Cover Reveal ~ Shopping for a Turkey

Coming November 2, 2021

Shopping for a Turkey features Scottish football player Hamish McCormick and Amy Jacoby as they navigate unusual cultural norms around American Thanksgiving, new traditions, and the undeniable attraction between these two characters who have been featured as minor players in Julia Kent’s New York Times bestselling Shopping series.

It’s their turn to pull the wishbone. 😉

Preorder your copy today!

Amazon (all countries):  https://geni.us/SFAT_AznALL

Apple Books:  https://geni.us/SFAT_Apple

Kobo:  Coming Soon

Nook:  https://geni.us/SFAT_Nook

Google Play:  https://geni.us/SFAT_Google

 

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Where does Marie get her Yankee Swap gifts?

‘Twas the Night before the Yankee Swap…

Enjoy this extended excerpt and discover Marie’s secret source for the best (?) Yankee Swap gift. Shopping for a Yankee Swap releases tomorrow. Preorder your copy today ~ this is one gift that does not have a “Do Not Open Until Christmas” label!

 

Shannon

If there is one thing you need to know about my mother, it’s this: She’s generous with advice, information, and product recommendations. Especially the advice.

But she’s stingy as can be when it comes to her Yankee Swap secrets.

Until my cat and her dog nearly burned the house down on Christmas, the annual Yankee Swap was Mom’s time to shine. A weird tradition in its own right, it tends to be the province of weirdos. I mean, who came up with the idea to bring the craziest gift possible, have people pick numbers out of a hat, and then systematically steal the most prized gift from each other?

You have to have a sense of humor and be a bit of a sadist–and a holiday one at that–to enjoy such a ritual.

And “funny eclectic sadist” has my mother written allll over it.

While Declan is up north with Dad, Tyler, Jeffrey, and Andrew, getting wreaths and finding his special tree, I left Ellie with our nanny, Mia, for a day of shopping with Mom. Being married to a billionaire has its financial perks, so you’d think we’d spend the day on Newbury Street, but no.

We’re at a recycling center in Framingham, staring at a tangled ball of rescued Christmas lights. It’s so big that it looks like a mutant cat from outer space hacked it up as a giant plastic green hairball.

We’re in the back of this huge warehouse, a place open to the public, part of an enormous complex. Junkyard isn’t the right term for how Funicularelli’s Salvage Yard works. You can dump your junk off here for a fee, or bring working, usable items and drop them off for free. Whatever they can sell, they do, placing it all in a huge showroom floor-like space, where nothing has a price on it.

That’s right.

You haggle.

See that gleam in Mom’s eye? Her middle name is Haggle.

Marie Haggle Scarlotta Jacoby is in her element.

“Mom?” I call out. Apparently, I’ve lost her in the lawn chair aisle, where a mountain of cheap plastic chaises have folded themselves into an organized favela, complete with union reps and a water filtration plant. No joke: The pile of chairs is at least two stories high.

“I’m over here!” A hand appears above a rattan curio cabinet that looks like something out of the TV set for Three’s Company.

“What’re you doing?” She’s bent over, on her belly, rolling on what looks like a giant barrel on its side, with plastic spikes poking out of it.

“Remember these? Cellulite Buster!” She sings a jingle no self-respecting advertising person would write, but the kind that haunts their nightmares. Rolling onto her back, she sits up, rocking forward, pushing her ample tushie into the spikes. “Mmmmm,” she moans. “My glutes are killing me after Jason woke me up this morning for some nookie.”

“MOM!”

She scoffs, closing her eyes, rocking to some 1970s disco song she begins to hum. “Oh, please. As if you and Declan didn’t get it on. When they have to get up at 4 a.m. for something, the morning wood must be appeased, especially if they’re not headed to work with their brains full of job stuff.”

I start to argue but snap my mouth shut.

Because she’s not wrong.

And now I feel guilty it didn’t happen this morning.

“You are three seconds away from a public indecency charge on that thing, Mom.”

“Give me five and I’ll have an experience even better than the one your father gave me this morning.”

I press the ball of my foot against the roller and shove hard enough to make her stand quickly, forced to use her yoga-teacher reflexes. I used to wonder how old Agnes could be so crude. What could make an elderly lady have such a dirty mind?

Now I know.

Dirty old ladies don’t become that way. They just are.

“I am not leaving Ellie with a nanny all day just for you to embarrass me nonstop in public.”

Confusion fills her eyes. “Then why did you come shopping with me?”

A bald dude wearing a dirty blue t-shirt with the salvage yard’s logo–a dumpster with a heart on it and the words We Rescue the Junk in Your Trunk!–passes us, pushing a huge cart loaded with bags of what appear to be stuffed animals. One wheel on the cart gyrates like a dying fish on the beach.

“Ooo, is there a Mickey Mouse in there?” Mom asks.

“You always told me used stuffed animals are nothing but vectors for lice.”

“That’s true for everything but Yankee Swap.”

“You’d give away lice-infested toys?”

“If it’s goofy enough to be the most popular item, yes.”

“Minnie Mouse,” the workman mutters.

“Excuse me?”

“Not Goofy. Minnie Mouse.”

Squeak. Squeak. Squeak.

Mom watches as he passes us and begins unloading bag after bag of stuffed animals. I’m starting to feel like we’ve been teleported to the horror movie version of Al’s Toy Barn.

Something hot pink catches my eye, the big swath of color standing out in the dreary grey of fluorescent light hell. As I focus on it, I realize it’s a Lisa Frank area rug.

And it’s a unicorn.

“I think Carol had that when she was in middle school!” Mom gasps, the sound of my sister’s name transporting me instantly back to the mid-1990s, when I was the annoying little sister and Carol saved up all her mother’s helper babysitting money to buy that damn rug.

“Did she donate it?” Mendon is close enough to Framingham for this to be possible.

“Oh, no! We still have it.”

“You do? In her old room?”

“Probably? It’s not on the floor. Maybe in the closet, or in the attic? I was saving it for my granddaughter.”

“That’s really gendered of you, Mom. What if Jeffrey or Tyler wanted it?”

“I already offered. I’m not that out of touch, Shannon,” she says tightly. “I may be at the tail end of the baby boomers, but I’m plenty hip.”

“Right, Mom.”

“Oh, look! Macrame plant hangers!”

And she’s off.

I take a deep breath, filling my lungs with the odors of old wood, various fabric softeners and upholstery cleaners, dried bleach from the recently washed linoleum, and the unique scent every thrift shop has–distinct yet similar. No retail shop with shiny new merchandise from China or Pakistan or Made in the USA can compete with the eclectic beauty of second-hand stores.

Because places like this are repositories of memory and function.

Other people’s memories, and the persistence of value.

No one wants to throw away something that’s “perfectly good,” even if it’s scratched a little, has some threadbare spots, or looks a wee bit shabby. We’re all the Velveteen Rabbit at some point in our lives, right? Except we go through cycles of rebirth and reinvention, within our own lifespans.

Sometimes the piece of you on display is in need of replacement, other times it’s new, and sometimes you just need to find the right person to see you still have value, even if you’re a bit used up.

The soft spot in Mom’s heart for second-hand stuff came after the very gritty financial need to save money, but it’s not a distant second in her reasons for shopping this way. Drawn to the different, the motley, the hidden and buried treasure, she unearths what touches her.

As for why it resonates, who knows?

And, really, who cares? It just does.

That’s more than enough.

Once I married Declan, I teleported to a financial dimension that might as well be science fiction for the vast majority of people. Dec considers places like this to be literal trash heaps. When we first met, he thought a thrift shop was an antique shop. After I explained the difference, he was perplexed by the idea that you would buy someone’s used items.

He once compared it to buying used condoms or tampons and got an earful from Mom. I’ve never seen him shut up so fast.

Screech, screech, screech.

Someone’s pushing a shopping cart down an aisle on the other side of the enormous warehouse, another cart with a broken wheel. When you spend enough time in discount and secondhand shops, you know that sound all too well. Everything is thrifty in a place like this, even their own equipment.

“Honey! Look! A wine refrigerator!” Mom shouts, her voice echoing. There are only three or four other people in the entire store. Mom’s a pro like that, too: She only shops during the quiet times, and she knows when they are. When eBay became a thing, people who make a living buying low and selling high began flocking to places like this, coming during sale days and red-tag clearances to make a small profit off whatever they could find.

Mom avoids those times.

She’s not here to make money.

She’s here to make discoveries.

“A wine refrigerator? Here?” As I turn the corner and follow her gaze, I realize she’s staring at a small fridge, the size you use in a dorm room. It has a clear glass front, but it looks… off.

A hospital sticker is on the front, and a big orange warning label with details on how to discard sharps.

“See! You billionaires aren’t the only ones who can have these fancy things.” Bending into a squat, she starts to lift it.

“What’re you doing?”

“Buying it!”

“Mom! I don’t think that’s a wine refrigerator. I think that’s for storing insulin safely!”

“Even better. It’ll do double duty if anyone in the family ever develops diabetes.”

“Why don’t you just store wine in the regular kitchen fridge?”

“Why do wealthy people have wine fridges?”

“So they can have temperature-controlled storage,” I say automatically, a mental image of ours flitting through my mind. “But you don’t have a collection.”

“Not yet,” she sniffs. “We haven’t been able to have one because we didn’t have a wine fridge, silly!”

The guy in the blue t-shirt walks by carrying a big stack of plastic storage bins, three on top of each other, and plunks them down a few feet to Mom’s right.

“Excuse me?” she asks him. He’s shaved bald, has a greying goatee, and lashless brown eyes that look like a serial killer’s.

Until he smiles.

“Yeah? Whatcha need?”

“How much for this?”

He blinks rapidly. “Just that? You’re not getting more? Normally, you fill the cart up and we give you a price.”

I look at him. “She comes in here that often?”

The guy laughs. “She comes in here so often, we’re close to creating one of those punch card systems. You know, buy nine cartloads, get the tenth half off.”

“FREE!” Mom exclaims. “It should be free!”

Tension that used to live between my shoulder blades, a muscle memory of a time when money was what I thought about, talked about, worried about, and always needed more of, returns for a brief moment, just long enough for me to realize what I’ve lost–and gained–over the years.

I didn’t marry Declan for his money.

But it sure is true that while money can’t buy happiness, it can buy a kind of peace that I deeply appreciate.

As Mom and the guy talk about the fridge, he explains that it’s from a lab that studied stool samples.

My brain grinds to a screeching halt.

“Stool? As in poop?” Mom asks, pulling away from her find.

“Yeah. Gotta tell you, it’s one of the weirdest junk hauls we ever got. Twenty-five of those. Turns out the government changed some regulation and the lab had to get new ones. Decommissioned these. This is the last one.”

“Did you tell everyone what they used to store?”

“Sure. No one cares, right? Just bleach the hell out of it before you put your beer or whatever in. You want it? I’ll put it aside for you so you don’t have to push it around in the cart.”

Mom eyes the fridge, her lips twisted to one side, teeth biting down as she contemplates.

“How much are they going for?” I ask, certain they’ll cost more than Mom would ever pay.

“Twenty bucks or so. Depends. You know how it works,” he says to Mom. “Fill the cart and we start the fun.”

“Fun?” I ask.

“You pay by the cart here.”

“There’s a flat rate?”

“No. You fill it up, I eyeball it, and give you a price.”

“And then I counter with a fairer price.”

“Hey, lady. Fair is in the eye of the beholder.” He winks at Mom.

“So is value,” Mom shoots back.

“Hey! Cory! Getcher ass out on the loading dock!” someone shouts from behind a cheap plastic bi-fold door. Fluorescent lights flicker from what looks like a hallway.

He thumbs toward the voice. “Gotta go. It’s the beginning of the month and that means cleanouts.”

“Cleanouts?”

“Apartments. People moving. They leave their junk and our guys go and get it.” He rubs his palms together in a gesture of eagerness. “Lots of work right now.”

“Anything good coming in?” Mom asks breathlessly.

He laughs as he leaves. “You one of those people who think all the good stuff is in the back?”

And then the doors swallow him.

Mom plants her hands on her hips and mutters, “He didn’t answer my question.”

Cory jogs back, slaps a Reserved sticker on the fridge, and winks at Mom again before rushing away.

“Let’s get back to our real goal, Mom.”

“We have a goal?”

“The Yankee Swap? Remember?”

“Oh. Right.” Funicularelli’s uses the same furniture they’re selling to display many of their wares. Bookshelves have books on them. Curio cabinets are filled with tchotchkes. If you want to buy the furniture, I assume they clear it and just relocate all the merchandise somewhere else.

I come upon Mom opening and closing a box. Inside is a figure of a woman on her knees, in front of a man with a huge penis.

“MOM!”

“What? It’s in a tasteful box.”

“What is that?” I pick it up and turn it over. “Envelope licker?”

Understanding brightens her eyes. “Oh! I see. Like the little sponges you use when you’re a secretary. I wondered why her tongue was so huge.”

“What’s the point of the guy’s… you know?”

“I think you rest the flap of the envelope between his legs and his doinker pushes it close to her sponge tongue.”

“DOINKER?” I erupt into uncontrollable giggles. Haven’t heard that term before.

“We’re opening and closing an office supply item that has a man’s raging hard-on as a working part, Shannon, and doinker is what makes you fall apart? Really? I raised you better.”

“What does raising me have to do with anything?” I ask as Mom quietly closes the box and slips it into the cart.

“Hmph.”

“You’re actually buying that thing? Is that it? You found your Yankee Swap gift?”

“That? You think that would win the Yankee Swap? Heck, no. I’ll give that to Agnes.”

“Agnes?” I snort. “I’ll bet she hand carved that thing seventy years ago.”

“Pretty sure she was around when that sponge was born, deep in the ocean.”

For the next half hour, we wander, my mind attaching prices to everything. Declan would consider this a gigantic waste of time, insisting that my new assistant, Shayla, could order whatever I need and have it shipped to our house. He’s pushing me lately to rely on other people so that I have more time for family life and, to his credit, he’s doing the same.

Declan’s presence is precious, and we’re gradually getting more and more of it.

But farming out the pieces of life that I actually enjoy doesn’t make sense to me.

Sure, I could skip all this. Go on eBay and find a quirky item. Order it and help someone to make a tiny profit off the very activity I’m enjoying with Mom right now. Calculating the value of my time and delegating work to people whose time is “worth” less might make sense in a business setting, but these hours with Mom can’t be project managed.

My mommy brain downshifts and I start to really enjoy the slow shop. You know the kind, when you take your time, look at everything, reflect on whether you like it, and move on.

So simple.

So rare when you’re parenting a little one. How do I prioritize something that’s solely for me?

Maybe that’s Declan’s point. Give over the work that isn’t central to who I am, so I can focus on me.

“Shannon?” I turn to find Mom standing there, cart overflowing, holding a ThighMaster.

“Hmm?”

“Which color ThighMaster do you think Jason would like most?”

“Does Dad… have a favorite ThighMaster color?”

“He broke the last one. It was blue.”

Do not ask Mom how he broke the ThighMaster. Do not ask Mom how he broke the ThighMaster. Do not ask Mom how he broke the ThighMaster. Do not ask Mom how he broke the–

“He broke it during a Boy Scout meeting.”

Whew.

“What was Dad doing with one of those at a Boy Scout meeting?”

“Something to do with teaching the boys how to build a trebuchet. You know. A catapult.”

“I know what a trebuchet is. We never learned anything like that in Girl Scouts.”

“Maybe Ellie will.” She contemplates the item in her hand. “I think I’ll get him two. One blue, one pink. Jason said they have a nonbinary child in the troop, so let’s get some welcoming colors.”

“Why not get green and yellow, then? Just avoid the gender stereotyping entirely.”

“Ooo! I like that idea!” Mom pushes her cart down the aisle toward a tangled heap of ThighMasters at least six feet high. “You know,” she says, manhandling one, “Jason could attach this to the porch ceiling and it would make a fine plant hanger.”

That’s what’s so great about thrift shopping: You can use your imagination to turn a cheesy ’70s “As Seen on TV” product into a functional piece of home décor.

My stomach is now growling so much, it’s howling at the moon. We wheel the basket over to Cory, who is chatting with a fellow worker in rapid-fire Portuguese. They finish quickly, and he turns to us.

Mom’s entire demeanor changes.

Marie Scarlotta Jacoby has spent her entire life squeezing every bit of value out of every penny she can get her hands on. Declan and I have tried over the years to let our money be theirs, but Dad and Mom are proud to a fault, and it’s trickled down to my sister Carol, too. She’ll let us help with Tyler’s therapies, and we created accounts to fully fund college for both kids, but other than working for Anterdec, she won’t take more help.

So we have to get creative.

No, I won’t step in and buy this for Mom, though it’s tempting. I could hand Cory a couple of hundreds and make his day, but that would strip the thrill of the shop away from Mom. What might seem like kindness and generosity on the face of it really wouldn’t be.

But I’m totally buying lunch, and she doesn’t get to skimp.

The music to High Noon plays in my head, Dad’s old westerns with the whistling twang running through as Cory takes a pencil and taps once on every single item in the cart, keeping a mental tally in his head. You can see the adding machine ticking through numbers in his brain, until finally he looks up, moves his mouth soundlessly, then looks at Mom and says, “One seventy-two.”

“One twenty-five.”

“You’re killing me, lady.”

“That’s not a no.”

“One sixty.”

“Pffft. One thirty.”

Bzzz

My phone rescues me from their haggle, Declan’s text coming at the perfect moment.

How’s it going at the dump? he asks.

It’s not a dump, and Mom found a new ThighMaster for Dad.

I don’t even want to know what that means. Are you having fun?

Yes.

That’s what I want to hear.

How’s the wreath trip?

Good. You never told me about Perlman.

My heart leaps, galloping in my chest. Oh, dear. He’s right. I never did tell him about Perlman.

Is he there? Tell him I said hi.

He’s here. And he certainly remembers you.

Texts can’t communicate tone or attitude, but Declan’s use of the word certainly communicates plenty. My husband can be deeply jealous, and this is one of those times when I need to defuse it.

But it’s Perlman, for goodness sake! Derpy Perlman. He was a sweet, nerdy kid who had a crush on me forever. Every year from the time I was eleven and he was thirteen, we’d go to get the tree from Pops and Nanny’s tree farm and he’d be there, moon-eyed and so besotted with me, I didn’t know what to do.

Carol teased me mercilessly the entire car trip home the first year.

And the whole way up and back after that.

Perlman was always a gentleman, and never tried anything. Never touched me, never tried to kiss me, nothing.

Maybe if he’d tried, I’d have tried right back. While he was never my type, his crush was sweet, and I had enough awkward years as a teen that it might have been nice to have a stolen kiss from a boy who lived in Maine.

Who am I kidding?

My awkward years weren’t limited to my adolescence.

Shannon? Declan texts.

Perlman’s an old friend. Stop it.

Best to cut Declan’s macho b.s. off at the knees.

Stop what? Just letting you know your old friend thinks I’m lucky for marrying you.

Awwww. That’s sweet. Give Perlman a kiss for me, I text back.

Ring!

Mom and Cory, mid-negotiation, both jump at the sound of my phone ringing. Mom’s head tilts in inquiry.

“It’s Declan. He met Perlman and he’s jealous,” I explain to her.

“Jealous? Of PERLMAN?”

I shrug. “The man gets jealous when I have a male salesclerk at the shoe store.” I open the call.

“That’s not funny,” Declan snaps.

“I thought it was.”

“Perlman loved the kiss, though. Said I used just the right amount of tongue.”

“Dec!”

“You didn’t tell me about Bessie, either.”

“The tree? Dad’s cutting old Bessie down this year?”

Mom’s in the middle of peeling off the exact amount of cash needed to buy the cart full of stuff when I hear her say, “Can you believe it, Shannon? Finally.”

“I haven’t been to the tree farm in years, Dec. I hope you’re having fun.”

“We should bring Ellie up here next year. Start buying our trees here.”

“You just want to show Perlman that you own me.”

“You’re not wrong,” he growls. “But they do have nice trees up here, and it’s very New England.”

“Too bad you never met Pops. He was the Yankee-est Yankee you could ever imagine.”

“Jason holds him in high esteem.”

“We all did.” I pause. “How’s Andrew handling the trip?”

“He’s been bent over his phone most of the time.”

I hear Andrew shout loudly in protest in the background.

“Look, we have to go. I’m calling because there’s a gli–”

And he disappears into thin air, the three beeps of the call dropping making me look at my phone as if it’s responsible.

“That’s weird,” I mutter. Declan’s phone must have died. Hah! For once, I can tease him about not keeping it charged.

“Everything ok?”

“I hope so.”

Shopping for a Yankee Swap coming 12.23.20!

 

Shopping for a Yankee Swap ~ Read Chapter One

Shopping for a Yankee Swap releases in two days! Read Chapter One and then look for two special giveaways.

Shannon

“You’re killing me, Shannon,” Declan says over the Facetime video chat we’re having. He’s in Australia, on a quick layover for some meetings with a resort chain that might carry our coffee. A few years ago, as a wedding present, Declan bought me Grind It Fresh!, a small coffee chain with the best coffee I’d ever tasted. Some men would buy their new wife a necklace, or a fancy bike, or a special memento.

Mine went a little overboard.

We co-own and co-manage the chain of coffee shops. I handle on-the-ground issues at our headquarters here in Boston. He’s the road warrior. His trip to Indonesia to negotiate Fair Trade coffee deals has been a big success, but he’s been gone for three weeks.

Three entire weeks.

Three weeks of no sex. Three weeks of no kisses. Three weeks of no one to turn to for a silent hug, a quick smile, a simple vent. Yes, we have phones and texts and video chats, but it’s no replacement for your lover’s hot breath on the back of your neck as he initiates what you’ve been wanting, too.

The red garters had to come out, even if all we can do is have virtual sex.

Given that he just missed Thanksgiving yesterday, and Christmas is coming soon, I might need to pull out my sexy elf costume for old time’s sake.

“I’m killing you? How about I kill you with my thighs wrapped around your face?” I tease.

His hand goes to his belt, pants unbuttoned, fly unzipped, one part of his body very much alive. Declan has eyes the color of heathered emeralds, framed by a strong face with broad cheekbones, and thick, dark hair. He stands tall, his shoulders straight, with a confidence that comes naturally. Unruffled and unraveled before me, half naked and breathing with a rough edge that speaks to desperation, I watch him on screen, a small smile curving my lips.

In public, he’s an impenetrable wall, a steel fortress, an airtight container of business might and financial savvy.

In private, he’s mine.

And I’m the one who brings him to the point of panting, holding his erection in one fist, staring at the red garters that made him lose his mind a few years ago, and imagining plunging into me.

“Those damn garters. I’m imagining you in my office that day. Remember? On my desk?”

“How could I forget?”

The sound of his ragged breath makes me feel less silly. Since we had our baby two years ago, Declan’s traveled significantly less, but running a fast-growing coffee brand doesn’t lend itself to a lot of time at home. We manage. Declan and Ellie have a standing date for Facetime video calls, and he reads her bedtime stories every night, even if it means he does it with his morning coffee from halfway around the globe.

We chat constantly, dealing with business issues, weaving in personal-life conversations.

But no video camera, no internet connection, no unlimited data plan is a substitute for having my husband naked in bed with me.

None.

“Are we really doing this?” I giggle.

“Pretty sure I’m about done,” he says, but I can see he is definitely not. It’s dark here, late at night, which means it’s afternoon there.

I guess I’m having a nooner at midnight.

I move my face as close as possible to the camera.

“Shannon, what are you doing?”

“Put it right by your camera,” I order him.

One eyebrow goes high. “Put… what?”

“You know.”

I can’t see anything, because my mouth is right up against my video lens, but I sure can hear.

“What the hell are you–oh, no. No. No.” That last no sounds like a growl.

“What? It’s the closest I can get–I’m simulating!”

“First of all, that’s not even close to what your mouth feels like. Second of all, you’re asking me to put my junk on a glass screen and… what? Move it up and down?”

“You can’t exactly poke it at the screen and pretend it’s a wet hole.”

“This thing is so hard, it might make a hole.”

“Declan!” My cry of outraged hilarity makes me stop, mid-sound.

I realize I’ve gone and done it.

You know that movie, A Quiet Place? The one where monsters track humans by sound and kill them if they even snap a twig?

That’s one big metaphor for parenting a small child, let me tell you.

“Mama? MAMAMAMAMAMAMAMAMAMA,” Ellie cries out from her bedroom next to ours.

“NO!” Declan grunts, then lets out an aggrieved sigh. “Damn it.”

“No sex,” I say with a sigh.

“Makes me feel like I’m right back home.”

I wince. He’s not wrong. But it hurts, anyhow.

Toddlers are the OG cockblockers.

Yanking the sash of my chiffon robe together as I stand, I tie it off, looking back at the screen to find Declan looping his belt. The robe is last year’s Christmas present from my husband, one he selected just for this purpose.

“I’m sorry.”

“Me, too.” He looks at his crotch. The thick outline of his erection is obvious, even on video.

“MAMAMAMAMAMA! I want up! I want up!”

I close my eyes, trying to shut out the spike of the immediate reaction her cries generate in me. Shifting roles from sex kitten to mother isn’t second nature, so I feel weirdly exposed as I look down at my breasts, uncovered for Declan’s viewing. These same breasts feed my child.

How they’re being used by others controls how I feel about them.

I grab the tablet, not ready to let go of my only connection to my husband.

Can you tell we’ve done too many of these FaceTime calls? We’re the Facetime Family.

My throat aches a bit at the thought, stinging with emotion.

And speaking of Christmas, he needs to get home soon. Our third Christmas with Ellie needs to be extra special; her first Christmas, my parents’ house caught on fire during the festivities, so that one doesn’t really count.

Our cat, Chuckles, still has half his tail fur burnt off.

Last year we all sat around Mom and Dad’s still-under-renovation living room and tried not to tempt fate. The Yankee Swap was a half-hearted, Jacoby-only event.

None of the usual suspects came to the celebration.

This year is different. More than needing to reclaim good memories, we have been presented with a challenge from my mother.

The great Jacoby Yankee Swap will resume this year, and I’m determined that my husband will join in.

“Up! Uppy!” Ellie calls again, only this time, her tone is less frantic, her language devolving into baby talk. I have a chance to take a true, deep breath and feel my inner arms brush against my lower ribs as I move, the tablet pressing into my side.

“If we had a live-in nanny, you wouldn’t need to do this,” says a voice from under my left arm.

I tap the back of the tablet’s case and say loudly, “If we had a live-in nanny, you’d get less sex, because I can’t make love with you when someone else is here.”

Walking into Ellie’s room, I find her red faced, eyes teary and wide. Her little arms reach for my neck and soon, she’s clinging to me, tiny ribs wracked with aftershocks from crying.

“Shhhhhhh,” I say as I sway-walk back to my bedroom and hold the tablet screen toward her. Declan stares back at us, the image cutting him off at the waist on the display screen.

“Hi, Ellie!” he coos, instantly in Awesome Dad mode, making me smile. My father and Declan are about as different as two men can be, but in this–loving and parenting their child–they are one and the same.

“Dah-dee!” Ellie squeals, touching the screen. “Whatcha doon?”

“I am in Australia!”

“Uh-stray-la?”

“Yes! Good! I’ll be home in two days.”

“I want Daddy home. I want swings whichoo.”

“Swings! Of course. How many pushes?”

“All da pushes!”

A wistful look takes over his face. I know that look. It’s the expression of a man who would rather be here than where he actually is. Ambition is in his DNA, but loving his daughter takes precedence.

“All the pushes, sweetie,” he says as Ellie kisses the glass screen.

“I want milk, Mama,” she says. “Chocka milk.”

“How about water?” I offer. Sexytime is over. Parenting mode engaged. “Water and some cantaloupe.”

“Catnayope!” she crows, toddling off to the kitchen in her footed sleeper. As she leaves, Chuckles pokes his head into the room. He spots Declan, and I swear the cat smiles.

“Want me to put Chuckles on? He can kiss the screen for you.”

“That’s the only pussy I’m getting, apparently,” Declan mutters.

I stick my tongue out at him. He doesn’t laugh.

A huff, then a long sigh comes from the screen as he runs his hand through his hair, conflicted eyes growing larger on the screen as he leans in and says, “I’m not sure I want this anymore.”

“Want what?”

“This.” He motions with his hands, as if gesturing to the whole wide world. “All the travel.”

“You can build a coffee empire without it.”

“No, Shannon. I can’t.”

“You can come home and focus on other aspects of the business. Or you could retire.”

“Retire? I’m not that old!”

“Retirement isn’t just for old people.”

“But I love what I do. I just hate being away from you and Ellie.”

“You’re the boss. Change it.”

A wry grin spreads across his face. “You’re right.”

“I am?”

“I’ve been gone from you for too long. I miss you.”

“I know. Three weeks without sex is a long time.”

“No–not the sex. I miss you. I miss my friend. I miss hearing you laugh. Your breath on my face. Your cold feet against my calves. How you smell in bed. Moving furniture around because you want to make a play area in the living room for Ellie. Going to vintage antique shops and buying weird sculptures.”

“Since when do you miss going to thrift shops with me? And they’re not weird!” I bring the tablet into the kitchen with me, where I find Ellie on the floor, the tub of pre-cut cantaloupe in her lap, each little fist clutching an orange chunk.

The fridge door is wide open, casting a sci-fi glow over her.

“You bought a gnome drinking coffee out of a toilet, Shannon.”

“For this year’s Yankee Swap!”

“The gnome had a frog on a leash.”

“It’s supposed to be funny!”

“And when you press the button, it sounds like an octopus being choked to death.”

“Your point is…?”

He makes a grunting sound worthy of Geralt of Rivia.

“Fine,” I inform him as Ellie thrusts her sticky fingers into the venting grate under the fridge. “Next time we go to a thrift shop, you get to find something better.”

“I’ll just send Dave.”

“You cannot send your executive assistant to find a Yankee Swap present!”

“Of course, I can.”

The silence is what makes me suspicious.

“Declan?”

Another grunt.

“You had Dave shop for you this year, didn’t you?”

Another grunt.

Suppressing the impulse to sing the first line of “The Witcher” song and toss a coin his way, I turn the video camera on Ellie instead.

“Say hi to Daddy!”

“Hi, Daddy! You want some catnayope?” She smears a grey-ish, half-chewed piece on the glass where Declan’s mouth is.

“Mmmmmm,” he pretends. “Yum!”

Talking with my husband for two minutes instead of monitoring her has led to a twenty-minute clean up.

“I knew it! Daddy yikes catnayope!”

“Nice sentences!” he says, grinning.

“She’s been saying more complex phrases all week,” I tell him.

His face falls. “She has? I missed it.” Voice going gruff, he turns negative. “Damn.”

“Dam!” Ellie repeats.

“Shit,” he mutters.

“That doesn’t help!” I say through gritted teeth.

“I mean, I like it!” Over-enunciating, he uses the time-tested technique every parent tries when they utter profanity in front of the human equivalent of a mynah bird.

“I yike it!” Ellie repeats.

Magic.

The man has magical powers. If I said the S-word, Ellie would repeat it ad infinitum, and always in the worst possible places. At the pediatrician, during story hour at the library, at the yarn shop Mom loves, where the woman who runs it looks like a church organist–you get the picture.

Declan does it? Crisis averted.

Chuckles pads up to the screen and starts licking Declan’s face. When I try to pet him, I get a condescending sniff.

Dec laughs.

Chuckles runs off.

“I miss being home,” Declan says. Squaring his shoulders, he nods to himself. “And it’s entirely my fault.”

“Your fault?”

“Which means it’s completely under my control.”

“Huh?”

“If something is a person’s fault, there’s a cause-effect relationship. You can’t be held accountable for something you can’t control, but I can control being away from my family.”

“Yes, you can. You’re the boss. The owner. The CEO. What you do with your time is completely your decision,” I affirm.

“And I’ve been deciding to be away. It felt like it was inevitable, but it’s not. Not if I say no.”

“Say no to yourself?”

“Say no to the idea that in order to be successful, I have to do it like this.” Eyes the color of an Irish hill meet mine. “I chose. I have the power.”

“You always do.”

“I’m a hypocrite.”

“You are? How?”

“I lectured Andrew before the twins were born. Came down hard on him about putting work ahead of his growing family. What do they call that in psychological terms? Projection?”

“Since we’ve had Ellie, you’ve been a very hands-on father. I know you and Andrew worry about being like your father, but neither of you is anything like James.”

His shoulders drop with relief. “I know. And I don’t think Andrew will be like Dad, but I laid into him. We had that fight, and he came damn close to hitting me.”

“I didn’t hear about that part.”

A rueful stretch of Declan’s mouth makes it clear the incident had an emotional impact on him. For as much as I hate having him away from us so much, these Facetime sessions paradoxically tend to get him to open up to me more.

“He told me he wanted to run the gym chain he’d bought, and be CEO, and be a new father to the twins. Plus a husband to Amanda. I told him he was crazy, and he brushed me off. It got… tense.”

“When was this?”

“At the end of Amanda’s pregnancy.”

“The twins are fifteen months old, Dec! You never told me.”

“I know.”

“If he almost hit you, sounds like it got more than just tense.”

“We’re fine now. But I’m thinking back on it and realizing I’m the one traveling all over the place and he’s back there in Boston, winding down his responsibilities at Anterdec.”

Andrew quit his role as CEO of their family company last May, on Mother’s Day.

As we all gathered at their mother’s grave.

“Amanda said it’ll take him nearly two years to really leave.”

“She’s right. You don’t just give two weeks’ notice when you’re the CEO of a Fortune 500 company. And Dad’s doing everything he can to maintain control, which isn’t helping.”

“He’s also frozen Andrew out. Nothing like the silent treatment to make everything better.”

A long, pained sigh comes out of Declan. “Never underestimate the stubborn narcissism of the founder of a large institution.”

“This isn’t just founder’s syndrome, though, Declan. James is acting like Andrew doesn’t exist,” I say, disgust and pain echoing back from my own voice.

“I know. It’s immature and ridiculous, which is exactly what I would expect from Dad.”

“I’m so glad you’re nothing like him.”

“Me, too.” He groans. “Except here I am, gone for three weeks on yet another business trip. It’s exactly what the 1990s were like, growing up with him.”

“You are not him!”

“And I don’t want to lose these years with you. With Ellie. With our other children.”

“Other children?” A tingle forms in my belly.

“Shannon, I–” A distinct buzz cuts him off, the sound of a notification coming in. “Damn it.”

“JAM IT!” pipes up a little voice behind me. I turn and look down.

Ellie’s using a potholder to smoosh cantaloupe pieces into the planks of the hardwood floor.

“I have to go. Some sort of problem with air travel out of Australia.”

“Oh, no!”

Ellie looks at me, eyes wide, reading my emotions.

“It’s fine. I mean, it’s not fine, of course. I’ll be home in two days. No matter what.”

“Good!”

“MAMA!” Ellie screeches, holding up a red finger. “I got a boo-boo!”

“Let Daddy kiss it,” Declan says, and I hold her finger to the screen.

“Mwah!” kisses my billionaire husband, being as goofy and lovesick with his daughter as I’ve ever seen him.

“Dat better, Daddy!” She gives him a very sticky kiss.

I blow him one. You think I’m kissing that tablet screen now? Ewww.

“See you soon. I love you.”

“I love you, too, Dec.”

“And I mean it. I’m redefining how I build Grind It Fresh! There is a better way, and I’ll find it.”

“I know you will. You’ll find your way home.”

Under your tree 12.23.20!


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If 2020 had a tree, this would be this.

Before I even begin to tell the story, take a look. Go ahead. Laugh. Get it out of your system.

No, the picture doesn’t cut off the top. That’s an eight-foot ceiling. The top of the tree was trimmed by my 18 year old because “It didn’t fit, Mom.”

Behold: the Kent family Christmas tree, pandemic style.

Grab a cup fo coffee, tea, cocoa, whisky, whatever – and settle in for this story.

It is quite the story.

I’ve been very open about the fact that my family of five is a soup of autoimmune conditions, and so we’ve been super locked down since March 2020. The issue of a Christmas tree came up, and we figured we’d go to one of the stands we’ve gone to for YEARS, and buy one. Easy peasy, right? They’re outdoor, easy to stay distant, etc.

But then my middle child told me his new school (he’s a high school senior who had to change schools this final year) has a tradition: the seniors go into the woods and cut down the school Christmas tree. He’s doing remote learning, but they Facetimed him in.

He wanted to cut a Christmas tree from our woods.

I don’t know about your experience, but how often does an 18 year old enthusiastically offer to do ANYTHING these days? So I said yes, of course – and that was that.

I thought.

On Monday, he came to me right before the Facetime call with a concern: his phone signal didn’t go far into the woods around our home. He wanted permission to cut down a tree closer to the house. I found the PERFECT tree, but it was slightly out of range.

Then he pointed to the ugly scraggly tree in the middle of a patch of rocks, at the bottom of a hill in front of our house. It looked like a Truffula tree from Dr. Seuss. No nice triangle shape – oh, no. A big, fat bush atop a long, skinny trunk about 8 feet before the branches began.

“You sure?” I asked.

“It’s the best choice,” he said, sharpening the ax.

Ok, then. Fat tree it would be.

An hour after the call, my son came inside, exhausted.

“Chopping down a tree is HARD.”

“Yep. Where is it?”

“In the yard.”

“Are you bringing it in?”

“I will. I just need a break.”

Anyone who parents older teens knows that “need a break” is code for “need to disappear into the black hole of my room for eight hours and play video games and eat junk food.”

Which is exactly what happened.

On Tuesday, he got Clark, and they dragged the tree into the garage. Clark found me.

“You picked THAT tree?”

“Hey! Don’t blame me!”

Clark shook his head. “It’s like a Charlie Brown Christmas tree, only uglier.”

On Wednesday, the tree was still in the garage. We had a huge snowstorm coming, and we needed to fit cars in the garage. My 18 year old (we’ll call him R), said, “I don’t think the tree will fit up the stairs.”

Clark gave me a snarky look. “It always fits.”

R managed to get the tree into the family room, and with my oldest kid’s help, they set it up in the tree stand. R said the top of the tree was bent at the ceiling, so he trimmed the top branches (see them on the floor in the picture?).

I came downstairs, saw the tree, and promptly had a wheezing laughing fit, the kind where your stomach muscles spasm. Poor R thought I was mad. Poor Clark came running upstairs, hollering, “Are you okay? Are you hurt?”

I laughed until I cried.

I declared our tree The Pandemic Tree. if 2020 had a tree, it would be this monstrosity.

And I love it.

Now, R never reads my books. What he doesn’t know is that in Shopping for a Yankee Swap, there’s an extended chapter involving Jason’s love for a certain tree, and the extremes a mild-mannered man will go to in pursuit of a goal. You’ll have to read it to understand.

I went into the garage to get something, and found a bird’s nest in there, clearly from the tree. Sorry, bird. We hope there aren’t any surprise squirrels in there, too.

It’ll look better decorated (we’re doing that later today. We got 14 inches of snow on Thursday, so we’re still digging out).

But this morning, our 11 year old looked at the tree and declared, “It is joyful!”

Yes. It is, indeed.