Christmas Takeover 21: Rebekkah Ford: The Elf on the Shelf

The Elf on the Shelf

A Story by Rebekkah Ford
4,589 words

Our backyard was nothing but dirt and a few pathetic bushes that were good at catching garbage. I picked out a couple of Mountain Dew cans and a Snickers wrapper that were between the branches, trying not to prick my fingers.

Why couldnโ€™t people throw away their trash? It was so annoying.

The air was a bit chilly for Arizona weather in December. I could almost see my breath. I shivered, regretting not wearing a jacket over my sweatshirt hoodie.

Looking up at the enormous tree that gave our tiny shit-hole house some nice shade, a feeling of gratefulness came over me and the annoyance vanished. At least we had this beautiful tree to hang out under or climb when things got a bit rough.

I went to the side of the house and dumped the trash into the tin garbage can. As I headed to the back door, something red beneath the bushes I was just at caught my eye, causing me to go back over there. Bending to examine it, I noticed two long red legs. A childโ€™s toy I guessed. I wondered if it was my sister Averyโ€™s toy. Clasping my fingers around the legs, I tugged them towards me.

โ€œAn Elf on A Shelf,โ€ I said to myself a bit surprised. I licked the tip of my thumb and rubbed the dirt off his pale face and big blue eyes. They seemed to sparkle in the sunlight as if there was mischief brewing behind them. โ€œI donโ€™t think Iโ€™m supposed to touch you. Donโ€™t you lose your magic if I do so? As if magic really exists.โ€ Averyโ€™s friends had an elf like this, and sheโ€™d been wanting one for a couple of years now. I couldnโ€™t wait to show her.

โ€œWhatโ€™s behind your back?โ€ Avery asked when I entered the kitchen. She had a heaping tablespoon of peanut butter in her hand. The sides of her shoulder-length dark hair were pulled back with purple butterfly barrettes, and her brown eyes were filled with curiosity. In the background, I could Bugs Bunny talking to Elmer Fudd. We couldnโ€™t afford cable so we had old VCR tapes to watch and entertain us, even though I could pretty much say each line in every one of them.

I kneeled so I was eye level with her. โ€œDo you still want An Elf on A Shelf?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s The Elf on the Shelf,โ€ she corrected. I swear there was a thirty-year-old editor in her six-year-old body.

โ€œSorry, I meanโ€”โ€

She gasped. โ€œIs there one behind your back?โ€

โ€œYup.โ€ I nodded with a grin and showed her.

She squealed and jumped up and down, but then she stopped, and a look of horror entered her freckled face. โ€œYou canโ€™t touch him!โ€ Tears filled her eyes, and her bottom lip quivered. โ€œHeโ€™ll lose his magic,โ€ she cried. โ€œHe wonโ€™t be able to talk to Santa Claus for me.โ€ She set the spoon down on the counter and sat at the kitchen table and wept. You would have thought she lost her best friend with how upset she was.

I sat in the chair next to her. โ€œIโ€™m sure he still has his magic.โ€

โ€œNo, he doesnโ€™t. Now Santa is going to ignore us like he always does.โ€

It broke my heart to see her so distraught and at the same time, it made me angry at our mom for not giving us a father. Sixteen years ago, when I was born, she had no idea who my father was. Ten years later, she repeated the same damn mistake โ€“ at a drunken party, swapping partners at what I called an Orgy-Fest. Just the other day, in a fit of anger, I threw that in her face and basically called her a whore. She was stunned as if I slapped her across the face. Without saying a word, she walked out of the house and drove away. I instantly felt bad and bawled myself to sleep. Thankfully, Miss Avery was at a friendโ€™s house that night.

I rose and tugged on the back of Averyโ€™s T-shirt. โ€œCome with me. Iโ€™ll show you he still has his magic.โ€

She sniffed and followed me to my bedroom.

I turned on my desktop, set the elf down and typed in The Elf on the Shelf. I clicked on Wikipedia and scrolled down while reading it until I found what I was looking for.

โ€œIt says right here that the magic might disappear if the scout elf is touched.โ€ I locked eyes with her. โ€œMight,โ€ I emphasized. I pointed to him. He was lying on his side next to my keyboard. โ€œI bet you money, he still has his magic.โ€

Her mouth formed an O-shape. โ€œYouโ€™re going to give me your dollars if youโ€™re wrong?โ€

โ€œI sure am, and itโ€™s the money Iโ€™ve been saving to buy my dream car with.โ€ I imagined myself driving a classic convertible white VW bug, my light brown hair blowing in the wind. The popular kids at school would be so jealous, and Iโ€™d ignore them. I pushed that pleasant fiction aside and raised my eyebrows and touched my chest with my fingertip. โ€œSo, Iโ€™m totally serious here, Avery.โ€

She wiped the tears from her face and sniffed again. โ€œYou are. Youโ€™ve been saving forever.โ€

It did seem like forever. Iโ€™d been saving up for well over a year now with my babysitting money and cleaning houses in our neighborhood. Iโ€™d love to work at a Starbucks or a movie theatre, but I had no way of getting there.

โ€œI have,โ€ I finally said. โ€œBut Avery, donโ€™t touch him. Okay?โ€

She held her hands up as if she were surrendering. โ€œI wonโ€™t.โ€ She looked around my room. โ€œWhere should we put him?โ€

Grabbing him, I headed out of my room. โ€œNot here.โ€ I went to the living room and sat him on a bookcase next to our TV. โ€œHereโ€™s a perfect spot for him, and this will be the last time I touch him.โ€

Avery grinned and nodded.

The front door opened, and Mom walked in. โ€œWhat are you girls up to?โ€ She had her Dennyโ€™s uniform on and smelled like fried food. She looked fried herself. Strands of dark hair were falling out of the bun on top of her head, framing her heart-shaped face.

Avery jumped up and down in a fit of excitement and told Mom everything while Mom set her purse on the floor. She kicked off her shoes, sat on the couch, and proceeded to rub her feet as she listened to my baby sister run her mouth.

โ€œPeyton said if the elf lost his magic, I can have her dollars. The ones sheโ€™s saving for a car. Do you remember?โ€

Mom glanced at me. A guilty expression flickered across her face. Her attention went back to Avery. โ€œI do, which is the perfect time for me to tell you, girls, something that Iโ€™ve been working on.โ€

Thatโ€™s unexpected. The last time she had something important to say was when . . . she was pregnant with Avery.

Sonofabitch!

My face burned, and my mind immediately raced with ugly thoughts about my mother.

โ€œPeyton,โ€ Mom said, her voice raised enough to get me to look at her. โ€œIโ€™m not pregnant.โ€

The heat subsided from my cheeks, my chest felt lighter, and a sigh of relief whooshed out of me.

โ€œI had my tubes tied after I gave birth to Avery. You know that.โ€

I thought about it. Oh yeah, she did. โ€œI forgot,โ€ I mumbled, not looking at her. Instead, I stared at the Charlie Brown tabletop Christmas tree in the corner of the room. Most of the ornaments were from the Dollar Tree, a few were homemade or given to us.

โ€œWhatโ€™s your news?โ€ Avery asked, plopping down on Momโ€™s lap.

โ€œA gal in my AA meeting offered me a job that pays really well.โ€

I narrowed my eyes. โ€œShould you be hanging out with other alcoholics outside the group?โ€

โ€œSheโ€™s been clean for six years, Peyton.โ€ There was a bit of annoyance in her tone. She covered Averyโ€™s ears and whispered, โ€œIโ€™m not going to fuck up this opportunity. I promise.โ€

I glanced away and thought I saw movement out the corner of my eye where the elf sat. He looked the same as he did when I placed him there. โ€œOkay, what type of job is it and how much does it pay?โ€

Avery moved her head, and Mom dropped her hands into her lap. โ€œIโ€™ll be trained in as a dental assistant. If I do well, theyโ€™ll pay for me to be a dental hygienist, if I agree to work for them for three years after Iโ€™m done with my schooling.โ€ She paused and despite looking a bit haggard from a long day of serving food to the public, a renewed energy took over her. Avery must have felt it because she slipped off Momโ€™s lap and looked at her. The corners of Momโ€™s mouth turned into a bright smile. โ€œDo you know how much hygienist get paid an hour?โ€ She was practically bouncing in her seat.

โ€œNo, I donโ€™t.โ€ I wasnโ€™t sure if cleaning peopleโ€™s mouths would be a job Iโ€™d want to do.

โ€œTwenty-seven to forty-six dollars an hour!โ€

My mouth flopped open. โ€œAre you serious?โ€

She stood and placed her hands on my shoulders. โ€œI am, and Iโ€™ll work hard so I can give us the life we deserve. I swear to you I will.โ€ She hugged me tightly. โ€œI love you and Avery more than anything. Iโ€™ve been a shitty mom. Iโ€™ll do my best to make it up to you two.โ€

I hated to admit it, but I was skeptical. I didnโ€™t believe it. But why then did my eyes filled with tears?


The next morning as I was walking by Averyโ€™s bedroom, I heard her talking. At first, I thought she was reading aloud. I leaned my ear next to her door, smiling at the thought she was reading to her stuffed animals. I used to do that when I was her age and would make up words that I couldnโ€™t read, which resulted in telling my own little story.

โ€œTell Santa that I want a pink, sparkly bicycle with a white basket in front. Also, a helmet that matches my bike andโ€”โ€

I opened the door. โ€œWho are you talking to?โ€

She blinked in surprise and pointed to her left. โ€œI was talking to the elf.โ€ She looked and frowned. โ€œWhere did he go?โ€ In a fit of excitement, she jumped to her feet. โ€œHe went to the North Pole to tell Santa what I want for Christmas!โ€

โ€œThe elf was talking to you?โ€ I could hear the doubt in my voice. Avery might be taking this whole elf thing a bit far. Then a thought occurred to me, and my heart sank. She was telling this toy elf what she wanted for Christmas, thinking heโ€™d tell Santa, and then on Christmas day, which was two days away, sheโ€™d expect to get those presents. When she didnโ€™t, sheโ€™d be crushed and think something was wrong with her.

She nodded as if she had a bobblehead on her shoulders. โ€œHe did. His name is Mr. Jingles. He still has his magic so you donโ€™t have to give me dollars. You were right!โ€ She laughed and twirled around. โ€œThis is going to be the best Christmas ever!โ€

I stopped her and held her hands in mine. โ€œAvery, please donโ€™t get your hopes up. That elfโ€”โ€

โ€œMr. Jingles,โ€ she corrected with a grin. She was missing two front teeth, and her child-like wonder endeared me so that the rough edges in my tone softened.

โ€œSorry. Mr. Jingles. He may not be reliable enough to get your message sent to Santa Claus.โ€

โ€œHe doesnโ€™t like you,โ€ she confessed. โ€œHe told me he didnโ€™t like you because you donโ€™t believe in magic, and he didnโ€™t like the way you looked at him last night.โ€

I released her hands and laughed. โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s what he told me,โ€ she said, shrugging.

I crossed my arms over my chest. โ€œWhat did you say?โ€

โ€œI told him you didnโ€™t mean to upset him, and youโ€™re the best sister ever.โ€

I hugged her. โ€œThank you, Munchkin. I love you.โ€ I tickled her side, causing her to giggle and pull away. โ€œLetโ€™s go have some breakfast.โ€

When we entered the kitchen, I groaned at the mess before us. Flour covered the entire counter, and there were little footprints across it. The cupboard door above was open. The spices and baking ingredients inside were knocked over.

I pointed to the front of the counter, which was also covered in the white powdery stuff. โ€œDid you do this?โ€

โ€œNo, Mr. Jingles did. He was probably going to make us pancakes.โ€

Mom must have before she went to work early this morning. It made sense. She wanted to entertain Avery, so she made it look like the elf was up to no good.

I sighed. โ€œYouโ€™re probably right. Help me clean up his mess, and then Iโ€™ll make us some pancakes.โ€

โ€œOkay.โ€ Avery grabbed a washcloth off the sink while I picked up the torn bag of flour, wondering if this elf on the shelf game was worth the trouble.


โ€œWhatโ€™s for dinner?โ€ Avery asked Mom. I was at the kitchen table drawing in my sketchbook. I looked up and Mr. Jingles was leaning against the toaster with his arms folded against his chest and his ankles crossed. โ€œIโ€™m hungry,โ€ Avery added.

Mom was unwrapping a pound of hamburger. โ€œHamburger Helper Cheeseburger Macaroni.โ€

โ€œYay! Thatโ€™s my favorite.โ€

I turned my attention to Avery and Mom. โ€œDid either one of you put the elf there?โ€

Mom glanced over her shoulder at me. โ€œWhere?โ€

Avery gasped and looked at Mom. โ€œYouโ€™re not supposed to touch him! Pleeeease tell me you didnโ€™t touch him,โ€ she whined.

I pointed to the toaster and then popped out of my seat, nearly falling over. โ€œHe was there less than a minute ago.โ€

WTF?

โ€œDid you touch him?โ€ Avery demanded.

โ€œNo,โ€ Mom said.

โ€œMom, Mr. Jingles was there. I saw him.โ€ Chills broke across my skin. The damn thing was alive. But how could that be? Magic didnโ€™t exist.

โ€œHe has a name now?โ€ Mom laughed.

โ€œHe told me his name,โ€ Avery said.

My face felt cold from the blood draining from it. The room spun.

โ€œPeyton, are you okay?โ€ Mom asked, concerned. โ€œYou look like youโ€™re going to faint.โ€

I sat back down in the chair and took a drink of water in an attempt to calm myself. I cleared my throat. โ€œThat elf is alive.โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t be ridiculous,โ€ Mom said, turning back to the stove and placing the hamburger on the skillet. A sizzling sound filled the room. โ€œYou must have been seeing things.โ€

โ€œWe need to get rid of him.โ€

โ€œNo!โ€ Avery squealed, causing Mom and I to jump. โ€œHeโ€™s my friend.โ€

I left the room with Avery chasing after me, begging me not to get rid of him. To keep the peace, I told her Mom was probably right, that I was seeing things. The elf was fine. No harm would be done to him, even though secretly I was hoping to catch him and see if he was real or not. Because to be honest, I had a hard time wrapping my head around a childโ€™s toy being alive. I needed more evidence and was determined to get it.


โ€œTomorrow is Christmas Eve,โ€ Avery said to me in a sing-song voice as I tucked her into bed. She yawned and hugged her teddy bear to her chest.

โ€œIt is,โ€ I confirmed. โ€œAnd guess what I did?โ€

โ€œWhat?โ€ She kept blinking to force herself to stay awake.

โ€œI bought us matching PJs, soap to make a bubble bath, and hot chocolate we can drink while we watch your favorite Christmas movie we have on tape.โ€

A sleepy smile crossed her face. โ€œSee? I told you this would be the best Christmas ever.โ€

I kissed her cheek. โ€œEvery day is what you make of it.โ€

She closed her eyes. โ€œI love you, Peyton.โ€

โ€œI love you, too, Munchkin.โ€

When I stepped outside her room and softly closed her door, something red and white darted across the hallway into the bathroom.

Mr. Jingles?

My heart raced, and I was suddenly hyper-aware of my surroundings. The carpet felt soft against my bare feet as I slowly edged my way to the bathroom. The sound of the clock ticking in the living room, a car driving down our street, and a dog barking in the distance amplified in my ears.

I should have a weapon, but it was too late. I reached the bathroom, pushed the door open with my foot, reached around the corner, and flicked the light on. There was toilet paper everywhere as if someone deliberately tped the bathroom. A flash of red and white dashed by my feet, stepping on my baby toe.

I hopped up on the other foot and grabbed the injured one. โ€œOw!โ€

A car pulled into our driveway. Mom was home. If I showed her the bathroom and told her what I saw, she might believe me. Maybe.

I met her at the front door. She had an arm full of packages that were wrapped in Christmas paper with shiny gold bows perfectly placed on top.

โ€œHelp me with these, please.โ€ She unloaded some of them in my arms and went back outside.

โ€œWhere do you want me to put these?โ€ I asked when she came back with more presents and a large holiday bag filled with what looked like candy and baked goods.

โ€œThe walk-in closet in my bedroom.โ€

โ€œWhere did you get the money for all of these gifts?โ€ We placed them in a dark corner of her closet.

โ€œSince Iโ€™ll be quitting Dennyโ€™s, my boss was kind enough to allow me to cash in my vacation pay. I used that money to give you and Avery a Christmas you deserve.โ€

โ€œWow,โ€ is all I could say, but then I remembered the elf. โ€œI need to show you something.โ€

โ€œWhat?โ€ She followed me to the bathroom and gave me a dumbfounded look when she saw it covered in toilet paper. โ€œDid you do this?โ€

โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œThen whoโ€”โ€

โ€œThe elf,โ€ I said in a high whisper, not wanting to wake Avery up. โ€œMr. Jingles.โ€

Mom rolled her eyes. โ€œClean this up. It isnโ€™t funny.โ€

โ€œDo you see me laughing? Iโ€™m not making this shit up. Heโ€™s alive.โ€

โ€œThere are better ways to get my attention.โ€

โ€œWhat about the disaster you left in the kitchen this morning. I had to clean it up. Thanks a lot. Maybe you should clean this mess.โ€ I knew I was being snotty to her, but I didnโ€™t care.

Her eyebrows pulled together. โ€œWhat mess?โ€

I told her about it, and she didnโ€™t know what I was talking about. She seriously didnโ€™t know, which raised the hair on my arms.

โ€œIf you didnโ€™t do, then the damn elf did,โ€ I stressed.

She shook her head and raised her hand to shut me up. โ€œI had a long day. I donโ€™t want to hear it. We can spend more time together once I switch jobs and actually have normal working hours.โ€

I gritted my teeth. โ€œThis is not about you not paying attention to me.โ€

โ€œWhatever.โ€ She walked away, leaving me to clean up the bathroom and wondering what the hell I was going to do.

That night I slept with my light on and didnโ€™t see Mr. Jingles. I thought I heard him a couple of times and was jarred awake. Needless to say, I didnโ€™t get much sleep and was looking forward to Christmas being over with.


Avery came out of the bathroom, wet hair combed, and in her Cat in The Hat PJS, the same ones I had on. She sat on the couch beside me smelling like lavender from the bubble bath she just had. I took mine first so I could prepare everything while she was washing up. Mom had popped popcorn on the stove and poured melted butter on it, then salted the batch. A big bowl of it was on the coffee table, along with the hot chocolate I made for all three of us.

โ€œI feel left out,โ€ Mom said, standing in the middle of the room, eyeing our PJs.

Guilt tugged at my heart. I should have bought her one as well, but to be honest, I didnโ€™t want to spend the money. It was my car fund money and at the time I wasnโ€™t sure if sheโ€™d even be home on Christmas Eve.

โ€œSorry, Mom,โ€ I said. โ€œI didnโ€™t have enough cash on me.โ€

She waved it off as if it was no big deal. โ€œItโ€™s okay. Iโ€™ll go put my own pajamas on. Donโ€™t start the movie without me.โ€

โ€œWe wonโ€™t,โ€ Avery said.

I gingerly handed a cup of hot chocolate to her. โ€œBe careful. Itโ€™s hot.โ€ She held it with both hands and slowly sipped it. โ€œMmmm, this is super yummy.โ€

I took a sip of mine. The hot chocolatey taste coated my tongue and mouth in a delightfully smooth texture that had me making pleasurable sounds as well. I bought this hot chocolate at a specialty shop and paid more than I wanted to, but now I was glad I did. It was totally worth it.

โ€œWhat movie are we watching?โ€ Mom asked, wearing her flannel Snoopy PJs.

Avery laughed. โ€œYou know what weโ€™re watching, silly.โ€

Mom playfully slapped her forehead. โ€œHow could I forget? Weโ€™re watching The Grinch Who Stole Christmas.โ€

โ€œDuh!โ€ Avery said, making me laugh.

Mom slipped the VCR tape in and sat beside me. I handed a mug to her, and when she tried the hot chocolate, she closed her eyes and made the same yummy sounds we did. Yup, it was worth spending the extra money for this treat.

After we watched the cartoon, which was only a half-hour long, we then watched Home Alone. Both Avery and Mom fell asleep towards the end. I told them to both go to bed, Iโ€™d clean up. Mom thanked me, kissed our cheeks and headed to her room. I tucked Avery in who basically slept walked to her bed. While I was in the hallway, I heard some movement in the kitchen. Mom must have decided to get a drink . . . or, wait. We needed to put the presents out. I totally had forgotten about it.

Shit!

When I entered the kitchen, Mr. Jingles was standing on the counter, up to some mischief I was sure. His blues eyes widened in surprise.

I pointed to him. โ€œYou! How can you be real?โ€ My brain shifted out of place, then back again. I was rooted in my spot, unable to move. My pulse throbbed on the side of my neck.

His expression turned hateful. His mouth opened, but I couldnโ€™t hear what he was saying.

โ€œI canโ€™t believe youโ€™re real and why you hate me so much,โ€ I said. When I moved forward to go grab him, he ran and jumped off the counter.

Mom let out a little yelp.

โ€œMom?โ€

โ€œI think we have a mouse in our house,โ€ Mom said as she entered the kitchen from the south side of the house.

โ€œItโ€™s not a mouse. Itโ€™s that damn elf! Where did he go?โ€ I moved passed her, and she grabbed my arm, stopping me.

โ€œPlease not tonight, Peyton. We need to get the presents out so Avery will have a wonderful day tomorrow.โ€

โ€œFine.โ€ She was right. I needed to think of Avery first. Maybe the elf will leave us alone and disappear in the morning. One could only hope. But I knew I was going to sleep with my light on again, and if I saw Mr. Jingles, Iโ€™d do my best to catch him.

After two hours of setting everything up around our Charlie Brown tree, I was exhausted. Everything looked amazing compared to our normal Salvation Army and Dollar Tree gifts. I was actually excited and was looking forward to Christmas. Mom was even going to make her homemade lasagna for Christmas dinner.

I said goodnight to her and went to bed. I kept the light on but was unable to stay awake. Hours later I was jarred out of sleep when something crashed across my bedroom where my desk was. I sat up and blinked several times to adjust my vision. Mr. Jingles was standing on my desk, intently watching me. He didnโ€™t have a hateful look on his face like he had earlier, but his expression was questionable. I wanted to get out of bed and catch him, but I knew heโ€™d be too fast.

โ€œWhat do you want?โ€

He jumped off the desk. The quick pitter-patter of his feet, heading towards my bed, had me looking in that direction. Then the edge of my blanket tugged away from me.

โ€œQuit!โ€ I yanked it back. The next thing I knew, Mr. Jingles was right in front of me. I slapped a hand on my chest and shrank back. His eyes were blazing with anger. โ€œWhat? What did I do wrong?โ€

โ€œYou donโ€™t believe in magic,โ€ he said in a raspy voice. โ€œPeople like you are what makes it difficult for magical beings like myself to be seen by others. We canโ€™t do our jobs when there are too many skeptics in this world!โ€

โ€œI used to believe,โ€ I confessed. โ€œBut I stopped once I got tired of being let down by myself and others.โ€

โ€œNever stop believing,โ€ he said, his expression softening. โ€œYou too have magic within you.โ€

โ€œThere you are!โ€ I looked up and there standing in my doorway was Santa Claus. No shit. I couldnโ€™t believe it. โ€œWeโ€™ve been looking all over for you.โ€ He entered my room and plucked Mr. Jingles off my bed. He pulled his other hand out of his pocket and handed me a bar wrapped in blue and gold paper. โ€œHere you go, Peyton. Mrs. Claus makes these chocolate bars every Christmas. Enjoy.โ€ When he smiled, the corners of his kind blue eyes crinkled. Then he and Mr. Jingles vanished, leaving me speechless.

โ€œOmigod!โ€ Avery squealed, causing me to bolt off my bed.

I ran to the living room, my heart racing. โ€œWhatโ€™s wrong.โ€ I stopped when I entered the room. I couldnโ€™t believe my eyes. There was a huge Christmas tree with twinkling lights and pretty ornaments. Beneath it was shiny and colorful presents that I didnโ€™t recognize. Avery was petting the sparkly pink bike she told Mr. Jingles she wanted.

โ€œWow,โ€ I said. โ€œThere is magic in this world. You just have to believe.โ€

โ€œI believed enough for the both of us,โ€ Avery said, hugging my side. โ€œI told you this would be the best Christmas ever.โ€

She was right, but not because of the material items in front of us. It was because we were taught to believe good things could happen if you had a positive attitude, if you believed in yourself, and believed you could create the life you wanted like Mom was now finally going to do.

That was the greatest gift ever.

No material possession could ever top it.

I hugged Avery back. โ€œYou were right, Munchkin. You were definitely right.โ€

THE END

Rebekkah Ford is an award-winning author who writes paranormal romance and fantasy novels. When her parents were married, they were the directors of the UFO Investigators League, they also had taken on some paranormal cases as well. The way Rebekkah grew up aids her in her paranormal storytelling and probably the reason why sheโ€™s fascinated with the unknown.

Rebekkah is also a blogger and freelance writer. She writes versatile and in-depth articles on various topics.

Fun Fact: Rebekkah and her husband converted a cargo van into a camper and plans to travel the U.S. full-time, writing and videotaping their journey as digital nomads. Rebekkah is not only an author, but sheโ€™s also an explorer in search of adventure, new discoveries, and to live life minimally and deliberately. She’s a YouTuber (Dare to Live channel) and believes we weren’t born to just pay bills and die. The core message on her and her husbandโ€™s channel and website (Exploring Rabbit Holes) is FREEDOM.

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Christmas Takeover 20: Joanna Koch: Santa’s Eyeball

Santa’s Eyeball

A Story by Jaonna Koch
1,592 words

Lily looked at her eggs. The eggs looked back.

They shook when he laughed…

Her brothers thundered down the stairs. Two eggs sunny side up jiggled at Lily in time with the twinsโ€™ festive descent. They looked at her like yellow googly eyes on a slimy white face.

โ€œIโ€™m going to ride the Polar Whirlwind ten times!โ€

โ€œNo way. You have to take Lily on the Baby Reindeer Sleigh.โ€

โ€œMom, donโ€™t make me waste my allowance on kiddie rides with her!โ€

โ€œShe still believes in Santa Claus, donโ€™t you, Lily?โ€

The table rattled as the twins cavorted into their chairs. Two viscous aureoles accused Lily, unblinking.

He sees you when youโ€™re sleeping; he knows… he knows

โ€œNo I donโ€™t.โ€ Lily stabbed one of the eyes on her plate to stop the wiggling. โ€œIโ€™m not a baby, either.โ€ The dry crust of triangular toast burst open an invisible membrane holding back the quivering yolk. Gelatinous gold spread out and left a white crater of empty albumin. Lily gouged the second eye and smiled in triumph at the leaky sockets.

You better not cry, she thought and stuck out her tongue at her runny eggs, and then at her brothers for good measure.

Sadie, their mom, sat down with a fresh cup of coffee. โ€œI feel so bad for poor old Santa when you kids rag on him like that. Iโ€™m just glad your father and I arenโ€™t the ones getting bags of coal this year. We still believe in him, donโ€™t we?โ€

Her husband failed to transition from phone to family. The twins sniggered. Sadie covered his confused silence with a helpful prompt. โ€œWe believe in Santa like reasonable people, donโ€™t we, Jim?โ€

Jim caught on. โ€œOh, yeah. Heck yeah.โ€

โ€œI suppose we donโ€™t need to drag a bunch of mean-spirited doubters all the way to Elf Land for nothing. Letโ€™s drop the kids at my sisterโ€™s. Weโ€™ll have Santa all to ourselves.โ€

Lily was thrilled. She dreaded seeing Santa every year. It was bad enough how he was always watching, making lists, and checking them twice with invisible, omniscient eyes. Face to face with him she felt terrified and exposed.

โ€œWell, hot dog, that sounds like a date.โ€ Jim winked at his wife. โ€œJust you and me, out on the town. Grown-ups only.โ€

Scandalized, the twins abandoned their pessimistic stance.

โ€œI believe in Santa. I never said I didnโ€™t!โ€

โ€œLilyโ€™s the one who said it. Please, please, take us with you.โ€

Lily disdained their fickle shift. She knew they were lying. Worse, they were ruing her chance to escape Santa. Lilyโ€™s mom noticed her silence and conspired behind her coffee cup while Jim fielded the twinsโ€™ uproar. โ€œYou donโ€™t have to pretend you donโ€™t believe in Santa Claus, hon. Look at those boys. Youโ€™re more grown up than the two of them put together no matter what. Why donโ€™t you finish your breakfast and put on your pretty new dress?โ€

Lilyโ€™s nibbled crusts stuck in the thick ochre sludge. โ€œIโ€™m not really hungry.โ€

โ€œOkay, hon. Did you want some more juice?โ€

โ€œNo, thank you,โ€ Lily said, and took her plate and silverware to the sink. She was a big girl, not a baby. She didnโ€™t need her mom to clean up after her. And she had a plan for that miniature fruit fork she snatched from the table without anyone noticing. It would fit in her pocket perfectly after she washed and dried it.

You better watch out, you better not cry

Lily hummed the song as hot water melted the remains of coagulated eggs off her plate. She believed in Santa Claus, all right. She took the fork to her room and got ready to meet him.


Lily was glad she didnโ€™t let her family drag her to Elf Land unarmed. The place was crawling with people, swarming like someone stepped on an ant hill that erupted with people instead of ants. People of all shapes and sizes, wearing jolly dazed smiles, red and white hats with clattering bells, jingle-jangling earrings and bracelets, and a wide variety of abhorrent crocheted tops. The Helpers, as management insisted they refer to the staff, practically danced with jauntiness and insistent grins as they performed servile, repetitive tasks.

The whole place trilled with holiday gaiety. Except for that one elf.

At least, Lily thought he must be an elf. He wore the green boots with toes that curled up on the ends and the askew pointed green cap. But he didnโ€™t dance. He skulked. Lily kept catching him smiling strangely at her. Not the normal, vacuous smile of a Helper or guest; an oily, slippery leer. Sheโ€™d spy him looking at her, turn to tell her mother, and when she turned again, he was gone.

โ€œOf course people are looking at you, honey. Youโ€™re the most beautiful girl here.โ€ Sadie held her daughterโ€™s hand and followed the map to meet Santa. She stopped short. They couldnโ€™t even see the photo booth from where they stood at the back of the line. โ€œOh, my. Look at all this.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t really want to see Santa. Itโ€™s okay if you donโ€™t want to wait, mom.โ€

โ€œNonsense!โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not a baby anymore.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s true, honey. Youโ€™re growing up so fast.โ€ Sadie smoothed the irritation out of her voice. She wondered why they didnโ€™t have multiple Santas to get the job done more efficiently. The kids would never know. The photo booth was private anyway. โ€œLetโ€™s get your picture with Santa this one last time, okay? You look so pretty in your new dress. I bet if you tell him exactly what you want, youโ€™ll get it, too.โ€

Lily checked her pocket for the fruit fork with her free hand. She nodded up at her mother. She was rewarded with a warm smile.

Lily loved her motherโ€™s smile.

Hours seemed to pass. The line moved like a river of mud. Tinsel laughter trickled from the shore while the line lagged. The suspicious elf slipped in and out of the crowd like an eel. Lily glimpsed him more often as they moved to the head of the line. When it was Lilyโ€™s turn to enter Santaโ€™s private quarters, the eel-elf stepped up and took her hand to lead her inside.

Lily held on to her mother. The elf grinned furiously. His lukewarm hand tugged on her like a moist rope.

Sadie tried to shake Lily loose. โ€œGo ahead, honey. Donโ€™t be scared.โ€

A burly man stepped out of line several paces back. โ€œLook lady, if you canโ€™t control your kid, mine is more than willing to–โ€

โ€œExcuse you.โ€ Lilyโ€™s mom shot the man a stern glare. โ€œBe patient. These are our children. We each wait our turn.โ€

โ€œLady, I been being patient, and all Iโ€™m saying is your kid better move it or lose it.โ€

Murmurs and nods rippled down the line.

โ€œIโ€™m not scared.โ€ Lily didnโ€™t like the man making her mom a target. She let go and slid through the heavy curtains into Santaโ€™s chamber. She fingered the fruit fork pressed in her pocket.

Inside, the photo booth spun with fake snow, walls decked in red and white stripes, and a huge tree with multicolored lights. Silence sparkled. The angry crowd echoes didnโ€™t pass through the curtains. Lily heard the sound of real snow outside, the tiny chitter of ice hitting the roof.

In the center, Santa sat on a white and gold throne. The oily elf led Lily near. She forgot about his soft, damp fingers and peekaboo leer. Santa looked like a sleeping mountain. Never had Lily met a man of such girth. The elf gestured toward the mountainโ€™s lap. Lily thought the figure might be a giant plush statue. It wasnโ€™t until she clambered up that she noticed the sonorous suggestion of a snore.

Santa glowed and pulsed. His suite was more viscous than velvet. Round red baubles rolled from his pockets as Lily upset his stasis. They clung like anemones and drained away color where they stuck. Feeling her breath go black and white, Lily gasped. Baubles bound her to Santaโ€™s lap.

The oily elf slithered behind the camera, his spindly stockings completing the points of a pentagram with the legs of the tripod. He cloaked his head under the back of the box and held up a flash tray set to ignite. โ€œSmile.โ€

Lily frowned.

โ€œYou better not pout.โ€

Without further warning, the eel-like elf triggered the flash. A pyrotechnic blast blinded Lily for an instant. While she recovered her vision, all the round ornaments on the tree winked open and watched. The red anemones rolled upward and gaped. Santa sputtered and blinked. He bubbled and chortled with glee, one eye crusted shut with gluey magma. His good eye opened and shook when he laughed like a bowl full of jelly.

He laughed and laughed at Lilyโ€™s scowl. The bulging globe juddered loosely in the socket as he shook. Lily bounced on his lap, not amused. Santaโ€™s hilarity escalated to tears. His eyeball streamed with thick, yellow rheum. Lily spit the ichor away as it spattered her face and dress.

She grabbed the fork from her pocket. The orb wiggled free, lidless and sticky, trailing an elastic optic nerve. The liquid-coated membrane of Santaโ€™s eyeball touched Lilyโ€™s cheek.

The eyeball crawled up and squished against her eye, rolling around her iris like it was trying to get inside. Lily saw the world inverted through the back of the foreign lens.

She plunged the fork, fast and deep.

Author Joanna Koch writes literary horror and surrealist trash. Her short fiction has been published in journals and anthologies such as Synth, Honey & Sulphur, and In Darkness Delight: Masters of Midnight. Look for her novella, The Couvade, coming soon. Consumer her monstrous musings at Horrorsong.

The compromise to do specific projects without giving up your own editing business seems wise, but only if it pays well enough and gives you a credential to flout. Then again, if you’re making it work now and living comfortably, why give up autonomy? A difficult decision. Do you mind my asking what horror authors I might be familiar with who you’ve edited for? Yes, I’m shopping a little bit. May want to try getting together a collection in the next year or two.

The Couvade

Christmas Takeover 19: Scott M. Baker: Deck the Malls with Bowels of Holly

Deck the Malls with Bowels of Holly

A Story by Scott M. Baker
5,301 words

No one expected to see Santa Claus leaning against the mallโ€™s dumpster, puffing on a cheap cigar he held in one hand while taking a swig of whiskey from a 200 ml bottle of Jack Daniels clutched in the other. A bleached-blonde soccer mom decked out in a fur-trimmed leather jacket drove past in her Mercedes SUV, covering her daughterโ€™s eyes so the little girl could not see while flashing him a look that was equal parts haughtiness and disillusionment. Jack placed the cigar between his teeth and used his free hand to tip his Santaโ€™s hat to her. The soccer mom crinkled her face in disgust and sped away.

Jack placed the Santa hat back on his head and removed the cigar from between his teeth, but not before taking a deep puff. He blew the smoke in the direction the soccer mom had driven off. To Hell with her. Jack had met a lot of people like that in his life, the pampered elite who were arrogant and judgmental. To them, hardship was when the local wine shop ran out of brie. Let them live his life, and then weโ€™d see how well they made out.

Four years ago he never would have guessed his life would have turned out like this. As a major in the Special Forces, he was a few years shy of putting in his twenty and cashing in on an early retirement when an IED outside of Baghdad went off next to his Humvee, shattering his right leg. A year of therapy left him with a limp and an addiction to pain meds, both of which earned him a discharge from the Army. He broke his addiction to the pills by climbing into a whiskey bottle, and spent the better part of the next two years bouncing in and out of rehab until he finally got his life into some semblance of order. By then, his resume and reputation left much to be desired. He was forced to take any odd job he could get, which was how he wound up as the mall Santa. At least he made enough to pay the rent on his run-down studio apartment, even if it meant he had to take a few shots of whiskey every now and then to dull the pain in his leg from having whiny little brats sit on and kick it all day.

Jack took another swig of whiskey before replacing the cap and sliding the bottle into the fur-trimmed pocket of his Santa suit. He shifted the padding in his pants and jacket, grateful that he needed padding. It would have sucked if the mall hired him merely because he filled the suit. He might have a little more around the waist than he wanted, but other than that he was in good physical shape

The door to the employee entrance opened. Jack grabbed his cigar and prepared to toss it into the dumpster, afraid it might be Bert, the megalomaniacal security guard who ran his mall like a third-rate dictatorship. Thankfully, his friend Sammy stepped out. Sammy worked at the Christmas Village ushering kids to and from Santa. He had a way with kids. They related to him, mostly because Sammy was a midget. A little person, Jack corrected himself. Too bad mall management wasnโ€™t as sensitive. The Ice Princess dressed Sammy in an elf costume and paraded him around the display like he was one of the decorations. Though Sammy never admitted it, he was humiliated by the treatment, and probably would have quit if he could have found work elsewhere.

Sammy pointed to Jackโ€™s cigar. โ€œThoseโ€™ll stunt your growth.โ€

โ€œHow many did you smoke as a kid?โ€

โ€œHa ha,โ€ Sammy replied good-naturedly. โ€œIโ€™m surprised you havenโ€™t taken over for Jimmy Fallon yet.โ€

Sammy leaned against the dumpster, yanked off his elf cap, and wiped his palm across his forehead. It glistened with sweat.

โ€œAre you okay?โ€ asked Jack.

โ€œIโ€™m running a fever and feel like crap. I think I got an infection from one of the reindeer.โ€

โ€œWhen?โ€

โ€œEarlier this morning. The big one with the antlers is a mean bastard. It bit me and the other reindeer in the pen.โ€ To emphasize his point, Sammy shoved up his sleeve and pulled aside a large white bandage stained with blood. Underneath sat a nasty-looking bite that cut deep into the skin. Yellow pus oozed from around the edges. Bluish-black skin surrounded the wound, which gave off the sickeningly-sweet odor of rot.

โ€œThat looks serious. You need to get to the emergency room.โ€

โ€œNot until after my shift.โ€ Sammy replaced the bandage and pulled down his sleeve. โ€œIf I leave now, the Ice Princess will can my ass for sure.โ€

Jack wanted to argue, but he knew Sammy was right. The Ice Princess, their less-than-affectionate nickname for Holly Landers, the mall manager, showed nothing but contempt for those under her, Sammy in particular. If he left early to go to the hospital, she probably would use it as an excuse to fire him.

โ€œThereโ€™s only a few hours left to the shift. Try to stick it out. But if you get worse, you got to promise me youโ€™ll take off early and head to the hospital.โ€

โ€œIf I get any worse youโ€™ll be picking me up off the floor.โ€

โ€œWhere did they get vicious reindeer?โ€

Sammy leaned against the dumpster for support. โ€œI overheard the Ice Princess telling Bert she got a good deal on them from a farm up state. I know now why she got them so cheap.โ€

The back door opened again. This time Meghan appeared. She was the Christmas Village photographer, a young woman in her mid-twenties with shoulder-length strawberry blonde hair. Jack could not help but notice how sexy she looked in her green mini-skirt elf costume and red nylons. She refused to wear the pointy shoes with bells on the toes and opted instead for black heels, which the Ice Princess accepted once she discovered that the slightly-fetish look brought more fathers to Christmas Village and, by consequence, more money.

Meghan greeted them with a smile warm enough to melt snow. โ€œI hate to bother you, but Miss Landers is hanging around the village asking where you guys are.โ€

โ€œWhat a…โ€ Jack checked himself, not wanting to swear around Meghan.

โ€œDonโ€™t worry. I told her you just gone on break. Sheโ€™ll never be the wiser.โ€

โ€œThanks. Weโ€™ll be there in a minute.โ€

Meghan flashed Jack a flirtatious grin and headed back inside. He watched her behind as it jiggled beneath the elf skirt, wishing he was twenty years younger. Jack tapped his half-smoked cigar against the dumpster several time to make sure all the loose ash fell off, and then slid it into a carrying case he kept in his pants pocket.

He turned to Sammy. โ€œReady?โ€

Sammy pushed himself off the dumpster and staggered to the door. โ€œI feel like Iโ€™m gonna puke.โ€

โ€œIf you do, just tell the kids itโ€™s eggnog.โ€

As the two approached Christmas Village, Jack admired the work that had gone into organizing the display. The village filled the first floor atrium across from the main entrance, nestled up against the glass-enclosed elevators that led to the second-level food court. His throne, an old preacherโ€™s chair, sat atop a raised platform covered with fake snow. To the left stood a fifteen-foot live Christmas tree strung with colored lights and decorated with large red and green glass ornaments. To the right, a propane tank fed the flames behind faux logs in a fireplace. Curved metal poles painted to look like candy canes and linked together by a garland-wrapped chain prevented the kids from getting too close to the fireplace. Directly opposite the platform on the other side of the atrium sat a plastic igloo and half a dozen animatronic penguins, which had nothing to do with Christmas but did cash in on everyoneโ€™s love of penguins. To the right of the village, a maze of velvet ropes herded nearly twenty kids and their parents who patiently waited for Santa. Off to the left stood the pen holding the five reindeer, a twenty-foot square area closed off by a heavy log fence. The buck with the large antlers stood near the front of the pen, swaying unsteadily. Behind it, four does walked around lethargically. Jack knew nothing about animals, but even he could tell they were not feeling good.

What upset him more than the condition of the reindeer was the presence of the Ice Princess. She stood with Meghan by the camera, arms tightly folded across her chest, her frosty glare fixed on the two men. Dressed in a dark pants suit and sporting a short, professional hair style, she might have been passably attractive if her face wasnโ€™t frozen in a perpetual frown. As Jack and Sammy approached, she stepped over to confront them.

โ€œWhere were you two?โ€ she huffed through the clenched teeth of her forced smile.

โ€œTaking our break.โ€ Jack tried to sound as disarming as possible.

โ€œYouโ€™re entitled to fifteen minutes. You were gone for nearly twenty.โ€ The Ice Princess leaned forward and sniffed. She grimaced. โ€œWhatโ€™s that smell?โ€

โ€œCigar smoke.โ€

โ€œThat suitโ€™s coming out of your paycheck if we canโ€™t get the stink out of it.โ€

โ€œYes, maโ€™am.โ€

At that moment, Bert pulled up on his Segway. He skidded to a halt by the group, the sudden stop causing the beer belly that strained against his uniform shirt to jiggle like a bowl full of Jell-O. โ€œYou wanted to see me, Holly?โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s Miss Landers, to you.โ€

โ€œSorry, maโ€™am.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t want to give the parents any reason to file a lawsuit against the mall, so guard those unruly beasts and make sure they donโ€™t bite anyone.โ€

Bert grinned, revealing a mouth full of yellow teeth. โ€œI assume you mean the reindeer, and not Santa and his elf.โ€

โ€œHa. Ha.โ€ This time, Sammy did not sound amused. โ€œDid your mother tell you that joke was funny?โ€

The smile drained from Bertโ€™s face. โ€œBlow me, Munchkin.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s what I said to your mother last night.โ€

โ€œEnough,โ€ the Ice Princess hissed through clenched teeth. โ€œJust get back to work. All of you.โ€

Bert sneered at Sammy before whipping his Segway around and driving over to stand guard by the reindeer pen. Jack and Sammy headed for the platform. They were greeted by a round of cheers and applause by their young fans. Jack bellowed a hearty โ€œHo, ho, hoโ€ and waved. A minute later, seated in his chair, Sammy ushered over to him a six-year-old with auburn locks who beamed as she approached.

The next fifteen minutes passed without incident. The Ice Princess hung around, keeping a watchful and distrustful eye on Jack and Sammy when not telling Meghan how to take photos. Bert circled back and forth in front of the reindeer pen as if guarding a federal penitentiary. Jack had finished talking to a boy who requested the latest edition of Grand Theft Auto and Sammy was ushering him away all Hell broke loose.

The buck let out an anguished mewl and toppled over, its head twisted on the floor at an obscene angle, black fluid leaking from its mouth. The does backed away, moving to the corner to get as far away as possible. Bert jumped off his Segway and raced over to the gate, unlatched it, and entered the pen. He knelt down beside the carcass and placed a hand against its neck.

Sensing a growing uneasiness among the children and parents still waiting in line, Jack tried to take control and calm everyone down. He stood up, held his belly, and forced a hearty laugh.

โ€œHo, ho, ho. Nothing to worry about, kids. My reindeer is tired after pulling my sleigh. Heโ€™s just taking a nap.โ€

โ€œNope,โ€ Bert blurted out loud enough for everyone to hear. โ€œItโ€™s dead.โ€

Parents gasped and children cried. One little girl looked up at her mother, her lips quivering as she asked if Rudolph would be okay.

โ€œNo, no, no.โ€ Jack waved his hands dismissively. โ€œHeโ€™s just joking. My reindeer is resting, thatโ€™s all.โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s right,โ€ said the young mother to the little girl who had asked if Rudolph would be okay. She pointed to the pen. โ€œSee. The reindeerโ€™s moving.โ€

Jack turned to look. Sure enough, the buckโ€™s legs spasmed, lightly at first, then more forcefully. It flopped around for a second before struggling to its feet, eventually standing upright on wobbly legs. Bert moved away a few feet to give it room to maneuver, backing up against the pen.

The Ice Princess stepped up to the outer side of the pen. โ€œYou idiot. I thought you said that thing was dead.โ€

โ€œIt was. It didnโ€™t have a pulse and was cold to the touโ€”โ€œ

The buck spun its head toward Bert, attracted by the sound of his voice. The once dark brown eyes were now light gray and lifeless. It bared its teeth, snarled, and lunged. Before Bert could react, the buck latched its mouth over his face and bit deep, stopping only when its teeth ground into his skull. It tugged at the flesh. Blood spurted from around the reindeerโ€™s teeth and poured from its mouth. Bert howled, as much in terror as in pain, most of his cries muffled down the reindeerโ€™s throat.

Some of the parents already had scooped up their children and were dashing for the safety of the mall entrance. Most stood motionless from shock, too transfixed by the sight to move. Jack had no idea what was going on, although he knew enough to realize they all were in danger.

โ€œSammy!โ€ he yelled. โ€œGet these people out of here!โ€

โ€œS-ure th-thing.โ€ Sammy turned to the crowd gathered behind him in the rope maze and shuffled toward them. He took two steps, wobbled, and fell forward. His face made a horrible crack as it hit the floor.

Before Jack could react, the sound of more bodies dropping to the floor caught his attention. He turned to the pen as the four does, all of which had been bitten by the buck, collapsed one at a time.

Meghan took control of the situation, racing up to the maze full of parents and children. She clapped her hands in the air to get their attention.

โ€œYou have to get out of here now. Please move in an orderly manner towardโ€”โ€œ

No one waited for Meghan to finish. Shock gave way to universal panic as everyone rushed for the exit at the same time. Children were knocked down. Parents tripped over the velvet ropes, collapsing the maze, which caused even more people to get entangled. Meghan tried to maintain order, but no one would listen.

Jack ripped off his beard and Santaโ€™s cap, and began stripping out of his padded jacket. Shit, he thought to himself. This canโ€™t get much worse.

He had no idea how wrong he was.

The Ice Princess leaned over the pen and pulled the can of pepper spray from Bertโ€™s belt just as the buck yanked its head back. Bertโ€™s skin slid off his skull like a mask. He fell to the ground and placed his hands over his face, whimpering into the palms. Blood gushed between his fingers. As Bert rolled around in agony, the buck chewed the skin and swallowed. Bits of flesh and gore dangled from its jaw.

โ€œDonโ€™t screw with me and my mall, fleabag.โ€ Leaning over the pen, the Ice Princess raised the can of pepper spray and squirted a stream directly into the buckโ€™s face. It mewled in pain and thrashed around, shaking its head wildly to get rid of the liquid. When it finally stopped, the buck fixed its gaze on the Ice Princess and sneered.

โ€œOh, shit!โ€ She took a step backward as the buck lunged, slamming into the pen. The top log flew off, hitting her in the chest with a loud crack and knocking her backwards. She cried out. Putting pressure on her broken ribs, she struggled to get to her feet, wincing in agony with every move. The buck used its front hoofs to knock down the last remaining logs, clearing a path for it to escape.

โ€œHolly, look out!โ€ screamed Jack. Before he could react, a moaning to his left caught his attention. He looked to the base of the platform as Sammy got to his feet, looking dazed and disoriented.

โ€œHow ya doing, buddy?โ€

Sammy spun around to face Jack, focusing on him with dead gray eyes. He raced up the steps of the platform, snarling, his tiny arms reaching out for his meal. Jack waited until Sammy got to within a few feet before kicking out with his right leg, catching the zombie elf in the chest. Bolts of pain shot up his leg, the damaged nerves from his war wound protesting the action. The force of the blow sent Sammy reeling off the platform. He slammed into the floor and slid for several feet, coming to a rest only when he crashed into the overturned rope maze.

Jack looked around for a weapon, but Christmas Village was not what one would consider an armed compound. He finally spotted something he could use. Rushing over to the fireplace, Jack disconnected the chain from one of the metal poles painted like a candy cane and tried to pull it out of the platform. The pole moved only an inch or two. Jack twisted it to loosen the mounting, pausing when he heard snarling again. Sammy staggered back to his feet and raced across the atrium toward him. Jack yanked hard on the pole. It gave a little. He yanked again, this time with all his strength, and the pole broke free. Jack stepped aside and held the candy cane like a baseball bat.

When Sammy came within range, Jack swung the candy cane. It connected with the side of Sammyโ€™s head with a loud crack. His friend spun around and tumbled back down the stairs, rolling head over heels twice before flopping to the ground. The body barely slid to a stop before Sammy started to get back up.

Shit, thought Jack, this was going to tougher than I thought. Shifting the candy cane in his hands, he brandished it by his side as if it were a rifle with a bayonet. Sammy already was half way up the stairs and gaining speed. Jack pulled his arms back.

โ€œSorry, Sammy.โ€

As his friend closed to within a few feet, Jack thrust his arms forward, aiming the end of the candy cane right at Sammyโ€™s forehead. The metal end easily punched its way through the skull, scrambling his brain. Sammy twitched on the end of the candy cane for several seconds before going limp. His lids closed over the lifeless eyes. His snarling features softened, finally at peace.

A female scream echoed throughout the atrium. Jack spun around, afraid the cry came from Meghan. Thankfully, he saw her standing at the far end of the village by the penguin display, ushering the last of the terrified parents toward the mall entrance.

The scream had come from the Ice Princess. After being knocked down by the buck, she had gotten to her feet. The buck charged, bowing its head and plunging its antlers into her abdomen. It repeatedly twisted its head from side to side, goring the Ice Princess with all the dexterity of someone using a chain saw on a piรฑata. She pounded futilely on its head and antlers until her screams became a gurgle. With a strained cough, she spat blood from her mouth and her body went limp. The buck flipped its head, throwing aside the disemboweled mall manager and leaving a five-foot length of intestine and a ruptured stomach dangling off its antlers. Hollyโ€™s body hit the floor with a sickening squish. The buck stepped over to her, put its head inside the gouged-out cavity, and started to feed.

Only then did Jack notice that the four does also had risen and were exiting the pen looking for food. The clamor of panicking mall patrons bunched up near the entrance caught their attention. As one, the four reindeer moved off in that direction.

What could have been a slaughter was averted when Meghan spotted the does heading for the entrance. She grabbed one of the animatronic penguins and flung it at the first reindeer, clipping it on the side of the head. It distracted them, but now their attention was focused on her. The four does attacked. Meghan ran for the penguin display, dove to the ground, and scampered on hands and knees into the igloo just as the does reached her. The creatures kicked and head butted the igloo, their snarls drowned out only by Meghanโ€™s cries for help. Being made of thick plastic, the igloo afforded some protection, but for a minute at best. Already chunks of plastic were being torn off by the onslaught.

Jack quickly assessed the situation. He stood exposed here on top of the platform, but as of yet none of the reindeer had noticed him. That was his sole advantage. There was no way he could take on all five of them with a metal candy cane. And he couldnโ€™t waste time trying to find another weapon because Meghan would be zombie reindeer chow long before he got back. So he could either fight a futile, hopeless battle orโ€ฆ.

What was he thinking? There was no โ€œorโ€. He couldnโ€™t leave Meghan and the remaining mall patrons to be devoured by these Christmas nightmares. Running was not an option.

Jack had only one chance, as ridiculously slim as it seemed. Running over to the fireplace, he placed the candy cane on the ground and removed the rear panel to the fireplace, exposing the propane tank. The meter indicated it was more than half full. He wished it could have been more, but this would have to do. He closed the valve on the propane tank, disconnected it, and placed it at his feet. Reaching into his pants pocket, he rummaged around until he found his cigar case, pulled it out, withdrew the cigar, and placed it between his lips.

โ€œHey, walking wall mounts.โ€

Five sets of dead eyes turned toward Jack on top of the platform. Jack lit a match and placed it against the tip of the cigar, puffing until the end glowed red. He flicked out the match and tossed it aside.

โ€œItโ€™s time to play some reindeer games.โ€

The five zombie reindeer let out a collective howl and charged, covering several feet in a matter of seconds. Shit, Jack thought. Fast zombies suck. Grabbing the propane tank and the candy cane, he jumped off the rear of the platform and raced for the bank of glass-enclosed elevators. Behind him, he heard the creatures crashing their way up the front slope of the platform. As he circled around to the elevators and slammed his finger against the UP button, he prayed that at least one of the cars was on the first floor. Thankfully, the doors on the far left slid open.

The buck topped the platform first and slid down the back slope. Jack ducked into the elevator, dropping everything onto the floor and turning to the control panel. He pressed one thumb each against the second floor and CLOSE buttons, jabbing repeatedly. Nothing happened. As Jack watched, the buck reached the floor and looked around, finally spying him. It snarled and rushed toward him, with the does close on his hooves. Just then the doors began their interminably slow slide shut. Jack didnโ€™t know if he would make it. He shoved his thumbs even harder against the buttons and braced himself to be mauled. Thankfully, the doors closed enough that the buckโ€™s antlers slammed against the outside surface, preventing it from getting its head inside. It spat at Jack, filling the interior with the stench of death. The car jerked and traveled up to the second floor.

When the elevator came to a stop, Jack waited until the doors opened before pulling out the EMERGENCY STOP button. Working quickly, he used the end of the candy cane to knock aside the access panel in the elevatorโ€™s roof, pushing it aside to clear the opening. He then placed the propane tank in the raer corner of the car and turned the valve to the ON position. Gas hissed into the interior. Stepping to the control panel, Jack pushed in the EMERGENCY STOP button, pressed the button for the first floor, and stepped out. A few seconds later, the doors slid shut and the elevator began its descent. As it did, he wedged the end of the candy cane between the joints of the doors and pried them apart enough for him to reach in with his hands and open them all the way. He leaned out to watch as the elevator stopped on the first floor and listened as the doors slid open. It sounded like a stampede when the five zombie reindeer rushed inside, thrashing around as they searched for their prey. The buck glanced up, catching sight of Jack in the open doorway above. It growled and raised itself on its hind legs as if wanting to climb out and get Jack.

โ€œHo. Ho. Ho.โ€

On the last โ€œHo,โ€ Jack puffed on the cigar and then flicked it down the shaft. It arched through the air like a tiny comet before disappearing through the access hatch.

A moment later, a fireball mushroomed through the hatch as the propane ignited, incinerating the zombie reindeer. Jack dropped to the ground and covered his head as the tank erupted. The floor beneath him shook. The explosion took the path of least resistance, shattering the glass walls into a million shards and venting a fireball out across Christmas Village, ripping Santaโ€™s chair into kindling and blasting apart the giant Christmas tree.

Jack got to his feet and stepped over to the railing, surveying the carnage. All that remained of the platform was the metal struts of its base. The rest lay scattered across the area, pieces of wood and particle board mixed in with charred chunks of zombie reindeer. Pine needles, pieces of wrapping paper, and shattered fragments of ornaments rained down. Except for the settling debris and the crackling of a few scattered fires, everything was pleasantly quiet. Not a creature was stirring, he thought.

Jack suddenly remembered that Meghan was still down there. Running to the stairs opposite the elevators, he rushed down them two at a time, careful not to slip on the holiday flotsam. Below him was the igloo, shredded from the blast and partially melted. There was no way she could have survived that. Even so, he rushed over to the penguin display and dropped to his knees.

โ€œGod, Meghan. Iโ€™m so sorry.โ€

Jack flipped over the igloo, surprised to find nothing underneath it.

โ€œSorry about what?โ€ The sexy voice came from behind him.

Jack looked over his shoulder. Meghan stood three feet behind him.

โ€œArenโ€™t you dead?โ€ he asked.

Meghan placed both hands on her hips and rested all her weight on her right leg, striking a pose that looked all the more erotic in her short elf skirt. โ€œNormally this would sound like a stupid question, but do I look dead?โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ Jack stood up and took Meghan in his arms, hugging her tightly against him, or at least as tightly as the padded pants would allow. โ€œHowโ€™d you survive the blast?โ€

โ€œWhen I saw you leading those things away with the propane tank, I knew nothing good could come of it, so I headed for better cover.โ€

โ€œThank God you did.โ€ Jack broke the hug, but kept one arm wrapped around Meghanโ€™s waist. He was happy to see that she didnโ€™t protest. The couple headed for the mall entrance.

โ€œYou know,โ€ she said. โ€œSince you saved my life, you get to buy me dinner.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s a date. What would you like?โ€

โ€œI could go for a nice steak.โ€

โ€œGreat. I know a place that serves venison.โ€

Meghan wrapped her arm around Jackโ€™s. โ€œMaybe we should go for pizza instead.โ€

Clint stopped the ambulance a few yards from mallโ€™s main entrance, fighting back a sense of uncertainty about what they would find. The initial dispatch had been unusually vague, saying something about reindeer beating people at a Christmas display, although Kevin swore the dispatcher had said โ€œeating.โ€ Not that neither one made any sense. In any case, it sounded more like a situation for animal control rather than EMTs, and Clint had said as much, only to be ordered to get to the mall pronto. Of course, arriving in time to see swarms of terrified shoppers shoving their way through the exit and scattering across the parking lot did not help assuage his uneasiness. Panicked crowds were never a good sign.

Jumping out of the ambulance and grabbing their gear, Clint and Kevin rushed into the mall. They had to push their way past a couple strolling out arm-in-arm, the man wearing padded Santa pants and the young strawberry blonde dressed in very risquรฉ elf costume. Clint thought it unusual that, amidst the frenzied exodus, these two seemed not to be concerned.

Kevin, on the other hand, noticed the blonde. โ€œHey, did you see the ass on that one that just walked by?โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ Clint pointed toward the atrium where the charred wreckage of the Christmas Village lay scattered around. โ€œIโ€™m more interested in that.โ€

โ€œHoly…โ€ Kevin let his words trail off. He broke into a jog, rushing to the scene in case someone was still alive.

Clint followed, though judging by the extent of the destruction, he doubted if anyone could have survived. He stopped by what looked like a pile of dead penguins and scanned the atrium, shaking his head.

โ€œMan, nothing could have survived this.โ€

โ€œSomeone did,โ€ responded Kevin. โ€œOver there.โ€

Across the atrium, near the remains of what once was a pen or something, a single figure stumbled through the debris, his hands stretched out in front of him, fumbling as if he was blind. His back was to them, so Clint could not tell how badly hurt he was. Given the fact that the man wore a light blue shirt with the tattered remains of a patch on his sleeve and a utility belt that hung at an awkward angle from his hips with half the contents missing, Clint figured he must be mall security.

โ€œPoor guy,โ€ said Kevin. โ€œProbably stayed behind to help get everyone out, and then got caught up in all of this.โ€

โ€œYou check out the rest of the mall. Iโ€™ll tend to him.โ€

Clint crossed over to the security guard. The guardโ€™s hands fell onto the handlebars of a Segway and clutched it tightly. He attempted to climb on, but could not get his feet up high enough. Probably shock. When Clint got to within a few feet of the guard, he called out to him.

โ€œHang on, buddy. Iโ€™m a paramedic. Iโ€™m here to he… Holy shit!โ€

When the guard turned around at the sound of the voice, Clint saw that his face had been ripped off. He stared into a skull covered in gore and blood. Strands of severed nerve endings dangled out of the sockets. The thing couldnโ€™t see Clint, but it heard him. When Clint squeaked a muffled cry of revulsion, it dove at him, its exposed teeth ripping into the paramedicโ€™s throat.

Scott M. Baker, author of Yeitso, The Vampire Hunters trilogy, and the Rotter World Saga.
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Christmas Takeover 18: A.S. Chambers: Christmas Fear

Christmas Fear

A Story by A.S. Chambers
2,399 words

โ€œYou want me to do what?โ€

I was stood on the deck of my pride and joy, Icarus, fastidiously removing any trace of smear or smudge from the brass safety rail when Suzi dropped the question. I turned, unkinked the knots in my back that seemed to be growing more numerous with each passing winter, placed my hands on my hips and stared at the young woman who stood in front of me, fidgeting.

Iโ€™ve known Suzi Maloney since she was knee high. Her mum and dad were old friends of mine from way back. Jackโ€™s been passed away some ten years now, so thereโ€™s just Suzi and her mum. Plus, Kendra, Suziโ€™s sweet little four-year-old bundle of energy and questions. You know the sort of stuff: โ€œWhat you doing that for? How fast can your boat go? Have you fought pirates? Have you got any liquorice?โ€

Not the sort of thing that her mum had just asked.

The dark-haired twenty-something was worrying at the edge of the sleeve of her thick parka as I held her with my disapproving stare. I was hoping for an explanation. Instead, she just kept tugging away at a rogue thread that was trying to escape the frayed edge of her coat, her eyes studiously avoiding mine.

I eventually let out a deep sigh, my warm breath fogging in the frigid air. โ€œSuzi?โ€

This time she indeed looked up and my heart ached as I saw the desperation in her dark eyes. โ€œI said that I need to hire Icarus. Buster has a very important business deal. He needs somewhere private to carry it out.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll bet he does,โ€ I growled, and Suziโ€™s eyes suddenly shot away again. โ€œWhat is it this time? Timeshares on the Algarve? Holiday homes in Mull?โ€ Those were the usual things that darling Buster was usually pushing. Suziโ€™s latest paramour was one of those oily jerks who never quite stepped over the fine line of legality, but he definitely danced incredibly close, occasionally kicking a certain amount of sand on it to blur the edges. In the two months that he and Suzi had been dating, I had seen him leave a trail of disgruntled customers chewed up, spat out and empty of pocket with not a thing that they could do about it. He was certainly clever, Iโ€™d give him that, but he just stank of dishonesty and deceit.

I folded my arms and leant against my freshly polished safety rail, the cold harbour water lapping down below against the side of my yacht. โ€œTell me,โ€ I asked, โ€œwhy on earth do you go for these types? Is it the cars? The flash cash? Seriously, Suzi, didnโ€™t you learn when Kendraโ€™s dad skipped out on you when you were six months pregnant? Why canโ€™t you get yourself a nice lad?โ€

โ€œBuster is a nice lad,โ€ she protested. โ€œHe looks after me. With this deal, he says weโ€™ll be able to put thousands by for Kendraโ€™s uni fund. Plus, weโ€™ll be able to get her something sweet for Christmas, better than the usual tat that I can afford. Imagine the look on her face when she opens something worth having! Not like the battered second-hand garbage I got her last year.โ€

I shook my head. It was the same old story: the boys would let their eyes wander over Suzi, and they would like what they had seen, so they would get at her through her kid. Promising Kendra the world was guaranteed to make her mother more pliable than a ball of potterโ€™s clay. โ€œSo, whatโ€™s he planning this time? What luxury property is he selling off now?โ€

Suziโ€™s young face suddenly brightened and she rummaged around in her handbag as Christmas shoppers wandered past on the quayside, chattering brightly about their seasonal purchases or other festive crap. โ€œOh, itโ€™s nothing like that,โ€ the young woman explained, handing over an envelope she pulled out the bottomless depths of her ridiculously large handbag. โ€œBusterโ€™s been able to sign a deal with a bank to let him sell bonds that they back.โ€

Even before I opened the envelope, Suzi could not have failed to see the utter disbelief on my face. I ripped the envelope open and yanked the piece of paper out from inside. โ€œWhat the hell is this?โ€ I breathed as my eyes scanned the most godawful piece of fraud that I had ever lain eyes upon. โ€œSeriously, Suzi, have you even looked at this?โ€

And there, finally, was the flicker of doubt. It crossed her eyes like a gull skimming the prow of Icarus: brief, but definitely noticeable.

I pressed home my advantage.

โ€œBanks donโ€™t let other people sell their merchandise. They keep a very tight rein on those things. Theyโ€™re not going to want to share the profits.โ€

โ€œBut Buster said…โ€ Her voice drifted off.

โ€œWhat? That it was a swell idea? That it would be the last scam he would have to pull?โ€ I waved the A4 sheet in front of her. โ€œCome on, Suzi. Itโ€™s time to wake up. Heโ€™s using you. You need to go to the police. Thereโ€™s no way heโ€™s doing anything remotely legal here.โ€

Suzi chewed her bottom lip and my heart sank.

It was a habit that I had seen before from her many times as a kid. Whenever she got caught doing something she knew to be wrong, the lip would get tugged and bitten as the guilt wormed away inside of her.

โ€œSuzi, what is it?โ€

โ€œBuster said that the bank needed an up-front payment to release the bonds into his business.โ€ I groaned. โ€œHow much?โ€

โ€œIt… it was just fifty pounds. He said that it was a guarantee and would be paid back once we had sold the bonds for them. He said it was all above board.โ€

I turned the letter over in my hand. The thick paper and the cream, embossed envelope felt expensive. Obviously, Buster hadnโ€™t wanted to stump up the cash himself this close to Christmas. Perhaps he was too busy saving up for a flash new car to park under his tree? โ€œDid the money come direct from your bank account?โ€

She nodded.

There was no way that we could go to the police now.

โ€œOkay, so this is what we do. We need to get him to back off. You tell him that everything should be fine here, but that I need to have a small chat with him over the fine details. Health and safety, you know? Can you do that, sweetie?โ€

Another silent nod.

โ€œGood girl. Get him back here tonight at six. โ€œIโ€™ll sort this for you.โ€

Iโ€™ll sort this for you.

Those were the last words that I ever heard my old man say.

When I was still a kid of single digits, my Nana, Dadโ€™s mum, lived with us. She was the oldest person that I knew. Her hair was pure white and incredibly thin, her skin wrinkled and she smelt funny. She stayed in bed all day, reading her bible and saying her rosary. I once asked her why she did this and she said that she had nothing else to do at her age, so she might as well make sure that she was right with God when he came for her.

Then, one winter, she fell ill. Seriously ill.

Her skin turned a pale grey and her jaw became slack, dribble running from the edge of her lips. She could hardly talk and obviously my dad was worried.

It was the day before Christmas and there had been a hell of a snow storm the night before. We lived out in the countryside, miles from nowhere. It was one of the perks of Dad being the senior partner in the townโ€™s largest legal practice. However, it meant that our nearest neighbour was only vaguely visible over on the next hill. The phone was out due to the heavy snow having brought down the lines, so we could not call for a doctor or an ambulance. Dad decided that he had to go into town and get help for his mother, so he pulled on his warmest clothes and climbed the stairs to her bedroom. Bending over, kissing her softly on the forehead, he whispered the same words that I would say to a desperate young mother sixty years later.

Then he turned, left the house, drove off in the car and I never saw him again.

He was found dead in a frozen ditch the next day. Christmas Day.

Not only that, but an hour or so after he left the house, there was an almighty scream from Nanaโ€™s room. Mum and I hurried up the stairs. I was smaller, faster, so I got their first. What I saw would haunt me for the rest of my life. The elderly woman who had been quietly making peace with her maker was sat upright against the quilted headboard of the bed, her arm stretched out with her fingers splayed wide. Her dead face was set in an horrific, contorted scream of terror.

So, no, Iโ€™m not a big fan of the festive season. Whether it brings credit card debt or family anguish, Christmas sucks.

Six oโ€™clock and Suzi arrived dead on the dot with dear old Buster. Suziโ€™s latest is one of those who has a wide, insincere smile permanently fixed to his orange face. The guy is just awash with teeth, bronzer and expensive cologne. Hell, it was almost Christmas and he looked like he was partying in Bermuda!

โ€œWell, hi there, Harry!โ€ he grinned, his snake eyes not once leaving me. โ€œI believe youโ€™ve agreed to host my little shindig.โ€

I stroked my rough beard with my gnarled fingers. โ€œAbout that. Not happening.โ€

There was the slight hint of surprise in the corner of his eyes, but still that damned smile did not flicker. โ€œOh? And why would that be? Itโ€™ll be a great evening, so much fun.โ€

โ€œNo, Buster,โ€ even saying the stupid name made me feel nauseous, โ€œwhat will be fun is if you get all your shit together and just get the hell out of here. Youโ€™re a fraud and this time youโ€™ve gone too far. How dare you use Suzi like this?โ€

He chuckled to himself. โ€œWell now, Harry, I donโ€™t see why I should follow you up on your advice.โ€

โ€œYou know who I am. You know who my father was. People respect me, people who matter. You may be able to twist and manipulate the facts to keep you out of legal trouble, but I can make it so that life here is extremely uncomfortable for you.โ€

There was a pause, then Buster took one step closer to me, his bright blue eyes fixed on my face. โ€œDo you know whatโ€™s uncomfortable, Harry? Iโ€™ll tell you whatโ€™s uncomfortable. Feeling me chowing down on your soul, thatโ€™s what.โ€

Well, this conversation had just taken an unexpected twist.

Buster nodded. โ€œMmmm… yes, there we go. That sense of unexpected doubt and fear. Delicious. Now, for the last few years Iโ€™ve been dining mainly on greed. The modern society are so hard to scare these days, what with their precious internet and darling television. They just donโ€™t get me and my old kind anymore. No, but they get greed and, once itโ€™s been stoked up in them, Iโ€™ll quite happily slurp away all that bitter brew.

โ€œBut fear… Now fear is something else. It slips off the plate in waves, so sweet, so moist.โ€ His tongue slid across his thick lips which seemed more engorged than they had been just a moment ago. โ€œYesss… so sweet. It really hits the spot. Just like it did when I appeared to your dear old Nana. I walked up to the side of her bed and peered deep into her frail eyes. Do you know what she saw in mine?

โ€œNothing.”

โ€œAll that reading. All those prayers as those stupid beads clicked away. All for nothing.โ€

He licked his lips once more and this time there was no mistaking just how plump his fat lips had become. Whatโ€™s more, his tongue had changed colour from pink to a dark purple. It seemed to snake around his bright, white teeth.

Buster chuckled again, but this time it was more of a sibilant hiss. โ€œOh, yes. Thereโ€™s the good stuff. I can smell it all over you. You reek of it. It makes me so hungry…โ€ And, with that, his tongue shot out of his mouth and lashed itself around my neck. I gagged and fell to my knees, my old hands trying desperately to unwrap the muscular noose, but it was wet and slippery so my fingers could gain no purchase. Buster continued to chuckle in his weird sibilant hiss. His eyes faded from blue to orange and I was aware of a green mist beginning to permeate from his tanned skin.

I was also aware of Suzi behind him. She had reached into that abyssal handbag of hers and damn me for lying if she didnโ€™t draw out a knife. I couldnโ€™t tell what sort it was as my vision began to blur, but I could see the sharp blade glint against the twinkling fairy lights of the festively decorated quay.

I reached out towards her as she drew the weapon up and tried to cry out that this was not a good idea, but my words failed as the blade arced down into the meaty shoulder of boyfriend Buster, or whatever the hell he was.

There was a blinding flash and I was aware of a powerful force crumpling me down onto the deck as the tongue released its grip around my neck. I was also aware of a womanโ€™s scream and the sound of Suzi careering over the safety rail into the frigid wintry waters.

I forced my old body to take control of itself and dragged myself past where Buster had once stood. I hauled myself up against the railings and peered down into the black depths. I could not see her. She must have fallen like a stone and plummeted downwards, taking in water as she fell.

I thought about her four-year-old daughter sat at home waiting for her mother to return and I cursed Christmas even more.

Lancaster’s master of the macabre is well known for marking his home town’s place on the horror map of the United Kingdom. His Sam Spallucci books, with their quirky blend of urban fantasy, film noir and dry humour, have gained a cult following over the last few years with fans journeying from around the country to see where reality meets an ever expanding universe of vampires, werewolves, angels and a plethora of other supernatural characters.

Christmas Takeover 17: Thomas R Clark: All I Want for Christmas, the first three chapters

For Christmas Takeover, Thomas R. Clark has given us the first three chapters of his story, All I Want for Christmas: A Tale of Holiday Horror, which can be found on Amazon.

And don’t forget that his book, Good Boy, is available for order today.

A mysterious, foul-mouthed Santa offers Christmas wishes, but at what price?

All I Want for Christmas on AMAZON


All I Want for Christmas

A Story by Thomas R Clark
3,038 words

1

โ€œNick? Youโ€™re playing some fucking joke, right? I mean what are the odds of this happening?โ€ Bob Clark, manager of the Great Ontario Mall said to the elderly man in a Santa Claus outfit sitting before him. This guy was on point with the familiar red suit, complete with white and black trimmings. Oh, and the classic Santa hat. He even went as far as to wear the round-lensed spectacles. He was good. โ€œLet me guess, you changed your name to Nick when you grew that beard out and started playing Santa?โ€ He watched the old man shake his head.

โ€œNope,โ€ the applicant said. โ€œItโ€™s always been my name. Nick Samuel. You do know Nick is a common fucking name, right? It shouldnโ€™t surprise the shit out of you or anyone else.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s ironic, thatโ€™s all Iโ€™m saying.โ€ Bob opted for damage control, so they could get on with the process. He wasnโ€™t sure if he trusted this creepy old dude. โ€œSo I assume youโ€™re interested in becoming our Holiday-โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ Nick interjected, โ€œI fucking accept. Iโ€™d like to be your holiday Santa.โ€

โ€œHold on a minute, Nick. I didnโ€™t say you had the job.โ€ The old man released a jolly chuckle of hoโ€™s in response. Bob cut back in, โ€œWhatโ€™s so funny.โ€

โ€œWhat? The ho-ho-hoing? Iโ€™m Santa, itโ€™s what I fucking do. And, we saw you were looking for Santaโ€™s Helpers, too.โ€

โ€œWe?โ€ Bob raised an eyebrow.

โ€œI have my own assistants. Weโ€™re the remedy to your situation.โ€ The old man made a fist with each of his black-gloved hands and pointed his thumbs behind him. A pair of sultry women stepped out from behind Nick. Bob wondered where they came from. The last he checked, only Nick here in his Santa suit entered his office. These women manifested from out of nowhere. The pair stood at Mr. Samuelโ€™s left and right. โ€œThese are my elves, Lily and Aggie!โ€ The women curtsied on cue and handed Bob their resumes. He reached across his desk and took them, nodding as he did.

Bob was forced to admit, this was convenient. It would save him time and headaches. His former Santa, Kenny Saint-Claire, used his daughters as his helpers for years. But they grew up and moved out of town and Ken got caught groping one of the replacement Elves last year. It was quite the scandal for a small city like Fenton. Now Ken was fired and Bob needed a new Santa.

โ€œWell, Bob? What do you say? Is it a deal?โ€ the old manโ€™s tone startled Bob. It was almost rehearsed, wooden, as if Nick were playing a role, not that of Santa, but of Nick Samuel. Bob fumbled with the resumes in his hand.

โ€œYes, thatโ€™s nice. Do you have references?โ€ Bob forced out to regain control of the interview.

โ€œWeโ€™re not from around here, as you probably guessed. We only come through this way every so many years. Last year I was in Auburn at another dying mall. They had the busiest season since their catalog anchors left. But, of course, I have references! Elves, do we have references?โ€

โ€œYes we do, Santa,โ€ the women replied in unison.

โ€œBut Bob here, he doesnโ€™t need to check them, does he.โ€ He wasnโ€™t asking them a question.

โ€œThatโ€™s right, Santa, Bob doesnโ€™t need to check our references. Weโ€™re all set.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t need to check your references. Youโ€™re all set,โ€ Bob said. He felt a warmth in his groin and was surprised to find his dick was getting hard looking at Santaโ€™s helpers. This was an odd one. Bob was gay, and for the first time in his life since coming out, he questioned his sexuality, โ€œYou start next week, on Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving.โ€

โ€œExcellent, Mr. Clark. Itโ€™s a pleasure doing business with you. Now, one thing, for insurance purposes, all the parents must sign a waiver in order for their children to sit on my lap. It protects me, protects them. You know how it is.โ€ This was something Bob hadnโ€™t considered. Nick was right.

โ€œDamn, I donโ€™t have one. I can draw a form up-โ€

โ€œNo, no need to do that. I have forms they can sign. It comes with being a freelance Santa.โ€

โ€œOh, okay, Mr. Samuel.โ€

โ€œCall me Nick. Old Nick is what my friends call me.โ€

โ€œOld Nick it is,โ€ Bob corrected himself.

โ€œSo what would you want for Christmas, Bob?

โ€œI wish for this Mall to have a successful, record-breaking shopping season.โ€

โ€œAmen to that, Bob. Amen to that,โ€ Old Nick said, before breaking back into a low series of ho-ho belly rolls

2

Mike Lombardo stood in the reception line at Steveโ€™s funeral, trying to think about everything but his brother dying. It was difficult to do, to keep his mind blank, with the constant stream of mourners shaking hands, hugging or just nodding. Mike and his wife stood with his sister-in-law and mother. The line of people coming to pay their respects was a nonstop train all day. It was finally beginning to abate some, much to Mikeโ€™s relief.

Mike hated funerals, but he hated cancer more. The shit ran in the Lombardo family, rotting the men from the inside. First their father, John, and now Steve. Mike didnโ€™t know what killed Grampa Lombardo over in Italy, but he was confident ass cancer ate him, too. Mikeโ€™s older brother came clean about how sick he was just after New Yearโ€™s, and he didnโ€™t make it to fucking Thanksgiving. Mike didnโ€™t feel sick. His brother hadnโ€™t, either. But fear of a positive diagnosis prevented him from going to a doctor.

A man Mike didnโ€™t know was approaching the line. He looked familiar, but Mike wasnโ€™t sure. Elderly with a white beard, and accompanied by a pair of lovely, albeit much younger women- one blonde, one red-headed. Both were painted into skin-tight black mini-dresses. And as cute as those women were, this was his cue to leave.

He felt the urge to pee come on. Mike knew his bladder and feared pissing his suit pants. He excused himself and made haste to the restroom, avoiding making eye contact with anyone who might wish to stop him and make conversation. Lombardo nodded to them, mouthed the words โ€˜Thank youโ€™ in a nearly inaudible whisper, and ran off.

Mike made it to the urinal in record time, dripping while in the act of unbuttoning his pants. His dick was hard, for some reason. It was odd. He wondered why he would be sporting a woody at his brotherโ€™s funeral. It made pissing and directing the stream all the more difficult. The relief of finally breaking the seal was euphoric. Much like the last ten months of Steve Lombardoโ€™s life.

The brothers shared a bucket list year. From concerts, finally seeing KISS, their favorite band, together. A trip to the State Fair, camping at the State Park. A trip to Atlantic City where they lost more than they won. They scoured garage sales, buying toys they owned as boys growing up. Their best picks?

The Shogun Warriors they got for Christmas when Steve was five, and Mike was four. This Christmas in particular stuck with Mike. Though he was young, he remembered it clearly to this day, playing with his brother with those giant robots, nearly as tall as they were. So when Steve insisted on being buried with the Shogun, Mike didnโ€™t find it to be odd.

โ€œThey say you canโ€™t take it with you. Well, I say fuck them, whoever the fuck they may be! If itโ€™s what damned me, then itโ€™s coming with me. Fuck โ€˜em!โ€ Steve told him at Halloween. His wife balked at the notion. Earlier today, Mike handed the mortician a hundred dollar bill, and he slid the Shogun Warrior into the bottom of Steveโ€™s casket. It was there now, resting next to his legs.

Mike left the lavatory and found his way back to the reception line. It was empty, for the first time today. He saw his son, five-year-old, Brian, standing by the photo board. It was covered in pictures of Steve, from his time in diapers up to the concert back in August. Brian was focused on a single picture, looking at it with curious nods of his head. Mike went to his sonโ€™s side.

The Polaroid printed picture was from the Great Ontario Mall about forty years ago. Mike and Steve were sitting on Santaโ€™s lap. The eyes of all captured in the picture glowed a demonic red from the reflection of the cheap camera used. Christmas 1978. The year they got the Shogun Warriors. Mike remembered this picture and the day it was taken as if it were yesterday.

โ€œHey, son. That was your uncle Steve and me when we were your age.โ€

โ€œWhy is one blurry?โ€ Brian asked, pointing to Steve, sitting on Santaโ€™s knee. His image was a blur. His face, his hands, all clouded up. You could tell someone was in the picture, but who they were, you couldnโ€™t tell. Mike only knew it was Steve because he knew the picture. He pulled the picture off the poster board and put it in his pocket.

โ€œCome on, letโ€™s go stand over here with Mommy and Gramma and say hello to people coming to say goodbye to Uncle Steve.โ€

โ€œOkay, Daddy.โ€ The little boy took his fatherโ€™s hand, and the duo joined their family in the reception lineโ€ฆ

3

Snow assaulted Fenton, New York on Black Friday. A freak lake effect storm with a below-freezing wind chill struck from the north of Canada. The snow was dropping an inch an hour on the Ontario shoreline city. Visibility was next to nothing. But that didnโ€™t stop the regional shoppers from filling the parking lot of the Great Ontario Mall with their cars, trucks, and vans. If this were an indication of the shopping season to come, the mall was in store for a record year.

Retailers within the complexโ€™s walls were holding incredible sales, drawing out the local residents. The mall was alive with activity, including the seasonal debut of Santa Claus and his helpers, taking Christmas wishes from the young brave enough to sit on Santaโ€™s lap and have their picture taken.

Lines of traffic, headlights burning white circles into the falling snow, circled the building. Stuck in this jam, trapped in their Chevy Cruze, Mike and Lexie Lombardo waited patiently. Their son was sound asleep in his car seat. They were doing this for him, taking him to see Santa on the day he appeared at the mall.

For weeks little Brian had looked forward to this event. The little boy nagged his mother until she made a treat to bring Santa. Sugar cookies covered in green sprinkles. And yes, they brought enough to share with Santaโ€™s helpers. After all, the elves were important, too! They made the toys.

The only positive thing? There were so many cars in line, the snow wasnโ€™t covering the road. It was covering the cars, instead. The wipers of the Cruze pushed piling snow off the windshield. It was falling fast enough to cover the hood, the hot engine melting patterns in the accumulations. The farting sound of rubber squee-geeing across glass filled the car.

โ€œCan you turn the wipers off? That sound is driving me up a wall.โ€ Lexie asked her husband.

โ€œI wish. The snow is falling too fast. I canโ€™t believe this weather, Lexie.โ€

โ€œRemind me again why we came out in it.โ€ She said, rubbing her hands together.

โ€œFor Brian. To see Santa and give the jolly old elf some cookies and a Christmas wish-list.โ€

An hour and another inch of snow later, they found parking. Once inside the mall, the congestion wasnโ€™t any better. Sure, there was no snow, but the heat of the mall combined with the heat of the bodies in the mall made for tropical conditions. Mike was sweating his balls off, beads of it poured down his forehead and neck. Lexie was flushed, her ponytail dripping in her own perspiration. But little Brian was a smiling bundle of joy.

The boy was here to see Santa and tell the legend what he wanted for Christmas. He was a good boy all year, so no coal in his stocking. He gave zero fucks about the temperature. He cared even less about the line to see Santa, which curled through the mall and moved at a snailโ€™s pace.

He stood there, holding a bag of snacks for Santa in one hand, and his motherโ€™s hand in the other, being

Good.

With all the stress of the moment and location, Mike and Lexie had to admit their son was not a contribution to the trouble. The little things in life were working in their favor here. All of this made enduring the experience tolerable. As did Santaโ€™s helpers.

Mike noticed the scantily clad beauties as soon as they rounded the bend. Santa was smack dab in the middle of a fake Christmas Village, but these ladies were shifting duties. And they looked familiar, as did the Santa. One blonde and one redhead. The sight of them made him forget about how uncomfortable he was standing in this line. Now the only thing uncomfortable was the unexplained boner Mike was popping in his jeans.

He put his arm around his wife. She reciprocated, dropped her hand and squeezed his ass. He never expected this from her in the mall, the sign she was horny. Maybe being drenched in sweat after being stuck in traffic during a whiteout of snow was a turn on. If it paid off, theyโ€™d have to do it again.

Another hour passed before they got near enough to the front of the line to fill out the paperwork for the pictures. They wouldnโ€™t want anything more than the one complimentary shot, but there were still release forms and whatnot requiring signatures. It seemed like too much of a big to-do over something as simple as pictures with Santa.

โ€œWhatโ€™s up with all of this paperwork?โ€ Mike asked the redheaded elf. Her name badge said โ€˜Aggieโ€™.

โ€œLegal mumbo jumbo. Itโ€™s the Twenty-First Century. Santa canโ€™t afford any legal trouble, handsome.โ€ She wiggled her eyebrows and shook her tits. Jingle bells hung off her tight sweater. They jingled and jangled as a result.

โ€œJesus, itโ€™s like Iโ€™m taking a test. Iโ€™ve filled out auto loans and mortgages with less paperwork.โ€

โ€œYou can just flip through and sign at the โ€˜Xโ€™ on the bottom of each page if that will make it easier for you,โ€ she suggested. He hesitated.

โ€œBut, what if weโ€™re giving you permission to sell our child into slavery?โ€ Aggie laughed out loud.

โ€œWith some parents, youโ€™d think they wished for that. But no. Itโ€™s worse. Youโ€™re signing his soul away.โ€ Mike shot Aggie an inquisitive eye. โ€œIsnโ€™t that what remote tribes of people think when you take their photograph, that youโ€™re stealing their soul?โ€

โ€œI forgot about- โ€ Mike started.

โ€œJust do it, honey,โ€ Lexie interjected. And Mike did, signing his name at the โ€˜Xโ€™ on a dozen more pages.

Fifteen minutes later Lexie handed little Brian off to Lily the Elf. A shit-eating grin covering the boyโ€™s face with his eyes as wide open as they could go. A half dozen steps later, he found himself sitting on Santaโ€™s lap.

โ€œHello Brian,โ€ Santa said, following the boyโ€™s name with a jolly roll of hoโ€™s. โ€œThatโ€™s a keen name!โ€

โ€œThis is for you and your helpers!โ€ Brian handed Santa the bag of cookies.

โ€œOh isnโ€™t this nice! Thank you very much, Brian. Lilly, could you take these and put them with our snacks for tonight?โ€ The blonde Elf shimmied over to Santa and took the bag of goodies.

โ€œI hope you like them!โ€

โ€œWhat is your Christmas wish, young man?โ€

โ€œMy Christmas wish is for a puppy! I want a puppy for Christmas, Santa. Iโ€™ve been a good boy! My Christmas wish is a puppy! Thatโ€™s it, nothing more!โ€ Mike and Lexie heard their son. They looked at each other, sadness in their eyes.

โ€œWell, thatโ€™s an easy one, Brian. Itโ€™s something Santa can handle. You keep being good until Christmas Eve.โ€

โ€œI will, Santa. You know I will!โ€

โ€œOkay, Brian. Look at the camera and say โ€˜Amenโ€™ with Santa on three!โ€ Lily the Elf said. โ€œOne… two… three… Amen!โ€ Brian laughed as he repeated the words with Santa. Lilly snapped the photo and the flash lit up the Holiday set. The digital print captured the moment. Aggie handed it to Lexie. Brian took his fatherโ€™s hand.

โ€œI asked Santa for a puppy. Not a toy puppy but a real dog. Do you think he can swing it? He said he would! He said all Christmas wishes come true for good little boys, amen.โ€ Brian eagerly spewed words out to his mother and father. They looked at Santa.

โ€œI donโ€™t know about that one, sport. Weโ€™ll see,โ€ Mike replied.

โ€œBut Santa said my wish would come true if I was a good boy! And Iโ€™ve been a good boy, Iโ€™ve been the best boy, ever!โ€ The tone of voice was downtrodden and dejected.

โ€œIs there a problem with the boy getting a pet?โ€ Santa asked.

Mike looked at Lexie.

โ€œWe live in a rental. The landlord has a strict rule. No pets,โ€ Lexie told Santa. She held Santaโ€™s gloved hand. He was strict about it. Not even a hamster in a ball or a goldfish in a bowl, โ€I wish I could do something to change it for him.โ€

โ€œStranger things have happened. Amen.โ€ Santa said, grasping Lexieโ€™s hand with both of his.

โ€œYeah, whatever. Amen and all of that stuff. Merry Christmas, Santa.โ€

โ€œMerry Christmas to all of you in the Lombardo family.โ€

Mike shook his head in denial. He hated disappointing Brian. Lexie hugged her husband and hung her head so Brian couldnโ€™t see her face. Mike held her tight for another moment. Then, the three of them walked away from Santa and his helpers at the Great Ontario Mall.

Thomas R Clark is a musician, writer and podcast producer & engineer. His podcasts, including the popular Necrocasticon, can be heard on the Project Entertainment Network. He is the author of the novellas Bella’s Boys and Good Boy, published through Stitched Smile Publications. You can find Tom’s short story collection, A Book of Light & Shadow, on Amazon through his personal imprint, Nightswan Press. Tom lives in Central New York with his wife and a trio of Jack Russell terrier companions.