An Arthur Rawlings Christmas
Posted: Fri Dec 24, 2010 5:04 pm
The video fades in from black, a sparkling Christmas tree fills the screen. Words explode onto the screen.
Tales of Awesome:
The Arthur Rawlings Story
Christmas, Age 6
As the title fades, the camera pans down, past the two drowsy men on the couch, to the little beaming face of a boy half-buried in a mountain of ribbons and colored paper. The boy bears a passing resemblance to Arthur Rawlings ten years later, if the cheek bones were a little higher, the nose a little straighter, the chin a little better defined. The shot zooms in and out rapidly a few times, much to his delight, followed by a blur of ceiling, wall, tree, window, father, and finally rug. The boy's laughter all but drowns out his Papa's admonitions about precision equipment and his Daddy's chuckling, murmured reminder that they built it to withstand the nuclear apocalypse for a reason.
"Try again, Artie," Daddy's voice says louder, still chuckling.
The camera rights itself and the angle lifts up once more into the air, steadier this time. The boy takes to the wireless controls like he was born for it. After all, he was. There's one package left, and the shot homes in on it. Artie knows what's in there. It's a talking Pikachu with light-up cheeks and posable legs and tail. He's been hinting about it with all the subtlety of a semi, even requesting a visit to Santa, despite the long talk he and his dads had the year before about fantasy and reality. Every family dinner for the past two months, every one with at least one dad present, has featured Artie's well-rehearsed Pikachu impression, reciting every phrase this marvelous toy says by heart. He even found a way to add sound effects, a crackling buzz coaxed out of one of the thingies in his chest that sounded just like a Thundershock charging up. He missed the last week of school and the class Christmas party while recovering from an emergency repair.
And now all the work is about to pay off in one last storm of shredded paper. The camera zooms in close, sizes up the prey from all sides, spies for weaknesses in the Scotch Tape defenses. There it is! The perfect opening for quickest entry. A small hand enters the picture, visibly trembling with the thrill of anticipation. The professionally wrapped paper never stood a chance; it's gone in less than five seconds. The lid of the plain brown box underneath suffers much the same fate, never again able to close properly. The camera zooms out to take in the whole scene, child, parents, and prized toy.
Daddy and Papa beam proudly. Little Artie's face shows first shock, then confusion, disappointment, and finally, looking up at his dads, abject joy.
"Wow! What is it?" he cries out, excitement plain for all to see.
Papa slides off the couch and crawls across the multicolored wasteland formerly known as his living room to the box and the boy. He reverently lifts out a long, slender, bendy tube with wires blooming out of both ends and at several points along its length.
"This little baby is going to let you control everything that's going on inside you. It'll start up under here," he said, holding one end at the base of his son's skull, "and go all the way down the inside of your back."
The camera gets a good shot of the tube tracing down the boy's spine. The picture then moves up overhead and zeroes in on the box, just to be sure there's nothing else in there.
Ar closed the window and moved the file into the folder with everything else due to be offloaded to external memory before he headed back to school in the new year. His eyes refocused on the TV in time to catch the closing number of Holiday Inn, Papa's favorite.
Tales of Awesome:
The Arthur Rawlings Story
Christmas, Age 6
As the title fades, the camera pans down, past the two drowsy men on the couch, to the little beaming face of a boy half-buried in a mountain of ribbons and colored paper. The boy bears a passing resemblance to Arthur Rawlings ten years later, if the cheek bones were a little higher, the nose a little straighter, the chin a little better defined. The shot zooms in and out rapidly a few times, much to his delight, followed by a blur of ceiling, wall, tree, window, father, and finally rug. The boy's laughter all but drowns out his Papa's admonitions about precision equipment and his Daddy's chuckling, murmured reminder that they built it to withstand the nuclear apocalypse for a reason.
"Try again, Artie," Daddy's voice says louder, still chuckling.
The camera rights itself and the angle lifts up once more into the air, steadier this time. The boy takes to the wireless controls like he was born for it. After all, he was. There's one package left, and the shot homes in on it. Artie knows what's in there. It's a talking Pikachu with light-up cheeks and posable legs and tail. He's been hinting about it with all the subtlety of a semi, even requesting a visit to Santa, despite the long talk he and his dads had the year before about fantasy and reality. Every family dinner for the past two months, every one with at least one dad present, has featured Artie's well-rehearsed Pikachu impression, reciting every phrase this marvelous toy says by heart. He even found a way to add sound effects, a crackling buzz coaxed out of one of the thingies in his chest that sounded just like a Thundershock charging up. He missed the last week of school and the class Christmas party while recovering from an emergency repair.
And now all the work is about to pay off in one last storm of shredded paper. The camera zooms in close, sizes up the prey from all sides, spies for weaknesses in the Scotch Tape defenses. There it is! The perfect opening for quickest entry. A small hand enters the picture, visibly trembling with the thrill of anticipation. The professionally wrapped paper never stood a chance; it's gone in less than five seconds. The lid of the plain brown box underneath suffers much the same fate, never again able to close properly. The camera zooms out to take in the whole scene, child, parents, and prized toy.
Daddy and Papa beam proudly. Little Artie's face shows first shock, then confusion, disappointment, and finally, looking up at his dads, abject joy.
"Wow! What is it?" he cries out, excitement plain for all to see.
Papa slides off the couch and crawls across the multicolored wasteland formerly known as his living room to the box and the boy. He reverently lifts out a long, slender, bendy tube with wires blooming out of both ends and at several points along its length.
"This little baby is going to let you control everything that's going on inside you. It'll start up under here," he said, holding one end at the base of his son's skull, "and go all the way down the inside of your back."
The camera gets a good shot of the tube tracing down the boy's spine. The picture then moves up overhead and zeroes in on the box, just to be sure there's nothing else in there.
Ar closed the window and moved the file into the folder with everything else due to be offloaded to external memory before he headed back to school in the new year. His eyes refocused on the TV in time to catch the closing number of Holiday Inn, Papa's favorite.