Skip to content

Every Writer

Short Stories

Menu
  • Home
  • Reading
    • Blog
    • On Writing
    • Interviews
    • Famous Authors
    • Stories
    • Poetry
  • Writing
    • Writing Tips
    • Writing Inspiration
    • Playground
    • Writing Prompts
  • Publishing
    • Publishing Tips
    • Literary Magazines
    • Book Publishers
  • Promotions
    • Book Promotions
    • Promoting Tips
    • Classifieds
    • Newsletter
  • Submit
Menu

Christmas Shopping by Doug Elwell

Posted on November 30, 2013 by Every Writer

xmastree

Christmas Shopping

By Doug Elwell

Slush—the streets and sidewalks were littered with slush. Slush marked the Christmas season in Pinhook the year I was eight. It seemed the sun had fallen over the horizon never to return. It was dreary. Smatterings of snow fell during the long nights, rain drizzled off and on during the short days. It was ideal weather for growing slush.

I left the house to walk uptown to do my Christmas shopping. It was my first solo excursion into the market place. I was very proud. Though only three blocks away, it was difficult to get to Main Street and the stores around the square without getting my shoes soaked in random clumps of slush strewn over the sidewalks. I felt the cold wet seeping into my shoes, soaking my feet. The squishing began somewhere between the Farm Supply and the welding shop. By the time I passed Taylor’s Heating, I gave up trying to dodge the islands and rows of slush on the sidewalk. Then it turned into play as I jumped and stomped in it to watch it splash in all directions.

I don’t remember if it was at Taylor’s or the doorway to the Eastern Star Hall, but near there someone rigged a small, raggedy speaker to a radio or record player to broadcast Christmas music up and down the street. Silver Bells rang out thin and tinny as the speaker struggled to bring Christmas to Pinhook. It was being asked to do more than it was capable of, but it tried—heroic in a way, I suppose.

In the Christmas season we become children again. It is a magical time to wonder at the arrival of Santa and his bag of presents. It’s important to convince Santa that we’ve been mostly good since last Christmas. Boys seem to struggle with this more than girls, but usually in the end we decide we’ve been good and deserve a present or two.

At the village square a single, threadbare string of colored lights encircled the park. Hung from the lampposts, their uncertain Christmas colors chased away the grayness of the afternoon. In the five and ten cent store I selected gifts I knew would highlight the family gift exchange on Christmas morning. I found a diamond studded comb for Mother for fifty-nine cents. Father was to be the proud owner of a box of three cotton handkerchiefs for the pocket of his suit coat—seventy-nine cents. I got my sister a cardboard box of three large red paraffin lips filled with sugar water for fifteen cents. I wanted to get her the box of buck teeth, but she already had them. I stepped up to the cash register and counted out my dollar and fifty three cents. She said everything came to a dollar and fifty eight, tax included. Luckily I had a nickel extra and handed it over. I was proud of the gifts I had for my parents and, yes, even my sister. I reluctantly included her on my shopping list at the last minute for insurance purposes. Though I was eight and had pretty much resolved the Santa conundrum, I wasn’t ready yet to leave anything to chance.

Silver Bells takes me back to that Christmas when I was eight.

Back home, Mother dried my stinging toes and feet, “Harry Edwards, don’t you know you’re going to catch your death with those wet feet? What’s the matter with you anyway? How did you manage to get them so wet?” Without giving me time to think up a good lie she patted my feet with a towel and continued gnawing on my ears, “Blah blah and blah blah and don’t you ever blah blah again blah blah. Do you hear me?”

“Yes maam.”

“Now get yourself upstairs and put on a dry pair of socks. Then I want you to blah blah your shoes blah blah with newspapers blah and put blah blah on the register to blah.”

When I came back to the warmth of her kitchen I stuffed my wet shoes with newspaper, put them on the register. A steaming cup of cocoa, no marshmallows, awaited me at the kitchen table. She knew I didn’t like marshmallows in my cocoa. She was a good mom.

###

Doug Elwell was born in Chicago, Illinois then grew up on the prairie in rural downstate where he spent his formative years. He explores the influences of place and community in our lives through creative non-fiction and fiction short stories. His work has appeared in The Oakland Independent, the first edition of Ignite Your Passion: Kindle Your Inner Spark, True Stories Well Told, Every Writer’s Resource and Midwestern Gothic. Doug can be contacted via email at: djelwell@mchsi.com.

Related Posts:

  • screwsnails
    Think Fast By Doug Elwell
  • NOT ALL WHO WANDER ARE LOST
    Taking Submissions on our Main pages
  • window
    Christmas Collage by Raymond Cothern
  • hillmann
    Christmas Samaritans
  • Dec 2013 Every Writer FREE (Are you in it?)
    Dec 2013 Every Writer FREE (Are you in it?)
  • What Christmas is as We Grow Older by Charles Dickens
    What Christmas is as We Grow Older by Charles Dickens
  • Categories
    Categories
  • Christmas Every Day by W. D. Howells
    Christmas Every Day by W. D. Howells
Category: Literary Story

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Call for Submissions

summer call for submissions

Open Submissions for fiction and poetry. See our submission guidelines.

Sign up and get free ebooks!

When you sign up you get 2 free horror ebooks and digital copies of our magazine for free!



Search

Categories

  • Adventure
  • Animal Stories
  • Anton Chekhov
  • Arthur Conan Doyle
  • Bram Stoker
  • Brothers Grimm
  • Charles Dickens
  • Children's Stories
  • Christian Short Story
  • Christmas Stories
  • Classic Authors
  • Classic Horror
  • Classic Short Story
  • Contemporary
  • Evans
  • EWR
  • Fairy Tales
  • Family Story
  • Fantasy Story
  • Father Story
  • Featured
  • flash fiction
  • Friends Story
  • Fyodor
  • Ghost Story
  • H.P. Lovecraft
  • HG Wells
  • Horror Contest 2013
  • Horror Contest 2014
  • Horror Contest 2016
  • Horror Stories
  • Horror Story Contest 2015
  • Horror Winner
  • Jack London
  • James Joyce Stories
  • Kate Chopin
  • Literary Short Story
  • Literary Story
  • Love Story
  • Mystery Story
  • Nathaniel Hawthorne
  • Nature Story
  • O. Henry
  • Poe, Edgar Allan
  • Psychological Stories
  • Pushkin, Alexsandr S.
  • Relationship Stories
  • Relationship Story
  • Robert Louis Stevenson
  • Rudyard Kipling
  • Saki
  • Scary Stories
  • Science Fiction Stories
  • Sea Stories
  • Short Short
  • Short Stories from Africa
  • short story
  • Short Story: Relationships
  • Stories about writing
  • Stories for Kids
  • Story of the World
  • Summer Stories
  • Thanksgiving Story
  • Thriller Story
  • War Stories
  • Women Authors

For Teachers and Writers

Looking for engaging writing prompts? Get 2,000 classroom-ready prompts that combine SEL with academic writing development! Perfect for grades 7-12, this comprehensive collection includes daily warm-ups, journal entries, and discussion starters. Stop searching, start teaching – download your complete writing solution today! Teaching writing just got easier. Buy the resource, support our site. 

Never Stop

Poetry

Buy Our Print Magazine


Buy the issue!

© 2025 Every Writer | Powered by Minimalist Blog WordPress Theme
Go to mobile version