Here's Chapter 9, which I'd say is my favorite one if you'd ask me about it:
The Dumpee Garage tow truck slid to a stop outside its headquarters with the Dry Bandits’ truck hooked up to the back. George hopped out of the cab and trudged around to the back. “That’ll be five bucks,” he told them.
“For the whole thing?” Bo was amazed, “How do you stay in business by being that cheap?”
“As I told some customers I had earlier today, it’s my pre-Boxing Day discount,” George informed them, “Bruno, unhook them while I get the Dumpee Catalog for their perusal.”
There was a click as Bruno unhooked the vehicle from the tow truck. It was also at that moment that Larry’s mind clicked as well. “Wait just a second,” he mused, looking around at the garage and service station, “We were in here just this morning. There were those weirdoes in the bus that were here when we were; they were still here when we left.”
“And?” Bo gave him a quizzical look.
“And,” Larry rolled his eyes in disgust at his colleague’s thickness, “Somehow the diamond must have ended up with them! Can’t you even think on your own for once? Don’t answer that, please,” he added when he noticed Bo was going to, “Just be quiet and let me try to at least take a broad guess where the weirdoes might be now.”
“No need,” Chuck slid forward, a triumphant and cold smile on his face, “I know exactly where they are. They’re at my aunt’s. I know the way.”
“You sure?” Larry frowned.
“Chuck ain’t never wrong about nothing,” the Weasel informed his human associate, “Step on it; they may have found the diamond by now.”
“But it’s only a five dollar charge for towing; we can pay that!” Bo protested. Everyone ignored him as Larry turned the key in the ignition and threw the truck into reverse. He zoomedout of the parking lot just as George came trudging back out with the catalog. He observed his customers peel off into the growing night without paying. “You know something Bruno,” he confided in his associate, “I’ve just realized that if we waited until after our customers paid before unhooking them, we might actually have some who don’t leave without paying.”
“Now keep in mind, Big Bird, that the rules we have in the city apply for this trip,” Gordon informed the large canary inside the farmhouse’s doorway, “Stay close to everyone else and don’t talk to strangers.”
“Don’t worry about a thing, Gordon, I still know the rules by heart,” Big Bird told him. He took a few steps forward off the porch and was immediately hit by a snow slide from the overhang. Off to the side, Oscar snickered, not bothering to hide the broom handle he was holding. “I guess now you’re a real snowbird, huh?” he told the canary.
“OSCAR!” nearly a dozen people glared out the door at him. “What?” Oscar asked, “If you turkeys can have fun, so can I. Geez, can’t anyone handle a joke?”
He slammed the lid of his can back down and trudged off toward the back of the farmhouse. Big Bird shook the snow out of his feathers and walked over to the sleigh already hitched up in front of the house. “So, Christine, you ever been on a sleigh ride before?” he asked his new friend as he took his seat in the back of the sleigh.
“No,” Christine told him, “How about you?”
“Nope, it’s my first time too,” Big Bird said, “I just wonder why we’re using a one horse and one donkey open sleigh. It just doesn’t seem right.”
He looked ahead at Buster and Leroy, who were hitched up too the sleigh and fitted with strings of bells. “Because Fred called in sick earlier,” Leroy informed him, “and I can pull these things as good as any horse.”
“Ah, you still look like an *** to me,” a clearly drunk Scred staggered over toward the donkey. Leroy frowned heavily at the Gorch resident. “Don’t you have something better to do?” he asked him harshly. Scred stumbled away into the nearest snowdrifts, mumbling, “On Moishe, on Herschel, on Shlomo, it’s time for Hanukkah Harry…” Gonzo, who was passing by, shook his head as he slid into the sleigh’s front seat. “I swear that guy’s ruining the family appeal of this story,” he muttered.
“Well, at least we’ll be away from him for a little while, eh?” Gobo piped up from his perch on the back of the sleigh, “I hope these Outer Space stores, as you call them, have more radish bars; the ones we had for dinner were terrific.”
“I preferred the vegetables personally,” Robbie, now wearing an additional two winter coats, slid into place next to Big Bird, “Many dinosaurs don’t like them still, but I’ve found…”
“Hey look at that,” Big Bird pointed in amazement at the sight of Yoda and Cantus levitating in mid-air toward the sleigh. The two of them were engaged in a holographic chess match as they floated into place right behind Gobo. One of Cantus’s pieces stomped across the board and flattened what was apparently Yoda’s main piece. “Incredible,” the Jedi master mused, “Truly great at this you are for never having before it played.”
“It takes the skills of knowing everything and knowing nothing,” Cantus proclaimed, “How about another one?”
“Fine with me that is,” Yoda pressed a button that reset all the pieces in their original positions on the board. Alan, who walked by with a list-holding Fozzie, stared in wonder at the chessboard. “Now how do you manage to play something like that?” he asked the two mentors.
“Use your mind well you must,” Yoda informed him, “Anticipate what your opponent might do. Similar to what is done in this galaxy, heard have I.”
“Yeah, it’s not too much different, really,” Alan told him. He turned to Fozzie, who was getting into place in the driver’s seat. “Say Fozzie, are you sure we have enough money to cover all the food on that list? We are pretty broke, I told you earlier, so I can’t really help you.”
“No problem at all, I’m charging everything to my Bearican Express card,” Fozzie held up his credit card, “Don’t leave the cave without it.”
“Fozzie, what did I just say about product placement?” Kermit protested as he approached the sleigh, Robin in his arms.
“You didn’t say anything about fictional product placement,” Fozzie pointed out.
“Well it goes for all product placements!” the frog told him, slipping past Gonzo.
“Oh Kermit, please let me come too,” Piggy came running up, bobbing up and down wildly, “Please, please, please, please, please, please, please….”
“Do I have a choice?” Kermit asked her.
“No.”
“Then it’s fine by me,” he shrugged. Piggy pushed her way passed Gonzo. “Move it or lose your foot, weirdo!” she snapped at him when he initially resisted. She cuddled up against Kermit. “What an evening for a sleigh ride between the two of us,” she cooed happily, “There’s romance in the air, a…”
“Everyone here who’s going?” Fozzie called out loud before things could get too intimate between his passengers. No one else stepped forward. “OK boys, forward ho!” he called to Buster and Leroy, giving the reins a slight tug to get them started.
“And don’t forget the honey popsicles,” his mother called after him.
“I won’t, Ma,” Fozzie gave her a paw’s up as he turned the corner towards the highway. “I hope we have enough room here for all the food,” he remarked.
“Have it we should,” Yoda said, directing a spider-like holograph across the board. Although the sleigh was in full motion, he was still able to mentally keep Cantus and himself floating directing behind it while still working the chess game. Alan leaned over the back of the sled and observed their game. “You play this a lot where you come from?” he asked Yoda.
“A way to keep one’s self occupied in exile it is,” Yoda explained. His face fell. “Too little to celebrate in the galaxy there is now. Only holidays for the Emperor’s false achievements there are. A good change coming here to see real joy it is.”
“Well, I’m glad you can enjoy yourself,” the human said. Yoda studied him closely. “Many things trouble you,” he noted, “Many deep things. Explain them you will.”
“Um,” Alan glanced at Christine, who suddenly had a horrible coughing fit, “I guess I could, but can we talk in private?”
“Any private discussion between us will ultimately be a public one,” Cantus blurted out abruptly. Alan stared at the Fraggle in wonder. “Do you always confuse people when you speak, because I didn’t understand a word of that just now,” he told him.
“They are confused, but they also understand,” Cantus apparently knew what he was talking about. He directed a large lumbering board piece to kick a crab-like piece of Yoda’s off the board. Alan shook his head. “Well, it looks like I was wrong,” he told Christine, “Fraggles are by and large far from pessimistic.”
“Now where’d you ever hear that from?” Gobo asked him.
“That’s the basic rumor that went around when I was young,” the man told him, “We all believe Fraggles were lethargic pessimistic creatures.”
Gobo chuckled out loud. “It looks like Boober’s more popular than he realizes,” he commented. He looked up at the treetops flying by quickly overhead. “Strange,” he said out loud, “Uncle Matt always said these things were green.”
“That’s just in spring and summer,” Big Bird corrected him, “Boy I would love to come back here in summer, though. It must look beautiful with all the trees in full bloom. When you come from the city as I do, you learn to like the country more”
“I agree,” Robbie nodded, “It’s just too bad nature gets plowed up too much these days for business. If we could just set aside one acre of nature land a month, we could help keep enough oxygen in the air to prevent carbon dioxide overload in the atmosphere.”
“Well you know what they say, it’s not easy being green, right Kermit?” Fozzie nudged his friend. Kermit forced an uncomfortable smile. “He’s right though,” Robin glanced back at Robbie, “We need to be more active these days to protect the countryside. A couple of years ago they almost plowed up half the swamp for a series of outhouse emporiums; Uncle Kermit had to get a thousand and fifty-five signatures before they backed off. Don’t they understand we have homes too?”
“Apparently the Wesayso Corporation doesn’t,” Robbie sighed, “I’ve been telling Dad he should quit as an example, but he just won’t consider it. We could still make the same money if he were to do something like being, for example, an industrial plumbing investment counselor. Indoor plumbing’s still a growing business among dinosaurs, and if he took the…”
There was the blaring of a horn as they merged with the highway and almost ran into a snowplow. “Watch where you’re going, bear!” the driver yelled at Fozzie.
“Honk on this, pal!” Piggy shook a fist at him. “Snowplows,” she remarked to everyone, “They think they own the road.”
“So it’s at Grizzly Farm, huh?” Bitterman said over her cell phone to Larry, “Well, if you can get it without them putting up too much of a fight, please do; I’ve already had enough with delays.”
“Don’t worry Miss Bitterman, we should have everything under control within an hour,” Larry told her, “I’ll call you back when the cat’s in bag.”
“Whatever,” Bitterman hung up on him. She climbed out of her limousine, which was now parked in a diner lot, and trudged with a frustrated expression through several deep snowdrifts to where Hopper was standing under the diner’s awning. “They say they’ve got it under control; tell me why I don’t believe them,” she said.
“Not to worry miss, here comes my cavalry right now,” Hopper pointed across the parking lot. A strange bike-like sleigh wobbled into the lot, being pulled by a quartet of strange brownish creatures that moaned as they were whipped unmercifully by the hunched toad-like creature straddling the sleigh. Behind him came a beaten-up pickup truck. Each slowed to a halt by the limousine. “You called?” asked the toad-like creature, giving his drivers one last gratuitous whip each.
“Mr. Wander McMooch, so nice of you to drop by,” Hopper shook the newcomer’s hand—or flipper, or whatever it was, “We’ve got a new assignment for you tonight…ah and my good friend Farmer Sledge, glad you could come too.”
“So what’s the big scoop, Hopper?” Mordecai Sledge asked as he and his fellow farmer/robbers climbed out of their pickup, axes and blades in hand.
“Well, some people took something that belongs to us now,” the restaurateur informed them all, “We know where they are, we just need you gents to help the people we already have staking them out get it back.”
“And what’s in it for us?” Caleb Stiles asked, his eyebrows raised.
“Exactly one million dollars for each of you,” Bitterman withdrew her checkbook, “Plus stakes in our next business venture, which will gross at least that much.”
McMooch and the farmers whispered excitedly among themselves. “All right missy, you’ve got yourself a deal,” Sledge shook the businesswoman’s hand, “Where do we go?”
“Grizzly Farm, I’m sure you know where that is,” she told them.
“Indeed we do; come on boys, let’s saddle up!” Sledge waved his cohorts back into the truck. McMooch lingered a little longer. “If this involves real estate, can I have some prime shares?” he asked Bitterman and Hopper, “I’ve been hoping to get into real estate lately.”
“Absolutely,” Hopper said firmly, “Half our property rights go to you, my friend.”
“Half the property rights?” Bitterman elbowed Hopper as McMooch tore away on his sleigh over the howls of his slaves, “I thought we agreed we’d divide that up after…!”
“Hold that thought, here come the rest of our guinea pigs,” Hopper pointed across the lot. A large brownish giant in a grayish winter coat was towing a large enclosed rickshaw of sorts toward them. “Presenting their royal majesties, the king and queen of the universe!” he announced grandly once he’d stopped, breaking into an improvised trumpet fanfare. The slightly shorter purple giant that emerged from inside the carriage bopped him on the head to make him stop. “So what’s this all about?” he asked the two humans, “You said you had information about the whereabouts of the enemies of the Gorg Empire.”
“In fact, we just found out this evening, your majesty,” Bitterman suppressed a loud snicker, “The leaders of your enemies are meeting at Grizzly Farm not far from here. If you attack them now, you can crush them once and for all.”
“Wonderful!” Pa rubbed his hands in glee, “After all these years, we can finally bring peace to the Gorg Empire for good. How can I ever thank you for this?”
“Don’t,” Hopper told him, “Giving you the chance to rub them out is reward enough for us.”
“Dearest, sharpen Gorgonzola for me,” Pa told his wife in the carriage, “It’s going to be used to fell our foes tonight. Junior, pull out and make for this Grizzly Farm."
“Yes sir Daddy Sire,” Junior saluted him, “The king and queen are now departing for Grizzly Farm!” he announced out loud, “All loyal subject bow down before them!”
He took off sprinting with the carriage. “Junior, not until I got back in!” Pa yelled, running after his ride. Bitterman and Hopper exchanged glances. “I hope these friends of yours actually work,” she told him.
“If numbers don’t work, firepower will,” Hopper reassured her, “Let’s get a coffee; I’m thirsty.”
"...you see, this one day after all my legs had grown in, but before I lost my tail, I was just lounging on the bank of the swamp, enjoying myself," Kermit was relating to Alan a story he'd promised to tell, "And when I looked up there was suddenly a strange hole in the base of the big willow tree behind me that I knew hadn't been there before. I was curious enough to crawl inside and found myself in the most wonderful caverns I'd ever seen. I must have been too entranced with it, because I didn't hear anyone coming up behind me. The next thing I knew, I found myself surrounded by Fraggles."
"One of which was my Uncle Matt," Gobo informed the human, "Right about when he was my age. He'd tell me a story of a green visitor from Outer Space for years; I didn't believe it until last Christmas."
"I was frightened at first, I'll admit," Kermit went on, "But then one of them looked me over and announced if I was peaceful. When I told him yes, they invited my to this big singalong. I must have been there for hours singing along with every Fraggle in the Rock, it seemed, until I finally realized my parents were probably missing me by then. I was sad to go, and they were all sad to see me go, but I promised them I'd come back some day. I never saw the hole again, but I kept them in mind all the while when we all got famous. And so when Jim invited me on that Concorde flight to London to work out a show that could bring about world peace, I suggested to him to look for a Fraggle hole, and he'd find everything he needed to know."
"And a whole lot more, too," Cantus added, checking Yoda's apparent king.
"Well, that's really an interesting tale, Kermit," Alan nodded in acceptance, "Once we do get home, I'll check under all the furniture to see if we've got any, if you say they spring up anywhere at any time."
"Hey look, we made it to town!" Big Bird pointed eagerly around at the well-lit houses flying by them now.
“Ah, nothing like Christmas in a small town,” Fozzie remarked as the sleigh headed up the main street of town, “The lights, the carolers, the guys running around yelling at the top of their lungs.”
“Where?” Kermit looked around to see a disheveled main tearing down the road in from of them. “Merry Christmas!” he was screaming to all who cared to listen, “Merry Christmas Bedford Falls! Hello you old Building and…!”
He abruptly ran into a lamppost and was cut off. “Well, at least we’re getting some parody into this story,” Gonzo remarked.
“This is amazing,” Gobo pointed up at the Christmas lights strung everywhere, “Silly Creatures know how to harness Ditsies and use them to make light displays.”
“Not Ditsies,” Fozzie told him, “Some day we’ll have to go in depth with you Fraggles on electricity, right Kermit?”
“Perhaps,” Kermit stared absentmindedly at the winter wonderland around them. “I believe in miracles and I can tell you why,” he started singing again, “Once a year the street I live on sparkles like the sky.”
“All hung with lights for Christmas,” Robin joined in with him, “twinkling everywhere, the world turns bright for Christmas, and if that isn’t a true blue miracle, I don’t know what one is.”
“I believe in miracles, I know because I’ve seen,” Gonzo took the next verse, “Once a year, the place I walk is filled with trees of green.”
“And pine cones smell of Christmas,” Robbie, despite his normal celebration of Refrigerator Day, had caught on quickly, “Floating through the air to jingle bells of Christmas, and if that isn’t a true blue miracle, I don’t know what one is.”
“But the greatest wonder of them all,” everyone sang at once, “is not what’s happening around you, it’s the way you start to be. Yes, the greatest wonder of them all is how your heart is filled with love. You start to light up like a Christmas tree.”
“OK, stop here,” Fozzie directed Buster and Leroy, who ground to a halt in front of a downtown mall and backed up into a parking space. The bear dropped a quarter in the parking meter. “Hey, these must be those sidewalk creatures Uncle Matt wrote me about,” Gobo approached the meter, “Hey, merry Christmas, sidewalk creature!”
“Hey look in here,” Christine was at the window of the store. Everyone walked over to join her. “There it was, shining in absolute beauty,” a voice said softly from above, “The Red Ryder BB gun, the one thing I wanted more than anything for…”
“Uh, Ralphie, this is the ladies’ department,” Fozzie said to the sky, “And you’re not in this story.”
“Sorry,” the voice said.
“The store’s inside; follow me,” Kermit waved the others toward the door. “Feelings feel so wonderful, you have to let them show,” he continued singing.
“And maybe that’s why everyone begins to get a glow,” Fozzie waved at a nuclear power plant operator walking by who happened to be glowing with radiation.
“And with Christmas their hearts fill,” Yoda took the next verse, causing some heads to turn at his juxtaposition of the words, “spirit share they can.”
“That’s the best part of Christmas,” everyone finished the song as they reached the door, “And if that isn’t a true blue miracle, I don’t know what one is.”
The mall was still fairly crowded despite the fact it was after dark on Christmas Eve. Few of the customers, though, were bothering to watch the Cirque Du So Lame Mall Tour show currently going on at the center of the atrium, where four penguins were “calling” on cell phones next to three French chickens doing the can-can and two turtles with fake dove wings attached to their shells jumping up and down very slowly. They passed the Wesayso Jewelry Emporium, Wesayso Shoe House, Wesayso Pancake Shop, and the Twenty-Eighth National Wesayso Bank along the way, causing Robbie to shake his head sadly at the sight of such blatant corporate overload. Kermit stopped at the outside of a store with the marquee JENNY’S FASHION EMPORIUM. “I need to run in here for a minute,” he announced, “You guys go on to the store.”
“Can I come with you on this one, Kermit?” Christine asked him.
“Sure, if it’s OK with your dad,” Kermit looked up at Alan, who nodded his approval. The man hung behind as he watched her and the frog disappear into the store. “About her your troubles are, are they not?” Yoda inquired from behind him.
“Oh, uh, yeah, um, sit down,” Alan waved for him and Cantus to have a seat on a bench near the elephant fountain in the middle of the mall. He put his hands in his face. “I didn’t want to believe the test results on her,” he mused softly, “We have enough troubles as it is. To think that leukemia could be striking her down…my little girl…”
He broke down. “She’s just six,” he sobbed, “She’s too young to go out like this! Tell me, how could this happen?”
“Just as you say,” Cantus told him, “These things do just happen.”
“But it’s my fault!” Alan told him, “I didn’t take her to the hospital when she first started coughing. If they’d been able to diagnose it sooner…!”
“Your fault it is not,” Yoda put a hand on his shoulder, “Done everything for her you have. Now learn you must to let go when the time comes to do so.”
“How am I supposed to just let her go?” the human told the Jedi, “She and her brother are everything to me. I can’t just forget about her if she dies.”
“Forget her you shouldn’t,” Cantus advised him, “But to best hold on to her memory, you’ll have to let go.”
Alan stared in wonder at the Fraggle. “Has anyone ever told you just how formulaic your advice is?” he told him, “By your logic you would say, ‘If you want to turn left, you have to turn right,’ understand what I’m saying.”
“And that is the point,” Cantus remarked, “For if you do turn far enough right, you will be turning left.”
“Hold onto things irrationally you cannot,” Yoda told Alan, “Change all things do. Even stars burn out over millions of years. Forget you must not, but accept the change you must. But more troubles you, I sense. Someone else you care for.”
“My wife,” Alan told him, “We all miss her terribly. Truth is, I wasn’t terribly keen on her going out west to try and get us more money, but she insisted she wanted to help any way she could.” He sighed deeply. “It’s been so long since I’ve had a job,” he told them, “No one wants a high school dropout with no special skills anymore. It’s hard watching Christine and Zachary go around with nothing except the clothes on their back. You tell me, what good am I to that if I can’t even provide for them?”
“But they love you, and you love them; clear that much is,” Yoda pointed out, “Financial means matter not; truly a wealthy man you are.”
Alan jerked around in surprise at the Jedi’s assessment. “You really think so?” he asked him.
“We really know so,” Cantus nodded, “And don’t feel sorry about missing your wife. If you love her as you infer, she hasn’t really left you at all. But enough of this talk. The others will need assistance with the groceries.”
Inside the fashion store at that moment, Kermit approached the front desk and rang the service bell. A familiar young woman wearing red felt reindeer antlers came out of the back room. “Kermit, you made it,” she exclaimed at the sight of him, “I thought with the storm and all you wouldn’t come.”
“Well you know me, Jenny, I always try and be punctual,” Kermit said, “Do you still have it in stock?”
“Of course, I’ve had it locked up in the safe since December first,” Jenny told him, “Sarah,” she called to the teenager managing the back room, “Get Kermit’s present ready.”
“Can we talk while we’re waiting?” Christine whispered in Kermit’s ear.
“Certainly,” Kermit let the girl pull him into an empty aisle. “Kermit, I hear my daddy talking a lot with the doctors lately,” Christine told him softly, a frightened look on her face, “He tells me everything’s fine with me. I don’t fell all right, though. This cough keeps getting worse. And I’ve done some reading about leukemia, how it can kill you. I don’t want to die, Kermit, I don’t want to die!”
It was her turn to break down. Kermit put a flipper around her and pulled her close. “I know about your case,” he told her, “Your father told me when we were alone together earlier. I’m sorry it has to be like this. It’s probably hard to understand a lot in your position, but I’m telling you honestly, Christine, you’ll have to be brave about it. Go out with a smile, not fear.”
“Are you sure?” she asked him hesitantly.
“Trust me, I’ve had enough experience with death before to know you have to look at the positive,” Kermit said. He lowered his head. “Really, loss has followed me a lot,” he said slowly, “Half my brothers and sisters never made it beyond their tadpole years; the snakes and alligators in the swamp took care of that. My parents died about a year before we first went on the air; I’d give anything for them to have seen me when we were all at our height. Then there were those drunken speedboaters who ran over Robin’s parents; he’s never really recovered from that. And of course we all never got over losing…”
He couldn’t go on, but Christine knew what he was talking about. “You still miss him, don’t you?” she asked him.
“We all do,” Kermit nodded, “And we didn’t know anything was wrong until it was too late. I can still remember unpacking my things at the Polynesian Resort, waiting for the bus to take me to MGM Studios to sign some autographs when I got the call from Jane. I was on the first plane to New York I could get. I got to the hospital around four in the morning, but by then the doctors told me it was already too late. I at least got to say goodbye, though. Just before he went into his last coma, he looked up at me with sunken eyes and said, “I’m counting on you to take care of them all, Kermit. Make sure nothing happens to any of them.” I just sort of nodded and laid my head up against his beard. He never said anything again. The nurse asked me to leave ten minutes later so they could operate again. The next time I saw him was at the funeral.”
He sighed sadly at the memories of people long dead. “But over the years, I’ve learned that they’re not all really gone,” he told the girl, “Nobody ever really dies who you love. And you won’t either. You’ve got a lot of people loving you a lot, and that’s better than a lot of world leaders can say when their time comes.”
“But I’m still scared, Kermit,” Christine told him, “Who knows if there’s life after death? What if there’s nothing out there after I die?”
“You’ll just have to believe there’s a better place out there, Christine,” Kermit pulled her close again, “It’s all a leap of faith, but I think there’s life after death. That there’s a place where there’s no pain, no suffering, just love.”
For what seemed like the longest time, the two of them just stood there in the aisle embracing. “Um, am I interrupting something?” came Jenny’s voice from behind them.
“Uh, no, no, um, we were just having a little talk on life and death, Jenny,” Kermit told her, “I’d like you to meet Christine Reiser, her family’s staying with us at Fozzie’s mother’s; Christine, say hi to Jenny; she helped get us on Broadway.”
“Among other things,” came Piggy’s voice from behind them. She was glaring at Jenny with her hands on her hips. “Fancy seeing you here again, sweetheart,” the pig told the human roughly.
“Didn’t Kermit tell you, Piggy? I started my fashion business here,” Jenny informed her, apparently oblivious to Piggy’s discontent at her presence, “New York was too overcrowded for fashion designers.” She looked down at Kermit. “Say, you don’t mind if Sarah and I come out to Fozzie’s for a little while? Since we’re away from our families out here, being among familiar faces would be nice on Christmas Eve, if there’s no problems.”
“Yes, there would be problems!” Piggy glared at her. Kermit paid no attention. “Sure,” he told Jenny, “I don’t know how many rooms we’d have left; you may have to sleep in a barrel in the basement, but….”
A loud howl of frustration came from Piggy. She kicked at a rack of designer blouses and stalked off. “Is she all right?” Christine asked Kermit.
“Uh, I think so,” Kermit stared after Piggy as she shoved aside a derelict that approached her outside the store and extended his hand for money, “She’s just a little jealous, that’s all. Apparently she likes to keep me close at all times, if you know what I mean.”
“But here’s the present you asked for, Kermit,” Jenny handed him a carefully wrapped present, “We’ll be closing up in about a half hour anyway.”
“Good, we’ll be in the Wesayso Food Mart getting spare food for everyone,” Kermit said, “And from the length of our list, it’ll take us at least that long to get everything.”
“So let me get this straight,” Harvey asked Rugby under the tree, “You guys are a bunch of talking toys?”
“That’s right, Flat Tail,” Rugby told him proudly.
“And you only come to life when people aren’t looking?”
“Yeah, so?”
“What do you think, Clifford, do they have a case against Pixar for infringement?” Harvey asked the musician behind him.
“You know, I think they just might,” Clifford nodded, “I don’t know how easy making a case in court given the corporate…”
“Hey you cats, back on stage, we’ve got some more songs on the slate,” Floyd Pepper called from the stage. Harvey and Clifford shrugged and ambled off. Rugby stared in wonder at his fellow toys. “What’s a Pixar?” he asked them.
“Sounds like some kind of a giant fairy,” Belmont proposed.
“Hold still please,” Mokey informed him, “I’ve almost finished your picture.”
Belmont stopped rocking and struck a big smile for the Fraggle. She added a few more brush strokes to the paper she was holding and held it up for the horse to see. “There, how does that look?” she asked him.
“Luckily you’ve got my good side,” Belmont told her, “I took some damage on the other side when I was dropped…”
“Hey what about me?” Rugby protested, “Aren’t you going to draw one of me?”
“Can’t you wait?” Apple upbraided him, “She can only draw one of us at a time!”
“One side please, one side,” Red pushed Rugby aside before things could go any further. She took a leap and grabbed onto the bottom branch of the Christmas tree. “Ready Wembley?” she asked her friend as he grabbed onto the light strand nearby, “First to the top of the tree wins.”
“Ready,” Wembley nodded. He glanced up to the top of the tree, where Rizzo was precariously perched. “You ready up there, judge?” he called up.
“Ready as I’ll ever be,” Rizzo called back down, clutching the star hard as it swayed dangerously under his weight, “Remember, no bumping or changing lanes or I’ll have to disqualify you. Now when I say go, you…no, not that go, another go!”
For both Fraggles had already taken off climbing at his last “go.” The two of them leaped from branch to branch up the tree. After about two minutes, Red reached the top first. “I win!” she exclaimed, raising her arms in victory—and accidentally backhanding Rizzo off the star. The rat fell head first into the floor, embedding his skull in a floorboard knothole. “Somebody get me out of here!” he screeched, kicking his legs frantically in the air.
“Relax, Rizzo,” Zachary, who was sitting nearby, pulled him out and dusted him off, “It’s not a big deal.”
“Not a big deal he says!” Rizzo shook his head, “You don’t have to worry, Zack; you’re not the fall guy for all these people.”
“Yep, and you just showed you’re a great fall guy—literally,” Statler told him from the couch. He and Waldorf laughed in triumph.
There was a trumpet and saxophone fanfare on stage as Smiley approached the microphone again. “Well ladies and gentlemen, it’s now time for our piñata contest!” the game show host announced excitedly, “The first one to successfully crack it will win a plate of cookies!"
"COOKIES!!!" exclaimed a familiar voice from the back of the den.
"Yes, Cookie Monster, a plate of Cookies!" Smiley assured him, "Sweetums, the piñata please!”
Sweetums lumbered into the room and attached the piñata to the ceiling. “Now a few minutes ago we drew numbers to see who would go first,” Smiley went on, “And our hockey hero Zachary gets first draw; Zachary come on up here!”
Loud applause accompanied Zachary to the middle of the room. He smiled in contentment as he put on the blindfold Sweetums handed him and took a hard swing at the piñata. He smacked it on the bottom, putting a moderate-sized dent in it. “Very good, very good,” Smiley commended him, “Grover, you’re up next.”
Grover flexed his fingers as he walked forward and put on the blindfold. Letting out a Samurai-style yell, he swung the bat…and conked Smiley on the head. “Sorry Guy,” he apologized once he’d removed the blindfold and saw what had happened.”
“No problem, Grover,” Smiley said, grimacing from the pain, “In show business you get used to this. OK Mr. Sinclair, you drew number three.”
Earl strode up to the piñata. He reared his arms back with the bat, took a mighty swing, and succeeded only in missing the piñata completely and falling flat on his face on the floor. “Someone close the window,” Ethyl snickered nearby, “We’ve got a terrible breeze in here.”
“All right,” Earl threw up his arms in disgust, “That’s it. For years you’ve been bringing me down over everything I do. Well, this time I’m making a stand.”
“Earl, please,” Fran tugged his collar urgently.
“No Fran, I have to say this!” her husband told her. Turning back to Ethyl, he shoved the bat into her hands and said, “You think you can do better than me, you hit that piñata. Go ahead, show me what you’ve got.”
“With pleasure,” Ethyl wheeled forward, raised the bat high, and smacked the piñata hard, causing a significant crack to open in the back. “Read it and weep, fat boy,” she told a thoroughly humiliated Earl.
“Herry Monster, it’s your turn now,” Smiley announced to him. Herry confidently ambled up and hit the piñata hard—so hard it fact that it broke loose from its string and sailed down the hall and out the window. Everyone ran to the window and watched the piñata continue going across the river and over the horizon. “Well, that piñata’s going to qualify for frequent flyer miles,” Ernie remarked as it disappeared from sight.
“Does this mean I win?” Herry was surprised at his own strength. It was at this moment that the doorbell rang unexpectedly, followed by the sounds of more people slipping on the icy patch. “Back so soon?” Emily mused, walking up to the door, “The roads must be better than they said they’d be.”
Upon opening the door, however, it was not Fozzie or anyone that had gone with him, but the Dry Bandits dressed in telegram deliverer outfits. They started tap dancing. “Oh, we’re you’re singing telegraph service,” they sang badly out of key, “And we’re here for you on Christmas Eve to deliver you a message you will like.”
“Oh, well, I didn’t call for a singing telegram,” Emily was confused.
“Uh, it’s free and on the house,” Larry said, “Can we come in to give it?”
“If you insist,” the elderly bear shrugged and let them inside. “This is the stupidest idea of yours yet!” Larry hissed to Bo. He placed the large sack he’d carried with him underneath the tree. Rugby put his ear up against it. “That’s strange,” he mused.
“What?” Balthasar hobbled over on his cane.
“There’s something breathing in here,” the tiger listened closely, “And it’s definitely not a toy.”
“It could be laundry that’s eager to be washed,” Boober proposed.
“Boober, laundry doesn’t breath like you and me,” Mokey reminded him, “Poor things, we’d better let them out before they suffocate in there.”
She drew the knot to the sack and threw open the flap. Dressed in ridiculous elf suits, the Riverbottom Gang stumbled out into the light. “Dumb Fraggle, you weren’t supposed to open us up yet!” the Weasel shouted, squinting hard against the light.
“What in the…?” Emily rushed over. “Charles!” she snapped upon seeing Chuck among the newcomers, “I thought I told you never to set foot in this house again!”
“Shut up auntie,” Chuck pushed her aside and stormed into the center of the room, “All right, give it to us!” he ordered.
“OK, but remember, you asked for it,” Oscar tossed a brick from his can at Chuck, sending the bear staggering once it connected with his forehead. Seeing that his plan had quickly unraveled, Larry drew a sawed-off shotgun and motioned for Bo to do the same. “All right, here’s our message, nobody move and nobody gets hurt!” he ordered.
“How dare you brandish those guns like that!” Maria yelled at him, “We have children in here!”
“Ah, children shmildren,” Larry snorted, “If they’re from the inner city, they’re used to guns by now. I said FREEZE!” he shouted at several Snerfs that had been inching toward the kitchen. Seeing his associates had also frozen in place he shouted, “Not you, you morons, them! Tear this place apart and find it!”
“Piggy?” Kermit stuck his head around the cereal aisle in the Wesayso Food Mart to see her hunched over the Lucky Charms shelf looking upset. He cautiously approached her. “Piggy, if this is about Jenny, let me just say…” he began.
“It’s more than that, Kermit,” Piggy said slowly, “I feel like I’m being marginalized in this story. I’m being shown in the worst light. It feels like the author doesn’t like me.”
“Well, Piggy, I don’t think it’s that the author doesn’t like you,” Kermit said encouragingly, “Maybe you’re just a little harder for him to write for that some of the rest of us. There’s nothing wrong with that.”
“How can you say that?” she looked hard at him.
“Because this is fan fiction,” the frog explained, “It’s not supposed to be perfect. Certainly there are parts I’d change if I had the power to do so. And no matter how this story turns out, you’re still great to me.”
“You really mean it?” Piggy became unexpectedly hyper, “Oh Kermie thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you! You’ve made my holidays complete! Kissie kissie!”
“Uh, maybe later,” Kermit quickly backed away as she advanced toward him with lips puckered, “Anyway, Fozzie says he and the others have gotten pretty much everything we need, so we might as well go and check out. We’ll be good till…Yoda?”
He’d noticed out of the corner of his eye that the Jedi master had suddenly slumped downward in the juice aisle behind them. The frog ran up to him. “Yoda, what’s wrong?” he asked breathlessly.
“A great disturbance in the Force I feel,” Yoda said slowly, “Terrible something happened has.”
“Hey Kermit, it’s Telly on the phone,” Gonzo came running up with his cell phone in hand, “He says it’s an emergency.”
“Emergency?” Kermit frowned as he took the phone. “Telly, what’s going on?” he asked.
“Kermit!” Telly gasped desperately into the receiver from underneath the bed in Emily’s room, “They’re here! They’re tearing everything up!”
“It’s awful, it’s tragic, it’s even worse than death!” Boober added hysterically.
“Come back quick!” Rizzo chimed in as well, “Before they…oh no, not the…don’t…AAAAAAAAHHHHHHHH!”
And then the line went dead. “Hello?” a worried Kermit pressed several buttons, but got no response. He gulped nervously and ran forward toward the checkout, which for the holidays was now situated atop a large “snow mountain” platform near the door. “Fozzie, finish paying for those things and get back to the sleigh!” he called to the bear, who was pushing a cart with groceries piled up almost to the ceiling, “We’ve got a serious problem back at the farm!”
“I’d love to Kermit, but take a look at the line,” Fozzie pointed to the line ahead of him, which was at least thirty people long, “I think we’re going to be here a while.”