Page 10 of Ripped (Miller Sisters 1)
Donât get me wrongâmy sister and I fought, but it was always over the small things. When it was anything to do with our past, we were a united front.
We opened the âstockingsâ weâd laid out the night before (she filled mine and I filled hers. Last year weâd bumped heads stuffing stockings at the same time). Each was full of funny low-priced gifts. Thanks to the stress of the wedding, Iâd bought all mine on the internet. I had no idea when Rosie had done her shopping. Soon my bed was covered in ripped paper and in amongst chocolates, a notebook, an exceptionally cute stuffed llama, and a festive bra and panty set in red with white faux fur trim, there was a packet of condoms with ânot to be used until the New Yearâ on them.
I raised an eyebrow. âI donât remember mentioning those when I wrote to Santa.â
âHe knows youâve been a good girl this year but he also knows youâre going to be a bad girl very soon.â She winked at me. âAnd he wants you to be prepared.â
Rosie was as subtle as a kick in the stomach from a reindeer.
I was pretty pleased with the presents Iâd chosen for her, and as well as the small things I gave her my main giftâa leather handbag in a soft shade of cappuccino sheâd admired in the market back in November.
âI love it.â She cooed over it and then threw me an enigmatic look. âYour big present is coming later.â
I wondered how my present could be coming later when there were no deliveries on Christmas Day, but I had no time to dwell on it because we were expecting a load of people and we had to produce food.
Surrendering to the inevitable cooking marathon, I showered quickly and teamed my favorite skinny jeans with thigh-length boots and a cute shirt with shell buttons. Underneath I was wearing my new festive underwear (including the bra, in case you were wondering. Never let it be said I donât learn from my mistakes).
I reported for duty in the kitchen just as Rosie staggered through the door carrying the turkey. It had spent the night in our hallway, apparently reaching âroom temperatureâ.
âThis needs a bit of attention. Can you do that while I make the stuffing?â
I looked at it doubtfully because I wasnât much of a cook. âWhat sort of attention?â
âThere are some stray feathers. Pluck them out.â
She wanted me to pluck the turkey?
âPoultry hair removal isnât exactly my specialty,â I began, but I was talking to myself. Rosie had already left the room, whirling through the flat singing Christmas carols. I wouldnât have minded, but my sister was a much better dancer than she was a singer.
I stared gloomily at the turkey. It had dark stubble on one leg. Clearly the person who had prepared this turkey for the oven had been anxious to leave work early. I looked at the stubby ends poking out of the plump pale skin and sympathized. It wasnât easy keeping yourself smooth. What the hell was I supposed to do?
I pulled my phone out of my pocket and checked my texts and emails but there was still nothing from Nico. Not that I was expecting âMerry Christmasâ, but I thought he might at least have demanded his jacket back.
âStop looking at your phone.â Rosie was back in the kitchen, squeezing orange juice into a bowl of cranberries. âHe isnât going to call you.â
âI have no idea what you mean. I was checking my work emails.â
âOn Christmas Day?â
I wondered why she was so sure he wouldnât call me. I had his jacket. It was Tom Ford. If nothing else, he should want it back. A guy like him was bound to be going to lots of smart dinners over the holidays. âThis project is important. And youâll be busy once Christmas is over.â Rosieâs phone never stopped ringing with people wanting her to help them get into shape. Usually I didnât see her until February when everyone went back to being inactive slobs.
The doorbell rang. We were nowhere near ready for guests and I looked at her in horror but Rosie smiled, which I thought was a very odd reaction. Given the hairy turkey and the state of our kitchen I would have anticipated screaming.
She vanished to answer the door and I decided life was too short to pluck a turkey. And anyway, I needed rapid results.
I formulated a plan, congratulating myself on my ingenuity. Behind me I could hear our apartment slowly filling up with people and it was quite a few minutes before Rosie came back into our pretty country-style kitchen. âHayley, you need toââ She broke off and stared at me in disbelief. âYouâre waxing the turkey?â
âYou told me to remove the stray feathers.â I ripped the strip, removing feathers and most of the skin. âOops. That wasnât the way it was supposed to turn out.â
âYou were supposed to pluck it!â
âThere was no time to pluck each feather individually.â We both stared at the skinless leg of the turkey, me with morbid fascination and Rosie with horror.
âI canât believe you waxed our turkey! Youâve ruined it.â
I felt a stab of guilt. âJust one leg. And leg meat is often dry.â