Stuffed Brief
My short story collection "Leftovers" that I have submitted for the Editor's Brief
“Why do you do this every year?” “When your aunties and uncles were younger, we weren’t able to afford the steak pies sold at New Year. Your Grandpa knew this butcher who reduced the price of turkeys after Christmas and we just decided to have that instead…” I don’t know why I do this now. You’re all too hungover to get up and help me clean the table and floor surfaces beforehand, making excused about having to clear up before your own parties and not getting any sleep. Don’t be like that, I’m not just blaming you. I want to see you all getting the chance to pull crackers and have a meal together. It’s just the house seems too small to have everyone around here, with the children chasing each other and the cat wanting its space. I have to clear this up on my own; the tables, the chairs, the spare cutlery, the leftovers. As much as you’d all want to have a break from this big meal every year, and I do too, you’d only come whining back to me as it draws nearer. I’ll still be there, making the soup in time for the Bells...
“So, what do you think of New Year up here then?” Jay would tell us at school about how they do Hogmanay up in Scotland, and how his Nan made a meal for the entire family on New Year’s Day. He told me about how he had to help clear the back room before everyone arrived, and when he played games and argued with his uncles during the meal. Jay showed me the wall of graduates and weddings in the living room this afternoon. He pointed out the missing grandchild, and though I was confused at first, I later realised why. His Nan joked about how he needed to graduate and get married. She looked at me there.
“You’re looking healthy, these days.” Am I really, Auntie Jane? I’ve ate nothing but Selection Boxes for breakfast and Takeaways the rest of the time. I was catching up with Jenny and Susie at the sales, and I didn’t realise how much I’d gained! I tried on this dress in TK Maxx that was dead expensive before, but it barely fit me! Jenny was looking at it really enviously, and I just knew that she would buy it the next day! As if Christmas dinner was bad enough, Granny’s making us have it all over again and she gave me the turkey with the rubberiest skin! I imagined chewing into myself when I had that first bite! I’m that fat! I don’t know what I’m going to be like next week. I’ve got all these exams but I need to be back to where I was before.
“So, how’s your revision?” You really want to know? I’ve been trying to have a Christmas break, like normal teenagers. You know, sleeping until midday, rolls and sausage while watching The Inbetweeners, practising my guitar, dinner, Facebook chat. All that. My uncles have been asking me about next year. Uncle Eddy’s been telling me about the Apprenticeship scheme at his yard, and the stories of somewhat aimless young men becoming focused and self-motivated. I’ll be like my Dad, stumbling from school to a trade, still there through marriage and a child or five, with a glass plaque to show for it. After the football tomorrow, I will read my Physics notes again. I’m not sure whether playing guitar will distract me this time.
“I’ve had shorter service in Harvester’s!” Waiting for the turkey and trimmings, I’ve been buttering bread rolls for Sean. Rachel decided to escape, and now chasing her cousins around the hallway. My holidays will soon be over. I have to fly down to Bristol on Thursday afternoon to interview little future Regional Managers the next morning. Things need to be ironed, dry-cleaned, polished and resoled. Rachel will have to wait for her bedtime story to end. I’ll be checking emails and waiting for steak fajitas in the hotel bar. Kate will call about school photographs and dental all-clears, and I will tell her about the delay beforehand. Call ended. There’s still no order.
“Aw man, what do you call a cat in the desert?” I would sit there like a nervous mother watching a Nativity play, as C read this joke out. He would make it an exercise in “the way they tell them”, wringing out his impersonation of a tabby swatting at Bedouins passing by, before his climax of “the dehydrated cat’s hairball at the mirage”. No-one misses him. That’s surprising. It’s annoying when Mum tells everyone everything, but my extended relatives around the table change the subject before talking, knowing to ask instead about my recent promotion. Sean now tells the joke. Stammering, instead of riffing, we wait for the punchline during his turn. “Sandy Claws!”
“The Irn Bru’s finished” It could be worse. They’re telling me to find a job and get a girlfriend, reminding me that it would help to get a haircut first. Eeyore’s just uncorked a bottle of champagne for everyone else, toasting good luck. It’s the same for us every Saturday night after The X Factor - 20 ounces of amber to 11 of ginger – before being snubbed by divorced former classmates remembering our (adolescent) desperation. I want to start fixing the boiler in my empty flat again. Trusted to drive there and back, I know I won’t feel overwhelmed and tempted by the half-empty bottle under the floorboards. That is, if I’m not driving people until five in the morning.
This is the full version of fictional short stories based on a family New Year's Day dinner. The protagonists in each of the short stories try to forget their struggles of the past year/to come during Christmas and New Year - only to be reminded once more following chatter around the family dinner table. They are: an son who wants to beat alcoholism and regain his independence a daughter remembering her former boyfriend the son-in-law resenting being away from his family due to work the grandson worrying about his exams the granddaughter worrying about her body image the grandson's girlfriend visiting the family for the first time the Matriarch of the family, who has her own worries.
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