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FIC: A Christmas Tail (1/1, Nightcrawler/Storm, G)   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #6443 of 6474 |
...It's been forever. But here I am with a little Christmas gift I wrote for a
friend, in case anyone else might enjoy it. :)

Jordi



Title: A Christmas Tail
Author: Jordanna Morgan
Archive Rights: Please request the author’s consent.
Rating/Warnings: G. Pure fluff.
Characters:Mainly Nightcrawler and Storm, with others here and there.
Setting: Movieverse.
Summary: An extra appendage meets a snow shovel… and therein hangs a tail.
Disclaimer: Marvel and Fox create the characters that sell. Not me.
Notes: Replete with many subtle private jokes, this fluffy little “tail” is
a Christmas gift for my dear friend and favorite X-fic writer, Skybright
Daye—which after all is only fitting, because she was responsible for
inspiring it in the first place. Merry Christmas!


The nearly-new snow shovel glistened under the fluorescent light, dripping a
slushy puddle of melting snow into the sink over which it was carefully
balanced. Attached to the shovel was a long blue tail… and attached to that
tail, wearing a painfully sheepish expression, was a very uncomfortable Kurt
Wagner.

For the Incredible Nightcrawler, it was an ignominious conclusion to the annual
Xavier Institute Snowball War.

“…So how exactly did this happen?” Ororo Munroe asked, trying to suppress
a grin, as she watched Jean Grey gently sponge the juncture between frozen
shovel and tail with warm water. In the background, a dozen of the school’s
students made an amused and curious audience—much to Kurt’s chagrin.

The German ducked his head, a rose-purple tinge flushing his blue cheeks. “I
think my tail was wet because I was using it to sweep up the snow… to make
snowballs faster,” he explained awkwardly, running his cloven fingers over the
extra extremity—talking of which always made him feel terribly self-conscious.
“And then I ran behind the garden shed. I didn’t see the shovel, and I
guess…”

“It just sort of got away from you,” Jean concluded for him, unable to
resist a pained smile. “Well, I think we’ve almost got it. Hold still—this
might smart just a little.”

Slowly and carefully, Jean began to remove the last slightly adhering portion of
tail from the cold shovel blade, using her telekinesis to aid the process on an
almost microscopic level. Kurt winced and clenched his teeth, letting out a
stifled yelp only when the last bit of tail skin abruptly came loose from its
unwelcome attachment. He moved to pull his tail back, but Jean held on to it
briefly, giving him a glance of reassurance before she examined it with medical
scrutiny.

“Okay, I don’t think there’s any real harm done,” she announced at last,
letting go. “But it *still* feels frozen. Doesn’t that bother you?”

"Oh, I… I don’t feel the cold in it much,” Kurt admitted, gingerly rubbing
the now-tender section of tail.

“Don’t give the kids ideas,” Jean cautioned him wryly. “And be more
careful—you could get frostbite. You should think about covering your tail
when you’re out in the cold. Now, you’d better go warm it up by the fire,
and get the circulation back.” She smiled at Kurt, then turned the expression
upon the peanut gallery of gawking teenagers. “I’ll bring in hot chocolate
in a few minutes.”

With exclamations of glee, the students trooped out of the kitchen, and Kurt
rather diffidently trailed behind them—the after portion of his tail still
delicately clutched in his hands.

Jean grinned at Ororo, turning to the large pot of hot chocolate that was
already simmering on the stove. “Well. The school’s seen its share of
tongues stuck to the flagpole—but this is the first time I’ve unstuck a
tail. Or even seen someone get stuck accidentally.”

“Poor Kurt,” said Ororo; and although her lips twitched, there was a genuine
sympathy in her heart.



The next day was Christmas Eve, and it marked yet another annual event in the
school’s Christmas holiday and unofficial winter games: the snowman-building
competition. It was the culmination of an entire year’s preparation; for
within the mansion there was a special closet, filled with the last twelve
months’ worth of old and unwanted pieces of clothing and junk. This was the
day when the Snowman Supply Closet was raided, contributing its most random and
outlandish contents to the adornment of the snowman army on the front lawn.

It appeared that Kurt had not only taken his mishap and Jean’s warning to
heart, but had personally availed himself of the closet’s bounty as well.
Ororo tried not to stare when he meekly stepped outside with his entire
tail—save for its spear-pointed tip—trussed up like a sausage in a
threadbare old purple scarf, wrapped lengthwise around the appendage and tied
with string.

That was when Ororo began to do some serious thinking.

In short order, the thinking turned to planning… and by that afternoon, the
planning turned to action.



“Hi, Kurt!” Kitty Pryde exclaimed, skittering up to her teacher and friend
in the front hallway of the mansion. Judging by the ice skates slung over her
shoulder, she was on her way out to the makeshift skating rink Bobby had made.

Kurt smiled fondly at her. “Hello, Kitty. Are you going skating?”

“Yeah…” Kitty grinned and shrugged. “It’s been a few years since I had
lessons, but it’s nice to keep in practice. I used to have a pretty good
double axel. Uh…” She darted a glance past Kurt, as if looking for
something. “I wanted to tell you those cinnamon pancakes you made this morning
were awesome.”

“Thank you.” Kurt ducked his head. “I thought I would try something
festive for the holiday.”

“Oh, yeah, it… it was.” Another questing look. “And—I’m really
looking forward to your apple strudel tomorrow night.”

Kurt’s tail twitched pleasedly. “I’m glad.” He paused. “Tell me,
Kitty, have you seen Fräulein Munroe? I was looking for her.”

“Oh—I, ah, um, uh…” Kitty’s unexpectedly startled response sounded
like the beginning of some bizarre chant. Her glance shot past Kurt
again—looking a trifle desperate. “She, uh… she had to go into town for
something.”

“On Christmas Eve?” Kurt frowned. “I thought all the shopping was done.
Won’t the crowds be terrible now?” He presumed this fact only from
secondhand knowledge, as he himself—with an appearance apt to cause
astonishment and even fright in public—had never yet ventured into a shopping
mall, at the holidays or at any other time. His own humble gifts had been
purchased online, with Kitty’s help in navigating the alien technology of the
computer.

The girl shrugged awkwardly. “Well, I… I guess they might. Depending on
where she’s going, I mean. I—don’t know.”

Kitty was plainly uncomfortable. She tilted her head to look around Kurt’s
shoulder again, and his curiosity overcame him. He turned; and that slight
lateral movement caused him to nearly bump into Peter Rasputin, who he found
towering behind him. The Russian had his sketchpad and pencil case tucked under
one arm—but his other hand quickly made a furtive movement toward his pocket.

“Hello, Mister Wagner,” he said smoothly.

Kurt raised an eyebrow. “Ah… hello, Peter.”

“So *there* you are!” Kitty piped up brightly, as if she had only just
noticed Peter—which, given both his awestriking size and the fact that he was
standing six inches behind Kurt, was patently impossible. She stepped past their
German teacher and slipped an arm around Peter’s waist. “I’ve been waiting
for you… He’s going to make some sketches of me skating,” she asided to
Kurt in explanation, fully recovering her aplomb.

“I see…” Kurt blinked at the pair, thoroughly feeling as though he had
missed something. “Well, then… have fun.”

Peter half-frowned a little worriedly, but Kitty flashed a smile at Kurt and
dragged her boyfriend away by the arm. Mystified, Kurt watched them retreat…
and when they were halfway down the hall, he saw Peter take something like a
wadded strip of ribbon from his pocket and begin to roll it up.

With a sudden flicker of suspicion, Kurt remembered past acts of mischief
perpetrated by other students—as well as Jean’s admonishment on the subject
the day before—and felt compelled to turn and look at his tail. However, it
remained unadorned by any form of prankish bow. Then he felt vaguely guilty to
have thought it, for he was sure that Kitty would not have been party to such a
thing. (Well, at least not at his expense. At Jubilee’s, on the other hand…)

Shrugging to himself in puzzlement, he turned and made his way down the hall.



As far as Logan was concerned, the occasion of Christmas Eve was no excuse not
to prowl the house on his regular night patrol—regardless of the fact that a
few younger students were afraid he might scare away Santa Claus.

In fact, the plate of homemade cookies under the Christmas tree was just an
added incentive for his nocturnal rambles.

Contentedly munching the last bite of a purloined macaroon, the Wolverine made
his languid way along the upstairs landings, listening briefly at the doors of
the bedrooms to confirm there was peace within. Around here, one never knew when
a secondary mutant power might manifest in some alarming way—or when the more
common varieties of teenage trouble would rear an annoyingly secretive head.

This was the way Logan cared.

When he neared the door of Ororo’s room, his keen hearing detected the sound
of a soft mechanical whirring from within. He paused to listen in quizzical
bemusement. The rhythm of the sound was not unfamiliar, although he could not
quite place it. Sometimes it slowed; now and then it stopped altogether for a
few moments, allowing an interlude for a few clicks or snips.

Logan thought back to Ororo’s return from her mysterious errand that evening.
She was furtive about it, but he had gotten a partial glimpse of the store name
on the bag she was hiding under her coat, and wondered what she could have
wanted from the place.

Suddenly it all made a certain amount of sense, and Logan cracked a smile.

“Never knew you had it in you, ’Ro,” he murmured under his breath, and
silently continued on his patrol.



On Christmas, the students and teachers of Xavier’s School felt more like a
true family than on any other day. The morning brought with it all the joy and
warmth that was natural to the occasion, as gifts and laughter were exchanged
around the tree.

Ororo gasped softly as she opened the box Jean had given her, revealing a plush
angora sweater in the richest royal blue she had ever seen. “Oh, it’s
beautiful, Jean!”

“I’ve noticed how much you’ve gotten to like the color blue,” Jean
answered with a wry smile.

Blushing, Ororo glanced across the room, to the place where Kurt was
enthusiastically admiring the gifts the children had received. “Yeah… yeah,
I have.”

She was wearing the sweater when she approached Kurt shortly afterward, with a
small bundle wrapped in snowflake-patterned blue and white paper. He looked up
at her in pleased surprise as she set the package in his lap.

“It isn’t perfect,” she said, somewhat shyly, brushing back a lock of her
ivory hair. “But I thought it might be a start.”

With an eager smile, Kurt looked down at the gift. His large fingers had a
slight bit of trouble finding an edge to tear the paper open; but after a moment
he succeeded, and the wrapping fell away from a curiously-shaped bundle of blue
fabric. His eyebrows went up, and he lifted it out of the paper, letting it
tumble to its full length.

In shape it was something like a thick section of garden hose, but it was made
of sturdy wool. One end was open; the other was tipped with an odd triangular
pouch. A zipper ran the length of the object, and when unzipped, a lining of
soft white fleece was revealed within the strange fabric tube.

Kurt was puzzled for only a moment; and then the purpose of this extraordinary
article of clothing dawned upon him. His yellow eyes grew wide, and he looked up
at Ororo in wonderment.

“Oh, how cute!” a beaming Kitty chirped, before either the giver or the
receiver could speak. She looked at Kurt with a grin. “I hope it fits. Uh…
Peter took the measurements yesterday, while I was sort of… distracting
you.”

Abruptly Kurt swallowed a chuckle. “So *that’s* what you were doing.” He
shook his head in humorous amazement, then sobered slightly as he turned back to
Ororo. “You… made this? Last night?”

Ororo blushed and nodded. “I hope it holds up alright. It was a little hard to
get the hang of the sewing machine.”

Kurt’s lips parted in a dazzling smile, as he regarded her with an expression
of perfect delight. Then his gaze dropped excitedly to the gift, and he unzipped
it. He gently snugged his barbed tail-tip into the pouch on the end, then
wrapped the length of it around his wiry tail and zipped it up. The fit was
perfect, and he stared at it with a sort of quiet awe.

His now-ensheathed tail slowly waved back and forth, and he beamed. Then he
turned to Ororo, with a childlike joy shining in his eyes. “*Thank* you!”

Ororo’s blush darkened—but before she could answer, Kurt bounded to his
feet, looking around at the students.

“*Snowball fight*!”

Peals of happy laughter broke out at this declaration of war, and the children
unanimously stampeded for the front door. Kurt turned to follow; but then he
turned back, smiling, and held out his hand to Ororo. “Will you come too?”

Returning the smile, Ororo put her hand in his, and did not let go for a moment
after he had helped her to her feet.

“Let me get my coat,” she said eagerly, and ran for the stairs.

=====================
2007 Jordanna Morgan




Tue Dec 25, 2007 4:14 am

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...It's been forever. But here I am with a little Christmas gift I wrote for a friend, in case anyone else might enjoy it. :) Jordi Title: A Christmas Tail ...
Jordanna Morgan
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