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A Fairytale at Christmas

santa

 


Christmas Eve so still I know,

But something’s in the wind,

There’s a sense of magic about,

It’s now we need our friends.


Christmas Eve began no different from any other morning this year. Yawning, I opened the blind to see what

the day outside offered. It was cold and dark, a typical midwinter day, with a coating frost covering the

ground, my car and a few scattered toys the children had absentmindedly left on the driveway the previous

evening. Gazing through the steamed up windowpane, onto the frosty wonderland outside, I felt almost as

cold as the weather outside. Grabbing hold of my dressing gown I donned quickly it. Embracing its

wonderful warmth, I pulled it tightly closed around me. “That’s better,” I whispered, mindful of my wife and

children who were still fast asleep in their beds.

 

Yawning some more, I ambled out from the bedroom, along the hallway then into the kitchen, where I

plugged in the kettle for the most important part of the day; my first mug of coffee. For someone who has

never imbibed of this aromatic concoction it is impossible for them to understand the importance, the

urgency of it. Watching the granules dribble off the spoon, into my mug, sent my pulse racing, in anticipation

of the delightful drink I was about to enjoy. “Coffee’s coming!” I said reassuringly to myself.

 

Pouring the hot, boiling water into my mug, drowning the coffee beans and realising their magical aroma, I

smiled. Last, but not least, I added a few drops of milk; to colour it. My coffee was now ready to drink.

Raising the mug to my lips, I drank heartily from it. It was truly wonderful.

 

Pulling out a stool from under the breakfast bar, I sat upon it. Grabbing hold of the TV remote control, I

pressed the green button upon it, and then waited for the picture to appear. Being quite old, the TV took

some time to warm up. When the picture finally appeared, my mind was drawn away from my coffee, to the

scene playing upon it. Sitting erect, I stared incredulously at it. Edging closer and closer to the cathode ray

tube, I gasped, “It’s him! That can’t be right. Where are the TV presenters?” I asked. Rubbing my eyes

disbelievingly, I said, “It’s him! It really is him – FATHER CHRISTMAS!”I said it over and over again, as if in

doing so might make some sense of it.

 

Pressing a button on the remote control, I checked to see if my TV was on the right channel; the news

channel I watch every morning. I was on the correct channel. “If it’s the right channel,” I groaned. “Why, then,

is he, Father Christmas, there instead of the usual presenters?” I asked, scratching mu head thoughtfully.

“Moreover, why is he staring back at me – and grinning like a Cheshire Cat?” Moreover, he was. Father

Christmas, staring out from the screen, was certainly grinning like the proverbial Cheshire Cat.

 

Pressing the button on the remote control, I switched to another channel. Groaning even louder than before, I

said, “No! This cannot be happening; he is also on this channel!” Pressing the button again, I checked the

next channel, then the next and also the next, but Father Christmas was on each and every channel I viewed,

staring out from the screen, grinning in the same Cheshire Cat way.

 

Drumming the counter inquisitively, I said, “What’s going on here?” Then the penny dropped, and I

remembered. “Sure, today is 24th December; Christmas Eve! Father Christmas is always about on

Christmas Eve. That’s why he’s on TV; it must be some sort of seasonal promotion or charity event he is

fronting!”

 

Believing that I had worked it out, why Father Christmas was appearing on every TV channel beamed into

my house, I relaxed and thought nothing more of it. Grabbing hold of my mug, I drank heartily from it. “Bah,” I

groaned, “it’s almost cold! Why does coffee taste so awful when it’s cold?” Standing up, I walked across to

the kettle and switched it on. “After that bit of confusion regarding Santa, I need some more coffee – hot

coffee!” I laughed. Returning to my stool, I sat there while I waited for the kettle to come to the boil. It was

only then that I noticed some strange, peculiar. THE TV SET WAS NOT EVEN PLUGGED IN.

 

Scratching my head, bewildered by this turn of events, I tried to convince myself that I was not going barmy.

“Hmm,” I said, grabbing hold of the TV remote, “I know how to sort this out.” Pressing the red button, I turned

off the TV. “Hah, that has you sorted, you old scoundrel, Father Christmas, for grinning at me so,” I said,

laughing at the TV. And for a while it did; the picture on the screen was out and it stayed out.

 

Just then, the kettle, having come to the boil, switched itself off. After placing a heaped teaspoon of coffee

into my mug I added the hot water and then a few drops of milk. Sipping it, I said, “Ah, nectar from the gods.

With you in my hand everything feels right in the world.”

 

“If that is what you think, then who am I to argue??” a voice, an old sounding voice, said to me.

Freezing, in fright, I whispered, “Who said that?”

 

“I did, of course,” the voice calmly replied.

 

“Who are you?” I timidly asked.

 

“Look up, Jeremiah.” the mysterious voice commanded. “Look up, and see the face of Christmas.”

 

Shaking, trembling, I lifted my gaze away from my mug, to the TV set in front of me. Then I saw him, Father

Christmas, smiling and waving to me from inside the screen. I was so shocked, upon seeing this, I dropped

my mug and fell off the stool. Hitting the floor, the mug shattered into a thousand pieces, dispatching its

piping hot contents far and wide.

 

“What has you so nervous, Jeremiah?” Father Christmas enquired of me.

 

Pulling myself up to the counter, nursing my hurt, I stared disbelievingly at the TV set. “Is that really you,

Father Christmas?” I gasped, quite in surprise.

 

“It most certainly is, Jeremiah,” he answered.

 

“But why?”

 

“It’s Christmas, that’s why,” he explained.

 

Moreover, he was right. What better time to appear than at Christmas? “Can everyone see you?” I asked

him.

 

Eying me with his large, round, friendly old eyes, he said, “You want to know if I am on everyone’s TV set in

the country?”

 

“Yes, can everyone see you?” I asked him.

 

Before replying, however, he laughed, a loud, jovial belly laugh, and then he said, “No, I’m afraid not. I am

only on your television set; I am here for your eyes only.”

 

After that, Santa’s mood changed, altered. He became quite, most unlike the overt, friendly old man that I –

we have come to expect – and love – down through the years. I waited for him to resume speaking.

 

As I waited patiently for the old man to resume speaking, I found my mind wandering, my thoughts drifting,

drifting back to my childhood days, a long time ago. I recalled, remembered how it was, being young,

without a worry or care in the world. It was fantastic. How did I ever forget the magic of Christmas? I

wondered out loud. Christmas, when anything is possible, if you believe that is so. Then my thoughts

returned to the present and I realised – regretted – the tremendous loss I had incurred with the passage of

time. Somehow, somewhere along the way I had lost something incredibly special – and I wanted it back,

oh, I wanted it back! “It is so clear to me now,” I said to the old man in my TV, “that, with the passage of time,

we lose the mindset that is open, willing to believe that anything – and everything is possible. I must do

something to rectify this situation – I must!” Then, I saw him, Father Christmas, Santa, and all the other

wonderful names he has been called, in time, looking out from the TV set, smiling congenially at me.

 

“You now see it, don’t you?” he said kind-heartedly to me.

 

Shaking excitedly, I replied, “I do, I most certainly do – and it’s fantastic! How did I lose it, the enchantment

and wonder?” I asked him. “How did I grow blind to it, the magic of Christmas? There are children – across

the entire planet – living this dream, with no idea whatsoever that adults have lost it.” Approaching the TV

set, I implored, “What can I do to change this, to make it right again?” At this point, something most

extraordinarily happened. For a second or two, I felt lightheaded, giddy, as if I was going to faint. Lowering

my head, I closed my eyes and waited for it to pass. It did. When I opened my eyes, though, I was in for a

shock, a big one, because standing directly in front of me was the old man himself, Father Christmas, red

suit and all. Seeing this, I fell off the stool once again.

 

“Phew, I thought I might never get from there,” Father Christmas merrily chuckled, while I pulled myself up

from the floor.

 

“You’re here!” I blurted out in reply, unable to come up with anything better to say than that.

Examining himself, making sure that everything was where it should be, he answered, “Yes, it’s me alright. I

tend to get a bit frayed at the edges, though, when I to that, TV thingy stuff.” His round, rimless spectacles

halfway down his fat, wrinkly nose the old man scrutinized his red and white suit, and then he said, “I think it’s

about time I got a new outfit, this one is getting a bit thin at the seams. Moreover, the bright colours get so

dirty going up and down all those chimneys.”

 

Shocked that he had said such a revolutionary thing, I gawped, “A new outfit?”

 

“Yes, something more practical, such as grey - or a nice shade of green,” he suggested, his voice trailing off

uncertainly. “What are your thoughts on the subject?” he asked.,

 

Although I was gobsmacked at how he had managed to get out from the TV and into my kitchen, I was even

more gobsmacked by him suggesting he swop his red and white suit for a grey one. “You must be mad,

considering such a queer thing!” I cried out in alarm.

 

Father Christmas looked at me questioningly for a few seconds, and then he pushed his glasses higher on

his nose and said, “Perhaps you are right. I could be mistaken for a burglar, wearing a dour colour such as

grey. And no amount of ho, ho, hoeing would help me to explain that.”

 

After that, I said nothing, nor did Father Christmas. Silence once again took hold of our meeting; it reigned

supreme. Although it was then so quite, a few moments earlier, when I and the old man had been engaged

in full, unfettered discourse, silence had been a scarce commodity in our kitchen. I wondered if my wife two

children (a boy and a girl) were still sleeping soundly in their beds, and if not, I wondered if they had heard

what I and the old man had been talking about. Then I said it, quietly and singularly, to myself, “There are

more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.”I have no idea why I said

that, perhaps someday I will...

 

Finally, Father Christmas resumed speaking. This time, however, it was with a clear purpose. He said,

“Listen, Jeremiah, I have much to tell you, just why I am here, but there is so little time in which I might do it.

Heed my words well…”

 

Santa talked. I listened. He talked some more. I listened some more. Sometimes I had to interrupt him, to

ask a question, or to ask him to clarify something he had said, but most of this time I remained silent,

listening intently to what he was telling me, to the wondrous, magical knowledge he was imparting to me.

 

On that cold December morning, Father Christmas told me something that I already knew, that time had

hidden a long way, deep down inside of me. He told me that life, here on Earth, is short, that we are here for

a purpose; an opportunity that must not be wasted. He said, “Seize the moment, be it Christmas or any time

of the year. By living you life to the full,” he went on, “you can change the mindset of mankind, for the better.”

The old man finished, by saying, “That is all I can tell you, Jeremiah. I hope you now understand the true

Spirit of Christmas and the importance of embracing it – and spreading it – throughout the entire year.” “I

do, I most certainly do – and I will!” I said to him, with a conviction of thought I had never, ever before felt in

my life.”

 

“Then my work here is finished,” he then said to me. “I have a busy night ahead of me. I must be away...”

Having said that, he was gone; disappeared into thin air.

 

As I stared at the television, wondering, hoping he might reappear on its screen, I tried to gather my

thoughts and get my mind round what I had seen and experienced that morning.

 

Hearing movements upstairs, I realised my family were awake. Running into the kitchen my children, Eric

and Victoria, said, “Who were you talking to, daddy?”

 

“I was talking to the Spirit of Christmas, dears,” I answered obliquely. Pulling back one of the curtains, I

glanced at the wintry scene outside. It was beginning to snow. “That’s nice,” I said contentedly, happily, to

myself,

 

“I thought you hated the snow,” Breda, my wife, said as she appeared in the kitchen doorway.

 

“I used to, but not anymore,” I answered. Turning to Eric and Victoria, I said, “It’s Christmas Eve; let’s go

outside and make snowmen.” The mere mention of snow was enough for Eric and Victoria, and they

dashed, cheering and laughing excitedly, for the door leading out from the kitchen and into the garden. “Not

until you are dressed properly,” Breda warned.

 

“Do we have to?” Eric groaned.

 

“Must we?” Victoria grated uneasily. Nodding, their mother said it was so.

 

Yanking her sweater over her head, while stepping into her jeans, Victoria tried to don them as fast as was

humanly possible. Eric, though, being – well, Eric, shoved an arm into his duffle coat while trying to tuck his

shirt into his pants even though they were not yet on.

 

Helping him out, his mother said, “You are such an excited ankle biter. I don’t know who you inherited your

personality from, me or your father.”

 

Ignoring her remonstrations, Eric pulled up his trousers and settled his shirt into them. Then he opened the

door and yelled, “SNOW!”

 

Having no intention of being outdone by her sibling, Victoria hollered, “SNOW SNOW SNOW!”

 

“Last one out’s a rotten egg!” I said excitedly to them as we scrambled through the open doorway, each one

of us determined not to be that rotten egg.

 

Gazing disapprovingly at us from inside the doorway, Breda said, “It’s just started to snow. There is hardly

any of it on the ground yet.”

 

Outside, oblivious to her words, enjoying the wondrous white stuff, we were in a winter wonderland, dancing,

singing and playing in the softly, silently falling snow.

 

“Look!” I called out to Eric and Victoria. “Look at this snowflake that has landed on my sleeve. See how it’s

formed – so perfectly!” My children gazed inquisitively at it, with eyes wide open and with minds even more

so.

 

“Look, look closely at it,” I said, pointing to the snowflake. “See its beauty, its exquisite beauty.” They studied

it closely. “And did you,” I asked them, “that no two snowflakes are ever the same? Not ever! Isn’t that

amazing?”

 

Eric and Victoria edged closer and closer to the most wondrous snowflake ever discovered. Then, because

of their warm breath bearing down upon it, the snowflake began to melt.

“It’s melting,” they cried out, distraught at its impending demise.

 

“Don’t worry,” I answered, consoling them, “we’ll find another, even more wondrous snowflake to inspect.”

 

“Hurray!” they cheered. “It will soon be Christmas – and it’s snowing! Hurray for daddy, even though he’s

awfully weird.”

 

Then we played in the snow, searching for ever more incredulous snowflakes to examine and enjoy. We

even managed to build a small snowman.

 

Later, tired but incredibly happy, we made our way indoors. Breda looked disapprovingly at us (we were

wet with melted snow), then she told us that breakfast was ready; piping hot chocolate with pancakes

smothered in hot butter and honey. It was the perfect start to a perfect Christmas.

 

Much later, after Eric and Victoria were asleep in their beds, Breda snuggled up close to me on the couch.

“Whatever came over you, today?” she asked.

 

“What do you mean?” I innocently answered.

 

“You were – are different. Playing with the kids, as you did, it’s like you were a child again. Does this make

any sense to you?” she asked, snuggling in closer to me.

 

“More sense than you can ever imagine,” I replied, smiling lovingly at her. “Merry Christmas – and God bless

us, everyone.”

 

A Note: If anyone reading this story thinks I told Breda about Father Christmas and the TV set, you are in

for a surprise, because I didn’t. Though, perhaps, just perhaps, I might have told Eric and Victoria about

it.

THE END.

 

 

 

I am the crazy-mad writer of children's stories,

songs, nursery rhymes and much, much more!

 

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