Kilkenny Observer 24th December 2021

Page 18

18

The Kilkenny Observer Friday 24 December 2021

kilkennyobserver.ie

NewsShort story

A SEASONAL SHORT STORY BY PAUL HOPKINS

I

had thought about it for, I guess, the best part of a day, mulled over it, slept on it, my baby brother rabbiting the head off himself in his bed opposite me. My plan was to burrow my way to the back of the huge stand-alone wardrobe in my parents’ bedroom. The planning needed skillful setting up, exact execution, perfect timing and precise action. Fierce, in fact. But, I figured, now that I was going on 11 years old and all, that I had the wherewithal to make my mission a success and find out if my suspicions were, after all, and sadly, correct. The truth about Santa Claus. If I was right, and my mission a success, there would be huge ramifications ( I had to look that word up) for the whole world and, most importantly, for all the world’s children. Trillions of them, most like. My father was away working, on the trains; sorting out the letters and cards for people from other people all over the world. Mostly their relations, sometimes old neighbours or childhood friends. Letters written once or twice a year, my father had told me, or for special occasions or when bad news happened like someone had died or someone’s cow had fallen down a bog or whatever. But there were lots and lots of letters, lots too at Christmas time were ‘registered’, with money orders in them, from places in England like Birmingham and Coventry or America and Boston and California. Sometimes Sydney or Toronto or sometimes from a sister who had became a nun and had gone off to teach the Black babies in far-away Africa. Anyways, my father would be working away on the trains, sorting out the mail to make sure the letters for Galway got to Galway and the ones for Sligo got to Sligo. My mother said he was very good at his job, so I guess he was. The day of my massive mission my mother had to go into town on the bus to buy

‘There were lots and lots of letters, lots too were registered, with money orders in them..

My mission to discover the truth about Santa

more stuff for Christmas. It was the only time she had, she told me. She took my little sister with her — she was only four — but left my little brother with me. I was in charge. That was a given, as I was nearly 11 and all. It was easy too. If he didn’t behave I just gave him a thump, and that was that.

I had warned my little brother to stay downstairs, with the cat, “or else”, and I headed off on my mission, armed with my flashlight and a a packet of Chew-its in case I got hungry while on the job. I climbed the stairs and my heart was heavy. Heavy, because I suspected my mission deep into the back of

my parents’ wardrobe would only prove my suspicions right. It had been about a week before that my mother was returning from yet another visit to town with my little sister in tow, steady on her baby reins.I heard them come up the garden path, and I quickly replaced the cushions on the good couch

in the good room where my brother and I had been playing the Lone Ranger, he was Tonto and I had tied him up with the chord from my father’s dressing gown. My brother and I collapsed at the front door as my mother put the key in, saying, Come on boys move, let us get in...

She was laden down with bags from Clery’s and Guiney’s and other places and it was then that I saw it. At least I thought I saw it. Peeking out of the top of the Clery’s bag. The X-Air Space Gun SR2 I had asked Santa to bring me. What was going on, my head wondered and I was


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.