- John Grisham
- Skipping Christmas
- Skipping_Christmas_split_003.html
Skipping Christmas
Two
With his feet toasty and besocked with
heavy wool, Luther fell fast asleep and woke up even faster. Nora
was roaming. She was in the bathroom flushing and flipping lights,
then she left for the kitchen, where she fixed an herbal tea, then
he heard her down the hall in Blair’s room, no doubt staring at the
walls and sniffling over where the years had gone. Then she was
back in bed, rolling and jerking covers and trying her best to wake
him. She wanted dialogue, a sounding board. She wanted Luther to
assure her Blair was safe from the horrors of the Peruvian
jungle.
But Luther was frozen, not flinching
at any joint, breathing as heavily as possible because if the
dialogue began again it would run for hours. He pretended to snore
and that settled her down.
It was after eleven when she grew
still. Luther was wild-eyed, and his feet were smoldering. When he
was absolutely certain she was asleep, he eased from the bed,
ripped off the heavy socks and tossed them into a corner, and
tiptoed down the hall to the kitchen for a glass of water. Then a
pot of decaf.
An hour later he was in his basement
office, at his desk with files open, the computer humming,
spreadsheets in the printer, an investigator searching for
evidence. Luther was a tax accountant by trade, so his records were
meticulous. The evidence piled up and he forgot about
sleep.
A year earlier, the Luther Krank
family had spent $6,100 on Christmas-$6,100!-$6,100 on decorations,
lights, flowers, a new Frosty, and a Canadian spruce; $6,100 on
hams, turkeys, pecans, cheese balls, and cookies no one ate; $6,100
on wines and liquors and cigars around the office; $6,100 on
fruitcakes from the firemen and the rescue squad, and calendars
from the police association; $6,100 on Luther for a cashmere
sweater he secretly loathed and a sports jacket he’d worn twice and
an ostrich skin wallet that was quite expensive and quite ugly and
frankly he didn’t like the feel of. On Nora for a dress she wore to
the company’s Christmas dinner and her own cashmere sweater, which
had not been seen since she unwrapped it, and a designer scarf she
loved, $6,100. On Blair $6,100 for an overcoat, gloves and boots,
and a Walkman for her jogging, and, of course, the latest, slimmest
cell phone on the market-$6,100 on lesser gifts for a select
handful of distant relatives, most on Nora’s side-$6,100 on
Christmas cards from a stationer three doors down from Chip’s, in
the District, where all prices were double; $6,100 for the party,
an annual Christmas Eve bash at the Krank home,
And what was left of it? Perhaps a
useful item or two, but nothing much-$6,100!
With great relish Luther tallied the
damage, as if it had been inflicted by someone else. All evidence
was coming neatly together and making a very strong
case,
He waffled a bit at the end, where
he’d saved the charity numbers. Gifts to the church, to the toy
drive, to the homeless shelter and the food bank. But he raced
through the benevolence and came right back to the awful
conclusion: $6,100 for Christmas. -
“Nine percent of my adjusted gross,”
he said in disbelief. “Six thousand, one hundred. Cash. All but six
hundred nondeductible.”
In his distress, he did something he
rarely did. Luther reached for the bottle of cognac in his desk
drawer, and knocked back a few drinks.
He slept from three to six, and roared
to life during his shower. Nora wanted to fret over coffee and
oatmeal, but Luther would have none of it. He read the paper,
laughed at the comics, assured her twice that Blair was having a
ball, then kissed her and raced away to the office, a
The travel agency was in the atrium of
Luther’s building. He walked by it at least twice each day, seldom
glancing at the window displays of beaches and mountains and
sailboats and pyramids. It was there for those lucky enough to
travel. Luther had never stepped inside, never thought about it
actually. Their vacation was five days at the beach, in a friend’s
condo, and with his workload they were lucky to get
that.
He stole away just after ten. He used
the stairs so he wouldn’t have to explain anything, and darted
through the door of Regency Travel. Biff was waiting for
him.
Biff had a large flower in her hair
and a waxy bronze tan, and she looked as if she’d just dropped by
the shop for a few hours between beaches. Her comely smile stopped
Luther cold, and her first words left him flabbergasted. “You need
a cruise,” she said.
“How’d you know?” he managed to
mumble. Her hand was out, grabbing his, shaking it, leading him to
her long desk, where she placed him on one side while she perched
herself on the other. Long bronze legs, Luther noted. Beach
legs.
“December is the best time of year for
a cruise,” she began, and Luther was already sold. The brochures
came in a torrent. She unfolded them across her desk, under his
dreamy eyes.
“You work in the building?” she asked,
easing near the issue of money.
“Wiley & Beck, sixth floor,”
Luther said without removing his eyes from the floating palaces,
the endless beaches.
“Bail bondsmen?” she
said.
Luther flinched just a bit. “No. Tax
accountants.”
“Sorry,” she said, kicking herself.
The pale skin, the dark eye circles, the standard blue oxford-cloth
button-down with bad imitation prep school tie. She should have
known better. Oh well. She reached for even glossier brochures.
“Don’t believe we get too many from your firm.”
“We don’t do vacations very well. Lots
of work. I like this one right here.”
“Great choice.”
They settled on the Island Princess, a
spanking-new mammoth vessel with rooms for three thousand, four
pools, three casinos, nonstop food, eight stops in the Caribbean,
and the list went on and on. Luther left with a stack of brochures
and scurried back to his office six floors up.
The ambush was carefully planned.
First, he worked late, which was certainly not unusual, but at any
rate helped set the stage for the evening. He got lucky with the
weather because it was still dreary. Hard to get in the spirit of
the season when the skies were damp and gray. And much easier to
dream about ten luxurious days in the sun.
If Nora wasn’t worrying about Blair,
then he’d certainly get her started. He’d simply mention some
dreadful piece of news about a new virus or perhaps a Colombian
village massacre, and that would set her off. Keep her mind off the
joys of Christmas. Won’t be the same without Blair, will
it?
Why don’t we take a break this year?
Go hide. Go escape. Indulge ourselves.
Sure enough, Nora was off in the
jungle. She hugged him and smiled and tried to hide the fact that
she’d been crying. Her day had gone reasonably well. She’d survived
the ladies’ luncheon and spent two hours at the children’s clinic,
part of her grinding volunteer schedule.
While she heated up the pasta, he
sneaked a reggae CD into the stereo, but didn’t push Play. Timing
was crucial.
They chatted about Blair, and not long
into the dinner Nora kicked the door open. “It’ll be so different
this Christmas, won’t it, Luther?”
“Yes it will,” he said sadly,
swallowing hard. “Nothing’ll be the same.”
“For the first time in twenty-three
years, she won’t be here.”
“It might even be depressing. Lots of
depression at Christmas, you know.” Luther quickly swallowed and
his fork grew still.
“I’d love to just forget about it,”
she said, her words ebbing at the end.
Luther flinched and cocked his good
ear in her direction.
“What is it?” she asked.
“Well!!” he said dramatically, shoving
his plate forward. “Now that you mention it. There’s something I
want to discuss with you.”
“Finish your pasta.”
“I’m finished,” he announced, jumping
to his feet. His briefcase was just a few steps away, and he
attacked it.
“Luther, what are you
doing?”
“Hang on.”
He stood across the table from her,
papers in both hands. “Here’s my idea,” he said proudly. “And it’s
brilliant.”
“Why am I nervous?”
He unfolded a spreadsheet, and began
pointing. “Here, my dear, is what we did last Christmas. Six
thousand, one hundred dollars we spent on Christmas. Six thousand,
one hundred dollars.”
“I heard you the first
time.”
“And precious little to show for it.
The vast majority of it down the drain. Wasted. And that, of
course, does not include my time, your time, the traffic, stress,
worry, bickering, ill-will, sleep loss-all the wonderful things
that we pour into the holiday season.”
“Where is this going?”
“Thanks for asking.” Luther dropped
the spreadsheets and, quick as a magician, presented the Island
Princess to his wife. Brochures covered the table. “Where is this
going, my dear? It’s going to the Caribbean. Ten days of total
luxury on the Island Princess, the fanciest cruise ship in the
world. The Bahamas, Jamaica, Grand Cayman, oops., wait a minute,
“
Luther dashed into the den, hit the
Play button, waited for the first notes, adjusted the volume, then
dashed back to the kitchen where Nora was inspecting a
brochure.
“What’s that?” she asked.
“Reggae, the stuff they listen to down
there. Anyway, where was I?”
“You were island
hopping.”
“Right, we’ll snorkel on Grand Cayman,
windsurf in Jamaica, lie on the beaches. Ten days, Nora, ten
fabulous days”
“I’ll have to lose some
weight.”
“We’ll both go on a diet. Whatta you
say?”
“What’s the catch?”
“The catch is simple. We don’t do
Christmas. We save the money, spend it on ourselves for once. Not a
dime on food we won’t eat or clothes we won’t wear or gifts no one
needs. Not one red cent. It’s a boycott, Nora, a complete boycott
of Christmas.”
“Sounds awful.”
“No, it’s wonderful. And it’s just for
one year. Let’s take a break. Blair’s not here. She’ll be back next
year and we can jump back into the Christmas chaos, if that’s what
you want. Come on, Nora, please. We skip Christmas, save the money,
and go splash in the Caribbean for ten days.”
“How much will it cost?”
“Three thousand bucks.”
“So we save money?”
“Absolutely.”
“When do we leave?”
“High noon, Christmas
Day.”
They stared at each other for a long
time.
The deal was closed in bed, with the
television on but muted, with magazines scattered over the sheets,
all unread, with the brochures not Far away on the night table.
Luther was scanning a financial newspaper but seeing little. Nora
had a paperback but the pages weren’t turning.
The deal breaker had been their
charitable giving. She simply refused to forgo it, or skip it, as
Luther insisted on saying. She had reluctantly agreed to buy no
gifts. She also wept at the thought of no tree, though Luther had
mercilessly driven home the point that they yelled at each other
every Christmas when they decorated the damned thing. And no Frosty
on the roof ? When every house on the street would have one? Which
brought up the issue of public ridicule. Wouldn’t they be scorned
for ignoring Christmas?
So what, Luther had replied over and
over. Their friends and neighbors might disapprove at first, but
secretly they would burn with envy. Ten days in the Caribbean,
Nora, he kept telling her. Their friends and neighbors won’t be
laughing when they’re shoveling snow, will they? No jeers from the
spectators when we’re roasting in the sun and they’re bloated on
turkey and dressing. No smirks when we return thin and tanned and
completely unafraid of going to the mailbox.
Nora had seldom seen him so
determined. He methodically killed all her arguments, one by one,
until nothing was left but their charitable giving.
“You’re going to let a lousy six
hundred bucks stand between us and a Caribbean cruise?” Luther
asked with great sarcasm.
“No, you are,” she replied
coolly.
And with that they went to their
corners and tried to read.
But after a tense, silent hour, Luther
kicked off the sheets and yanked off the wool socks and said, “All
right. Let’s match last year’s charitable gifts, but not a penny
more.”
She flung her paperback and went for
his neck. They embraced, kissed, then she reached for the
brochures.