But at the moment, he appeared content to stand there beside me. “Doing okay?” he murmured as the mayor rambled on, his voice just loud enough for me to hear.
“A little better. Thanks.”
“Good. Try not to think about . . . you know.” He smiled at me sympathetically. “Hey, remember when Jason Phillips did the honors two years ago?” He chuckled quietly. “He was so terrified of heights that we were all glad there was plenty of snow on the ground in case he fainted and fell off the ladder. I think some of the guys were taking bets on whether he’d make it.”
I smiled at him. I could tell he was trying to keep my spirits up, and I loved him for it.
“I remember,” I said. “Listen, Cam. Thanks again for doing this. I know it was a lot to ask.”
“Not at all.” He reached over and gave my hand a squeeze. “That Charlie guy doesn’t know what he’s missing.”
“Thanks.” I squeezed back. “Anyway, I’m kind of glad it’s you here with me, Cam. It feels right somehow.”
“I know what you mean.” He didn’t take his hand away. “It’s weird, but I guess I just always assumed we’d be here together this year for you to do this, you know?”
I nodded. “Me too.”
The mayor was winding up his speech by now. For once, I sort of wished he would ramble on even longer. Cam and I seemed to be making some real progress. Maybe if I could get in a bit more reminiscing time with him before Jaylene showed up . . .
“And so, without further ado,” the mayor announced, “I present this year’s Simpson Scholarship winner, Miss Alexis Michaels. Come on up here, Lexi!”
I gave Cam’s hand one last squeeze. Then I dropped it and hurried over to the base of the ladder. Everyone was clapping, and I gave a self-conscious little wave before grasping the sides of the ladder. It felt weird to have everyone staring at me. But I tried not to think about that as I got ready to climb. As I lifted my boot to the first rung, I glanced over to make sure Cam was in place. He was standing by the switch box. When he saw me looking, he gave me a smile and a thumbs-up. I waved back. Then I turned, accepted the star from the mayor, and started to climb.
It was a little tricky climbing the ladder while also holding the star, which was about the size of my head—hair and all. Only a few rungs up, I realized that the high-heeled boots had probably been a bad idea; they got caught up in the rungs with practically every step. But that hardly seemed worth worrying about. My heart felt lighter than it had in weeks as I thought back over my conversation with Cam.
It really does feel right, us being here together, I thought. I must have been crazy ever to have thought there were no sparks left between us. He had to be feeling them just now too, right?
Just then I reached the top. Leaning over carefully, I set the star in place on the clip someone had attached to the tip of the tree. A cheer went up from the crowd below, and the Girl Scouts burst into an enthusiastic if slightly ragged rendition of “O Tannenbaum.” Then the lights all over the tree flickered on, bringing more oohs and aahs and cheers from the spectators. I smiled as the newspaper photographer lifted his camera and fiddled with the flash. Cam had done his job.
I glanced down at him. He was still standing by the switch. But this time he wasn’t looking at me. He was looking off to the side at . . . Jaylene?
My heart sank like a stone as I saw her appear at the edge of the crowd, leaping giddily through the snow in a pair of ridiculously inappropriate pumps. She flung herself at Cam, grabbed his face in both hands, and planted a big juicy kiss right on his mouth.
No! I couldn’t believe it. It wasn’t fair. How could she just run in, kiss him like that, and erase everything that had just happened between us?
I guess I must have sort of lunged toward them. I’m not sure why, except that maybe I thought I could peel them apart or something.
But all I really succeeded in doing was losing my balance, being that I was still at the top of the ladder. Oops.
“Whoa!” I cried, forgetting about Cam and everything else for a second as I felt myself sway. My glove slipped off the side of the ladder, and I flailed helplessly in the air for a moment, probably looking like something out of an old Road Runner cartoon. I tried to catch myself with the other hand, but the damp sole of my boot slipped and the heel got caught up in the rung, throwing me further off balance.
Somehow, I managed to hold on with one gloved hand as I slid partway down the ladder. Cries of alarm and surprise were rising from the crowd as people started to notice what was happening. But it was too late for anyone to try to catch me, and I couldn’t seem to catch myself. Out of the corner of my eye, I could see the photographer snapping away. Bastard.
I closed my eyes as I felt myself lose my grip on the ladder entirely. My whole body tensed, waiting for the impact. When it came, it was softer than expected but very, very cold. Also, very wet.
If several people hadn’t rushed over to pull me out, I would have been happy to lie there in that snowdrift forever. Because just at that moment, it seemed significantly better than the alternative.
My embarrassing tumble off the ladder into the snowbank was pretty much the last straw for me. How many times was I going to insist on publicly humiliating myself before I gave up? What was the point? Cam and Jaylene were as tight as ever. If anything, my behavior seemed to be driving them closer together. Cam was probably relieved to finally have a normal girlfriend instead of being stuck with an exhibitionist nut who had no sense of balance.
“But you can’t just give up,” Allie insisted as we assembled canapés in my family’s kitchen the day after the ceremony.
I shook my head and sighed. “You’re such an optimist, Allie. It’s sweet. But come on, we need to be practical. The Ball—and that twelfth date—is only three days away.” I rested my head on my hand. “Maybe this is fate telling me I was right in the first place. I had good reasons for thinking Cam and I should split up, remember? So why am I second-guessing myself now?”
“Because you and Cam belong together!” Allie looked as if she might cry.
I stuck a caper on a piece of frozen shrimp. “That’s what I used to think,” I said. “But maybe I was wrong. Maybe we weren’t that well-suited after all, and it was just inertia keeping us together all this time.”
Over the next couple of days, my mind kept worrying over that. Cam and I were so different. Everyone had always remarked on that. My friends had always insisted that was a good thing—opposites attract, balancing each other out, and all that. But now I wondered. Were we good for each other?
I was pretty sure that Cam had been good for me. He’d helped me relax and not take myself quite so seriously. He’d showed me how to balance out my natural inclination for hard work with a little fun and relaxation. But had any of me rubbed off on him?
In any case, I eventually realized that it didn’t matter. Whatever our relationship had been in the past, it was naive to think that it could ever be that way again. Too much had happened over the past few months. I’d reached a sort of critical mass of untruthfulness. Even if I could scheme my way into getting us back together, would I really be able to go on knowing how many lies and secrets I was keeping from him? No, I wasn’t sure I’d be able to handle that very well at all. Not with Cam, who was honest and sincere to a fault. It would feel almost like cheating on him. So what was the point, really?
The afternoon before Christmas Eve, I was perched on the edge of the tub in Allie’s bathroom. I was supposed to be helping her figure out what shoes and accessories to wear with her angel costume, but my mind kept wandering. When she hurried back to her bedroom at one point for another pair of shoes, I found myself staring at the twin sinks in the room. The one on the right was Allie’s. It was mostly tidy but completely random, with not only the usual toiletries occupying its edges but also loose change, several pens and pencils, scrunchies in every imaginable color, and even a paperback book. The other sink was her brother’s. It only had a few items sitting on i
ts edges—toothbrush, toothpaste, comb—but it still looked like a mess, encrusted with old smears of Colgate stuck with loose hairs. In my current mood, it seemed like some kind of metaphor. The sinks were paired up, but totally mismatched. Just like me and Cam.
“What about these?” Allie hurried back in wearing a pair of strappy ivory sandals. She stuck out her foot and stared at herself in the full-length mirror that stood between the two sinks. Then she let out a frustrated sigh. “None of these are working at all. I really need some new shoes to go with this costume, but I spent my whole paycheck already.” She glanced at me. “I wish we wore the same size. Those white mules you have would be perfect.”
“Maybe you could stuff the toes with tissue paper or something,” I suggested halfheartedly.
She giggled. “No way! I want to be able to dance the night away.” She twirled in front of the mirror, making the skirt of her costume flare out.
Her chipper mood was wearing on me a little, though I was trying not to let it show. After all, it wasn’t Allie’s fault that I was feeling so low. No, the blame for that lay squarely on me, myself, and I.
Allie glanced at me in the mirror. Then she turned around to face me.
“Hey,” she said. “You’re wallowing again, aren’t you? Stop that. All we need is the right theory, and maybe you and Cam will be together by the end of the Ball tomorrow. Have we talked about the Hot and Cold Theory yet? Or maybe the—”
“Enough with the theories, okay?” I snapped, finally too fed up to hold in my inner grinch any longer. “All this theorizing doesn’t seem to have landed you a date to the Ball, so why should I trust it either?”
I regretted the words as soon as they were out of my mouth. Like I said, Allie could be awfully sensitive about her love life.
In fact, she looked slightly wounded. “Fine,” she said. “If you don’t want my help, just say so.”
“I’m sorry, Allie.” I stood up and took a step toward her, a little sick to my stomach. I wasn’t sure I could handle it if I messed up another important relationship in my life right now. “I didn’t mean that. It was a rotten thing to say. Please forgive me?”
She hesitated, then shrugged and giggled. “Well, okay,” she exclaimed, grabbing me and hugging me so tightly that it made her angel wings crinkle. “How can I not forgive you? It’s Christmas!”
I hugged her back in relief. All the Claus Lake Christmas cheer was obviously going to her head and making her even giddier and happier than usual. I was glad about that, even if I wasn’t feeling it at all this year myself.
“Thanks.” I stepped back, and as I smiled at her, I reached a decision. “And listen, I have an idea about your costume. Why don’t you scrap the angel thing and wear my Xmas Genie outfit instead? If we roll the hem so the pants aren’t too long, it’ll look great on you.”
Her eyes lit up with interest. But then she frowned. “Wait,” she said. “If I wear that, then what will you wear? Your reindeer costume?”
I shook my head. I’d almost forgotten that the outfit Cam and I had picked out way back when was still sitting around in the back of my closet.
“No,” I said. “Actually, I think I’m going to skip the Ball this year.”
Allie gasped and took a step back. “What?” she exclaimed. “But you can’t skip the Ball! Nobody skips it—JoAnn Garson even dragged herself there last year when she had the flu, remember?”
“I know. But I’m really not in a Christmas kind of mood. And I’m even less in a party kind of mood.” I stared at her, willing her to understand. “I just think it’s better this way.”
She stared back. Her dark eyes looked troubled. But finally she nodded.
“Okay,” she said quietly. “If that’s really your decision, I guess I know better than to try to talk you out of it. It won’t be the same without you, though.”
“Thanks.” I smiled at her, welling up a little as I thought about what a good friend she really was. For a second I almost changed my mind—maybe I could still go, just hang out with Allie the whole time . . . But no. It was better this way. “So how about it?” I asked her. “Want to wear the genie costume?”
“Oh!” She shrugged, looking a little sheepish. “Well, if you’re sure you really won’t need it . . .”
“I’m sure.”
“All right. I’d hate to see the Triple-Xmas Genie go to waste.” She giggled, her joyful mood already seeping back. “I might tone it down to a single X, though. I could ditch the vest and wear my gauzy red beach cover-up over the candy cane thing instead. Oh, and I think I’ll wear tights under those see-through pants, too—otherwise my parents will probably disown me.” She giggled again. “What do you think?”
“Sounds perfect. You’ll have to take lots of pictures, okay?”
Christmas Eve dawned bright, clear, and cold. My parents were in a frenzy of last-minute preparations all day, so I barely saw them. When they finally came home to get changed for the Ball, I told them I had a stomach virus and wouldn’t be going. They were surprised but didn’t argue. After all the work they’d put in all autumn long, they were totally focused now on going and enjoying the results.
By the time they came downstairs, dressed as a gingerbread cookie (Mom) and a glass of milk (Dad), I was wrapped in my shabby old Polartec robe on the couch watching a rerun of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. “Looking good, guys,” I called to them.
My mom hurried in, pulled off her gingerbread glove, and put her hand to my forehead. “Are you sure you’ll be okay here all alone?” she asked.
“Totally,” I said. “It was probably just something I ate. I’ll be fine.”
“Come on, Mellie.” Dad toddled in, his legs looking skinny in their white stockings sticking out under the bottom of the milk glass costume. “Lexi’s a big girl. She’ll be fine. Just call us if you need us, okay, sweetie?”
“Sure, Dad.”
The doorbell rang. “That’ll be Laurie and Hal,” Mom said, hurrying to answer.
Sure enough, Nick’s parents were standing on the porch. They were dressed as a lumberjack and a decorated Christmas tree. My uncle was the tree. His ornaments jingled beneath his L.L. Bean parka.
“Lexi! Nick said you weren’t feeling well, but I was hoping you’d recover in time to make it to the Ball after all,” my aunt said as she entered and spotted me.
“I don’t think so,” I told her. “I’m going to have to sit this one out.”
She tsk-tsk’d a bit. “What a shame. Well, never mind. There’s always next year.”
There’s always next year. I felt a flash of premature nostalgia as I watched my parents and aunt and uncle acting all eager and merry, preparing to go out and have a good time enjoying the fruits of all their labor. No, there wouldn’t be a next year for me. Not really. Oh, sure, I’d probably come back to Claus Lake for Christmas and go to the Ball itself. But it wouldn’t be the same. The whole extended holiday season was such a part of life in Claus Lake. What would it be like to spend next autumn someplace else—someplace where people probably didn’t start humming Christmas carols right after Labor Day? It was a weird thought.
“Oh! I almost forgot.” My aunt had been saying something to my mother, but now she turned to my uncle. “Harold, did you remember to bring over the package?”
“What package?” my dad asked as he pulled on his coat. It looked pretty funny trying to stretch over his costume.
My uncle reached into his voluminous jacket pocket and pulled out a brown-paper-wrapped package about the size of a large book. “It’s for Lexi. It got delivered to our house a day or two ago by mistake,” he said, tracking snow all over the floorboards as he hurried over to me. “In all the commotion, we didn’t notice until just now.”
That sort of thing was always happening. Even though the same mail carrier had been delivering to our neighborhood for years, our two houses were always getting each other’s mail. I suppose that’s what came of having two families with the same last name living next door to
each other.
“Thanks, Uncle Hal.” I took the package without looking at it. “Have a great time tonight, you guys. Have some eggnog for me.”
“That’s a promise.” Dad gave me a wink. “Come on, gang. Let’s party!”
They all bustled out, talking and laughing. As soon as they were gone, the house felt a whole lot emptier.
I sighed. Not a creature was stirring. “Merry Christmas to me,” I muttered, feeling sorry for myself.
Not particularly interested in Rudolph’s TV antics, I glanced down at the package in my lap. I’d expected it to be a gift from one of my out-of-state relatives. But to my surprise, I saw Cam’s name and address on the return label!
I ripped open the package. Beneath the brown shipping paper were a gift-wrapped item and a cream-colored envelope.
My mother had taught me to open the card before the gift. So that was what I did, slitting open the envelope. Inside was a holiday card with a picture of a sprig of holly on the front and Cam’s familiar slanty, pointy handwriting inside.
Dear Lexi, it read. I hope you don’t think this is weird. But I came up with the perfect gift for you ages ago, before we broke up, and I still wanted you to have it even if we’re not together anymore. I thought it might help inspire you once you get to college. Merry Christmas. Your friend always, Cam.
Curious now, I grabbed the gift-wrapped package and ripped it open. It was one of those double picture frames. One half held a framed photo and the other a handwritten note. For a second I wasn’t sure what it was supposed to be.
Then I gasped as I recognized the sharp-chinned, wild-haired little girl staring out toward the camera. A cheerful, slightly portly man in a white lab coat stood beside her, one hand resting paternally on her shoulder.
“It’s me!” I exclaimed aloud to the empty house, grasping the frame in both hands and staring intently at the pair. “And—and is that the doctor from the Mayo clinic?”
The Twelve Dates of Christmas Page 13