I am really not much of a Christmas person but a few years ago I wrote a couple of Christmas stories that might have happened to the Cartwrights on the old TV Western Bonanza. If you have a few minutes you might want to try one or two. Here is the first one.
Cartwright
Christmas
A
fire crackled in the huge fireplace warming the large, log, ranch
house. Jamie gently removed the fragile, blown glass Christmas
decorations from their bed of straw in the wooden box where they
nestled most of the year. Carefully he hung each colored ball on a
branch of the Ponderosa pine tree that stood to the side of the
staircase.
Ben
sat his desk, where he had been working on the ranch ledgers, and
watched the boy that he had taken into his home. He packed fresh
tobacco into his pipe and lit it. He and Jamie had ridden to a meadow
where Jamie had selected a seven foot tall Ponderosa as the perfect
tree to be the Cartwright’s Christmas tree.
Jamie
had made chains out of some colored Chinese rice paper that Hop Sing
had, while Hop Sing had folded the same rice paper to make birds,
flowers, and animals.
Ben
looked at the different ornaments on the tree. They brought back lots
of memories. Draped around the tree were the strings of brightly
colored beads that Marie, Little Joe’s Ma, had brought from New
Orleans. There were the tiny crocheted stockings that Hoss’s Ma,
Inger, had made, and the tiny cloth dolls, fairies, and snowmen that
Adam’s Ma had contributed. On the top was a polished tin star that
Ben, himself, had made. Under the tree sat a tattered and well-used
rocking horse that had been Adams, but had been ridden by all three
little boys, and most liked by Joe. With the wooden horse were a set
of wooden blocks with the alphabet on them. Near by was a well-read
copy of a book, entitled ‘The Night Before Christmas’ written by
Clement Moore in 1822.
Thinking
of his sons caused Ben to wonder where all three of them were. It had
been months since they had heard from Adam. According to his last
letter, Adam had been traveling all over the eastern states, seeing
the country, he said, while doing some buying and trading for a
friend who owned a marketing company.
Hoss,
Joe, and their friend, Candy, a hired hand from the ranch, were off
in northern California somewhere. Hopefully on their way back home.
They had gone to deliver a small herd of breeder cows and a bull to
the Dinsmore ranch near a little town called Willow Creek a few miles
from the coast. It was a long trip, especially at this time of the
year, but Dinsmore had paid well for the herd as a wedding gift for
his son, and new daughter-in-law. Besides, Joe, Hoss, and Candy had
been excited to go and see the country there.
They
should have been back by now, but a telegram a few days before had
said they were staying for an extra couple of days with the
Dinsmores. The telegram didn’t say why, but Ben made a bet with
himself that it might have had something to do with a need to see
more of the northern California country. If he had gone, Ben was sure
he might have done the same.
But
he wasn’t so sure that they were going to make it home in time for
Christmas. It was already the 15Hop Sing came in from the kitchen and
set a plate of cookies and a cup of coffee on the desk for Ben. “You
no worry, Mister Cartwright. Hoss, and Little Joe, and Candy. They be
back for Christmas.”
“I
know, Hop Sing. I’m not worried,” said Ben to his cook,
housekeeper, and special friend.
“That
Mister Hoss, he can smell my cakes and cookies all the way to
California.”
The
black horse stopped when he felt his rider shift back in the saddle.
Cochise had stopped when Chub stopped, and so had Candy’s bay horse
that he called, Rusty.
“Ya
know? I could a sworn I smelled some a Hop Sing’s ginger bread,”
commented Hoss where he sat on Chub.
Little
Joe cackled. “Big brother, every time you get a teensy-weensy
hollow spot in your belly, you think you smell something that Hop
Sing might be cookin’.”
“Hoss,
I gotta agree with Joe. But some food does sound good right now,”
said Candy.
Joe
clucked to Cochise, who walked on, while Joe called back over his
shoulder. “Let’s go a little farther. We still got daylight.”
Candy
and Hoss followed Joe. “What’s the rush, Joe?” asked Hoss.
Candy
pulled his coat closer around himself, and his hat a bit lower. “A
fire would feel good, too.”
Joe
answered Hoss as he rode on. “It will put us that much closer to
home, and I could use some a Hop Sing’s cookin’, too.”
They
road for a few more minutes when suddenly Candy pulled up his bay,
and stared off through the forest of big trees that they were riding
through. “What was that?”
“What
was what?” asked Joe. He and Hoss stared where Candy stared.
“Over
there.” Candy pointed. “I thought I saw someone or maybe more
than one someone darting through the trees.”
“I
don’t see nothin’,” said Hoss.
“Me
neither,” said Joe. “You’re imaging things, Candy.”
At
that moment a large, gray hoot owl drifted down to pass just inches
over their heads, making all three men duck. It continued on to land
high in a dead tree. It hooted three times at them. All three of them
laughed at the scare an owl had given them.
Candy
shook his head then urged the bay on. “I don’t think what I saw
was an owl, but I know I’m getting’ tired, and I still think
we’re on the wrong trail. We should’a turned east by now.”
“Well,
this is the way that hand at the last ranch we stopped at said to go.
This way, through the trees, ‘til we came to a fork in the road
that has a sign saying Big Trees, then turn east. Said it was the
best and fastest way to get to Redding where we could catch the train
to go to Sacramento.”
“Well,
Little Brother. I think he was foolin’ with ya. We should a turned
east back at the saloon and gone to Redding.”
“Over
there?” Candy hissed in a loud whisper, and pointed to his right.
“I thought I saw someone, again.”
They
all looked but couldn’t see anything.
“Joe,
I think we gotta get Candy some food and a bed for the night.”
They
rode on for a while in silence. There were huge trees everywhere they
looked. Big trees that had almost a scary look to them. It was as if
the trees were watching them.
“Them
sure is ‘bout the biggest trees I done ever seen,” commented
Hoss. “You could build a whole house out a just one tree. They make
our Ponderosa pines look like match sticks.”
“They
sure are big,” agreed Joe. “Would be a lot of board feet in each
one. They must be them giant redwood cedars we heard about from Hank
Dinsmore.” Joe stopped Cochise and scrutinized the area around them
from one side of the trail to the other, then back. “Over there. A
little old man. Peakin’ round that tree.” He pointed at a huge
redwood among the forest of trees, ferns, and brush that seemed to be
getting thicker and more impenetrable the farther they went.
“You’re
as bad as Candy, Joe. I don’t see nothin’,”
“So
I’m imagin’ things, am I? Now who’s imagin’, cause I don’t
see nothin’, either.” Candy crossed his arms and leaned on his
saddle horn. “Did he have a funny, pointed, pullover cap?”
“Yeah,
he did and he had green clothes on. Bright green, with red trim.”
“See,
didn’t I tell ya I saw him, too.”
Hoss
slowly followed after Joe and Candy as they rode on, looking and
searching through the thick trees for a sign of the little man. “You
fella’s sound like you’re talkin’ ‘bout elves or leprechauns.
Joe, ya see anything now?”
“Nah.”
Joe guided Cochise around several of the big trees where he thought
he had seen the man. “Maybe it was the owl again. Or a deer or some
other animal.” A big layer of fog rolled in toward them, making it
more difficult to see. As they watched the fog fill each corner and
crevice of the forest a deer did poke its head out around a tree and
stared at them with great, big eyes filled with wonder at finding
humans in its home.
All
three men sighed. “Just a deer,” said Candy.
“Come
on, Joe. It’s getting’ late, and I’m starvin’, and we got
this dang fog comin’ in. It’s makin’ me cold. And all this talk
of little green men, and this fog, and these big trees is givin’ me
the creeps.” Hoss pulled his big coat about him and fastened the
top button under his chin. “Let’s find a place to hole up for the
night. With this fog we’re gonna get more lost then we already
are.” He urged his horse on.
Candy
followed Hoss. “Yeah, thanks to our all knowing, well-informed
guide.”
After
a minute Joe sent his pinto after his brother and friend at a trot so
he could catch up. Maybe tomorrow would be a better day. The fog
continued to settle deeper, and silently around them. It thickened
and lay heavy making the trees and brush look like shadows. It
deprived them of their usually good since of direction. Not real sure
of where to go they continued on, looking for a place to spend the
night.
In
the distance was the faint hoot of an owl.
One
horse blew softly, another shifted on the short picket line near the
camp, while the third still dozed as the first distant glow to the
east attempted to lighten the sky. Candy snored where he lay wrapped
in a blanket, head on his saddle. Joe turned over and pulled his
blanket tighter around him. Hoss cracked his eyes open slightly when
his stomach growled at him. Expecting to see the fire down to just a
few coals, he was surprised to see several chunks of wood had been
recently added to it, and it was roaring with flames.
Hoss
sat up quickly at the sight of a little man sitting on the far side
of the campfire cooking a piece of meat on a stick he held over
several hot coals he had pulled to the side of the fire.
“A
good, fine morning to you, Hoss,” said the man.
His
right hand going quickly to the Colt pistol that lay beside him, Hoss
rubbed the sleep out of his eyes with his left hand. He still wasn’t
sure he really was seeing the little man or if he might be dreaming.
“Who are you?”
The
little man was dressed in green, with high, black leather boots and a
brown leather jacket. There was a green cap that came to a point and
had a red tassel on its tip. His pointed ears twitched as he stared
back at the man who was three or four times bigger than he was.
Hoss
could tell he wasn’t afraid, and he didn’t seem to be a threat.
There was a gleam in his bright blue eyes and a knowing smile on his
face. “I am called Donner.” He withdrew the stick and meat from
the fire. He tested the meat with a finger, then tore a strip off and
ate it. “My friends are called Dasher, and Blitzen. My wife is
Crystal, and my daughter is Dancer.
Without
Hoss realizing it four other people had come out from where they had
been hiding. Two were men and two were women. Crystal removed a
burlap bag from the pack of supplies that Hoss had brought so he
didn’t starve on the trip. She removed the chunk of meat and sliced
off several pieces. She pierced them with sticks and handed them out
to the others. Dancer took two; apparently one was for her mother.
Crystal sliced off a larger piece, put it on a stick and handed it to
Hoss. The smell of roasting meat filled the camp. “Where ya from,”
queried Hoss as he turned the stick slowly so each side of the meat
could cook.
Donner
took another bite. “We are from here. The Big Tree Forest. At least
we are now.”
“Now?”
echoed Hoss.
Donner
nodded his head. “Now. Our people used to be from other places. And
I think there are still some in those places. Places you call
Germany, Sweden, England, Ireland. Before that we were from a far,
far away planet called Vol-Can.”
“Vol-Can?
Another plant? I never heard of such nonsense.” This time the
questions were from Joe who had awakened and had been listening to
their guests. He returned the revolver he had in his hand to its
holster. He pulled on his boots, then stood, picked up the coffee
pot, filled it with water from a canteen, added a measure of coffee,
and set it on a hot rock at the edge of the fire. “No one can come
from another planet. It’s impossible, and stupid to even think
about. Keep the fantasies to your self. Just tell us who you are and
what you want.”
Donner
laughed. “Want? We don’t want anything, Little Joe, other than to
share your fire and food. We have just been ----curious----shall I
say-----about why you are here.”
“Well,
we’re headed for Redding so’s we can catch a train to Sacramento,
and get home fer Christmas,” explained Hoss. “But my little
brother, here, listened to some drunk cowhand fer directions, and
done got us lost.”
One
of the other little men snickered. Joe and Hoss didn’t know if it
was Dasher or Blitzen. They couldn’t tell them apart. Donner and
the two women just smiled at the story.
Candy
continued to snore in what appeared to be a very sound sleep.
Hoss
had to ask some more questions. “I don’t mean to offend you
people but why are ya’ll so small. And yer ears are pointed.”
“And
how come ya know our names,” put in Joe.
One
of the women, Crystal, the wife of Donner spoke. “We are unsure of
why we are not like you or other people. We only have our legends to
go by. Stories passed down by mouth from generation to generation for
many hundreds of years.”
“Well,
I always liked a good tale, don’t you, Joe?”
“Yeah.
Sure I do,” answered Joe, sarcastically.
“I
am called Crystal, because I can use crystal rocks to see into the
future, and into the past, and to remember the stories.” She
reached in the bag she had brought to the camp, and produced a shiny,
bright crystal. It was about two inches long, an inch wide and
pointed on one end. It almost seemed to glow. “Our stories say that
hundreds of hundreds of years ago our first people came from another
planet or maybe it was a star. We only know it was somewhere in the
far heavens. It was called Vol-Can. The leader or king of Vol-Can
wanted to send his people to other places to learn about other people
and cultures.”
“But
– But – How -?” Hoss tried to ask.
Crystal
held up a hand to silence him. “We do not know how we got from
Vol-Can to Earth. Our king put us here, and now we can never go back.
As to why we are small and have pointed ears. – it is just the way
we are. The legends say we were not always small. I think it has
happened when we married with other earth people. There were not
enough of us to continue our tribe and we found it necessary to find
husbands and wives among other tribes.”
“I
never heard of no Vol-Cans before. You’re just making this up,”
smirked Joe.
“Maybe
you have not heard of Vol-Cans. Many have not. We are also known by
other names. Elves, leprechauns, fairies, gnomes, pixies, and alfars,
spirits, and dwarfs. Only some people can see us. Like you, Hoss, and
you, Joe. But your friend Candy can not see or hear us.”
“Now,
I wouldn’t be so sure about that, if’n I was you,” said Hoss,
shifting position on his bedroll trying to get more comfortable.
“Candy saw one of you first, yesterday. Then Joe and I didn’t see
you all ‘til I woke up this mornin’.”
“Did
he now,” said Donner showing surprise, and the others looked just
as upset that Candy had seen them. “Now fancy that, would you.”
“Now
tell us, Mister Donner, what do ya’ll do out here?” questioned
Hoss.
Donner’s
daughter, Dancer was quick to answer. “We work, of course. We make
things – toys, furniture, clothes, toys, and – and things. And
then we sell them – in – certain – markets.”
“Did
you say we make toys,” cut in Blitzen.
“Yes,
toys,” Crystal added.
“We
make lots of toys,” came from Dasher.
“Toys,”
solemnly echoed Donner.
“Enough
about the toys,” exclaimed Joe disgustedly. “So what if you make
toys?”
Sweetly
Dancer continued,” We do live here, so we have families, and raise
our food, and chickens, and goats, and ponies. She pointed back
toward the trees where four small horses or ponies stood. They had
short legs, and very shaggy manes and tails. Mostly we keep to
ourselves. But sometimes – sometimes we help people – like
travelers who are lost.” She smiled at Joe and wiggled her pointed
ears.
Joe
wasn’t overly impressed. Her pointed ears sort of made him sick to
his stomach. He reached for his coffee pot but it hadn’t even
started to boil yet. Changing his mind he grabbed a canteen and took
a swig of water. When he looked up all the elves or Vol-Cans or
whoever they were had disappeared; except for Donner.
“Go
back about ten miles. There is a fork you missed that goes east. It
will take you to Redding. I have sent Blitzen and Dasher ahead to
mark it properly. You won’t miss it this time.” He held up his
right hand and made a V with his fingers. Two fingers to each side,
the V in the middle. “May you have peace and a long life.” He
picked up a stick and poked at the fire causing sparks to fly up.
“Your friend is waking up.”
Hoss
and Joe both looked over toward where Candy lay. The cowhand groaned,
raised his head and noticed the two brothers gawking at him. “What’s
the mater?” he asked, “you two look like you seen a ghost or
somethin’.”
“Or
something,” said Joe.
“Candy,”
said Hoss, “I want you to meet Mister Donner.” He looked back
toward the elf but there was no one there. “Where did he go?”
“Who?”
asked Candy, as he pulled on his boots. “That coffee ready yet?”
Hoss
tried to explain about the little elf people, but Candy just cackled
with laughter. “Heck of a dream you had, Hoss.” He looked at Joe.
“Oh,
it wasn’t a dream,” Joe assured Candy. “I saw ‘em, too. And
so did you, yesterday.”
“You’re
both pullin’ my leg.” Candy reached for the now boiling coffee
pot and poured a cup. He nearly dropped it when an owl hooted at them
from a nearby tree. On silent wings it lifted into the air and in
seconds was gone from sight.
Big
flakes of snow swirled down covering the ground, the trees, and the
small travelers’ inn and eatery located in the countryside
somewhere south of Boston. It looked like a welcome place of rest to
the weary rider as he rode up. He dismounted, led his horse into a
nearby stable, unsaddled, and rubbed down the tired animal, then gave
it some hay and oats. He picked up his saddlebags, and a satchel, and
stepped up on the porch of The Highland Hotel. He slapped off as much
of the snow as he could, petted a small black and white collie dog
that wagged its tail in greeting and opened the door. He stepped
inside and took a look around the establishment. It looked clean, and
neat and there was the smell of stew, fresh bread, and coffee. Just
what he needed on a cold, snowy night.
A
handful of people looked back at him then returned to what they were
doing, except for one. “Evenin’, Sir. If’in you need a room or
a meal, you have come to the right place,” said a man of about
fifty with a Scottish accent. “I’m Angus McNell, but most just
call me Scotty.”
The
traveler dropped his bags on the floor. “I’m Adam Cartwright. A
meal and a room sounds good.”
Adam
drank a beer then ate a meal of the hot stew and bread. When a woman
brought a pot of coffee and a cup he accepted. She poured coffee in
the cup, smiled sweetly at Adam and left to refill the cups of the
other diners. He leaned back in his chair, sipped the coffee and
surveyed the room. Two men who looked like drummers or salesmen
talked in low tones while they finished their meals. The woman who
had waited on him cleaned off a table and returned the dishes to a
small kitchen in the back. Scotty stood behind a bar and wiped at it
absentmindedly.
Adam
noticed a small tree standing in a corner by a rocking chair near the
kitchen door. It was decorated with strings of popcorn, wooden stars
with intricate designs cut into them and small wooden birds. On a
nearby table stood three candles illuminating a small wooden
nativity. Adam decided someone was a very good woodcarver. As he
thought that Scotty came from behind the bar, sat in the rocker,
picked up a chunk of wood and a knife from a wooden crate beside him
and started carving.
Seeing
the tree caused Adam to wonder what the date might be. He knew it was
close to Christmas but with all the traveling he had been doing he
wasn’t sure of the exact date. Maybe it was Christmas Eve.
The
two drummers stood and went up the stairs to their rooms. For a few
long moments there was only the sound of the fire and the snick of
Scotty’s old knife as he worked on the wood.
Finally
Adam spoke. “I believe it might be close to Christmas, but I’ve
lost track of the date. Could you tell me what it is?”
“Ay,
Mr. Cartwright. You are correct. Christmas it ‘tis. Or rather
Christmas Eve. It’s still the 24Adam nodded his head. “I’m glad
I didn’t miss it. I think I might have been a bit disappointed if
you had said it was after Christmas.” For a moment he thought of
the package of books he had sent to his family on the Ponderosa
Ranch. He wondered if they had received them yet. He hoped they had,
as it had been about a month since he mailed them. Memories of
growing up on the Ponderosa flooded him mind, causing him to smile
and wonder what his father, and brothers were doing on this Christmas
Eve. Christmas had always been a magical time for him and his family.
Both
women came out of the kitchen, the older one carrying a tray with two
cups and a teapot. They took seats at a table where they sat drinking
tea and relaxing.
The
front door opened and a boy of about seven or eight came in followed
by a swirl of snowflakes. The boy had an armful of wood that he
dropped in a big wood box by the door. He did this about four times
until the wood box was filled. The last time the collie came in with
him. The snow was coming down harder and faster. It looked like they
might be in for a blizzard.
Scotty
added a few pieces to the fire, bringing it to a roar that warmed the
big room, making everyone drozy, especially Adam. It had been a long
day but he felt relucent to go to his room.
The
younger woman went back to the kitchen and returned with a plate
covered in sugar cookies, gingerbread and shortcakes. She offered
some first to Adam, who gladly took several, and then to the other.
The first bite almost melted in his mouth. They were as good as the
ones he remembered Hop Sing making. Again thoughts of Hop Sing made
him think of the Ponderosa Ranch and home. He wished he had gone back
for Christmas but at least he had found this place to stay for the
night. He decided he liked the small hotel and its residents. Maybe
it would be a good idea to head west for Virginia City when spring
came.
Scotty
interrupted his thoughts. “That is my daughter, Kayla. She is
almost as good a cook as her ma, my wife, Katherine.” He looked at
the two women and winked. They ducked their heads in embarrassment.
“And the boy is my grandson, Patrick. He is a good boy. Usually.”
Adam
acknowledged the introduction. “I am pleased to meet you.” He
nodded his head at the women. “These cookies are delightful.
Patrick, thanks for keeping the wood box full of wood on a night like
this.”
Patrick
then ran upstairs but came back soon with four stocking. The adults
grinned at him but didn’t say anything as he hung them on nails
next to the tree.
Scotty
teased him a bit saying, “I said you were good but do you think
Saint Nick will think you have been good enough so that he can leave
you a present.”
Patrick
grabbed another piece of shortbread. “I hope so. I want a new book
to read.”
The
boys comment caused Adam to think of a story. “I know a Christmas
poem,” he said. “If you would like to hear it.”
“Oh,
yes, please, Mr. Cartwright.” Patrick clapped his hands in
excitement.
“’Twas
the night before Christmas and all through the house,” Adam
continued with the well-known poem to the delight of the boy, his
mother, and grandparents.
When
he had finished Katherine said to Patrick, “Is it not time for you
to go to bed?”
“Ah,
Grandma, it is early yet.”
“Saint
Nick will not come until you go to sleep.”
“But
how does he know, Grandma, and what about the snow storm. Will he be
able to come in it?”
“He
uses his magic,” she whispered loud enough for all to hear.
“Off
to bed with you, Lad. Morning will come soon enough,” said Scotty
to the boy.
Kayla
ushered her son up the stairs, with her mother following.
“Angus,
are you coming?” asked Katherine, when halfway up the stairs.
“Go
on with you, Woman. I’ll be along in a bit.” Scotty walked behind
the bar, took down a bottle of whiskey, picked up two shot glasses,
and then went to the table where Adam sat. “Will you have a drink
with me, Mr. Cartwright?”
“I’ll
be glad to, Scotty. And, please, call me Adam.”
“Adam,
it is then, Lad.” He poured a drink into each of the two shot
glasses. “To a Merry Christmas.” He raised his glass in a toast.
Adam
echoed his toast. “To a Merry Christmas.”
Kayla
appeared on the stairs and came down. She put a finger to her lips
asking for Scotty and Adam to keep silent. As the two men watched she
laid a small white shirt, and a pair of dark brown pants under the
tree. Then a pair of knitted socks and gloves. She and her mom had
worked hard on them so Patrick could have a new set of clothes.
Scotty
went behind the bar again. He dug around for a bit and returned with
a beautifully carved pony. He set it under the tree with the
clothing.
“It
is so pretty, Papa,” said Kayla. “Thanks for making it for
Patrick.”
“Go
on with you, Lass. Off to bed.”
Kayla
gave her father a hug and headed back up the stairs, then turned back
and called to Adam. “Goodnight, Mr. Cartwright. I’ll see you in
the mornin’ for breakfast.”
“Goodnight,
Kayla.”
Scotty
had returned to digging behind the bar. Again he went to the tree and
placed a carved cat near the pony, and an intricately carved wooden
vase with it. As he returned to the bar for more things he explained
to Adam. “Kayla loves Patrick more than anything. She is a widow,
now, and misses her man.” He added several wooden bowls nested
together and some wooden spoons. He stood up. “Mr. Cartwright,
Adam, I wish you goodnight, sir.” He hesitated. “Adam, we would
be pleased if you would join us for Christmas dinner tomorrow. Stay
here for a day or so, if you wish. Wait out this storm. It is warm
and dry here.”
Adam,
too, had been listening to the storm that sounded as if it were
getting worse. “I think that sounds like a good idea, Scotty. And a
goodnight to you, too.”
The
two Cartwright brothers and Candy had found their way out of the huge
redwood forest with the help of the Elves. They had made their way to
Redding and caught a train to Sacramento, with their horses riding in
a stock car. Then it had been on to Virginia City, Nevada. It had
been a long trip and the thought of the Ponderosa Ranch and home was
better and better.
It
was a huge relief when they were finally able to guide their horses
into the ranch yard and dismount. The evening was late and the smell
of supper drifted out to them when the front door opened and Jamie
came running out asking a string of questions that no one could
answer before he would ask another.
Ben
came out to greet his sons and friend, and there was much slapping of
backs and a few hug as everyone was glad they had made it back before
Christmas. “How was the trip? Did the cattle get there in good
condition?”
“They
were in fine condition and Hank Dinsmore was pleased with them,”
said Joe.
“It
was a good trip, Pa,” said Hoss. “Just long. But we made it.
Thanks to some help from some little people called Elves, when Joe
got us lost.”
Ben
crossed his arms and stared at his middle son, not sure he had heard
him right. “What did you say, Hoss? Joe got you lost? Elves?”
“Elves,”
echoed Jamie. “What about elves?”
“It’s
a long story, Pa,” said Joe, as he swung his saddlebags over his
shoulder.
“Yeah,
and I’ve heard it to many times, already,” added Candy.
“Oh,
and Pa, we stopped in Virginia City and picked up the mail, and there
was a package from Adam” Joe un-strapped a package wrapped in brown
paper and tied with twine from where he had put it behind his saddle
on top of his bedroll.
“Well,”
said Ben excitedly. “It’s nice to know that he remembered us at
last. Too bad we didn’t have an address to send him at least a
letter.”
“Come
on,” said Hoss entering the ranch house. “I can’t wait to eat
some a Hop Sings good cookin’.”
Later
that Christmas Eve Ben sat by the fire watching and listening to his
son’s and friends as they laughed and joked. They ate candy and
cookies that Hop Sing had made. Jamie held a skillet over the fire to
pop more popcorn. Hoss made a vain attempt to sing Jingle Bells.
Ben
wondered where his oldest son, Adam might be on this night. They had
added his gifts to the others under the tree. They felt like books,
which would be like Adam who had always loved to read, as did all the
Cartwrights.
Ben
hoped Adam knew they were thinking of him.
Adam
sat by the fire for a few more moments thinking of how much he liked
it here. He liked Scotty and his family and was glad he had been
asked to stay over until the storm was gone. He wondered if Scotty
was trying to play matchmaker for his daughter.
The
wind blew and moaned and threw sleet and snow against the
windowpanes. The collie lay in front of the fire softly wined and
wiggled his legs in his sleep. Probably chasing rabbits in his
dreams, thought Adam. Two cats, a big tabby, and a smaller half-grown
calico silently drifted in from the kitchen. They curled up together
on a rag rug that lay under a small table.
Quietly
Adam stood, set his valise on the table and took out several items.
Going to the tree he knelt and laid two silk scarves near the gifts
Scotty and Kayla had left. One was a shimmery sky blue to match
Kayla’s eyes. The other was a deep yellow that would be nice for
Katherine. He placed a small but sharp skinning knife with a bone
handle in Scotty’s rocker. Then he put a book beneath Patrick’s
stocking. It was ‘Huckleberry Finn’ by Mark Twain. He thought the
boy would like it. He knew he always had.
Turning
he thought he saw a face at the window, peeking in. It had looked
like a short man, maybe heavy set with a long, white beard. He seemed
to have on a reddish brown, pullover cap and a matching coat. Adam
opened the door wondering if a late traveler needed to come in for
the night. He could see no one on the porch. As he hesitated the
sound of sleigh bells and hoof beats came faintly through the wind
and snow. Adam could have sworn he heard someone calling out “Merry
Christmas.”
The
End
________
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