For the past twenty years, James’
dad had volunteered to play Santa for the children’s holiday party at the Civic
Center. When George passed away, the guys at the firehouse asked—begged—James
to take his dad’s place. He hadn’t given them his answer and the party was a
week away.
Josie and Mark were home for the
semester break. We hadn’t told them about the letter. In fact, we hadn’t talked
about it since we came home that devastating day three weeks ago. I was
decorating the tree when the phone rang.
Several minutes later, Mark walked
into the family room with a puzzled expression. “That was Steve at the
firehouse. He needs to know if Dad is taking Grandpa’s place as Santa this
year.”
“He has to,” Josie said as she
handed me one of the sequined ornaments my mother-in-law made. “It’s our family
tradition.”
“Yeah, that’s what I said to Dad
and he bit my head off.” Mark fisted his hands on his hips. “He said you threw
out the Santa suit.”
“What?” Josie dropped the
Shrinky-Dink ornament she’d made in second grade. “Mo-ther. How could you?”
Oh,
right. Blame me. James and I were going to have that talk a lot sooner than
planned. Whether he wanted to or not.
“Your father is mistaken,” I said
with extreme patience. “I had to repack the Santa suit in another box. It’s out
in the garage.” Hidden among the myriad boxes and furniture from my in-laws’
house.
Once James got motivated—his anger toward
his parents had one positive effect—in three weeks we’d emptied the house, had
the estate sale, hired a cleaning crew, and put the house on the market. Thanks
to staging the house for Christmas, it sold yesterday.
One of our problems solved. Now
onto the next one. Getting James into the Christmas spirit. He didn’t want
anything to do with it. He hid in his office watching football while I
decorated our house.
Before I could warn the kids to
leave their dad alone, they both rushed downstairs to his “man cave” aka his
office.
“Dad, Dad,” they hollered.
“You can be Santa,” Josie yelled.
“Mom said the Santa suit wasn’t thrown away.”
“Yeah, Dad. The suit’s in the
garage,” Mark added.
Seconds later James tromped up the
basement stairs. He went straight to the front closet and yanked out our
jackets so hard the hangars clattered on the floor. The kids followed,
bewilderment on their faces. When he threw my jacket at me, the two gave each
other wary looks.
“We need to talk, Megan.” He
frog-marched me out to the deck, slamming the slider behind us.
I slipped on the snow-covered deck
and had to grab the railing instead of James who was already halfway down the
steps. When I pulled on my jacket, I saw Josie and Mark staring through the
glass door. I held up a finger and smiled. Everything’s
fine. Mom will handle this.
When I reached the bottom of the
stairs, James grabbed my arm and trudged through the snow. Real considerate, my
husband. He had on boots. I wore my fuzzy Yoda slippers.
As soon as we got to the edge of
the woods, he whirled me around. “I told you to throw out that damn Santa
suit.”
“Yeah? Well, I don’t have to listen
to you. That suit is part of your family tradition.”
“Obviously, not my family.”
His sneer made me so mad all my
pent up anxiety over his anger at his father exploded. I slugged him in the
jaw. He reeled backward and landed in the snow.
I shook my hand. Damn, that hurt.
“You are a jerk.”
After I pounced on him, I grabbed a
handful of snow to soothe my swelling hand.
As Josie and Mark came running
outside, without coats, I had a better idea of what to do with the snow in my
hand. I smushed it into James’ face.
“Mom? Dad? What’s going on?” Josie
cried.
“This means war.” Jamie rolled me
over and shoved snow down the front of my open jacket, into my V-neck Doctor
Who T-shirt with a wreath on the front of the TARDIS. I never even saw him
scoop up the wet stuff.
I squealed and tried to get up. He
snagged my ankle, making me fall facedown into the snow.
Mark ran up and stood over us.
“Have you two lost your mind?”
I glanced at Jamie. A twinkle
glinted in his eyes. I knew what that meant. As I scooped up some snow, he
helped me to my feet. We each let go of a snowball. Our mental telepathy was
dead on. He got Mark in the chest while mine hit Josie’s arm.
Ten minutes later, we were all
laughing as we tromped up the deck stairs. We probably should have gone in
through the garage and shaken off the snow. Jamie took my wet jacket into the
half bath and returned with a towel. Instead of throwing it at me, he gently
rubbed my wet hair before making me sit at the kitchen island while he rubbed
my even wetter feet.
“What were you so mad about?” That
was our Josie. No keeping things inside for her. “Dad? Why did you drag Mom
outside?” Then she aimed her narrowed eyes at me. “I can’t believe you hit him.”
That sobered everyone.
“Your mother and I need to talk.”
Jamie took my hand, gave it a gentle squeeze, then led me into our bedroom.
After he closed the door, he leaned back against it. “You were right. I was
being a jerk earlier. I’m sorry, but I—”
“Don’t go spoiling a good apology
by trying to justify it.” I sat on his mother’s cedar chest at the foot of our
bed. “It is time we talked.”
After crossing his arms, he pursed
his lips the way he always did that meant he wasn’t going to like what I had to
say but would listen.
“I kept the Santa suit for Mark. You
had no right to take that away from him. He loved your dad.” When James started
to speak, I held up my hand. “George was your dad. He was Josie and Mark’s
grandfather. By his actions, he proved he was a better father than you are.”
He snapped his head up so fast it
hit the door. “What the hell—”
“You’re a great father because
those children we’ve just scared half to death are your own flesh and blood.
George was a great father when he didn’t have to be. He didn’t have to marry
your mother. He did so because he loved her. And he loved you because you were
part of her. Do not take away our children’s heritage because of your pity
party.” I walked toward him. “Now please move so I can go out there and
reassure Josie and Mark that we’re not getting a divorce.”
“Divorce? Who said anything—”
“Think about how you’ve been
acting.”
I told the kids their dad was still
having a hard time losing Grandpa. And that I would call Steve at the firehouse
and tell them to get someone else to play Santa this year.
“No,” Mark said. “I want to do it.
It’s our family tradition. If Dad doesn’t want to play Santa, I will.”
On Saturday morning, I offered to
help Mark with Santa’s beard, mustache, and wig.
He gave me an odd look. “Thanks,
Mom. Josie said she’d help me.”
I was arranging the nativity set on
the mantle when “Santa” came up behind me. In the mirror, I could see Josie had
done a great job helping Mark with the whole shebang. But then he put his arms
around me and said, “Have you been a good girl this year, little Meggie?”
That wasn’t Mark’s voice nor Mark’s
arms.
Oh my gosh. “Jamie?”
He shook his finger at me. “Why
aren’t you dressed, Mrs. Claus?”
“Yeah, Mom. How come you aren’t
dressed?” Mark smirked. He and Josie were clad in elf costumes.
“I don’t understand?”
“Here, Mom.” Josie held out a red
and white costume.
Jamie clasped my shoulders. “I
thought about what you said. I won’t muck up my apology this time. This was
Dad’s.” He waved his hand over the Santa suit. “I thought it was time we made our
own family tradition.”
That afternoon, we all rode the fire
truck to the Civic Center. Mark and Josie stood on either side of us. I held Santa’s hand as he “Ho-ho-ho’d” and waved to
those along the way. Jamie didn’t look the way his dad had in the Santa suit.
He looked even better.
Come back tomorrow to read Margo Hoornstra's story, Santa's Second Chance.
Diane Burton writes science fiction
romance and romantic suspense. "The Santa Tradition" is her second short story since
high school, *mumble* years ago. Read about Diane’s books at her
website: http://www.dianeburton.com/
18 comments:
Uh-huh. I knew Jamie had it in him. He just needed a little wifely guidance. Thanks for the cheery happy ending. Merry Christmas. I'll do my best to carry on the tradition.
I'm looking forward to your story tomorrow, Margo.
OH, I love, love, LOVE this! I did not expect that punch in the face! Such a wonderful job, Diane - I can't believe this is only your second short story since high school. I would have never guessed that you don't write short stories successfully all the time. You've inspired me to suck it up and try to write one. It's going on my January to-do list. Fantastic story!
Good story, Diane, portraying a "real" marriage in distress. I'm glad it had a happy ending!
So glad James pulled it together, with a little help from his wife. Thanks for the HEA, Diane!
I hope you write that story, Kristen. I'm glad you liked the ending.
Thanks, Lucy and Donna. Like real marriages with their ups and downs, James and Megan had to work for their HEA.
He deserved to be slugged. Knocked some sense into him! LOL Loved your story, Diane. A wonderful ending.
Love your timely and realistic story! Looking forward to more.
So glad he finally saw the light, Diane!
Way to go! Well done. Yep, he just needed a kick in the rear end. :) Wow, love the 'feel good' ending.
Loved this ending! I cheered when she punched him. Great job!
You guys are a blood-thirsty lot. LOL I'm so glad you liked the ending.
Oh! So wonderful! Loved it!
Great story! I would have hit him too! :) Being a parent is more than blood and flesh.
Thanks, Christine.
Melissa, I totally agree. It just took James longer to realize that.
Loved the finish. So sweet.
Wow, Diane, what a terrific snapshot of the give and take of a longtime marriage. I loved this line (I think from part 2?): "I didn’t tell him I was tired of being the strong one." Fantastic story.
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