The Great Christmas Monkey Hunt

[Rough scrap from a story to be writ­ten at some point in the future.]

Annie, age six, saw it first. She squealed, tiny hands pressed flat against the win­dow that looked out across the back yard, and cried: “An elf! AN ELF!”

I darted over, pushed my nose against the glass above her, and a chill ran through me—the chill of a strange sil­hou­ette in your king­dom. Annie was right: there, at the far end of the yard, was the shape of a lit­tle bent-​​over man strug­gling through the snow-​​drifts. But it wasn’t actu­ally a man, and it wasn’t a child, either. The shape was truly tiny. Miniature.

My brain was primed from watch­ing Planet Earth in school this year, and I rec­og­nized the shape: It was a mon­key. (In the next moment, a flash of won­der: I’d actu­ally used some­thing I learned in school.)

Holy shit,” said Uncle Mike, lean­ing over my shoul­der. From the out­side, he and Annie and I must have made a Truman-​​family totem pole. “That’s a macaque.”

The lit­tle mon­key kept its pace, stum­bling step-​​by-​​step. It really did look like a lit­tle old man with long, lanky arms. It even had the sug­ges­tion of a bushy gray beard. Then the wind rose and gusted for a stretch of sec­onds, pulling a scrim of white across the win­dow, and when it fell, the mon­key was gone, dis­ap­peared over the bound­ary into the next yard.

There were many ques­tions. Where had this macaque come from? What was it doing in Min­neapo­lis? Had it been brought here and given as a gift? Who would give a mon­key as a Christ­mas present? How did it escape?

Was it dan­ger­ous? (Mom.) Could we keep it? (Annie.) How did Uncle Mike know any­thing about mon­keys, any­way? (Me.)

Tru­mans were suit­ing up: Dad pulling on his thick black boots. Cousin Mike Jr. paus­ing his video game and instruct­ing Annie in loud, mono­spaced syl­la­bles: “Don’t. touch. this. Okay? Don’t. touch. it.” Uncle Mike rum­mag­ing in the closet for ski goggles.

And me, beg­ging to come along. Dad agreed, I think because he hadn’t seen the macaque him­self and wasn’t quite con­vinced it was real. Also because he knew I would be annoy­ing to Mom and Aunt Ron­nie if he left me behind.

Uncle Mike cracked the back door and it was like open­ing an air­lock; the warmth was sucked out of the room, out into the sil­very swirl. I felt like Mas­ter Chief in my lay­ers of snow-gear—thick and sturdy and a lit­tle stiff. We all tromped out onto the porch, and Mom sealed the ship behind us and waved farewell through the glass.

I fol­lowed behind Dad, hop­ping to place my steps in the craters he made with his black boots. We were going back across the yard, straight to where we’d seen the macaque last. I nar­rowed my eyes and made a tough expres­sion under my scarf. There might be macaques everywhere.

The Great Christ­mas Mon­key Hunt had begun.