Thursday, December 24, 2015

Merry Christmas Special: A Tapestry Christmas!

A Tapestry Christmas
By M & T Erickson

It was Sarah’s first Christmas at the Tapestry.  
She had no idea what to expect, especially after what they’d gone through to get the family Christmas tree yesterday.  Because her parents had tried living like humans, she’d only been to tree lots.  Getting a tree from the Beyond had been a lot more than she’d bargained for.
Taps, with Jeffrey at her side, stood before their group, seven teenagers, in the dining room and announced, “Now that you’ve secured our family tree, there is one more Christmas tradition that I must introduce.” 
She held out her hand and Jeffrey reached into his pocket and pulled out a small hand carved wood box and placed it on her palm.  On the front was:  Twiggle  and beneath that:  Handcrafted by Messrs. Persimmons and Cujels.
The beaming Taps carefully slid open the lid. 
Inside, was…a pickle.  It was six inches tall, there were bumps for facial features and a red scarf was tied where a neck would be.  On its hands were miniscule red and white mittens.  On its spindly legs were oversized white fur boots that reached to its knobby knees.  The odd boots had curled toes with a bell dangling from each.
“The bells are used for children under age eight, so you won’t need those.” 
They disappeared. 
“You are all up for the challenge.” 
The blonde Cam and dark haired Sal looked at each other, no doubt wondering how a pickle would be a challenge.
“What do pickles have to do with Christmas, mom?” asked T, Sarah’s adopted brother. 
Taps smiled.  “If you catch him, you get to find out.” 
T’s pupils enlarged and his shoulders twitched.  “I’m ready.” 
“First the rules, Tristan.” 
“Oh, right,” T said, eyes fixed on the pickle.  “It’s just that something in me wants to bite it…is that allowed?” 
“No.”  Jeffrey answered with one eyebrow rising.   “If you do, you’ll be disqualified, your mouth will be glued shut, your teeth will dissolve, and you’ll never play Twiggle again.”  
Taps gently cleared her throat.  “Twiggle was started by my father, finished by Jeffrey, and enchanted by my mother.” 
Cam looked at his idol.  “Cool…but, what’s the point of the tradition?  It’s a pickle, not a jinn trapped in a pickle – or is it?” 
All of them looked at her, knowing anything was possible with Taps. 
She smiled as Jeffrey answered, “The tradition was begun the year that Madam’s sister, Liddy, was born.  Master Persimmons and I made it to keep Madam from driving her mother to distraction.” 
 Taps’ cheeks pinkened.  “Back to Twiggle.”
The glass-looking pickle stood up in the box and the bumps he had for eyes opened, revealing his eyes were like tiny head lamps.
“Why is he called Twiggle?”  asked Dee, looking curiously at the pickle.
“Twas a combination of twitch and giggle,” Jeffrey said, looking fondly at Dee, who, with her coppery hair, looked a great deal like Taps.  “Madam will demonstrate before she releases him.”
Taps instructed, “For the following 24 days you will search for Twiggle.  He is limited to the house proper.  He cannot go into the kitchen, below stairs, or into any red-knobbed rooms.” 
Cam looked dumbfounded.  “Why would we want to chase a pickle?” 
“And what if Raffy or Rascal catch him?”  Dee bit her lip, worried about her pets.
“Then I guess they’ll get the present,” Taps answered in a tone that indicated it was unlikely. 
“What present?”  T asked.
“For each of the twenty-four bumps on Twiggle’s body, there are seven gifts – one for each of you.  If you catch him you get the presents the day represents.  If he remains uncaught, the days presents go beneath the tree, which Jeffrey and Prance warded to prevent peeking.”
Jeffrey stared at all of them with narrowed eyes, “They will be holograms of the real thing, so there’s no use in trying to shake, peel, or use magic to discover what’s inside.”
T looked disappointed.  “What about my sense of smell?”
“You’re welcome to try,” Jeffrey said.
“You can’t smell holograms,” Zack pointed out.
“How do you know?  Have you ever tried?” T asked, flopping down at the table.
“What kind of presents?” Cam asked.  “A candy cane or what?” 
“No candy.  It could be something as simple as an upgrade for your lunchbox or as complex as a one-time trip to the Hall of Mirrors.” 
“The what?” Zack asked, his attention drawn away from Sal for the first time. 
“A space where time and place mean nothing and everything,” Jeffrey smirked. 
“A puzzle?” T asked.
“I wish Ronnie were here,” Sal said softly.  “She’d love this.  She’s awesome at puzzles.”
“Well, she should be,” Dee said.  “She’s a three.”
Sarah felt Sal’s heart strings tighten.  Ronnie, Sal’s little sister, had been kidnapped months ago with no new leads.
“What does Twiggle do and how do we find it?” Ransom, the only human in their group, asked.
“Watch.” Taps softly said, “Tis the Season.” 
The pickle’s body glowed and glitter-like sparkles filled him, then faded 
“He’s so cute!”  Dee said, smiling widely.  “Can he stay in my room?” 
“No,” Jeffrey bluntly answered. 
“It’s time to show you his bag of tricks.”  Taps held Twiggle up to her face, stared at it, and said, “Blend.” 
He became invisible except for a faint outline. 
“Jump.” 
Now visible, he leaped from her hand up to the chandelier, giggling mischievously and twitching, making the chandelier sway a bit.      
“Sneak.” 
He walked off the edge of the chandelier and walked on air, doing a swan dive to the floor, tucking and rolling at the last moment.  He jumped to his booted feet and with a salute, disappeared. 
“Where’d he go?” asked T, his eyes scanning the ground. 
“The hunt has begun,” Jeffrey calmly announced.    
“Can we work together?” Dee asked.  “Raffy and Rascal will want to be part of this.” 
“Course,” Taps answered. 
“How long did it take you to catch it?” Sarah asked.
“Twenty-seven years, with Lacey’s help.” 
“That explains a lot,” Cam whispered to Zack.
Lacey was Taps’ cousin and very…unpredictable. 
“One more thing, children,” Taps said.  “Twiggle carries the true meaning of Christmas within.” 
Ransom gave her an odd look.  “A pickle carries the meaning of Christmas?” 
“Truly,” Taps confirmed.  “If no one has caught him beforehand, I will summon him on the eve of the 24th.  Good luck.”
*
The entire month of December, no one had any luck beyond seeing Twiggle’s footprints and too-brief appearances. 
He’d appeared in front of Cam, whacked him on the nose, and disappeared. 
Twice, he’d appeared on Sarah’s shoulder and she was bowled over by others in their efforts to get him. 
Ransom was smacked on the head with a bag of mistletoe as he looked at Sarah at dinner. Twiggle ran off, giggling madly, diving into Prance’s tiny mug.  The pink goblin, who was head of security, gave a grinchy grin, a wicked laugh and vanished, mug in hand. 
“Now we’ll never find it!”  T complained.
The next day, Dee nearly won the game by accidentally catching Twiggle in her crochet work, but he got away because she shook him free.  “You should see the knots he left behind!”
Sal and Sarah had their first serious argument when Twiggle appeared on Zack’s head and Sal used her bat to try and knock Twiggle out.  She missed.  It took Sarah an entire afternoon to heal Zack’s concussion. 
T was all over the place trying to catch the elusive pickle, only to find him sitting on his forehead whenever he woke – and disappearing on the spot, with a giggle and twitch. 
One night after dinner, Sarah excused herself.
“Where are you going?  Did you spot the pickle?” Cam and Sal both rose to their feet, their eyes scanning the room.
“No, I’m going to bed, I’m tired.”
“You give up way too easy,” Sal said with a frown.
“We’ll get a present anyway,” Dee calmly said, finally untying the last knot Twiggle had made.
“Tomorrow’s Christmas Eve,” Sarah pointed out.  “I don’t care about catching a pickle anymore. It took Taps twenty-seven years to find it!”
“It’s not about the gifts!”  Cam exclaimed.
“Then what is it about?” Ransom asked him.
“It’s about the right to gloat that I did it faster than Taps!”
 “Exactly,” Sal agreed.
“There it is!”  T yelled, howling like wolf and knocking over the table to capture Twiggle.
Zack rolled his eyes and waved good night to Sarah.
She walked up the stairs, feeling Ransom’s eyes on her. 
Honestly, they were no closer to capturing the pickle than they were on the first day.  In the future, she would not join the hunt.  She’d rather spend time walking around the beautifully decorated Tapestry grounds…with Ransom of course.
On Christmas Eve, they went to the parlor after dinner. Taps entered the room with Jeffrey, who moved to stand over by the gorgeous family tree.  It had the surprising habit of slapping your hands if you touched its ornaments.
Taps opened her hand and said, “Silent Night.”
Twiggle appeared at the top of the tree near the star and jumped down to her gloved palm.  Once there, he split in half like a broken peanut shell. 
A mem began, filling the entire room, enveloping them in a small manger with the Christ child in swaddling clothes, gazing up at the beautiful Mary and his foster-father, Joseph.  A brilliant star beamed overhead and a heavenly choir of angels was singing.  In silent awe they watched as shepherds came to worship the child destined to save them all.
There was a moment of silence as the image faded.
“Thank you,” Ransom said into the reverent quiet.  “My family used to read the story every Christmas Eve.  It’s been a long time since I’ve heard it and now I got to see it in a way I’d never dreamed possible as a boy.”
“Mom, did you burp baby Jesus while you were there?” Dee asked. 
Taps gave her a long look.  “That was a mem of a portrayal my father witnessed.”
“Wow, that is old,” T said, unselfconsciously.
Jeffrey nodded.  “Indeed, as he was born in the 14th century.”
“It’s all the more precious because of it,” Taps agreed with a happy smile.  She put the now-whole Twiggle back into the box.  As she slid on the lid, heaps of presents appeared beneath the tree and spilled out onto the floor.
“My father always said, The only way to Christmas at the Tapestry is through Christ,” she told them.  “Because all worthwhile gifts come from Him.”
“I can hardly wait for next year!” T said, his eyes fixed on the box with Twiggle inside.
“I’m glad,” Taps said with a twinkle in her eye.  “Because this year we went easy on you.  Next year, the rules change.”




Background story:  We have a family pickle.  I hid it every year in a different spot and our children searched always found it.  As they got older, I finally found the perfect spot and the pickle remains hidden to this day.  This set me to thinking what a magical pickle would be like – at the Tapestry.  (Michelle) 

Merry Christmas to one and all!
This was a cut scene from Book 3. We just couldn't fit it in. But we still wanted to share this special moment with all of you. Mom and I had a fun time writing it!
I hope you enjoy the Christmas season and hold the true meaning deep within your hearts.
-T. Erickson

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