American library books ยป Other ยป Let It Snow: Three Holiday Romances by Myracle, John (good book club books TXT) ๐Ÿ“•

Read book online ยซLet It Snow: Three Holiday Romances by Myracle, John (good book club books TXT) ๐Ÿ“•ยป.   Author   -   Myracle, John



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pleasure to watch JP show off his wit and see the Duke rise to the occasion. It took us fifteen minutes to circle back to Carla using a route that avoided Sunrise (and, hopefully, the twins). I climbed in through the trunk and grabbed the Twister, and we took off over a chain-link fence and through someoneโ€™s backyard so as to head straight west, toward the highway. We figured the twins would take the route we had initially taken. That route was quicker, but we all agreed that we hadnโ€™t seen a game of Twister in the hands of either Timmy or Tommy, so we didnโ€™t think it mattered if they beat us.

We walked in silence for a long time past dark wood-frame houses, and I held the Twister over my head to keep some of the snow out of my face. The snow had accumulated in drifts up to the doorknobs on one side of the street, and I thought about how much snow can change a place. Iโ€™d never lived anywhere but here. Iโ€™d walked or driven on this block a thousand times. I could remember when all the trees died in the blight, and when they planted new ones in all these yards. And over the fences I could see a block over to Main Street, which I knew even better: I knew each gallery selling folk art to tourists, each outdoor shop selling the kind of hiking boots I wished I was wearing.

But it was new now, all of itโ€”cloaked in a white so pure as to be vaguely menacing. No street or sidewalk beneath me, no fire hydrants. Nothing but the white everywhere, like the place itself was gift-wrapped in snow. And it didnโ€™t just look different, either; it smelled different, the air now sharp with cold and the wet acidity of snow. And the eerie silence, just the steady rhythm of our shoes crunching underfoot. I couldnโ€™t even hear what JP and the Duke were talking about a few feet in front of me as I got lost in the whited-out world.

And I might have convinced myself that we were the only people left awake in all of western North Carolina had we not seen the bright lights of the Duke and Duchess convenience store when we turned off Third Street and onto Maple.

The reason we call the Duke โ€œthe Dukeโ€ is because when we were in eighth grade, we went one time to the Duke and Duchess. And the thing about the Duke and Duchess convenience store is that instead of calling you โ€œsirโ€ or โ€œmaโ€™amโ€ or โ€œyou thereโ€ or whatever, the employees of the D and D convenience store are supposed to call you either โ€œDukeโ€ or โ€œDuchess.โ€

Now, the Duke arrived a little late to the puberty party, and on top of that, she also always wore jeans and baseball caps, particularly in middle school. So the predictable thing happened: one day we went into the Duke and Duchess to buy Big League Chew or Mountain Dew Code Red or whatever we were using to rot our teeth on that particular week, and after the Duke had made her purchase, the guy behind the counter said, โ€œThank you, Duke.โ€

It stuck. At one point, I think in ninth grade, we were all at lunch and JP and Keun and I all offered to start calling her Angie, but she said she hated being called Angie, anyway. So we kept with the Duke. It suited her. She had excellent posture, and she was kind of a born leader and everything, and even though she certainly no longer looked even vaguely boyish, she still mostly acted like one of us.

As we walked up Maple, I noticed JP slowing to walk next to me.

โ€œWhatโ€™s up?โ€ I asked.

โ€œListen, are you okay?โ€ he asked. He reached up and took the Twister from me and tucked it under his arm.

โ€œUm, yeah?โ€

โ€œBecause youโ€™re walking, like, I donโ€™t know. Like you donโ€™t have ankles or knees?โ€ I looked down and saw that I was indeed walking very strangely, my legs far apart and swiveling, my knees barely bending. I looked a bit like a cowboy after a long ride. โ€œHuh,โ€ I said, watching my weird gait. โ€œHmm. I think my feet are just really cold.โ€

โ€œVERY FAST EMERGENCY STOP!โ€ JP yelled. โ€œWeโ€™ve got some potential frostbite back here!โ€

I shook my head; I was fine, really, but the Duke turned around and saw me walking and said, โ€œTo the D and D!โ€

So they jogged and I waddled. They beat me into the D and D by a long shot, and by the time I got inside, the Duke was already at the counter, purchasing a four-pack of white cotton socks.

We werenโ€™t the only customers. As I sat down in a booth at the D and Dโ€™s miniature โ€œcafรฉ,โ€ I glanced down to the far booth: there, with a steaming cup in front of him, sat the Tinfoil Guy.

Chapter Ten

โ€œWhatโ€™s up?โ€ JP said to the Tinfoil Guy as I pulled off my soaked shoes. Itโ€™s sort of hard to describe Tinfoil Guy, because he looks like a somewhat grizzled but generally normal older guy except for the fact that he never, under any circumstances, leaves the house unless his entire body from neck to toes is wrapped in tinfoil. I peeled off my nearly frozen socks. My feet were a pale blue. JP offered me a napkin to wipe them off as Tinfoil Guy spoke.

โ€œHow are you three, on this night?โ€ The Tinfoil Guy always talked like that, like life was a horror movie and he was the knife-wielding maniac. But he was generally agreed to be harmless. Heโ€™d asked all three of us the question, but he was looking only at me.

โ€œLetโ€™s see,โ€ I answered. โ€œOur car lost a wheel and I canโ€™t feel my feet.โ€

โ€œYou looked very lonesome out there,โ€ he said. โ€œAn epic hero against the elements.โ€

โ€œYeah. Okay. How are you?โ€ I asked, to be polite.

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