‘Twas a Christmas tree lot in Alabama. It was the kind of operation that does business in the parking area of a major shopping complex.
My wife is a professional horse-trader when it comes to buying trees. She loves to haggle. Dicker. Negotiate. Bargain. Quabble. Lock horns. Butt heads.
Whatever you call it, my wife loves to barter. If for no other reason than because she likes the taste of blood on a cold autumn eve.
It was dark. The lot was about to close. My wife and I pulled up. We were greeted by two Boy Scouts in uniforms. Second class. Army green pants.
The boys were sort of crumpled looking, with shirt tails untucked and tousled hair. They were maybe 15. Pimples. Dental braces. The whole shebang.
“How can we help you?” they said in perfect unison. Their voices hadn’t dropped yet.
“We’re looking for a Christmas tree,” said my wife.
“You’ve come to the right place, ma’am,” squeaked one Scout. “We carry many high quality trees.”
“Very high quality,” added his friend, who was wearing horn-rimmed glasses. In
his back pocket was a rolled up anime comic book.
They led us through throngs of balsam firs, all huddled together. Overhead were strings of hanging lights. Mariah Carey was singing about how she doesn’t want a lot for Christmas.
“How about this one?” said one kid.
“This is a high quality tree,” the other Scout pointed out. “You wouldn’t go wrong with a tree like this.”
“Very high quality.”
“Well,” said my wife. “It looks sorta puny, we have nine-foot ceilings. Do you have something taller?”
“How tall?” the boy asked.
“Something that’s at least taller than a traffic cone.”
“Right this way, ma’am. We have just the one.”
The Scouts led us through a selection of select firs. I noticed that their shoelaces were untied, and one of the Scouts had a hole in his trousers so…
