- John Grisham
- Skipping Christmas
- Skipping_Christmas_split_015.html
Skipping Christmas
Fourteen
His second call was to the Albrittons,
old friends from church who lived an hour away. Luther spilled his
guts, and by the time he finished Riley Albritton was roaring with
laughter. “It’s Luther,” Riley said to someone in the background,
probably Doris. “Blair just called. She’ll be home tonight.” And
with that, Doris or whoever it was broke into
hysterics.
Luther wished he hadn’t called. “Help
me out here, Riley,” he pleaded. “Can you guys stop
by?”
“Sorry, bud. We’re going to the
MacIlvaines for dinner. They invited us a bit earlier, you
know.”
“All right,” Luther said and hung
up.
The phone rang immediately. It was
Nora, her voice as edgy as Luther’d ever heard it. “Where are you?”
she demanded.
“Well, I’m in the kitchen. Where are
you?”
“I’m sitting in traffic on Broad, near
the mall.”
“Why are you going to the
mall?”
“Because I couldn’t park at the
District, couldn’t even get in off the street. I’ve bought nothing.
Do you have a tree?”
“Yes, a real beauty.”
“Are you decorating it?”
“Yes, I have Perry Como crooning
‘Jingle Bells’ in the background while I’m sipping eggnog and
trimming our tree. Wish you were here?”
“Have you called anyone?”
“Yes, the Lairds and Albrittons,
neither can make it.”
“I’ve called the Pinkertons, Harts,
Malones, and Burklands. They’re all busy. Pete Hart laughed at me,
the bore.”
“I’ll beat him up for you.” Spike was
knocking on the door. “I gotta get busy.”
“I guess you’d better start calling
the neighbors,” she said, her hyper voice faltering.
“Why?”
“To invite them.”
“Not in a million years, Nora. I’m
hanging up now.”
“No word from Blair.”
“She’s on an airplane, Nora. Call me
later.”
Spike’s borrowed wagon was a red Radio
Flyer that had seen its better years. With one look, Luther deemed
it too small and too old, but they had no choice. “I’ll go over
first,” he explained, as if he knew exactly what he was doing.
“Wait five minutes, then bring the wagon over. Don’t let anyone see
you, okay?”
“Where’s my forty bucks?”
Luther handed him a twenty. “Half now,
half when the job is done.”
He entered the Trogdon home through
the side door of the garage, and felt like a burglar for the first
time in memory. When he opened the door to the house, an alarm
beeped for a few seconds, very long seconds in which Luther’s heart
froze and his entire life and career flashed before him. Caught,
arrested, convicted, his license revoked, banished by Wiley &
Beck, disgraced. Then it stopped, and he waited another few seconds
before he could breathe. A panel by the rear door said things were
Clear.
What a mess. The house was a landfill
with debris strewn everywhere, clear evidence of another successful
visit by Ole St. Nick. Trish Trogdon would choke her husband if she
knew he’d given Luther the keys. In the living room, he stopped and
stared at the tree.
It was well known on Hemlock that the
Trogdons took little care in decorating their tree. They allowed
their children to hang anything they could find. There were a
million lights, strands of mismatched garlands, tacky ornaments by
the boxload, red and green icicles, even strings of
popcorn.
Nora will kill me, Luther thought, but
he had no choice. The plan was so simple it had to work. He and
Spike would remove the breakable ornaments, and the garlands, and
for sure the popcorn, lay them all on the sofa and chairs, ease the
tree out of the house with lights intact, haul it over to Luther’s,
and dress it with real decorations. Then, at some point in the near
future, Luther and perhaps Spike would strip it again, haul it
across the street, put the Trogdon junk back on it, and everybody
would be happy.
He dropped the first ornament and it
shattered into a dozen pieces. Spike showed up. “Don’t break
anything,” Luther said, as he cleaned up the ornament.
“Are we getting in trouble for this?”
Spike asked. “Of course not. Now get to work. And
fast.”
Twenty minutes later the tree was
stripped of anything breakable. Luther found a dirty towel in the
laundry, and lying flat on his stomach, under the tree, he managed
to work the metal tree stand onto the towel. Spike leaned in above
him, gently shoving the tree to one side, then the other. On hands
and knees, Luther managed to slide the tree toward Spike, across
the wood floor, across the tile of the kitchen, down the narrow
hall to the laundry, where the branches scraped the walls and dead
spruce needles trailed behind
“You’re making a mess,” Spike said,
helpfully.
“I’ll clean it later,” said Luther,
who was sweating like a sprinter.
The tree, of course, was wider than
the door to the garage, as all trees are. Spike pulled the wagon
close. Luther grabbed the trunk of the tree, lifted it with a
strain, swung, the bottom through the door and pulled the whole
thing through. When it was sitting safely in the garage, Luther
caught his breath, hit the garage door opener, and managed a smile
at Spike.
“Why are you so brown?” the kid
asked.
The smile vanished as Luther was
reminded of the cruise he wouldn’t be taking. He looked at his
watch-twelve-forty. Twelve-forty and not a single guest for the
party, no food, no Frosty, no lights strung anywhere, no tree, as
yet, but one on the way. It seemed hopeless at that
moment.
You can’t quit, old boy.
Luther strained again and lifted the
tree up. Spike shoved the wagon under, and of course the metal tree
stand was wider than the Radio Flyer. Luther got it balanced,
though, and watched it for a moment. “You sit here,” he said,
pointing to a tiny spot in the wagon and under the tree. “Keep it
from tipping over. I’ll push.”
“You think this’ll work?” Spike said,
with great suspicion.
Across the street, Ned Becker had been
minding his own business when he saw the tree disappear from the
Trogdons’ front window. Five minutes passed, and the tree
reappeared in the open garage, where a man and a kid were wrestling
with it. He looked harder, and recognized Luther Krank. Watching
every move, he called Walt Scheel on a portable phone.
“Hey, Walt, Ned here.”
“Merry Christmas, Ned.”
“Merry Christmas, Walt. Say, I’m
watching the Trogdons’ house, and it appears as if Krank has lost
his mind.”
“How’s that?”
“He’s stealing their Christmas
tree.”
Luther and Spike began their way down
the Trogdon driveway, which had a slight decline to the street.
Luther was behind the wagon, hanging on, letting it roll slightly.
Spike clutched the trunk of the tree, terrified.
Scheel peeked out his front door, and
when he saw the theft with his own eyes, he punched the number for
the police.
The desk sergeant
answered.
“Yes, this is Walt Scheel, Fourteen
eighty-one Hemlock. There’s a burglary under way, right
now.”
“Where?”
“Right here. At Fourteen eighty-three
Hemlock. I’m watching it in progress. Hurry.”
Trogdon’s tree made it across Hemlock
to the other side, right in front of the Becker house, where now in
the front window Ned, his wife, Jude, and his mother-in-law were
watching. Luther negotiated a right turn with the handle, and began
pulling the wagon toward his house.
He wanted to sprint before anyone saw
him, but Spike kept telling him to take it slow. Luther was afraid
to look around, and he didn’t believe for a second that he was
going unnoticed. When he was almost to his driveway, Spike said,
“Cops.”
Luther wheeled around just as the
patrol car slowed to a stop in the middle of the street, lights
flashing but no siren. Two officers jumped out as if it were a SWAT
mission,
Luther recognized Salino with the
large stomach, then young Treen with the thick neck. The same two
who’d stopped by hawking calendars for the Police Benevolent
Association.
“Hello, Mr. Krank,” Salino said with a
smirk.
“Where you going with that?” asked
Treen.
“To my house,” Luther said, pointing.
He’d come so close.
“Maybe you’d better explain,” said
Salino.
“Yeah, well, Wes Trogdon over there
let me borrow his Christmas tree. He left town an hour ago, and me
and Spike here were just moving it.”
“Spike?”
Luther turned and looked behind him,
down at the wagon, at the narrow gap where Spike had been. Spike
was gone, nowhere to be seen on Hemlock.
“Yeah, a kid down the
street.”
Walt Scheel had a seat on the
fifty-yard line. Bev was resting, or trying to. His laughter got so
loud that she came to see what was the matter. “Pull up a chair,
honey, they’ve caught Krank stealing a tree.” The Beckers were
howling too.
“We got a report that a burglary was
in progress,” said Treen.
“There’s no burglary. Who
called?”
“A Mr. Scheel. Whose wagon is
this?”
“I don’t know. Spike’s.”
“So you stole the wagon too,” said
Treen.
“I’ve stolen nothing.”
“You have to admit, Mr. Krank, it
looks very suspicious, Salino said.
Yes, under normal circumstances,
Luther might be forced to say that the entire scene was a bit
unusual. But Blair was getting closer by the minute, and there was
no time to back down. “Not at all, sir. I borrow Trogdon’s tree all
the time.”
“We’d better take you in for
questioning,” Treen said, and unsnapped a pair of handcuffs from
his belt. The sight of the silver cuffs sent Walt Scheel to the
floor. The Beckers were having trouble breathing.
And Luther went weak at the knees.
“Come on, you can’t be serious.”
“Get in the backseat.”
Luther sat low in the back, thinking
of suicide for the first time in his life. The two cops in the
front seat were chatting on the radio, something about finding the
owner of the stolen property. Their lights were still swirling, and
Luther wanted to say so much. Let me go! I’ll sue! Turn off the
damned lights! Next year I’ll buy ten calendars! Just go ahead and
shoot me!
If Nora came home now, she’d file for
divorce.
The Kirby twins were eight-year-old
delinquents from the far end of Hemlock, and for some reason they
happened by. They walked close to the car, close to the rear
window, and made direct eye contact with Luther, who squirmed even
lower. Then the Bellington brat joined them and all three peered in
at Luther as if he’d killed their mothers.
Spike came running, followed by Vic
Frohmeyer. The officers got out and had a word with him, then Treen
shooed the kids away and released Luther from the
backseat.
“He’s got keys,” Vic was saying, and
Luther then remembered that he did indeed have the keys to
Trogdon’s. What a moron!
“I know both these men,” Frohmeyer
continued. “This is no burglary.”
The cops whispered for a moment as
Luther tried to ignore the stares from Vic and Spike. He glanced
around, half-expecting to see Nora wheel into the drive and have a
stroke.
“What about the tree?” Salino asked
Vic.
“If he says Trogdon loaned it to him,
then that’s the truth.”
“You sure?”
“I’m sure.”
“Okay, okay, Salino said, still
sneering at Luther as if he’d never seen a guiltier criminal. They
slowly got in the car and drove away.
“Thanks,” Luther said.
“What’re you doing, Luther?” Vic
asked.
“I’m borrowing their tree. Spike’s
helping me move it. Let’s go, Spike.”
Without further interruption, Luther
and Spike rolled the tree up the driveway, into the garage, and
grappled with it until it was sitting rather nicely in the front
window. Along the way they left a trail of dead needles, red and
green icicles, and some popcorn. “I’ll vacuum later,” Luther said.
“Let’s check the lights.”
The phone rang. It was Nora, more
panicked than before. “I can’t find a thing, Luther. No turkey, no
ham, no chocolates, nothing. And I can’t find a nice gift
either.”
“Gifts? Why are you shopping for
gifts?”
“It’s Christmas, Luther. Have you
called the Yarbers and Friskis?”
“Yes,” he lied. “Their lines were
busy.”
“Keep calling, Luther, because no one
is coming. I’ve tried the McTeers, Morrises, and Warners, they’re
all busy. How’s the tree?”
“Coming along.”
“I’ll call later.”
Spike plugged in the lights and the
tree came to life. They attacked the nine boxes of decorations
without a care as to what went where.
Across the street, Walt Scheel watched
them through binoculars.