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| The Last Christmas of Mrs. Claus |
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| by Alex Wilson |
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| Betty was thirty-eight and still believed in Santa Claus. |
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| But sometimes he could be such an asshole. |
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| She leaned against the kitchen counter, picking dried glaze from the wrinkles in the back of her hand. |
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| From the wireless headset that dangled from her neck, her old marine buddies called to her with joyous profanity and the bass of digital gunfire. |
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| The Xbox was upstairs. |
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| Her buddies were in San Diego and Cleveland. |
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| Satellite coverage in Santa’s Village was just another Christmas miracle, like faster-than-light travel and stuffing oneself through gas fireplaces with neither explosions nor lawsuits nipping at your heels. |
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| It was six o’clock. |
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| Santa had said he needed to leave at eight. |
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| So Betty had made Christmas Eve dinner while listening to — instead of participating in — the big special ops campaign game online. |
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| She’d garlic-salted the yams to the tune of Gomez unloading his Glock into a drug dealer. |
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| She’d painted the ham with maple glaze while Williams punctuated Patty Smyth’s “Goodbye to You” with bursts from his assault rifle. |
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| “Her boys,” as she called them, didn’t take a lot of eggnog in their rum. |
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| Santa had spent his day opening envelopes from North American children and falling asleep watching the Pittsburgh-Cleveland game in the media room. |
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| Now he was in the kitchen, awake and on his way out the door, because suddenly spending fifteen minutes eating dinner with his wife had become too much of a burden on this most wonderful night of the year. |
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| His white V-neck undershirt was tucked into his pants in front, pulled taught over his belly. |
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| It stretched the neckhole halfway down to his happy trail. |
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| His hands were finding their way through the armholes of his robe. |
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| “It’s just that there are more children in the world now,” he said. |
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| “And Santa’s not getting any younger, ho ho ho.” |
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| “Don’t get much older either,” Betty said. |
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| Santa’s first wife had died centuries ago, but he always just dismissed the question of his own mortality. |
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| Betty never knew how naughty she should feel about wanting to strangle him sometimes. |
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| “You’re seriously going to let me eat alone again on Christmas Eve?” |
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| “Don’t think of it like that, doll,” Santa said. |
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| “Think of the children.” |
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| He slung his belt around his back, and gave it a quick tug. |
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| His waist shrunk from dangerously obese to barely jolly. |
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| A few crumpled bills in American currency fell out of his pocket. |
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| Santa bent down to pick them up, mumbling about “emergency money.” |
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| “Can’t you get dressed in the bedroom like a normal person?” Betty asked. |
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| Distorted shouting erupted from Betty’s headset. |
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| She imagined red and yellow mosaic bursts lighting up the sunless snowscape outside, as if there was an HDTV behind the blinds instead of their kitchen window. |
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| One of her boys probably stepped on a landmine. |
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| Williams, she guessed. |
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| She thought she could hear Gomez laughing. |
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| She picked up the pans in which she’d made the potatoes and maple glaze. |
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| She put them in the sink to soak. |
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| The gingerbread batter bowl could wait a day, even though it would take longer to clean tomorrow. |
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| For now, she appreciated its fight to cover the ham-stink that coated the room. |
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| The jingle bell chimed on Santa’s cell. |
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| “Nutcrackers,” he said. |
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| “Santa can’t reach it, and it’s probably Ginny. |
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| Would you be a doll?” |
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| “Your secretary’s calling, and you need me to answer it? |
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| How efficient.” |
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| Betty wiped her fingers on a hand-towel. |
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| She lifted her headset’s microphone to her mouth. |
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| “Moroz out. |
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| Back in five.” |
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| “Copy that,” Gomez said on the other end. |
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| “It’ll take that long to put Humpty back together again anyway.” |
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| Betty switched off her headset mic. |
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| She unclipped the cell phone from the back of Santa’s girdle, and pushed the button with the green arrow, serrated to look like a double-edged diving knife. |
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| Or a Christmas tree, if that was more your thing. |
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| “Hey Ginny,” Betty said into the phone. |
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| “Oh hello, Mrs. Claus,” Ginny said. |
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| “Merry Christmas.” |
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| “For heaven’s sake, call me Betty.” |
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| “Sorry, Mrs. Claus. |
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| Has Mr. Claus left yet?” |
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| “On his way,” Betty said. |
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| “He was just thinking of the children. |
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| One at a time. |
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| He’s very thorough.” |
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| “How wonderful!” |