The Book Nymph Publishing & Promotions Tiny Tale Edition
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Transcript of The Book Nymph Publishing & Promotions Tiny Tale Edition
The Book Nymph Publishing &
Promotions
December 2015 “Tiny Tale” Edition
Featuring:
“The Ticking Ring” by, K.N. Lee
“Red” by, David S. Reynolds
“Ghosts of Christmas Past” by, Lynda Cox
“Of Dogs and Women” by, Jeané Sashi
“Winter in the West” by, David S. Reynolds
“A Heart in Autumn” by, Kyra Dune
“The Cloth” by, Eboney Thompson
“Aiden and Axel” by, Alex Ang
“There Arose Such a Clatter” CJ McKee
The Ticking Ring
By, K.N. Lee
lla’s breath escaped her lips in a puff of vapor. She licked her lips. The taste
of her sweet mango lip gloss made her smile. Snow fell from the sky in steady
sheets, covering everything in a thick layer of white. She took a sip of her hot
chocolate and delighted in the way the thick liquid warmed her from the inside out.
She sighed and snuggled into Jack’s side.
Ella frowned to herself as she shivered. She wore two layers of clothing, a
coat, gloves, a hat, and a scarf, and was still freezing. She couldn’t understand how
Jack could tolerate the cold with nothing but a thin jacket and scarf.
“How long are we supposed to wait out here?” Ella looked around at the quiet
park. The trees swayed slightly with the cold wind. The stars above seemed to flicker
around the pale moon.
Jack shrugged. He pulled her in closer and kissed her left cheek. “Maybe
another five minutes, tops. You okay?”
Ella nodded and rested her head on his shoulder. “Yeah. I’m just cold. I’m a
southern girl. I’m not used to this Arctic chill.”
Jack chuckled and wrapped her in his coat. “We’re in Ireland, not Iceland!
You mean to tell me they don’t have winters in Savannah?”
Ella glanced up at him. A snowflake rested on her nose. She closed one eye
and scrunched up her face as she looked at it. “Not like this. I’m sorry darling, but
I’ve never been a fan of the cold.”
“That’s unfortunate,” Jack said.
A hint of disappointment in his voice made her pause. She kissed his cheek,
and dusted more snow off her knees. “I just hope that whatever you have planned
happens quickly. I’m getting buried in snow.” Ella made a face. “I didn’t even know
Ireland got so much snow!”
Jack stood. He pulled her up to her feet. He winked at her. “It normally
doesn’t, sweetheart.”
E
Ella heard a howling as the wind picked up. She looked around, startled.
“What is it, Jack?” Her voice came out cracked. She clutched his arm and held on,
expecting to be carried away as the wind blew fiercely at the both of them.
Ella saw a light in the distance. Like a comet it shot towards them from the
thick forest.
She squealed. “Look, Jack! What is that?” She gripped Jack’s arm and pointed
towards the light. The light grew brighter and nearly blinded Ella. She gasped. “Jack!
It’s coming!”
“Calm down, my love. Everything is happening as it should.” Jack turned to
face her.
Ella raised a brow. “What do you mean?” She looked around. “What’s going
on?”
He grinned. Something strange happened to his image. His body seemed to
go translucent and a startled cry escaped Ella’s lips.
Ella covered her mouth. His blue eyes seemed to sparkle. She’d always loved
his eyes. The day they met on her tour of Ireland exactly one year ago, she’d felt
something almost magical whenever she looked into them.
Now, she was almost afraid. She started to take a step away, but Jack took her
hands in his. Ella stood still. The wind wrapped around them, but she didn’t care.
Something in his eyes calmed her. He kissed the back of both of her hands and fell
to his knees.
Ella’s jaw dropped as she realized what was happening. Jack reached into his
pocket and pulled out a glittering box.
“Jack!” Ella’s eyes widened. She swirled around, stunned by the fact that they
were now surrounded by people. All dressed in blue or white, the people clapped
and nodded their approval towards Ella. Ella’s heart thumped in her chest. She did
not care that they were smiling. The silence frightened her. She could see them, but
she could not hear anything coming from the crowd.
Still, they cheered her on in silence.
“Ella,” Jack began. “I’ve been meaning to ask you something.”
Ella shivered. She did not like the look in their eyes. Happiness was written
all over their pale faces, but their eyes were black and hollow. There was no real life
in their eyes.
“Who are they?” The words slipped from her cold lips in a whisper.
“They are my family.”
Ella shook her head. “I don’t understand.” The thought of fleeing crossed
Ella’s mind, but Jack’s hand holding hers kept her still.
“Listen to me, my sweet. I’ve been searching for hundreds of years for that
perfect woman. And then…I met you. I knew from the moment I saw you that you
were meant to be my beloved queen. I knew that all of those years of waiting were
worth it, because I was just waiting for you to arrive on this Earth.”
Ella shook her head again. “Thousands?” Ella asked. “Did you say thousands
of years?”
Jack chuckled softly. He opened the box and the sound of a piccolo began to
fill her ears.
Ella gasped at the large diamond set in a golden band. Jack presented it to her.
She froze and stared at his face in awe.
Jack took her hand into his, kissed her knuckles, and took her glove off.
“I love you, Ella,” he whispered as he slipped the ring onto her finger.
The ring was lighter than she expected. Somehow it seemed to warm her entire
body, seemingly from the inside out. A wave of joy flooded Ella’s body and she
found herself grinning. The cold of the air around them hit her teeth but she did not
care.
The joy was so euphoric that she almost lost herself in the sensation.
Her mind raced. Her cheeks reddened with embarrassment. She had dreamed
about being proposed to since she was a child, but she never imagined such an
elaborate scene.
Ella bit her lip, and winced at the pain. She wasn’t dreaming. Something
fantastical was happening and she didn’t know how to process it. All she could do
was look around in awe, occasionally glancing back at Jack’s smiling face to
reassure herself this was real.
Jack’s family continued cheering in silence. They were shouting, smiling, and
clapping, and still Ella could hear nothing.
Jack looked so happy and hopeful. His charming smile stretched from ear to
ear. He nodded her on. “Will you, my love? Will you be my queen?”
“Queen?” Ella croaked. Her eyes widened even more as the diamond on her
left ring finger began to glow and tick like a clock. The ticking grew so loud that the
sound of the piccolo was drowned out by it.
Jack closed the ring box and the music abruptly stopped. He came to his feet,
kissed her gently on the lips, and pulled her away at arm’s length. “Yes, Ella. I’m
asking you not only to marry me, but to be my queen.”
Ella’s brows furrowed. She swallowed a lump in her throat. “Queen of what?”
Jack chuckled. “Your innocence and purity is what drew me to you.”
Ella shook her head. “I don’t understand, Jack.”
Jack turned her towards the wall of wind that encircled them. The faces of his
family began to swirl away and vanish. Their images were replaced by a castle made
of ice. “Have you ever heard the name, Jack Frost?”
She shot a look at him. “No…you’re not telling me you’re the Jack Frost?”
He nodded and pointed to the ice castle. “That is my home, where I rule over
winter. I need a queen, someone to help me with the task and to watch over the
children of the world.”
Ella covered her mouth with her hands. The glow of the ring drew her
attention again. It continued to tick. “Why is the ring ticking?”
Jack stroked her cheek. His smile faded. “It has a timer. You don’t have much
longer to make your choice.”
Ella paled. She hated decisions. She hated pressure. But, she knew she loved
Jack.
“Tell me, my love. Will you chose to go back to your life before me, where
you’ll forget you ever met me, or, will you join me in my kingdom? Together we
can change the colors of the leaves in autumn, create art and wonder for people to
enjoy. We can spread winter snow and joy to the people of the world. Doesn’t that
sound glorious?”
Ella glanced at him. Her eyes examined his face. His white skin was perfect.
His white hair was soft, and flew around his face as the wind continued to sweep
around them. Ella couldn’t help but smile. His happiness was infectious. Jack was
as cheerful and happy as a little boy.
She couldn’t remember seeing him that happy before. Not even she could
make him as joyful as he was when he spoke of spreading winter and creating art
with the seasons.
Ella pulled her hand from his and took a step towards the vision of his castle.
It was a grand sight. The beauty of its towers and gardens of blue and white flowers
captivated her. She touched the image before her.
She winced. The air stung her with its chill. Like water, it rippled. Ella yanked
her hand back and put it in her pocket. She frowned at the vision. Its beauty somehow
made her sad.
“Will I be able to see my family?”
Jack was silent.
Ella glanced back at him. He shook his head. Ella filled with sadness. She
couldn’t imagine a life without her mother, father, and two brothers. Then, she
thought of being a queen.
She smiled. She’d be able to live with Jack in happiness.
In a cold ice castle, Ella thought. Her smile faded and she looked down at the
ring. The ticking made her shudder. Her time was running out. She could feel it.
Ella made her choice.
She took the ring off and handed it to Jack. Tears filled her eyes when she saw
the hurt in his face. The look of devastation morphed his features. She was almost
too afraid to look at him any longer. She put her glove back on and looked down at
her feet.
“I’m sorry, Jack. I love you, but I could never leave my family.”
Once again, Jack fell to his knees but this time he held his hands in prayer.
His eyes were wide with hope. Tears froze on his cheeks. “But, Ella. What if I
brought your family to my castle as well? There are many rooms. They’d be happy
there. You’d be happy. Right?”
There was the slightest thud of snow as Ella knelt before him and took his
hands in hers. She kissed his hands and used them to cup her face. She closed her
eyes, savoring the feel of his palms on her cheeks and his fresh, evergreen smell for
the last time. She wrapped her arms around his neck.
“Darling, you cannot bring my entire family. Even a life with them in your
castle would be a lonely one. Take my brother, for example. You bring him along,
but what about his wife’s friends and family? Could you bring them too? Can you
bring my entire family tree…and their friends and extended family?”
Jack’s shoulders slumped. “I suppose not.”
She smiled sadly, and wiped a frozen tear from his cheek. “I love you, but I
cannot live the life of a queen in your world.”
He nodded. “I wish that was not your choice, but I understand.”
Ella kissed him. “Forgive me”
He nodded and a tear turned into ice on his cheek. “It’s fine. I knew it was a
lot to ask of a mortal.”
She held back a sob as she whispered in his ear. “I’ll love you forever. And I
will never forget you. I will remember you with each snowflake and winter wind.
You’ll be with me every time I jump in a pile of orange leaves with my nieces and
nephews, or when I drink hot chocolate and watch as the kids in the neighborhood
build snowmen.”
Jack laughed softly. “You’re right, Ella.”
Ella gasped as he vanished.
She was all alone in the snow, confused, unsure of what had happened. Was
it real, or was it all just a dream? Then, she heard a soft voice on the wind.
“I’ll always be with you, Ella… Always...”
K.N. Lee
Connect with K.N. Lee
www.Kn-Lee.com
www.WriteLikeAWizard.com
www.Facebook.com/knycolelee
www.twitter.com/knycole_lee
Red
By, David S. Reynolds
Holiday Art/Photography
David S. Reynolds
Connect with David
www.davidsreynolds.weebly.com
Facebook @ Renaissance Redneck Media
Twitter @davidsreynolds1
Sign up for David’s email list and get notified of new releases and
sales! http://eepurl.com/3rj4D
Ghosts of Christmas Past
By, Lynda Cox
Christmas Eve, 1883
llison startled with the deep laugh behind her. She turned in time to see
A.J. lift their four year old daughter into his arms. Pamela wrapped
slender arms around his neck and snuggled deeply under his chin. As
happened every time her husband and daughter were together, Allison
was struck with the thought that other than being her mother, she truly
had nothing to do with the little girl. Pamela shared her father’s hair and eye color,
her features were a softer, very feminine version of A.J.’s, right down to the same
arch of her brows.
“We’re making your favorite pie, Daddy. I’m helping,” the child announced.
“I can tell you’re helping.” The amusement in his voice broke into a short
chuckle. “Your little hand prints are all over the back of Mommy’s skirt.” He placed
a kiss on Pamela’s raven head and set her on the floor. “Why don’t you go play with
A
your doll in the parlor? I need to talk to Momma.” He lifted the toy from the
miniature high chair he had built just for Pamela’s doll, smoothed the corn-silk hair,
and handed her to the little girl.
Once Pamela had skipped from the warm kitchen, A.J. crossed the room,
moving the bottle of molasses away from the large Hoosier stove. “Molasses, sugar,
bourbon, pecans…what are you up to, Alli?”
“What makes you think I’m up to anything?” He knew her too well. She
dusted her hands off, and lifted the rolled out crust, placing it into a cast iron skillet.
His brow quirked up and amusement danced in the cobalt depths of his eyes.
Leaning a hip against the counter, he crossed his arms over his chest. “The last time
you made me a pecan pie you made sure I had a piece before you told me about that
mangy cur you dragged home.” The deep Kentucky drawl he usually kept in check
emerged fully. “You made a pecan pie before you told me about buying a new
harness for the buggy.”
“Champ was not mangy when I brought him home. Thin, but not mangy,”
Allison protested in her own defense. “And he’s turned into a good working dog. As
to the new harness, after one of the straps broke, it was time to get a new one.”
“I’ll ask again. What are you up to that you need to make me a pecan pie
before you tell me about it?”
Deciding that the truth might be her best option, Allison poured the bubbling
pie filling into the crust. “I have a surprise for you.”
“Does it have anything to do with the wooden box from my sister that Thom
delivered today?” He picked out a pecan toasting on the stove top, tossing it from
hand to hand as it cooled.
“Yes, and stop eating the pecans. I need them for the pie.”
The crooked grin she loved so well crossed his face. “You won’t miss one.”
A.J. pressed a kiss to her temple and then walked to the doorway. He paused for a
moment. “Should I be worried that you and my sister have planned a surprise for
me?”
“No. She merely facilitated the delivery.” It was an honest answer. She was
more worried about his reaction. When she had first written to his sister with this
plan, Elizabeth warned her it might not be a good idea.
****
A.J. located a pry bar in the tack room. Walking toward the house, he
wondered again what could possibly be in that box and why Allison was questioning
her decision to surprise him with its contents, so much so that she insisted on putting
Pamela to bed before allowing him to open the wooden crate. He paused in the yard,
drawing a deep breath, wincing with the shattering cold air entering his lungs. Lifting
his head, he stared into the clear night sky, picking out constellations that shimmered
and danced in the velvety expanse, and took in the glowing grandeur of the Milky
Way spilling across the blackness. His gaze skipped over the ranch house, lingering
for a moment on the soft light spilling from the parlor windows.
Five years ago, he never would have dared to dream his life could be so full.
Five years ago, he was hell bent on finding the man who had destroyed his life,
leaving him broken physically as well as emotionally. Five years ago, his nightmares
of his tenure in a Union run prisoner of war camp often dragged him into a strange
state of being wide awake but unable to differentiate between the past and the
present. And, then Allison had almost missed a train…
He made his way into the house through the kitchen and poured himself a cup
of coffee. He found Allison in the parlor, staring at the wooden box that stood next
to the Christmas tree. After a quick sip of the hot brew, he asked, “Should I go get
another piece of that pecan pie to sweeten me up for this?”
She didn’t take her gaze from the box as she said in a near whisper, “I don’t
think the whole pie will.”
That startled him. Usually, his teasing brought about a similar teasing
response. “Alli, what’s in the box?”
She shook her head, still not looking at him. “Just open it.”
He set his cup on the side board and levered the pry bar under an edge of the
box lid. The cry of nails pulling from the wood sounded abnormally loud in the small
parlor. Lifting the lid, he caught a glimpse of a gilded frame buried in shavings. He
pulled the picture from its security within the long, curling shreds of wood and turned
the canvas around.
He stared at the group portrait, viewing faces he hadn’t seen in almost two
decades: his long deceased first wife, his two daughters from that marriage.
Breathing became difficult and his head was swimming with the memories swirling
around him. Cathy had been depicted seated gazing up at him, Caroline standing
behind her mother, while he stood at Cathy’s side, holding a three year old Aimee
Grace. The young child had her head resting on his shoulder, her tiny hand clutching
the lapel of his shell jacket. Commissioning the portrait had meant selling a top stud
horse north into Ohio for cold, hard Yankee gold.
“She was beautiful,” he heard Allison murmur, as if from miles away, and he
wasn’t sure if she referred to his deceased wife or either of his daughters, their lives
tragically ended so young.
“Where did you get this?” The only time he had seen the portrait—as it had
been completed after his Christmas leave had ended—it had been hanging in its
frame in slashed tatters, a victim of the men who had attempted to burn Clayborne.
“Elizabeth told me she had the cabinet card that portrait was painted from.”
Allison moved closer to the portrait. “I wanted to give you something special for
Christmas. She had seen the original so she supervised the recreation.”
A.J. forced in a deep breath, unable to form a coherent thought. The sudden
silence in the parlor grew until Allison whispered, “I’m sorry. I didn’t intend to bring
up painful memories.”
Her apology halted his careening, jumbled thoughts. “You didn’t bring up
painful memories. Almost all of the memories I have of them are good.”
She lifted her face to him, those chocolate eyes he’d once sworn he could
drown in dark with doubt. He closed the distance between them and pulled her into
his arms. “There’s nothing to be sorry for. It’s a beautiful and thoughtful gift, Alli,
and I appreciate it.”
Her shoulders hitched with her quick breath. He tightened his arms around
her, pressing a kiss to the top of her head.
“But, they’re my past; dead and buried.” Glancing at the portrait again, he was
struck with the uncanny resemblance between Aimee Grace and Pamela. “You and
our daughter are my here and now, my whole future. I can’t and I don’t want to
imagine my life without you. I told you the night I asked you to marry me that I was
not holding onto a ghost, that you have my whole heart.”
Her shoulders hitched again. Levering back from her, but not fully releasing
her from his embrace, A.J. said, “I want to send that painting back to my sister.
Elizabeth and Cathy were the best of friends. She was Cathy’s maid of honor at our
wedding and godmother to Caroline and Aimee. Let her keep that portrait. We’ll
find someone here to take our picture—you, me, and Pamela—to hang over the
mantel.”
Allison nodded and even managed a watery smile.
“I just have one request, Mrs. Adams. The next time you bake a pecan pie,
will you please not have a reason for it?”
Lynda Cox
Connect with Lynda
www.facebook.com/LyndaJCox (Facebook)
http://lyndajcox.blogspot.com (blog)
https://twitter.com/#!/LyndaCox (Twitter handle)
lyndajcox.com (web site)
Of Dogs and Women
By, Jeané Sashi
he Los Angeles Rain, although practically seasonal, was still an object of
fascination and relaxation to Patricia. Letting her work and her thoughts go
by the wayside, she gazed out her window, trying to watch each drop of rain
as it hit the concrete below, her attention only refocused by an occasional passerby,
and her eyes would follow them until they walked out of her line of sight. The
calming patter of the precipitation was slowly lulling her to sleep, as she pulled her
head from her hands with a great deal of effort.
It had been nearly two months since she left Quebec, Canada to go to graduate
school at the University of California at Los Angeles. Many people objected to her
leaving, and sometimes she herself objected, even after the move. This was one of
those times. She had a paper to do, and right now, she didn't feel like doing anything,
but she managed to take the pen in her hand and start writing. One word: "The" was
written before the little blue wooden dog sleeping on her desk drew her attention
T
away. "Wish I could sleep all day like you," she said. The dog had been a present
from Carl before she left; it was kind of a thank you for putting up with him. The
thought brought a smile to her face, and she began to mentally reminisce about
Quebec, Canada, Dusty, Lisa, and Alex.
After about a minute she realized she was drifting once again, and groaned at
the almost blank piece of paper in front of her. There was no way she was going to
get the paper done in her current state of mind, so she grabbed her coat and umbrella
and headed out the door. The rain had worn down to a few sprinkles by the time she
had gotten back, yet the cold and the clouds retained their iron grip on the landscape.
Managing to kick the door shut, she sat her bag of groceries on the table and
shook out her umbrella, hoping not to get anything valuable wet. She carefully
leaned it against her desk and moved to take the contents from the bag, first removing
a small piece of rawhide. Actually, it was a piece of fresh bone she had "borrowed"
from a neighbor's trash en route to the store, thinking it would be kind of funny to
put it near the blue dog. She did so, smiled at the scent then finished unpacking the
groceries.
As she shut the refrigerator door, she grabbed her cup of mocha and headed
back to her desk to hopefully start and finish that dreadful paper. Setting the cup
down, and grabbing a pen, she briefly glanced at the dog, it was gone. A look of
puzzlement washed over her face as she searched her desk. The wooden pit-bull had
disappeared. A faint noise drew her attention to the floor beside her, where the dog
was yawning and stretching out, seemingly ignoring the confines of its normal
sleeping form.
She stood and backed up as the dog tried to bite its tail. Realizing it couldn't,
due to the lack of teeth, it looked up at Patricia. They remained deadlocked, like that
for quite some time, but the short attention span of the dog caused it to lose the
staring match, and it began attacking a spot of paper on the floor. With the
convenient distraction, Patricia got hold of the phone and began to dial Will.
"Hello?"
"Hi, un...my dog is alive..."
"What?" Will's voice replied. Patricia turned to see the dog scamper into the
kitchen. "That blue dog Carl gave me is alive!"
"Oh no, please tell me you're kidding..."
"I'm quite serious."
"Great. Has it voiced its intentions to take over Los Angeles?"
"Luckily no; it's behaving like a normal dog would. Aside from the fact it can't
bite its tail itself.
"It can't bite its tail itself."
"It doesn't have any teeth."
"Well, that certainly is a problem." Will's sarcasm was quite apparent. "Are
there any sightings of the green marble?"
Patricia sat back down. "No, that's not what caused it...I put a rawhide bone
in front of it that I found, then it was stretching out on the floor a few minutes later.
"That's good news," he paused. "I say if it isn't going to kill you, you have a
nice new pet. You aren't allergic to wooden dogs are you?"
The dog ran back in front of her, glanced around crazily, and tore into the
other room. "I can't have a wooden dog running around my apartment, just like you
couldn't have a drunken bird lounging in yours!"
"All right, all right, I was just kidding. You say a rawhide bone started it up?"
"Yeah."
"Okay, what do dogs hate?"
"Cats."
"True, but you're going to have a hard time finding a live wooden cat. I was
thinking more along the lines of a bath. I've heard some dogs hate water."
The dog skittered back into the kitchen. "Are you saying that all I have to do
is dunk this thing?"
"Sounds like a plan to me."
She sighed. It might be some work just catching the hyperactive dog. "All
right, I'll try to and call you right back."
"Good luck."
"Bye." She hung up the phone and walked into the kitchen as the dog raced
between her legs back into the other room. "Here doggy!" She called after it. It
stopped in its tracks and turned to face her. "Wow that actually worked..." She
commented, and scooped up the dog. It was whimpering, obviously pleased with
being awake for once. Seeing this, Patricia began to feel guilty about ceasing its life.
She scratched its belly and released it, vowing to dunk it at the end of the day. The
dog ran off into the other room.
She called Will to tell him of her decision, and he wasn't too pleased with the
idea but, since the dog wasn't murderous or psychotic, he relented. After the brief
conversation, she sat back at her desk, picked up her pen, and started on her paper.
A few hours later, she put down her pen, stretched out in her chair, then stood
and yawned. The paper was done, and now she could goof off the rest of the day.
The rain had picked up again she discovered as she glanced out the window, so the
goofing off had to occur indoors. She hadn't heard a peep out of the dog, and she
found it staring at a corner for no apparent reason. On her approach it turned and
looked at her for a moment, then went back to watching the wall. Just as she turned
to leave, the dog was spooked by something, and ran from the room spitting and
barking. She tried to see what had scared the dog so but couldn't find anything
particularly terrifying. Patricia wondered if real dogs acted this strange.
She followed her wooden pet, and caught it tearing apart her newly finished
paper. Screaming "No!" she lunged at it, and managed to snag its back leg as it tried
to bolt for the kitchen. Gathering it up and gripping it tightly, she assessed the
damage to her paper, and realized it was irreparable. She glanced hatefully at the
dog, which was struggling mightily to free itself from her arms. She walked hastily
into the kitchen, turned on the faucet, and tried to reassure the dog that she wasn't
going to hurt it, although she really would have liked to.
The sink filled up but, before she could put the dog in, it freed itself from her
grip and clambered across the floor. "Come back here!" she yelled after it but, to no
avail, the dog was long gone. Sighing, she ran after it, and jumped onto her bed,
whirled and stood on hind legs, barking. "It's all right," she said. "It's all right. You
need a bath." The dog backed up, then leapt through the window to the ground below.
Patricia hoped the shattered glass didn't hit anyone below and she rushed to the
window to see what had happened.
It was pouring outside, the gutters working overtime to disperse the runoff,
and that's where the dog was lying, motionless. She signed in relief that no one had
seen the event and she grabbed her umbrella and decided to go down and retrieve it
before anyone found it. Upon arrival, Patricia discovered that her dog was back to
its normal position, and she bent to pick it up. It was sopping wet, the small black
and tan dots on its back faded and running.
She frowned; Carl's gift had been ruined. Nevertheless, she stuck it in the
pocket of her raincoat, and walked back to her apartment.
The rain began to taper off again, and a faint rainbow made itself known to
Patricia. The spectrum of colors distracted her from a bird flying swiftly south
overhead.
A mocking bird flew by.
©2014 Jeané Sashi
Jeané Sashi
Connect with Jeane
Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/author/jeane-sashi
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/JeaneEBennett
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/JeaneEBennett
Winter in the West
David S. Reynolds
Holiday Art/Photography
A
HEART IN AUTUMN
By, Kyra Dune
sat on the train staring out the window at the trees. Reds, oranges, and golds;
the trees in their fall clothes waiting for winter. Like me, though my own clothes
were not so bright and festive. But then, I felt neither bright nor festive so the
dull browns and grays I wore suited me fine.
`I hated the trees for facing the coming snows brightly arrayed like young girls
at a party. I was a young girl, but no party waited for me at the end of my long and
winding journey. A journey that had begun in death.
My mother was a nurse. She was all the family I knew. I often worried about
her going to the sick camps with all those diseased people. "Don't worry so, Anna,"
she would say with a smile. "Nurses don't get sick." Only she was wrong. Nurses do
get sick. They die and leave their teenage daughters to board trains to strange lands
to live with relatives they never even knew existed.
On the platform under the trees, groups of people were bidding goodbye to
their loved ones. Hugging and crying and carrying on as if it were the end of the
world. I hated them too. What did they know of the end of the world? Of sorrow?
Of goodbye? Goodbye was not a hug farewell at a train station, it was watching your
mother's coffin being lowered into the ground while the gray Autumn skies poured
misery.
Other passengers began to board the train. Chattering, smiling, even through
their tears. They took their seats with faces eager for the journey ahead. I wanted to
jump up, to scream, to tell them they had no right to look to winter with anticipation
while my life was disintegrating around me.
I remained in my seat, looking out the window at the trees as the train began
to roll.
****
The train ride was a cold blur filled with people talking and saying nothing at
all. A few friendly faces tried to start up a conversation with me, but they didn't
I
linger long. I suppose my expression too nearly matched the weather for their tastes.
So they moved on, looking for spring elsewhere.
And then a boy about my own age in a dark, hooded jacket, sat down in the
seat opposite mine. He didn't look at me. He didn't speak to me. Which was just as
well, because I was not in the mood for idle chatter.
Silence filled the air around us and became a dome of ice to hold the sun at
bay. The happy voices of the other passengers faded into the background. I was
comfortable with the silence when it was my own, less so now I found myself forced
to share it.
I kept thinking the boy would surely leave, but he didn't. He just continued
sitting there staring at his lap and intruding on my personal misery with his own.
"Couldn't you sit somewhere else?" My own voice was a stranger to my ears, it had
been so long since I heard it.
He lifted his head and looked at me with eyes gray as the clouded Autumn
sky. "Why?"
"Because..." But I could think of no reasonable reply. I crossed my arms and
stared out the window.
The silence came creeping back in, but the boy continued to stare at me. I tried
to pretend not to notice, but his gaze was like an itch crawling beneath my skin.
"Didn't your mother ever tell you it was rude to stare?"
"Didn't your mother ever tell you it was rude to ignore people?"
I looked him in the eyes. "My mother is dead." I expected him to flinch at the
words, to look away from me and stammer some kind of pointlessly sympathetic
phrase like everyone else.
Instead, he held my gaze like a challenge. "Mine isn't." He said the words as
if he'd wish to switch our circumstances.
"Why would you want your mother to be dead?"
He shrugged, breaking the hold of his eyes on mine. "My name's Evan."
"Anna." I gave my name automatically in reply, then scowled because I hadn't
intended to give it all. "Do you intend to sit here for the entire trip?"
"Maybe," He scuffed the toe of his sneaker against the floor.
"What if I don't want you to? What if I prefer to be alone?"
"Then I guess you'll have to move."
I narrowed my eyes. This was my space, my own personal island of misery,
and I was not about to give it over. "We'll see who moves first." I stared out the
window again, determined to not speak another word.
****
I woke with a start as the train came to a stuttering halt at the border. Lifting
my head from its rest against the window, I wiped a hand across my chin where a
line of spittle lay. I glanced over to see if Evan had noticed. He was looking intently
up the aisle with an expression of alarm. I turned in my seat to see what had his
attention.
The porter was coming up the isle checking passports. I took mine out of my
pocket, along with my permission card which allowed a person under eighteen to
ride the train alone. Then I understood Evan's expression. He didn't have such a card.
He wasn't supposed to be on the train. Now, I would be rid of him.
The porter stopped by our seats. "Passports."
We both handed ours over. The porter checked them and made notes on his
clipboard. "And your permission cards?"
Evan looked down at the floor. I wasn't sure why I did it, but when I handed
the porter my card I said, "We're together."
The porter noted this as well, then handed us back our papers and moved on.
I avoided looking at Evan while I put mine away.
"Why did you do that?" he asked.
I shrugged. I really wasn't sure, except maybe it was because for a moment I
felt something besides the endless misery that had for so long enveloped me in a
dark shroud. "Why are you running away?"
"I have my reasons." He fingered his passport, then slipped it into his pocket.
"Thanks."
A smile almost touched my lips. Surely it came closer than any smile had
since my mother's death. "You're welcome."
A moment of silence passed. Somehow less cold than those which came
before it.
"How much further are you going?" Evan asked.
"Fifty miles. You?"
He shrugged.
So, he was only running from something, not to it. I had thought it was terrible
to have to go to some unfamiliar place, but maybe it would be worse to have no place
to go at all. "They have a ranch," I said, unsure of why I was telling him this.
"My...my family. I suppose they'll expect me to get up at dawn to milk cows or
something."
A smile twitched at the corner of his lip. "Not exactly your idea of a good
time?"
I shook my head. "I was raised in the city. I've never even seen a cow in the
flesh."
"Me neither."
I looked at his face. Not a bad face, really. A little on the plain side, like my
own, but nice. "What will you do?"
Again, he shrugged.
"Haven't you thought about it?"
"Not really."
I found his reply oddly distressing.
*****
The train pulled into the station at my final destination as dawn was creeping
over the edges of the mountains. I looked to Evan. "This is my stop."
He nodded, looking out the window at the quiet, mostly deserted station so
different from the one we had disembarked from. "Is that your family?"
I followed his gaze to see a couple in work worn clothes rising from a nearby
bench. No one else in sight. "I guess it is." Much as I had not wanted to board this
train, much as I had craved solitude in which to drown in misery once I had, still I
found myself reluctant to leave behind this boy I barely knew.
A bell rang at the back of the train. A signal to the unlucky soul who was to
step out into this ghost gray dawning that the time was at hand. I stood, fingering the
hem of my coat. "I guess this is goodbye then."
Evan shrugged, his gaze fixed on the window. The easy dismissal stung me
when I had thought nothing would ever again touch the numbness in my heart.
I walked down the center aisle between the seats. No one looked at me. I didn't
care. But I did pause at the door to gaze over my shoulder one time. Evan was still
staring out the window, his face a blank reflection of the empty outside world.
The couple met me as I stepped off the train. Cousins, they were, and all the
family I had left with the passing of my mother. I judged them about her age.
"Hello, Anna." The woman smiled at me.
"Hello." I didn't smile back. I had nothing to smile for. Nothing to look
forward to but the deeper grays winter would soon bring.
Her husband took my single suitcase. "How was the ride?"
"Fine." I hoped they would soon cease this pointless chatter and allow me to
once again retreat into the sheltered box Evan had so briefly managed to draw me
out of.
"Good. Well," he cleared his throat. "I guess we should..." He frowned,
looking at something over my shoulder. "Do you need some help? Is somebody
supposed to be waiting here for you?"
"I'm all right. I can make my own way."
My breath caught at the sound of his voice. I turned and met Evan's gaze. A
brief smile flitted across his lips, warming a spot in my heart. Maybe spring wasn't
so far away after all.
Kyra Dune
Connect with Kyra
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Kyra-
Dune/136273741952?ref=bookmarks
Twitter: https://twitter.com/KyraDune
Blog: http://theshadowportal.blogspot.com/
Website: http://kyradune.weebly.com/
The Cloth
By, Eboney Thompson
I was comfortable and it felt good to be in.
I loved the way it caressed my baby soft skin
The way when inhaled, it's scent to me to different orbits
As the years went on I carried it wherever I went
I was open with it
I shared it with others
Not realizing that everybody wasn't worthy of it or was going to treat it like me
As I exposed it more terrible things began to happen to it
People used it, stomped on it, even ripped it to pieces
Shattered inside I vowed to never share my piece of cloth again
I mean no one valued it anyway
Until that day
That one day he walked into my life
Instantaneously he befriended me
And began to reopen doors I had bolted and forgotten even existed
He was like a clean, crisp, breath of fresh air that I had been needing
Reviving me with his every word
With his every glance and his every touch
He awakened dormant feelings in me
That I had buried in the deepest crevices of my very being and he...
He began to embed dreams of a life of Loyalty
A world that was Optimistic
A feeling of indescribable Value
And an Endless amount of treasures untold
Before I knew it, he had wrapped me in his LOVE
An array of questions filled my head
And like a magician he answered my unspoken questions
"I mended the rips and tears of your heart’s past
So that I could add the existence of our future
Swaddling us in our foundation, one we both need, which is Love"
His melodic truth made my heart skip beats and caused my mind to be at peace
Love
Love is what I had when I was brought into this world
Love is what I was giving away so freely
To those who misused and abused my precious gift
Love is what I vowed to never share again
Because my well had been dried out with no one or way to replenish it
But now, I'm back,
Back swaddled in love’s "cloth" even tighter than before
And it's just as I remembered
But better
I'm comfortable again and it feels so good to be wrapped....
In love.
Eboney Thompson
Connect with Eboney
Facebook: Eboney Thompson,
Instagram: @4evrbeautyful15
Twitter: @alisteningear21.
Aiden and Axel
By, Alex Ang
um, Mum! Tell me another. Tell me again how the big man in the
beard came to be. Tell me the story of the flying horses!” he begged
to his mother.
“But it’s half past bedtime, and the bell has yet to ring midnight. You haven’t
missed Christmas.” she cooed back to him.
“I want to hear the story now. Please, Mum.” He whined.
“So be it.” She told her son. She looked into the warm eyes of her son and
reached down to touch his cheek. “Just one story, and then you’re off to bed.”
He nodded rapidly in response, eager to hear the story. She sat up preparing
herself for the fistful of words that would soon pour out, and began:
Snow fell in tiny increments. There were large patches of white that now
appeared on the ground before them. It was freezing outside! The weather was
predicted to be in the 30’s, but felt like it had stooped way below that. But in a hidden
and isolated house in the North, a man and woman sat clutching their child in their
arms near the hearty fireplace. This house was concealed from the rest of the world.
No one could see it. No one could hear it. No one could smell the cinnamon cookies
and hot chocolate that was being produced inside it. And that was how the Claus’
liked it. Security. Obscurity. And away from the rest of the world.
“M
“We’re getting ready to leave in the morning. Prepare the gifts, collect the
reindeers and whatnot.” He said to his wife. “Could we bring little Aiden with us?”
“Hey! That’s my name Mum. He has the same name as me!” He interrupted
and threw his fists in the air, obviously excited after hearing his name in the story.
She threw him a glance, and he knew from then on never to interrupt during
storytelling time ever again. She went on:
“You know how dangerous it is. You will see him after you come back.” She
warned.
He frowned because he knew that as much as he loved his child, there was
nothing he could do for him. He could never tell his son about his true identity, and
therefore he could never tell him how much he loved him. She took the man into a
tight embrace and led him back into the bedroom. In the morning he would be able
to see his child again but for now, he just needed to prepare for the big day that was
supposed to come. He followed his wife back without hesitation, without another
thought. He just climbed back into bed and fell into a deep slumber.
In the still and silent night as Mr. and Mrs. Claus were sleeping, a sound
erupted from the side of the house. The shuffle of footsteps outside could be heard
with such precision, such clarity. The sound came again and it wasn’t long until a
storm of sounds came rushing into the house where the three members inside slept
so peacefully. But no one heard the sounds, except for little Aiden, who murmured
softly in his sleep.
“Take the child and nothing else.” One of the sounds snarled. Another and
another, they kept coming! They gathered towards the tiny crib that stood on the left
corner of the house. They lifted it slightly and smiled as the crib rose a few inches
above the ground. The sound of tiny prancing feet was even louder than before.
The mysterious invaders saw their exit and flew towards it, almost as if they
had already planned this, had already seen it happening in their minds and knew
exactly where to go. Mr. and Mrs. Claus were certainly out of it, as they didn’t stir
in their sleep and were positioned like lifeless logs. The invaders were closing in on
the door. After they pulled that knob, the kidnapping would have been over and the
family inside would never hear from their son Aiden, ever again.
Along with the house, there was a barn. The barn was coated with a noticeable
red paint and garnished from top to bottom with strings of bells and popcorn.
Christmas lights were strapped to the sides, allowing for that perfect holiday glow.
Inside lived these majestic animals, bred and trained to be highly eloquent and, at
times, aggressive when it came to facing danger. One creature in particular, named
Axel, purred and shook in his sleep, awakening a strange feeling that dwelled in his
insides. There was something wrong, and he knew it because he always detected
danger. As far away or as silent as it was, he always detected it. His head lifted off
the ground as he heard crash after crash and boom after boom. He quickly lifted
from his comfortable position and wandered out the back of the barn.
There! He saw it! A swarm of green specks preparing to enter what looked to
be a shuttle. Axel knew exactly what to do! But first, he had to wake the boss.
Axel threw himself into the house and barged into the first room on the right
side of the hallway. There he saw him and hurried to be by his side.
A massive clump of saliva rested on the tip of Mr. Claus’ nose and he was
awake in a matter of seconds, swatting at the undesired smell that now lingered on
the sides of his sinuses.
“What’s the matter with you?” Mr. Claus bellowed from his position on the
bed. His eyes were weirdly dark and a cloud appeared to be resting on his shoulder.
He hadn’t been able to sleep and Mrs. Claus, who was now also sitting up was now
aware of that.
“Tell us what the matter is, Axel” Mrs. Claus asked politely as she rubbed the
ear of the animal.
The creature couldn’t speak, obviously. They both knew just to follow it to
wherever it was leading them. As Axel led them quickly down the hallway and out
the door, Mrs. Claus stopped to gather her child from the crib. Her eyes hollowed
and her mouth dropped open when she saw the empty crib. No sign of life. No sign
of anything. There was nothing inside!
“Go!” Mrs. Claus said as she pointed to the door. Mr. Claus didn’t question.
He didn’t hesitate because from the look of his wife’s face, he had spontaneously
predicted the matter before he wanted to believe that something like this would
actually happen.
Outside he saw the swarm. Saw the little devils that were now holding his
prized possession. His hope. His only son! Mr. Claus was armed with a cane that he
was using to swat at the little creatures that crawled up his undergarments, trying
to pin him down altogether. Axel was already near the shuttle, attempting to
dismember it. He kicked and pounded on the metal contraption. The child. The child
was inside.
Everything happened in a flash, however. Mr. Claus was now sitting on the
cold snow, rendered unconscious. Axel was pummeled backwards by the ignition of
the shuttle. And Mrs. Claus was now sitting hopelessly beside the two of them, fumed
and angered.
When both Mr. Claus and Axel had regained consciousness, they both found
Ms. Claus in a pool of tears. She was still in her sleeping clothes, wearing nothing
but a long-neck tunic and a pair of pajama pants. She hadn’t decided to put on a
jacket or coat, even though it was assumed to be under 30 degrees.
“My wife…” he proceeded with caution. His wife was indeed fragile when she
was crying. But he couldn’t help but ask. He had hoped that while he was knocked
out, she would have made an attempt to stop the shuttle or even slow it down. “Where
is our son?”
“Gone, my husband. Our son is gone.” She stopped in between words to weep.
And her voice croaked as she spoke.
Mr. Claus now stood, his fists clenched together at his sides. When he was
watching Axel tear apart the shuttle, he had hoped that the creature would have
inflicted some sort of damage that it would somehow allow them to track it. And he
was right! Before him, was a trail of dark and grimy liquid that burned through the
snow. Engine grease! That’s it! The shuttle had to be leaking and somehow Mr.
Claus was eagerly prepped to follow the trail. But the problem was, Mr. Claus
hadn’t been the only one to find the trail of grease. The sound of slays and bells
came from the sky above him. The sound of Axel’s collar rang, as he floated through
the sky, following the sight of grease. And then he was gone, just like that.
And at that moment, the Claus’ had never felt so disheartened in their life.
They had lost their son. And now they had lost their best reindeer, Axel. Her world
was shattered, and his along with it.
They followed each other back inside the house, and mourned.
Christmas came in unannounced for Mr. and Mrs. Claus. The sound of
children running around and cheering in the village of Yelsburg was loud enough to
be heard from inside the house. But they wouldn’t be cheering for long. They
wouldn’t be cheering when Santa’s gifts never made it under their Christmas trees.
They wouldn’t be cheering when the annual sight of reindeers and the words ‘ho ho
ho’ never made it around their block. And they wouldn’t be cheering if the cookies
that sat on their counters were never eaten.
Mr. Claus sat on his rocking chair. He rocked forward and thought about how
he would never see his child again. He rocked back and thought about how he would
never see Axel again. The pattern repeated and it wasn’t until Mr. Claus was worn
out of the bones, did he stop and head to bed. The night of Christmas had finally
begun, but Santa was sleeping.
The next morning came fast and the sky was rewarded with the rising sun, its
colors shining hues of orange and pink. Mr. Claus stepped outside like it had been
days before he had last done it. His foot slightly touched the chilled snow, but he
still didn’t feel anything. He didn’t feel the bitterness on his toes nor the feeling of
goose bumps that was now rolling up his spine. Mrs. Claus came out, and she rested
her hand on the large of his back. There was no use in comforting him, but she could
at least show him that she cared. And that she was still here for him, even though his
son and his first comrade weren’t.
Mr. Claus looked towards the landscape. There was nothing there save the
sun and a dark shadow that sloped up the side of the hill. He walked towards it,
mesmerized. Could it be? Could it be? Mrs. Claus suddenly seemed to notice the
same thing. The figure that looked in the shadows appeared to be Axel. Axel, their
number one reindeer, their closest thing to a son before they gave birth to Aiden.
The reindeer came galloping towards the two people who were standing in
awe. Mr. Claus was the first to pull the reindeer into a squeezing embrace. He patted
the top of its head, and he felt a stream of tears falling from the crevices of his eye.
He had never shown Axel his love, but when he saw the crib that was attached to the
back of the reindeer, he showed much of his proper appreciation. Mrs. Claus joined
the rejoicing.
“Axel, my esteemed friend. You are the protector of Aiden. He is your child
as much as he is mines. Thank you.” He exclaimed to the reindeer, who seemed to
be listening to every word as if he clearly understood English.
From then on, the two were connected. Axel never went anywhere without
Aiden; Aiden refused to go anywhere without his reindeer. And Mr. Claus had not
needed to worry about their son from then on because he was with his protector,
with the reindeer that risked his life to save him. So he left, and he promised to return
one day. His son couldn’t know who he was but he would always know who his
reindeer was, and that was fine by him.
Her son was speechless. He didn’t say anything for a while after he got up to
brush his teeth and let her tuck him into bed. But when she got ready to leave his
room, he finally asked his question.
“Mum, was that story real?” he asked with great concern.
“Aren’t all the stories I tell you real?” she asked in response. He nodded. “So
what makes this story any different?”
It took him a moment to realize her reason for telling him this story. And just
like that, he put it together.
“So Mum.” He stopped her in his steps.
“Yes dear?” she could already predict the incoming question he was going to
ask.
“Where is my father?” he swallowed, still pondering the answer to himself.
But his mother just smiled and stalked out of the room without another word.
There Arose Such A Clatter - A Christmas Story
Written by CJ McKee Copyright 2007
t can’t be only two A.M. I swear it’s later than that. I thought to myself as I
sat up in bed so quickly, I nearly fell out of bed. My wife sleeps like a log.
She snorted a couple of times and turned towards me, her arm swinging
haphazardly through the air in search of my torso. Even in the dim light, I could see
her eyes open and look up at me.
“I thought I heard something,” I said, my dark eyes piercing hers.
“What?” she whispered in a hoarse voice as she sat up and leaned on one arm.
“Not sure, Donna. Shh. Listen!”
Silence.
“Did you hear that?” I said out louder this time.
“Phil, what is it?” she responded, glancing about the bedroom.
I
A sound like a deep car audio system pumping out the bass from some hip-
hop song passing down the street echoed off the walls, but came from the ceiling. I
grabbed her arm and her head slipped off and hit the pillow.
“Hey!”
“Sorry. You heard that, right?”
“It’s probably the neighbor’s T.V. again, hon.”
I shook my head and looked up at the ceiling and watched the shadows from
a tree outside the window dance across the textured surface. “No.”
I heard another sound, deeper within the house, a scraping…no, a tumbling!
“Ok, that’s it. I need to find out what’s goin’ on,” I stated as I threw the covers
back and slipped on my sandals. I grabbed my robe and shivered as the night air
surrounded me before I was able to get my robe on. “Stay here. If you don’t hear
from me in about ten minutes, call the police,” I whispered close to my wife’s face.
“Nuts to that, I’m going with you,” Donna stated as she scooped up the
cordless phone from the bed stand.
I sighed, nodded and opened the door. It, of course creaked loudly and we
both cringed. After a moment of waiting for any response, we made our way into the
hall and tiptoed past our daughter’s room. My wife peeked in to check on her, but
she remained asleep; none of the noises seemed to faze her while she dreamt of sugar
plums dancing, or however that saying goes. Donna closed the door and nodded for
me to continue on.
Just as we took a few more steps, we heard what sounded like rocks hitting a
concrete floor. I pursed my lips and held out my hand in front of Donna for her to
stop. I reached around the corner into the laundry room and grabbed the heaviest,
largest object I could find. Unfortunately it turned out to be a bottle of bleach. My
wife proved more competent and obtained the three foot wooden ruler hanging on
the wall. Well ok maybe it wasn’t that much better.
I shrugged to her and we made our way to the living room using the corner at
the end of the hallway as cover. I slowly ventured a view of the living room. Donna,
using my back as cover, peeked around me to get a better view. What we saw nearly
made our hearts stop and confounded our brains.
There by the twinkling light of our Christmas tree knelt a being that appeared
covered in fur. It was impossible to tell the color of the fur since the multi-colored
lights splashed across the beast into various hues and shadows. We could also hear
grunting and wheezing from the strange creature as it moved in and out of the low
hanging branches. In the darkness of the room and the shadows its head was
completely obscured. It appeared to have fur everywhere on its face and what
seemed like floppy ears and four eyes!
Suddenly, it sneezed! Loud!
We both jumped, my wife dropped her ninja yard stick and it tumbled and slid
across the linoleum floor. It clacked as it hit the wall and gained the attention of our
guest.
In one swift movement, the creature stood and raised its arms so it nearly
dwarfed the Christmas tree. The wheezing grew in intensity and it seemed as if it
took a deep breath before it finally bellowed.
“HO…HO…ACK!” The creature hacked and coughed, two of its four eyes
falling to the floor. “Oh, do forgive me. I am…unwell.”
Our jaws hit the floor along with the creature’s eyes. I reached back and let
my hand drift along the wall until I found the light switch and snapped it into the
“on” position. There before us, in a red furry costume, big black belt, oversized hat,
stood the man, the old Saint, of Christmas himself.
Instead of a bright red costume it appeared maroon because of the thin film of
soot from our chimney darkening its once bright hue. The white fur lining was
matted and stiff, the ends burned black from the fires and smoldering embers in
untold numbers of fireplaces. His beard had yellowed and thinned. The glasses he
now picked up from the floor and replaced on his nose were fogged and slightly
bent.
“Santa?” My wife finally managed to squeak.
“Yes my dear, it is me.” He replied. He sounded almost embarrassed to admit
it.
“What happened to you?” I asked while attempting to hide the bottle of bleach
behind my back.
“Nothing,” Santa deadpanned.
“Nothing?” Donna said.
“No,” Santa said.
“But your clothes, your beard, your health,” I said as I kneeled to drop the
bleach on the floor.
He chuckled quietly enough to prevent another cough. “’Tis normal for me,
son. By the time I have neared the end of my long, night’s route, as I have now, I
have flown around the globe in the cold night sky behind eight smelly reindeer,
climbed down tens of thousands of chimneys, placed hundreds of thousands of
presents under hundreds of thousands of trees, eaten five hundred pounds of half-
baked cookies, drank a hundred gallons of milk and made an ungodly number of
trips to the bathroom.”
“It starts out okay. I really look forward to those first couple of dozen cookies
to give me the sugar rush I need to make these deliveries, but towards the end I come
down from the sugar rush and feel like a wet sponge. The milk is great to wash them
down, but I have become lactose intolerant over the years of drinking so much milk,”
Santa paused to hold his great belly. “Thus the bathroom trips you see. My back is
killing me, I haven’t slept in weeks getting everything prepared and Mrs. Clause
nags me to the point of hysteria.” Old Saint Nick grinned and shrugged. “She is
really nice and wonderful throughout the rest of the year,” he said as he sat in the
big, plushy chair nearest the Christmas tree.
We both stood there, open mouthed with a reindeer eyes caught in the
headlights stare. What do you say to something like that? The poor man. He doesn’t
sound so jolly after all. “Santa, why do you do this to yourself every year?” I asked.
Just then a small voice called out from the hall. We turned to look down the
hall to see our daughter walking up to us and dragging a blanket behind her.
“Mommy?”
It was too late. She reached the end of the hall before we could stop her. She
saw Santa.
“Santa?” She said half asleep. Then her big green eyes grew to three time their
original size. “Santa!” She ran over to him and jumped up and down on the floor in
front of him. “Santa, Santa, Santa!”
We ran over and grabbed her, pulling her back from the tired old man who
looked like he was about to yak. “Honey, Santa’s not feeling well right now. We are
going to let him rest a moment and you can talk to him later tonight, okay?”
She turned to Santa and looked up at him with wistful eyes. “Santa? Are you
okay? What’s wrong?”
Santa chuckled slightly, stifling a cough. “Just a little tired, sweety. I will be
fine.”
With that, our daughter ran off to her room, blanket in tow.
“Is there anything we can do Santa?” My wife asked. Then we looked at each
other as if to read each other’s mind. I can’t believe we are talking to Santa Clause.
“You can rest here as long as you like, you know. Do you need anything? Some
warm milk perhaps? She stiffened and gave him an apologetic smirk. “Er, I mean
tea?!”
“If you wouldn’t mind. Mrs. Clause gets worried if I am late. Would you
please call the North Pole and tell her I am running a bit behind this year?”
“Of course we will,” I replied and took the phone from my wife. “Um. Right.
North Pole.” My fingers hovered over four-one-one. Then I thought better of it. “Um.
What’s the phone number?”
Santa told us the phone number and I dialed. This all seemed so surreal.
Calling the North Pole? Santa sick in our living room? Talking to Mrs.,”Clause!
How are you? Um, your husband, Santa…Kris. Er, Mr. Clause is not feeling well.
He is resting for a bit at our house. He said he will be running a bit behind this year,”
I looked at Santa and shrugged. His eyes twinkled and he chuckled.
I turned on the speaker so all could hear this gentle woman’s voice. “Well,
dear me, I told that man he needed to take it easy. We’re not getting any younger!
Thank you so much for taking care of my little Kris. Can I talk to the poor thing?” I
handed Santa the phone and nudged Donna into the kitchen so he could talk
privately.
“Can you believe this?” I said to my wife, incredulous.
Donna merely shook her head and smiled. What we caught of the conversation
between Santa and Mrs. Clause was sweet. Then, both of our heads turned into the
direction of the living room as we heard a small voice again. Our daughter had
returned. Kids have no sense of timing.
We peered around the corner to scold our daughter for disturbing Santa when
we caught our breath. There she stood with her little doctor’s kit, wrapping his
ungloved hand in gauze while he continued to talk with Mrs. Clause. She then took
her blanket and wrapped it around Old Saint Nick carefully tucking in the corners
behind his back and over his legs. Satisfied with this, she took out her plastic
stethoscope, placed it on his chest and asked him to breathe. Santa did as instructed
and breathed slowly so as not to cough in her face.
Our daughter, as if sensing our watchful eyes, turned to us and raised a cup of
water from the table. “Can I please get some elkie-selser?” We smiled, and I nodded
pulling a package of Alka-Seltzer from the top drawer in the kitchen. I opened the
package and dropped the tablets into the water and watched them fizz to life.
“I will be home soon, my darling,” Santa said and gave us a smile. “I will,
dear, love you, too,” Santa finished and made kissing noises into the phone. Then he
looked at the device and squinted.
“It’s the red button on the right,” Donna said.
Santa mouthed the word ah, nodded and pressed the red button and set it on
the table next to the chair.
My daughter took the cup from me and handed it to Santa. “Take two and call
me if you don’t feel better. Okay? You feel better now?” Then she raised her finger
up in a warning, wagging it back and forth. “Now you have to stay warm and get
lots of rest.” She finished crossing her arms and looking at both of us pleased as can
be. Then she turned back to Santa and offered a sheepish grin.
Santa looked at her, smiled, and nodded. Then he looked up at both of us and
smiled ever wider, the redness returned to his cheeks, the twinkle in his eyes grew
brighter and he placed his finger along his nose.
Looking more like the Santa we all knew, he gave a playful nod in our
daughter’s direction and chuckled. “And you asked me why I do this every year?”
CJ McKee
Connect with CJ
https://www.facebook.com/redmage.mckee
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Dragon-Sage-Blood-and-
Bane/215933601839782
http://www.mountaindragonmedia.com
Thank you for reading The Book Nymph Publishing & Promotions “Tiny Tale”
Edition!
We hope you enjoyed the selection of short stories and visit the participating
authors online.
Special thanks to:
K.N. Lee
Lynda Cox
David S. Reynolds
Jeane Sashi
Kyra Dune
Alex Ang
CJ McKee
Eboney Thompson
As always, we welcome all authors and readers to our website.
www.TheBookNymph.com
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