#Jadelaide
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Will you be bringing Joel & Adelaide back for Christmas?
I'm not going to lie, I have fully entertained this. But I want to completely change the family dynamic now that Mr. Edmundson has passed. I don't feel like it's respectful to keep it as it is.
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im going to adelaide today
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Alis;
Joel | Adelaide | @pleasantprefectsâ | @bugblogsâ
525 words
18 December 2010; London
The scent of her perfume was a comfort -- one Joel hadnât realized heâd been missing. Her London flat was drafty, but they were nestled into the soft down of her quilted duvet, and the warmth of her body curled against his did wonders to dispel the December chill. Her fingertips were brushing across the hair at the back of his head, her lips leaving his to trail along his jaw and to the side of his neck, to the hollow just below his ear, and despite himself, he let her name escape his mouth in a breathy moan.
Her lips were gone from his neck in an instant, and he opened his eyes to see Adelaide sitting back on her heels, her cheeks flushed. âAlis?â
âFuck--â The air seemed chillier as Joel pushed himself up onto his elbow, trying to clear his head, a hand half-reaching for her, hesitating. âNo, I didnât -- shit--â
âYeah, âshit.ââ Adelaide drew away from him, jerking her hand away from his fingers as he reached out to touch her. âReally? Alis?â She sighed, pushing a hand back through her red hair, turning away from him.
He reached for her again, his fingers brushing against her thigh. âAdelaide--â
She shook her head, swallowing hard, and drew further away, throwing back the duvet and creeping for the edge of the bed. âIt was too soon. You told me what happened, you told me about her, you told me--â She broke off, her cheeks still flushed pink as she squeezed her eyes shut. âI knew it was too soon, I knew. You loved her, you were engaged, and she--â She shook her head again.
âAde, please, it was a mistake--â
âThis was a mistake.â She turned to let her feet hang off the edge of the bed, hands gripping the edge of the mattress to keep herself from shaking, though her shoulders shook despite her efforts -- though he couldnât tell if it was from suppressed anger or the cold. âWhat am I to you? Just a replacement?â
Joel hesitated, looking at her back -- the red hair falling around her shaking shoulders where there should have been blonde, the freckles covering skin that should have been unblemished -- no, Adelaide was just as she should be -- she wasnât Alis -- she wasnât a replacement -- Alis was gone, gone--
âYou should go.â
âAde--â
âJust go,â she said sharply. And then, as an afterthought, quieter, her voice breaking, âPlease. Just go.â
He hesitated another moment, but she didnât look back at him, her grip tightening on the edge of the mattress, her shoulders tense, still shaking. Slowly, he pulled back the duvet and swung his legs to the side, hardly registering the feeling of the cold floor beneath his feet as he found his robes and pulled them on.
Once he was dressed, he headed for the door, pausing to put a gentle hand to her elbow, her name half-formed on his lips when she shuddered and drew away from his touch. âJust go,â she said again.
He dropped the hand and left the flat without another word, Disapparating as soon as the door had shut behind him.
#writing#fiction#fanfiction#fanfic#original character#joel michel#WRITING joel#SHIP jadelaide#SHIP jalis
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#look at her #peering into ur soul #like come fuck me
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Virgin and years!
Thank youuu :) :) :)
Virgin:Â Give a description of the person you want to lose (or have lost) your virginity to.
(Have) He's from my college. I think he's really cool and funny and nice. He's white, has curly black hair and it's so cute and he wears glasses and is a 10/10 would bang again.Â
Years:Â Tell us a story from when you were in high (or middle) school.
One time this teacher was being a douche cause someone asked a question and he's like "Any more questions" and I was all "why are you such a jerk" and the girl that asked the question thanked me and everyone's like "holy shit i can't believe you did that" and like i jsut called him a jerk nbd I dind't think anything was gonna happen #toosassy
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Hey guys, I've got a new poll up for My Father's Shadow.
I've been thinking about writing a series of fun My Father's Shadow inspired Les Mis AU one shots as a side project. I want to know what you guys think. The options are:
Yes, and make them all MFS based (so like Javert would be Enjolras' father, Adelaide would be Enjolras' mother and Javert's wife, Combeferre would be romantically involved with Turning Woman 3, Grantaire would have a sister, etc.)
Yes, but only use the concept of Javert being Enjolras' father and Adelaide being Enjolras' mother and Javert's wife.
Yes, but don't make them MFS based.
or
No.
I promise that this wouldn't interfer with the main My Father's Shadow story, but I really love Adelaide, and the concept of Javert being Enjolras' father. So please go to the following link and cast your vote:
http://www.fanfiction.net/~fictionfrek101
#my father's shadow#enjonine#jadelaide#les mis modern au#oneshots#fan fiction#fictionfrek101#poll#Les Miserables#les mis#enjolras#Eponine#adelaide#javert
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A Not So Southern Christmas, Part 1
This is obviously a rewrite of my old fic. I have been feeling romantic and Christmasy, so I figured it was time to bring back my favorite holiday couple. I found the header from @whatishockey!!
Synopsis: When Adelaide Thibodeaux finds her husband to be diddling the wedding planner in the Church before their nuptials, she walks out and is determined to take her dream honeymoon by herself. Until she gets a seat upgrade to first class and ends up next to Hurricanes Defenceman, Joel Edmundson. Holiday shenanigans ensue.
Author's Notes: This was written in early 2019 before Eddy went to Montreal as a free agent. I will be tagging both teams.
Part 1
Looking back on my relationship, there were a lot of red flags I ignored. Or maybe I was just naĂŻve. Either way, it was five days before Christmas and I was starting my solo honeymoon in the tiniest airport known to man in Birmingham, Alabama. My cousin, the âtravel agentâ, had âgivenâ me a deal on my honeymoon as her wedding gift, but I was beginning to suspect she didnât own a damn globe because I was flying to North Carolina then to Winnipeg, and then onto the winter wonderland of Toronto, Canada.
The plane looked like it would lose a fight with a sparrow, but 30 people were going to board the thing. As someone that had never been on a plane, I was beginning to regret my gumption of marching out of the church and taking the limousine directly to the airport.
If you asked me, impulsivity was not a common trait among my people. I was Southern by blood, Southern by raisinâ, Southern by livinâ and I wasnât prone to rush anything and I enjoyed tradition as Southerners do. I picked at a hangnail with my teeth and resisted the urge to ruin the most expensive manicure I had ever had in my life.
A tinny version of Jingle Bells played in the terminal and I was tempted to turn tail and run home. My momma went hog wild for the holidays and our house usually looked like something right out of a Thomas Kinkaid painting. White fluff and tiny villages covered every surface, anything that could be wrapped in lights and garland was adorned and Daddy made sure you could see our house from space. It didnât matter if it was 30 degrees or 80 on Christmas day (being Alabama, both were possible) we were having a baked ham with all the fixinâs.
There seemed to be two types of women in the South: Southern Belles with white gloves, pearls, and eyelashes that could bat for anyone, or TomBoys dressed in camo and boots. Any woman that fell into the inbetween was pigeonholed into one or the other. Despite the fact that I was 5â10â and closer to 200lbs than 150lbs, my momma always tried to turn me into a belle. Gymnastics, ballet, clogginâ, modern dance, pageants, cotillion of all things, were on my resume for a proper Southern Belle.
If I had let my mother dress me I would have been in a Chanel suit, tottering close to six foot in matching pumps, and a string of pearls around my neck. Dixiecrats were nothing if not predictable in their fashion sense. My own personal style was more âpost menopausal writerâ in legginâs, drapey sweaters, and sensible flats (if I had to wear shoes at all).
Considering all I had as I sped away from the church was the suitcase I had packed for the honeymoon, I was looking festive in darkwash jeans, a sensible red blazer I had found in a consignment store over a green teeshirt from the Wal-Mart, and pair of comfortable silver flats that I had found at Payless Shoes for $12. My Christmas light earrings actually lit up with the push of a small button and I looked like Santa Clausâ long lost granddaughter. You know⌠if she had run away from her wedding and slept in an airport.
I had my hair up in a messy bun after leaving a small mountain of bobby pins in the back of the limousine, but the bangs that were last yearâs bad decision didnât quite make it and they fell around my face in unkempt waves.
My knees were currently jammed into the seat in front of me and I was pressed against the window trying to make myself as small as possible. My fear of the window falling out and being sucked out of the plane was now secondary to making sure I did not touch the sweaty, leering, overweight man who had jammed himself in the seat next to me and might have actually drooled when he blatantly stared at my breasts.
I was saved by the captainâs voice coming over the loudspeaker, âGood morning yâall, thereâs a big olâ storm cominâ down thatâs gonna be coverinâ the better part of the Eastern half of the country, but we should be getting you into Charlotte on time to catch your connecting flights before she hits.â
My family was poor, but we werenât rich either. My daddy owned the family hardware store in a small town outside of Tuscaloosa and my Momma was a professional homemaker that would have made Paula Deen and Martha Stewart weep with envy. We had enough to go on day trips, to pay for my sister and I to do all of our extracurriculars, but I had never been on a plane in my entire life and I was about to spend the next 57 minutes with my knees jammed to my chest while being squashed by the fattest, reddest, sweatiest man on the planet and I would bet my life savings he was some sort of shoe salesman, or a judge, or a small town sheriff or something.
--------------------
When we landed in Charlotte, I sent a little prayer to the Universe for allowing me to live and for the one millionth time since climbing into that big car I thought about just going home. But that was what sensible me would have done and I was always sensible.
As we taxied to the terminal, I turned on my phone and the family group text started blowing up my phone.
Little Sister: Addie are you there yet? Did you live? Did the plane crash? I didnât see anythin on Twitter.
Momma: Adelaide, I donât understand dear, why are you leaving for Christmas? It was different When you and Daniel were going on your honeymoon and starting your own traditions. This is insane. Text us when you land. Adele said she didnât see anythinâ on the Twitter App. I know this weddinâ didnât go quite the way you were hopinâ but just come home.
Daddy: Girl, call us when you land and Canes won!
My phone was to my ear as the plane came to a stop and all 40 something passengers tried to stand at the same time with the exception of Chubby McPervert who didnât move a muscle and fell asleep with his massive jowl to his chest.
âHi Daddy, I landed. Yes, Iâm going to catch my next flight. No, this one wasnât bad.â It had in fact been horrible, but I wasnât about to tell him about Chubby McPervert and his leering eyes. âI love yâall too. Iâll call yâall when I make it to Toronto, it will be really late. No it wonât cost a fortune, remember Adele and I taught you how to facetime using the WiFi. Yes, Daddy, we have to use that newfangled thingamabobber. I love you too.â
I hung up as people were starting to file off the place and Chubby McPervert still hadnât gotten out of his seat and I needed to grab my carry on from the overhead bin. I swung my purse onto my other shoulder making sure it whipped right across his sleeping face and I put a look of abject horror on mine, âOh mah gosh! I am SO sorry, This purse was a present from my Daddy so I can carry all my stuff and I just have not gotten used to this big olâ thing!â
He grunted and finally got up. He apparently didnât have a carry on and I stuck out my tongue at his retreating back to the amusement of the little boy seated behind me. Stepping into the narrow aisle and grabbing my little roller bag that contained all my toiletries and a few changes of clothes in case the airline lost my suitcase, I rolled after everyone else exiting the plane and entered the indoor city that was (to me) a large international airport.
The hustle and bustle of an airport right before Christmas was overwhelming and I looked for a place where I could get out of the way and get my bearings.
I found a pillar in front of a bank of screens framed in cheap tinsel garland that had a list of all the flights coming and going. To my dismay, it looked like a lot were already being cancelled due to the weather. When I finally found my flight, I was dismayed to see it was already delayed. I looked around the terminal for signs of where the gate might be and figured waiting there was as good as any place.
It took what felt like an hour to traverse the bustling airport and I was pretty sure I had walked to the next county.
The poor gal behind the counter looked harried as people checked into the flight and a lot of grumpy faces seemed to be aware of the delay. I waited patiently in line for my turn as she tried to find accommodations for people who needed to make connecting flights. Much to my chagrin, Chubby McPervert huffed up behind me and spent the next 20 minutes grumbling under his breath. When I finally got to the counter I set my giant purse on it, âYâall look like yâallâve had a DAY.â
She took a breath before answering, âIâm new, this is my first holiday.â
âWell take a breath, a drink of water, I gotta find my ticket on my phone anyway.â
She shot me a grateful look as Chubby McPervert made impatient huffy noises behind me. She clicked around on her computer and after a good minute I held out my phone feigning stupidity, âThis is for this flight right?â
She smiled, âYes it is.â
Chubby McPervert made another impatient huff. I wanted to tell him he sounded like the draft horses in the log pull at the county fair, but I didnât, I just turned on the Southern Charm, âOh my goodness, I am so sorry, am I going too slow? I bet youâre in a big olâ hurry to board a flight thatâs been delayed.â
Turning back around, I made a note of the name etched on the little brass name tag as I reached over the counter with my hand and hoped the gal would follow my lead, âBethany dear, how IS your momma doinâ? I sent her a Christmas card last year and it was returned! Did she move?â
Bethany tried to hide her smirk as she caught onto my game, âYou know we had to move her in with my brother last year, Iâll text you her new address.â
I made a sympathetic face, âAw I am so sorry to hear that.â
She shook her head, âNo, itâs good, after Daddy died she just couldnât keep the farm all by herself. She fell and broke her hip, but she is doing great now. The grandkids can barely keep up with her!
She let go of my hand and passed my phone back to me, I gave her a wink and turned around with my cheeriest smile, âBless your big olâ heart for waiting while I caught up with my friend. Iâm sure she will be happy to help you now!â
As I grabbed my purse, Bethany mouthed, âThank you,â and I ventured into the waiting area to take a seat and wait for my delayed plane.
I was deep into a meditation podcast when I felt a tap on my shoulder, Bethany was bent over me, âMs. Thibodeaux? Can I have you come up to the counter please?â
âAbsolutely,â I answered, pulling my earphones out of my ears as I stood.
Setting my purse on top of my rolling carry on, I followed her to the counter. When she was back behind the computer she made a few taps, âUnfortunately, the gentleman behind you in line had to find an alternate flight, so we now have a first class seat available, would you like a free upgrade?â
A free upgrade into first class? I didnât even know there was such a thing.
Bethany seemed to sense my hesitation, âThereâs more legroom? You get to drink?â
She knew exactly what I needed. Bethany was like my secret Santa, âWell in that case, how can I say no?â
She gave me an updated paper ticket, âYour flight is about an hour out, enjoy!â
It was her turn to give me a wink and I was suddenly very grateful for my parents who taught me to treat everyone with respect and patience.
Returning to my seat to wait, I watched people exit a freshly landed plane, watched the cleaning crew get on, the switching of the pilots and attendants, the waiting area emptied as they started to board the plane like a herd of grumpy cattle and eventually it taxied away from the gate.
There was a duty free store across from where I was sitting and I idly wondered how many of those little gin bottles it would take to fill my water bottle and more importantly, how much it would cost. I finally decided, âWay too damn much,â and I was saved from a potentially bad decision by the loudspeaker announcing my flight. I blinked and noticed the waiting area had filled up again with weary holiday travelers and the flight was going to be very full as cancellations meant everyone was trying to get somewhere before the storm covered most of the US.
I got up, shrugging my purse onto my shoulder and grabbing the handle of my bag. I turned to walk around the bank of seats I was sitting in to avoid the gaggle of teenagers that had settled on the floors to take turns with the one available charging outlet, but was stopped as I smacked into a solid wall that I did not remember sitting next to.
Rebounding off the slab of granite, I tried to step back but the back of my knees hit my carry-on and they buckled. I felt myself losing my balance, before two large hands wrapped around my arms to steady me.
I would be the first to admit it was tough to date men when a woman happened to be nearly six feet tall and could be generously described as âcurvy.â Dan had been almost two inches shorter than I was, and was one of the very few men who didnât seem bothered by the fact I was bigger in every sense of the word. That is what I had believed, anyway, until I found him balls deep in our wedding planner who was all of five foot and 100lbs soaking wet.
The man I ran into, however, was much taller than Dan -- much taller than I was-- and it was a weird experience looking up into a manâs eyes instead of down. Not that I was complaining.
I felt my mouth open before I told it to and I knew stupid was going to come out, âOh mah goodness you are handsome.â My drawl became more pronounced when I was nervous and I had a feeling I just went full âback in the holler down by the crickâ Southern.
He blushed, murmuring what had to be a thanks and let go of my arms, gesturing for me to walk in front of him. When I turned around the aisle between the banks of metal framed seats had cleared like a combine gone through a wheatfield.
Making my way to the gate, I could feel the manâs huge presence behind me and I realized for the first time, I was unsettled because he made me feel almost small. Adelaide Thibodeaux donât you dare trip or make a fool of yourself more than you already have.
I scanned my ticket with my new seat assignment and headed down the gangway to a thankfully, much larger airplane than the first one. First class looked like having a king sized bed to myself after flying on what was essentially a deflating balloon next to the worldâs sweatiest man. The seats were in pairs on either side of the aisle and even economy, which had three seats on either side, looked roomy comparatively.
My seat was smack in the middle of first class and I was by a window. I stopped and pushed the extendable handle down on my carry-on and before I could pick it up the man I had crashed into basically palmed the thing like it weighed no more than a feather and lifted it into the overhead bin, before putting in his own bag and laying his very nice coat on top of both of them.
I felt a flush the exact color of my blazer creep up my neck and into my cheeks. âUm thanks! Polite and handsome, my momma would love you.â
Adelaide Thibodeaux, what the actual flying fuck are the words coming out of your mouth?
I took my seat near the window and looked out at the workers throwing the luggage onto the plane, hoping the very tall, very handsome man would keep going and I would never see him again. Which would be disappointing, but quite alright since I apparently couldnât control the verbal diarrhea around him and I wanted to sink directly through the plane to the ground below.
I was not that lucky; God didnât seem to want to grant me any favors to avoid paralyzing embarrassment this day and I glanced up at the man who was about to sit next to me. From a different angle and finally focusing on his face, I immediately recognized him and I turned my face toward the window again to have a minor meltdown. I was about to spend the entire flight next to a Carolina Hurricane and I did not want to find out what incredibly stupid things could come out of my mouth in six whole hours.
When I looked back over and swallowed he gave me a funny look, suddenly the plane seemed even smaller than the one I arrived on. There may have been at least four inches between our arms, but it felt like nothing and I swear I could feel the heat of his body coming through his stylish sweater. The awkward silence stretched tight like a bungee cord and I knew when it finally snapped I was going to feel the lash.
He held out his hand, âJoel, and Iâm sorry about putting my hands all over you, but I donât make a habit of letting beautiful women fall to the floor.â His smile indicated he was anything but sorry.
In that moment, I wished his hands had been all over me. I cleared my throat and willed myself to say something normal, âAdelaide, and itâs no problem, hot hockey players catch me in airports all the time.â
I winced internally at the flood that escaped my lips, but he just chuckled, âFirst time flying?â
âWhat? No! Excuse you sir, I fly all the time.â I had an intelligent, stubborn, impulsive little sister, I could razz with the best of them.
He grinned, and looking at him was like looking directly into the sun, he was so hot, âAre we making up stories? Iâm going to win the Norris this season.â
The teasing was enough to release that awkward tension and I smacked his bicep playfully, âShut UP I am not that obvious!â I donât know what bayou I was suddenly born in but the Southern just jumped right out and I sounded like I should be noodling catfish and not flying to another country.
âJust when I think Iâve gotten used to the southern accent, you sound a little different than people in North Carolina,â his smile was infectious and I couldnât help but smile back.
âWell Mr. Edmundson, you are acquirinâ quite the ear. I have a âbama accent not a Carolinan one.â
He squinted his eyes in thought for a moment, âAlabama?â
âThe Sweet Home one, yes.â
The gorgeous pea coat he had been wearing was in the overhead bin, leaving him in just a burgundy cashmere sweater and soft jeans that hugged the muscles in his thighs. âHow did an Alabama girl start watching hockey?â
This was a story that had been told more than once in our house during the holidays because Alabama was definitely football country. âBack in 2017 Bama lost a game to Auburn and at one point Daddy screamed at the TV, âIf you let that dumbass team beat you I am never watchinâ football again!â Auburn beat us 27 to 14 and my daddy is a stubborn southern man and hasnât watched a single pass since. We all thought it would last a week tops but here we are 2 years later and now weâre all Canes fans.â
âWhen you say⌠us?â He had an eyebrow raised.
I realized I probably sounded like one of those fans that thinks they are on the team, âOh! Alabama football, Roll-Tide! If youâre from Alabama youâre a Bama fan or an Auburn fan. We are a âBama family and I am a âBama alumni.â
He grinned and shook his head, âI know youâre speaking English, but Iâll be damned if I understood a single word, but you sure look cute saying it.â
The heat flooding my cheeks could have probably cooked a holiday turkey and I was certain my face was the same color as my blazer. It almost felt like I was being hit on. Clearing my throat, I fiddled with my phone, opening and closing apps hoping my brain was going to restart soon because it needed to tell my heart to stop beating a million times a minute.
The silence stretched like some eldritch being between us until he broke it again, âSo youâre obviously from around hereâŚish. What is taking you to Winnipeg?â
He was almost too handsome to look at directly, âI am actually going to Toronto for the holidays.â
A perplexed look crossed his face, âare you on the right plane?â
I sighed, âYes, my âtravel agent,ââ I made air quotes, âis a cousin on my mommaâs side, honestly, the whole side of the family is a lost cause.â
He replied with a knowing nod, âGotcha, so do you have family up there? Meeting family? Friends?â
I nervously fiddled with the end of the seatbelt, âUh no, Iâm going by myself.â
He didnât say anything and the silence began to stretch and grow like an organic being and I felt myself rushing to fill it, âIt was actually supposed to be my honeymoon, until I caught my fiance having a one on one meetinâ with my wedding planner, naked, in the bridal suite of the church.
A big breath of air whooshed out of him, âWow that kept getting worse.â
I offered a shrug, âIt was not my finest moment. But the trip was non-refundable and I needed to leave, you know?â
His long strong fingers traced the edge of the armrest and he cleared his throat, âYou know that Toronto is like a two hour flight from here and youâre about to fly six hours in the wrong direction.â
A humorless laugh escaped my throat, âHa, well yes, my cousin is not really gifted in any way. The good lord didnât see fit to give her smarts or looks, so here I am flying in the wrong direction because she dropped out of school at 14.â
He gave my hand a cursory pat and it was probably wishful thinking that he let his fingertips linger ever so slightly, âWell Adelaide, Iâm very happy my mom convinced me to fly out last minute and that your cousin is terrible at geography.â
As the last few passengers filed onto the plane, the crew pulled the door shut, and the pilot came over the loudspeaker, âSorry folks, but there is a mechanical problem with the fueling truck, it will be a few minutes longer.â There was a collective groan from everyone.
The thought of the plane going down in a snowstorm made me shiver. If the crash and subsequent explosion didnât kill me then hypothermia would and at least Iâd die next to Joel Edmundson.
He glanced at the fancy black watch on his right wrist, âI wonder if it's too late to disappoint my mother and be back to my apartment before the evening news.â
I scoffed, âYou couldnât let me fall on the ground, but youâll let me die in a fiery plane crash by myself? AND disappoint you mother? Some gentleman you are, Mr. Edmundson.â
His grin was wide and white, âFair enough, I canât be disappointing my mom.â
The flight attendants were starting to make their way down the plane with the drinks cart while we waited. His fingertips were still on the back of my hands and he gave it a pat, âFirst drink is on me, what is your order?â
I resisted the urge to move my hand away, not because I didnât want him touching me--I did, I wanted him to touch me all over so when I died on this death trap, I didnât have a single regret--but the sensation was also overwheming because the Sex on a Stick that was Joel Edmundson had been caressing my hand like a lover and it was all too much.
âLady?â
That snapped me out of my own head, âLady?â
I donât know what face I made but he was quick to backpedal, âNo not like âHey Lady!â But L-A-I-D-I-E Like Adelaidie. Sorry, itâs a hockey thing. Nicknames.â
âUh, my sister just calls me Addie.â
He shook his head, âCanât have Eddy and Addie, thatâs too cute.â
This was a completely surreal conversation and I wondered if the gangway to planes was like a portal to another dimension, âSo Lady and Eddy is better?â
He nodded like this was a completely normal thing to talk about 5 minutes after meeting someone, âYeah like Eddy and his lady.â
I just blinked and answered his original question in case I hallucinated this entirely ridiculous exchange. âGin and Tonic please.â
He snickered, âSuch a Lady thing to order.â
How many concussions had this man suffered?
He took our drinks and surreptitiously slipped a couple of dollars into the flight attendant's hand, then passed over my G&T, heavy on the T. I suspected Iâd have to drink 20 to even feel anything close to tipsy.
As she helped the row behind us, I leaned over and Joel leaned in and now our faces were close together and it was difficult for me to focus, âWas that enough money?â
He looked confused a moment before his face softened, âLady, drinks are free. This is first class, that was just a tip.â
I had a feeling I just showed my Alabama roots. âOh.â
He patted my hand again and left his fingers on top of mine. Was it hot in here? It felt hot. I desperately wanted to move my hand because touching him was summer in Phoenix, completely fine in small doses and completely overwhelming after 30 seconds.
Finally, I was saved by the buzzer as my phone notified me of a text message. I regretted losing the contact of his touch immediately as I slid my hand out from under his and pulled the phone out of my purse.
Little Sister: Are you THERE YET?
No. My flight was delayed but I did get upgraded to First Class and you will NEVER GUESS WHO I AM SITTING NEXT TO.
Little Sister: TAYLOR SWIFT.
Why would Taylor Swift be flyin to Winnipeg also Iâm pretty sure she owns her own plane.
Little Sister: Well then I donât know.
Joel Edmundson
Little Sister: ⌠Fake⌠Take a picture.
I AM NOT TAKING A PICTURE
Little Sister: Then you are obviously lying. Itâs probably some stinky old rich guy.
I sighed as only an older sister could sigh and Joel looked over at me, âWhatâs up Lady?â
âMy little sister is a pain in the ass,â I said as I set my phone face down on my thigh.
His smile was large and genuine. âAs the little brother, I take offense.â
I offered an eye roll, âYeah, but I bet you donât drive your older brother crazy.â
He laughed, âIâm pretty sure he still wants to strangle me on a regular basis.â
âWell then, maybe I should introduce you to my little sister, and you can introduce me to your brother,â I said, shaking my head.
He lowered his voice, âonly if sheâs as gorgeous as you,â
This time I know my face matched the color of my blazer. âShe got the same build as my mom. Small and petite â
Joel sucked air through his teeth, âSorry not interested. Petite has never been my thing.â
I almost barked and covered my mouth with my hand, âLiar. Petite is every manâs thing.â
He took a sip of his vodka soda and shook his head. âNahâ
Turning in my seat to face him I rolled my eyes, âOk mister mysterious. What is your type?â
He stayed silent but his eyes traveled slowly down my body before he looked forward again and took another sip of his drink with a smirk.
The temperature in the cabin seemed to jump 500 degrees. I pulled the safety card out of the pocket of the seat in front of me and pretended to read it for a moment before I just started using it as a fan. âIs it hot? I feel like itâs hot.â
He just grinned to himself and took another sip of his drink.
Eventually I started babbling to fill the silence that once again stretched and started to come to life, âSo Daddy said yâall won today. I couldnât watch the game because I was flying from Birmingham to Charlotte on a plane the size of a tic tac. But, congrats.â
He just smirked. âThanks. I was feeling good, probably why my mom was able to convince me to get on a plane last minute.â
Then something hit me out of the blue. âShouldnât you be flying outta Raleigh?â
His answer was punctuated by a nod, âThis was the last flight to Winnipeg I could find this afternoon before the storm hit.â
âOh thatâs right weâre flying directly into a storm.â I downed the rest of my drink and resisted the urge to crush the little plastic cup in my hands.
He just arched his brow, âYouâll be fine.â
My answer was bitchier than it should have been and I grimaced as I said it, âOh really, are you a pilot?â
âI spend hundreds of hours on a plane every year.â The look on his face was kind.
I shrunk down in my seat, thinking I was toilet scum, âOh. I suppose thatâs true.â
I glanced at my phone, my sister was still relentlessly texting and finally she called. Even though my voice was low there was no mistaking the tone when I hissed, âWhat Adele?â
Joel gave me another sideways glance and he seemed to have the smirk permanently etched on his face.
âNo! Iâm not puttinâ him on the phone. Why? Because heâs flyinâ home for Christmas, not partaking in a meet and greet with my crazy little sister. You are SO crazy. Oh my goodness gracious, put Daddy on the phone I canât with you right now,â I growled, âWhy are you like this? I swear.â
Before I knew what was happening, my phone had been snatched from my ear and his giant hands dwarfed the device. âThis is Joel Edmundson and you are?â
I couldnât hear her side of the conversation any more but I did hear her shriek and I covered my face with my hands. This poor man...and I was going to have to sit next to him for six hours and stew in my embarrassment or heâd have me moved back to economy or something.
I did my best not to listen to the conversation because I knew I was going to melt into a gooey puddle of embarrassment if I did; fortunately it was fairly easy because, true to form, my sister wasnât letting the hockey player get a word in edgewise.
After 84 years she seemed to stop talking. âWell, Adele, Itâs lovely to make your acquaintance and Iâll get your address from your sister and send you some swag. Yes, Iâm sure sheâll give me your address. I can be very charming maâam.â There was a long pause, âWell, yes she does seem immune to my charm thoughâŚâ
My head whipped around at his words, but he ignored me and continued. âWell, Iâve tried to be very obvious, but sheâs not picking up the cues, oh sheâs dumb that way?â
His eyes met mine and he winked, he was joking. Everything was fine. He was just kidding. Of course Joel Edmundson wasnât interested in me, imagining that could be true would be a special kind of brain trauma. I probably was dumb like my braniac sister always said.
âShe IS gorgeous, Iâm glad you agree, legs for days and that hair! So tell me about this loser she dumped on her wedding day⌠uh huh⌠uh huh⌠What a bastard. Your daddy never liked him huh? I donât want to put the cart before the horse, but would your daddy like me? Uh huh⌠I can definitely work on not turning over the puck on the blueline. Is that his only complaint? Of course Iâd treat her like a queen. Have you seen her?â
My mouth was hanging open so wide that my chin was somewhere around the vicinity of my boobs. Who in tarnation was this man?
âLook, Adele, Iâm going to have to let you go, I think your sister might be going into shock, but add me on Instagram, okay? Great! I look forward to it, have a wonderful holiday.â
His hand had barely lifted from his ear before I heard my Daddyâs baritone, âSon?â
Joel put the phone back to his ear. âYes, sir?â
This conversation was easier to follow because my father was a simple and forthright man, âI also think itâs crazy sheâs going all the way to Toronto by herself. Uh huhâŚ. Yessir. Well, Iâd love to accompany her to Toronto, but Iâm afraid I promised my mom Iâd be home this Christmas. Uh huhâŚ. Uh huh. We always love the holidays. My momâs been baking for weeks.â He gave me a sideways glance as my fatherâs voice rumbled, âI canât imagine she will like this idea.â
He covered the phone with his hand and I wondered if I had somehow been transported to a different timeline; maybe parallel universes did exist. âYour dad says I either have to go with you to Toronto or you have to come to Brandon with me.â
âHe did NOT say that,â I said, furrowing my brow. I leaned forward and he held the phone out, âDaddy did Eddy take a hit to the head today?â I could barely hear him, âBecause I think he might have a concussion.â Our faces were inches apart and this close I could definitely smell his soap or a hint of cologne mixing with his natural scent and it was panty dropping for sure.
He brought the phone back to his ear, âOK sir, Iâll do my best to change her mind. I have her as my captive audience for six hours. Yes sir, thank you sir. Have a great evening.â
The call was over when he handed the phone back to me and I gladly put that fucker in Airplane Mode and slid it into my purse before studying the safety placard with great interest. Eventually, the air felt extremely heavy to my left and when I glanced over Joel had turned in his seat to watch me with great interest. I gave him a dry look, âWhat?â
âYou donât seem interested by that phone call.â
âWhat phone call, that was clearly a hallucination and you are a figment of my imagination. My fear of flying is clearly manifesting into,â I gestured at his big body, âyou.â
He rolled his eyes. âAnyway, your dad said if I donât go with you to Toronto or convince you to come home with me he knows a witch and heâs gonna curse me.â
I chuckled through my nose, âMy daddy wouldnât know what a witch looked like and he sure as heck doesnât know one. But Iâm pretty sure my Auntie practices Hoodoo. But thatâs just speculation. Anyway, Iâm staying out of these cockamamie shenanigans.â
He looked perplexed, âYou mean VooDoo?â
I rolled my eyes, âI said what I said Mr. Edmundson, Google is free.â
His eye brows hit his hairline and he made a serious face, âOkay Ms. Witchcraft Know-it-All.â Facing forward he made a sad noise, âMan, my mom is going to be so disappointed that Iâm going to Toronto.â
âI think we both know that you arenât following me to Toronto and Iâm not actually invited to Christmas at your house, so donât even try and make me feel guilty. Also, itâs weird, we met like 5 minutes ago.â
He just looked at me, deadpan, while he picked up his phone to hold it to his ear. While it rang, he spoke, âItâs been like half an hour and it IS weird, because I never let my brother meet girls Iâm interested in, âHi mom, yes, Iâm on the plane. No, itâs delayed again. Yes, I will be home in time for Christmas. Listen, Iâve met this lovely woman, Adelaide, she is flying to Toronto. Yes, she knows sheâs on a plane to Winnipeg. There were scheduling problems. Anyway, sheâs going to Toronto, on her honeymoon, BY HERSELF. Yeah, I know thatâs terrible. The asshole cheated on her, ON HER WEDDING DAY, can you believe?â
I shushed him and waved my hand indicating he should lower his voice, leaving me slightly mortified that not only did his mother know what a loser I was, but so did everyone on this plane.
âYeah sheâs sitting right here. No you canât talk to her. No, Mom. No.â He held his phone out, âMy mom wants to talk to you.â
This was the most surreal experience I had ever had and I was 100% sure this was some kind of dream. I was probably the lone survivor of the plane crashing and I was pinned by piles of twisted metal and I was hallucinating as I died from blood loss. Tentatively I took his phone and held it lightly to my ear, âUmm, hello Mrs. Edmundson. Umm no maâam I canât call you by your first name. Southern raisinâ and all. Well, Iâve never been out of the country before and the trip was already paid for so I figured âwhy not.â No maâam we celebrate Christmas. My house lights up the whole block. Yeah my Daddy does displays at our house every year. My mama bakes a ham every Christmas. Yes maâam, itâs a big deal at our house. You and my mama would get along real well Mrs. Edmundson, she asked me the same thing before I left. Mmmhmm. Yes maâam.â I handed the phone back to Joel and sighed, âShe says Iâm invited for Christmas.â
He gave me a smug look, âYeah, mom. I donât know if Dad should bring the SUV to pick me up, I donât know if it will be an us. Yes, I will ask her. Yes, I know. Ok. Love you, bye.â
It was his turn to down his drink and he turned to face me again. âMy mom says if you wonât come to Christmas, then I have to go to Toronto with you and while that will make her sad, your safety is important.â
Was everyone in this dream crazy except me? Or maybe I was the crazy one and this was normal behavior. âI am not crashing your familyâs Christmas because your mother feels a moral obligation to some sad sack you met on an airplane and because my family is trying some weird matchmaking thing.â
He sighed. âMan, my mom is going to be so disappointed. Do you have a bunch of couples stuff planned in Toronto? Are we going to get a sensual couples massage? Couples yoga? A romantic carriage ride?â
I hit the call button above my seat. âWe are not getting anything. You are going home to your mother and I am going to Toronto to enjoy my solo vacation.â
The flight attendant interrupted Joelâs retort, âCan I assist you?â
I held up my empty glass. âI have a newly developed fear of flying and this man might be insane. May I have another gin and tonic, heavy on the gin, light on the tonic.â
She was ever the professional but her mask slipped as she eyed the 6â4â defenceman and her look said âGirl, look at this tall drink of water you get to sit next to for six hours, what is wrong with you?â
She didnât actually say any of that though instead she said, âOf course, just one moment.â
Ignoring the man next to me, I impatiently tried to push my failed bangs back, They immediately fell forward again and I stared dejectedly out the window. I almost missed Joel lifting his phone, the telltale shutter sound, and him swiping his finger across the screen and the swoop of a text being sent.
I narrowed my eyes at him, âWhat did you just do?â
He lifted his butt off the seat and slid the phone back into his front pocket. âSent a picture of you to my mom.â
The audacity of this man. There was a replying bing that was followed by a second bing. âArenât you going to check that? Itâs your mom telling you not to bring Shrek to Christmas.â
He shook his head, âDonât need to. The first one is my mom saying you look nice and itâs about time I date a nice girl and the second one is my brother asking how serious we are and if he has a shot.â
I rolled my eyes. âYou are such a fibber.â
He snorted, âA âfibberâ?â
âYes, you know, someone who is a liar.â My drawl drug that 'i' out to pasture and the 'r' was soft and barely pronounced.
âOh I know what it means, Lady, I just havenât heard that word used in this decade.â
I swatted his bicep again, âAre you always this annoying or is this just for me?â
He rubbed his arm and faked a wince. âAm I going to have to tell Rod the Bod I canât play because I was abused by a girl on an airplane?â
I countered his question with one of his own, âYou call your coach âRod the Bod?ââ
Joel dropped his arm to the rest again. âNot to his face, because I value living, but have you seen the man?â
He had a valid point. Rod BrindâAmour was jacked in all the right ways. âOf course Iâve seen him, I have eyes for goodness sake.â
The flight attendant returned with my happy juice in a much larger glass and waved away the few dollars I tried to give her and her eyes darted to the man next to me before she gave me a pointed glance.
I took a sip and I didnât think there was a drop of tonic water in it. I just had a straight up highball glass full of gin. âI do believe that woman is trying to get you into the mile high club Mr. Edmundson.â
He snorted, âBaby Iâm already in the club, but Iâd be more than happy to provide your initiation.â
I didnât know what to say to that so I just sipped my gin and my face was once again just as red as my blazer.
He snuck a glance at me, âYou blush so easily, itâs fantastic.â
#Joel Edmundson#carolina hurricanes#montreal canadiens#Joel Edmundson fic#Canes fic#habs fic#Joel Edmundson Imagine#Carolina Hurricanes Imagine#Montreal Canadiens Imagine#NHL rpf#hockey rpf#NHL Fic#NHL Imagine#A Not So Southern Christmas#ANSSC#Jadelaide
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Part 2.
Jeff bolted to the other side of the room, pushing through people, ignoring the stares. Quickly, he saw her curly, dirty-blond hair sitting down on a couch. Making his way over there, he noticed that Derek was sitting next to her, with an arm around her. Jeff felt a purge of jealousy in his stomach. Derek was quite obviously drunk, his hair was a mess and he was slurring his words. âCome on, just come to Stuart, you boyfriend wonât mindâŚâ Jeff could tell what he was doing and at that moment would rather have to deal with Alex. Adelaide rolled her eyes and pushed his arm off her waist, but didnât say anything. Jeff sat down next to her and held her hand. He was trying to keep as much of her shielded away from Derek. âAdelaide, can we go?â He muttered under his breath, trying to sound as casual as possible. She looked amused, entertained. She muttered back, âJealous much, Jeff?â Jeff blushed. âWell, Iâm sorry. But you know Derek, he wouldnât be terribly opposedâŚâ âOkay, letâs go.â Adelaide lifted up from her seat, and started walking to the door, Jeff right behind her.
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A Not So Southern Christmas-- Part 6
This is obviously a rewrite of my old fic. I have been feeling romantic and Christmasy, so I figured it was time to bring back my favorite holiday couple. Title banner by the wonderful @whatishockey. Thank you thank you thank you to the people who periodically peek at this fic to make sure I don't make too many typos and mistakes. @hockeylvr59 @rymurrsneckbeard and @princessphilly
Synopsis: When Adelaide Thibodeaux finds her husband to be diddling the wedding planner in the Church before their nuptials, she walks out and is determined to take her dream honeymoon by herself. Until she gets a seat upgrade to first class and ends up next to Hurricanes Defenceman, Joel Edmundson. Holiday shenanigans ensue.
Author's Notes: This was written in early 2019 before Eddy went to Montreal as a free agent. I will be tagging both teams. It's been a while since I've posted a dual POV so reminder that *~*~*~*~*~* delineates a change in POV. Today we are beginning with Eddy.
Tag List: @leafs-foreverr, @pagirl6866, @colecockfield If you would like to be part of the tag list, please let me know.
Part 6
*~*~*~*~*~*
Just over an hour later we were crawling along I-90 in an SUV the size of a tank. After the second close call of almost being sideswiped by another vehicle sliding on ice after a single mile on the interstate, I was thankful for it. It was a rideshare, so I didnât care if it only got two miles per gallon, as long as it was able to get us to the airport in one piece.
Adelaide finally turned on her phone and I just arched a brow at her as it vibrated in her hand for what seemed like a solid minute while she looked annoyed, âYou ok there?â
She gave me a withering glare, and she looked so cute that I couldnât help but smile, which made her glare harder and the entire thing was just a circle of me being amused and her getting more furious. It was fantastic.
Poking around on the screen, a call connected and started to ring as she brought the phone to her ear. I could hear her motherâs voice on the other end of the line. âHi Momma, is everyone there? Put me on speaker.â
I was thankful it was a regular voice call and not a facetime, because I knew her father would pinpoint the âI just fucked your daughter nasty" vibes wafting off of me from four states away.
âNo, Adele, I'm not putting Eddy on speaker.â She sighed and dropped her phone to her lap, hitting the speaker button with her thumb. âFINE. Is everyone here?â
âAdelaide why are you in a car, it sounds like youâre in a car.â
She transferred the phone to her opposite hand as I stretched my arm across the seat and intertwined our fingers. âEddy and I are going to the airport Mama, our flight leaves at one.â
Her fatherâs rich baritone chimed in, âI guess thereâs a first time for everything, one of my daughters not being stubborn? I better buy a lottery ticket.â
She sighed and rolled her eyes, âDaddy.â
âEddy, son she IS going with you, correct?â
I cleared my throat, âYessir, she agreed.â
âGood. Finally. Adele youâre next.â
Adelaide mouthed âIâm sorryâ at me.
The conversation devolved from there. âWhat does that mean Daddy?â Adele sounded irritated.
âIt means you need to stop being so stubborn and accept help and maybe find a good man.â
An argument started between the two of them, with Dottie interjecting at random times. There was something about college and Adele getting her Masters while working. Adelaide looked bored, like she had heard this argument before. She started massaging the palm of my hand with her thumb and staring out the window as her family argued.
Finally, Adeleâs voice cut through the nonsense, âAddie and Eddyâs hotel room only had one bed!â
I caught the driverâs eyes in the rearview mirror and I donât think he felt at all sorry for my impending death.
Adelaideâs attention was suddenly diverted back to her phone, âADELE! Daddy, there was one bed, but I slept on the couch.â
Her sister wasnât to be swayed from her current path of turning the attention to Adelaide, âDaddy, I looked at photos of the suite, the couch was too small for anyone to sleep on.â
He sounded displeased, I was suddenly very aware the man owned a hardware store and all murdering/disposing bodies things were readily available and no one would blink twice at him having any of them. âEddy made you sleep on the couch?â
Adele sounded breathless, âTHEY WERE CUDDLING THIS MORNING.â
Adelaide started making sounds into the phone, âCan'tâŚ. tunnel⌠losingâŚ. serviceâŚâ She hit the end button and heaved a sigh, âWell that was a fucking disaster.â
I squeezed her fingers. âAm I safe from your father in a different country?â
She squeezed back. âProbably.â
Her phone started vibrating and she sent the call to voicemail and the next three calls after that before opening Instagram and scrolling through her notifications.
She frowned thoughtfully, âI probably should have gone private before you posted that picture. In our little bubble I forget youâre a famous heartthrob.â
âWhat? Why? Are people being mean?â I released her hand and snatched the phone from her. Totally ignoring the famous part, because honestly I forgot sometimes too. Someone had gone through every photo of her just commenting âfatâ or âwhore.â
I took the liberty of blocking them. She had 100 new followers and a number of DMs. âDo you want me to go through the DMs?â She didnât answer so I took the liberty.
A lot of them were the same as the comments, a few from women I had slept with claiming I was their boyfriend, a lot of marriage proposals from men, those all got deleted. And finally, there were some messages from my teammates' wives, and at least three from my horny teammates trying to hit on Adelaide. She would see right through them, so I left those for her to laugh at later. I set her profile to private and handed her back her phone. âCleansed. But Svech proposed, you should probably let him down easy.â
She smirked. âI donât know...heâs heading for a big contract and Iâve become accustomed to a certain lifestyle. Besides Iâm dying to find out what else his nimble hands can do.â
My jaw dropped, âYou minx. Heâs 12.â
âOh so we should add stamina to the pro list then,â she said looking teasingly thoughtful.
The SUV pulled up to the terminal and I reached over to unbuckle her seatbelt and haul her against my side, lips finding hers. âSvech probably doesnât even know what the clit is. Youâre better off with me, beautiful.â
As the driver put the vehicle in park and went around the back to get our bags, I stepped out of the backseat and offered Adelaide my hand, which she took, gracefully stepping out of the SUV. I could easily picture her stepping onto the red carpet at any awards show.
There were a lot of perks of flying first class and the priority lane through security and the lounge were two of them.
Adelaide was sipping on a double cappuccino she snuck off to buy herself and staring around the lounge. âIâm suddenly regretting working in Human Resources instead of being a bajillionaire.â
We were sitting on a plush leather loveseat and I put my arm around her and tugged her against my body. âBajillionaires own their own planes. They donât fly with the unwashed masses.â
âEddy, Iâm the only woman in this lounge and everyoneâs shoes cost more than my entire outfit.â
I kissed her temple. âExcept I know youâre not unwashed because I was in the shower with you, doing the washing.â
Little Eddy twitched thinking about the shower, soap cascading down her body and dripping off her tits while I fucked her against the shower wall.
She blushed and hid her face in my shoulder. âEddy! Shh, someone might hear you.â
I didnât tell her the guy a few seats down definitely heard me and looked her up and down. I had never been possessive before. It was a new feeling and I didnât want some overdressed schmuck making eyes at my girl.
With her tucked into my side, head under the side of my jaw, she let the coffee cup she was holding rest on top of my thigh. A few minutes later it started to slide out of her fingers and I took it with my free hand and sipped while she made little kitten snores into my neck.
She was wearing an oversized cream colored fishermanâs sweater, sleeves rolled up, over black leggings with practical fur lined boots. The knit hung from her shoulders making her appear way more petite than she was and according to her, was premium comfort.
I just thought she looked cute and I had only thought about bending her over the back of the loveseat, pulling her leggings down just below her ass and fucking her hard until we both came, twice⌠maybe three times.
My phone vibrated in my pocket and I lifted my hips slightly to get my hand in there and pull it out. I rejected the call and sent my mom a text in reply.
At the airport, Adelaide is sleeping.
Mom: Sheâs coming?!
Yeah⌠sheâs coming. Weâre gonna land about 5, and it will probably take an hour or so to get through customs and get her checked bag. You should have dad bring the dolly. Her luggage was huge before we went shopping.
Mom: Ooh a heavy packer. Iâll have Dad pick you up around 6 then. You and Jesse will have to share the bunk beds. The guest room is full of storage stuff.
Itâs all presents for you guys and her family. We spent 6 hours in department stores and boutiques and I donât think she bought a single thing for herself. I am not sleeping in a bunk bed.
Mom: She didnât have to get us anything! What a dear. Well Iâm not making our guest sleep in a bunk bed with your brother.
I told her that. She didnât listen. Something about hostesses and Southern women. Mom, my suite at the Thompson only had one bed.
Mom: Oh⌠OH.
Yeah.
Mom: So when are you proposing?
Youâre ridiculous.
Mom: Youâre bringing home a woman that you are sleeping with which has never happened in the history of EVER. Even when you dated that one girl for almost a year.
I met her two days ago, she was just left at the altar and cheated on. Give me some time.
Mom: But youâre planning on it.
Iâm currently trying to convince her to let me take her somewhere tropical for the break. Besides, she could go full exorcist at any time. I literally know nothing about this woman.
Mom: Whatever. Youâll marry her. A mom knows these things. Sheâs been through a trauma and still scurried around to buy people sheâs never met gifts.
I shoved the phone in my pocket. I knew my mom was going to make a huge deal about this thing. I sat in the quiet lounge, staring out the window as the storm clouds began to clear and chilly sunshine started to glint off of the snow and ice, sipping on Adelaideâs cappuccino while she snored gently into my neck.
Finally, our flight was announced and I turned my head to kiss her forehead. âLady, our flight is boarding in 10 minutes.â
She stirred and pressed a kiss to my neck before sitting up and stretching. âMm. Okay handsome.â
I grinned, âHandsome?â
She took the now empty coffee cup from my hand and frowned. âWell yeah, you call me âBeautifulâ so canât I return the favor?â
Taking her free hand I pulled her to her feet and grabbed our carry-ons, âOf course you can.â I brushed her hair from her face and gave her a chaste kiss, âYouâre adorable when you sleep by the way.â
âOh my god, did I drool or snore?â she said, rolling her eyes.
âNo drooling and only soft little cat snores. Adorable.â
The airport was absolutely packed and bustling outside of the first class lounge and instinctively she stepped into my body and I put a protective arm around her as we made our way to the gate.
When we got to our seats, I let Adelaide take the window. I tended to prefer the aisle anyway. Leaning over, I took her hand. âDo you still have a fear of flying?â
She squeezed my fingers. âIâm still nervous, but itâs like an excited nervous. But I donât think I can fly economy ever again.â
I squeezed back, âStick with me Lady and youâll never have to.â
Her bright genuine smile made my stomach jump. Oh no.
It was amazing watching her reactions: well rested, well fucked, and without the stress of getting left at the altar, she was able to actually enjoy all the minute things about flying that frequent travellers lost. I couldnât wipe the smile off of my face as she treated take off like a roller coaster, saying a whispered âwheeeeâ to herself as she watched a winter laden Chicago get smaller and smaller.
She was still staring out the window, her nose practically pressed to it like a child waiting for Santa when the drink cart came by and I got her a G&T. âLady, I got you a drink,â I said, nudging her elbow.
Settling back into her seat she took the drink, âThank you Eddy.â
I grabbed her free hand with mine and brought her fingers to my lips, âYouâre welcome, Lady.â
We sat in silence, she occasionally glanced out the window, but we had ascended above the clouds and there wasnât much to see. At least I didnât think so, but I was wrong.
âI bet this is what heaven looks like⌠but less cold.â
I choked down my drink, âWhat?â
âItâs just a big fluffy blanket that goes on forever. Like a foam pit but without all the gross kiddy germs.â
Suddenly, I saw the appeal of economy; sure there was less leg room, but the armrests lifted. I hated the six inches of extra space that separated our bodies. I leaned an elbow on it, âLady.â
âHmm?â She continued staring out the window.
âLady, come here and kiss me.â
Turning her head, she mimicked my position and pressed her lips to mine. âThank you Eddy.â
I wrapped a lock of her hair around my finger and tugged her closer to kiss her again, âFor what?â
âThe destination and the man are different, better even, but this feeling I have? Thatâs exactly as I planned it. I feel⌠I donât know, safe, cared for.â
I kissed her again before pressing our foreheads together. âGood. I want to give you everything you want for Christmas this year. Dan is a fucking idiot.â
âYouâre making a shitty holiday better than I ever could have imagined.â
Pressing my lips to hers again I wove my fingers through hers, âWe have about 5 hours in the air now, want to tell me about your dad?â
She sighed and tugged our hands into her body and laid her head on my arm. âMy real dad is a congressman now. Has been. He knows I exist but,â she shrugged, âhe doesnât care. My mom was raised by a family that was trying to climb the social ladder and my grandmother actually encouraged her when he started making advances even though he was with someone else. My mother didnât know it but he had gotten engaged to that other woman when she had gotten pregnant with me. He chose the other woman who was from a better family. My mom got thrown out of her house because she refused to get an abortion. So she was 20, pregnant, and basically had zero life skills other than knowing what fork to use for what course.â
She paused and took a sip of her drink. âMy dad had just taken over the hardware store from its previous owner. Papa Glenn was white, widowed, and his kids had zero intention of taking over the store. It had been an institution in our town for over 50 years and they wanted to sell the building and the business. So Papa Glenn left it to my Daddy who had worked for the man since he was just a poor teenager. He started as someone who swept and tidied. I donât think he even needed help, just saw a boy who needed a purpose in life and gave him one. I started calling him Papa Glenn when I was a little girl, but he passed quite a few years ago. ANYWAY, he had just given Daddy the store. His kids vandalized it. Threw bricks through the windows, tried to burn it down, graffitied horrible things on the walls. Daddy almost lost the store before he even got a chance to run it.â
I squeezed her hand as she continued, âSo, heâs sweepinâ up all the broken glass and my mom, who is about six months pregnant at this point, comes up and starts clucking about crime and hooligans. Just treated him like any other person. Heâs cleaning up and this pregnant white lady is standing in the street giving him the what-for all while picking up merchandise that can be salvaged and putting it in a box. Finally, he just looks at her and asks where her husband is, she says she doesnât have one, he tells her to go home, she says she doesnât have one of those either. She ended up living in the space above the store managing the books until Daddy convinced her to marry him a couple years later. When they got married someone threw a Molotov cocktail through the big front window. This time though, half the town pitched in to help. What happened to my mom made the rounds in a small town and you donât just throw bombs in the windows of men who take in pregnant ladies and provide for them. You just donât, anyway, Adele was born a year later. Mama became president of the PTA and Daddyâs store sponsored sports. Other than the occasional asshole, life was pretty good. And that is how I ended up with a dad that is Black.â
I rubbed her knuckles with my fingertips. âDid you ever try to contact your real dad?â
Her voice was firm. âGeorge Thibodeaux is my real dad. But I know what youâre saying, I sent him a letter once in high school. He basically sent a cease and desist back. I didnât care after that. I had a father that provided for me in all the ways that were important. Who loved me as his own. He never treated Adele and I differently.â
I kissed her temple, âItâs a beautiful story. I look forward to meeting your dad one day, when he doesnât want to bury me in concrete.â
She downed the rest of her drink and put it in the trash as the flight attendant walked by. The seatbelt sign had long been turned off and I reclined my seat and reached over to unclip Adelaideâs seat belt. I hauled her over the armrest and she made a small squeak as I settled her on top of my body and pulled a blanket over us. Her voice was quiet, âWhat the fuck Joel?â
I sighed, âI really hate it when you call me Joel. Nothing ever good happens when you call me Joel. Now, just settle. I need a nap and I can't nap when youâre all the way over there.â
She settled her head on my chest with a sigh and muttered, âWhatever.â
My last thought before I fell asleep was to wonder if I could bring her on the team plane. I was insanely comfortable and warm.
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*
When I woke, I felt like half my face was plastered to whatever I was using as a pillow. It was the type of nap when you wake up and you donât know what year it is. My pillow was rumbling and there was an arm around my waist. Yawning, I lifted my head and reality slowly resumed. Joel was snoring softly and the plane was filled with a muted orange glow like we were flying directly into the sunset. It was oddly romantic. Before I had time to absorb it the captainâs voice came over the intercom announcing our descent into Winnipeg and the seatbelt light came back on.
I tried to roll off of him gracefully and back into my own seat. I knew I failed when he let out a soft grunt and removed my elbow from his spleen. I grimaced, âSorry.â
He yawned and adjusted his seat upright. âDonât be, that was the best damn nap Iâve had in awhile. It was like 3 hours.â
His hair was tousled from running his hands through it and his face was still slack with sleep as he picked up my hand and kissed it with a groggy smile. My heart did a free fall out of my chest and for the first time since I crashed into Joel I realized he had more power to break my heart than Dan ever did and it had been less than three days.
Taking a shuddering breath and an anemic smile he misread whatever vibe I was putting off, âScared of landing?â
In a metaphorical way it fit, because I was afraid of landing after going back to the real world after this fairy tale, so I nodded and he let go of my hand and settled his palm behind my head, his fingers rubbing the back of my neck.
This revelation was kicking my ass and I realized this was a HUGE mistake, going home with him to his family, but backing out now would be so incredibly rude.
The sun was quickly setting and I looked out the window, hoping to catch a glimpse of Winnipeg before it was too dark to see anything properly.
Joel let his hand drop and started playing on his phone. As I settled back into the seat he leaned over holding his phone out, âCan I post this to close friends on Instagram?â
The photo was before I had put his sweatshirt on, it was clear I was wearing a Christmas themed pajama set that bordered on lingerie. I was smiling and looking at the camera, Elf hat at a rakish angle on my head, hair falling perfectly and Joel, Joel was looking at me in the photo. Looking at me like nothing else in the world existed. I felt a small flame of hope ignite in my belly. âThatâs a good picture, post it wherever you want.â
He looked at me apprehensively. âYouâre not worried about your family?â
I gave a wry laugh, âMy mama is going to be planninâ another wedding when she sees that. When we can afford another one that is.â
He linked his arm through mine and started tapping on his phone again. âYour mom will have to fight my mom for that right.â
The little flame of hope glittered a little brighter as the plane made a controlled descent into Winnipeg.
It took the better part of an hour for the plane to land and for us to make it through customs and get our bags. Joel had his bag over his shoulder and was dragging my big suitcase as he followed me with my smaller carry-on. The bells I attached to the zippers jingled everytime the bags bounced over a bump.
Bob Edmundson had texted his son to let him know he was circling the airport and would meet us out front as soon as we got our bags. I stopped in the middle of the sliding doors as the icy blast hit my face and I made an about-face running into Joel.
His arms came around me protectively, âWhereâs the fire, Lady?â
âCold,â I answered, giving a shiver.
His laugh rumbled in his chest, âItâs Manitoba.â
âThis is not Alabama cold, this is not Chicago cold. This is Arctic cold and I AM FROM ALABAMA. Itâs 65 degrees in Alabama!
He used his body to herd me out the door and I was suddenly seeing a disadvantage of being the small person in a relationship. âThis isnât bad, itâs probably like negative ten.â
My voice was a little louder than I anticipated and my Southern was coming out a little more than I liked, âNegative Ten?! Itâs colder than a witchâs tit out here!â
A dark SUV pulled up to the curb and Joel had the audacity to chortle, âNegative ten Celcius. Thatâs like fifteen degrees Fahrenheit.â
I suddenly felt chilled to the bone. âThat information does not in fact make it better, Joel. If itâs below freezing the entire South just shuts down until it defrosts.â
He grinned again and grabbed my head to press a kiss to my temple. âI know Princess, I wonât let you freeze.â As he rounded the back of the SUV with our bags a gentleman about my height rounded the hood and his smile was identical to his sonâs.
He opened the front door of the vehicle and held out his hand, âIâm Bob Edmundson, you must be Adelaide, letâs get you in the car before you freeze.â
I gripped his hand, surprised to find it warm and I looked at it in surprise, âMr. Edmundson, itâs a pleasure. Does everyone in your family run hot? I feel like my hands are turning to icicles.â
âHop in, the seat heaters are warm, and please call me Bob,â he said, gesturing to the front seat. The well worn leather was already warm and the heater was going full blast as he closed the door and I turned in my seat to watch the men do the forearm grab/back slap hug all men seemed to do. Masculine affection was weird.
There was a muted argument between the two that was short-lived and ended with Eddy sliding into the back seat while his dad slid into the driver's seat, both muttering about stubborn assholes.
I cleared my throat apprehensively. âI can sit in the back seat, thereâs probably more room for Eddyâs legs up here.â
The answers were simultaneous with Bob looking at Joel in the rearview mirror and Joel staring back at his father.
âYou make her call you Eddy?â
âThe old boat only has seat heaters in the front. Because my parents are too stubborn to let me buy them a new one.â
I sat in the front seat as the SUV pulled away from the curb, hand folded in my lap trying not to smile as the men practically yelled at each other.
âYour mother and I donât need a new Land Rover.â, he held up a finger as Joel opened his mouth, âOR a Gwagon or BMW whatever.â
The six foot four, two hundred and thirty pound man that had literally been inside me less than 12 hours ago, pouted like a petulant toddler in the back seat muttering under his breath, âStubborn old coot.â
Bob frowned and reached over and patted my knee in a comforting manner, like my own father might do. âIâm sorry, weâre not this dysfunctional usually. But lately Joel and his brother have gotten it into their heads that Iâm some infirm old man.â
I smiled and patted his hand. âIf youâre ever blessed with a speaker phone chat with my family you will understand why I find this perfectly comforting. Thank you Mr. Edmundson.â
âYou can call me Bob, Adelaide.â
âI will certainly try Mr. Edmundson, I mean Bob.â
I bent over to dig through my purse trying to find my phone so I could call the family and let them know we landed. I turned off the data roaming and various notifications started to pop up. A long arm appeared from the backseat, âUse mine Lady, the international charges will be outrageous.â
Bob frowned as he piloted the SUV toward the highway. âYou call her Lady?â
âYeah, Dad. Like âAdelaidie.ââ
I got a sideways glance from Bob and I put a hand on his arm. âItâs fine. Heâs not being disrespectful, I promise. At least he doesnât insist on calling me Addie like my sister. She calls me that because she knows I hate it.â
Joel shook his phone at me again, âLady.â
I took his phone and threw it back at him where it hit his chest and fell in his lap. âI have an international plan, Dorkface.â
Bob coughed and kept looking at the icy highway in front of us, while his son looked shocked and then continued pouting in the backseat, âDid you just call me âDorkface?ââ
Dialing the phone I held it to my ear. âI did.â
The man to my left was now openly smiling and trying not to laugh.
âHi Mama! I made it! Put me on speaker. Hi Daddy! No Adele, Iâm not speaking to you. Yeah, Eddyâs dad picked us up from the airport. Brandon is about two and a half hours from Winnipeg?â I looked at Joel for confirmation, âMaybe three with all the snow and ice and stuff. No. Iâm not putting you on speaker. I just wanted to let yâall know I got here and Iâll send you a text when we get there. No, Iâm not inflictinâ you on Bob while heâs drivinâ. Momma he told me to call him Bob. Not calling him Bob is rude. Ugh⌠Momma!â
Joel and his father shared a smile and meaningful look in the rearview mirror that I didnât have the extra brain cells to process at that moment. âOk. The plane landed. Iâm safe. Iâll send yâall a text when we get to the house. Bye.â
There was a comfortable silence after I hung up and inspite of the three hour nap on the plane, I felt the day catching up to me.
Joel yawned and stretched in the back seat. âHey Dad, pull over and hit that Timmies.â
I perked up slightly. âTimmies? Like Tim Hortonâs?â
He grinned, âYou canât get the authentic Canadian experience without going to Timmies.â
The big SUV pulled up to the drive-thru and we sat behind a couple of other cars as I stared out the window looking at the lights of Winnipeg. Something moved in the bushes by the drive-thru and squinted trying to see what it was before Bob asked me a question.
âPardon?â I shook my head slightly and blinked a few times. I must have been more tired than I felt.
Bob repeated his question, âWhat would you like, Adelaide?â
I answered with a small smile, âOh just some herbal tea for me.â
âYou donât want a Timmyâs coffee?â Bob Edmundson was the epitome of a father and I was beginning to think Eddy and I had similar childhoods.
âI do, I just had a good nap on the plane and if I drink coffee at this time in the eveninâ I will never sleep.â
âOh Dad, get Timbits!â Eddy piped up from the back seat.
Any guard Joel might have up was completely gone as he sat in the back seat of the older SUV. He was just a big kid in the back seat of the family vehicle and I wondered if his family had taken him to hockey practice in this car. His buddies and teammates and all their hockey gear piled in the big Tahoe and I wondered if our kids would play hockey. What the fuck? I turned back to the window so any expression I might have about my intrusive thought was hidden.
Something moved in the darkness again and I strained to see what it was , blinking trying to get my eyes to adjust to the darkness as Joel and his father had a conversation like I wasnât even there, which is what my parents did when Adele and I were annoying.
âWill she eat Timbits?â
âYes, Dad she eats anything, itâs fantastic.â
I was distracted when I interjected, still trying to develop superhuman night vision. âI actually hate broccoli unless itâs smothered in Velveeta.â
I had no idea the look that passed between the men in the rearview mirror, but Joel replied excitedly, âI told you!â
As we pulled forward to the speaker box I could see what I had been looking at was just a bag of trash moving with the wind.
Bob was in the middle of ordering when the bag moved again and this time there was no breeze to speak of. I unhooked my seatbelt and opened the door, the cold hitting me like a freight train.
Joel leaned forward in his seat as his father gave me a sideways glance, âLady?â
I wrapped my arms around my body, âThat bag of trash keeps moving, I just want to make sure thereâs not a possum or something stuck in it.â
âLady, itâs just some varmint. It probably has rabies or something,â Joelâs voice was tinged with a combination of amusements and exasperation.
âThen, we will call animal control or whatever to put it down humanely and not let it suffocate in a trash bag,â I answered matter-of-factly.
Slamming the door I tiptoed through the bushes next to the drive-thru, the Manitoba winter cutting through the knit of my sweater with ease, and as I got closer, the bag moved more and whimpered. Feeling a chill that had nothing to do with the cold I jumped back to the Tahoe and threw open the door to the back seat, âEddy give me your coat.â
He held the wool to his chest. âWhat? Why? Adelaide this is a Tom Ford, Iâm not letting you wrap a raccoon in a four thousand dollar coat.â
My jaw dropped, âWhy do you OWN a four thousand dollar coat!? Thatâs just ostentatious!â Slamming the door I pulled my arms through the sleeves of my oversized sweater and slid it off, leaving me in leggings and a cami and I ripped a hole in the trash bag with frozen fingers. The puppy inside the plastic gave a tired cry and I gently wrapped it up in my sweater before cradling it to my chest.
Joel jumped out of the back of the SUV. âAdelaide, what the fuck it is freezing outside!â
Suddenly, filled with a white hot rage, it was directed at him in that moment, âItâs not a raccoon, you asshole! Itâs a puppy!â
He settled his coat around my shoulders and helped me back into the SUV. I wasnât sure who was shivering harder, me or the puppy now cradled against my body. I pulled the four thousand dollar coat around me, trying to create a pocket of heat for the little creature. I hugged it a little tighter and it gave a sharp cry with whatever energy it had left. I felt helpless, âEddy!â
âIâm looking for an emergency vet right now, Lady.â
Bob pulled forward in the drive-thru line and looking between his son and me and the puppy before pulling his cellphone out of his pocket. I guess the Tahoe was old enough not to have bluetooth and therefore could have been the car that Joel and his brother got carted around to hockey practice.
âHi honey, we are going to be a little later than planned. Joel insisted on Timmies and Adelaide found a puppy and I think we need to drop it off at a vet.â There was a pause that was obvious confusion before he continued, âYouâre going to love her. She found the poor pup in a trash bag. Iâll give you a call when we are on our way again. Ok. Bye dear.â
We sat in silence, trapped in the drive-thru. I carefully tried to tuck my sweater around the dog as Joel spoke, âThereâs an emergency vet about five minutes across the highway. Iâm going to call them.â
The SUV inched forward, pulling up to the window and Bob handed his credit card over and silently distributed drinks and a cardboard box with a handle. âHi, yes, my, uh, girlfriend just found a puppy in a trash bag. Itâs cold and we think itâs hurt.â He paused and I just blinked at the word âgirlfriend.â I supposed it was faster than âgirl I bumped into in the airport and fuckedâ and probably would result in fewer questions. But he could have also said friend in a pinch, travel companion, literally anything other than the G word.
Bob regarded me through the conversation. I was never adept at hiding any thought that crossed my mind and I knew he read my face like a book.
âI understand itâs close to Christmas and youâre full, but this is an emergency. Yes, fine we accept financial responsibility. Itâs an animal that needs care.â He hung up and pointed between the front seats, âDad, take a left out of the parking lot.â
I held the cup of tea inside the coat, hoping the hot cup and steam would produce some radiant heat to help warm the puppy and myself.
Joel wasnât kidding when he said the emergency vet was close and we pulled in just a few minutes later. It was one of those little miracles that happen especially around Christmas. The smell of disinfectant made my nose wrinkle, but the office was warm and I was thankful for that.
The girl behind the desk seemed friendly enough in holiday themed scrubs, âHi, welcome.â
I almost surprised myself when I spoke first, âHi, yes my boy⌠my boyfriend just called. This is the puppy I found.â It was harder than I thought, saying that word.
She frowned, âThe one you found in a trash bag? Let me take it back immediately. Weâll assess the poor dear and let you know what needs to be done.â
I tried to wrap my sweater around the puppy more securely before I handed it over across the desk. She took the bundle and cooed as she walked to the back, âArenât you darling? Weâll get you all fixed up.â
Joel and his father had taken up residence in the three empty seats, leaving the middle one for me and I pulled the peacoat closer around my body as I plopped in the plastic chair. âI canât believe you own a four thousand dollar coat, Eddy. I canât believe I am WEARING a four thousand dollar coat; four thousand dollars is like a yearâs worth of car payments for me.â
He put his arm around me and kissed my temple, âLady, Iâm in a tax bracket thatâs just a little higher than yours.â
âA yearâs worth of car payments, Joel⌠A YEAR.â It was clear that I was going to be stuck on the coat for while.
âNo offense Princess but it sounds like you need a new car.â HIs big hand rubbed my arm, trying to create friction and warmth.
Bob gave his son a dry look over my head, âDonât let him bully you into buying a new car Adelaide.â
Joel started rubbing the back of my neck, which was becoming a habit. âDonât you work for Mercedes?â
I scoffed, âIn HR. And why would I spend half my paycheck on a stupid expensive car that is even more expensive to maintain. Just to get like a 10% discount?â
He made a face. âReally? Your company discount is that low?â
âYou probably get a better deal as a professional athlete than I do as an actual employee,â I sighed.
The receptionist came back out front and looked at me, âAre you taking responsibility for the puppy?â
I stood and went to the desk. âYes. What do I need to do?â
She slid a clipboard towards me, âJust fill this out and we will get started on her.â
âHer!? Itâs a her! Is she ok?â
I received a warm smile, âYes, sheâs lucky you found her. Sheâs malnourished and dehydrated, suffering some hypothermia and probably some other things, but for being found in a trash sack and separated from her mom at such a young age she should be just fine. She will probably have some pretty bad diarrhea for a few days.â
âIs she really young? I thought she was pretty big.â
âSheâs barely six weeks, if that. Sheâs gonna be a big girl. Probably some sort of LGD and malamute, husky, german shepherd. Something like that. Weâll send you home with some puppy food.â
I looked over the form in front of me, only half paying attention to it, âWhatâs an LGD? How big will she get?â
âLivestock Guardian Dog like a Great Pyranees or Anatolian Shepherd. She will probably be around 70lbs.â
I sighed, âOf course I couldnât find a Chihuahua in a trash bag.â
âGo ahead and fill out that paperwork to the best of your ability, she is just old enough to get the first round of distemper and parvo, do you want to do that?â
I nodded, âYeah I mean, I guess just do everything you need to.â
Both men were buried in their phones when I plopped back into my seat. âI think I have a puppy,â I said it to no one in particular, but a thought occurred to me, âOh my god, Bob. Iâm so sorry. We can find a shelter or something to take her to, if she can go.â
He patted my knee and didnât reply, just asked me a question, âWhatâs her name?â
I answered before I even knew the question had an answer, âTinsel.â
âWhy donât you stay here and wait for Tinsel and Joel and I will go across the highway, Iâm pretty sure we passed a Pet Valu. Just text Joel anything you need.â
âOk, let me get my emergency credit card,â I said as I dug around in my giant purse trying to find it. Joel gave me a dry look and I sighed, âIf I check this later there wonât be a charge on here will there?â
He shook his head.
Bob just looked at us with a big grin on his face. âBest Christmas ever.â
Soon I was alone in the waiting room, barks, yips, meows, and yowls coming from the back room and I tucked Joelâs coat tighter around me. I actually swam in the thing, but I didnât have time to process that.
#joel edmundson#carolina hurricanes#montreal canadiens#canes#habs#joel edmundson imagine#joel edmundson fic#habs imagine#habs fic#canes fic#canes imagine#nhl imagine#nhl rpf#nhl fic#hockey fic#hockey rpf#anssc#jadelaide#a not so southern christmas
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A Not So Southern Christmas Masterlist
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
Part 5
Part 6
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For anyone interested, the link to the A Not So Southern Christmas (aka Jadelaide) playlist is:
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Based on the answers, ANSSC is paused. Maybe Iâll do like a Christmas in July thing.
In light of Bob Edmundson losing his fight with cancer, I think it's perhaps best if I shelve ANSSC for awhile, but I'd like to hear from you what your opinions on this are.
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Hi! I absolutely love your storyuniverse of Jadelaide! I hope you write more because I would love to know how she handles Christmas at his family's place and how Tinsel is doing. Keep well!
Thank you! I had tentatively planned for Christmas in July, we will have to see how that goes!
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