he imagined its steady sun and its rural quiet, seemed more real than the
Christmas with Aunt Vicky and Uncle Steve, just like in the old days, had
come to him. He awoke with it, and it clanged in his head with a peculiar
persistence. The idea seemed to be an awfully good one, an all-important
one. To get out of Libertyville before
Well, before Christmas. What else?
particularly hard on Regina. On Wednesday, she abruptly gave in and agreed.
over her, so it was all right.
Now, on Christmas Eve, he felt that
everything
would soon be all right.
"There it is, Mike," Regina said, "and you're going to drive right by it, just
like you do every time we come here."
Michael grunted and turned into the driveway. "I saw it," he said in the
perpetually defensive tone he always seemed to use around his wife.
He's a
donkey,
Arnie thought.
She talks to him like a donkey, she rides him like a
donkey, and he brays like a donkey.
"You're smiling again," Regina said.
"I was just thinking about how much I love you both," Arnie said. His father
looked at him, surprised and touched; there was a soft gleam in his mother's
eyes that might have been tears.
They really believed it.
The shitters.
By three o'clock that Christmas Eve the snow was still only isolated flurries,
although the flurries were beginning to blend into each other. The delay in the
storm's arrival was not good news, the weather forecasters said. It had
compacted itself and turned even more vicious. Predictions of possible
accumulations had gone from a foot to a possible eighteen inches, with
serious drifting in high winds.
Leigh Cabot sat in the living room of her house, across from a small natural
Christmas tree that was already beginning to shed its needles (in her house
she was the voice of traditionalism and for four years had successfully
staved off her father's wish for a synthetic tree and her mother's wish to kick
off the holiday season with a goose or a capon. instead of the traditional
Thanksgiving turkey). She was alone in the house. Her mother and father had
gone over to the Stewarts for Christmas Eve drinks; Mr Stewart was her
father's new boss, and they liked each other. This was a friendship Mrs
Cabot was eager to promote. In the last ten years they had moved six times,
hopping all over the eastern seaboard, and of all the places they had been,
her mom liked Libertyville the best. She wanted to stay here, and her
husband's friendship with Mr Stewart could go a long way toward ensuring
that.
All alone and still a virgin,
she thought. That was an utterly stupid thing to
think, but all the same she got up suddenly, as if stung. She went into the
kitchen, over-conscious of that Formica wonderland's little servo-sounds:
electric clock, the oven where a ham was baking (
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