My mom and dad sit in recliner chairs. I sit on the floor in front of the fireplace with the stockings by me. This scene is always blocked this way. Them sitting with coffee, leaned down over me, watching for my reaction. Me Indian-sitting on the floor. All of us in bathrobes and pajamas still.

Perry Como is singing “I’ll Be Home for Christmas.”

The first thing out of my stocking is a little stuffed koala bear, the kind that grips your pencil with its spring- loaded hands and feet. This is who my folks think I am. My mom hands me hot chocolate in a mug with miniature marshmallows floating on top. I say, “Thanks.” Under the little koala is a box I take out.

My folks stop everything, lean over their cups of coffee, and just watch me.

Perry Como is singing “O Come All Ye Faithful.”

The little box is condoms.

Sitting right next to our sparkling, magic Christmas tree, my father says, “We don’t know how many partners you have every year, but we want you to play safe.”

I stash the condoms in my bathrobe pocket and look down at the miniature marshmallows melting. I say, “Thanks.”

“Those are latex,” says my mom. “You need to use only a water-based sexual lubricant. If you need a lubricant at your age. Not petroleum jelly or shortenings or any kind of lotion.” She says, “We didn’t get you the kind made from sheep intestines because those have tiny pores that can allow the transmission of HIV.”

Next inside my stocking is another little box. This is more condoms. The color marked on the box is Nude. This seems redundant. Next to that, the label says odorless and tasteless.

Oh, I could tell you all about tasteless.

“A study,” my father says, “a telephone survey of heterosexuals in urban areas with a high incidence of HIV infection, showed that thirty-five percent of people are uncomfortable buying their own condoms.”

And getting them from Santa Claus is better? I say, “Got it.”

“This isn’t just about AIDS,” my mom says. “There’s gonorrhea. There’s syphilis. There’s the human papilloma virus. That’s genital warts.” She says, “You do know to put the condom on as soon as the penis is erect, don’t you?”

She says, “I paid a fortune for bananas out of season in case you need the practice.”

This is a trap. If I say, Oh, yeah, I roll rubbers onto new dry erections all the time, I’ll get the slut lecture from my father. But if I tell them no, we’ll get to spend Christmas Day practicing to protect me from fruit.

My dad says, “There’s tons more to this than AIDS.” He says, “There’s the herpes simplex virus two with symptoms that include small painful blisters that burst on your genitals.” He looks at Mom.

“Body aches,” she says.

“Yes, you get body aches,” he says, “and fever. You get vaginal discharge. It hurts to urinate.” He looks at my mom.

Perry Como is singing “Santa Claus Is Coming to Town.”

Under the next box of condoms is another box of condoms. Jeez, three boxes should last me right into menopause.

Jump to how much I want my brother alive right now so I can kill him for wrecking my Christmas. Perry Como is singing “Up on the Housetop.”

“There’s hepatitis B,” my mom says. To my dad she says, “What’s the others?”

“Chlamydia,” my father says. “And lymphogranuloma.”

“Yes,” my mom says, “and mucal purulent cervicitis and nongonococcal urethritis.”

My dad looks at my mom and says, “But that’s usually caused by an allergy to a latex condom or a spermicide.”

My mom drinks some coffee. She looks down at both her hands around her cup, then looks up at me sitting here. “What your father’s trying to say,” she says, “is we realize now that we made some mistakes with your brother.” She says, “We’re just trying to keep you safe.”

There’s a fourth box of condoms in my stocking. Perry Como is singing “It Came upon a Midnight Clear.” The box is labeled …safe and strong enough even for prolonged anal intercourse …

“There’s granuloma inguinale,” my father says to my mother, “and bacterial vaginosis.” He opens one hand and counts the fingers, then counts them again, then says, “There’s molluscum contagiosum.”

Some of the condoms are white. Some are assorted colors. Some are ribbed to feel like serrated bread knives, I guess. Some are extra large. Some glow in the dark. This is flattering in a creepy way. My folks must think I’m wildly popular.

Perry Como is singing “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel.”

“We don’t want to scare you,” my mom says, “but you’re young. We can’t expect you to just sit home nights.”

“And if you ever can’t sleep,” my father says, “it could be pinworms.”

My mom says, “We just don’t want you to end up like your brother is all.”

My brother’s dead, but he still has a stocking full of presents and you can bet they’re not rubbers. He’s dead, but you can bet he’s laughing his head off right now.

“With pinworms,” my father says, “the females migrate down the colon to the perianal area to lay their eggs at night.” He says, “If you suspect worm activity, it works best to press clear adhesive tape against the rectum, then look at the tape under a magnifying glass. The worms should be about a quarter-inch long.”

My mom says, “Bob, hush.”

My dad leans toward me and says, “Ten percent of the men in this country can give you these worms.” He says, “You just remember that.”

Almost everything in my stocking is condoms, in boxes, in little gold foil coins, in long strips of a hundred with perforations so you can tear them apart. My only other gifts are a rape whistle and a pocket-sized spray canister of Mace. That looks like I’m set for the worst, but I’m afraid to ask if there’s more. There could be a vibrator to keep me at home and celibate every night. There could be dental dams in case of cunnilingus. Saran Wrap. Rubber gloves.

Perry Como is singing “Nuttin’ for Christmas.”

I look at Shane’s stocking still lumpy with presents and ask, “You guys bought for Shane?”

If it’s condoms, they’re a little late.

My mom and dad look at each other. To my mom, my dad says, “You tell her.”

“That’s what you got for your brother,” my mom says. “Go ahead and look.”

Jump to me being confused as hell.

Give me clarity. Give me reasons. Give me answers.

Flash.

I reach up to unhook Shane’s stocking from the mantel, and inside it’s filled with crumpled tissue paper.

“Keep digging,” my dad says.

In with the tissue, there’s a sealed envelope.

“Open it,” my mom says.

Inside the envelope is a printed letter with right at the top the words Thank You.

“It’s really a gift to both our children,” my dad says.

I can’t believe what I’m reading.

“Instead of buying you a big present,” my mom says, “we made a donation in your name to the World AIDS Research Fund.”

Inside the stocking is a second letter I take out.

“That,” my dad says, “is Shane’s present to you.”

Oh, this is too much.

Perry Como is singing “I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus.”

I say, “That crafty old dead brother of mine, he’s so thoughtful.” I say, “He shouldn’t have. He really, really shouldn’t have gone to all this trouble. He needs to maybe move away from denial and coping and just get on with being dead. Maybe reincarnate.” I say, “His pretending he’s still alive can’t be healthy.”

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