Read literal leigh 05 - joyful leigh Online
Authors: melanie james
“Ha ha! You guys are so funny. Sturm und Drang! The late 18
th
century proto-Romance German literary and music movement. See? A liberal arts degree pays off once in a while. Sturm und Drang, so funny.” It wasn’t funny at all, it was just plain stupid, but I wanted to play along and just get a warning.
“No. I’m Sturm und dis is Drang,” said the second man with the stronger accent. “We are EPA, Elf Protection Agency.” Hunter came back down the stairs and joined me at the door. He quietly listened to the conversation.
“What? Elf Protection Agency? Excuse my French, but you have got to be fucking kidding me!” I barked.
Sturm seemed taken aback by my expletive phrase, and it worried me that I had ticked him off. “What? That doesn’t sound French. Drang, do you know this French saying? Fucking kidding me?”
“No. No sounds more like Korean maybe?” Drang answered.
Then I realized that these were the guys that followed us in Daley Plaza. “Hey! You guys were following us. Why?”
“The Elfa is under attack. Our people are currently involved in what we call an internal dispute for control. He needs somewhere safe. Our magicians tell us that you have had some influence on the elves through your magical desk. We wanted to know what side of the dispute you were on—if you were for, or against, the Elfa. Now we see you have proven yourself loyal to the Elfa by bringing his bunker to this place of safety.”
I cringed inside.
Sleighing the Elfa
told a story about the internal struggle for control of the elves. It was eerily similar to the troubles the EPA were concerned with. I hadn’t finished my story, but I was working the plot so that it would result in the assassination of the Alpha Elf, the Elfa. I knew that if they ever read what I had been working on, I would suddenly become elf enemy number one.
“So, now what?” Hunter finally interjected. “You plan to stand guard around this king elf in our front yard?”
“Yes. That is exactly what we will do until it is safe to go home,” Sturm answered.
“Of course, Hunter, what would the holidays be without Sturm und Drang?” I joked.
“Where is home? The North Pole? Elfheim? And are you both elves? Or just people working for the elves?” Hunter asked.
“That location is classified. And yes, we are elves,” said Sturm.
Drang interrupted Sturm, “We want to thank you once again and apologize for following you. You must understand that we have to be very cautious. You can be assured that we will not bother you. If any enemy should attempt to attack your home, we will protect you.”
“Okay, well, have fun Sturm and Drang. Let us know when the Elfa shows up. If you need anything, just ask.” I remembered that Dalia would certainly be visiting with the EPA agents. “I almost forgot! You have some company out there. In that gingerbread thing is a witch—”
Sturm cut me off, “Ah, yes. Dalia. We are quite…
familiar
with her, you could say.” He glanced at Drang and smiled.
Apparently Dalia had quite a friendly reputation among the elves. “Okay then! Behave your elves.” I chuckled at my little joke that was wasted on the dimwitted Sturm and Drang. “Bye now!” I closed the door and joined Hunter in the living room.
We decided that we should just leave them all alone for the time being. I liked having all of them around. If Sybil was right, I would need these supernatural beings as allies. The next couple of days went by without any incidents or visits by the neighborhood watch. Dalia seemed to stay inside her hut, and we scarcely saw the two EPA agents that guarded the Elfa home. Only once did I have any more contact with them. I did get a chance to sneak a peek into the Elfa lair. Before Sturm and Drang shooed me away, I saw that it led to a magical plane. A giant crystal lined cavern that glowed with every color of the rainbow. There were piles of gold, silver, and gems. It wasn’t just a pile of rocks with a cramped space inside after all. It was a portal, similar to what I walked through when I met Cosmos and Sybil. These structures were simply portable doorways to their respective supernatural planes. Then I knew why Dalia was never around. I wondered what sort of world would be found inside her gingerbread hut, but I had to admit, I was more afraid than curious.
Chapter Twenty Five
‘Twas the Night Before Disaster
We decided our house would be ground zero for Christmas Eve, and we had invited our families and friends over for a night of partying. Other than our tree and the outside lights, our house was lacking. I wanted more. No, I needed more. I wanted people to walk in and think Christmas threw up in our house. I wasn’t too sure how to go about doing it, though. After all, I didn’t grow up in a home that celebrated Christmas, and Hunter would be working until late afternoon. It was time to make the dreaded last minute shopping trip.
Thank God for last minute deals at the Dollar Store. I waltzed right in and went up to a tall but scrawny young store clerk. His bangs hung halfway over his eyes and his clothes looked five sizes too big. I asked him for help. “Excuse me, I’d like to decorate the inside of my house and make it look more like a Lifetime movie set. I want people to think that my house was decorated by Santa Claus himself. Can you help me?”
“Sure.” He pointed to an aisle overflowing with everything Christmas. “Just buy whatever catches your eye and put it in your house. Pretty easy.” His eyes were taking a stroll over my body from head to toe and every place in between. “You know what? My room is decorated pretty nice. I could show you my Christmas tree. If you know what I mean. Or I could go home with you and let you unwrap my package—”
“Stuff it, kid. What would your mother say if she heard you hitting on women like that?” I could tell pretty easily that he was a seventeen year old smartass in training. What he really needed was a little shaming. “If you ever want to impress the girls, start by dropping the pathetic pickup lines, get a better haircut, not to mention some clothes that fit.” I spotted boxes full of ribbons, bows, and garland and made a beeline towards them. Before long I was carrying home enough Christmas stuff to decorate my entire neighborhood.
“Come on, Luna, we’ve got work to do.”
“Meow.” She curled up on my desk and closed her eyes.
“Thanks for nothing.” I went to work hanging up a nice new wreath. Curiously the wreath had a ribbon across the front that said
Mother.
I knew just what to do. I used red felt ribbon to tie it to one of the frottage sculptures. Those things needed to be covered in ribbons and bows. I didn’t want every photograph of our evening to be photobombed by two entwined colorful penises. My mom could take her personalized wreath home with her after the party.
The next step was to cover the bannister in bushy silver and gold garland along with red bows. I had so much left over. I strung garland along the walls, over the fireplace, and around each of the windows. I tied bows to lamps, table legs, and any other place they could feasibly be attached to. I had four packages of garland in silver, red, green, and white left to work with, so I decided to just string all of it alongside the gold and silver strings. Then it was time for candles, plastic snowmen, Santa figures, and angels.
When I was finished, I stood back and admired my handiwork. Christmas had indeed thrown up. No, Christmas had actually projectile vomited an entire Dollar store Christmas aisle into my house.
It was early evening when Hunter finally came home from work. “Wow, look at this place. You must have been busy today,” Hunter called out as he came through the front door.
I walked over and wrapped my arms around him, a smile plastered to my face. “I hope you like it!”
“It looks great, baby, but uhhh...why is there a funeral wreath for your mother hanging on the rubbing noodle statue? Freud would have a field day with that one!”
“Funeral wreath? I thought wreaths were considered Christmas decorations, but never mind that.”
I led Hunter over to the tree. “Baby, I was planning on giving you your gift on Christmas morning, but I can’t wait for you to see it. And I really want you to open your present before everyone shows up.” I knelt down under the tree and pointed out the gifts that I had awkwardly wrapped. I don’t know why they always show these perfect boxes on Christmas cards and store displays. They certainly don’t show a small pile of power tools, individually wrapped by a frustrated Christmas novice.
“Hunter, guess what it is?” I held up a cordless drill that was tightly wrapped. Hunter knelt down beside me and took the gift. It was pretty hard to disguise a cordless drill, but he played along, guessing a dozen wrong choices. We repeated this little game with a sander, a circular saw, a jigsaw, and a toolbox.
Once we had gone through all of the gifts for him, he handed me an envelope, my last Hanukkah gift of the year. I ripped it open. “What’s this? A travel brochure?” I turned it around in my hand. “It’s for Hawaii!”
“Seven nights, all inclusive in Maui. The only catch is that I didn’t pay for the airfare. We’ll have to count on your broom for that. And it’s all set around your spring break dates.” Hunter took me in his arms, kissing me thoroughly. “And it’s for our honeymoon.” He paused just to watch the various expressions of shock that my face went through when he said it was for our honeymoon. “I think Valentine’s Day would be a great time for a wedding. Don’t you? I realize the honeymoon will be almost a month after the wedding but who cares! This wedding—ours can be all you want it to be, all you’ve ever dreamed it to be in fact. I had a little talk with Marie Laveau. She has some serious connections. How would you like a full blown fairy tale, magical wedding? On Valentine’s Day? Hell, you can even arrive in a gold carriage pulled by a dozen unicorns…at least that’s Gertie’s plan.”
“Honeymoon? Wedding? Gertie’s plan? Marie Laveau? You have this all worked out?” Then for the first time in my life I fainted. I woke up as Hunter carried me to the couch. “You went through my box, didn’t you?”
“Of course. You wanted that dream wedding and I knew it. You just didn’t want the stress, but with friends like ours, it isn’t a problem.”
I heard the door opening and closing behind me, but I was too busy looking into Hunter’s blue eyes to care about anything else. “Thank you. Thank you for taking the time to treat my box like the treasure it has always been to me. I never really showed my box to anyone else. Well, Kelly got a chance to go through it once or twice. But it’s not like she could do what you did. You even took the time to not overlook anything. You didn’t just poke around in there and shove it aside when you were done. It means so much to me.”
The noise in the background was now a mixture of hearty laughter and several shocked voices saying, “Oh my God!” Randy’s snark laden voice was loud enough for everyone to hear. “You let Kelly play around with your little box! I knew the two of you had something going on.” I gasped when I turned around and saw our families and all of our friends. Then it hit me. I realized all of the smartasses were laughing at what they thought I meant by “my box.”
“And that was tonight’s entertainment. Goodnight,” I joked.
We settled in to a comfortable evening in the garland and ribbon bedecked museum of erotica that also serves as our living room. My parents joined me in lighting the eighth mitzvah candle of Hanukkah and my father even said the blessing. Hunter lit a Christmas candle with his parents. If that moment would be the only moment to remember of our evening, it would have been enough. It was everything I truly wanted to feel with our families together, ever since I started with my Thankshanukkamas season. I felt a little sad when I noticed Marie Laveau wasn’t there to see it all.
Then we heard bells—jingle bells. I could just be a smartass and say “away to the window I flew like a flash.” In any case, Hunter and I both rushed to the window. In the glow of the streetlight we saw a dark green limousine pull up to the curb.
“Too bad our nieces and nephews aren’t here to see Santa,” Hunter commented.
“Um, I don’t think that’s Santa Claus,” Randy said.
I provided a running commentary from my vantage point at the living room window, even though my friends were watching for themselves. “It looks like Sturm and Drang are saying something to that man that came out of the limo. He’s coming straight to the house now. Oh wait, Dalia just popped out of her little slut hut. And she looks a hell of lot better than the last time I saw her. Wow! Get a look at that naughty princess dress.”
“I need that outfit. She looks like a stripper version of Snow White,” Kelly said.
I nodded in agreement and added, “You should see her when she is the ugly old witch. I’ve got to admit, that magical instant makeover thing she does could be pretty damn handy. Especially on a Monday morning.”
My parents were loaded on Brad’s generous servings of gorilla milk. “Harold, let’s get a good seat on the couch,” my mom said. Then in her buzzed state, she addressed whoever else was in the room. “When Leigh and Sarah were little girls, they used to put on these adorable plays for us whenever we had guests. I had no idea that Leigh was still setting these things up.” She motioned for Hunter’s parents to join them on the couch. “Have some more to drink, Millie. You two should have a seat with us.”
Max was admiring the fireplace. “Oh! This is a gas fireplace. You see there is this little valve to turn on the gas and you just light it. Pretty cool, man.” He twisted the valve back and forth.
“Dad, be sure to shut that valve off,” Hunter said.
I continued my reporting from the window, “He’s saying something to Dalia. Okay, she just blew him a kiss and he’s on his way up to the house.”
Sturm and Drang opened the front door and let themselves in. Sturm spoke in a deep commanding voice, “Please rise for the Elfa Elf.”
“What’s an Elfa Elf?” Lindsey whispered to me. Everyone must have wondered the same thing since they all leaned in to find out what I had to say. All except our parents, whom were happily watching the show.
“The Alpha elf, as in the leader of the elf pack,” I answered.