Read I'll Be Home for Christmas Online

Authors: Fern Michaels

Tags: #General, #Romance, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Christmas stories; American, #Christmas stories, #Fantasy, #Short Stories (single author), #Short Stories

I'll Be Home for Christmas (24 page)

Amy's jaw dropped as she tried to absorb what Gus Moss was telling her. Her back stiffened. “Let me be sure I understand what you've just said. As far as you know the $45 per tree is a rumor. Moss Farms is divided into two parts. You own half, your father owns half. You are working your tree fields, and your father's are nothing but garbage. You're willing to sell your trees to me for $80 a tree which is a 20 percent discount to the Seniors. Did I get that all right?”

“That's about it. We'll trim the base, clip the straggly branches, drill the hole in the trunk and net the trees. We'll divide the lot into three categories—small, medium and large trees. You can sell them for whatever you want. We'll even deliver them to your site. That's all gratis. Labor is expensive. It's the best I can do.”

“Well, that isn't good enough, Mr. Moss. This is for charity, for the Senior Citizens of our town. Your father is a senior citizen, and so is my mother. One day you and I will be seniors. Shame on you, Gus Moss. I wouldn't do business with you if you paid me my weight in gold. Who do you think you are?”

His love was angry. Well, he was angry too. “I'm an architect. I'm not a tree farmer. I came here to help my father and to protect my interest in this farm. I put my personal life on hold to come here to do this and to make it work. And it is working. My fields are ready to go.”

“Helloooo, Mr. Moss. I did the same thing. I'm going to make it work, but for all the
right
reasons. Not to make money for myself and to protect my investment.”

The purple hat was suddenly on her head, the muffler whipping past his nose as she wrapped it around her neck. “You…you…
Scrooge.
Shame on you, Gus Moss. I hope you enjoy your ill-gotten gains. Thanks for the pie.” The door slammed behind Amy. Cyrus let out a shrill bark and slammed against the back door as he tried to understand the young woman's angry tone.

Gus flopped down on the chair he'd been sitting on during Amy Baran's tirade.
Scrooge! Scrooge!
She'd called him, Gus Moss, a scrooge.

Chapter Eight

The Rafters was a secluded restaurant perched high on a hill. In the fall and winter when the trees were bare, the nation's capitol could be seen in the distance. It wasn't necessarily the kind of eatery where one went to be seen—just the opposite, as it afforded privacy and small rooms where one could dine without worrying about people stopping by to say hello. It was rumored that more than one senator and congressmen had dalliances in the private rooms. The owners of the establishment, the ladies Harriet and Olivia Neeson, were quick to deny all such rumors.

Sam Moss had called ahead for a reservation and was assured by Harriet, who had been a dear friend of his wife, Sara, that she would reserve the best table in the house.

Sam and Tillie were halfway through the meal when Sam realized he was enjoying himself. He liked the witty, sharp-tongued Tillie Baran. He knew he was going to be sorely disappointed if this outing turned out to be solely about Christmas trees.

It had been ages, years actually, since he'd dined out. He always felt like a fish out of water sitting down in a restaurant by himself. When Sara was alive, they ate out every Saturday and Sunday to give her a break from cooking. He'd liked the fact that they both got slicked up. Sara preferred to say they got dressed up. Before his date with Tillie he'd dithered about what to wear and had trouble deciding if he should get dressed up. Finally, he settled on one of his vintage sport jackets. He was glad now that he hadn't gone the suit-and-tie route, because Tillie was dressed casually. She smelled so good he kept sniffing her over the delectable aromas emanating from the kitchen. Yes sireee, he was enjoying himself.

Tillie looked up from her pecan-crusted salmon she was eating and said, “I can't help but notice how you keep sniffing, Sam. Do I still smell like mothballs?”

“No, no. I'm trying to decide which smells better, the aromas from the kitchen or your perfume. It's been a long time since I smelled perfume. The truth is, I haven't been out with a lady since Sara died.”

Tillie pushed her plate away. “I can top that, Sam. I haven't been with a man in twenty-eight years. What I mean is, I haven't…never mind. It must have been very hard on you when Sara passed away. My husband…it was different. I know you and Sara were very happy.”

Sam saw that his dinner companion was becoming agitated. “That was all a long time ago. Life goes on whether we like it or not. Let's talk about more pleasant things.”

“How about we get down to business and talk about trees?” Tillie said bluntly.

“I can do it, Tillie, but it's going to pose a big problem for me. Unless we can come up with some way…Look, I'm on shaky ground where my son is concerned. We're being civil to one another but our relationship is very strained. He hasn't forgiven me for a lot of things I really don't want to go into right now. What that means to you is, he is working his half of the farm. He hired people to thin out the trees. He did some irrigating and fertilizing. His half. My half of the fields is in poor shape. If we can find a way to get the trees thinned and cut, I'll donate as many as you want to the Seniors' fund-raiser.”

“Sam! Really! You'll donate as many as we can sell? That's wonderful. We'll just have to find people to help us. We have over seventy members to our chapter. The members have sons, nephews, grandchildren. Surely we can convince them to help us.”

Sam toyed with his wineglass. “We have to do it at night, Tillie.”

Tillie reared back in her chair. “At night! Right off, I see that as a problem. Why?”

Sam looked embarrassed. “I don't want Gus to know. Right now the boy doesn't have a very high opinion of me. Like I said, we're on shaky ground. He left his business to come here to help me. I reacted like the old fool I am, said and did a lot of things Sara would deplore, but I did them anyway. He wants to prove to me he can get the farm back on its feet. He just might succeed at the rate he's going. It's too late to get my fields in shape, so while I'm donating them to you, you won't be able to charge much for them. That means they aren't going to be perfect trees. If I donate them to you, whatever you do sell them for will be all profit. Perhaps less than you planned, but you'll make something. If you can get the volunteers, I think we can make it work. Maybe you can bill them as Charlie Brown trees.” Sam guffawed at what he thought was his witticism.

“Why are you doing this, Sam?” Tillie asked suspiciously. “When I came out to see you weeks ago you all but ran me off your property.”

“I'm sorry about that. I wasn't in a good place mentally at the time. Then Gus came home with a major attitude. I had to fall back and regroup. At my age it's damn hard to admit when you're wrong, especially to your son. There are things…I don't know if I can ever make right.”

Tillie reached across the table to take Sam's hand in her own. “I know all about that, Sam. I really do. Amy and I are in the same position. I think we're two old fools that stepped off the road and are trying to find it again. My daughter is so…efficient, so smart. She's detail oriented. She follows through. That's important, as she pointed out to me. She doesn't like me, Sam. She as much as said I wasn't mother material. Do you know how hard that was to hear? Worse, she's right. She ran my cell phone under water. She said it was growing out of my ear.” This last sentence was said with such outrage, Sam burst out laughing. He squeezed her hand.

“My son doesn't like me either. He needs to show me up, prove that he can run the farm and make money. He's trying to show me that even though he hates it, he's good at it. Does that make sense?” Tillie nodded. “I understand he's a damn fine architect and makes tons of money out there in California. Gets all kinds of awards. Sara would have been so proud of him. He never forgave me for donating ‘his' tree to the White House. Sara always said when it got to a proper growth, she was going to donate it to the White House in Gus's name. She was so proud of that tree. Gus thinks I did it for spite.”

Tillie was aghast. “And you never told him?”

“No, I never told him, just the way you never told your daughter about your husband.”

“Not only are we old fools, Sam, we're stupid old fools. Why do we always think we know best just because we're older? Do you think we can pull this off, Sam? Won't your son hear or notice the activity out in your…your half of the fields?”

“No. What he considers my half is down more in the valley. We can drive in from the back end. He's busy working
his half
. He goes to bed at eight o'clock and sleeps so soundly the house could fall down around him and he wouldn't hear it. How are you going to explain it to your daughter?”

“I'll think of something. It's the season of miracles, isn't it? Every morning when Amy gets to the site she'll see whatever we put there during the night. She did tell me this was a seat-of-the-pants operation. I think she's right. A mysterious Good Samaritan delivers trees in the middle of the night. She'll find a way to run with that. She's a PR person and will play that up to the public.
I think she's right
. Can we really do this, Sam? I'm starting to get excited.”

Sam stared across the table at his dinner partner, saw the sparkle in her eyes, felt her hand squeeze his again. He was starting to get excited himself. “Yes, we can do it. When you go home, start making phone calls. I'll do the same. We'll start work tomorrow night. We'll all meet at the back entrance at eight-thirty and take it from there. Do you care for dessert?”

“No, Sam, I don't think so. I think we should go home and get to work. I have one small question. If we work all night, when are we going to sleep?”

Sam threw his head back and laughed again. “We might have to pretend we're sick. Old people get sick all the time. We can say we got our flu shots and like a lot of people, got sick.”

“Oooh, Sam, you're so devious. I think that might work. I don't see your son or my daughter fussing over either one of us, do you?”

Sam grinned from ear to ear. “Nope.” He squeezed Tillie's hand. When she squeezed back, he laughed again. “Okay, partner, let's hit the road and get to work. I think we should do this again sometime, Tillie.”

“I'd like that, Sam. I really would. It was a lovely dinner. Thank you.”



Amy was sitting at the kitchen table nursing a glass of wine she really didn't want. Every time she thought about Gus Moss, her cheeks burned. The man was a scrooge. An out-and-out California guy who thought only about money. The arrogance of the man!

Amy was startled out of her reverie when she noticed her mother standing in the doorway. “Did you have a nice time wherever you went, Mother?”

“I suppose so. Dinner is dinner. You eat, you chat, you pay the check. Dinner. Is something wrong? You look angry.”

“I am angry. After you left, I drove out to Moss Farms to talk to Mr. Moss, only he wasn't there. His know-it-all son was there. Mr. Moneybags Moss. I offered to buy his trees and asked for a discount. The best he could do was 20 percent. We can't operate and make money at that rate. We had words. I called him a scrooge. I think I might have screamed that. He gave me some pie that was very good. He's in charge of the farm these days. He was so arrogant, Mom. But boy was he good-looking. I'm really pissed off right now.”

Tillie felt so weak in the knees she had to sit down. Her daughter poured a glass of wine for her, which she drained in one long gulp. “I see.”

Amy bolted off her chair and started pacing the kitchen from one end to the other. “What do you see, Mother?”

“That…that you're upset. I'm…ah…feeling a little slow today. I got a flu shot the other day and for some reason I always get sick afterward. That happens to a lot of people my age for some reason. I could…ah…be laid up for as long as a week. I'm sorry, Amy. I'll do what I can, even if I have to do it in bed. It's not easy getting old. Not that you would understand that.”

“Oh, I understand, Mother. It's called a cop-out. Good night. I'll see you in the morning. I'll make breakfast if you can see your way to getting out of bed.”

Tillie felt her shoulders stiffen. “I'll do my best, Amy,” she said coolly.

Tillie poured herself another glass of wine as she contemplated what the coming days would bring. “This is all my fault,” she mumbled to the silent room. “All my fault.”

Chapter Nine

The silvery flakes of frost on the windows of Amy's car alarmed her. She hoped she was dressed warm enough. To her way of thinking it was too cold for this time of year. They shouldn't have a frost until Thanksgiving, but then what did she know about weather conditions? Not a whole lot, she decided as she climbed into her car to head to the Coleman site, where the tent people would be erecting the tents three days ahead of schedule. Nothing was working right. Everything had a glitch. Even her mother was under the weather. Sometimes, life wasn't fair.

She had to find some Christmas trees or she was going to fizzle like a dead firecracker. She'd been talking a good game to her mother but it wasn't working for her. Someone, somewhere had to have some Christmas trees they were willing to sell for a discount for a worthy cause. She'd beaten the bushes, banged the drum, and the tree growers had laughed at her. None to spare, she'd been told. Orders were placed months in advance, not weeks like she was doing. If push came to shove, she might have to resort to dealing with the crook her mother had signed on with. If she didn't pull this off, she'd be a failure in her eyes, and her mother's as well. Amy thought about her bank balance as she drove to the Coleman site. It wasn't exactly robust, but it was healthy. She'd dipped into it for deposits, and now it looked like she might have to do more than dip the second time around.

She thought about Gus Moss and how nice it had been sitting in the kitchen at Moss Farms. Everything had gone so well until she told him what she wanted. Such a scrooge. Why couldn't people be more generous? Money wasn't the answer to everything. Christmas was supposed to be a time for giving, for helping one's fellow man. What was it Gus Moss had said?
Time is money, business is business.
Maybe that was her problem, she was taking this personal. The tired old cliché of all PR people came to mind. Fight fire with fire. Preempt your opponent. Strike first. Amy shivered. Was she a match for Gus Moss? Probably not. What she knew about Christmas trees would fill a thimble, whereas Gus Moss could write the book on the subject. One of the sharpest PR people she'd ever come across told her she had to subscribe to his credo: dazzle them with rhetoric and baffle them with bullshit, and you win the game. Like she was really going to do that? Not in this lifetime.

Amy swerved into the vacant lot and was surprised to see three trucks and men hustling about, driving stakes into the ground. She was pleased to see that the tents were made from a shiny white plastic that would lend itself well to the red and green Christmas colors, colors that would stand out and draw attention. Another plus was the site, which was a corner property with an entrance from both roads and more than ample parking. She would have plenty of room to line up her trees if she ever got any to line up.

Amy watched the workers for a few minutes before she drove off down the road to a Burger King, where she bought a honey biscuit and two cups of coffee to go.

Back at the site she opened her laptop and logged on. Time to find some Christmas trees. An hour later, Amy was jolted from her search by a knock on the car window. She looked at the bill, winced, and wrote out the check. She went back to her search as the men drove off. She looked at the tents and was impressed. At least she'd done one thing right.

It was midmorning when a whoop of pleasure echoed in the car. A man named Ambrose McFlint had trees for sale in McLean, Virginia. The banner ad running across the flat screen said the trees were reasonably priced, and free delivery went with the deal. Within minutes, Amy had the car in gear and she was headed for McLean.

Ten miles away Gus Moss was tagging trees he judged ready to be cut in two weeks' time. Orange tags were tied onto the branches for the first cutting. Red tags meant the second cutting. Purple tags were balled trees to be dug out with the backhoe, but only when the trees were paid for.

As Gus tromped from the Douglas firs to the Balsam firs to the Virginia pines, he let his mind run wild to the young woman he'd shared dessert with last night. Even though he was bone tired, he hadn't slept well, tossing and turning all night long. He couldn't get Amy Baran's expression out of his mind. She'd been shocked, dismayed at his callousness. Then she'd added insult to injury and called him a scrooge. Would it kill him to sell her a few trees at a healthy discount for the Seniors' cause? All his life he'd been a generous person, so why was he suddenly turning into a skin-flint? He didn't have to prove anything to anyone except maybe his father. The why of it simply eluded him.

“Jack, Bill, come over here,” he called to two of his workers. “See this grove of Virginia pine? I want you to trim the trees, cut away the brush and tag them with these red tags. We'll cut these trees the Tuesday before Thanksgiving and deliver them after dark. Don't look at me like that and don't ask any questions. Just do it.”

“All of them? There must be over two hundred,” Jack, his foreman, said.

“Yeah, all of them. We'll stagger the deliveries, fifty at a time. I'll pay you overtime.”

Gus felt his shoulders lighten a bit as he prowled his fields. An anonymous donation of two hundred trees should take him out of the scrooge category.

Every so often Gus glanced over his shoulder to look for his father, but he was nowhere to be seen. He'd had to make his own breakfast that morning. He felt a grin stretch across his face. His father must have had a really busy night. He'd heard him come in, heard him going up and down the stairs all night long. Obviously he wasn't the only one who hadn't had a good night's sleep.

As he worked through the day, all he could think of was Amy Baran. He suddenly loved the color purple.
Where is she? What is she doing right now?
He wished he knew.

He wondered what she would do if he called her up and asked her out to dinner. He nixed that idea as soon as it popped into his head. He knew in his gut Amy Baran would never go out with someone she considered to be a scrooge.
So why did I even think about it?

It was noon when Gus made his way back to the farmhouse. He needed some hot soup and a cup of strong, black coffee. He looked up when he felt something brush his cheek. Rain? He was stunned when he realized what he felt was a snowflake. Thick gray clouds scudded across the sky. Snow this early? He hoped not.

Gus almost swooned at the delicious scents that assailed him the moment he and Cyrus entered the kitchen. A fire was roaring in the fireplace.
The only thing missing is the girl with the purple hat and scarf,
Gus thought as he washed his hands. He ladled soup into a bowl, cut a chunk of crusty bread and fell to it. He was careful to only eat two bowls of soup; otherwise, he'd be sluggish all afternoon. The strong, black coffee made his eyeballs stand at attention. As he sipped the brew he walked around the house calling his father's name. He craned his neck to stare out the window. His father's truck was gone. He must have gone to town for something. He shrugged.

Gus set his dishes in the sink, gave Cyrus a rawhide chew, put on his jacket and hat and was out of the house, all within five minutes. Instead of walking out to the white pine field, he climbed into his pickup. If the weather held he could clear at least two rows of the beautiful white pines that would bring him top dollar. As he bumped along the rutted fields his thoughts returned to Amy Baran. He felt like a sixteen-year-old again with his first crush.

On the seat next to him, Cyrus growled as he fought with his chewie, which wasn't crumbling to his satisfaction. “You see, Cyrus, you have to work for everything in this life. There's no free lunch, even though Miss Amy Baran seems to think there is.” Cyrus ignored him as he continued fighting with the rawhide bone.

Gus stood in awe as he gazed at the white pine grove. How beautiful, how pungent it smelled. Suddenly, he didn't want to cut the trees. They were just too majestic. Even though his father hadn't fertilized or irrigated the beautiful trees, they had survived. All the grove needed was to be thinned out. Maybe he would cut every third one instead of all of them. It broke his heart that once the magnificent specimens were cut, decorated by someone in a house that was probably too warm, the tree would slowly die and be discarded.
You live, then you die,
he thought bitterly.

Angrily, Gus walked among the stately trees, tying long, yellow strips onto the branches. Long strips of the bright yellow tape meant the trees were not to be touched.

Why, he asked himself, was he so angry? Was he angry that his mother died, that his father let everything go to hell, that he'd killed
Gus's birth tree
by cutting it down and donating it to the White House? Or was he angry at the young woman in the purple hat and scarf for calling him a scrooge and hurting his feelings? All of the above, he decided as the chain saw in his hand came to life. He worked then like there was a devil on his shoulder, cutting away the thick undergrowth and dead branches. He broke a sweat but continued until it was too dark to see what he was doing. He was sweating profusely and every bone in his body ached as he drove back over the same bumpy fields. He looked down at his watch and was surprised to see that it was six-thirty. His father would be waiting dinner for him.

His father wasn't waiting for him when he opened the kitchen door. The table wasn't set either. The huge pot of soup was still simmering on the warming burner. The oven showed a golden roast chicken dinner complete with stuffing and mashed potatoes and gravy. Cyrus barked.

Gus shed his outer clothing, and that's when he noticed the red blinking light on his father's answering machine. No voice mail for Sam Moss. Gus pressed the button to listen to the message. His eyebrows shot up to his hairline when he heard the sweet, melodious voice of his love. “Mr. Moss…ah, Gus, this is Amy Baran. I'm…ah, calling you to apologize for calling you a scrooge last night. I was upset when I called you Scrooge. At the time I meant it because I was angry. I don't mean it today because I'm no longer angry. Even though we're competitors of sorts, I hope you sell all of your trees and that you make a lot of money. Again, I'm sorry for my rude behavior.”

“Well, hot damn! Did you hear that, Cyrus?” Gus slapped at the kitchen table as he danced a little jig while Cyrus nipped at his ankles. His love apologized. She wasn't angry with him. Maybe now he could call her for a date. He played the message again and listened to the end of it. A frown built between his brows. She hoped he sold all his trees and made a lot of money. She thought this was all about money. She thought he was a money-hungry Christmas tree salesman. How could she think that about him? It was never about the money.

A niggling voice whispered in his ear, a voice he didn't want to hear.
Sure it's about the money. It's about proving to your father you can do in two months what he didn't do in the last ten years. This is your way of getting back at him. It all translates to money—$$$. Who are you kidding, Gus Moss?

You didn't put it behind you. You're kidding yourself if you think you've moved on. You haven't. You are a scrooge.

The phone found its way to Gus's hand. He dialed Information and asked for the number to the Baran residence. His shoulders slumped when he heard the voice mail click on. “This is Gus Moss, a.k.a. Scrooge. I just want to say I accept your apology and would like you to know I'm really a stand-up guy. I'd like to invite you to dinner if you have some free time. If you're agreeable, we should probably schedule it before we both get busy selling Christmas trees. The apology wasn't necessary. I would have said the same thing if I had been standing in your shoes. I think you should give me an opportunity to defend myself. I hope you have a nice evening.”

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