The war of winter had two major battles: Christmas and New Year. Grant Stonehouse had spent hour after hour meticulously planning for the forthcoming events like a military general, entrenched in his bunker. He wasn’t buying Christmas presents for his beloved friends and family, or organizing a huge party for New Year’s Eve, but his schemes were hopefully going to be equally as entertaining as the greatest gift that money could buy, or the most sophisticated of seasonal soirees. The plotline to his festive novel was fairly simple: let everyone else spend a small fortune on gifts, or employ an army of helpers to concoct the perfect party, then steal the presents and gatecrash the best parties. Warehouses were stocked up to the rafters with TV’s, iPhones, laptops, and gaming consoles, ready to supply the marauding gangs of shoppers. The buildings were target rich environments, almost aching to be pillaged, as were the gift bags and cars of the aforementioned shopping squads as they dashed around, fighting for last minute bargains. A little bit of breaking and entering into a storage facility lacking in adequate security, or a quick-fingered stealing spree in a crowded shopping mall or car park, could potentially yield a plentiful bounty of goods. There was always a dodgy looking backstreet merchant looking to get his grubby hands on a box of iPads, no questions asked. The festive holiday season really was the most wonderful time of the year for an enthusiastic entrepreneur.
Stonehouse had already plundered enough treasure to sink a battleship through shear weight alone, so tonight he had decided to focus on the social aspect of his seasonal scheme. There were a multitude of Christmas parties scheduled by companies to allow their employees to let their hair down and celebrate; drunken team-building with the inevitable bitching and moaning about the lazy guy in IT and the woman in accounts with the appalling dress sense, and a scandal just waiting to happen involving the boss ******* his secretary in the restaurant restroom after one too many glasses of mulled wine. It was easy to infiltrate these jolly jamborees by simply claiming to be the new hire, or the guy who had come over from the office in Ottawa. There was always a way in, a tunnel to the treasure that could take the form of jewellery, wallets, or expensive overcoats draped invitingly over the backs of unattended chairs or cloakrooms. The potential bonus of an easy midnight snack was also an incentive for a hungry vampire looking to drink something more substantial than a mere glass of sherry. Luring away a victim at the office party for a shot of bloodnog was like shooting fish in a barrel, or more appropriately a sherry cask.
Charitable fundraising events were also abundant at this time of the year. Opportunities to share the ethos of goodwill to all men were taking place in fancy restaurants, city hall ballrooms, or local churches all across Harper Rock. Stonehouse had chosen a function that had been arranged by a local women’s group that was affiliated to a nursing home for tonight’s activities. The Champagne and canapé reception was being held in a swanky hotel in downtown Harper Rock, and it was a black tie event – right up Stonehouse’s street of expertise. However, there was an unforeseen problem.
It was fair to say that Stonehouse was self-centred, and was driven by increasing his own personal gain, but he wasn’t completely heartless. Having arrived at the hotel, which was festooned with lavish festive decorations, including a tree overflowing with glistening baubles, it became immediately apparent that the entire event had been put together by a bunch of lovely old grannies with hearts of gold who were trying to help terminally ill children have a nice Christmas before they passed away in their under-funded hospice. Not even Stonehouse could lower himself to stealing from these honourable folk. Instead, he slipped $100 into the collection bucket, took off his
black bow tie, and gazed out into the cold evening air from the comfort of a cosy chair in the hotel lobby, for once holding the moral high ground for a change. Something instantly caught his eye, or should that be somebody caught his stunned eye.
Delicate flakes of snow were drifting out of the night sky like confetti at the Snow Queen’s wedding, forming a thin sparkling layer of white on the street as the overhead lighting illuminated the chilly pavement below. It was as if Jack Frost was sprinkling a final dusting of icing sugar onto the wintery bride’s wedding cake. But it wasn’t the weather that was capturing his intrigued eyes. Rising from his seat and exiting the hotel though its large revolving door, Stonehouse stared at the sight for sore eyes in the pub opposite through the large front window. Robert Stonehouse, Grant’s father, was an aficionado of 1970’s rock music, and had imparted much of his knowledge onto his willing son. Bon Scott era AC/DC was one of Robert’s particular favourites, so when Stonehouse Jr heard the familiar chords of “Highway to Hell” blurting out into the street he couldn’t help but burst into a smile. However, the vocals to this particular version were neither being supplied by the late, great Bon Scott, nor his successor, Brian Johnson. There was blonde-haired woman standing on a table, singing her heart out… wearing a wedding dress! There was no way that Stonehouse was missing out on watching this circus.
Leaving a trail of shallow footprints in the fresh snow, Stonehouse scuttled across the road, bursting into the bar with the enthusiasm of a young child rushing to open his presents on Christmas morning. The stench of booze filled Stonehouse’s sensitive nostrils, and the constant chatter and laughter of a busy bar crowd echoed through his eardrums, but it was his vision that was being bombarded with the most interesting of stimuli. The blonde bride held a near empty bottle of rum, which was doubling up as an imaginary microphone, in one hand, and a pair of slinky wedding shoes in the other, dangling them by their ankle straps as she whirled them above her head. By the constant flashes of red on their soles, Stonehouse was sure that they were Christian Louboutin’s – surely far too expensive and sophisticated for this place? She was singing along to the tune that was blasting out from wall-mounted speakers, while the onlookers giggled and egged her on. The air guitar performance to Angus Young’s solo was truly spectacular.
As the song ended, applause broke out and the woman in white took a bow, before stumbling down from the table and plonking herself rather unceremoniously into her seat. Stonehouse noted how her black eye makeup was smudged. Either she was entering a panda impersonation competition, or she’d shed a few tears. Stonehouse’s own sister, Kate, had been jilted at the altar by her fuckwit of a fiancé a few years earlier, and it was her doting brother who had been her shoulder on which to cry, leading the usually emotionally bankrupt businessman to feel a wave of compassion for the dishevelled bride. She was a good looking woman, not to mention a half decent singer, leading Stonehouse to ponder the circumstances behind her bridal betrayal. He had a hundred questions that he’d love to ask, although in her current state of inebriation, it was unlikely that he’d receive any sensible answers. The fact that the attractive blonde was surrounded by a group of ogling men would also make any interrogation that little more difficult to initiate.
The way that the men were leering at her, almost drooling as they sneered to one another behind her back, was a cause for concern. Stonehouse had seen that lecherous look before, he knew how the male brain worked, after all, he, himself was one. There was also a peculiar scent in the room, a worrying aroma that potentially spelled danger, the smell of testosterone. The glorious swan with her ruffled white plumage was effectively a sitting duck, and the hunters already had their shotguns cocked and loaded. Stonehouse had done one good deed today; perhaps he needed to undertake a second? Glancing down at his attire, a plan began to formulate in Stonehouse’s mind.
Straightening his tuxedo jacket and running a hand through his thick, dark hair, the bold Englishman strode forward through the crowd, being extra careful not to spill any of the drinks that were held loosely in drunken hands. It was time to runaway with the bride.
“Hey, there you are!” announced an energetic Stonehouse as he approached the slim blonde with open arms,
“I’ve been looking for you everywhere. Your mother is going crazy and your fiancé, you remember him, my brother, is going out of his mind with worry. Let me get you out of here and we can try to sort things out.”
Stonehouse smiled, comfortingly, at the woman, before gesturing to the gathered masses, almost apologetically, trying to indicate to them that the show was over and he was going to steal the star performer. This hare-brained ploy could go horribly wrong, but he couldn’t leave this woman at the mercy of the masses.
“There’s still time to save the day,” continued Stonehouse, as he reached his target, looking deeply into her slightly reddened eyes,
“and it’s actually snowing a little now. It’s a nice day for a white wedding!”