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Mistletoe
Wish
By
Christine DePetrillo
To anyone who’s ever been afraid
to ask Santa for something really
special…
Chapter One
She had just one wish
for the holidays. That wish involved a remote for the Universe in which she
could fast forward directly through this damn holiday.
Most
Wonderful Time of the Year?
Bleck.
“More like Most
Miserable Time of the Year,” Katherine Graves grumbled as she waited in a long
line of cars all dying to get out of the overstuffed parking lot at Seafield
Crossings. She’d had to elbow through an ocean of shoppers to finish buying
gifts for her parents and sisters who weren’t even going to be around for
Christmas. They’d all decided to go on a Caribbean cruise for the holiday. Of
course Kat had been invited to join them, but she’d be the only single person.
The only one without a spouse.
The only one who was
apparently unmarriable.
Her parents had been
happily hitched for a million years, and her two sisters—both younger, gasp—had tied the knot in a lavish
double ceremony three years ago. Their husbands were romance novel gorgeous and
doted on Jessi and Ariana as if they were royalty. It was cute at first, but it
got sickening real quick. Kat swore she had an allergy to seeing such
lovey-doveyness.
So while her entire family
was off sunbathing on a white sand beach, she was freezing her ass off in Rhode
Island and battling aggressive shoppers hungry for a deal.
“This is what you get
for waiting until December 23rd, dummy.” Kat squeezed the steering
wheel of her little purple Mazda and growled in frustration over the lack of
movement in traffic. She swore she’d spent at least forty years creeping toward
the shopping center’s exit and it still didn’t seem any closer.
She flicked on the
radio, but quickly snapped it off when “The Twelve Days of Christmas” blared
through the car’s speakers. She needed twelve days of adult beverages just to
make it past Christmas. With a mountain of snow forecasted, empty shelves at
the grocery store, and her tiny house where she’d spend the holiday completely,
utterly alone, this was definitely shaping up to be the Worst Christmas Ever.
Kat’s cell phone chimed
in her purse, and she reached over her purchases to locate her handbag. After
digging past her wallet, a half-eaten package of gummy bears, peppermint lip
gloss, and something sort of sticky, her fingers closed around the phone. She
yanked it out and glanced at the screen.
“Hey, Dad.”
“Hiya, Kitty Kat. Where
are you?”
I’m
imprisoned in a never-ending parade of cars. Send food.
“Just leaving Seafield
Crossings,” she said instead.
“Bet you regret that
decision.” Her father chuckled.
“You’re a mind reader,
Dad.” She rolled her eyes up to the ceiling of the car, noted a piece of red
lint stuck there, picked it off, and tossed it down by her feet. These were the
things you noticed when you were trapped in your vehicle with no end in sight.
“Did you buy me
something wonderful?” Her father was always like a kid around the holidays.
He’d don the Santa hat, pass out candy canes to absolutely everyone, and
decorate the lawn in a Walt Disney World fashion. There were lights, music, and
last year he even added a snowman who recited ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas
whenever you crossed its path. It was all pretty tacky, but seeing how
delighted it made her father always made Kat smile. Her mother had to use every
tactic available to get the man to go away at this time of year. Maybe Kat
would go by the house to see the set-up he had on a timer while he was gone.
If
you ever get out of this abominable parking lot…
“I got exactly what Mom
told me to get you,” she said.
“The cordless
reciprocating saw with the forty different blades?” Her father’s voice had
risen in excitement.
“No, the fifteen piece
stainless steel cookware set. You know, for all those dinners you’re going to
cook now that you’re retired.” She threw a look over her shoulder at the
reciprocating saw box in the back seat and grinned. Teasing Dad was one of the
small joys in life.
Her father whined into
the phone. “Aw, c’mon, Kat. I don’t want pots and pans.”
“We’ll have to let
Santa decide then. Something tells me there’s a black mark next to your name.”
Her father laughed, and
suddenly Kat wished she’d gone on that stupid cruise. What was she going to do
all alone over the next few days?
“I’ve been a perfect
angel. You can even ask your mother.”
Kat heard the phone
change hands then her mother said, “He actually has been an angel, Kat. I think
the drinks with little umbrellas are doing wonders for him.”
Her parents sounded
so…so happy. Why couldn’t she be like that?
“Are you having a good
time?” she asked. Stupid question.
“The best. Wish you
were here, Katnip. You should have come. There are a lot, and I mean a lot, of nice looking young men on this
cruise. I showed your picture to one of them last night, and he said you were
the most beautiful woman he’d ever seen. He liked that you were a school social
worker too. Should I give him your number?”
Oh,
good God. Her mother was not
scoping out potential mates for her in the Caribbean, was she?
“Kat?”
“Yeah?”
“Yeah, give him your
number?”
“Umm, no, Mom. Please
don’t.” If she started going out with guys her mother had hand selected for
her, she’d have to do something drastic.
Like drink poison.
“He’s awfully cute. I
saw him by the pool this morning, and you should have seen the abs on him.” Her
mother whistled.
“Still, I’ll pass.
Thanks.” Kat popped a red gummy bear into her mouth and imagined it screaming
for mercy as her molars pulverized it. Why did she want to be that gummy bear
right now?
“Okay. Your call, sweetie.
Oops. Your father and the rest of the family are dragging fingers across their
necks telling me to cut this short. We’ll call you again on Christmas morning.
Bye-bye, Katnip.”
Her mother was gone
before she had a chance to say good-bye. Kat shut off her phone and dropped it
back into her handbag, stealing another gummy bear in the process. Could a
person survive on nothing but gummy bears? Looking ahead at the motionless
traffic, she thought she just might get an answer to that question today.
Then, miraculously, it
happened.
The car in front of her
rolled ahead a whole fifty feet! Kat let up on the brake and closed the
distance.
Ah,
sweet victory.
It felt amazing to move
even that small distance. She hunted for another gummy bear, craving an orange
one this time, when...
BANG!
Kat jolted forward when
the nose of the car behind her slammed into her back bumper.
“Son of a bitch!”
Her eyes immediately went
to the rearview mirror. What kind of a moron would hit her in barely moving
traffic? Unfortunately, the driver in the car behind her was looking down to
his lap, a ball cap covering his head.
Stupid
punk. He was probably texting his parole officer.
She threw her car into
park and nearly kicked open her door. She marched to the car behind her, ready
to use every foul word she knew. It was damn frosty out and snowflakes were
already falling. She just wanted to get the hell home and put on her pajamas,
but now she’d have to call the cops and go through all the nonsense involved when
some ignorant ass hit your car.
Happy
Friggin’ Holiday.
The other driver opened
his door, and when he stepped out of the car, Kat skidded to a stop, her black
boots sliding a bit on the wet road.
“Kat? Kat Graves?” He
smiled, and Kat remembered everything that came with that smile.
Join me tomorrow to read Chapter Two!
Buy my other holiday stories, Midnight Mistetoe and In the Nick of Time at www.christinedepetrillo.weebly.com
Toodles,
Chris
5 comments:
WELL, now, isn't this a humdinger of a chapter-ending hook? I'll be holding my breath until tomorrow. Can't wait to read your next chapter. Good job!
Love the line - texting his parole officer. In fact love the whole thing. Especially the, well, humdinger of a hook. Nice work!
A fun story! I'm ready for the next installment.
Thanks, ladies! I was sitting in that exact traffic just last week! LOL.
Go, Chris. I love a heroine with a bad attitude. And you have to love a mom who checks out the abs at the pool. LOL
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