Once upon a terribly cold and lonely town, it was the eve of
Christmas and it was nearly dark as the snow lightly fell upon the snow-covered
streets and roofs. In the cold and dim light, a poor little boy with no more
than a blanket to keep him warm was lying on the roof of a shop which was
closed for Christmas, so as to avoid the dangerous thugs of the streets. The
poor boy was shivering and his each breath was quiet and quivering as he
struggled to hide under his blanket which was too small to cover his bare feet;
poor little child, he looked the picture of misery. The snowflakes fell on his
face and short, brown hair, but he regarded them not.
With a wisp of wind, the boy snuggled tighter into the blanket, his frozen fingers
red and numb from the cold. Upon the wind, an odd figure began to appear.
Wearing a dark red cloak trimmed with dirty, white fur that hid his face in a
hood and holding a large, farmer’s scythe in one hand, the figure faded into
view like a man wandering out of a fog. The figure seemed slightly hunched and
very old, yet its feet had no trouble wandering the roof tiles, in fact it
seemed to stand up tall even as the red cloak draped over the slanted rooftop.
The boy was shivering with the cold and fear as the thing stood over him, and
digging the butt of its scythe into the ground for support it leaned towards
the poor, young boy. In a ghastly, scratchy voice like a lifelong pipe smoker,
the creature said,
“ . . . What is it you desire . . . ?”
The boy was so frightened, and could barely think to process the creature’s
words. The cold was getting to the boy and he closed his eyes, huddling even
deeper into his blanket even though it only pulled the blanket further off his
feet. The creature leaned in closer,
“ . . . What would you like for Christmas
. . . ?”
The boy wasn’t thinking anymore, he wasn’t thinking about how scared he was or
how strange this thing was, he was too cold to know anything else, all his body
knew was shivering and all his mind knew was the cold.
“I-I . . . I d-d-don’t w-want t-t-t-to be c-c-cold any-m-m-more . . .”
stammered the little boy, “I d-don’t want t-to h-h-hurt.”
“ . . . This is what you desire?”
asks the creature again. The poor boy was so cold, his only response was a
painful whimper.
“ . . . As you wish . . .” says the
creature, and with another wisp of wind, the creature disappears from sight.
“N-no . . .” cried the little one, “O t-take me with you . . .” but the boy was
growing too weak to speak, even too weak to shiver. The poor boy was dying,
passing on to a place where there was neither cold nor hunger nor pain. As the
boy stopped moving, his body began slowly sliding off the slanted roof. It was
not too far to fall, but as the boy slipped off the roof, his body landed
limply on a pile of snow on the street below.
As the boy lay there, a handsome couple came wandering the street.
“O God!” cried the woman at the sight of the child, “Look, my dear, a child in
the snow. Is he alright?”
The man ran to the child, and held the boy’s face in his hands.
“He’s alright, but he’s half frozen to death. We must warm him quickly.”
The woman ran forth and took the little boy in her arms.
“Don’t worry now,” she said, holding the boy and his blanket tightly against
her “We will take care of you now. You won’t be cold much longer.”
So the boy and his new family went quickly home.
A little boy was pushing his way through the market square and bumping into
people through the crowds. As he bumped past a gentleman in a fine coat and
hat, he slipped his hand into his pocket. Quickly pulling back through the
crowd, he looked to see what the man had. The boy had a useless piece of paper
with words he had never learned to read.
“Bah,” said the boy, throwing the paper to the ground as he continued down the
road. He chose a very large group of people by a shop stand and pushed
deliberately through them. The first pocket he could find, he slipped his
fingers in and grabbed what he could. As he exited the crowd, he held a little
pouch of coins. It wasn’t much, but it was more than the boy could earn with a
day of honest work, so he slipped it into his own pocket.
“That’ll do nicely . . .” he said to himself, wandering down the road. As he
walked, he saw a pair of gentlemen who were coming his way. They wore very fine
shoes indeed, the sort who’d probably carry the heavy coins. Not able to resist
such a chance, the boy walked straight towards the two, pushing his way through
the men, he grabbed what he could out of a pocket. He stopped and turned to
look at the fine gold pocket watch, when he felt a sharp tug. Dangling from the
watch was a chain that ran back into the man’s jacket. The man felt the tug and
turned around to see the boy holding his watch.
“Hey you!” cried out the man, “Pickpocket!” as both men turned to grab the
child, he dropped the watch and ducked beyond their grasp. He turned and ran as
fast as he could, hearing the men yell behind him, “Police! Police!”
The boy ran up the street as he heard people running behind him.
“Oi! You boy, stop!” yelled an authoritative voice. The boy quickly dodges
through the labyrinthine streets before pushing his way through a small opening
in an enclosed little alley and suddenly stopping, pressing himself tightly
against the wall. The boy waited for the rush of feet to pass before he
relaxed.
Looking around the little alleyway the boy saw that there wasn’t much to it,
but it wasn’t as cold as sleeping on the street so he sits down to look at the
things he’d gotten.
As he looked through his pockets at the shiny jewels and things he’d gotten.
Sitting quietly in the corner, he didn’t notice as a wisp of wind flew in
through the enclosed space. A dark creature in a red cloak trimmed with dirty
white fur wanders out of nothingness, holding on a large scythe.
The boy suddenly looks up to the creature and jumps up, bracing himself against
the wall, the boy was frozen with fear as the creature walks closer and closer.
The creature looks straight at the boy’s face. Its own face was hidden in
darkness, behind large, ancient eyebrows, its eyes seemed like hollow sockets,
and its mouth was hidden behind a long, trailing beard.
“ . . . What is it you desire?” asks
the creature, its cold breath washing over the boy’s face. the boy mumbled and
stammered as he stared at the creature,
“W-w-what?”
“ . . . I offer you a Christmas wish . .
. anything you desire . . .”
The boy stopped shivering as he saw the creature offered no harm,
“Anything?” he asks tentatively. The creature slowly nods as it stands up
straight. The little thief thinks for a moment on what he could possibly want,
when his stomach suddenly grumbles loudly. Looking down and patting his belly,
the boy giggles,
“Alright then . . . I’m hungry.” He says “I want some food.”
“ . . . Is this what you truly desire?”
asks the creature,
“Yeah.” Says the boy, “Feed me.”
“ . . . As you wish . . .” it says.
The creature, leaning heavily on the scythe, reaches down to the snow, its
cloak seeming to bundle up, empty, as it bends down. It reaches a mitt-covered
hand deep into the snow. It pulls its hand back holding a large bowl, which was
full of snow.
The creature hands it to the boy who takes it with both hands, a little
confused. Closing and opening the fingers of its mitt-covered hand, it suddenly
held a spoon which he stirs the snow with. Quite suddenly, the snow melts and
changes to a creamy, yellow colour. As the bowl started to steam and little
pieces of vegetables bobbed to the surface of the liquid, the boy noticed that
he was holding a large bowl of soup. Dropping the spoon into the soup ready for
the boy, the creature turned and walked away into nothingness.
“Thanks.” Said the boy with a smile. He crouches against the wall and rests the
bowl on his lap as he begins to eat. It was amazing soup, and he could barely
believe that it was his and his alone. The boy looked around at the alleyway
and saw how dark and empty it was. He looks out of the little space he’d
entered through, and saw across the street at a house. Lights were shining from
every window, and there was a savoury smell of roast goose, for it was nearing New-year’s
eve and there was a family inside enjoying their feast. The boy saw how happily
the people were, laughing and eating their dinner, and also saw how lonely he
was, eating his soup on his own. It was then he realized that he hadn’t desired
something to eat, but rather someone to eat it with. And then, the poor little
pickpocket with his large bowl of soup, began to cry.
A little girl was sitting in the corner of her room, cowering in fear. The door
to her room was banging loudly as a fist pounded against it,
The slurry, drunken voice of her father yells out angrily and incomprehensible.
The girl didn’t know what to do, she couldn’t run away and could only wait for
him to break through the door. She didn’t want him to hit her again, she didn’t
want him to hurt her or her mother again, but she was just a little girl and
could do nothing about it.
The girl is so scared she doesn’t notice as the room suddenly flutters with a
wisp of a breeze that rustles the light sheets of her bed. From the other
corner of the room, a figure in a red cloak with a large scythe wanders in from
shadow. Already cowering, afraid, the girl merely stares fixedly at the
creature as it approaches her hunched, quivering form.
The creature doesn’t even notice as door is pounded against loudly, making the
girl jump each time.
“ . . . What is it you desire . . .?”
asks the creature, its voice just able to be heard over the girl’s shouting
father.
“Don’t hurt me, please . . .” says the girl,
“ . . . I do not wish to harm you . . . I
wish to help you . . .” says the creature as it leans heavily on its
menacing scythe, “ . . . what do you most
desire . . .?”
The girl looks at the creature for a moment, then blinks her eyes as she begins
to cry,
“I wish . . . I wish my father loved me . . .” she whimpers quietly, looking at
the door as it shudders violently with each blow.
“ . . . As you wish . . .” says the
creature. The creature turns towards the door and drifts towards it. Standing
before the door, the creature passes its scythe to its mitt-covered hand, and
places its other hand on the door. The hand was skinny, with knobbly knuckles
and was a dark, dead black as though it had succumbed to frost bite.
As the creature stands with its hand on the door, it suddenly fades into
nothingness.
The girl stares at the door and notices that it is completely silent.
She continues to stare, waiting and hears a strange sound coming from behind
the door. Her father was crying quietly to himself.
And then the sound faded. The girl, ever so slowly and quietly stands and heads
towards the door.
She stands just a few paces from the door and listens. Her father wasn’t there
anymore.
She didn’t know what to do, and stood there for a moment when so suddenly it
made her jump, she heard the resounding BANG! Of a gunshot from downstairs.
The girl, not knowing what to do, stood silently, a tear rolling down her cheek
as she tried to smile for once.
There was a homeless, bitter, old man, lying in the corner of an empty street,
staring at the sky which was now dark. In a few short hours it would be
Christmas, and the man was grumbling to himself about how terrible it was,
keeping warm under a lot of mouldy blankets as he sat on top of a pile of
newspapers, cardboard boxes and paper bags.
As he sat alone in the corner, a figure in a red cloak suddenly appears at the
end of the street and begins wandering towards him, using a large scythe to
pull its way through the snow.
“Hey, mister, can you spare us a dollar or somethin’?” asks the poor, homeless
man.
“ . . . What is it you desire . . .?”
asks the creature. The man eyes the thing suspiciously before asking,
“What’cha mean?”
“ . . . I offer you a Christmas wish . .
.” says the creature.
The man sits up straight and looks at the thing,
“Why? What are you?” the creature takes a few steps closer,
“ . . . I am the Spirit of Christmas . .
.”
The man studies the thing deeply up and down, looking over its beard, red
cloak, scythe, frost-bitten hand and mitted hand and deep sunken eyes.
“You don’t look much jolly . . .” he mutters with a chuckle,
“ . . . I bring gifts to those who need
them . . .” says the creature, “ . .
. this brings me joy . . .”
the man looks at the creature,
“ . . . so, you’re saying you’ll give me whatever I want?”
“ . . . if it is what you desire . . .
yes . . .” then the man chuckles a little to himself,
“What if I want something bad?” he asks, “I thought Santa didn’t help naughty
boys and girls . . .”
“ . . . Naughty children often need help
the most . . .” says the creature.
“But will you grant my wish? No matter what it is?”
The Spirit of Christmas leans menacingly
over the man,
“ . . . What is it you desire . . .?”
The man is a little unsettled, but he clears his throat and looks up at the
creature.
“I lost my job in the blacksmiths because I hurt my leg in the king’s bloody war
. . . then I lost my house because I couldn’t pay the king’s taxes, and now I
live on the streets . . .” the man looks straight at the empty eyes of the
creature, “I want you to kill the King.”
The creature pauses a moment before continuing,
“ . . . Is this what you desire . . .?”
“ . . . It was his blasted war, his bloody taxes. It’s all his fault that I’m
on the streets, he deserves it. Yes, I want you to kill the King.” The creature
nods its head,
“ . . . As you wish . . .”
And with that, the creature disappears into the night.
The royal bedchambers were covered with fancy tapestries and portraits, and all
around there were priceless vases, huge rugs and in the middle an enormous bed
with satin sheets. From the darkness of the corner of the room, the Spirit of
Christmas appears from nothingness and wanders slowly toward the King. The
creature was pure silence as it grasps the scythe in both hands, so quiet that
you could hear the king’s quiet breath over the creature’s approach.
The creature stopped beside the large bed and loomed over the sleeping king.
The creature raises its scythe, the blade glinting in the moonlight from the
far window.
With a quick swipe, the creature brings the scythe down quickly. The creature
bangs the butt of the scythe against the hard, stone floor with a BANG! Waking
the king with a start.
The king looks up to see the creature leaning over him and stammers quietly as
he struggles to understand what he sees,
“ . . . Dear king . . .” says the
creature, “ . . . I have come to offer
you a Christmas wish . . .”
as the king sits up and looks at the creature, the creature continues to speak,
“ . . . I offer gifts to those that need
them the most . . . you are going to die, and this means that you deserve a
gift . . . a final Christmas wish . . .”
The king thinks over what the creature is saying,
“I don’t understand,” says the king, “I am going to die?”
“ . . . Someone has wished you dead . . .”
says the Spirit of Christmas, “ . . . you
will die.”
The king gets out of his bed and as he wakens begins to pace his bedchambers,
thinking,
“If I am going to die . . . can you tell me who the man is that wishes me
dead?” he asks,
“ . . . If that is what you desire . . .”
“No!” says the king suddenly, “No . . . I would merely take it to my grave . .
.”
The king thinks to himself some more, “ . . . Could I wish him dead?” he asks,
“ . . . You may have whatever you desire
. . . if you wish the man dead . . . he
will be dead . . .”
“No . . .” mutters the king, “No, that helps no one . . .”
the king goes to the open window of his bedchambers and stares out at the town,
up and down the twisting streets and houses, all the children probably now
sleeping, awaiting for Christmas that next morning.
“If I am going to die, then I can’t help me . . . I would wish for the people
of my kingdom . . .” he says
“I wish that everyone has a merry Christmas.” He says
“ . . . Is this what you desire . . .?”
asks the Spirit of Christmas,
“Every man woman and child deserves at least one day of happiness. Yes, I wish that
everyone could have a happy and merry Christmas.”
“ . . .Admirable,” says the creature
as the king turns around, “that is the
true spirit of Christmas . . .”
And with a one swift motion of its scythe, the king fell down, dead.
In the dawn of morning, all awoke to the promise of a merry Christmas. It would
soon be daylight, but atop the roof of the church stood a strange creature in a
red cloak. The thing stood, with a stiffness like death, holding the scythe in
his hand, which was black and frost-bitten.
as daylight creeped steadily closer, and the sun began to rise and shine upon a
Christmas day, the creature looked at the many people houses, each with
sleeping children waiting for the day,
No one imagined that what was watching over them was the true spirit of
Christmas, a spirit of giving, of spreading joy and helping others. Before
retiring into the night, it looks over the town and says to itself in its harsh
voice,
“ . . . Merry Christmas to all . . . and
to all a good night . . .”