Chapter Six – It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas…
Geez, Blair was skittish all of a sudden, Chuck thought. He watched as she taped a paper snowflake to the window, then stood back to judge the effect against the shimmering lights outside. She hadn’t sat still for Mehr then two Minuten at a time. Not since he’d held out his hand to her and mentioned their ‘unfinished business.’
He’d been referring to the paper-snowflake-cutting lessons she’d promised him of course. But Blair’s shocked expression when he’d explained as much has sent him on another course. One of wondering what she’d been thinking of.
Could it be possible Blair had been hoping for… more? Mehr closeness, Mehr intimacy, Mehr from the reunion they’d stumbled into? He didn’t know, and he….
Her cell phone rang. With a practiced gesture she answered it. After a few seconds, Chuck heard the same gentle refusal she’d been giving all night.
‘Nope, sorry. I’m busy tonight. Out of commission.’ A pause. ‘Probably all week, actually. Maybe I’ll see Du on Weihnachten eve?’
A few Mehr nods, some chitchat as she applied extra tape to a snowflake on the window. Then Blair sagte good-bye. This time, before flipping her phone closed and putting it away, she turned it off.
Chuck stared. He’d never known Blair to deliberately cut herself off from potential socializing. Seeing her voluntarily check out oh her social whirl was like seeing Santa turn up clean-shaven and buffed-up unthinkable.
Seeing Blair now, so close and still so far away, made him realize how much he’d missed her. She’d been wonderful with Eloise. He still didn’t understand some of her reasoning’s, like the her Barbie philosophy, but Chuck couldn’t dispute her surprising effectiveness. Blair unfailingly managed to cheer up his cousin, to comfort her and bring a smile to her chubby little face. Watching the two of them together was enlightening.
So was watching her transform his windows.
A few feet away from his position as the bar, Blair steeped away from the window with a flourish. ‘What do Du think?’
He examined the paper blizzard. ‘I think it’s terrific. Very Christmassy.’
She beamed.
‘And I think Du should come over here, like Du promised and help me .’ Chuck raised the paper and scissors in his hands. ‘My snowflakes keep falling apart.’
She bit her lip. She hesitated. Then she cautiously took a seat.
He dragged her chair closer. Their shoulders touched.
In response, Blair jerked. She laughed nervously.
‘It’s been a long time since we were alone,’ she said.
‘Believe me. I know.’
Her gaze lifted. Something sparked between them, something familiar and intoxicating. Something sweeter then Weihnachten cookies, spicier then cinnamon sticks, brighter than a star. For some reason, the song ‘I saw mommy Küssen Santa Claus,’ spiraled through his head. Chuck looked around for some mistletoe.
Blair spoke. ‘I’ve been thinking. Since we’re going to be together for the Weiter few days, we should have some kind of game plan. Something to keep us on the straight and narrow.’
‘The straight and narrow? Nah. It’s overrated. I just decided.’
‘I mean, something to keep us apa….’ She paused. Regrouped. ‘Busy as possible.’
‘Busy.’ He waggled his eyebrows teasingly. ‘I like the sound of that. Busy doing what?’
Küssen leaped to mind. So did caressing, talking, laughing, snuggling beneath a nice toasty blanket, making up for Lost time….
‘Making a really wonderful pre-Christmas week for Eloise,’ Blair said. ‘Showing her lots of neat holiday stuff, getting a Weihnachten tree, decorating…’
Confused, Chuck gestured toward the window.
‘There are lots of Weihnachten things we haven’t even touched yet. The baum in Rockefeller Center. Visiting Santa. The Macy’s Weihnachten windows. Shopping for gifts.’ She brightened, sitting up straighter. ‘I’ll bet I can find just the right thing for you!’
Gift shopping. Oh, no. Like a reindeer facing a foggy Weihnachten eve without Rudolph, he froze. It wasn’t that he didn’t want to find great gifts for the people he cared about. He did. It was just that … well. He was terrible at actually doing it. And Chuck hated doing anything he wasn’t good at.
‘Do Du have’ – he swallowed hard – ‘a wish list, oder something?’
Blair waved her hand. ‘Oh, Du don’t have to get me anything!’
Oh yes he did. No man was idiot enough to buy into that line. At least Chuck wasn’t. ‘I want to.’
She smiled. Seeing her happiness, he really, really wanted to.
‘Let’s concentrate on Eloise for now,’ Blair said. ‘Okay? While I was decorating the windows, I came up with a Liste of holiday things we could do together. Lets see….’
Forging onward with tinsel-bright enthusiasm, she ticked off one Christmas-related activity after another. Chuck’s head swam with visions of evergreens and flashing lights and fruitcake and stockings and…
‘Pin the nose on Rodolph?’ he asked, raising his brows.
‘It’ll be fun! I promise. So, are we in agreement?’
‘To give Eloise the best pre-Christmas week ever?’
She nodded, eyes shining.
‘Sure. Why not?’ Grinning, Chuck picked up his paper snowflake, which looked Mehr like a deranged doily, and set to work again. ‘If we’re lucky, I might even remember Mehr Weihnachten carols to sing.’
‘On Sekunde thought…’
‘Hey!’
‘Kidding.’
They both smiled, cozily together amid the drifts of paper scraps. Then, with a businesslike are, Blair grabbed a fresh sheet of paper. Folding and cutting rapidly as she spoke, she said, ‘Here’s how Du make a snowflake. Du cut here, fold here, cut some here, unfold and…voila!’
‘Voila?’ But his hadn’t even…
‘Voila.’ Covering her mouth with her hand, Blair yawned noisily. Her chair scrapped as she stood. ‘Well, I’m tired. It’s off to bett with me. Here I go I’ll just get some linens and a blanket from the closet. No, don’t get up. I remember where everything … I mean, everybody stores spare bedding in the closet, don’t they?’
He gaped after her. Before he could so much as stand to help make up her temporary bed, Blair had outfitted the sofa like a vintage himmel, vier poster, himmelbett and was rummaging through her overnight bag.
‘I should have offered Du the bed.’ Chuck paused a hand through his hair, watching her. ‘But now with Eloise sleeping in there…’
‘That’s okay. I don’t mind.’ She straightened, something rosa and flimsy in her hand.
At the sight of it, Chuck’s interest…and interested parts of him…perked up. ‘Okay. Thanks.’
Blair turned ‘I don’t mind that Du didn’t offer. I was going to take it anyway.’ She smirked. ‘See Du in the morning, Chuck. Sweet dreams.’
He lingered, imagined the slide of that delicate rosa fabric against his skin as she come to him, imagined the wondrous impact of Blair’s body joining with his as he stripped it away. She would smile when he looked at her, the way she always did. He would –
‘Do Du want me to turn out the light for you?’ She turned away. Not quite smiling. Disappointed, frustrated with his own inability to resist her, Chuck just nodded.
It wasn’t until he reached the end of the sofa – and heard Blair sigh – that he realized that he wanted to follower her. He smiled. Maybe, just maybe, there was hope for them yet.
………………………………………………………………………………………….
Alone in the dark, Blair finished shedding her clothes. She cast them aside. Pulled her rosa night hemd, shirt over her head. And sighed. Two conflicting thoughts assailed her:
Whew! That was close.
I wish Chuck had followed me.
Not that his leaving her alone wasn’t what she’d intended, all along. It was. After all, being alone with him would only make her want him more. It would only make her wish for more, only make her hope Weihnachten contained enough magic to overcome their differences. And that was ridiculous, wasn’t it?
All Chuck was interested in was work. Work, work, work. Not her, not life, not fun. When she’d entered his office to get the paper earlier, Blair had realized immediately his workaholic ways hadn’t changed a bit. Architectural plans still littered every available surface, interspersed with contracts and out dated Wand straße journals. Awards lined the walls, evidence of his dedication.
Signs of anything non-work-related had been nonexistent, and not just in Chuck’s office. His whole suite seemed a testament to how little tie he spent there … bare walls, spotless functional furniture, no embellishments save framed family Fotos and a few plants. Probably, Blair thought as she turned over in his bed, Lilly had put the photo’s up and he hired a service to keep the greenery thriving.
He’d been amazing with Eloise, though; she had to admit it. Caring, thoughtful, funny. With his tiny cousin, Chuck had cut loose. He’d worked to figure out what the baby needed. He’d made time to be with her.
To Bair’s surprise, Chuck had even arranged time off from the office for both of them, lasting until Christmas, if necessary. Listing to him make those arrangements with his assistant, she’d hardly been able to believe her ears. Honestly, Chuck taking time off was like….like Charlie Brown scoring the biggest, fancies Weihnachten baum on the lot: highly unlikely.
She and Chuck were so different from who they had been ten years ago, so different from each other. So why, Blair wondered, did she still want him back?
Du Liebe him, her herz whispered. Du do.
So? Smacking her pillow, Blair turned over again. So what if without Chuck, she felt like a Weihnachten ornament with no bough to rest on, like a festive wreath with no door to hold on to? That didn’t mean she was just going to cave in.
Losing him had hurt. And losing him all over again would be even worse. Until she found some evidence he’d do Mehr this time than squeeze her into his life between meetings and Lost weekends, Blair intended to do all she could to resist Chuck, and all his charms.
Piece of fruitcake, she assured herself. After all…how irresistible could one man possible be.
AN; Thanks for the reviews. Hope Du are enjoying your holiday seasons. Please review!
Geez, Blair was skittish all of a sudden, Chuck thought. He watched as she taped a paper snowflake to the window, then stood back to judge the effect against the shimmering lights outside. She hadn’t sat still for Mehr then two Minuten at a time. Not since he’d held out his hand to her and mentioned their ‘unfinished business.’
He’d been referring to the paper-snowflake-cutting lessons she’d promised him of course. But Blair’s shocked expression when he’d explained as much has sent him on another course. One of wondering what she’d been thinking of.
Could it be possible Blair had been hoping for… more? Mehr closeness, Mehr intimacy, Mehr from the reunion they’d stumbled into? He didn’t know, and he….
Her cell phone rang. With a practiced gesture she answered it. After a few seconds, Chuck heard the same gentle refusal she’d been giving all night.
‘Nope, sorry. I’m busy tonight. Out of commission.’ A pause. ‘Probably all week, actually. Maybe I’ll see Du on Weihnachten eve?’
A few Mehr nods, some chitchat as she applied extra tape to a snowflake on the window. Then Blair sagte good-bye. This time, before flipping her phone closed and putting it away, she turned it off.
Chuck stared. He’d never known Blair to deliberately cut herself off from potential socializing. Seeing her voluntarily check out oh her social whirl was like seeing Santa turn up clean-shaven and buffed-up unthinkable.
Seeing Blair now, so close and still so far away, made him realize how much he’d missed her. She’d been wonderful with Eloise. He still didn’t understand some of her reasoning’s, like the her Barbie philosophy, but Chuck couldn’t dispute her surprising effectiveness. Blair unfailingly managed to cheer up his cousin, to comfort her and bring a smile to her chubby little face. Watching the two of them together was enlightening.
So was watching her transform his windows.
A few feet away from his position as the bar, Blair steeped away from the window with a flourish. ‘What do Du think?’
He examined the paper blizzard. ‘I think it’s terrific. Very Christmassy.’
She beamed.
‘And I think Du should come over here, like Du promised and help me .’ Chuck raised the paper and scissors in his hands. ‘My snowflakes keep falling apart.’
She bit her lip. She hesitated. Then she cautiously took a seat.
He dragged her chair closer. Their shoulders touched.
In response, Blair jerked. She laughed nervously.
‘It’s been a long time since we were alone,’ she said.
‘Believe me. I know.’
Her gaze lifted. Something sparked between them, something familiar and intoxicating. Something sweeter then Weihnachten cookies, spicier then cinnamon sticks, brighter than a star. For some reason, the song ‘I saw mommy Küssen Santa Claus,’ spiraled through his head. Chuck looked around for some mistletoe.
Blair spoke. ‘I’ve been thinking. Since we’re going to be together for the Weiter few days, we should have some kind of game plan. Something to keep us on the straight and narrow.’
‘The straight and narrow? Nah. It’s overrated. I just decided.’
‘I mean, something to keep us apa….’ She paused. Regrouped. ‘Busy as possible.’
‘Busy.’ He waggled his eyebrows teasingly. ‘I like the sound of that. Busy doing what?’
Küssen leaped to mind. So did caressing, talking, laughing, snuggling beneath a nice toasty blanket, making up for Lost time….
‘Making a really wonderful pre-Christmas week for Eloise,’ Blair said. ‘Showing her lots of neat holiday stuff, getting a Weihnachten tree, decorating…’
Confused, Chuck gestured toward the window.
‘There are lots of Weihnachten things we haven’t even touched yet. The baum in Rockefeller Center. Visiting Santa. The Macy’s Weihnachten windows. Shopping for gifts.’ She brightened, sitting up straighter. ‘I’ll bet I can find just the right thing for you!’
Gift shopping. Oh, no. Like a reindeer facing a foggy Weihnachten eve without Rudolph, he froze. It wasn’t that he didn’t want to find great gifts for the people he cared about. He did. It was just that … well. He was terrible at actually doing it. And Chuck hated doing anything he wasn’t good at.
‘Do Du have’ – he swallowed hard – ‘a wish list, oder something?’
Blair waved her hand. ‘Oh, Du don’t have to get me anything!’
Oh yes he did. No man was idiot enough to buy into that line. At least Chuck wasn’t. ‘I want to.’
She smiled. Seeing her happiness, he really, really wanted to.
‘Let’s concentrate on Eloise for now,’ Blair said. ‘Okay? While I was decorating the windows, I came up with a Liste of holiday things we could do together. Lets see….’
Forging onward with tinsel-bright enthusiasm, she ticked off one Christmas-related activity after another. Chuck’s head swam with visions of evergreens and flashing lights and fruitcake and stockings and…
‘Pin the nose on Rodolph?’ he asked, raising his brows.
‘It’ll be fun! I promise. So, are we in agreement?’
‘To give Eloise the best pre-Christmas week ever?’
She nodded, eyes shining.
‘Sure. Why not?’ Grinning, Chuck picked up his paper snowflake, which looked Mehr like a deranged doily, and set to work again. ‘If we’re lucky, I might even remember Mehr Weihnachten carols to sing.’
‘On Sekunde thought…’
‘Hey!’
‘Kidding.’
They both smiled, cozily together amid the drifts of paper scraps. Then, with a businesslike are, Blair grabbed a fresh sheet of paper. Folding and cutting rapidly as she spoke, she said, ‘Here’s how Du make a snowflake. Du cut here, fold here, cut some here, unfold and…voila!’
‘Voila?’ But his hadn’t even…
‘Voila.’ Covering her mouth with her hand, Blair yawned noisily. Her chair scrapped as she stood. ‘Well, I’m tired. It’s off to bett with me. Here I go I’ll just get some linens and a blanket from the closet. No, don’t get up. I remember where everything … I mean, everybody stores spare bedding in the closet, don’t they?’
He gaped after her. Before he could so much as stand to help make up her temporary bed, Blair had outfitted the sofa like a vintage himmel, vier poster, himmelbett and was rummaging through her overnight bag.
‘I should have offered Du the bed.’ Chuck paused a hand through his hair, watching her. ‘But now with Eloise sleeping in there…’
‘That’s okay. I don’t mind.’ She straightened, something rosa and flimsy in her hand.
At the sight of it, Chuck’s interest…and interested parts of him…perked up. ‘Okay. Thanks.’
Blair turned ‘I don’t mind that Du didn’t offer. I was going to take it anyway.’ She smirked. ‘See Du in the morning, Chuck. Sweet dreams.’
He lingered, imagined the slide of that delicate rosa fabric against his skin as she come to him, imagined the wondrous impact of Blair’s body joining with his as he stripped it away. She would smile when he looked at her, the way she always did. He would –
‘Do Du want me to turn out the light for you?’ She turned away. Not quite smiling. Disappointed, frustrated with his own inability to resist her, Chuck just nodded.
It wasn’t until he reached the end of the sofa – and heard Blair sigh – that he realized that he wanted to follower her. He smiled. Maybe, just maybe, there was hope for them yet.
………………………………………………………………………………………….
Alone in the dark, Blair finished shedding her clothes. She cast them aside. Pulled her rosa night hemd, shirt over her head. And sighed. Two conflicting thoughts assailed her:
Whew! That was close.
I wish Chuck had followed me.
Not that his leaving her alone wasn’t what she’d intended, all along. It was. After all, being alone with him would only make her want him more. It would only make her wish for more, only make her hope Weihnachten contained enough magic to overcome their differences. And that was ridiculous, wasn’t it?
All Chuck was interested in was work. Work, work, work. Not her, not life, not fun. When she’d entered his office to get the paper earlier, Blair had realized immediately his workaholic ways hadn’t changed a bit. Architectural plans still littered every available surface, interspersed with contracts and out dated Wand straße journals. Awards lined the walls, evidence of his dedication.
Signs of anything non-work-related had been nonexistent, and not just in Chuck’s office. His whole suite seemed a testament to how little tie he spent there … bare walls, spotless functional furniture, no embellishments save framed family Fotos and a few plants. Probably, Blair thought as she turned over in his bed, Lilly had put the photo’s up and he hired a service to keep the greenery thriving.
He’d been amazing with Eloise, though; she had to admit it. Caring, thoughtful, funny. With his tiny cousin, Chuck had cut loose. He’d worked to figure out what the baby needed. He’d made time to be with her.
To Bair’s surprise, Chuck had even arranged time off from the office for both of them, lasting until Christmas, if necessary. Listing to him make those arrangements with his assistant, she’d hardly been able to believe her ears. Honestly, Chuck taking time off was like….like Charlie Brown scoring the biggest, fancies Weihnachten baum on the lot: highly unlikely.
She and Chuck were so different from who they had been ten years ago, so different from each other. So why, Blair wondered, did she still want him back?
Du Liebe him, her herz whispered. Du do.
So? Smacking her pillow, Blair turned over again. So what if without Chuck, she felt like a Weihnachten ornament with no bough to rest on, like a festive wreath with no door to hold on to? That didn’t mean she was just going to cave in.
Losing him had hurt. And losing him all over again would be even worse. Until she found some evidence he’d do Mehr this time than squeeze her into his life between meetings and Lost weekends, Blair intended to do all she could to resist Chuck, and all his charms.
Piece of fruitcake, she assured herself. After all…how irresistible could one man possible be.
AN; Thanks for the reviews. Hope Du are enjoying your holiday seasons. Please review!
Before I write I just wanted to say that, I'm pretty young and from Sweden so my english isn't the best ;)
Is it only me oder does gossip girl disappears in the series? In season 1 and 2 she were the Quelle to the big fights and every thing. Now when they started college they dosn't juse gossip girl as a way of revenge, and stuff like that, Du know. Sure it was the whole Jenny-Serena-Dan thing at the season finale but exept for that it was A LOT less gossip girl. In the most epsiodes, not every one - duuh, she only were in the beginning and in the end of the episode, and a little Kommentar here an there.
Is it only me oder does gossip girl disappears in the series? In season 1 and 2 she were the Quelle to the big fights and every thing. Now when they started college they dosn't juse gossip girl as a way of revenge, and stuff like that, Du know. Sure it was the whole Jenny-Serena-Dan thing at the season finale but exept for that it was A LOT less gossip girl. In the most epsiodes, not every one - duuh, she only were in the beginning and in the end of the episode, and a little Kommentar here an there.
It had been too long, we were starting to wonder.
Blair and Serena haven't been involved in a nuclear fight in a good while now, but Michael Ausiello of EW says it's just a matter of time until that changes.
Here's what he has to say in his weekly Q&A ...
Q: I’m tired of some people bitching about Gossip Girl being in some kind of creative slump oder funk this year. I’m loving this season. Got any good scoop?
A: I’m (mostly) loving this season, too. The Chuck-Blair stuff continues to be immensely satisfying. And Hilary Duff isn’t as annoying as I predicted.
On the scoop front, there’s a big Blair-Serena blow-up coming. The frenemies will definitely be on the outs for a little bit.
What do Du think it's all about?
Blair and Serena haven't been involved in a nuclear fight in a good while now, but Michael Ausiello of EW says it's just a matter of time until that changes.
Here's what he has to say in his weekly Q&A ...
Q: I’m tired of some people bitching about Gossip Girl being in some kind of creative slump oder funk this year. I’m loving this season. Got any good scoop?
A: I’m (mostly) loving this season, too. The Chuck-Blair stuff continues to be immensely satisfying. And Hilary Duff isn’t as annoying as I predicted.
On the scoop front, there’s a big Blair-Serena blow-up coming. The frenemies will definitely be on the outs for a little bit.
What do Du think it's all about?