It's Almost Time For Christmas, Charlie Boone!
By:
Geron Kees
(© 2017 by the author)
The author retains all rights. No reproductions are allowed without the author's
consent. Comments are appreciated at...
GKees@tickiestories.us
Charlie Boone was
asleep, and he knew he was asleep. The blackness around him was deep, and
oppressively close as only the dark of dreams could be. He turned his
head, stared about, seeking any break in the uniformity of the night that
held him, but could find no light to attach his gaze to, no safe island in
the perpetual gloom.
"Why is it so dark?" a voice asked, so close by that Charlie jumped.
"Kip? Is that you?"
"Who else would it be?" His boyfriend sounded sleepy, maybe not completely
awake. "The nightlight must have gone out, Charlie. I can't see my hand in
front of my face."
Charlie bit at his lip. "We're not in my room anymore, Kip. I think...I thought...that
this was a dream. But if you and I can talk, it must be something else."
He heard the other boy take a quick and startled breath, felt a presence
beside him, and then a hand touched his arm. "Is that you, Charlie?"
Despite the strangeness of their situation, Charlie had to smile. Kippy
sounded subdued, about as far from his normal bright, somewhat extroverted
character as he could be.
He put a hand on Kippy's and pressed firmly. "Yes. We're together. We're
safe, I think."
Kippy moved closer, and wrapped an arm around him. "Yeah, but where? How'd
we get here from the bed?"
"I don't know. I was asleep, and then I thought I was dreaming. I still
feel like I'm asleep and dreaming."
He heard a soft chuckle, and then Kippy snuggled closer. "I don't really
feel awake, either. It's just like you to dream so hard that we're both
caught up in it, Charlie."
Despite the oddness of their situation, Charlie had to smile. "I don't go
anywhere without you, Kip. Who would do my thinking for me?"
Kippy understood that it was not meant as a barb. He briefly tightened his
grip around Charlie's waist and sighed. "Oh, Charlie. You say the nicest
things."
Charlie turned his head and planted a kiss on Kippy's cheek. "Let's walk
around some and see if we can figure out where we are."
They took a step in unison, and then Kippy stopped. "I just realized I
have shoes on. And clothes. How'd that happen?"
They had been asleep in Charlie's bed, and the only thing covering their
bodies had been the soft quilt that Charlie's grandmother had given him as
a boy. Well, as a little boy. At a still fresh sixteen, Charlie
had no illusions that he was an adult yet, but neither could he quite
think of himself as just a boy.
Kippy, who turned sixteen in less than a month, was hardly an innocent
child, either. Charlie's boyfriend had a tongue that could slice cold
butter just as neatly as any knife, and to have that tongue turned against
you would quickly dispel any notion whatsoever that Kippy was unwise about
the world.
Both of them had been asleep in Charlie's bed, wrapped together beneath
the plump quilt, warm and happy after making love, and hardly outfitted to
be traipsing about in the pitch black, dreamlike, or otherwise. But now
they were fully clothed.
"I still think this is a dream," Charlie ventured. "It feels like a waking
dream, where you know darn well you're asleep, but everything that goes on
about you is out of your control."
"Well, I wish we'd hurry up and wake up," Kippy said, his voice sounding
annoyed now. "I have much better things to do with my sleep than stumble
about in the dark."
Charlie smiled, even though he knew that his boyfriend couldn't see it.
Nothing kept Kippy down for long. "Let's go on a bit,
and see what we can see," Charlie suggested. They resumed
walking, stepping carefully and feeling their way forward. Despite what
Kippy had said, they hadn't stumbled yet. There seemed to be nothing in
the dark with them, and the ground beneath their shoes had all the
resiliency of concrete, and its evenness, too.
Kippy made an impatient noise. "We can walk on a bit, but it sure looks to
me like there's nothing to
see."
Almost as if in answer to that declaration, a faint light winked on, very
far away. Kippy gasped, and they stopped moving. "What's that?"
he whispered.
Charlie, knowing better, but unable to help himself, turned his face to
Kippy's ear and whispered, "It appears to be a light."
It was a measure of Kippy's unease that he didn't come back with too sharp
a reply. "I can see that, dum-dum," he whispered. "But what's
making it?'
That was the question, wasn't it?
Charlie shrugged, and he and Kippy stood still in the darkness and watched
as the light began moving. Began coming their way.
There was an odd canter to the motion of the light, as if it was
being carried, and swung slowly back and forth in front of its bearer. As
the brilliant spot came closer, a distinctive cone-shape to the light
became evident, and Charlie's eyes widened as he realized what it was that
he and Kippy were seeing.
A flashlight. Someone was coming closer, feeling out the path
before them with the sharp beam of a hand-held light. Kippy
pushed himself a little closer to Charlie, and Charlie put a
reassuring arm around his boyfriend. Kippy was a brave soul when out and
about in the real world; but things that went bump in the night got to him
a little more than he would ever admit. Charlie, too, felt uneasy at the
the light moving slowly towards them. Not scared, just deeply in doubt
about what they might be facing. He could not get past the feeling that he
was still asleep, but the fact that the dream was so real, and so odd, and
so obviously beyond his control, was supremely disconcerting.
The boys watched as the light continued to approach, and when it was
twenty feet away, the beam of the flash suddenly swung upward and pinned
them in its glow.
"Aw, there you are!" said a familiar voice, with just a trace a humor in
it.
Charlie realized immediately who that voice belonged to, and so did Kippy.
"Max!" they both called. Charlie felt a feeling of relief flood throughout
him.
The elf came closer and dropped the light. "Sure is good to see you fellas
again! How's things?"
Charlie and Kippy surged forward, pushing past the flashlight to wrap
their arms around the elf behind it. They both squeezed him mightily,
causing Max to flinch, and then to laugh. "Aw, geez! Easy on the
merchandise, guys! I'm an old man, ya know!"
Charlie grinned and stepped back from the elf, eying him in the dimmer
light behind the flash. Max was slightly shorter than they were, and
dressed all in red. His face appeared to belong to a
teenaged boy their age. Max had very blue eyes, and a cute
little nose, and a mouth that looked like it might like to be kissed.
His hair was blond, and curly, and circled about his face like the wind
had blown it there.
"You're still too cute for words," Kippy sighed out, putting to voice
exactly what Charlie had been thinking.
Max grinned. "Just remember that I'm six hundred and thirteen, and the
feeling will go away."
"I doubt it very much," Kippy returned. "Your kind of cute is ageless."
"I'm sure there's a reason we're here," Charlie cut in then, trying to
rein in the conversation. Kippy could get going with a vengeance if he
found a topic to his liking, and cute guys were always to his
liking. "In fact, just where is here, Max?"
The elf laughed. "Shh. Talk quieter, okay? We're in the cellar of the Big
Guy's shop. He's upstairs somewhere, inspecting things." Max sighed. "He's
always inspecting things."
Charlie blinked. "We're at the North Pole? For real?"
Max nodded. "Well, at an undisclosed location nearby. For all intents and
purposes, it's the same."
"I knew I was dreaming," Charlie said, nodding. "But you're the one
running the show."
"Yeah, more or less. I would've come to your place, but we're really busy,
and I couldn't get away." He grinned, turning his gaze from one boy to the
other. "So I invited you here!"
"Why are we in the basement?" Kippy asked. "If it's just a dream, you
could have met us anywhere."
"I had to pull you guys in at a certain moment in your sleep. I just
happened to be finishing up my shift when that happened. But I'm off now,
so we can get outta here, okay?"
Kippy sighed, apparently feeling a need to balance out his anxiety with a
little annoyance. "You couldn't do any better than this?"
Max frowned. "Well, it had to be somewhere out of the way. The Big Guy can
feel everything that happens around here. I needed to put you someplace
the boss don't like to concentrate on."
Kippy gave a little huff of air. "Well, there had to be something less
startling to the senses then this place." He looked about at the darkness
that surrounded them. "Somewhere less creepy than this empty dungeon,
that's for sure."
"Oh, this place ain't empty," Max told them. "Heck, it's crammed full.
There's five hundred years worth of failed toy attempts down here. That's
why the Big Guy ignores the place."
Charlie frowned at that. "Really? I'm surprised we didn't bump into
something in the darkness."
Max laughed. "You can't. If you can't see it, you can't bump into it."
"What?" Kippy looked over at Charlie. "What's that mean?"
Charlie shrugged, and looked questioningly at Max. The elf grinned at
them. "Aw, geez. I sucked at fourth-dimensional mechanics in school,
fellas. I don't know if I can explain it." He waved a hand, as if taking
in all the darkness. "This place is really big, but it's finite. The Big
Guy, well, he's a creative genius. Maybe one that ain't quite perfect,
though. He's always thinkin' up new toys and gifts, and most of them are
just really cool, and go right into production."
Max shrugged then, almost indifferently. "But no one's a hundred percent,
not even the Big Guy. Every now and then there's a clinker, some toy that
proves, uh, not to appeal." He waved his hand again. "The Big Guy's
prototypes are kinda indestructible, and they need to be, because we make
a few million copies of most of them over time. Unfortunately, when one of
them is a clinker, it also means it can't just be destroyed. So we put
them here. This place is crammed to the gills with toys that didn't quite
make the production lines."
Charlie looked about them again. "You mean...if you wave your light
around, we could see them?"
"Oh, sure. Put a light on them, and there they are."
"But they're not there if there's no light?" Kippy asked.
"Nope. Not exactly. I mean, they're here, but they ain't, until you can
see 'em. Heck, if this whole room were suddenly lit up, it would explode.
The toys would all be visible at one time, and probably push the shop
right off its foundations!"
Charlie looked at the elf with one eye closed, almost feeling like Max was
having fun with them. "Okay. Humor me, huh, and point the light up from
the floor somewhere for a moment."
Max nodded. "Sure. Where do ya want it?"
Charlie extended his index finger, waved it uncertainly a moment, and then
suddenly pointed it to their right. "There."
Max obliged, turning the light in that direction.
It was almost as if things suddenly surged towards them out of the
darkness. Kippy let out a startled squeak and jumped backwards, and would
have pulled Charlie with him, if Charlie wasn't already jumping that way,
too.
"Whoa!" Charlie exclaimed, staring at a frightening face that seemed to
lurch forward right at them. It took a moment for the details to sink in,
and then he realized what it was: a wooden horse mounted on curved
rockers, a child's toy meant to enchant.
It looked to be finely crafted out of some dark wood, and polished to a
high shine. The rocking horse was large - large enough for a good sized
kid to ride. A saddle was carved into its backside, and its neck and
flanks below the perfect mane flowed with beautifully etched equine
muscle. Handholds projected from the bridle on each side, with a woven
leather rein dropping beneath the horse's chin. The workmanship was
superb.
But it was the animal's face that commanded their full attention. The
eye's were large, deep, and strangely hooded, almost sinister in
appearance, and certainly too darkly ominous to be appealing. The horse's
mouth was open in a big grin, and long, pointed white teeth lurked within.
The friendly smile of a horse, it was not.
This was the grin of a tiger, that fatal look of triumph a big cat might
wear just as it landed on the unsuspecting back of its prey, and so
unnerving in its realism that Charlie took another involuntary step
backwards. The horse looked ready to pounce and devour, not to provide an
exhilarating riding and rocking experience for a child.
Kippy looked aghast. "Oh my god! If a velociraptor could be a horse, that
would be this guy!"
Max nodded, looking sadly at the wooden animal. "Lot of good materials
went into this toy. Just a small design flaw or two, and it's all wasted.
The Big Guy musta lost his concentration on this one." He brightened then.
"Fortunately, he has infinite resources."
Behind the rocking horse, other things were visible, some recognizable,
others just shadows. They marched away to the limit of the flashlight
beam, and faded into the seemingly infinite blackness beyond.
"That's a lot of screw ups," Kippy observed. "I always thought your boss
was this master toymaker."
For just a second, a pained look flitted across the elf's face. "He is. He
creates a lot of great stuff. It's just...everyone makes mistakes. There's
bound to be some clinkers."
Charlie watched the elf a moment, unsure of what he'd just seen in his
face. "So if you turn off the light, I could walk forward, and there would
be nothing there?"
"Yup. Wanna try?" The flash suddenly went out.
Charlie licked his lips, staring at the inky point where the horse had
just been. He nodded to himself, took a tentative step forward, his hands
outstretched...and encountered nothing at all. He took another step, and
then another...still nothing.
"That is so weird," he said softly, really to himself. But Max heard him
anyway.
"It's necessary, or there'd be warehouses all over the pole full of this
stuff." The light winked on, pointed at the floor, and Max gave a
soft sigh. "Happy? Now c'mon back over here, Charlie."
Charlie returned to the others. "Now that I know there's stuff here all
around, I can almost feel it."
"Sure. That's the way it is for me, too."
Kippy gave Charlie a nudge with his elbow. "So, Max. Why are we here?"
Charlie smiled. Oh, yeah, there was that. The elf nodded.
"Okay. But not here, huh? Follow me, and I'll take you guys someplace a
little more comfortable." Max turned, jiggled the light, and started off.
Kippy reached out and grasped Charlie's hand, and the boys followed.
"What do you think?" Kippy whispered. "I think he needs our help for
something." He squeezed Charlie's fingers. "Something big."
Charlie considered that. "Is it skwish? You have a feeling?" He
knew that Kippy possessed an odd talent for divining things before they
happened, at least sometimes. Skwish is how the elves referred
to this talent.
"Yes. If he doesn't say something soon, I'm going to ask him. The suspense
is killing me."
Charlie tried not to laugh, knowing full well that Max possessed extremely
acute senses and could certainly hear every word. "Calm down. Let's just
wait and see what Max has to say."
Kippy sighed, and nodded, and drew a little closer as they followed the
elf into the darkness.
* * * * * * *
Max lived in a house that looked like a snowball. A big
snowball. Charlie stared, wide-eyed, at the structure as they approached,
taking in the merry candles burning in the small windows on two floors,
the lazy stream of smoke rising from the chimney pipe, and the colored
Christmas lights around the front door. A brief, rounded weather roof
supported by two pillars sheltered the entry, and a small garden behind a
short, white picket fence to one side of the front door held rows of
strange-looking flowers that looked for all the world like blooms made
from charcoal briquets.
The
landscape all about them was buried in several feet of snow, although
there was a clear area about the house that seemed carved rather than
dug from the icy wilderness. The sky above them was dark, filled
with stars, and laced with the delicate red and green flowing lines of the
aurora. It was beautiful, and quite telling. Clearly, they were very far
north, near the pole, and could only assume that Max's claim about their
location was genuine.
And yet, they were not cold at all.
Max cocked his head at Charlie when the boy mentioned the absence of
chill. "I can make it cold for you, if you want realism," he said, his
eyes twinkling.
"No!" Kippy barked immediately, and then cleared his throat. He glared at
Charlie a moment before returning his gaze to Max. "Um, we're good.
Thanks, anyway."
Max laughed, but said no more as they climbed the three small steps to the
landing before the house's entry.
"Uh, nice," Charlie said, smiling at Max as they stopped before the small
front door.
"Hey, it's paid for," Max returned, his eyes bright. "And I've raised a
mess of elflets in this place." He gave the molding around the oval-shaped
door a fond thump. "Lotta memories here. All good ones, too."
The structure certainly wasn't made of snow, that was for sure,
although some loose flakes did rain down about them from the small roof
above in response to Max's thump. Charlie held out a hand and caught a
few, and watched them turn to droplets of water on his palm, without
feeling a thing.
Max dug in the nearly invisible front pocket of his red trousers and
produced an impossibly large ring of keys, flipped through them, and
selected one with an odd set of fine notches in it. He was about to insert
it into the door's lock when the panel flew inward, and they were
confronted with the curious face of another elf.
This one was plainly feminine, with long, golden hair, and a red dress
with a high hemline that revealed a very shapely set of legs
beneath. Her face was every bit as cute and appealing as Max's, and the
small breasts that perked up the top of the dress gave her a certain sexy
charm that even Charlie noticed.
"Oh, it's you, muffin!" she exclaimed, her eyes lighting up at the sight
of Max. "I thought I heard voices out here."
Kippy snickered, and Charlie smiled, and they both looked at Max, whose
face immediately reddened with embarrassment.
"Uh, ixnay on the uffinmay, buttercup," he said quickly, holding up a hand
in alarm. "Hon, this is Charlie and Kippy." Max turned to look at the
boys. "Meet the missus, gents."
Charlie and Kippy in turn each shook a petite hand, and were invited
inside the home. "Just call me Mrs. P," Max's wife said, laughing. "I can
imagine that our last name can be a little fearsome to people ears."
Max frowned. "Pribilownakowskif ain't
nothing. We oughta introduce them to Phil Garospondalooietooiemastiffmacawlin."
Kippy laughed. "Do all elves have names like that?"
"Nope. Got a Filbert Smith on the line at the shop. Don't say much, but a
real nice guy."
Charlie was staring about the front room they had entered. He could see
now what Max had meant about the squareness of human houses. The room they
were standing in didn't have a straight line to be seen anywhere, with the
slightly curved walls curling right into the floor and ceiling, giving the
room a kind of fishbowl look. And, the room was far bigger that Charlie
could account for, seeming to offer more space than the outside of the
house would have allowed possible. Not only that, but three doorways
spaced around the room suggested that quite a bit more house was to be
found in each direction.
"It's...big in here," he noted, thinking out loud.
"Sure," Max replied, grinning. "We need the space. Got a big family living
here."
Kippy squinted at him. "How big?"
"Well, like I told you before,
I got a wife, and
twenty-seven kids, eighty-four grandchildren, and one-hundred-sixty-six
great grandchildren. There's some great, great grandkids, and some
great, great, great grandkids, too, but I lost count of them."
"Three hundred and eighty-seven," Mrs. P said brightly. "Well, three
hundred and eighty-eight now, with Delly and Pique's new baby."
Kippy and Charlie both gaped. "All those people live in this house?"
Charlie looked around the room in disbelief. "That's hundreds and
hundreds."
"More than that," Max countered. "Lots of those kids and grandkids and
what-not are married and have families of their own. There's about three
thousand living here, I think."
From the outside, and despite the house's odd shape, it hadn't looked much
larger than Charlie's parent's house.
"No way!" Charlie exclaimed, certain now that Max was pulling their legs.
"Where would you put them all?"
"Oh, the house is quite roomy," Mrs. P said. She smiled brightly, as if it
was all perfectly obvious. "If we get short on space, we just add on."
Charlie stared at Max, who just shrugged. "It's just size, Charlie. It's
all relative."
Kippy burst out laughing, and grabbed Charlie's arm. "Frit and Pip told us
that, remember?"
Charlie suddenly recalled Max's thrice great grandson, Frit, and his
boyfriend, Pip, who had spent the night with Charlie and Kippy and their
best friends, Ricky and Adrian, the year before. Both elves had spoken of
size being relative - relative, apparently because they could alter the
size of things at will. They had performed their magic on Adrian's bed,
causing it to grow to a size that would accommodate all six boys for
sleeping.
Sleeping, and, um...other things.
Charlie's face warmed at the memory, and he looked over at Kippy, whose
eyes were too bright not to be remembering a few things himself.
"Oh, yeah," Kippy said then, his smile quite delighted. "Frit and Pip
could make all sorts of things big."
Max's eyes widened, and he glanced quickly at his wife before looking
desperately at Charlie. "Uh...how are those guys? Uh...you know,
Ricky and Adrian?"
"They're fine." Charlie could see that Max wanted to direct the
conversation away from Frit and Pip and their...appetites. "Adrian's mom
loves her job, and Adrian and Ricky are very happy together."
Max managed a smile. "Ah, love."
Kippy looked curiously at the elf. "You didn't want them here, too? I'm
sure they'd want to help you out, especially after what you did for Adrian
and his mom."
"Oh, they'll be along," Max said, a little vaguely. "They was a
little...occupied, and I didn't wanna disturb them."
Kippy suddenly whipped his head around to face Charlie, a smile spreading
across his face. "Ricky was spending the night at Adrian's tonight,
remember?"
Charlie grinned at the elf. "Oh, yeah. Didn't want to disturb them, huh?"
Max's face reddened slightly. "Hey, I got respect, just like the next
guy."
"Are you boys staying for dinner?" Mrs. P asked, looking from one to the
other, and then to her husband. "We have plenty."
"Yeah, you guys are invited," Max agreed. "We can go in my den and talk
until dinner is ready." He smiled at his wife then. "Be four of them by
then, honeypot. Two more are on the way."
Mrs. P held up her hands and bounced her fingertips together happily.
"Always room for more. I'd better go and see to things, then. Enjoy your
talk." And with that, she hustled away through one of the side doorways.
"Be a little bit before we eat," Max said. "We got time to go over a few
things. Come on into the den." The elf turned, and headed for the doorway
his wife had just left through. Charlie and Kippy followed.
They entered a room that looked like the interior of a large, comfortable
cabin in the mountains somewhere, except that the walls and ceilings all
had that rounded look to them where they met. But those walls were dark,
and looked like wood, and were lined with shelves full of books and other
items that could only be family memorabilia. Photos of smiling elf
children were everywhere, and family groups that looked happy to be posing
before the camera.
A great stone hearth held a crackling fire, and the end of the room was
composed of large panes of glass that framed the great expanse of snow and
ice beyond, and what looked like a range of snow-covered mountains in the
far distance. A group of upholstered chairs and a sofa formed a
three-sided area facing the window, with a large, low wooden coffee table
between them, that held other personal items of a family nature. The room
was warm and comfortable, cheerful without being overbearingly so, and
Charlie couldn't help smiling at the urge that came upon him to sit and
stay a while.
"Nice," he said, smiling at Max. "Don't know who does your decorating, but
I'm sold."
"Aw, it's mostly my missus that does this stuff."
"Speaking of whom," Kippy said, suddenly sounding surprised, "where did
she go?"
Charlie looked about the room, and realized that there was no other exit
but the doorway that they had entered through. Yet Mrs. P was plainly not
with them. He turned to look at Max. "Yeah. Where did she go?"
Max looked surprised. "She went to the kitchen."
"But she came in here," Kippy said.
Max grinned. "No she didn't. She just went through the same doorway."
"Uh...yeah. That usually leads to the same room beyond," Charlie argued.
"Maybe in people houses, but not here. Sheesh, all the people livin' here,
you know how many doorways we'd need to connect all those rooms together?
What a waste! So we just use a few doorways, and let the people stepping
through them decide where they want to go."
Charlie gaped. "You mean that same doorway can go to any room in this
house?"
"Sure. Why not? Who wants to walk all over creation to get someplace
when they can just step through a door?"
Charlie looked over at his boyfriend and shook his head. Kippy smiled,
and gave him a slightly accusing look that plainly said,
It's
your dream, Charlie!
Yeah.
About that.
"Okay. Well, how about this: was there a reason you had to bring us here
in a dream, rather than just snap your fingers and bring us here in
reality?"
"Just convenience. Having you asleep makes it easier to manipulate the
flow of time, and we can get everything done while you guys are in REM,
and it won't take any real time away from your life. Then, if we need
to, we'll move things into the real world." The elf laughed. "Or, at
least, my part of it."
Charlie sighed, and shook his head. "I don't know what's real, and what's
a dream. I hope you won't be offended, Max, but his place is a little
nutty."
Max looked about the room and gave a small, contented sigh. "Yeah. No
place like home, I always say."
"You and Dorothy, both," Kippy countered, not unkindly. "It's a pretty
place, even if it's only half-real. Now can we sit and find out what this
is all about?"
"Almost. I need to bring the other guys in now."
Max went to the sofa and sat, and waved a hand at the chairs, indicating
that the boys should sit down. Kippy grabbed Charlie's hand and led him
around to a large overstuffed chair, pushed Charlie into it, and then
wedged himself in beside him.
"Just in case," he whispered, snuggling against Charlie.
Charlie sighed, but knew better than to say anything. Instead he watched
Max, who was pulling up his sleeves and gazing into the air above the
coffee table. The elf rubbed his hands together, narrowed his eyes, and
let out his breath.
"Eenie meanie, chili-beanie, the spirits are about to speak!"
Kippy took a startled breath. "Are they friendly spirits?"
Max grinned. "Friendly? Just watch!"
The air above the coffee table darkened, and then seemed to turn to mist.
A hazy outline appeared, that looked tantalizingly familiar, and Charlie
squinted at it, almost recognizing the long, flowing shape.
And then the outline took the form of two bodies, laid out as if in a bed,
but entwined in an obviously fond embrace. Charlie's eyes widened as
details formed and settled into place, until, with a small plop
of displaced air, the figures of Ricky and Adrian appeared, floating in
the air, their bodies wrapped together as if they were still laying
together in the bed, happily asleep.
Both boys were naked, and Kippy gave out a delighted little titter and
leaned forward next to Charlie, his eyes roving over the beautiful lines
of the pair as they slept in each other's arms.
"Oh, Max! That is one hell of an entry!"
Charlie let his eyes slide over to the elf, whose own eyes were wide in
amazement. Max blinked, and threw up his left hand to cover his eyes,
while rapidly waving the fingers of his right hand at the two sleeping
boys. "I see now there was advantages to doing this in the dark with you
two!"
A blue splotch appeared on Adrian's back, which was facing Charlie, and
rapidly spread, until both sleeping bodies were covered, neck-to-foot. The
splotch pulsed a second, and then became jeans and tee-shirts, and socks
and running shoes. There was a small ding! from out of the air,
which sounded for all the world like a kitchen egg timer, and then Ricky
and Adrian each took a deep breath, sighed it out, and opened their eyes.
"Why are we floating in the air?" Adrian asked sleepily, closing his eyes
again.
"We're dreaming," Ricky said, smiling and snuggling closer to his
boyfriend. "Stupid dream, too."
The two boys floated in silence for a few more seconds before Ricky jacked
his eyes open and looked directly at Charlie and Kippy. "What the hell?"
Adrian, reacting to the tone of his boyfriend's voice, opened his eyes
again and seemed to focus on the ceiling above. "Where is this?"
Ricky gave him a little push, and Adrian turned his head. "Charlie? Kippy?
What the --?" And then both boys spied the elf, and broke into grins.
"Max!" Adrian said in delight, sitting up and disentangling himself from
Ricky. Ricky sat up, too, and looked down to see what they were laying
on...and saw only air, and the coffee table, three feet below.
His gaze came back to Charlie, and he shook his head in confusion. "What's
going on?"
"Relax," Charlie said, smiling. "You're at the North Pole with us."
"Or at an undisclosed location nearby," Max put in then. "But it's the
same thing, really."
Charlie rolled his eyes, but continued to smile at his friends. "You're
asleep, and Max brought you here while you were dreaming. Same as Kippy
and me."
"I'm asleep?" Ricky asked, looking like he didn't believe it. "And you're
asleep? It all seems so real." He looked down then, at where he and Adrian
were still floating in mid-air, and shook his head. "Well, it almost
seems so real."
"How do we get down?" Adrian asked.
Max waved a hand, and the two boys moved away from the coffee table, and
silently lowered until they were sitting on the floor. They got up,
brushed themselves off, and looked at each other. Then they grinned,
jumped at Max, sat down on each side of him and wrapped him in their arms,
and each planted a big kiss on opposite cheeks.
Max closed his eyes and hunched his shoulders inward, a mix of delight and
sheer terror appearing on his face. "Aw...geez! Careful, fellas! I might
break!"
"I doubt that very much," Adrian said, pulling back long enough to grin at
Charlie and Kippy. "We just wanted to thank you again for helping to keep
Ricky and me together!"
"Yep," Ricky said, nodding. "We've been butt-nutty-happy together, all
because of you!" His eyes sparkled playfully as he leaned in and kissed
Max's earlobe, and then tickled it with the tip of his tongue. "Mmm! I
always wanted to taste an elf!"
"Again!" Adrian said, laughing.
"Uh, yeah," Ricky admitted, nodding, obviously remembering a night now
nearly one year past.
"Stop that!" Max hollered, looking panicked now. "Charlie...help me!"
Charlie and Kippy both burst out laughing. Kippy heaved himself out of the
chair, and Charlie followed.
"What's he taste like?" Kippy asked, sitting down next to Ricky and
leaning against him.
"He's sweet!" Ricky said, laughing...but then caught himself. "Um, from a
strictly bisexual point of view, of course."
"Of course," Charlie agreed, sitting down next to Adrian. He was unable
not to enjoy Max's apparent discomfort, which seemed a cloak to mask the
elf's delight at being the center of so much affection. Charlie had come
to understand that Max felt compelled to defend his heterosexuality, but
that, underneath, he was far lass concerned about it than he let on.
Kippy sighed dreamily. "I'll bet that if that ear tastes that good, there
are some other parts that taste even better!"
Max gave a little squeak of alarm at that, and then disappeared in a pop
of inwardly-rushing air. He reappeared, standing, across the coffee table
from the four boys, who all started laughing.
Kippy shook his head, grinning. "You're just too easy, Max."
"I am not. I ain't easy at all. And you guys just remember that, too!" But
the elf's eyes held an obvious glow of humor, unable to be hidden by the
apparently indignant stance of his body.
Charlie sighed, and sat back on the sofa. "Okay, let's stop playing. Ready
to tell us why we're here?"
Kippy nodded, got up and went to sit by Charlie. Ricky and Adrian scooted
together to fill the void that Max had left, and twined their fingers
together, their eyes on the elf.
"Give," Ricky said, pointedly.
Max nodded. "Yeah, okay." He frowned, and shook his head. "Heck, I don't
know where to start."
"At the beginning," Charlie suggested, smiling. "Just spit it out, Max."
Max compressed his lips, and then nodded. "It's...it's about the Big Guy.
I...we need some help with him."
Kippy's eyes widened. "You mean San--?"
"Shh!" Max interrupted, waving his hands frantically. "He'll hear you!"
Kippy looked over at Charlie, who just shrugged and turned his gaze back
to the elf. "Something's wrong with...the Big Guy?"
Max nodded, suddenly looking stricken. "Yeah. I think...we
think...that he might be...uh...going...a little...nuts." A
silence descended upon the room as the four boys just stared at the elf.
Kippy laid a hand on Charlie's wrist and squeezed it as he leaned towards
Max. "Are you saying that San...that the head man...is going crazy?"
Max blew out a puff of air, and closed his eyes. "Actually, I think he's
already there."
* * * * * * *
"I've been noticing things for a few years now," Max said, pacing the
floor. "Most of the other guys have, too, but no one has wanted to say
anything."
Kippy looked at Charlie, his eyes wide. "You mean he's doing crazy stuff,
and everyone is ignoring it?"
The elf looked pained. "It ain't that simple, fellas." He stopped, and his
eyes searched their faces, looking for support. "The Big Guy ain't like
anyone else, anyway. A lot of the things he does are kinda weird, but they
always work out. Usually, it's just too big for us to follow until it's
all laid out at the end."
"Then why do you think there's a problem?" Charlie asked.
"Well..." Max came over and sat on the edge of the coffee table, facing
them. He glanced around the room, as if searching for hidden listeners.
"Is this a secret, or something?" Charlie whispered.
"Are you kiddin'? If it got out to our families that we thought the Big
Guy was on the edge, there'd be hell to pay!" Max looked frightened at the
very idea of the knowledge going public. "You gotta understand, fellas,
that the Big Guy ain't just a paycheck and security for all of us. He
means...Christmas. And you don't mess with Christmas in these
parts, not lightly."
"You don't mess with Christmas where we're from, either," Adrian put in.
"It's not just elves that would be upset."
Ricky sat forward. "What kind of weird stuff is he doing?"
Max looked at Charlie. "You know the cellar you guys showed up in?
Underneath the Big Guy's shop?"
"Yeah."
Max nodded, looking at Ricky and Adrian. "It's where we keep the Big Guy's
booboos. The stuff he imagines that don't quite work out." He shrugged.
"Lotta stuff there, but it's been five hundred years in the makin'. Used
to be, we'd put four or five things a year down there. Then, a few years
ago, it got to ten a year, and it's been going up ever since." Max
actually looked scared now. "This year he's hit twenty already, and it
ain't even Christmas yet!"
Charlie and Kippy looked at each other. "That's it?" Kippy asked, surprise
obvious in his voice. "He's making more mistakes than usual? That's hardly
crazy, Max."
The elf put a hand to his forehead and closed his eyes. "Mistakes." He
sighed. "You just don't get it, fellas." Max opened his eyes again and
shook his head. "The Big Guy is a creative genius. He can lose his
concentration, yeah. But he never makes mistakes!"
"Until now," Kippy pointed out. "That's why you're worried, isn't it?"
"Well...yeah. I guess it is."
"How old is the Big Guy, if I might ask?" Charlie wondered.
"Aw, geez. No one knows that. He's older than any elf alive, and my great
granddad is still going strong at almost eight hundred!"
That was a surprise. "Elves haven't always been with him?"
"Nope. That all started maybe seven hundred years or so ago. Before
I was born, that's for sure."
"Really? Who helped him before then?"
"Nobody. Before that it was just him and a horse." Max smiled. "Working
with us has allowed the Big Guy to expand his activities pretty
dramatically."
"A Horse?" Kippy wondered aloud. "No magical reindeer?"
"Nah. The ones he's got now are kinda...well, it's a long story. We can do
that another time."
"I never really thought about how he got started," Ricky said."I mean, I
knew he had magic powers and all, but I never thought about how the Big
Guy got to be the Big Guy."
Charlie frowned at that. "I always kind of thought that, uh, your
boss...was human. Maybe magical, but still...human."
"He is human. He just ain't people human."
"What's the difference?"
The elf looked surprised at that. "Really? Besides the obvious? That he's
the oldest living person on the planet, who can create stuff out of any
matter he wants, in any shape or form, by using his mind and the energy
that makes up that matter itself? Just from his own imagination, and the
imaginations of the children that write to him? And that he then flies
around the entire planet in a single evening and leaves those wonderful
treasures at every home, for every child to awaken to? "
Kippy gave a soft laugh. "Ooh. You make him sound so sexy, Max."
Even Charlie blinked at that one. "Sexy? How does being able to manipulate
matter and energy make him sexy?"
Kippy huffed. "Oh, Charlie, come on. The man's an artist. He creates
wonderful things out of nothing and gives them to people. How can that not
be sexy?"
Charlie opened his mouth, and then closed it again, and smiled at his
boyfriend. "Well, when you say it like that..."
Ricky and Adrian both laughed. "Okay, the Big Guy is sexy,"
Adrian said. "I never heard of anyone going nuts from being too sexy."
"Agreed. "Charlie frowned. "Still, being special in
the way he is doesn't mean he's immune to some of the things that bother
regular people." He nodded at Max. "You say you don't even know how old
the man is. Maybe it's age, then. It's normal for people to lose some of
their concentration as they get older."
"I thought of that. We've all thought that might be it, over at the shop.
If it was just a concentration thing, it might be the right idea. But,
he...well...he talks to himself a lot lately, and sometimes he just kinda
zones out and stares off into space. And when the Big Guy stares off into
space, he's really seeing out there. Like out around Rigel,
maybe."
"Sounds like he's just a little introspective to me," Charlie decided. He
smiled. "You can daydream a little and not be crazy."
Max shook his head. "There's other things, Charlie. He's not sleeping
well, either. He has bad dreams, and wakes up in the night, yelling." Max
sighed. "Sometimes it's so loud the night shift guys in the shop can hear
it."
"He never did that before?"
"Not since I've known him. It all started in the last year or so."
Charlie frowned again. "Well...what does, uh...what does Mrs. Big Guy
think is going on?"
For just a second Max looked stunned. Then he shook his head. "Oh, that's
right...you don't know." He shrugged. "There ain't no missus. Not for a
long time now. That's just stuff the PR boys came up with back in the old
days, to make him seem more like people."
"There's no Mrs. Claus?" Kippy blurted, looking shocked.
Max winced, and looked quickly about the room, and then shook his head.
"Nope. There was a few a long time ago, but they don't live as long as the
Big Guy. He got tired of losing them, and stopped looking for new ones."
Charlie held up a hand. "That sucks. Are you saying he lives alone?"
Max nodded. "Pretty much. Some of the boy's wives look out for his
place...you know, keep it dusted and the dishes washed...but just during
the day, and that's it." Max shrugged. "He ain't got time for
housekeeping, let alone socializing, fellas. He spends all year dreamin'
up new stuff for you people. Makin' his lists and checkin' 'em twice, and
all."
Kippy's mouth sagged open. "He's been doing this for hundreds of years?"
"Uh huh." Max suddenly looked wary. "Why? You think of something?"
Kippy sputtered, and looked at Charlie like he couldn't believe it. "He's
lonely, Charlie. He's gotta be."
Max blinked, and then gave a look that said he thought the idea stupid.
"How can he be lonely? He's got all of us!"
Kippy stood and put his hands on his hips, and glared. "Really? And do you
talk to him every day, and ask what he's thinking, what he's feeling? Are
you his friend, and his
companion? Do you sit with him at night and watch TV? And rub his feet
after he's had a long day? Tell him what a great job he's doing? And smile
and kiss him when he says nice things to you?" Kippy snorted. "Do you sleep
with him, and make love to him?"
Max's jaw dropped open. "Heck, no!"
"Well, then. How would you feel if you came home to this big house of
yours every evening, to nothing? No wife, no kids, no people at
all? Just an empty house, where you fixed your own dinner and sat and
stared at the TV, and then went to bed, all alone?"
Max winced. "We don't watch people TV up here. It rots the brain." But he
quickly held up a hand when he saw Kippy's ire rise. "But I know what you
mean!"
Charlie nodded. "You may have something, Kip. Loss of focus and sense of
purpose are both signs of loneliness."
Ricky laughed at that. "How would you know? No one has pried Kippy away
from you since you two guys met."
Adrian smiled, and hugged himself to Ricky, but nodded. "Yeah."
Charlie gazed fondly at Kippy. "I read it in a book, somewhere."
Kippy raised an eyebrow, but didn't take his gaze off Max. "That's the
answer, Max. I feel it."
"Skwish?" Charlie asked, suddenly having a feeling.
Kippy shrugged. "Who needs skwish to see that?" But then he frowned. "But
maybe it is. I feel I am certain that's what the problem is."
Charlie blew out a little puff of air. "Wow. So what do we do about it?"
"What can we do about it?" Adrian asked. "If he won't look for
human companionship on his own, how do we persuade him to get a girl?"
"Or a guy," Kippy said, suddenly grinning. "Maybe the Big Guy swings both
ways!"
Max gave a little cringe. "I don't think the boss wants a boyfriend,
fellas. Thanks for the nice thought, anyway."
Charlie and Kippy both gave a little laugh. "Worth suggesting," Charlie
said, winking at Kip.
"You say he was married before?" Ricky asked. "Where'd he meet his wives?"
Max rubbed at his chin. "It was different in the old days, fellas. There
was a lot less people in the world. Lotsa little villages, and people was
close together. The Big Guy used to visit villages during the days before
Christmas, and talk to people. They loved him, and believed in him. He
wasn't so isolated back then."
"What happened to that?" Charlie asked, unable not to be fascinated by the
past of so famous a personage as Santa himself.
"Ha! I'll tell ya what happened! The world changed, that's what. People
stopped wantin' to accept the boss just on faith. They started wanting to
know who he was, and pry into his private life. Do background checks, and
credit checks, and every other kind of check. Like he was some Joe Blow on
the street." Max looked angry now. "And then all them human advertising
nutbags wanted to steal his image to boost their junk!." Max made a - for
him - nasty face, and his voice took on an unusual depth and speed. "Buy
Snorg, the fabric softener that's as soft as the driven snow! Even
the Big Guy uses it, to keep his red suit looking soft and fluffy!"
Charlie looked askance at the elf. "Do I detect some bitterness there?'
"Maybe." Max nodded. "Yeah, I guess so. All the stuff he's done for you
people for hundreds of years, and look what he got back."
"That's not fair," Kippy said quietly. "Your boss is loved by millions of
children and adults, everywhere on the planet. You can't blame them for
what the assholes among us do."
"Yeah...I know. It just pains me to see the steps back he has taken in the
last coupla centuries. If he showed up in a big city today and said who he
was, someone would want to arrest him, or mug him."
"Could that even be done?" Adrian looked like he didn't believe it. "Who
could get away with arresting San...uh, him?"
"No one. I wouldn't want to be the guy that tried, either. "Max laughed
bitterly. "The Big Guy has a heart of gold, but he can toss lightning
bolts around with the best of them if he gets pissed off."
Briefly, Charlie imagined a scene on a busy street corner with Santa
trading lightning bolts for bullets from New York's finest. It was a scary
picture, indeed.
"I think he's lonely," Kippy repeated. "Everyone needs some love in their
life." He squeezed Charlie's hand, and Charlie smiled at him.
"I second that," Charlie agreed. "It's at least worth looking into, isn't
it?"
"Well...he knows that kids everywhere love him. But..." Max considered the
idea, and then gave what appeared to be a reluctant nod. "Yeah. I gotta
admit I didn't think about him not having anyone special. It almost seems
obvious now that a guy that loves people like he does needs to get
something back now and then."
"Something personal," Kippy said, smiling. "There's all kinds of
love in the world, Max. But it's hard to beat the warm and fuzzy kind, you
know?"
Adrian sighed, and planted his lips firmly on Ricky's cheek. Ricky
immediately turned into it, and both boys laughed as they kissed.
Kippy's bottom lip thrust out, and he looked at Charlie. "Do I get some?"
Charlie grinned, and leaned into his boyfriend, more than happy to share a
little of the warm and fuzzy that Kippy had been talking about.
Max crossed his arms and made a little impatient sound. "Uh, fellas? Could
we? It's the Big Guy that needs the lovin', ya know?"
Charlie pulled back from Kippy, and smiled at him. "There's always later."
Kippy smiled, but didn't say anything. But his expression held a promise,
and Charlie knew it would be one worth waiting for.
"So how do we go about this?" Charlie asked, returning his attention to
Max. "I mean, we can't just walk up to your boss and ask him if he's
eyeballed any hot chicks lately."
"You can't walk up to him at all. You're not supposed to be here. And I
don't know what he'd do if he knew that people
were here at the undisclosed location."
"Don't make it easy on us," Ricky said, frowning. "Shee-it. How can we
help the guy if we can't even get near him?"
Kippy turned to look at Charlie. "Well?"
"Well, what?"
"You're the brains of this outfit, Charlie. Think of something."
Charlie gave a little laugh, and shook his head. "Give me a moment, and
I'll pull a solution right out of thin air."
Adrian grinned. "Come on, Charlie. Something has to be going on inside
that encyclopedia-head of yours."
Charlie turned his gaze to Ricky, who simply shrugged and nodded.
"Great." Charlie turned back to Max, considering. "Your boss have all the
same magic stuff you have?"
"Huh? Well...no. Actually, elves have powers that nobody else has got."
"Stronger powers than the Big Guy?" Kippy asked.
"Oh, heck no. Just different powers." Max frowned. "We can kind of play
with time...relativity...but you know that." Then he laughed. "And you
already know about the size thing."
Kippy bounced his eyebrows up and down. "Do I!"
"What about the dream thing?" Charlie asked, feeling a sudden burst of
inspiration.
"Dream thing?"
"Yeah. You know...how you brought all of us here in our dreams? Does your
boss have that kind of power?"
"Nope." Max looked pleased with himself. "That's an elf thing, and not
every elf has got it, either. I'm pretty good at it, if I do say so
myself."
"You could visit your boss in his dreams?" Charlie asked. "While he was
asleep? And maybe take us with you?"
The look of self-satisfaction vanished from the elf's face, to be replaced
with one of horror. "Are you kidding! I can't just go dragging you fellas
into the Big Guy's dreams!"
Kippy shrugged. "Why not?"
Max opened his mouth...and then closed it again. He looked at Charlie, and
then at Kippy. And then he frowned. "What for?"
Charlie briefly closed his eyes. An idea was forming in his mind now. And
an unconventional one, at that. "Uh...could we visit your boss in his
dreams, and make him think it was just
a dream?" Charlie opened his eyes and grinned.
Max simply stared, looking appalled. At first. And then he seemed to
consider the idea, walking around it and viewing it from all sides. "In
his sleep, huh? And have him think it was just a dream?"
Charlie nodded. "Uh huh. Can it be done?"
The elf licked his lips. "I dunno. Maybe. I'd have to think about it."
Kippy bounced up and down on the sofa, his expression delighted. "We're
going to visit the Big Guy's dreams!"
Max looked annoyed. "I didn't say we could do it."
"You will." Kippy looked quite assured. He leaned forward and kissed
Charlie. "Skwish, remember?"
Max studied the boys a moment longer. "Okay. Let's say for just a minute
that it could be done. " He narrowed his eyes, staring intently at
Charlie. "What are your plans?"
Oh. There was the sticky part. "Well...I'm not quite sure. We'd need to
talk to him before I really even have an idea."
Max's eyes widened. "Talk to him? You? You've got to be kidding!"
Charlie shook his head. "Um, no. Uh, well...you can change the way we
look, right? I mean, you put clothes on us that aren't there. Can't you
dress us any way we need to be dressed?"
Max gave a little shake of his head. "Oh, man!" He closed his eyes, looked
momentarily like he was praying, and then reopened them. "Yeah, I can do
that. But just what is it we're going to do?"
Charlie laughed, feeling a little ridiculous. But an idea was an idea.
"I'm not sure, exactly." He looked at Kippy, and then back to the elf. "I
think we'll just have to wing it when we get there."
* * * * * * *
The snow fell lazily, coating the world in a soft, white down that
softened the footfalls of Nicholaas and his horse, Kirka, to the faintest
of crunches. There was something grand about walking out in the fresh,
hard snow that touched Nicholaas deeply. Especially this night, the night
of nights. Even as the sky above was exceptionally dark with snow-filled
clouds, a strange, full moon had pierced the haze at the horizon, and now
coated the land with an additional white of its own, in moonlight.
"A beautiful evening, I think," Nicholaas said, running his fingers gently
through Kirka's mane of yellow hair. "A perfect night for giving."
The horse gave a small, affectionate chuff, blowing mist from
his nostrils as if to acknowledge his master's words, and Nicholaas
smiled. Kirka understood. That animals were far more in tune with the
world than was humankind was one of the many things that Nicholaas had
come to understand. Understanding things seemed to be his new gift; or,
just one of the many new gifts he had found within himself as he neared
full manhood. That he was somehow different from those around him,
Nicholaas had also come to understand. Only the why of it had escaped him.
But it did not matter, the why. To have when others did
not only meant to Nicholaas that he should give, and that sharing had
become one of his chief joys in life. For the balance of each year he
studied those around him, looking for the things they needed most, which
he then would create and pass along on this very special evening that came
but once each year. He was in his third year of doing this now, this
sharing, and the joy this time was almost hard to contain.
The tiny village that he and Kirka approached even now was called Tirma.
He already knew that the people that lived here were basically good folk,
poor as the stunted harvest the too cool summer this year had provided,
but steadfast in their determination to aid one another in making it
through to the next hopeful spring. He had sampled their worries and spent
time with their fears, and so knew in his heart that these people deserved
more than they currently had. Knew that they deserved to make it to the
next harvest, which something told him would be as bountiful in nature as
this last one had been poor.
And so, here he was, with Kirka to aid him and the night to cloak him, and
the snow to silence even his footfalls. The world had conspired, it
seemed, to assist him this night.
Kirka chuffed again, more quietly this time, as if to rouse Nicholaas from
his introspection and alert him to the nearness of the first small house.
"I see it," he said softly, his eyes moving about the small plot of land
among the trees that held the modest home. Here was Faram the smith, who
shod the local horses and repaired his neighbor's wagons and tools, often
for no pay, in order to keep the town going. A chicken here, some grain
there, and he was able to keep his own family at least reasonably
comfortable.
But there had been a setback to that comfort. Recently, while pounding
straight a shaft of iron upon the great anvil handed down to him by his
father, that anvil had cracked in two. One portion had remained whole, but
the other had dissolved into chunks of useless iron. Faram was horrified
and distraught, but had been making do using the much reduced surface area
of the remaining half to perform his duties. What else could he do? But
his output had been curtailed by the accident, and both the town and his
own family were poorer as a result.
But not after this night.
Nicholaas led Kirka boldly into the yard before the house, and around the
side to the forge. The great fire had been covered for the night, and the
coals shed a glow that escaped from beneath the edges of the hood. A small
wisp of warped air and smoke wafted upwards from the chimney pipe of the
hood, vibrant in the soft moonlight; but that was the only sign that the
forge was still alive.
To one side stood the remnants of the anvil, the shattered remains of the
one side stacked in a sad pile near the remaining whole half. That would
make things easier, as Kirka could only carry so much weight, and to have
brought enough stone along to make the complete repair would have
seriously curtailed Nicholaas's efforts that night. But remaking the anvil
from its own remains would be easy, with just a few stones tossed in as a
binder.
Nicholaas was not worried about being discovered. In addition to the snow
and the night, his own cloak of invisibility protected both himself and
his horse. Another gift from within, one that made the eyes of onlookers
skitter away, to focus elsewhere, never to alight upon man nor animal in
their tasks. It would not do, to be observed in the act of giving.
"This way," Nicholaas said softly, guiding the horse to a spot by the
anvil. Kirka knickered softly, excited at what was to come. The horse had
come to somehow grasp the special nature of these holiday eves, and seemed
as entranced by them as was Nicholaas himself.
The cracked iron lumps were cold, but that mattered not. The energy they
contained, deep down upon that most smallest of levels, the domain of tiny
vortices that only Nicholaas could see, was more than enough to fuel the
process of reconstruction. First he withdrew several small stones from the
pack draped over Kirka's back, and placed them on the ground next to the
pile of iron fragments. Then he closed his eyes, and looked deep into the
iron, and then imagined that the pieces could be melted and reformed, and
remade with the remaining side of the anvil into one that was whole.
He pulled certain of the tiny, swirling vortices from the stones he had
laid upon the ground, and sent them along to assist in the reconstruction,
setting them to finding the points where the iron pieces would meet, and
assisting in the fusion that would make them whole again. He could feel
the air around him warm in reaction, and the faint scuff of Kirka's hooves
against the frozen ground as the horse edged nearer to watch.
The remaining side of the anvil also possessed minute cracks in its
structure that might one day separate under the right force, and Nicholaas
fused these also, to prevent that from happening. In his mind he could see
a complete anvil, shiny and new, stout with the perfection of the metal it
contained, now all of one, and without fracture. The heat about him
intensified, and the briefest of flashes lit against his eyelids; and then
Nicholaas sighed and opened his eyes.
Before him stood the anvil, bright as if new, all of one piece, and ready
for use. Nicholaas smiled, and set about examining the tools that Faram
used in his work, and repaired and strengthened all those he found
wanting. A bit of wood here, a sliver of metal there, and the forge was
once again a business that could feed a family and support a village.
Next there was Anna, Faram's wife and the mother of his two children. A
practical woman, the things she wanted were practical as well. Nicholaas
set about repairing her butter churn, and the can she used to transport
milk from the tiny dairy farm down the road. The pennies she had earned
selling the butter had been sorely missed when the churn had broken, and,
Nicholaas felt their return would be a cheer the entire family would feel.
He regrew the worn broomcorns of her hearth broom, and retied them to be
stout and lasting. And, finally, there was the dress, simple yet fetching
to the eye, not so lavish that it would be out of keeping in such a small
village, nor so rich that it would be envied more than briefly. It was the
sort of dress a woman could wear to any sort of village gathering and feel
comfortable in its cleanliness, and moderately prideful in its appearance.
Anna had dreamed of the dress, only briefly, as she had sat and churned
butter one day, and Nicholaas had been passing by and seen it in his
mind's eye. He never forgot such things, and this eve, the special eve,
all those memories came rushing to the fore of his mind.
There were gifts for the children, too. For Laina, the girl, a warm cloak,
fur-lined, and a pair of leather shoes for the winter. For Mikel, the boy,
a pair of shoes as well, and a jacket to keep him warm in his chores. For
both children there were small figurines of animals and birds, beautifully
carved from wood and painted as if by hand by the power of Nicholaas's
mind.
He left the treasures upon the doorstep, where they would be found on
first rising, and then he and Kirka moved on up the road to the next
house, and the next, until all in the village had received their gifts.
The night was half over now, and Nicholaas and Kirka cut across the fallow
winter fields to the next village, Ramini, and repeated their performance
there.
And so it was that the first gray streaks of predawn were appearing in the
sky as Nicholaas and Kirka walked the road back to their own home. The
snows had ceased as the clouds had lifted, and the first hints of light
suggested that this might be a brighter day than the last. Nicholaas
smiled, knowing in his heart that this day would be brighter for many,
certainly. The satisfaction made him glow, and he was so wrapped in his
own thoughts that he failed to notice that others were out and about as
well.
Kirka slowed and gave a soft knicker, and Nicholaas looked up to see a
party of travelers on foot coming along the road towards him. At first
they were indistinct in number, too merged with the grayness of the early
morning to count. But soon, as the two parties neared each other,
Nicholaas could see that there were five of them, all young men, and that
they strode along watchfully, their eyes already upon Nicholaas and his
horse.
Nicholaas smiled. He felt no fear at such an encounter, for the
protections he could bring to bear were formidable, and quite beyond the
abilities of anyone to counter. Anyone he had yet met, that was. But
Nicholaas had been all about the land in these parts, and he had always
been certain that he would feel anyone using the powers that he himself
possessed. He had never once felt a thing, and felt nothing now as the
five approached him.
Nicholaas reached up and pulled back the red hood of his cloak, allowing
the brisk morning air to circle about his face and chase away any
sluggishness he felt at being out and about all night. As the others
neared he smiled and nodded, and then drew to a halt as they met at the
side of the road.
"Good morning to you, fellow travelers. I see I am not the only early
riser to take to the road."
The five separated and stood before him, and drew back their own hoods,
and Nicholaas was surprised to see that the travelers were young, even a
few years shy of his own eighteen years.
"Greetings," the one out front said, smiling. Like the others, he was a
little shorter than Nicholaas, but a handsome lad, with bright,
intelligent eyes and an honest smile. In fact, all the lads were
appealing, and looked healthy and strong, their clothing clean and only
scarcely worn.
Another lad moved forward, this one straw-haired, and smiled as well. "A
fine horse you have there."
Kirka gave a soft chuff, as if he understood the nature of the compliment,
and cast a look at Nicholaas, as if to say, 'did you hear that!' Nicholaas
laughed. "This is Kirka, and I believe you have made a friend by your
comment."
"It's early, but looks to be a fine day in the making," the first lad
said, the dark-haired one with the bright eyes. "We were just thinking of
stopping and making a fire, and having something hot to eat and drink.
Would you care to join us?"
The offer seemed in earnest, and Nicholaas was touched, as he was always
touched when someone offered to give to him without thought of recompense.
He looked at Kirka, and the horse gave a soft knicker as if to say the
idea was a good one.
"It seems that Kirka is of a mood to rest," he said. "And I have been out
for some time now, and I am hungry, I think, and I have a few things in my
pack I can share, as well. So let us move there by that fallen tree and
make a fire, shall we?"
The dark-haired lad grinned. "I'm Charlie. And these are my good friends,
Kip, Rick, Adrian, and Max."
Nicholaas nodded to each lad in turn, and then offered his own name. He
made no comment on the oddness of the traveler's names, for it was already
obvious that they had come from some distance, indeed. The six of them
moved to the fallen tree by the road, cleared a spot in the snow, and
broke limbs from the fallen trunk for kindling. The one called Max pulled
out a flint and striker, and in very short order he had a fire going.
Nicholaas marveled at the proficiency. It was the quickest he had ever
seen a fire produced.
"You possess the magic of fire," he said, smiling at Max. "I have never
seen one kindled quicker."
For just a second the boy looked startled, but then smiled. "Aw, geez. It
ain't nothin' to comment on!"
Nicholaas smiled, sensing something different about this boy, but unable
to put his finger upon it. For one, the lad possessed a sense about him
that was far more mature than his apparent years, and conveyed a feeling
of age much greater than his boyish features would suggest. But of course
there was no comment to make, as Nicholaas also believed that while
curiosity had its place, the privacy of others took precedence. Yet this
lad was an odd one, indeed.
"Busy night?" the straw-haired lad - Kip, it was - suddenly asked.
Nicholaas looked at him, and for the strangest moment felt that the other
boy knew exactly what Nicholaas and Kirka had been about all throughout
the dark period. But that was not possible, and the question therefore had
to be more innocent than it sounded.
"I was off late last night, and will arrive home in another hour's
travel." He smiled. "I wished to be home for this day, of all days."
Kip smiled. "It's Christmas. A merry one to you, I should add."
The obvious warmth of the wish was touching. "Thank you. And to all of
you, as well."
A small kettle was dug from one of the boy's sacks, and a unique little
rack made of iron, with legs that folded out to make a stand, which was
set above the fire. The kettle was filled with fresh, clean snow, and
placed upon the rack over the fire. The boys dug in another sack and found
potatoes, carrots, celery, and what looked like dried beef, which they
happily cut into small pieces over a clean section of leather and then
poured into the kettle. To this mix was added a toss of blended spices,
and then the pot was stirred slowly by the boy named Rick while Adrian
retrieved a whole carrot from the sack and pointed at Kirka with the sharp
end of it. "May I?"
Kirka immediately made a pleased sound at the sight of the carrot, and
Nicholaas laughed. "I could not stop you now if I tried."
Adrian laughed, and got to his feet and approached Kirka slowly, the
carrot extended before him. Kirka was not bashful, and came forward to
accept the prize, taking it carefully as the boy held it closer. Adrian
looked pleased, and rubbed a hand along the horse's muzzle, and sighed.
"He's beautiful."
"He is a Carmargue," Nicholaas explained, "and a free agent. He is with me
by his choice, and I am honored by his presence."
Kirka chuffed and looked pleased, and then took another bite of carrot.
"Wow. He seems to be very smart," Adrian returned, smiling even more
broadly and again gently rubbing Kirka's muzzle.
"He is that," Nicholaas agreed. "A finer traveling companion I could not
have asked for."
The pot was brought to a boil and tended by Rick, as the others sat about
it on the lengths of broken tree and talked. Nicholaas quickly found that
his new friends were an interesting lot, indeed, tossing about odd bits of
language that were totally unfamiliar, but getting their meanings across
with an exuberance that Nicholaas found charming. That these were lads
used to a more civilized life than just a farm and a cow was soon quite
obvious, and though Nicholaas burned in his curiosity to know more about
them, his nature kept his questions to a minimum. But he absorbed
everything that was said, and his memory was such that he would forget
nothing.
At last the stew was ready, and the boys produced a set of six wonderful
little ceramic bowls from yet another pack, and spoons made of finely
worked metal. Nicholaas was surprised and impressed, and examined his
spoon quite carefully, marveling at the intricacy of its handle. "I don't
believe I've seen such fine spoons before."
Charlie squinted at his own, and briefly looked over at Max, who just
shrugged.
"Something we picked up in our travels," Charlie said then, smiling. "If
you like it, please keep it, and the bowl, too."
Nicholaas stopped in the middle of chewing a mouthful of stew, and looked
first at Charlie, and then around at the others. "For me?"
"Yes. Merry Christmas."
For a moment Nicholaas did not know what to do. In all of his life no one
had ever given him a gift. For just the briefest of moments, he felt what
it was like to be on the receiving end, to have something given to him for
no reason but for the giving. His thoughts whirled back over his night, to
all the things he had left for others in two villages, which many would be
wakening to find about now. Nicholaas looked again at the spoon in his
hand, and the bowl that held his stew, and the stew itself. All things
given to him, for nor reason other than the gift.
The feeling was blissful, exquisite, and quite beyond anything he could
have imagined on his own. Up until now he had enjoyed giving for the
thrill and pleasure of doing for others. But now...now he knew what it was
like to receive the gifts he gave out. He could see the smiles
on the children's faces, the wonder and perhaps even the tears on the
faces of the adults, who were mostly beyond the stage of life where one
subscribed to wonder at all. That they could not imagine who had left them
these things, and ascribed them to some variation of the old Saint
Nicholas, only made it better. The gift of receiving good things, and
the sense of wonder about how it had all come about.
And in that instant, Nicholaas knew for certain that this was the course
his life would take. He had been enjoying what he was doing without much
thought to the future of the endeavor; but now he knew that what he was
doing once each year was his future. The gifts he had been given
in life could be passed along to others in variant form, all to the good
of the world, and the many wanting people in it.
"Thank you," he stammered, his eyes trying to water. He rubbed the sleeve
of his cloak quickly across them, and went back to eating his stew.
The boys around him smiled, and went back to eating, too...
* * * * * * *
"...What happened?" Charlie asked, shaking his head, and looking about
Max's study. No time seemed to have passed since they had started. The
fire still burned tall in the hearth, and the cold and quiet night world
beyond the window glass still stared in at them.
"Dream shift," Max said, leaning closer from his position seated on the
edge of the coffee table. "You know how dreams are. One moment you're
walking along a brightly lit street with your missus, and the next instant
you're flying like a bird over some dark castle full of dragon eggs."
Adrian laughed. "Dragon eggs! Not in my dreams!"
Kippy, who was sitting next to Charlie and holding his hand, shook his
head briefly. "Wow. That was so real!"
"What was up with the spoon?" Ricky asked, from his seat next to Adrian.
"The Big Guy looked like he'd never seen a spoon before."
"My fault," Max said. "Spoons like that didn't come along for a few
hundred years, at that point. Temporal flummox on my part." He smiled at
Charlie. "Nice thing you did, though, giving him the spoon and the bowl. I
could see he was touched by it."
Charlie shrugged. "Seemed the right thing to do." He frowned. "Are you
somehow guiding the Big Guy's dreams? It seemed odd that we were just
suddenly with him as a teenager."
"Nope. Whatever is happening is all in the boss's own mind. We're just
along for the ride, although what we say and do adds to what he is
experiencing. So just remember that and be careful what you guys say and
do, okay?"
"Yeah." Charlie nodded. "I'm still not sure just what we need to say to
him. We don't seem to have arrived at a point where we can talk about him
maybe finding a girl or something."
The elf shrugged. "It'll either happen, or it won't. But you'll know it if
you see it, I'm pretty sure."
Charlie nodded. "So what do we do now?"
"We're in a brief bit of no-time between the dream shift. We just wait
until...oh! Here we go!"
* * * * * * *
...The castle ballroom was alive with movement, with candelabras and wall
sconces full of cheerful flames casting a warm glow everywhere as the
crowd danced to the strains of the waltz. Nicholaas had been introduced to
a dozen people, all of whom had inspected him closely, examining his
clothing, and his bearing, and who had then relegated him to some lower
status than themselves. He did not mind that at all, hearing their small
thoughts and seeing their small desires, and understanding that they had
no need of his visits on the next Christmas Eve. Yet for each one he
marked in memory some small thing to give, some item that would touch the
tiny grains of joy still left deep within them. Even the wealthy were once
children, and the spark that is the child that lives on in everyone has
dreams of its own that never quite die away.
"...the Countess DeWard," Lady Tipperink was saying. "Oh, I'm sure you
will like her, dear Nicholaas. She is from the west, and is quite a
charmer, if I do say so myself." This followed by the horse laugh that the
Lady was so self-conscious about, but which she seemed unable to change.
Nicholaas smiled and nodded. "I would be pleased to meet any of your
friends, Milady."
The woman quite chortled, probably at the notion that a personage of the
Countess's status could actually be her friend. But she pulled
even harder on his sleeve as they approached a woman dressed in elegant,
bejeweled finery, and with blonde hair piled unbelievably high upon her
head in the style of the western continent, those notions which were now
making their way to this part of the land. She turned and saw them coming,
and a frown immediately covered her otherwise glacial features. Nicholaas
sighed inwardly, knowing that more pleasantries were about to ensue with
someone who had not the slightest desire to hear or offer them.
"Oh, Countess, there is someone I would like you to meet," Lady Tipperink
said quickly, before the Countess had a chance to melt away into the
crowd. She pulled hard on Nicholaas's arm, and then just as quickly yanked
him to stop before the other woman, who barely managed to mask her
annoyance at yet another man being thrust at her. But Nicholaas could hear
her interior dialogue, and so knew that he must keep this encounter as
short as was possible without appearing rude to Lady Tipperink.
The Lady formally introduced the Countess, who offered her white-gloved
hand. Nicholaas bowed his head over it and said he was enchanted. The
Countess did the appraisal thing with her eyes, and quickly assigned him
to social climbing status, with a small warning to not be taken
in by Nicholaas's youth, good looks, and apparent charm. Nicholaas smiled
inwardly at that; he was all of thirty years now, but the Countess spent
many hours before each vespertine social engagement with her couture and
appearance staff, mostly to conceal her age, which was much greater than
the eye could now tell.
There was some small talk, and the mention of some social engagement that
the Countess was planning a month down the road, to which Lady Tipperink
virtually invited herself, and pulled Nicholaas into as supposed bait. The
Countess was not fooled in the slightest, but could see no clear way to
avoid inviting them - though Nicholaas could see her already formulating
plans in her head to avoid both of them at the event when it transpired.
"I will have my secretary add you to the list," the Countess said, with
just a touch of unintended chill in her voice. She turned, and looked at a
small knot of retainers, who had been standing nearby, pretending not to
have heard every word.
"Margrait? Come here."
A young lady in pleasant but scarcely royal attire detached herself from
the crowd, came forward, and bowed her head with the right amount of
subservience. "Yes, ma'am?"
"Please add the Lady Tipperink and this Nicholaas fellow to the guest list
for the Magister Ludi's award ball."
"Yes, ma'am."
And with that the Countess turned and swirled away, glad to be done with
the whole thing.
The young lady produced a small book and stepped forward, and as she did
so, her eyes came up and met Nicholaas's gaze.
For a brief moment, the world stopped as they stared at one another. A
series of enchanted thoughts came to Nicholaas from the mind of the girl
as she instantly fell in love with him, and he her, in one of those magic
moments that normally take time to become apparent, but to which
Nicholaas's gifts made him immediately aware.
"Hello," he managed, smiling. "I am Nicholaas, and quite charmed to meet
you."
A sterling silver smile appeared on the young lady's face, and then a
slightly timid cast as she briefly averted her gaze. But she could not
keep her eyes away, and when they returned they were warm with feeling.
"Hello. I am called Margrait."
But then duty, and a sense that she was about to overstep her bounds, came
upon her. A moment of the briefest pain passed behind her eyes, followed
by another brief appearance of a boundless inner strength as she composed
herself and got down to business. "May I have addresses to which to send
your invitations?"
Nicholaas warred with himself, too, but like the girl, only briefly. He,
too, had a duty, one to a larger world, and could not take the time to be
in love. He steeled himself, and waited while the Lady Tipperink gave her
location, and then gave his own, and then did not have to act to say he
was charmed again to have met Margrait. And then he watched her turn away
with a hollow feeling he would never forget.
The Lady Tipperink gave an indignant little huff to Margrait's back, and
looked at Nicholaas with disdain in her eyes. "Forward little thing, isn't
she? I did not miss the way she gazed at you, dear Nicholaas." She turned
to watch the secretary as she melted back into the Countess's entourage.
"Some people just do not know their place."
For a second, Nicholaas felt an uncharacteristic anger. But it passed
quickly, for he realized that Lady Tipperink was not to blame for the
social conventions of the land. But he did feel a need to be away from the
woman now, and so he directed her to a group of other personages, and then
left her in the conversation there.
He found himself wandering about, hoping to again see the Countess
DeWard's secretary.
Instead, his eyes lit on five young men in splendid dress, who all seemed
to be looking at him at one time. Something in their gazes demanded that
he take notice, and he moved slowly towards them, inspecting each face.
And then the oddest thing occurred.
He felt like he knew them. All five faces were familiar, but from when and
where, he could not place. And since Nicholaas forgot nothing, the feeling
was quite eerie, indeed.
They smiled as he approached, and a dark-haired lad with sparkling eyes
nodded briefly. "Hello."
Nicholaas stopped before them, and again looked to each face. "I'm
sorry...do I know you gentlemen?"
That the five were just lads was apparent to him now. But they were so
familiar that he just could not believe that they had not met somewhere
before.
"I don't think so," the dark-haired boy said. "I'm Charlie. These are my
traveling companions, Kip, Rick, Adrian, and Max."
The last one - Max - especially roused some awareness of having been met
before. "You seem very familiar," Nicholaas insisted. "Perhaps at the
Magister Ludi's homecoming?"
"We were not there," the one called Kip said. He had straw-colored hair,
and a hint of mischief in his eyes that Nicholaas found somehow appealing.
"No, we weren't," Charlie confirmed. "We've only just arrived to the city,
in fact. This is the first event we have been, er, invited to attend."
Nicholaas frowned, but decided that he could not let the familiar feeling
cause him to be rudely inattentive. He smiled again, and gazed about the
crowded ballroom. "I attend these things, but they really are beyond me."
"Then why come?" Kip asked, again with that hint of something else in his
gaze.
"Oh...I like people." Nicholaas understood then that these lads were
unconcerned with station. "Even this sort," he kidded.
All five of the lads laughed. "It is a little hoity-toity," said Rick.
Nicholaas took in the unfamiliar expression and intuitively understood its
meaning. "Yes. Uh, hoity-toity, indeed."
He was taken now by the apparent strangeness of the five, so out of
keeping with the surroundings. So when Charlie announced that they were
just ready to leave, and asked if Nicholaas would like to join them for a
small meal in less spectacular surroundings, Nicholaas jumped at the
chance to get away. Get away form the ball and it's layers of
pretense...and to get away from Margrait, who was now somehow firmly
lodged in the back of his mind.
So they quietly left by a side doorway, and emerged into a street just
filling with new snow falling from a gray sky overhead.
"Man!" said Kip. "It sure snows here a lot!"
Nicholaas laughed. "I love snow, personally. If I could have it
year-round, I probably would."
"I like it, too," Kip returned. "I just wish the cold didn't have to
always go with it!"
Charlie reached out and gave a squeeze to Kip's arm that was somehow very
fond, and Kip turned and beamed at him, and Nicholaas felt surprise at the
intimacy that was conveyed by the simple touch and gaze between the two.
An unusual intimacy, even.
The one event was by no means conclusive; but as they followed Nicholaas's
directions through the streets to his favored inn, he noticed more of the
seeming intimacy between Charlie and Kip, which was entirely unconscious
on their parts, but which could not be concealed from a sharp observer
like Nicholaas.
And not only that, but Rick and Adrian displayed much of the same
fondness, laughing and touching one another, and looking at each other in
such a way that there could be no denial that there was love between them.
It seemed now that Charlie and Kip were a couple, and Rick and Adrian,
too.
Nicholaas had heard of such things, mostly whispered about and concealed
among the upper class, and occasionally dealt with more openly and
brutally by the lower class. He had been surprised to understand that,
while the idea of being with another man in such a fashion did not appeal
to him, he saw no evil in love shared by any two people old enough to
understand its implications. There was never enough love to go around,
really.
Max seemed the odd man out. He seemed aware of the other boy's closeness,
and displayed a good-natured tolerance of it that spoke volumes about
where his heart lay. But there was a difference in his manner, and not
just that he seemed tolerant of but not interested in the other boy's form
of companionship. Max, despite his appearance, seemed somehow older and
more experienced than the others, and Nicholaas felt inside himself that
Max might be one with a woman waiting somewhere for him to come home.
It was of no importance. As they walked along and talked, Nicholaas found
that he liked all five of the lads, with their good spirits and their
obvious affections for one another. Here were people that cared far more
for each other than for any social convention, and who obviously would
dare to be together no matter what the cost. That their closeness would be
much less apparent to most people he was sure of, as few - if any - others
saw the things that Nicholaas could observe.
They found the inn, and took a small back room to themselves and ordered a
small meal. A curtain separated them from the inn's dining area, and no
one could see them, and no one was close enough to hear. They talked
freely, and Nicholaas learned that the lads had found the ball they had
quitted faintly distasteful.
"Nothing personal," Adrian said, holding up a hand as they discussed it.
"Some nice people there." He frowned then. "Some not very nice ones, too,
though."
"Oh, I agree," Nicholaas said, smiling to put the others at their ease.
"But everyone has their value to the world, even if the coinage often
seems small."
The boys stared at him a moment, and then broke into laughter, as if it
took a full moment for what Nicholaas had said to sink in. Odd, that they
spoke and acted so differently than the people he knew. Nicholaas had met
visitors from all across Europe, but none with quite the attitudes and
ideas of these.
Charlie laughed. "We saw you were having fun with the lady, though."
Nicholaas thought he was referring to the Lady Tipperink, and gave a wan
smile. "As I said, sometimes the coinage is a bit small."
Kip leaned forward on the tabletop and gazed at him pointedly. "Not her.
We mean the young one that took your name and street."
Oh!
"Margrait," Nicholaas said, automatically. He smiled, unable not to. "Yes,
she was quite fetching, actually."
"Is that all?" Charlie asked.
Nicholaas stared at him, unable to believe that others might have seen the
brief acknowledgement between himself and Margrait that there was room for
each other in their hearts.
He swallowed, feeling unaccountably vulnerable for some reason. "Oh...I
don't do love. Especially at first sight. I have a busy life, and no time
for such things."
"Everyone has time for such things," Kip said, giving a small
shake to his head. "Even you."
The forwardness of the suggestion was surprising, almost as if Kip had
some secret knowledge of the life that Nicholaas led. But that was
impossible.
"No, you don't understand. I travel about a lot, and I am very busy all
year long, and to leave some poor woman waiting about a home for my rare
returns would be unconscionable."
"Take her with you," Rick suggested. "That's what people in love do.
Things together, I mean."
Again, Nicholaas was surprised. How could these boys know what had
transpired between himself and Margrait, just by observing? They had to be
guessing, or, worse, assuming.
Nicholaas felt mildly affronted, and had no idea why. The five seated with
him radiated nothing but decency towards him, and yet he was just starting
to discern some subtle purpose to their actions.
"You are rather young to be making such judgments, are you not?" he cast
out, feeling on the defensive and not knowing quite why. "Just because you
have all found love together is no reason to feel you can direct my love
affairs as well."
It came out before he knew it, and Nicholaas was immediately aghast at
what his mouth had dared.
Kip sucked in a little air, obviously startled; but Charlie immediately
reached out an arm and dropped his hand on the other boy's wrist, and gave
it a gentle squeeze.
"You're right, of course. Just because we have love is no reason for us to
point out what you are deliberately allowing yourself to miss."
Nicholaas froze at the boldness of the statement. And yet, he had asked
for that, hadn't he? "I apologize for being rude," he said immediately,
and made to get up from his seat.
Max, who was sitting beside him, reached up a hand and placed it on
Nicholaas's shoulder, and pulled him back to his seat with surprising
strength. "Please don't go."
The other four boys nodded immediately. "Yeah, we're sorry," Kip said,
looking upset now. "We just wanted to help."
We just wanted to help.
The sound of those words echoed inside Nicholaas's head, and he could
not ignore the honest feeling behind them. He stared around at the circle
of faces, and saw only concern in their eyes. Only concern for him. It
was strange, and unaccounted for, and yet...welcome.
"I am sorry," he repeated. "I just...I don't know what came over me."
"I do," Kippy said, leaning forward again. "You know we're right, and you
don't want to admit it."
Brazen lad! But Nicholaas smiled, and then laughed out loud.
"How can you know my desires so well?"
"You wear them in your eyes," Charlie returned, once again squeezing Kip's
hand. "It's easy to see that you care about people. That...appeals
to us."
"Ain't that the truth," Max said. "And you're in danger now of caring so
much about everybody else that you won't care for your own feelings."
Nicholaas blinked at the lad, but could find no fault with his words.
Blind he could be at times, but Nicholaas was never one to run from the
truth when it so boldly pursued him.
"You saw that, eh? The...I don't know what to call it. The spark
between myself and Margrait?"
"Did we!" Rick said, patting Adrian's hand where it lay on the
tabletop. "LIke a flag going up and fireworks going off!"
Nicholaas did not stop to ask what these fireworks might be. "I admit it,
then. I felt in my heart for her."
"Then why did you walk away?" Charlie asked.
Why, indeed?
But Nicholaas knew the answer, even if he had never before placed it into
words. "I had a horse once, named Kirka. A very special horse, that simply
walked up to me one, um, night in my travels, and stayed with me of his
own accord thereafter."
Charlie scratched his head and looked at Max, who just shrugged. "What's
that got to do with it?" Charlie asked.
Nicholaas took a deep breath and let it sigh out before continuing.
"Horses don't live as long as people. My horse eventually died."
Surprisingly, even after five years, the grief quickly returned. "It
was...difficult for me. The sense of loss. I was able to imagine what that
would be like with a person. With a wife."
Charlie's eyes widened. "You cannot refuse love just because someday it
might end."
"I didn't mean it quite that way."
"Then how did you mean it?" Kip asked.
How indeed? Nicholaas sat still, knowing full well that that was exactly
how he had meant it. That, after losing Kirka, the idea of losing anyone
else, ever again, was too painful for him to imagine. Nicholaas was
blessed with incredible imagination, that allowed him to visualize things,
to create things out of the smallest bits of space and time. It gave him
considerable insight into those around him, and considerable empathy for
their plights. It was this very imagination that prodded him to give so
much of his own talent to assist his fellow men.
And so much pleasure for doing it.
But what was a boon to creativity could be a bane to his peace. That same
imagination could chain him to uncomfortable remembrances, like that of a
horse with the intelligence and personality of a person. He had
loved Kirka like a friend, and his loss had run deep into Nicholaas's
soul.
"To never have love is to never have lived," Max said quietly. "The things
you do in life, you do for love. You cannot deny yourself the same thing
you give so freely to others."
Nicholaas stared, questions aflurry within his mind, not the least of
which was how these people could seem to know so much about him. But all
questions were pushed aside now, and only the face of Margrait remained.
No...there was one question still there, and it concerned himself and
Margrait: what was he going to do about it?
The answer started within his legs, as he pushed himself to his feet. "I
need to go. Maybe she is still there."
The others stood up, all of them grinning now. "Go!" Charlie said, waving
a hand at the curtained doorway.
Nicholaas nodded, and ran for the door. But something made him pause at
the curtain, to turn and look back at those oh-so-familiar faces. "Will
you come? To the wedding?"
The lads laughed. "Sure," Charlie said. "If you don't miss it yourself,
standing here talking about it!"
Nicholaas grinned, his spirit suddenly soaring outward for the first time
in years. "I will! I will go!"
And he did...
* * * * * * *
..."That was kind of intense, " KIppy said, squeezing himself against
Charlie. But that was not nearly enough, so he turned to kiss Charlie's
cheek, and found him waiting with his lips instead. They kissed, until
Charlie and Kippy both started laughing.
"Did he marry her?" Adrian asked, leaning forward to gaze at Max.
"Sure. And they were happy together for fifty years before she died. The
Big Guy took it hard, but he still married two more times after that." The
elf shrugged. "I don't know what happened after the third one. I always
assumed he couldn't take losing them anymore. I can sure feel that,
myself."
Charlie looked at Kippy, and nodded. "Yeah."
Kippy stuck out his tongue, his eyes bright. "What are you worried about?
I'll outlive you. It will be me with all the grief, not you."
Charlie frowned at that, but then smiled. "Oh...I dunno. I don't usually
go anywhere without you. Maybe we'll go together."
"Maybe you should stop talking about it, huh?" Ricky said then. "Neither
one of you are going anywhere, got me?"
Charlie and Kippy both laughed, and Adrian put an arm around his boyfriend
and drew him closer.
"Aw, geez," Max said, rolling his eyes. "If you guys ain't the lovebirds!"
"That's right," Kippy offered, nodding. "Anything wrong with that?"
The elf held up a placating hand. "Nope. Not at all."
"I have a question," Ricky announced. "If the stuff in these dreams
already happened, why are we doing this?"
Max frowned at that. "Well, I don't know that everything that is happening
while we're there actually happened the way it happened in the
dream. Yeah, the boss's first wife was named Margrait. But he's just
dreaming, guys, so we don't know exactly how what we say and do will
affect the way the boss thinks."
Charlie nodded. "Yeah, that's right. Our purpose is to somehow put a bug
in his mind that he needs to go on finding companionship even when his
wives pass on." He shook his head. "I somehow don't feel right doing this.
I mean, the man is entitled to his grief, and the way he feels about
having another wife." He looked over at Max. "Is it selfish of us to try
to push him into staying healthy for the sake of the world?"
"You're having doubts now?" Max asked, shaking his head.
Charlie reddened slightly. "I'm sorry. I just...I'm only just getting to
know him a little, and I have to wonder if we're doing the right thing."
Kippy nodded. "It seems kind of like meddling. Or manipulation."
Max closed his eyes, and then nodded. "I know. I love the guy, too. I
don't know if what we are doing is right. But we can't stop now. The
sequence is shifting and about to pick up again."
Charlie nodded, and grasped Kippy's hand again. "Then we're ready, right,
guys?"
Everyone nodded.
Max licked his lips, and closed his eyes. "Okay..."
* * * * * * *
Nicholaas paced the floor, until the doctor finally emerged from the room.
"Well?"
The man had a fine reputation, and Nicholaas believed in getting the best.
But Dr. Sebastian only shook his head. "I'm very sorry. But I don't think
there is anything I can do for her."
Nicholaas stared at the man, feeling the first pangs of shock. He had
known it was time, and yet...he had still maintained some small hope...
"She is eighty-two," Dr. Sebastian said. "I just think it is your
grandmother's time, young man."
Nicholaas winced at the charade, that Inya was his grandmother, and not
his wife of over fifty years. Of course no one would believe they were
married. Nicholaas still looked thirty-five, while Inya looked...
He nodded, rubbing a hand across his eyes. "May I see her?"
"Yes. She is asking for you, in fact."
Nicholaas nodded, and went right in.
It was a cheerful room. Despite the weak winter sun and the snow on the
ground outside, the room felt warm and cozy. The little stove in the
corner was well stoked, the bin of coal had been kept full, and flowers
from many well-wishers filled pots on the small table near the bed. There
were notes among the flowers, from friends of the family, and even a few
written in the oddly curved script that only elves could manage.
Outside the room, in the street below, bells rang to herald the holiday,
and the clip-clop of horses and the creak of wagons accompanied cheerful
voices calling for a splendid new year. Christmas was done, 'in the bag',
as Inya had always said, and the next year ready to begin. And this year
had been a very fine year, indeed.
It had been Inya who had engineered the new contract with elfkind, that
had ushered in a new era for Nicholaas and his Christmas activities,
allowing him to create far more variety and quantity in the way of gifts
and distribute them ever wider in the world. Nicholaas had not known of
the ties that Inya's family had with the invisible world until he had
started revealing things to her about himself after they were married.
What a joy it had been to learn that his new wife so easily accepted what
he was and what he did in life!
And, true to her nature, she had looked into ways to help him, and ease
his load, and even to expand his capabilities, widen his horizons. The
world was at their feet, and the eventual ability - with the aid of
the elves - to reach every corner of the planet with needful things for
others!
It had been wonderful, while it lasted. But the one thing that Nicholaas
could not conquer was time. It had crept upon them, slowly at first, and
then in ever quickening steps these last few years. Eventually, to
maintain their public face, they had been required to move around, and for
Inya to eventually move in the public eye from wife to mother, and then
grandmother within the household, for no one would believe that a young
man like Nicholaas would be husband to one so aged as Inya.
But behind closed doors, they had maintained their love, in private.
But now...it was all about to end. For the third time Nicholaas was about
to lose a great love, a great light from his life. His heart burned with
the anguish of it...and the helplessness with which he viewed its
approach.
Inya heard him come in, and raised an arm from the bed. "Nicholaas?"
He circled the bed, and sat in the chair by the arm. "Yes. I am here, my
love."
She smiled, the years on her face unable to conceal the beauty that still
resided there. "I am so glad. How are things with the new shop?"
"They are fine, my sweet. Greylisk installed one of those peculiar elfin
doors in the back of the house, which, when I now step through it, I am
transported directly to the shop." He smiled. "I do not think anyone will
be stumbling across this shop anytime soon."
"It is well-concealed, as I suggested?"
"Yes. Farther north than any man has yet to set foot, and likely to be so
for some time to come."
For a moment she grayed out, her eyes closing, and Nicholaas felt an
immediate grief. But then she opened her eyes, and smiled. "A good thing,
my husband. All we have worked for can now progress smoothly and
undetected for many more years to come."
Nicholaas nodded, but said nothing, just gripping her hand and offering
what he could by touch.
The door of the room opened then, and a parade of people started in.
Nicholaas whipped his head around and stared as five men - boys, rather -
entered the room and took up positions at the end of the bed.
"I beg your pardon!" Nicholaas stood, prepared to be quite angry at this
intrusion. "This is a private room. I think you have made a mistake."
"No." But it was Inya who said this. "I asked them to come back, husband.
Let them remain."
Nicholaas stared at his wife. "You asked them?"
Inya smiled, and Nicholaas returned to his seat and picked up her hand
again.
"They are well-wishers," Inya explained. "Come to wish only good for you
and I both."
"Well-wishers," Nicholaas repeated, in disbelief. He stared at the five
young men, wondering just how they had managed to get past Inya's
commonsense safeguards. Inya was not one to let just anyone walk into
their world, and these five had the look of...
He stopped, staring at the five lads. They looked familiar! He let his
eyes go from face to face, certain he had seen all of them somewhere
before...but where? Nicholaas never forgot anything, and so it was
extremely disconcerting to feel like he knew these lads...but not to know
how. "We've met?" He asked, his eyes moving
among them, and finally settling on the dark-haired boy in the middle.
"No," that one said. "My name is Charlie. These are my friends, Kip, Rick,
Adrian, and Max."
Nicholaas shook his head. "Why are you here?"
"Because we need to see this thing out," Charlie said. "Whatever the
cost."
Nicholaas squinted at them, not understanding. He was about to demand a
full explanation when he noticed a difference in Inya's breathing. It had
slowed, grown deep and somewhat noisy. His eyes bounced to her, dread
pushing away any thought of the interlopers. "Inya?"
Her eyes were closed. and she did not answer. Nicholaas squeezed her hand,
but to no avail. "Not yet," he whispered, tears coming to his eyes.
"Please...not yet."
He stared at her still form...and for the very first time, his power to
see within things opened in
his mind while looking at a person, and he was looking inside a human
being. It had never happened before, and Nicholaas was stunned. Here were
muscles and bone, and veins and arteries transporting blood. It was in a
way gruesome, and in another way fascinating. His eyes darted about,
examining, until they came to a single spot, an irregularity in a vein
leading to the heart. There was a slight bulge in it, a tear, from which
blood was oozing into the surrounding tissue.
Shock hit him in stunning measure as he realized that he was seeing the
cause of his wife's ailment - the thing that was pushing her towards
death. A tear in a vein, the resulting loss of blood and blood pressure
slowly ebbing away the life in Inya's body.
Nicholaas felt a familiar swirl of energy behind his eyes, and realized
that his powers were getting set to make repairs! For a moment he
panicked. This was not some broken tool, to be casually manipulated! This
was a person!
He dragged his eyes away from the torn vein, and they settled upon an
irregular mass inside Inya's abdomen. Certainly, it was not something that
belonged there! And then he began to see other things, things that were
wrong with Inya's body, as his power, so efficient with broken things of
an inanimate nature, slowly figured out the collective nature of the
problems that were killing his wife. And with the vision of what was
wrong, came the vision of what could be done to save her.
He could fix her, make her whole.
But...for how long? Aging was built into all humans, and how long could
his repairs last before something else cropped up to steal away her life?
And...did he even have the right to do anything at all?
Nicholaas, despite the holiday around which his world revolved, was only
vaguely aware of religion. But he had always felt inside that there was
more purpose to things than he was aware of, and that there were rules by
which all the things that he could see and hear operated by. Rules that
meant something, and must be maintained. He used these rules every day in
his work, and had always been careful to maintain their sanctity. Without
the rules, there was nothing. He had a great gift, a gift that no other
human seemed to possess, and he had always felt that he used it for the
betterment of his fellow kind.
But now...to be able to prolong life? If he used his powers upon Inya, to
heal her and bring her back, could he then walk out among all those in the
world dying slowly each day, and do no less for them? The idea was
staggering, and frightening, and for the first time Nicholaas doubted his
ability to cope.
And then he was aware of movement, as the five lads circled behind his
chair, and then the warmth and comfort of hands upon his shoulders.
"It is a terrible decision to have to make," came the soft voice of the
one named Max. "We never knew you had faced such a thing before. Never
knew how alone you were. Not this time, though."
Nicholaas heard the words, but could make no sense of them. Yet the voice
was reassuring, and the hands upon his shoulders firm with caring
and...love.
He closed his eyes, tried to settle his whirling thoughts. The answer was
there before him, the choice...but he could not quite grasp it. Could not
quite make the decision he needed to make. He opened his eyes again,
trying to see order in the chaos swirling about him.
Inya opened her eyes, and smiled. "I love you, Nicholaas."
He felt her life slip away, like a morning mist evaporating in the new
sunlight...and did not act. The decision was made, whether he knew it or
not. He could not change the natural order of things, not without
threatening the world he loved so much.
He lowered his head to her breast, and cried.
The five behind him crouched over him, pushing close, holding him,
offering what solace they could.
"I'm so sorry," Max said. "So sorry, boss."
The comment slipped by, lost in the wave of grief that overcame Nicholaas.
He remained there, holding her, for what seemed like forever.
Finally, the fact that he was not alone seeped into his mind, and he
became aware again of the five bodies pressed close to his own. He
straightened, and they straightened with him.
He looked up at them. All five had tears in their eyes, a sharing of
grief, both for Inya's loss, and for his own pain.
"Who are you? I feel...I feel that I know all of you."
"We're your friends," the one named Kippy said.
"Friends?" Nicholaas repeated, not understanding. "I don't have friends."
"Don't be silly," Charlie said. "The whole world loves you."
Nicholaas looked down at what had been Inya, and shook his head. "I could
have saved her."
"No," said Max, "you couldn't." The finality in his voice was so firm that
Nicholaas turned to look at him.
"I have the power," he whispered.
"Not for that. No one has the power for that. No one should have
the power for that." Max shook his head. "Your power is for sharing life,
Nicholaas. Not for stopping its end."
Nicholaas looked down at Inya a last time. "Never again."
Someone settled down beside him, laid his head against the side of
Nicholaas's. "That's ridiculous. Would you wish her away?"
He looked, and it was the straw-headed boy. "Wish her away?"
"Yes," Kippy said, shaking his head. "If you knew when you met her that
this moment would eventually come, would you have walked away from her,
never gotten to know her?"
"Never gotten to love her?" Charlie added, rubbing Nicholaas's shoulder.
The thought was a little horrifying. Walk away from Inya? To have never
felt the touch of her hand, the warmth of her lips? To have not spent all
the wonderful years together that they had shared? To not have worked
together, laughed together, cried together, and...loved
together?'
"No. I would not have walked away." No.
Kippy made a tsking noise, and
straightened. "Then never say never again."
Nicholaas closed his eyes. It was too much to consider now. An odd feeling
came over him, a feeling that he was sliding away from things.
He fought it a moment, and then just let it go...
* * * * * * *
Kippy and Charlie sat together quietly, their faces pushed together. Next
to them, Ricky and Adrian were the same way.
Max sat on the edge of the coffee table, his head hung forward. "Man, I'm
beat."
Kippy sniffed, kissed Charlie again, and then wiped at his eyes. "Do you
think we did any good?"
Charlie nodded, wiped at his own eyes. "Yeah. Was this a waste of time,
Max?"
"What time? This has all happened while you fellas are sleeping."
Ricky and Adrian raised their faces, and both stared at the elf
questioningly. "You know what we mean," Adrian accused.
Max shrugged. "I dunno, fellas. It was a risk. I hope the effort wasn't
wasted."
"Risk?" Charlie shrugged. "What risk?"
Max stared at him. "Seriously? We went into the Big Guy's dreams, Charlie.
How would you feel if someone did that to you?" The elf looked glum.
"I...I may not have a job tomorrow. And the Big Guy can wipe all of this -
and me - from your memories, if he wants to. It will be like we never
met."
Charlie sucked in his breath. "He can't! You're our friend, Max!"
"He can, and he will if he feels like he has to. The boss is a very
private person, Charlie. We probably know more about him now than any
other people on the planet. He may not like that."
Charlie and Kippy looked at each other. "We only wanted to help him,"
Kippy said.
For a moment no one said anything. Finally, Max shrugged, and stood.
"We'll just have to wait and see, I guess."
There was a soft rap at the door to the den, and Mrs. P stuck her head
into the room. "Max? Dinner is ready. Want to come, and bring your
friends?"
Max grinned, and suddenly looked like his old self. "Come on, guys. Let's
have dinner, and then I'll send you home."
Charlie and Kippy exchanged glances. "Really?" Charlie asked. "You feel
like eating now, after all that?"
"I always feel like eating," Max confided. "Come on...it'll be fun."
Kippy gave a short laugh. "How can it be fun after all that?"
Max came and took each of them by the arm, and tossed his head at Ricky
and Adrian, indicating that they were to follow.
"Oh, it'll be fun, all right. You ain't never had dinner with three
thousand elves before!"
* * * * * * *
Christmas morning, Charlie got up and took a shower. He was tired, and he
was feeling kind of down, the amazing dream of several nights before still
circulating through his head. That it had been a dream he was certain of,
but that it had also been real he also knew to be true. So far he still
remembered it, and Max, so there had yet to be any negative fallout over
what they had done.
Charlie would not be surprised if there was. In retrospect, invading the
mind of anyone was simply a terrifying thought, and to think that they had
done it to someone like Santa Claus was just plain appalling. What had
they been thinking?
He had breakfast with his folks, and they opened their presents. That
brightened things up, and Charlie and his folks sat at the kitchen table
and talked about Christmases past. After a while, Charlie decided he'd
better call Kippy and see what he had gotten for Christmas, and went
upstairs for his phone, which he had left on his nightstand.
He took four or five steps into his bedroom before the fact that there
were wrapped presents on his bed registered. He gaped at them, then turned
as the bedroom door closed behind him.
Someone was standing there, in the shadows by the door.
"Max!"
The elf stepped forward and opened his arms, and Charlie rushed forward
and unabashedly hugged him, squeezing their bodies tightly together. Max
hugged him back, and didn't even flinch when Charlie kissed him on his
cheek.
"Merry Christmas, Charlie!"
Charlie stepped back, grinning ear-to-ear. "It's so good to see you!" He
stepped closer again, and lowered his voice. "I was worried about you. But
when you didn't disappear from my memory, I figured maybe you were okay."
"I'm okay," Max agreed. Charlie watched him closely, but the elf didn't
volunteer more. Charlie wanted to ask, but couldn't quite bring himself to
do it. Instead, he pointed at the wrapped gifts on his bed. "What's this?"
"Oh, those are for you and the guys. From me. Can you see that they get
them?"
Charlie frowned. "You don't want to give them to them yourself?"
"Naw." Max grinned. "And have your boyfriend stick his tongue down my
throat? Or Ricky taste my ear again? No thanks. I'll pass this time."
Charlie couldn't help giving a little pout. "They'll be upset they missed
you."
"Oh, I'll be around."
Charlie sighed. "I'm sorry, but I didn't get anything for you."
Max's face got serious, and he stepped closer and laid a hand on Charlie's
arm. "Oh yeah, you did. Trust me, Charlie. What you and the guys gave me
is the best present ever."
That brought a smile to Charlie's face. That could only mean that Santa
had forgiven them, somehow, for the trespass. "Are you gonna tell me?"
"Later." Max held up a finger and crooked it at Charlie. "Come closer."
Puzzled, Charlie stepped nearer to the elf. Max pulled him closer, and
placed his lips near Charlie's ear. "Look under your Christmas tree,
Charlie."
There was a soft pop of displaced air, and the elf was gone. Charlie
stared at the space where he had stood, trying to register everything that
had just happened.
Look under my tree? They had cleaned all the presents out from
beneath the tree and opened them earlier. There should be nothing left.
But he headed for the stairs anyway, took them two at a time, and returned
to the family room.
"What's up?" his dad said, from the kitchen as he passed.
"Uh, I think I missed a present from Kippy. He said it was all the way in
the back, or something."
His dad laughed, and winked at him. "Can't have that."
Charlie hated lying to his folks, but knew that sometimes it was
necessary. He smiled, and went to the tree, and got down on his knees and
peered under it.
Sure enough, there was a box under the tree, wrapped in gold paper with a
red ribbon. He pulled it out, and turned the label around to read it:
To Charlie,
From Santa
Merry Christmas!
Charlie gaped, and then hurriedly closed his mouth, got to his feet,
and rushed upstairs.
Every year there were a few presents under the tree addressed to him, and
signed as from Santa, but in his mom's handwriting. This label was none of
that. It was in a black script, like calligraphy, and looked as beautiful
as the wrapping and the red bow.
He got to his bedroom, went in and closed the door, and sat on the end of
his bed. Taking a deep breath, be pulled at the ribbon and untied the bow,
and pulled the top off the box.
At first he didn't recognize what was inside. It was dark and
rough-looking, and felt quite massive when he reached inside to pull the
object out. He held it up to the light...and gasped.
It was like a small statue, two figures carved out of some dark red wood,
beautifully polished, beautifully detailed. The first figure was a man in
a flowing cloak with a hood, cinched at the waist by a thick belt, and
when Charlie peered closer, he was astounded to see the face of Nicholaas
inside the hood. One of the figure's arms was stretched out behind him,
and he was leading a horse by the reins. There were small packs strapped
to each side of the horse's back, and small items protruded from beneath
the flaps.
The base was carved to resemble snow, with the footprints of both man and
horse plainly visible. Nicholaas, and Kirka.
"Beautiful," Charlie whispered.
As if in answer to his voice, the figure of Nicholaas raised his other
hand and waved, and Kirka tossed his head and gave out a clear, tiny
little chuff.
Charlie simply stared, unable to believe his eyes. The statue was clearly
made of wood, but it moved with the grace of a living thing.
"Do that again," he breathed.
And again, the small Nicholaas waved his hand, and Kirka tossed his head
and spoke.
Over on the nightstand, Charlie's phone rang. He stood, still staring at
the beautiful statue, and picked up the phone and looked at the screen. Kippy.
"Hi. Merry Christmas," Charlie answered.
"Oh, Charlie, I just found something under my tree --"
"A statue," Charlie blurted, without thinking.
"How'd you know?"
Charlie described Max's quick visit, and his instruction to look under the
tree.
"I don't know what made me look," Kippy said. "It was like a little voice
in my head. But I looked under the tree, and there was the box."
Kippy described his statue, and Charlie realized that, while similar to
his own, the two were plainly different. "Amazing, "Charlie said.
There was a bleep in the background, and Kippy grunted. "Hold up, Charlie.
That's the house phone."
Kippy went away, and was gone for several minutes. Charlie was just
starting to get impatient when Kippy returned. "That was Ricky. He called
the house phone because both our cells were busy. You'll never guess,
Charlie."
"He got a statue, too?"
"Uh huh. And Adrian. Just like me, they heard a voice saying to
look under their tree. And Charlie, it looks like their statues are a
little different from ours."
"Come over," Charlie said. "And bring your statue."
"I am. And Ricky and Adrian are on their way, too." Kippy gave a little
laugh. "It's sure is fun being your boyfriend, Charlie."
Charlie smiled. "I love you, Kip."
"I love you, too, Charlie. See you soon, okay?"
"Okay." Charlie was just about to turn the phone off when he heard Kippy's
voice again. He returned the phone to his ear. "What?"
"I want to see your note, too, okay?"
Charlie blinked. "Note?"
Kippy gave out an astounded laugh. "In the box, dummy! There's a note!"
Charlie looked over at the box, his heart racing. "See you when you get
here, Kip."
"Okay. Bye."
"Bye."
Charlie laid the phone down and took a deep breath. Then he went back to
the box that had held the wonderful statue, and looked inside. A folded
piece of red paper lay in the bottom. He retrieved it, and opened it wide.
The paper was covered with more of the elegant black calligraphy:
Dear Charlie,
I know who you are now. And, I know all of your friends. Amazingly, I
have known you four all along, through the activities of my shop
supervisor, Max, and his secret activities with PEE. Yes, I know of
that, too.
I wanted to write to you personally and say thank you. You already know
the reason why.
I have decided, after the holiday is over, to take a small vacation. I
know a little town in Switzerland that has the most comfortable little
chalets for rent, and it is just beautiful this time of the year.
I passed through that town a year ago, and one of the ladies that worked
at the ski lodge there caught my eye, and we hit it off rather
splendidly. Before my dream the other night, I was not prepared to do
anything about it. Now...who knows? Life is short, yes. But it is there
to be lived, and one can never run away from the responsibilities it
brings. I know that now, thanks to you and your friends.
So tonight I am wondering, how she might get along with elves!
Please accept the little gift I have enclosed. You will recognize
myself, and my good friend, Kirka. Together again!
I want you to know that you always have a friend in me. Any time you
speak to the figures, they will acknowledge your presence and greet you.
But if you ever need help, ever need a friend, just tell them, and I
will know.
As I write this, I am preparing to go out into the world and make my
deliveries. I am looking forward to this even more than usual, it seems.
Merry Christmas, my friend. It is always nice to meet a fellow traveler
on the road, especially one that knows what the journey is about.
Love,
Santa
Posted: 07/14/2023