Tuesday, 9 August 2022

Uncanny Christmas Tales – (030) A Snowy Christmas

 

In the small but thriving English county of Downshire people go about the tasks of their everyday existence in ways that range from the mundane to the extraordinary as their forebears had done for centuries before, in the varied and diverse landscape, from the Ancient forests of Dancingdean and Pepperstock, the craggy ridges and manmade lakes of the Pepperstock Hills National Park, the rolling hills of the Downshire Downs, to the beautiful Finchbottom Vale and the short but beautiful coastline to the east.

But it’s in the sprawling village of Denmead where the participants of this particular tale live their lives, and the tale began in late November.

Hazel Fordham found herself living alone for the first time in her life at the age of twenty-seven, after her sister Hayley moved out to be with the love of her life.

Hazel hadn’t found hers yet, not that she didn’t have plenty of offers, because she was an attractive girl, but the men she seemed to attract had different expectations from a relationship to her. 

Living alone in the house she had been born in didn’t daunt her in anyway, and in many ways, life went on in exactly the same way as it did before Hayley left.

She was financially secure; Hayley and the rest of the family were still just a phone call away and she had plenty of friends.

The only thing she needed to immediately remedy was to buy a dog, she had always wanted one, but Hayley was allergic.

She didn’t know what sort of dog she wanted other than the size, the dog couldn’t be so big that it took her for a walk, because she was only 4ft 11 and nor could it be one of those ridiculous creatures that celebrities carried around in their handbags, other than that she was open to anything.

She heard through a colleague at work that a friend of theirs had a West Highland Terrier that they wanted to go to a good home.

Hazel was given a phone number and called to arrange a mutually convenient time for her to go round.

The address was only a few streets away, so she walked round to Cooper’s Copse Close to number 35, which was a bungalow, and the walk took her about 15 minutes.

She rang the bell and provoked a bark in response and then a moment later the door opened, and she was greeted by a pleasant looking man about her own age with sandy coloured hair.

“Mr. Miles?” she asked

“Clive” he replied “You must be Hazel”

“Yes”

“Please come in” he said and stood aside and let her pass and smiled

“He’s lovely” she thought and when she got inside, she felt the same about the dog, and it wagged his little tail frantically as Hazel made a fuss of him.

“Well, I can see he’s made up his mind about you already” Clive said

“He’s adorable” Hazel said “I don’t know how you can bare to part with him”

“Well, I have to admit it’s not through choice” he replied

“He’s my gran’s dog really but she reached the point where she was struggling to look after herself let alone this little fella” he explained “So she’s had to move into sheltered accommodation, and unfortunately he’s not allowed”

“That’s really sad” Hazel said, “Did you not want to take him?”

“I did but unfortunately my landlord doesn’t allow pets either” he replied and gave the dog a lot of fuss.

“Do you live locally?” she asked

“Yes, just five minutes away” Clive replied

“I’ve been staying here to look after him while we found him a good home, and I’ve got to clear the bungalow by the end of the month so the council can relet it”

Clive had made up his mind within a few minutes that Hazel was the right person to take on Snowy, but they still sat talking for over an hour.

Just before she took her leave, she wrote down her phone number and handed it to Clive

“I live locally as well so if you ever want to pop round and see him, or…. join us on our walk please just call”

“Really?” Clive said “That would be lovely”

Clive gave her a “bag for life” containing all of Snowy’s possessions and Clive waved them off and she returned it as she walked away with Snowy and she hoped he was a good prospect.

 

She was on a walk in the woods with Snowy on a cold and damp November morning a week later when they took a trail they had not followed previously, which was almost exclusively uphill, and when they reached the summit, she stopped and looked down at the farm below, which had its own wind turbine, and she wasn’t sure she liked what she saw.

“It’s hideous, isn’t it?” a voice behind her said

Hazel turned around to see it was Clive Miles

“It is rather” she agreed “and it’s nice to see you again”

“And you” he said and then added “And not forgetting you either boy”

“He’s pleased to see you too” Hazel pointed out

As he was stroking Snowy, he said

“I was going to ring you but in the turmoil of clearing Gran’s bungalow I lost the piece of paper you wrote your phone number on”

“How annoying” she said but internally she was saying “thank goodness for that”

She had hoped he would ring, and she was really disappointed when he didn’t.

“I saw you cross the road into the woods” Clive said “so I followed, but I couldn’t catch you up, especially when you started uphill, you are deceptively fast for someone with …” 

“Little legs” she suggested and giggled

“Yes” he agreed and laughed as well.

At the end of the walk, they both expressed how much they’d enjoyed it and said they’d like to do it again.

However over the next week or so the walks were foreshortened by the weather, which was not conducive to prolonged country walks, but the dog had to be exercised, so some exposure to the elements was necessary, there was finally a break in the weather, so Hazel phoned Clive and they arranged to meet at the entrance to the woods, so Snowy was given a thorough walking and at the end of it the three of them were shattered, and they still had to get home.

The walk back down through the woods was much harder on their legs than the one up was and when they reached the road Hazel said

“I’m exhausted, and I really need a cup of tea, would you like to join me?”

“I’d love to” Clive

 

The day after it was a cold foggy day, one of those days when the fog clung on all day, so they took Snowy on a safer route, where the path was more substantial, but even that was not without problems, as one of the paths had been blocked by a fallen tree, and Hazel spotted something in the branches, a huge ball of mistletoe.

“Look” she exclaimed “Can you get some?”

“Erm…” Clive exclaimed ashen faced

“What’s wrong?” she asked with concern

“Heights” he said sheepishly “I can’t even stand on a stool” 

“No problem” she said handing him the dog’s lead “hold that”

Hazel clambered up onto the trunk and began walking up an adjoining branch like she was a highwire performer, confident and surefooted.

“Be careful” he called with concern as she reached a narrower branch and then when she had a clump of mistletoe in hand she about faced, and he closed his eyes and didn’t open them again until she jumped down beside him.

 

The freezing fog was showing no sign of abating and had got into their bones, so they cut the walk short at that point and went back to her house for coffee.

When they were sitting in the kitchen drinking their coffee and were beginning to thaw out, she picked up the mistletoe and asked   

“Do you think this is as good as shop bought?”

“I think so, especially after your daredevil act” he replied

“Well, I’ve only every used shop bought before” Hazel confessed as she stood up and walked towards him

“So, I think we should test the quality of this bunch”

So, Hazel leant down and kissed him, and a few moments later she was sitting on his lap, and they didn’t need the mistletoe anymore.

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