
Mistletoe Fangs by Susan Blexrud:
Lauren
parked in front. There were no other cars on the quiet street. As she
approached the house, careful of the irregular sidewalk buckled from the
roots of hundred-year-old trees, a shiver of foreboding ran up her
spine. The house looked like a grande dame in partial ruin, clutching
the remnants of her former glory. Lanterns on either side of the front
door revealed peeling white paint and massive columns reminiscent of
Tara after the Civil War, while an audio background of creaking planks
strained under Lauren’s feet. A swing swayed eerily on the expansive
front porch.
Before she
reached for the gargoyle knocker, the door opened with a pop, like it
had been sealed shut. She peered into the musky foyer. A deep voice
issued from the darkness, “Good evening. Please come in.” Lauren
inched across the threshold. She didn’t need to close the door behind
her. It creaked shut on its own.
A large,
looming figure stepped out of the shadows. “Light?” The figure walked
to a table in the foyer, struck a match and lit three candles in a
candelabra. “There. That is better.”
Lauren
suppressed a gasp as the figure turned to her. There stood a reasonable
facsimile of Rasputin. He flashed a dazzling smile, and the dentist in
Lauren took over. She was a professional. She could handle this.
“So nice to
meet you.” She held out her hand.
“And you,”
he said, caressing her hand with long, cold fingers. “Would you like me
to turn up the heat? It is a touch chilly this evening.”
“No, I’ve
got a built-in oven here.” Lauren rubbed her pregnant belly.
“I am
Erasmus Gephart,” the man said, eyeing her round tummy, “though I am
sure you surmised that already.” His incisor glistened in the
candlelight as he smiled.
She’d hoped
he’d been the butler. Best not put too much stock in first impressions.
“You come highly recommended.”
He
dismissed her compliment with a wave of his hand. “My credentials are
impressive, but what is more important is whether I can assist you.”
For the first time, he gazed into her eyes with a penetrating stare. No
doubt the same hypnotic gaze Rasputin used on Queen Alexandra.
Dr. Gephart
curled his index finger in a hokey “come hither” gesture, and Lauren
followed him through an arched doorway hung with mistletoe into a
dimly-lit Victorian parlor.
“I see
you’ve decorated for Christmas.” Lauren nodded to the mistletoe.
“That has
been up for years,” Dr. Gephart said. “I have not yet put it to use.”
Lauren
shivered at the thought of Dr. Gephart’s lips, which would surely be ice
cold. She took in his eclectic decor, replete with red velvet
upholstery on the ornately carved furniture and an assortment of Cuckoo
clocks on the walls. He indicated a small loveseat for Lauren with a
footstool at its base. She settled in, propping up her high-top pink
sneakers.
Sitting in
a throne-like chair across from her, Lauren thought that Dr. Gephart had
a freakish sort of magnetism. Maybe it was his long black hair,
streaked with silver, or the intensity of his dark blue eyes. She
could understand how an unsuspecting human female could be seduced by
him.
The Office Christmas Party by Bill Haworth:
As drunk as they were, the crowd fully comprehended
their new manager’s veiled threat that an early departure from the party
would be looked upon most unfavourably. So, either due to gutlessness,
ambition or both, the party flowed merrily on.
The old cleaning lady tugged on Perkins’ sleeve.
“Yes, yes, we’ve already said thanks for suggesting
the shops nearby.”
“Then would you say you owe me a favour?” she
asked.
“I knew it. She wants a bonus!”
“No I don’t. I just want a favour.”
“Oh dear,” he groaned. “I suppose so. What is it?
You want a drink?”
“No thank you.”
“Then what?” he asked impatiently.
“The music is wrong. Do you think we could have
some seasonal music?”
“It’s a party, you old trout! We’re celebrating!”
“Celebrating what exactly?”
“My promotion of course!” he snapped, then to the
gathering asked, “Where do we get these people?”
Calmly the old girl told him, “It’s just that it’s
Christmas Eve and you ought to be celebrating that! That’s more
important than any promotion!”
“Well, of all the nerve!”
“Ha - ha! She’s got you there F.P!” shouted Baxter.
Felling miffed but wishing to appear magnanimous he
acceded to her request.
“Of course, granny, you’re quite right!” he said
sporting a quite insincere smile for her. Calling out to an underling
across the room he shouted, “Hey Sammy! The old girl wants a hymn. See
what you can do, eh?”
Sammy was always ready for a laugh and so waved and
shouted back, “She wants a him?” then pointing to two men said,
“Well how about him and him?”
The crowd jeered at this coarse remark as Sammy
dutifully twiddled the knobs of the CD/radio eventually tuning into a
choir singing ‘God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen.’
The fact that the rock music had lost out to the
hymns made little difference to the party crowd, who took scant notice
anyway.
The irony was not lost on Mattie. Look at them,
she thought, they sure are ‘merry’ alright. Any merrier they
would collapse! And ‘gentlemen’! Ha! Give me a break!
There isn’t one here would wouldn’t sell his own mother if it meant
getting on in the company!
The old lady was most appreciative of the hymn
music and happily continued titivating around the conference room with
duster and broom.
A Special Christmas Gift by Kate Hofman:
He gazed at Glenda for some
time. At last he asked, “Did you really try to get in touch with me?”
Glenda nodded, opening her mouth to explain.
They were
interrupted. A small voice said, “Mommy?” Glenda flew up from her
seat. “I must go to Jason,” she whispered, and was gone. Alexandros
found it hard to sort out his feelings. There was no doubt about his
love for Glenda, but she had a child. She isn’t married, the name on
her mailbox said St. George. Was there a lover, who left her when he
discovered she was pregnant? Deeply distressed, he decided to
wait and see.
His distress ended
quickly. He heard Glenda’s soft voice talking lovingly, then a child’s
treble voice saying something. Glenda, holding her son by the hand,
walked over to Alex, smiling. Letting go of her son’s hand, she sat
down again in her corner of the sofa, and watched Alex and her little
boy. In spite of his tan, Alex’s face became deathly pale. Thee mou,
this is what I looked like when I was his age.
Jason gazed at Alex for a
while, then he asked, “Who you?”
Profoundly moved,
Alex whispered, “I think I am your Daddy.” Jason beamed. “My Daddy?
You my Daddy?” He glanced at his mother, saw her nod. “Mommy, me have
Daddy!” the little boy exclaimed. He stretched out a tentative hand to
Alex’s face, and with a moan Alex wrapped his son in his arms, lifting
him to his lap. Elated when he felt his son’s kisses on his face, he
gently kissed the boy’s forehead, whispering brokenly, “Ye mou” –
my son.
“How old is he,
Glenda?”
She smiled. “Jason,
tell Daddy your age.”
Jason held up two
fingers. “Me two.”
Alex hugged his son
closer. “You’re a big boy for two years old. When I was that age, I
looked just like you.” This seemed to please Jason a lot, and they
spent some time quietly enjoying Alex finding his son.
Peace on New Earth by Miriam Newman:
They turned to each other in the night, after lovemaking and before
dawn, in the hours when neither of them could sleep.
Jadelle was first to speak. “Avron, what is it?” she questioned softly.
“My warriors will return at dawn. I must think how to greet them.”
“Well…I think Kevan planned to do that.”
“He did?” Accustomed to being the only leader, Avron was surprised and
not entirely pleased by the thought.
“He has an obligation,” Jadelle pointed out gently. “We are the ones
who brought sickness to your people.”
“But you are the ones who will cure them, as well. And I told them I
hoped it would be so. There is obligation upon me, as well.”
“Of course. Perhaps you can do it together.”
“And you,” Avron insisted. “When they first receive the idea of this
cure, it must be you they see. You will be the one to administer it to
them, will you not?”
“Oh, yes,” Jadelle agreed at once. “I wouldn’t miss that chance for
anything.”
She was so quiet then that finally Avron was the one to inquire what was
in her mind.
Shifting slightly, she framed his face in her hands, kissing his
forehead. “Would you think I was silly if I said I was seeing the
future?”
“You can do that?” he asked seriously. The colonists performed so many
wonders with their satellites and ‘puters, he was prepared to believe
they had vision, as well.
“Not really. It is just a picture I see in my mind, that’s all. I can
see fields by this oasis. Water and crops, and bigger buildings by our
domes. Many of them. Homes for people. Places to gather. To trade.
A school. A town where our children can be educated together, if their
parents wish it. And beyond that…free land. Land enough for your
people to roam and hunt as they always have, so that your ways are not
lost. With med-technos from my domes to visit among them, giving
knowledge and medication. Your children fat and healthy, prospering. I
see those things, Avron, if I look hard enough. I really do.”
He touched her back, in the darkness, running his hands the length of
her small, precious body. “If you do,” he said, “then I believe it may
be so.”
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