris.  “Maybe I could help.”  She made it a statement, but really asked if she could come.

Chris did not hesitate to nod his agreement.  “I could use the help,” he said.  And with that settled, they climbed into Chris’ pickup and went out in search of a real tree.

They drove to several places, Lilly in her car seat in the back, looking out the back window at the Christmas on the street, and Mary sitting close beside Chris, grinning the whole time.  Chris wondered what might be wrong with the girl.  She was what, twenty-one?  Perhaps not even that.  He was turning thirty, practically a father figure.  Why was the girl grinning?

They stopped at several places, but none of the trees seemed quite right. Finally, they got to the supermarket lot, and Chris excused himself to pick-up milk, bread and a few things for home.

When Chris left, Mary turned to Lilly and asked why she had such trouble picking out a tree.  The balsam fir has such a great scent.  “It smells like Christmas,” Mary said.

“I just can’t picture it,” Lilly said, looking at a blue spruce.  “I like this one.  This tree looks nice, but how will it look when it is decorated?”

Mary nodded, like she understood something.  “I think we can give some substance to what we visualize,” she said, but Lilly looked like she did not understand.  Mary found a little stick.  “Pretend you are a Christmas fairy, and this is your magic wand. Point your wand at the tree…yes, like that.”  Mary stood behind Lilly and laid her hands gently on Lilly’s shoulders.  Something sparkled, silver and gold in her touch. “Picture in your mind the way you want the tree to look, and wave your wand to make it happen.”

Something happened.  The silver and gold sparkles went out from the stick and covered the tree.  The tree lit up with lights. It had garland, ornaments, and tinsel all over it, and Lilly gasped, a delighted sound.

“I did it.  It’s beautiful.” Lilly squeaked her words.

“Hey. Save the decoration for home.” The man in the lot yelled and came running up as Lilly collapsed.  The decorations and lights returned to silver and gold sparkles and fell to the ground, like bits of ash after the fireworks.

“Lilly,” Mary caught her and held her head up.  To his credit, the man turned from the tree to concern about the little girl. Lilly turned pale, ashen white, and her skin felt clammy.

“Christopher,” Mary shouted for Chris, as Lilly fluttered her eyes open.

“I want that one,” she breathed, but did not have the strength to lift her hand and point.

Mary nodded for the man.  He picked up the tree and set it in the pickup, while Mary scooped up Lilly and opened the door to get her in her seat.  Chris came out and pulled out his keys.  He stared at his keys for a second.  He thought he locked the truck.  He overpaid the Christmas tree man and hustled.  He got out his phone, but Mary snatched it out of his hand. She dialed the doctor, and held it up for Chris to talk while he focused on his driving.

The nurse saw Lilly first.  She weighed her and measured her while she spoke.  “How old is Lilly, now?  Five?”

“She is nearly seven,” Chris said.  “First grade.”

“Oh.” The nurse seemed surprised. “Developmentally, she is on the chart for a four-year-old.”

“She behaves like she is four often enough,” Chris admitted with a face that could not decide between a frown and a smile.  Lilly tried to smile, and they sat in the examining room for a long time, waiting for the doctor.

An hour later, the doctor strongly recommended Chris take Lilly to the hospital.  The doctor wanted to keep her for a couple of days of observation, and run an MRI on Monday.

“I can’t do that,” Chris replied.  “I just lost my insurance yesterday, but I could not afford the deductible anyway. Besides, you already ran two MRIs in the last four years.  I don’t see how that is going to drastically change.  You said you don’t know what is wrong with her…”  Chris let his voice trail off.  Probably not a smart thing to say to a know-it-all doctor.  The doctor looked like he had to control his response.

“I could send the ambulance and fetch her.”

Chris shook his head.  “Nothing is going to happen in the hospital on Sunday.  Let me keep her this weekend.  I’ll bring her in Monday morning, and we can talk about it.”

The doctor said nothing.  He left the room with a look of frustration and anger.  Chris did not blame him.  Maybe Chris did not feel angry, but he certainly felt frustrated, not knowing what he could do to help Lilly.  Lilly’s condition seemed to have all the doctors stumped.  Lilly felt a bit better by then.  Her condition appeared to get better or worse without reason.  Chris dropped a hand to her shoulder, and Lilly held the hand with both of hers, looked up at him, and tried to smile again.

Chris and Lilly went out to the waiting room and saw that Mary had been crying. Chris felt shocked.  Mary always had a smile.  He felt an urge to hold her and comfort her, but stopped himself.  How could he hug this young woman without suggesting something he did not mean to suggest?  Lilly, of course, did not break her stride.  She threw her arms around Mary, and Chris decided he could add his arms around the two of them, briefly.

“I’ll be all right.  You’ll see,” Lilly said, and tried to smile.

“I am sure you will, little one,” Mary whispered in Lilly’s ear. Then she wiped her eyes and they drove home.  Mary let them go, and went into her own rooms where she wept.  Then she opened her window, as the twilight came, and she spoke softly into the air.

“It is as we feared.  She is dying, being smothered by her humanity.  It is not her natural state, I am sure.  We must rescue her.  Come quick.

Mary left the window open to let in the cold and snowy air.  She stepped into her kitchen and thought something for supper might hit the spot.

************************

MONDAY

A Holiday Journey: Lilly goes missing.

Until then, Happy Reading

*

Holiday Journey 2

Chris picked up his phone.  Mary sent him a text.  Mary lived in the apartment across the hall from his own apartment.  She became his semi-permanent babysitter over the last six months, since his mother got so sick.  Mary picked up Lilly from first grade, and they were presently in a department store downtown, looking for a Christmas present for him, so don’t hurry. Chris smiled.  He hurried, though he figured in his small Midwestern city, nothing could be that far away.

Mary seemed a godsend.  She appeared to be young.  He guessed she attended some local college, and maybe mostly took classes on-line. That, or she recently graduated and was filling the gap between graduation and a good job.  She always seemed to be available when he needed her, but he never would have noticed her if he had not broken up with his fiancé, Courtney, some six months ago; about the time his mother went into hospice.

Lilly, who he had mostly taken care of over those last couple of years when his mother got so sick, had come to live with him by the time Grandma went into hospice. Chris recalled his fights with Courtney were all about Lilly.  He depended a lot on his babysitter, Missus Minelli, at first.  When Lilly finally and permanently moved in with him, Courtney called it the last straw and broke up with him.  Mary moved in that very day.  Lilly seemed immediately drawn to Mary, and Mary volunteered to sit whenever he needed her, and without him even having to ask.  Truth be told, he felt bad about paying her minimum wage, even if he paid her under the table so she got to keep the whole amount.

“Mary.” He saw her right away.  The brisk three-block walk faded as he warmed in the ambient heat of frantic shoppers.  Mary’s smile helped—and Lilly’s hug, when Lilly ran to him.  “And what have you two been up to?” he asked, pretending innocence.

“Buying you a Christmas present, but you are not supposed to know,” Lilly said, as he set her down and took her hand.  “It’s a surprise.”

“A surprise?”  He pretended surprise, while Lilly vigorously nodded her head, before she coughed.  Chris knelt-down to hold her until the coughing fit passed.

“I’m sorry,” Mary said.  “She seems to be struggling today, but I thought a fun outing might do her some good.”

“No, it’s all right,” Chris said.  “It was a good idea.  Lilly always gets sick around Christmas, especially.”

“But maybe an hour and a half since school is enough.”

Chris shook his head, and confessed himself.  “I just got laid off, so Lilly and I will be spending lots of time home in our little apartment this Christmas.”

“I’m sorry to hear that,” Mary said, and barely held her hand back to keep from offering a physical touch to comfort him.  Lilly stopped coughing, but instead of backing out of the hug, she put both arms around Chris and returned the sentiment to him.  Even if she did not entirely understand, she knew being laid off would not be a good thing.

“No, I think maybe it was a gift.  Maybe, if the economy picks up in the new year, I can get a job that actually uses my college degree.  Who knows? I might even find a job I like.”

“It should be one that you love, no?” Mary whispered.

Chris heard, but did not answer.  Instead, he stood, kept hold of Lilly’s hand, and proposed.  “What say we go to Vincinni’s tonight?  What would you like: spaghetti or pizza?”

“And Mary?” Lilly asked with the name, and reached out with her other hand.

“And Mary,” Chris said.  “If she doesn’t have other plans…” he turned to Mary.  “If you would like.”  He did not want Mary to think he was asking her on a date.  He wanted to be sure she knew she could make an honest choice, but Lilly interrupted.

“Mary is family, too,” Lilly said.

“Like family,” Chris admitted, and he thought of Thanksgiving, and that great turkey Mary made.  She called it the first turkey she ever made, but it turned out perfect, so he found the first turkey confession hard to believe.  Still, she asked him, and Lilly to Thanksgiving supper.  She brought everything over to his apartment, turkey and all, since Lilly had a fever that morning, and lay curled up on the couch. Not exactly a date, Chris imagined. Not the same as him asking her out.

Mary looked at Chris with a look that said she would not mind being family; but he did not notice.  They walked, both holding one of Lilly’s hands, and no doubt the people who saw them thought a mom, a dad, and their little girl.

“So, what did you do for an hour and a half?” Chris asked Mary, but Lilly answered.

“We counted the decorations all up and down the street—all the beautiful trees and lights.  And we said Merry Christmas to everyone.  I love Christmas,” Lilly said.  She let out her biggest and best smile, but she felt warm, like she had a little fever even then.

 

Cue: Silver Bells

A Holiday Journey, The London Symphony Orchestra

conducted by Don Jackson.  Ó℗CD Guy Music Inc., 2001

 

After spaghetti, and lots of love and laughter, they walked home together, since Mary lived just across the hall.  Chris picked up his mail on the way and said good night to Mary, who lingered a bit before she went in to her place.  He carried a tired Lilly inside, after a last look at Mary’s door.

Mary closed the door to her rooms gently. She put her back to the door and found a small tear in her eye.

###

Chris turned on the light switch, and made sure his Christmas tree got lit. Lilly had always been a sickly child, but she always got worse during the Christmas season.  Curiously, she also drew strength during the season. The lights and treats, the trees and decorations, the hymns and songs of joy, the giving and receiving gifts of love, and wishing absolutely everyone Merry Christmas always lifted her spirit. They did not have much in the way of decorations in their little apartment, but as Chris explained to Mary, he really had a choice of buying decorations or presents, and he imagined Lilly would be better off with presents, even if they were things she needed, like clothes, and not so many things she might want, like toys.

He set the mail on the table and carried Lilly to her room, where he got out her things to dress for the night.  “Now, get ready for bed,” he told her.  “And don’t forget to brush your teeth.”

Lilly nodded, a tired nod, but had a question to ask.  “Uncle Chris, could we get a real tree this year?”

Chris paused.  He had the big box of decorations his parents put on the tree every year, so a real tree would not cost more than the tree itself.  His artificial one turned ten that year and began to show signs of age. “Maybe we can do that,” he said. “But not tonight.  Now, go get ready for bed.”

Lilly did not argue.  She felt tired, and in a way, she felt more than tired just from a long day.  She did not feel well at all, but she did not want her Uncle Chris to worry.

Chris checked the mail, and found a letter from the court.  He felt curious, but paused first to consider how Lilly came to be his sweet responsibility.

Chris’ brother, Ricky, went into the military, and served overseas in the war. Lilly’s mother, Serissa, who no one ever met, was an American service woman Ricky met at Christmas time.  Those were hard days, as Ricky wrote.  The country they were in did not allow for any Christian celebrations, so Ricky and Serissa had to celebrate on the sly.  Ricky said he lost her after the season, and did not see her again until the following Christmas, when she showed up with a three-month-old baby, Lilly.  Christopher paused in his reflections as Lilly went to brush her teeth,

After that, Serissa became lost in the war zone and was presumed dead.  Curiously, when Chris’ mother checked with the defense department to see if Serissa had family, like Lilly might have other grandparents and such, the Defense Department had no record of her as ever having served, and so they could not give Mom any information—not to say that bloated government agency knew anything.  Mom probably got transferred to the wrong department.  Anyway, Lilly came home with Ricky at one point.  No one could imagine how he worked out the paperwork for that; but then he did another tour and in the end, he came home in a box.  Dad had already passed away from heart trouble, but Mom was still alive back then. She raised Lilly until Lilly nearly turned six.  Chris helped-out as much as he could; but then Mom died suddenly at the age of sixty-three.  At twenty-nine, Chris felt devastated.  He clung to Lilly as much as she clung to him.

He opened the letter from the court.  He read and found some tears.

The court knew he became unemployed, and the Department of Social Services was suing him for custody of Lilly.  Courtney, he thought right away.  She canceled their engagement, because, in her own words, she had no intention of being wet nurse for someone else’s child.  She worked for the company, in the main office, and got him a job there back in the days when they were supposedly in love.  No doubt, she arranged for him to lose his job.  But she made a mistake.  The DSS suit got initiated before he technically got fired; not that the court would care about that technicality.  She probably figured if she waited a week, he might find another job and ruin the whole plan.

“So, what?” he mumbled.  “Does she think she can swoop back into my life once I no longer have a child to care for? Or is this just a vindictive, hateful act?”

“Uncle Chris,” Lilly called.

Chris stood, wiped his tears, and went to Lilly’s room.  He smiled his best smile, and read her a Christmas story.  She fell asleep before they got half-way through.

Holiday Journey 1

Christmas came on a Sunday that year.  The old radio played a mix of Christmas carols and Santa music.  Six-year-old Christopher Shepherd curled up on the couch and marveled at the Christmas tree.  It even smelled like Christmas—evergreen, and Turkey roasting in the kitchen.  He thought happy thoughts, and reveled in the joy of the season.  He felt the love everywhere, and wondered why he could not feel such Christmas spirit all year long.  He felt peace on earth and good will to all with whom God is well pleased.  His older brother apparently felt something quite contrary.  Nine-year-old Ricky had a new dart rifle.  He presently hid behind the Christmas tree where he could poke his head out and shoot the bad guys.  They had plenty of first person shooter video games, but they were not allowed to use them on Christmas morning before church.  Christopher did not mind.  Ricky whined.

Ricky paused in his killing spree.  His eyes got wide and his mouth temporarily opened, when one dart accidentally knocked over the framed picture of Aunt Linda that sat on the wall unit.  He quickly retrieved his dart and put the cracked picture back up, crooked.  His face looked sorry, but his mind worked fast to figure how he could pretend he did not know what happened.

Christopher preferred peace to war—love, and joy to the world, like the angels sang in the Christmas Eve service.  He felt content to sit and look at the most beautiful Christmas tree in the whole world; at least as he imagined it to be.

Mom came over to sit on the couch beside him and she put her arm gently around Christopher’s shoulder.  He smiled and snuggled.  He always smiled on Christmas day.  He normally smiled all day long, and not just for the presents and torn Christmas wrap that littered the floor.  Christmas was the best day of the year, and he wished every day could be like Christmas.

“We need to get moving,” Dad said, as he came half-way down the stairs, and spoke to his wife.

Mom nodded and stood.  “Time to get dressed for church,” she said to the boys.  “Ricky,” she added his name to be sure he heard before she went into the kitchen to check on the turkey, pausing only briefly to straighten out Aunt Linda’s picture, and frown.  Christopher got down from the couch to walk up the stairs.  Ricky put down his gun and ran, shoving Christopher out of the way to be sure he got up the stairs first.  Christopher didn’t mind.  It was Christmas.

 

Cue: Here We Come a Wassailing

A Holiday Journey, The London Symphony Orchestra

conducted by Don Jackson.  Ó℗CD Guy Music Inc., 2001

Cue: opening credits …

…               Christopher Shepherd

…               Merry

…               Plum

…               Roy

…               Lilly

…     as      Courtney/Demon

and

…      as      Santa…

“You wanted to see me Mister Potts?”  Chris stepped into the manager’s office and straightened his shirt, though he imagined he knew what Mister Potts wanted to see him about.  He had been through this before.  He knew the routine.

“Chris,” Mister Potts spoke without looking up from the papers on his desk. “The district office has been reviewing the P & L statements since the summer, and I have been told I have to pare down the staff.”

“I understand,” Chris said, but he could not help the disappointment that crept into his words. “And at Christmas time.”  It caused Mister Potts to look up.

“The company is not responsible for Christmas.  Lots of people don’t even celebrate these days.  I will give you a good recommendation, wherever you go.”

“I do try to show up on time and do my work to the best of my ability.”

“I understand,” Mister Potts said, as his face wrinkled with regret.  “I understand your mother passed away.”

“Three months ago,” Chris said.  “Cancer.” Chris held back his tears.

“I’m sorry.  Your father?” Mister Potts looked up briefly.

“Passed away almost twenty years ago.  Heart.”

Mister Potts lowered his head and shuffled his papers.  “It’s that girl of yours.  You have to call out so much.”  Chris saw the rationalization for the firing scurry across Mister Pott’s face.

“Lilly is my brother’s daughter.  Ricky was military.  He died overseas two years ago.  I guess she is my responsibility now.  We never knew her mother.”  Chris figured it was pointless, but he had to say it.  “I am all she has left.  I need to take care of her.  That is why I need this job.”

“It isn’t my decision.”  Mister Potts steeled himself.  “I’m just the bearer of bad news.  I’m sorry. Good luck.”  Mister Potts went back to his papers and would not look up again. “Your last check will be mailed to you.”

Chris knew better than to argue, and much better than to complain.  “I will be putting you down as a reference, and I thank you for putting in a good word for me.”  He turned and stepped out of the office, closed the door quietly, and breathed.

Being laid off could be a gift, he thought.  Chris sniffed and wiped the tear that came up into the corner of his eye. He thought he might get unemployment through the new year.  The company would probably fight him on the unemployment.  Still, he had some money he inherited when his mother died, though she ate most of it over the years in her reverse mortgage.  He got something from the V. A. to help support Lilly.  He dreaded the idea of going to court, if it came to that.  He knew he needed to insure Lilly had a stable home environment, or lose her, and being laid off twice in the last four years did not make for a good resume.

He did not want to think about it.  His phone buzzed.

Avalon for Free

 

 

************************

 

A Gift

 

 

 

 

Avalon, Season Five is humming along for free on the website.  The travelers keep finding new and unusual ways to get in trouble, and there always seem to be new people and creatures following them, or hunting them.

 

 

Now, all for free… that is FREE… The Pilot Episode is available on Smashwords and whatever associate sites (Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Apple, etc) which are willing to make free an option.  Amazon will also match the FREE price, if you complain loud enough that it is already free elsewhere.

 

ALSO… Also… also, The Avalon Prequel, Invasion of Memories, as well as Avalon Seasons One, Two and Three will remain in all outlets at the low price of $1.99 until the new year.  That means a low price for anyone who might enjoy a good e-read for Christmas.

Happy Thanksgiving, and at the risk of setting some people off before the season… Merry Christmas — MGK

************************

 

The Elect 11, part 2 of 4: Home

Emily was glad to be home, but terribly bored.  It was the day after Christmas and she was sick of football.  It was also two in the afternoon and she was still in her pajamas with her long slipper-socks with the pebble bottoms.  Mother had gone out to make returns, a time honored family tradition.  The rest of the family declined.  Dad opted for football with David who was still home from Thanksgiving and probably would not be deployed again until February.  Tyler also opted to stay home and spent an hour sliding around the kitchen floor in his slippers, scaring the cat.  Emily could not slide in her slipper-socks because of the no-slip bottoms.  Too bad, because sliding around the floor felt more and more like something to do as the football went on and on.ac emily pjs

“Hey!  What is this!  Wow, is this real?”  The shout came from upstairs and Emily immediately knew Tyler was into her things.  She ran.  David followed her.  Dad was not moving, except maybe by crowbar.

It was what Emily feared.  Tyler had her sword out and was swinging it around the room.

“Sorry about the lamp,” Tyler said.  He had already busted it, accidentally.

“Give me that!”  Emily yelled, but Tyler was not going to do that.  He was too busy playing Obi-Wan.  Emily ducked, caught Tyler’s hand, ripped the sword from his grip with one hand and with her other hand pushed him rudely to her bed.

“Hey!”  He never saw it coming.

“This is real,” Emily said as she looked for her sheath.  It was on the floor behind the bed.  “This is not a toy, and I’ll be taking your desk lamp in place of my broken one so screw you.”

“Can I see that?”  David stepped up.  “I’ll give it right back, I promise.”

“Where did you get it?”  Tyler wondered as he rubbed his chest.  She kind of hit him to the bed more than shoved him.

Emily pulled the sheath out from the space between the bed and the wall before she handed the weapon to David.  “I got it from a friend who is more than four hundred and seventy years old and he made it by hand so it is not only real, it is one of a kind.”

David looked at the weapon closely and made no comment on what his sister said.  Tyler laughed.  The phone rang, and Emily rushed downstairs.  “I’ll get it.”  Not that there was any danger that her dad would answer the phone.  The call was not what she expected.

ac nyc anna phone“Emily Hudson?  This is Anna Lee from New York.  We met at Latasha’s house.”

“Yes, of course,” Emily said, though she was not entirely sure which of the elect she was actually talking to.

“I have reason to believe there is a danger on its way to Columbus, if it is not already there.  I will arrive at ten tomorrow morning.  Is there a chance you can meet me at the airport?”

“Yes, of course.  Just give me the information.”  Emily wrote furiously on the pad beside the phone.  “Can I ask what exactly the danger is that you are referring to?”  Emily wrote the word vampires in big black letters on the pad.  “What?  Local police?  No, wait.  Lieutenant Reese Anthony.”  She grinned when she gave the man’s name.  “He already talked to Miriam at the FBI.  There was an incident over Thanksgiving.  I don’t know what Miriam said to him, but he let me go.  What?  No, he is the only one I know.  I never got involved with the police before Lisa.”  Emily looked up and saw David hovering over her shoulder.  “Maybe I should tell you when you get here.  Yes.  See you at ten.”  Emily hung up the phone.

David handed the sword back and said just one word.  “Vampires?”

Luckily, Emily did not have to answer as the phone rang again.  “Hello?”  It was Susan and she ac susan phonewanted to take in a movie.  Apparently, football was no respecter of persons and Susan just had to get out.

“I’m driving,” David said.  He was not going to let her escape without answering some questions.

“But that means Tyler will have to come, too,” Emily whined like Jessica.  She had learned the technique well.  David just stared at her until she squirmed.  “Better get dressed,” she said.

Susan, Emily and Lori sat in the back.  Tyler was up front with David driving.  Susan and Lori were not thrilled about Tyler being there, but they did not mind David coming along.  Emily decided she did not mind Susan, Lori and Tyler all being there.  It kept David from asking too many questions.

The movie was the latest blockbuster, not exactly a Christmas movie.  When they got to the fight scenes, Emily thought it was too fake for words, but she imagined David thought the same thing having been in combat, or near enough.  When it was over, Tyler suggested the diner across the street.  Of course, Tyler had no money with him, but that was fine.  Emily would cover for her little brother and be repaid, or as the saying went, take it out of his hide.

They stepped out of the theater together and heard the woman scream.  Emily ran in the direction of the scream and David came right on her heels.  They found Emily’s ex-boyfriend, Brad and his companions Duncan and Hoover and they had a woman backed up to the trunk of her car.  The woman had pepper spray in one hand.  Her other hand was up against her neck where she was bleeding.  There was a second woman, but she was on the ground and looked unconscious, or dead.

ab park fight 3Emily grabbed the back of Duncan’s shirt and tossed him over the hood of the pick-up, head first into the fender of a parked car.  She kicked Hoover in the stomach and hit him hard enough to send him sprawling.  The boy tripped over the woman on the ground and landed face down on the asphalt.

David shoved Brad out of the way and bent down to the woman on the ground.  He tried to check her breathing and then tried for a pulse.  He looked up at Emily and shook his head.

Emily ducked.  Duncan’s sucker punch from behind missed.  She kicked back and caught him where he would certainly feel it.  David did not duck as quickly.  Brad’s punch grazed David’s shoulder, but David was well trained by the army.  He punched Brad in the knees before he stood and landed a better punch on Brad’s face.  Emily leapt to David’s back and Hoover stopped where he was.

Tyler came to the corner of the lot followed by Susan and Lori.  “Too many people,” Brad yelled and he, Duncan and Hoover ran off into the shadows.  The woman with the pepper spray started to faint, but Emily caught her and in the process saw the two puncture wounds in her neck.  David pronounced his findings regarding the woman on the ground.ab park fight 5

“She is dead.”

“Susan, call for an ambulance!”  Emily yelled, but Susan already had her phone out and was calling.

When the ambulance came, the medics confirmed David’s diagnosis.  They put the body of the dead woman in the ambulance while they worked on the other woman.  She had lost a great deal of blood and they got her on a stretcher and hooked up to an I. V.

Naturally, Tyler’s curiosity took him straight to the back of the ambulance to look at the dead body, so he was there when the woman sat up, starving for blood.

“Help!”  Tyler got that much out as the woman went for his neck.  David moved first and yanked the woman off his brother, but she simply turned toward Susan and Lori.  Emily had her knife out by then.  She had strapped it to her ankle just in case, and she jumped.  She sank her knife deep into the dead woman’s chest and the woman stopped moving before she appeared to laugh.  Emily nodded, remembered her zombie training, pulled out her knife and promptly took the woman’s head off.  That killed her for good.

ab park fight 4Naturally, the police pulled up right then.  Lieutenant Reese Anthony came bounding out of his car, saw the beheaded woman on the ground and Emily standing there with a knife in her hand, but Emily had learned.  She cleaned her knife, even if it did not have much blood on it, and she set it down before the Lieutenant arrived and grabbed her.  He turned her roughly, though she did not resist, and he slapped handcuffs on her.

Everyone started yelling at the Lieutenant.  One of the officers with him was so startled by the crowd reaction, he pulled his gun.  Even the medics were yelling at him.  He turned away.  “Shut them up,” he said to the officers present and got out his phone.  He had to walk around the corner to hear anything.

“Hey, people.  Calm down.  It will be alright,” Emily said.

“But Emily, you should not be in cuffs.”  David was her defender, but his voice was calm and that also calmed the police.

“You saved our lives,” Lori said, emphatically.

“Yeah, that lady was trying to eat me,” Tyler added his thoughts.  He had his hand up to stop the bleeding from his own neck.  One of the medics came up, looked at it, and then took Tyler aside to work on the wound.  The other medic came up with a word for the police.

“Ever see a dead person get up and walk around?”  The police scoffed and shook their heads.  “Well, I have.”  The medic pointed to the decapitated corpse.  “Good thing she was here, whoever she is.”  He pointed at Emily and walked away.ab park fight 2

“Wait a minute,” Emily said with a smile.  She had been straining for some time, but there was a snap and she pulled her hands to her front, still cuffed, but the cuffs were separated.  One cuff had most of the chain links.  “Loose link,” Emily said with a smile.  The police looked very confused as Lieutenant Anthony came back around the corner.  He saw Emily had her hands free and shook his head.  He already had the key out.

“I should run you in for questioning in a murder,” he said as he unlocked Emily’s cuffs.  “But my boss says I am supposed to cooperate with you and your people.  He got a call from the mayor, from the FBI and from Washington.  Who the hell are you and your people?”

“Later,” Emily responded quietly.  “When we pick up Anna at the airport, she may explain.”

Lieutenant Anthony stepped back and pointed to the dead body.  “You decapitated the damn woman.  What the hell is this?”

David was the one who answered.  “Vampires.”

“Looks like an epidemic,” Emily added as she rubbed her wrists.

“Bullshit!”  Lieutenant Anthony was not buying it, but the medic returned with Tyler and ripped back the tape that held the gauze to his neck.  Tyler protested, but the medic’s words were clear.  “The woman in the ambulance is suffering severe blood loss,” he said.  “And look at this.”  He showed Tyler’s neck where there were the characteristic puncture wounds.  He put the gauze back in place as his partner called.

“Time to go.”  the partner got in the ambulance front seat.  They had a quick trip to make to the hospital.

ab park fight 1“Vampires,” one of the police officers said in a hushed voice.

“What am I supposed to do with this dead body?” Lieutenant Anthony asked, not to say he never dealt with a dead body before.  He was thinking that surely the woman had family somewhere.

“Cremation is the traditional answer,” Emily said in answer to the rhetorical question.

“Awesome!” Tyler spouted.  “Am I going to turn into a vampire?”

Emily shook her head.  “Stupid movie.”

Wizard’s Bane, a short story that crosses the fine line between Halloween and Christmas

Coriander gently lifted the sleeping child’s curly, golden locks and pulled the ancient quilt up to her chin. He tried hard not to wake her. Coriander feared earlier in the evening that his golden, three-year-old girl might be too excited to sleep, it being Christmas Eve and all. He bathed her in warm water and dressed her in her warmest flannel nightgown to protect her from the worst chills in the old, stone castle. He read her a bedtime tale about Santa and the elves, and all of the reindeer, which he remembered by name. And without any prompting, he thought, proudly. Then he kissed her goodnight and sat up in the dark to contemplate what was to come. He feared to think about it.

While he watched her sleep, his little golden haired wonder, he considered his options. He had no a caste bedroom 1friends, no family, no neighbors he could call on. No one would help him in his time of need. He exhaled a heavy sigh. He could not blame them. He was not a good man—and he knew it. But he was far better than the cruel and wicked witch who had vowed to destroy him and who even now was coming to steal his joy.

Coriander sighed when he recalled that bright Sunday morning in June when this innocent wonder that lay sleeping in his bed entered his life and changed it forever. He realized, on that day, this child was his one chance at redemption. He would love her with every shred of love that was in him, however little that might be, and he would protect this child from the cruelty of the world—the same world that taught him to be cruel. He leaned over the sleeping child and kissed that precious forehead once more before he stood and walked ever so slowly to his study.

Through all of his years, his worst enemy was the witch, Moria of Avila, a powerful sorceress filled with the most noble and magical blood and able to practice the most powerful, ancient and cruel magic. Coriander had little hope against her, but he had to try, because the witch had vowed to take the child from him. It took no prophet to know she would come on Christmas Eve in order to sting his heart in a witch 2the worst possible way and leave him bereft and alone on Christmas morning.

Coriander stepped into his study. Despite the December chill in the stones, he opened a window for fresh air. He breathed deeply several times while he contemplated exactly what he would do. He looked around the room at the walls filled with books, but there were no answers in those tomes. The tables were filled with magical equipment of all sorts, but these simple tools of the art would not stop this wicked witch. She would brush them aside like play toys.

He considered the lab where he kept his ingredients, his cauldron, and other tools to make potions, but there was no potion that would solve this problem. He knew, as he had always known, that this would come down to a battle of wills and magic, and Coriander wondered if he had the will to keep her out. He wondered whose will would prevail—who would end up with the child and who might be destroyed.a wizards study 3

Coriander shook his head before he brushed his gray streaked hair back out of his eyes. His were eyes that glowed as red as his anger, determination, fear and power that surged up from his innermost depths. Those eyes could turn a man to stone, like old Medusa, and they could pierce the armor of the strongest knight quicker and cleaner than any sword. They could set a whole forest ablaze in seconds, but would they be enough against Moria? Not likely.

He heard a commotion in the courtyard inside the castle wall and turned to the window quickly to focus his attention on what he could see. It was Moria, he was sure of it. He could sense her presence. He could smell her musky scent. He could not quite see her, but by his power, he saw the golden shield she projected against the arrows from the wall; arrows that were shot in a half-hearted manner, he noticed. That was a fault that would be corrected, assuming he survived the night.a castle

“Moria is clever,” he admitted to himself. She must have expended some power to fly over the castle wall, and now she stood at the very gate of the inner house. He hoped that expenditure would tire and drain her, but he doubted it. As he turned from the window, he did not give it another thought. He had to settle his mind and heart to focus on his work, to employ whatever magic he could contrive to stop her.

The crystal on his desk lit up with a wave of his hand. He would stop her at the gate where he had a whole squad of the undead ready to guard the door. He saw them first as they came to mind when he looked into the crystal. With a surge of the power that was within him, he animated that decaying flesha zombie guard.

Then Moria stepped into the picture, and with a wave of her own hand, there came a flash of golden light against his red magic. Thousands of worms and maggots sprayed across the steps toward the doorway, attached themselves to the undead and literally covered the zombies from head to toe. The rats that came swarming up from the cellars and dungeons in answer to Moria’s pied piper call were almost superfluous. The flesh of those zombies got stripped in a few short moments, but Coriander still smiled. Though not as strong as their flesh covered cousins, skeletons armed with swords and shields might still be sufficient to a skeleton guardkeep out the witch.

“Betsy.” The crystal in the study conveyed Moria’s word and it showed something else which made Coriander swallow hard. A massive, reptilian head came into view, and Coriander saw the fire in its snake’s eyes. It was a dragon, and in one breath, his skeletons went up like a bonfire doused in oil. That was the weakness of skeletons. They burned like kindling. In a few moments, there was no longer anything to prevent Moria’s access to the house. What is more, Coriander realized that the witch must have flown over the wall on the dragon’s back, so it cost her nothing in the way of energy. Coriander shook his head and brushed back his hair once more while he repeated his words.

“Moria is clever, and resourceful.”

He concentrated on the crystal and sent an illusion, a glamour to make the entrance hall appear to spin in an hypnotic fashion. He knew there was no hope of hypnotizing the witch, but he thought he might disorient her and perhaps cause her to get sick or pass out. There was a slim chance, he told himself, even as he sent his real spell and the room below very quickly filled with dust. The dust was not enough to notice, unless Moria looked real close. If she did, she might catch the glimpse of the faint red glow of his magic attached to each little particle. Even if she saw it, though, he imagined it would be too late. He sent enough dust to be effective, and that was all that mattered.a dragon

The front door exploded and the picture looked very real and very close. Coriander jumped back from the crystal. When he took a breath and returned to concentrate again on the crystal orb, he praised himself for his forethought. He had found a better lock. Even the witch could not simply unlock it and walk in.

Coriander watched as the dragon head butted against the door until it was no more than scrap metal. Coriander’s smile broadened. The door was fireproof too, even against dragons. Moria had to expend herself to gain entry.

He watched as she stepped in and immediately put one hand to her head. She stretched out her other hand as if trying to gain her balance. He watched as she pulled a pair of spectacles out of her bag and slipped them on. After that, she appeared to have no trouble with his illusion, and again he cursed the fact that she did not have to expend any of her energy to overcome his hard work.

a crystal ball 3“Clever and resourceful,” he shouted into the crystal.

“Coriander! Bring me Alicia!” Moria shouted back, but Coriander did not hear as he was busy mumbling.

“Stupid, despicable, horrible creature.” He kept it to a mumble because he figured there was no point in enraging the woman. “Such strength of mind and magic should not belong to such a one as this,” he said to himself, and paused. He wondered how often others had said that about him. He quickly convinced himself that he was not such a terrible man. He had no one who would help him because not one would dare lift a finger against the witch lest they too face her wrath.

He shook that thought far away as soon as his mind was settled on the lie, and he peered ever closer into the crystal. Moria was already beginning to itch and scratch herself. Good. He took a real close look and noticed, not for the first time, how stunning she was. It made him pause and wonder how one could be so gorgeous on the outside and so rotten on the inside.

“No! You will not have her,” he shouted into the crystal in response to Moria’s demand for the child, a crystal ball 2even as the first boils began to break out on Moria’s skin. Coriander kept his giggles to a minimum, but it got hard to stifle himself when a pimple appeared on Moria’s face, followed by the proverbial wart on the nose.

Moria screamed. “I’ll give you no!” A flash of brilliant golden light, strong enough to make Coriander blink and take a step back, suddenly lit up the room below. Coriander felt his knee itch. Then his cheek itched, but he refused to respond. His study remained well protected, even against his own spells cast back at him; but his chin itched all the same.

Coriander looked again into the crystal in time to see Moria cast an illusion of her own. There were three Morias in sight of the crystal, and it was a masterful glamour. He had no way of knowing which was the real one. They split up and he reached for a rendering of the castle to quickly calculate where they would have to be rejoined. “A-ha!” He shouted, grabbed a vial off one of the shelves, and raced out of his study.a castle stairs 1

They would be close, he thought, as he arrived at the spot where an upper hall met a stairway that came up from below. Moria would be close to the goal, but this should do it. He grinned. He took three giant steps back from the spot, uncorked the vial and splashed the liquid all across the floor between him and the stairs. When he was satisfied that the area was well covered, he stepped back around the bend in the hall to wait and watch. He also thought of ways to negotiate, just in case.

One of the Morias came down the hall before a different Moria reached the top of the stairs, but then the one in the hall did not stop and wait for her sister-self to catch up as Coriander had expected. It came on, and his red magic a flashed as the potion took effect. The Moria in the hall stopped, frozen like a well carved block of ice, unable to move, even the least polished pinky.a caste room 1

“Clever.” The Moria on the stairs spoke and the voice grated in Coriander’s ears, not the least because he knew he trapped the wrong one. Moria waved her arm and a touch of her golden magic revealed that the frozen Moria was only a cellar rat, temporarily transformed. It was not entirely an illusion, which was why Coriander could not tell which was real and which was the illusion. Of course, the poor rat would stay frozen in place for several hours before the spell wore off and it could return to the dungeon.

Fortunately, Coriander was not frozen in place, and he currently ran with all speed back to his study. He wracked his brain to think of something, anything! But all he could think was Moria had been cleverer. “Bring me Alicia!” He heard Moria yell. He did not answer.

In the end, there was nothing else Coriander could think to do. The study was to his left hand, but Alicia’s room was not much further along on his right. He had put her to bed in the room he sometimes used to rest from his studies. He did not want her to be far away. He had thought if she was close he would be able to protect her better, but now he wished he had secreted her away somewhere; not that Moria would not have pierced his secret. Now, there was nothing to do but wait. He gave himself little hope. He felt kind of glad that he did not have to wait very long.a castle hall 1

“Coriander. Bring me Alicia.” Moria spoke as she came around the corner.

“No.” Coriander was defiant, but Moria did not hesitate. Her golden magic poured from her hands and Coriander answered with his red magic, and barely in time, but it was enough. In this way, the witch and the wizard stood like statues. They kept each other at bay for a long time. When they stopped, it happened suddenly, as if by some unspoken agreement. Both needed to catch their breath and take a respite from the exertion, like boxers between rounds.

“Coriander.” Moria spoke again.

a witch 1“But it’s Christmas,” Coriander countered and watched carefully as the conflicting emotions ran across Moria’s face. At first, it looked like she might say she did not care if it was Samhane, Beltane and New Year’s Eve all rolled into one; but then she seemed to relent and a look of understanding flashed ever so briefly behind those eyes. Coriander got caught up by the look, but maybe he knew better. He had been fooled by that look once too often.

Moria struck again, and this time, Coriander struck right back with all of his strength. Where the red and golden magic met, there was an orange barrier. It gave off orange sparks like an arc welder at work, only these sparks were much more powerful and much more destructive. The priceless painting on the wall got burned and scratched beyond repair. The very stones in the wall smoked wherever a spark touched as if vaporized in those spots. The floor beneath their feet trembled, and the ceiling above their heads sent down streams of dust as if caught in an earthquake and in imminent danger of collapse. The witch was determined to take the child. The wizard was equally determined to keep the child, and neither made headway; and neither gave up.a magic battle

At last, the magic subsided when both witch and wizard collapsed to their knees, exhausted and worn to their last ounces of strength. Coriander then heard the squeak of the door behind him. He could do nothing about that. He no longer had the strength.

The little girl with the golden curls came out into the hall and blinked because of the bright light. She rubbed her sleepy eyes. “Has Santa come?” Coriander knew the noise would wake her, and he was not at all surprised to hear the girl’s next word. “Mommy!” The girl ran right past Coriander as if he was a slug on the floor, and she dashed into Moria’s waiting arms. The woman found strength in that wonderful hug.

a witch 3“Alicia, darling. It is time to go home.”

“But it’s Christmas.” Coriander whined. He sounded like he had a frog in his throat, like his magic had streamed out of his mouth and rubbed his vocal chords raw. Both he and Moria struggled to their feet, Moria holding tight to her precious child.

“You agreed to every other weekend.” Moria spoke in a voice as uncertain as Coriander’s. “You pull a stunt like this again and I’ll see you get no weekends.” Coriander looked ready to speak, so Moria added, “I’ll get a restraining order!”

“But mommy, it’s Christmas.” Alicia mouthed the words she had heard. “Mommy, I’m cold. Can I have some hot chocolate?”a girl

Moria looked up, but Coriander merely shrugged so Moria spoke. “Of course, sweetie. I’ll make it.”

“Oh, so you don’t trust me?” Coriander spoke at last.

Moria turned and started toward the kitchen. Coriander expected her to say something nasty and cutting in response to his remark, but she said nothing. Maybe she was too tired, and anyway, Alicia aChristmas starspoke into the silence.

“Daddy,” she said, and she held out her little hand and looked at him with those great big eyes. Coriander felt obliged to shut his mouth. He lowered his own eyes and came up close so those little fingers could wrap around his big finger and she could drag him along with them.a christmas star

They say that Christmas is the most magical time of year, but when it is combined with the heart of a little girl with a golden curl, well, there is no greater magic in all the universe.

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Beginning Monday, look for The Elect: Freshman Year, posted as a serialized novel:

The elect are one in a million, maybe one in ten million. They are women chosen at birth and empowered from ancient days by the goddess of old, originally, to protect and defend the home when the men went away, to hunt or to war. Emily Hudson is an elect who has no idea how gifted she is until she arrives at New Jersey State University, in Trenton, and meets another elect—a police Detective, Lisa. Together they find a third elect, Latasha, a high school freshman, and realize that three elect in the same community, maybe even three in the same state, defies all odds. There are not very many elect in the whole world. Then again, maybe three together is by some divine design, because there are things going on in Trenton and around the university which will take every gift they have to give, and then some.

This is a serialized novel, to use the classic term, but neatly divided into “episodes” like a television show. It is jam packed and fast paced to where I have been accused of squeezing three seasons worth of material into a single season. The emphasis is on dialogue and relationships, with enough showing, but a fair amount of telling which on film would be showing…so don’t write and complain about the telling, please. Also, there are quite a number of characters, but again, you must imagine them on film where they would be easier to remember by matching a face with a name. All you really need to remember are the three elect, Emily with her college friends, Detective Lisa, and the local girl, Latasha. Everyone else is either family (mom, dad, brother), friend, co-worker (detective, police officer, teacher) or antagonist of some sort. Oh, and then there is Heinrich…e NJSU 1

The pilot episode will post the first two weeks in November 2015, M, T, W and Th of next week, and then M, T, W and Th of next week. After that, each of the 22 episodes will post weekly (M, T, W and Th) over the next 22 weeks. If you wait until Thursday, you will find all posts for the given episode on the right side of the blog under “recent posts”, plus the last post of the previous episode to help set things in context. Some might want to wait until Friday, or even the weekend to read the whole episode at once. That is fine.

If you miss an episode, or find your way to this story somewhere in the middle, feel free to click on the archives button and select November, 2015. The pilot episode begins it all at the beginning of November 2015. Happy reading. Lets see how good your visualization skills really are.