FRESH
YARN presents:
High
Atop the Christmas Tree
By Shannon
Starr
As the holiday
season approaches I can't help but fondly remember a family Christmas
story from my girlish youth.
At the age
of sixteen in 1975, I was the proud owner of a 1967 VW Beetle, tan with
red fenders and rust spots galore, it would run forever on a hope and
a prayer and 79 cent a gallon gas. One of the responsibilities of having
the car was to be at my mother's beck and call whenever she needed someone
to run an errand.
The weekend
right before the holidays that year, she asked me to go get a Christmas
tree.
We never
did things like normal families, no loading into the family car and walking
the lot picking and choosing our favorites. No, we needed a tree to have
in the window of our house so the small town neighbors in Jonesville,
Michigan would think we were a functional family unit headed by a hard-working
single mom.
Mom assigned
my slightly older brother, Mark, to go with me to the local tree lot half
a mile away. She handed him the $10 bill bestowing upon him all the rights
and responsibilities therein. With the money in his hand, symbolically
she was saying he was in control, whereas I was just the method of transportation.
His first
order of business, once we fought over the fact that no-way-in-hell did
he get to drive my car, was to stop and pick up my friend Terri. With
long dark hair, exotic looks, and rather large ta-ta's for her age, Terri
was the subject of my brother's eternal crush and he used any excuse to
go see her. Terri, on the other hand, used any excuse to get out of the
house.
Between my
brother's duplicity, and Terri's hunger for adventure and getting high,
I was on the road to hell. It had not occurred to me to do anything other
than my mother's bidding, but Terri and my brother came up with a different
plan.
Driving through
Jonesville, they decided that we wouldn't have to spend the money on a
tree. We could spend it on other things, and steal a tree.
Ten dollars
didn't land in a teenager's hand every day back then. The two of them
figured out we could buy a couple of dollars worth of gas, two packs of
Kool cigarettes, two bottles of Annie Green Springs wine, and a nickel
bag of pot.
Then once
we had scored, we would drive out to the country to the tree farm. We
had worked there the previous summer, lured by the idea of making a whole
$2 an hour trimming the trees on hot August days. For three weeks, the
tree trimming season, we were covered in sap, sunburnt beyond recognition,
and the owners of a new-found insight into the life of the migrant workers
and their bosses.
We also knew
the layout of the farm.
First, my
brother figured, we had to go back to our house, park down the block while
he snuck into the garage and grabbed some rope and a saw for our crime.
We would then stop at his best friends house, score the pot before getting
the wine, and then on the way out of town, stop for gas.
While I looked
forward to becoming a one-third owner of a nickel bag of pot, and drinking
the sweet elixir of cheap wine on that beautiful day, I thought about
the owner of the Christmas tree farm. Crotchety and mean, he treated the
poor black migrant workers like dogs yelling at them that they weren't
working hard enough, and constantly pointing me out as the only female
in the crew and saying, "The white girl don't complain, I don't wanna
hear you!"
We also heard
stories from him during our lunch breaks about how during Christmas season
he kept a shotgun handy to shoot people who would come out and try to
steal trees.
So there
I was driving, my big brother rolling a joint, and Terri swigging out
of the first bottle of wine during the ten miles of country road to the
farm. We passed the bottles and the joint while we masterminded our plans,
and concocted an alibi in case we ran into the law.
Since the
Christmas tree farm was only a mile from my grandparents' farm, we would
drop my brother off at the tree farm, where he would penetrate the depths
of the two-hundred acres to stay out of sight while he played Paul Bunyan.
In the meantime,
Terri and I would drive to my grandparents' house, stop in to say hi and
then leave ten minutes later, thus establishing our alibi for being in
the area if the local sheriff happened upon us driving away with the tree
strapped to the top of my car. "Why, we got if from our grandparents'
farm, Officer."
I stopped
the car, and my brother scampered off into the trees, saw in hand.
By the time
Terri and I got to my grandparents' farm, we had reached a nice level
of glow-on, and had inhaled enough of the marijuana to have altered the
time-space continuum. By this I mean, once Terri and I wandered into the
kitchen, which was filled with the warm scents of holiday cooking, we
forgot about my brother.
I
found out later that while we feasted, Mark searched for a tree. But without
the decent coat, warm boots and gloves that he was too cool to wear, he
started getting cold. Frustrated and tired, he started sawing away at
whatever tree he was in front of. Working in the snow, and freezing his
nuts off, my brother realized he had picked an old rusty and dull saw.
He worked that saw until he could stand it no more and then kicked the
tree over the rest of the way.
Dragging
the tree back to the road, my brother cursed himself for going so far
into the farm as he did. He knew he was late for the rendezvous with us,
and he started getting paranoid.
And there
Terri and I were, sitting in my grandmother's kitchen, being plied with
all sorts of goodies, giggling at the fact granny had no idea we were
high. Everything she said was funny. That is until she asked how Mark
was doing.
Our eyes
got as big as saucers and Terri and I took off like our asses were filled
with firecrackers. Now we were paranoid about how long we had been gone.
A half-hour? An hour? Two?
Upon arriving
at the rendezvous site, we were greeted by my very angry and stoned brother
dragging a huge Christmas tree.
We had to
move fast, but unfortunately we were unable to work as a team. Paranoid
about getting caught, Terri and I were of no use to my brother loading
the tree onto the roof of the car. We grabbed the rope and started wrapping
it around the tree, then through the windows of my Bug, expecting at any
moment to hear the sound of the Christmas tree farmer as he slid a shell
into the chamber of his shotgun. The more we hurried, the more it seemed
we were moving in slow motion.
We were also
suffering from snow blindness. The brilliance of the bright winter sun
and blue sky did not help our dilated pupils, and we had to continually
blink our eyes to see to tie knots with the rough inch thick rope. There
must have been a hundred feet of rope but we were too stoned to realize
we did not have to use it all
My brother
and I began arguing who would drive home, he saw himself as the better
get-away driver. But I insisted that since it was my car, only I got to
drive it. We both reached for the door handle and pulled. It opened an
inch and then stopped. In our hurry to tie the tree on we had tied all
the doors shut. The windows were only down three-fourths of the way so
we had to reach in and crank them down. We each climbed in head first,
my brother managing to get into the driver's seat. He refused to budge.
We were Cheech and Chong meets The Three Stooges. Off we drove, triumphant
that we had pulled the heist off and not gotten caught.
Until
we got home.
As we drove
up to the house, not quite ready to assume a straight face, my mother
stormed out slamming the door behind her.
"Why
have you been gone almost four hours, it should have only taken 30 minutes?"
She demanded an answer.
This was
a development we had not considered. With my brother tap dancing around,
hemming and hawing, and Terri telling my mom how pretty she looked, we
made up some stupid story I don't remember now, and presented the tree
to my mom.
I had not
taken a good look at the tree my brother had selected, trusting that his
expertise in Christmas trees from the previous summer would enable him
to pick out a good one.
The specimen
before my mother was bare, no needles at all on one side. The other side
had the long needles of a fir, and not the short needles of the better
spruce. The limbs were not symmetrical, and the base of the tree was all
splintered.
Angry at
the tree lot man for taking advantage of kids, my mom instructed us to
load the tree onto the car again. "We'll all go back, and I'll make
him give us a better tree, or refund my ten dollars," She said.
We begged
and pleaded knowing that once there, the jig would be up, and there would
be hell to pay. We told her how we walked the lot and picked the tree
special because it reminded us of the story we watched when we were little
kids -- A Charlie Brown Christmas -- and how it was one of the
last trees left, and surely not going to have a home unless we took it.
My mother
was a tough nut to crack but as we told her of the ugly, unwanted tree
and how we knew she was the only mom cool enough to accept it into her
home, her heart was melted by her thoughtful children. By the time my
brother and Terri were done I'm surprised she didn't go inside and bake
us cookies, and make hot chocolate with little marshmallows.
Mark leveled
off the bottom and stuck the tree in the base with some water; I went
and took a nap. Terri managed to leave with the nickel bag stuffed down
the front of her jeans, and we didn't see her for a couple of weeks.
A few years
later we confessed the whole thing over Christmas dinner to my mom who,
with the wisdom of age, and glass of wine or two, laughed at the whole
thing.
And every
year since then, Mom has told the story to whatever friends or family
we are gathered with -- the story of her two stupid, stoner kids stealing
a Christmas tree. God bless us every one.
[Author's
Footnote: A couple of years ago I wrote this true story into a screenplay
that made the rounds in Hollywood. About a year later my mom called and
said she saw it in an episode of That '70s Show.=)]
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