‘Bloomin’ elves haven’t oiled the sleigh properly,’ he muttered before realizing it was his knees that were protesting. The horrible truth was Father Christmas was getting old. He’d been doing the Christmas rounds for over a hundred years now and he should be thinking about retirement. In spite of having to work so much harder these days, as children expected so much more in their Christmas stockings than when he began the job, he was reluctant to give up.
It would be his nephew, Nicholas, who would be taking up
the reins, and let’s face it, Nick just wasn’t mature enough for the job. Only
two weeks ago when Father Christmas asked Nick to take the reindeer and sleigh
out for a run to get the deer limbered up and ensure the sleigh was in good
working order, what did he do? Had them tearing along at top speed like some
boy racer, careless of not only his charges but endangering the elves in the
delivery sleighs coming in and out of headquarters with supplies. Luckily there
hadn’t been a nasty accident, but the reindeer were exhausted and needed double
rations that night to keep up their strength, which was a waste of fuel. Mrs
Christmas had had to lecture Nick on the concepts of eco-Christmas,
this year’s theme, and not wasting the earth’s precious resources.
Still, there was no time to waste pondering – he must get
on. This year the first round (every child worth its salt knows the whole lot
can’t be done in one go) was both his favourite and the one he disliked the
most. He decided to call on Happyton first to put him in a good frame of mind
before going on to the dreaded Greediville. He loved the village of Happyton,
where the Victorian houses had proper chimneys that he could get up and down
with no bother. Even the houses that had been divided into flats and had boarded-up
fireplaces presented little difficulty. Greediville was a newish town with mean
little boxes for houses, full of new-fangled gadgets and not a chimney in sight.
The Happyton children always asked for good old-fashioned
toys: Lego, dolls and footballs. Puzzles and board games were still popular and
Father Christmas’s favourite; books. Of course these new-fangled e-readers and
smartphones appeared on the older children’s lists but the girls still liked the
pretty silver jewellery and silk scarves that Mrs Christmas sourced from
Traidcraft workshops. The boys liked traditional sports equipment as well as new technological
things that Father Christmas didn’t really understand. Chocolate – always Fairtrade from
Ghana, Belize and Cote d’Ivoire – was still an enormous hit with all ages. It
was so different in Greediville where the kids demanded their own computers,
endless computer games, I-pods, I-pads, and who knew what else. They
needed new models every year. Goodness knows why, Father Christmas had had the
same mobile for about ten years and it still worked absolutely fine. Mrs Christmas had hinted that he should upgrade but so long as she was able to check he was alright, she wouldn't press the issue.
The elves used much more up to date gadgets and lately had been using strange things called Apps – it did make
things easier now the goods could be ordered online, meaning he could avoid the
tiring incognito reconnoitring trips he used to make. It saved fuel but he put his
foot down at the idea that it could all be delivered to headquarters by air-freight and
insisted on the traditional methods.
As the sleigh flew
over Greediville, Father Christmas’s heart sank. The place was blazing with
lights. Each house seemed to vie with its neighbours for the gaudiest display.
Many of them were crude depictions of himself and the deer. Last year Blitzen
had been most upset and handed in her resignation. Still, Happyton would be the
same traditional scene. But wait… what was going on here?
Coming in to land Father Christmas could see the usual
Christmas tree outside the church. It was shining brightly – those low-energy bulbs
were jolly good – but the houses were all in complete darkness. It was quite
irresponsible to keep tree lights blazing all night, both on counts of energy
and safety but it was a bit of shame not to have a few of those twinkly lights.
He wondered if people who had pet hamsters could rig up their little wheels to
generate enough electricity to keep low-watt bulbs glowing. The only other light he could see was
from a cluster of six flickering candles in jam jars near the church door.
He negotiated the first chimney and what was this? There
was the decorated tree but no presents lay beneath it. This house belonged to a
large family who gave generously to each other. Every year the grandparents,
aunts, uncles and cousins all came to stay and lovely parcels always lay beneath the
tree in anticipation of the special day.
Had they all gone away and forgotten to tell him? Or
worse, had he made a mistake? Had he come a day too early? He was getting a bit
forgetful lately. No, Mrs Christmas would never let him make an error like
that. Then he spotted a plate of home-made mince pies – one for each of the
deer and one for himself. He popped one in his mouth and placed his presents in the stockings hanging up and made his way to the next house. No brightly wrapped gifts in recycled
paper here either. Every house was the same. What was happening – was Happyton no
longer the generous, loving community he so admired?
Feeling rather shaken he pulled out his phone and dialled
the number of the elf responsible for Happyton orders.
‘Is that Albert? What’s going on in Happyton?’
'Simples!’ said Albert. ‘Look out for the candles in
jars. Must dash.’
Father Christmas made his way to the candles by the church door.
Above them was a notice from the NHS Blood Doning Service. “Thank you, Happyton,
for your gift of life. We collected 153 units at the special Christmastide
session. Thank you also to those who gave drinks and refreshments for the donors, saving us
money.”
He spotted the next cluster of candles a few yards away.
Above them was another sign. “Thank you Happyton for your donations of bedding,
toiletries, clothes and food. We will now be able to keep our town shelter for the
homeless open for ten days over the Christmas period. Additional cash donations went to Crisis."
A third group of candles gleamed not far away and Father Christmas
found another sign. This one proclaimed that Happyton’s energy saving drive
throughout December had enabled the residents to Send a Cow to a family in Kenya along with several smaller gifts.
The fourth notice said “Thank you Happyton! The Time, Skills
and Services Auction has raised over two thousand pounds for DEC's Ongoing Appeals. Your babysitting, gardening, computer trouble-shooting,
cleaning and cooking will enable people to start rebuilding their lives in the face of disaster."
A fifth group of candles outside the school showed a poster of
children from all around the world. Under the picture large multi-coloured
letters spelled out “Happy Christmas and Peace on Earth to all. By not having
Christmas presents from our parents this year we have funded five Shelterboxes for people in places where disaster has struck."
Father Christmas climbed back into his sleigh with a
creak of his knees. He patted Prancer and Comet.
‘I’m a silly old fool,’ he told his faithful reindeer. ‘Of
course the people of Happyton haven’t stopped giving. Not all gifts come
wrapped in bright paper tied up with tinsel. The sleigh lifted off and Father
Christmas went on his way calling his usual greeting,
"Merry Christmas and Peace on Earth to you all."
This an updated version of the story first published in The Greenacre Times December 2007.
3 comments:
An amusing, inspiring story,Lindsay and one with a message for us all.
I loved this. Funny but with a serious message. Very enjoyable.
I thoroughly enjoyed reading that - thank you :o)
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