To the Reader: Here it is the ninth of January, with the last of Christmas’s trash barely hauled away, and there’s precious little magic left in stories about Santa Claus. So I had the choice to run this Part III out to its end, today, or to lop it in half and run it in two installments. If I did the former, however, who the hell would read it … at close to 3,000 words? On the other hand, I would be racing the calendar if I chose the latter. By the time folks got to the end of Part IV, January would be closing out, taxes would be on their mind, and they would be booing Santa, like a freaking villain!
Santa deserves better. So, after a lot of thought, I opted for posting part III by itself ... with this kicker: the member bucks I saved by only using the one Prose Treasure Chest and one Lucky Leprechaun Certificate, instead of two—the extra $12.90—I would toss into the promotion.
Oh, what the hell! I decided I would pull out all the stops for Part III and post it so high that the poor guy or gal in the number two slot will get dizzy just looking up at it!
And to you, the reader, we’ll just call this a late Christmas gift from Santa Claus.
Now, Santa may be losing his memory, but he’s not naive. He knows that some few money-grabbers will open the gift, play with it for a minute or two, then kick it to the wall. You’ll still write your thankyou note to Santa, even gush about how great the gift was … ’cause Mama Tom makes you. But that’s you. It’s the way you approach all difficult things. Off of FanStory, you skim along the surface of life in just the same non-commital manner.
You know if it's you I'm talking about. (I'm surprised you even got this far.) You also know that the dues you pay for enjoying the community of our elite group are supposed to be to help your brothers and sisters improve their craft. And you are supposed to be elated that they are helping you with yours.
Well, Santa … who’s been a member of FanStory almost as long as FanStory has existed … slipped in a little something somewhere within that gift. The true Fanstorian will know it because it just doesn’t belong there. It’s an extra digit on Barbie Doll’s hand. Or, it’s Roy Rogers wearing a bonnet on his head. It just doesn’t belong! And Santa put it there, HO-HO. It’s a gift within a gift. The money-grabbers will never get to it. But to the true Fanstorian ... You’re welcome!
And now on with the story. …
~ ~ ~
They all sat, silent in their individual thoughts, content being with each other, cradling hot cups of cocoa in their hands, with the bed of coals in the fireplace pulsing red and orange heat into the room.
Ajdin was the first to speak.
“It is magic, you know. Once you opened your door, a year ago—though you were understandably cautious and suspicious—and we entered … José, Gustav, and myself—that was when the magic began.” He smiled over at Nicholas and Anya. “The two of you have been under the spell of the magic for so long that you may not be aware of its joyous hold on you. But I tell you, the boys and I felt it immediately, and in spite of their roughhousing, they feel it now. And … once a year, on Christmas eve, it's that same magic you spread throughout the world.”
He paused to smile, lovingly, at his boys, then turned back to Nicholas. “Do you remember the last stop you made a year and one day ago, Santa?” He lingered on the name Santa as reverently as he had earlier lingered on Papá.
“The last …? Well,” said Nicholas, “there were so-soooh-oh-ho-ho, so many …”
But at that moment everyone saw Santa’s face reddening.
“It was a modest adobe house," said Ajdin, “in the city of Zamora, in the state of Michoacán, in Mexico.”
Nicholas turned in his seat to Ajdin with an inquiring smile. “It was your house?”
“For years, I had suspected that our house was your last stop, Santa—it was somehow part of a master plan, that even you were not aware of. Your arrival was always just before dawn. Yet, in all the years we’d lived there, I had never disrupted your magic by tiptoeing out of my room and catching you in mid-delivery—that is … until last Christmas eve.”
“Yes! José and Gustav,” Santa broke in, suddenly, clasping his hands in glee, “… and you, Ajdin … yes, I remember reading your names, now, from my list just before I went in. It was my last stop! I had just checked them off and—”
“Oh, we watched it all, Santa … out-of-sight beside our house, huddled together in our blankets since 2 A.M., waiting. And while you were inside, the boys and I scrambled over to the sleigh and we hid ourselves under all the discarded bags. Soon you returned, tossed the final empty bag atop the others, and we were off for the ride of our lifetime.
“We spent all of Christmas day in the stable with the reindeer. And—as I think you’ll remember—it was the evening of Christmas day, a year and a day ago, that we knocked on your door.”
Upon these words, Nicholas turned back to Anya and smiled. “Santa can be a foolish old man three-hundred and sixty-four days of the year, Mama.” Then turning back to Ajdin, he extended both chubby hands to him. “Welcome home, Son.”
Ajdin took Santa’s hands in his own and kissed the backs of them, his eyes brimming.
The boys, caught up in the excitement, leaped to their feet and began cheering and jumping up and down, the tips of their moustachios rising and falling with each jump.
Ajdin grinned. “Look at them! As I said, there is a special magic in your home.”
“In our home, now,” Santa corrected. “In our home …”
“There is a special magic in our home, Papá and Mamá,” Ajdin repeated, and again his eyes filled. “The boys are proof of the magic. José there, for example … Would it surprise you to know that the one bouncing about like a rubber ball was the mayor of the city of Zamora for two, four-year terms, beginning 1871? His campaign gave his age at fifty-three, but he was more than double that, at a hundred and ten.” He smiled massaging his hands. “Yes, we never forget our children’s births. José here,” he said, smiling broadly, “was born on August 10th, 1761.”
“Yes! Yes! And how could he not—oh-ho-ho—not have been the mayor, what with all that, ah-ha!—enthusiasm? I might have to check my records—the world is so full of children now—but I know it would be right there, ho-ho-ho my boy! Your father has to be proud of you!”
“Indeed, I am. It was he who brought water piping and plumbing—a marvel at the time, though crude, of course by today’s standards—to the city. That was a hundred and fifty years ago. His statue still stands in the plaza, in front of the library.”
“It doesn’t surprise me at all, ho-ho-ha-ha, there was a—I remember now—there was a star by his name on last year’s list. There was one, ho-ho-ho, by Gustav’s name as well. Both of you had been such good boys!”
“Ah, yes, Gustav.” Ajdin stopped suddenly. “Boys, go sit by Santa’s knees before you fall and hurt yourselves.” As they did so, he continued, “Gustav, here, my eldest—would you believe that bubbly mischief-maker, Gustav, had been lead proctor, in 1705, and within the unheard of span of two years, the Dean of the University of Leipzig, in Germany, where he was known for his discipline and firmness? Feared, but respected by all—students and faculty alike?” He clasped his hands and rested his chin on their knuckles as he tilted his head. “No father was ever more proud of his son. Dean of the oldest, most respected university in Germany at the unheard-of young age of forty-three—according to the university’s reckoning. Of course, the secret that both Gustav and I hoarded was that he was born a hundred and eighty years earlier, in 1527.
“Oh, yes," said Nicholas, nodding … "I’d have to go way, waaay back, but ho-ho-ha-ha—have no doubt about it that Gustav, here, would be in my ledgers as well. And you were with them both, Ajdin? You were right there with them in their moments of great achievement?”
“But of course … I was their father!”
“Bless your hearts …” Santa’s voice quivered to a stop in mid-sentence, while he removed his fogged glasses, revealing eyes that were overflowing. “… bless all our hearts, for we are all together as we should be.”
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