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Authors: Craig Lightfoot
Louis knows that the holidays are supposed to be a time of rest in
theory, but the days between the closing night of the play and
Christmas Eve are a complete blur. When he‟s not striking the set, he‟s
marking term papers. When he‟s not marking term papers, he‟s looking
over exams. When he‟s not looking over exams, he‟s making his
excuses to Harry, who he hasn‟t seen in days. And when he‟s not
apologizing to Harry, he‟s preparing for the annual Louis Tomlinson
Holiday Extravaganza.
The Extravanganza had taken place on Christmas Eve for the last three
years, each time to greater and greater acclaim. It is an immovable date
on the social calendar of everyone who matters in Louis‟ life, and with
good reason: it‟s Louis‟ birthday. And it shall not pass uncelebrated,
despite whatever lesser holidays might follow it.
It had started out as a simple Christmas/birthday party the first year that
he‟d moved to Manchester, before he‟d had many friends. He‟d wanted
to impress his new colleagues, so he‟d made an effort. Naturally, when
Louis makes an effort, the results are legendary, and his party had been
the talk of the teachers‟ lounge for weeks. Zayn may or may not have
been photographed wearing a lampshade on his head and little else.
Such are the foundations of friendship.
Unfortunately, his success had consequences. He had to out-do himself
the next year, so suddenly instead of a few bowls of punch and eggnog
there had been a full bar with Christmas-themed drinks. Niall had
woken up on the roof of the building dressed as Father Christmas, and
Louis had chalked up another victory. But then Christmas came around
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again, and he couldn‟t let everyone down, so he‟d moved all the
furniture out of his flat and created a dance floor, complete with a red
and green strobe light. It had been quite the hit, even with the
policemen who arrived to break the party up.
And now it‟s time to do it all again, bigger and better. He has a
reputation to maintain. Sadly, the fact that his life has descended into a
state of disaster over the past month means that he‟s not as prepared as
he usually is by now. By this time last year, he‟d already placed an
order for ten dozen festive cakeballs, stockpiled five cases of beer in
the snowdrift on his balcony, coated fifty yards of fake popcorn garland
in gold glitter, and gotten Duchess up to a record nine minutes before
she ripped her tiny elf hat off and tried to eat it. This time around he
hasn‟t even got enough food in his fridge to feed himself lunch, much
less accommodate the mobs of people coming to make merry. He needs
to get his arse in gear.
Thankfully he sent out the invitations—tiny cards attached to glass
Christmas ornaments with silk ribbon and nestled inside gold boxes on
a bed of gold-flecked tissue paper, tasteful and fun, Christ he is good—
before things got too hectic. But there‟s still the matter of food, drinks,
entertainment, decorations, and every small detail in between. He ends
up clutching two hundred red plastic cups to his chest in the party store,
having a nervous breakdown over tablecloths and alcohol logistics, so
he calls Zayn and Niall in as reinforcements. It pains him to admit
defeat, but he can‟t do it alone this time.
“You know, you could call Harry,” Niall tells him one afternoon while
he‟s hanging his eleventh string of lights along the ceiling of Louis‟
flat. “I‟m sure he‟d be willing to help.”
“Not happening,” Louis says. He keeps his eyes trained on the table
arrangement he‟s working on. Red, white, and silver is his palette this
year. Inspired. He is arranging decorative pomegranates. Pomegranates
will keep him sane.
He pretends like he doesn‟t notice Niall and Zayn exchanging a look
across the living room.
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Harry keeps texting him throughout the week, offering to pick up
anything he might need or come by to help him set up. Louis shrugs
him off every time and insists that everything is under control even
when it clearly is not, even when he almost breaks his leg falling off the
ladder while getting a box of decorations down from the top of his
cupboard. He feels shitty about it, but he‟s afraid that having Harry
around will lead to him having to talk about feelings, which is just not
exactly something he feels like handling right now. Or ever, really. So
he keeps his head down and hopes Harry doesn‟t hate him for it.
They make it through seven days of scrambling, of cleaning his
apartment from top to bottom, of searching for a place in Manchester
that will rent him a chocolate fountain on such short notice, and by the
night of 23rd he‟s finally, finally ready. The ashtrays are sparkling. The
pudding is chilling in the fridge. The Christmas-themed shot glasses
have been arranged on the counter with care, in hopes that people will
get absolutely, monumentally sloshed.
Louis is finally curled up warm in his bed and starting to drift off when
the buzz of his phone wakes him up. He squints at the light and thumbs
through the lock screen to find one last text message from Harry
waiting in his inbox.
please at least let me bring something, i want to help xx
Louis buries his face in his pillow. He is shagging the most genuinely
good person on the planet outside of Zayn‟s fireman and probably some
nuns somewhere. He is almost definitely a dick.
bake something if u want, he texts back, then he shoves his phone
under his pillow and wills himself to sleep.
He wakes up early the next day to nine birthday texts because, oh,
right, it‟s his birthday. He managed to forget that part somewhere along
the way. There‟s one from Harry, one from Zayn, one from Niall, one
from his mum and two of his sisters, and the rest from his old
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Doncaster friends. He reads them as he steeps his tea. He is twenty-six
years old.
“I am,” Louis says to his cat, “officially closer to thirty than twenty.”
Duchess stares at him, then knocks over a tin of plastic spoons in a way
that looks deliberate.
He doesn‟t have much time to dwell on his age since his day is full of
fielding phone calls and deliveries of hors d‟oeuvres, setting out plates
and napkins, making a last minute run to the shop because he forgot he
was out of his favourite kind of brandy. He spends most evening before
the party meticulously ironing his red trousers and trying on three
different pairs of braces before rejecting them all in favor of a fuzzy
white jumper, because it‟s cold, damn it.
Niall arrives an hour before the party sporting a red and green
snapback, and starts to set up the AV equipment. He and his endless
playlist of Christmas remixes have always been in charge of the music
for this particular party, but this year Louis has got him hooking up
karaoke in addition to the dance floor.
Zayn‟s the next one to arrive, the only time a year when he‟s not
fashionably late and only because it‟s under threat of bodily harm from
Louis.
“Excuse me,” Louis says, blocking the door with his body when Zayn
tries to come inside. “Do I know you? Are you on the guest list?”
“Quit fucking around, Louis, it‟s cold out here,” Zayn huffs, teeth
chattering.
“You look so much like my friend Zayn,” Louis says, “except he‟s the
type of lad who always adheres to his friends‟ party dress codes, and
your head is tragically lacking in any festive headwear. You are a
complete stranger to me.”
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Zayn glares at him, his face lit up in flashes by the multicolored lights
on Louis‟ own hat, which is in the shape of a Christmas tree. He
mumbles something Louis can‟t understand, half-muffled by his scarf
and the turned-up collar of his coat.
“I‟m sorry,” Louis says, holding one hand up to his ear dramatically.
“Didn‟t quite catch that.”
“I said, I spent a really long time on my hair!” Zayn says.
“Ah, yes!” Louis says as he steps aside. “Now I recognize you!” Zayn
aims a kick at Louis‟ shin as he slips inside, but Louis dodges it.
“Should I take this to mean that your man candy is coming tonight after
all?”
“You know I would have told you if he‟d said so,” Zayn says. He
shrugs his coat off, bumping his fist against Niall‟s as he passes on the
way to dump it on Louis‟ bed. Louis has them all well-trained on the
party coat protocol by now. “Last I heard it was still a maybe.”
“Well, mate,” Niall says, “if he doesn‟t turn up, we could always just
set the tree on fire.”
“Ha-bloody-ha,” Zayn says. “Get me drunk enough and I just might.”
It‟s not long before people start pouring in, bottles of liquor and boxes
of beer in hand. Niall‟s got the stereo playing something relatively
relaxed, some acoustic cover of “O Holy Night,” but Louis knows he‟s
just easing people into things before everyone gets drunk enough for
him to switch on the strobe light. The turnout is good, as usual, and
Louis is pleased to see that everyone other than Zayn is honoring the
mandatory hat rule he put on the invitations.
It‟s always interesting to see all of his different worlds collide.
Everyone mills about, talking and drinking and laughing, gradually
filling in the walls of Louis‟s flat with faces from every part of his life,
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one of his old friends from uni chatting up his librarian in the corner,
Zayn‟s TA doing shots with two of the girls from two doors over. He‟s
just said hello to Stan, who came bounding in with a case of beer and
two of the other Doncaster lads, when the door swings open again and
he‟s almost hit in the face with a stack of boxes.
“Sorry!” says the person behind them, and if Louis didn‟t know that
voice intimately by now, the curly hair peeking over the top of the
boxes would have given Harry away immediately. “Sorry, can‟t really
see where I‟m—oh, hello, birthday boy!”
Harry‟s stuck his head around the side of his armload of boxes to smile
at Louis. He‟s wearing a pair of reindeer antlers with little jingle bells
hanging from them, and there are snowflakes in his curls. It‟s the first
time Louis has seen him in a week, and he‟s helpless to do anything but
smile stupidly back at him, wishing he was maybe a little less tipsy for
this.
“Nice hat,” Harry says happily. He leans in to kiss Louis on the cheek
but misses, too busy trying to balance everything he‟s carrying, and
lands somewhere between his cheekbone and his hair.
“What in the name of Christ is all that?” Louis says, closing the door
behind Harry before too much snow comes inside.
“You told me to bake something,” Harry says. He starts making his
way to the kitchen, the crowd parting like the Red Sea to let him
through, and Louis follows. “I may have gotten a bit carried away.”
He sets the boxes down on the small amount of empty space left on
Louis‟ kitchen table and starts unpacking them and, Jesus, Harry has
outdone himself this time. The first four boxes are filled with a dozen
cupcakes each, different flavors, all iced in varying shades of Christmas
colors and covered in sprinkles. The last box is the tallest, and when
Harry opens it, Louis feels his mouth drop open.
“Haz.”
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It‟s a cake, three layers by the looks of it, all thick off-white frosting
and red trim. In the middle of it in red icing script are the words Happy
Birthday, Louis! The i‟s are dotted with little smiley faces.
Louis stares at it for a few seconds, then yanks Harry roughly into a
hug by the waist, and Harry‟s laughing at him but he‟s buzzed and
Harry made him a birthday cake and what else can he do?
“I didn‟t know if you already had one or not,” Harry says when Louis
lets him go.
“I—” Louis begins, and then stops and starts again. “No, with
everything else I‟d, I‟d completely forgotten.”
“Good, then,” Harry says, grinning. “Hope you like red velvet.”
Louis bumps Harry‟s shoulder with his own and picks up one of the
boxes of cupcakes. “Come on, then, let‟s get these all out before I get
too drunk to be trusted with things that could stain the carpet.”
And, well, honestly, the cupcakes really do not match his color palette
at all. Part of him wants to die a little when he thinks of bright blue and
green frosting and gold sprinkles in between his carefully chosen trays
of peppermint bark and silver dusted sugar cookies, but the rest of him
really doesn‟t care. The rest of him just wants to put them somewhere
everyone can see.