Tag Archive for: Christmas Gifts

Special Gifts for the Holidays


by
Paula Gail Benson

During
the holidays, there is a lot of emphasis on gift giving. For most of us, it
means online or in store shopping and figuring out the heart’s desires of those
nearest and dearest to us.
Sometimes,
the gifts of the holiday season are more subtle. The joy of hearing and singing
traditional music. The quiet realization that comes from a special moment while
watching a holiday program. The chance to see and reminisce with family and
friends.
This
year, I received a special gift while talking with my friend Margaret Davis,
who works with the children and handbell choirs at my church. Probably,
Margaret didn’t realize she was giving me anything. She just told me about a
story that had been very meaningful to her. And, for the first time, I heard
about “Why the Chimes Rang.”
Barnes and Noble Edition
In 1909, Raymond MacDonald Alden wrote the story. The
Baldwin Project (“Bringing Yesterday’s Classics to Today’s Children”) provides
an online version.
 
Several other versions are available through Amazon,
including a dramatized version.
The story is about a town with a large church that has
impressive Christmas chimes. Unfortunately, the chimes have not been heard for
many years. Every year, the townspeople would lay their offerings to the Christ
child on the church’s altar. They believed that when the greatest and best
offering was placed on the altar, the bells would chime.
One year, Pedro and his younger brother decided to go
to the church on Christmas Eve, to attend the service. On their way, they came
upon a poor woman who had collapsed in the cold. Pedro decided to stay with the
woman and help her keep warm until his brother could bring assistance from
the people leaving the service. He gave his brother a coin and cautioned him to
place it on the altar when no one was looking.
The brother arrives at the service and sees many gifts
being placed on the altar, including a book an author had been writing for many
years and the crown the king took from his own head. None of the gifts caused the bells
to chime. As the service was concluding, no one noticed the brother quietly
placing Pedro’s coin on the altar. Only when the chimes rang out did those
closest to the altar see the little brother creeping silently down the aisle.
Raymond MacDonald Alden was the son of author Isabella
MacDonald Alden (who wrote many Sunday School books) and Reverend Gustavus
Rossenberg Alden. Raymond became an English professor, writing books of
literary analysis. His “Why the Chimes Rang” has been compared with two similar
holiday stories, “Le Jongleur de Notre Dame” (a miracle story about a juggler
who becomes a monk and has no gift to offer the statue of the Virgin Mary
except his ability to juggle–when the other monks ridicule him, the statue
comes to life and blesses him) and “The Little Drummer Boy” (who plays his drum
as a gift for the Christ child). The Wikipedia article on Raymond MacDonald Alden provides information about his work and links to articles about the related stories.
I’m so grateful that my friend Margaret told me about
this story, for now it will become part of my holiday celebrations. It’s good to
remember in the hustle and bustle of the season that sometimes the smallest
offering can have the most significant effect.
May you all be looking forward to a wonderful holiday!

The Perfect Holiday Gift of Unconventional Romantic Comedy

By Kimberly Jayne


Happy holidays to all! This month, with Take My Husband, Please! on sale for the holidays, I’d like to give you a taste of what reviewers and critics are saying:



From Publisher’s Weekly’s BookLife Prize in Fiction: “Slightly madcap, suddenly sweet, this novel combines the best of female friendship with soulful exploration of passion in its many forms. The dialog-heavy, elegant writing style pulls readers into a world that is difficult to leave.”



From the Midwest Book Review: “A delightfully quirky yet all-too-human cast of supporting characters rounds out this genre-busting tragi-sexy-drama-comedy. Highly recommended!”



From Readers’ Favorite: “Take My Husband, Please by Kimberly Jayne was a wonderful romance and a complete delight to read. I really enjoyed this book and I recommend it to anyone who likes a good combination of comedy and romance.



From Self-Publishing Review: “A laugh-out-loud romantic comedy. Will and Sophie are wonderfully flawed characters who find themselves in one absurd situation after another that’ll have you in stitches. In addition, the quirky supporting cast really brings this novel to life, and the author was able to throw in several hilarious and suspenseful twists and turns.


And if that doesn’t entice you to gift this delightful romantic comedy to someone you love—including yourself—here’s the opening excerpt:



CHAPTER ONE


Mitch Houdini clung to Sophie’s shoulders like the week’s dry cleaning as she led him inside. Loud enough to scare off intruders, her strappy stilettos click-clack-click-clacked across the hardwoods and echoed off the walls, giving her foyer a deserted feel. She reached for the lights but thought better of it because, in the dark, a few stubborn extra pounds and some baby-birthing stretch marks don’t exist. Right?


Mitch kicked the door shut and twirled Sophie around, painting a wet trail of kisses along her neck that fueled her long-suppressed yearning to be touched and adored—worshipped even—by a man. This man. From the moment he’d whisked her away in his Lamborghini convertible for a happy hour that had lingered to midnight, Mitch had been a heat-seeking missile she could not deflect. Not that she wanted to after all those Mexican martinis.


She reached behind, dropped her keys on a wood console table cluttered with framed photos and a warming pot of orange blossom-scented wax, and discreetly flipped a family portrait on its face. After the date she’d had, prying eyes need not sabotage her mission.


“Sophie.”


His voice vibrated the hair on her neck like plucked violin strings. He caressed her face in his hands and let his brazen tongue probe one ear, exploring every hill and cranny like he polished the chrome wheels of his cherished Lamborghini—cleaning and buffing and shining—and shooting chills right to her marrow. He followed with an invitation for dueling tongues, and by then she figured there wasn’t much that tongue of his couldn’t do. Still, she had imagined he would taste more like Don Juan instead of Cuban cigars and Stolichnaya.


Mitch took a breath and shrugged out of his sports coat, revealing a wedge-shaped torso that strained against the fabric of his tailored shirt. She stood in the shadow of his six-four frame, the ceiling vents blasting cold air on her skin, while his hands ventured where no man had gone for nearly two years. He thumbed her breasts through her little black dress and a pushup bra with its work cut out for it, igniting a white-hot desire between her legs. Every millimeter of her womanhood begged for the point of no return. Begged.


That’s when he crushed himself against her.


Whoa. So the rumors were true. His manhood was the stuff of local legend, regaled in water cooler jokes about some hocus pocus that had to be kept under wraps—an industrial-length Mr. Slinky. Uncompressed, it could be dangerous. His massive hardness rolled against her bellybutton and his soft moans set her on fire.


Teasing him with a gentle bite on his lower lip, she drew him into the shadowy living room, around the sofa. He pulled her closer, his hands disappearing under her dress and searing his fingerprints into her bare skin. She felt her lacy panties shift and roll down until they stretched around her thighs. As his fingers explored the terrain between her legs, her breath caught and she could no longer wait.


She pushed him onto the sofa and pounced on top of him. But in less time than it took to say, Wheeee! Sophie felt herself flying backward. She landed on the coffee table with her feet in the air and her bottom winking at the ceiling.


“What the hell?” Mitch said, scrambling to his feet.


“What the hell?” came another man’s voice.


“What the hell?” Sophie echoed, clapping her hands to turn on the lamp.


A man in a black T-shirt and sweats rolled off the sofa, fast-blinking and squinting as if he’d just woken up, his salt-and-pepper mullet spiked in all directions.


Sophie gasped and gaped. “Why the hell are you in my house?”


Mitch launched into a fighting stance with his fists up. “Who is this?”


“He’s my— he’s my—” She blew out an exasperated sigh. “Husband.”


“Your husband?” Mitch’s face turned the same shade as the Sultry Summer Spice lip color smudged around his bruised mouth.


“Ex-husband, actually.”


“Not ex yet,” the mullet-headed man said.


Sophie huffed and rolled her eyes, gesturing at each man by way of introduction. “Will Camden, Mitchell Houdini.”


They made no move to shake hands, and a hot rash of embarrassment spread across her skin. Will had never seen her with another man before. Had he heard her mouth kissing Mitch’s? Her sighs escaping? Her primal need for fulfillment screaming?


The hot rash began to itch then, and she wiped her swollen lips. Her hair clip fell out and bounced on the hardwoods, and that’s when she noticed her push-up pads had dislodged themselves and wiggled up to her neck. Great. Now she had no boobs, an up-don’t, and her dignity bunched around her ankles. It was official. She was a slut.


“I don’t feel well.” She held her stomach and wavered on her heels, reaching down to pull up her panties when the martinis went to her head, her eyes crossed, and the room swirled. Down she went like a felled redwood.


Will extricated the panties from her heels and dangled them from his fingertips. “You wear a G-string now?”


Mitch hauled her up by the armpits. “Something you want to tell me?”


Sophie snatched back her panties and squeezed her eyes shut to quell the dizziness. “There’s not much to tell. We’ve been separated for more than a year, and now we’re getting divorced. The papers have been filed. Speaking of divorce, Will, did you forget you don’t live here anymore?”


“I’m here because somebody had to pick up the kids from the slumber party. They’re upstairs, sick.”


“What? Both of them?”


“Too much sugar would be my guess. And omigod, the projectile barfing was epic. I’m talking some serious industrial-strength chum. First, one would blow and then the other. I think they were tag-teaming me. I divvied out the Pepto-Bismol, and at least that didn’t come back up.”


Mitch’s mouth contorted through various incarnations of horror.


“Exactly,” Will said. “Regurgitated strawberry shortcake is something you don’t want to miss in your lifetime.”


“Good god.” Sophie dug her fingers into her forehead. A lifelong bachelor like Mitch Houdini had to be eased into the dark side of childrearing. Will could play tough, but he had his less-than-shining moments too; he was the king of squeamish stomachs. “You gave up a sympathy barf, didn’t you?”


Will screwed up his face, not bothering to deny it. “Point is, I was here for the kids. I handled it. The kitchen, the staircase, even the big wet spot on your bed.” Before she could ask, he waved it off. “They’re fine now, I’m telling you. It’s just that Keely had to see for herself that you weren’t in there, and—”


Mitch backed into the foyer. “Look, I don’t know who’s interrupting here, me or your—er, husband. So I should go and let you two work this out.”


Dammit. This was her one night. She’d been crushing on this man for months; and after a handful of dates, they’d passed the hardest part, broken the slab of ice that had encased her libido for so long.


She thrust her palm flat toward him. “Please don’t go. Will is leaving, aren’t you? Because, at the risk of sounding like a broken record, you don’t live here anymore.”


“Ah, yes,” Will said, his mouth an intractable slash. “Didn’t mean to interrupt your…” finger quotes, “big date. Can’t put a kink in Sophie’s plans with the—” quotes again, “big date, now can we?”


“You know,” Mitch said from the foyer, forming finger quotes of his own, “the big date is still here.”


Will squinted at him. “Yeah, why is that, Mitchell?”


The way he said Mitchell was equivalent to verbal spitting. They both stood with eyes narrowed, chins high, and chests puffed out. A cockfight waiting to happen.


Mitch towered over Will by six inches with shoulders and arms to match. He extended a hand. “It’s Mitch. Mitch Houdini. We’re all adults here. Why don’t we start over?”


Will grudgingly shook Mitch’s hand, and each man’s arm tensed in the protracted squeezing of Olympic wrestlers, jaws clenching and nostrils flaring. Mitch’s biceps bulged through his dress shirt, and his face contorted with the effort. Will scrunched up his face like he might have been on the crapper.


Sophie planted herself between them and peeled their hands apart. “There we go,” she said, as if breaking up two first graders. “There we go. All civil again. Isn’t that better?”


Will pointed a wavering finger. “Houdini. Houdini Real Estate? Where We Make the Home of Your Dreams Appear Like Magic? Aren’t you Sophie’s boss?”


Sophie crossed her arms over her chest. “He’s not my boss.”


“I’m her sponsoring broker,” Mitch said. “Sophie is her own boss.”


The cuckoo lurched in and out of a tiny cubbyhole in the clock, crowing twelve times in a thick, gelatinous quiet, when Will turned a wary gaze on Sophie.


She opened the front door, tamping down the creeping swell of guilt. “We’re past the judging phase, Will.” The cool night air swirled around her bare legs, and she guided him with a scooping hand gesture toward the exit. “Thanks for getting the kids.”


He got nose to nose with her. “Just one more thing.”


She tapped her foot while he readied himself to say just one more thing. “Well?”


“Sophie,” he said, with some apparent mental wrangling and a sidelong glance at Mitch. And then he muttered, “I’m staying in the studio for a while.”


Sophie leaned closer. “What? The shed?”


“The studio, the shed, whatever. I’m staying in it for a while.”


“Ohhellno, you’re not.”


“Ohhellyes, I am.” He turned and headed straight for the back door.


She ran ahead and blocked the door with her body. “What’s going on? You’re not staying here unless I know why.”


His voice dropped to a whisper. “I got… laid off.”


“Laid off?” she shouted. “When?”


“Shhh.” He peered over his shoulder. “Could we not yell it to the world?”


“You’re a director of product development. You have products to develop.”


He shook his head. “Whole division is gone. Three months ago. It makes business sense. They’re reorganizing, and—”
“Are you kidding?” Sophie could feel her temper building to an ugly pitch. “You waited till now to tell me? What about your condo?”


“Sold it. Buyers wanted in early. They’re leasing it back from me till the closing, which is three or four weeks from this morning. So…”


“Will Camden! You seriously can’t—”


He placed one hand over her mouth. “Now, don’t say something you’ll regret. I know this seems like a good time to lay into me, but I just need the studio temporarily, till my money’s freed up.”


Her resolve to not speak wavered until he removed his hand. “There’s no place to sleep down there. Junk’s everywhere. You still haven’t cleaned out all your stuff. The electricity isn’t even connected. Not to mention the black widows and fat, flying, disgusting cockroaches.”


“Come on, your cockroaches are not fat.”


“It’s got a padlock on it, and the door is all wonky and—”


“I have been here before, and I do have a key.”


Sophie’s lips pressed into a scowl, which was hard to maintain given that he was still mourning his father. It had only been a few months since Gus Camden passed. How could she be heartless and not help his grieving son? Still, a night in the shed for anyone, much less Will, was nonsensical. His eyes looked tired and red, and those broad shoulders she’d once leaned on with such unwavering trust now sagged. Had he lost weight?


She tilted her chin. “I want you out of my life, Will.”


“Yeah? Well, I wouldn’t take you back if you begged me.”


“Good. Because I would never beg.”


It was an exchange they’d volleyed back and forth since he moved out and always resulted in a Camden Standoff, two ex-lovers, ex-confidants, ex-family, ex-everything glaring until somebody blinked.


Sophie raised a finger and opened the door. “One night. Do you understand? One night.”


Will gave a withering last glance before he flipped on the porch light, crossed the deck, and descended three steps to the flagstone pavers that led to the erstwhile-music-studio-turned-dilapidated-shed at the far corner of an oversized yard. Head hanging, he looked back, affecting a weird, tight-lipped smile that did nothing to reassure her that he was all right.


But the massive oak trees cast opaque shadows across the yard; he tripped over Keely’s pink Schwinn and landed on the chrome handlebars with dangling neon ribbons. His elbow thumped the rubber horn, and a clownish honk echoed through the air. He bounced up as if it had never happened and disappeared into the night with a slight limp.


Sophie shut the door, awash with questions. How bad were things that Will Camden would sleep in a bug-infested junk room?
_____________________________________

Want to get your copy? Find it here on Amazon: Take My Husband, Please.

Kimberly Jayne is the author of the dark fantasy series Demonesse: Avarus and the hilarious romantic comedy Take My Husband, Please. She has been making up stories since she was five, when she scribbled on her grandfather’s notepads her first tall tale about pigs flying. Yes, she started that shtick. Since then, she’s written just about everything and for various websites and clients, including humor features for Playgirl Magazine. She also performed her work in the 2011 Listen to Your Mother Show in Austin, Texas. Visit her at ReadKimberly.com.