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This is an article submitted to a 1999 Louisville Sentinel contest to
find out who had the wildest Christmas dinner. This won first prize:
"Christmas With Louise"
As a joke, my brother used to hang a pair of panty hose over his
fireplace before Christmas. He said all he wanted was for Santa to fill
them. What they say about Santa checking the list twice must be true
because every Christmas morning, although Jay's kids' stockings were
overflowed, his poor pantyhose hung sadly empty.
One year I decided to
make his dream come true. I put on sunglasses and went in search of an
inflatable love doll. They don't sell those things at Wal-Mart. I had to
go to an adult bookstore downtown. If you've never been in an X-rated
store, don't go. You'll only confuse yourself. I was there an hour
saying things like, "What does this do?" "You're kidding me!" "Who would
buy that?" Finally, I made it to the inflatable doll section. I wanted
to buy a standard, uncomplicated doll that could also substitute as a
passenger in my truck so I could use the car pool lane during rush hour.
Finding what I wanted was difficult. Love dolls come in many different
models. The top of the line, according to the side of the box, could do
things I'd only seen in a book on animal husbandry.
I settled for "Lovable Louise." She was at the bottom of the price scale. To call Louise a "doll" took a huge leap of
imagination. On Christmas Eve, with the help of an old bicycle pump,
Louise came to life. My sister-in-law was in on the plan and let me in
during the wee morning hours, long after Santa had come and gone, I
filled the dangling pantyhose with Louise's pliant legs and bottom. I
also ate some cookies and drank what remained of a glass of milk on a
nearby tray. I went home, and giggled for a couple of hours.
The next
morning my brother called to say that Santa had been to his house and
left a present that had made him VERY happy but had left the dog
confused. She would bark, start to walk away, then come back and bark
some more. We all agreed that Louise should remain in her panty hose so
the rest of the family could admire her when they came over for the
traditional Christmas dinner.
My grandmother noticed Louise the moment she walked in the door. "What the hell is that?" she asked.
My brother quickly explained, "It's a doll."
"Who would play with something like that?" Granny snapped.
I had several candidates in mind, but kept my
mouth shut."Where are her clothes?" Granny continued. "Boy, that turkey
sure smells nice, Gran," Jay said, trying to steer her into the dining
room. But Granny was relentless. "Why doesn't she have any teeth?"
Again, I could have answered, but why would I? It was Christmas and no
one wanted to ride in the back of the ambulance saying, "Hang on Granny!
Hang on!" My grandfather, a delightful old man with poor eyesight,
sidled up to me and said, " Hey, who's the naked gal by the fireplace?"
I told him she was Jay's friend. In a few minutes I noticed Grandpa had
sidled up to the fireplace and was talking to Louise. Not just talking, but actually
flirting. It was then that we realized this might be Grandpa's last
Christmas at home.
The dinner went well. We made the usual small talk
about who had died, who was dying, and who should be killed, when
suddenly Louise made a noise that sounded a lot like my father in the
bathroom in the morning. Then she lurched from the panty hose, flew
around the room twice, and fell in a heap in front of the sofa. The cat
screamed. I passed cranberry sauce through my nose, and Grandpa ran
across the room, fell to his knees, and began administering
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.
My brother fell back over his chair and
wet his pants and Granny threw down her napkin, stomped out of the room,
and sat in the car. It was indeed a Christmas to treasure and remember.
Later, in my brother's garage, we conducted a thorough examination to
decide the cause of Louise's collapse. We discovered that Louise had
suffered from a hot ember to the back of her right thigh. Fortunately,
thanks to a wonder drug called duct tape, we restored her to perfect
health. Louise went on to star in many family celebrations after that
first Christmas.
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