The Passion of the Santa
Late one
night, in the middle of a dream, Sogwa the supercat was window-shopping in
Nowheresville Mall. There were hordes of shoppers, but none seemed to notice
that Sogwa was there too. She walked amongst them, unseen.
All the
prices were very low, but that did Sogwa no good at all. Sogwa the supercat
wore no clothes, of course, so of course she carried no money at all, not a
cent. It didn’t matter that all that cool stuff was marked down from a thousand
dollars each to a penny each; she couldn’t afford it either way.
Somehow the
floor was harder than ordinary marble; it made Sogwa’s feet ache. She sat on a
bench near a fountain. Shoppers swarmed by, not seeing her.
Right next
to the bench was a short pedestal. Someone had left a Santa doll on it. The Santa
doll’s arms and legs splayed like a starfish; his smile was stitched on a linen
face as round as a full moon. Sogwa reached for it.
The moment
she touched the Santa doll, it flew upwards with a shimmering sound, shedding
sparks and streamers of light. The doll rose into the air, turning and growing.
Full-grown,
Santa rotated in midair. He boomed, “HO, HO, HO! Have a merry Christmas! A
healthy Hanukkah! A quality Kwanzaa! A soulful Solstice! AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR!”
Santa waved his right hand, and candy rained from the ceiling.
Sogwa
yowled, “YOW!”
Santa looked
at her, winked, and put a finger beside his nose. There was a flash of light.
When Sogwa’s
eyes cleared, she saw that she was sitting on Santa’s lap, and Santa was on a
kind of a throne. He said, “What’s your name, kitten?”
“I’m Sogwa
the supercat, and I think your special effects are really neat, Santa!”
“So Sogwa,
you like magic?” She nodded, and he said, “Then here, have a magic wand!” Santa
handed her a short stick.
She looked
it over. “What’s it made of?”
“Genuine
cheap plastic, ho ho ho!”
“Thank you,
Santa! But how does it work?”
“It works
well enough.”
“I mean... how
does it work? What’s the secret?”
Santa said,
“It’s magic!”
Sogwa said,
“Yes, I know it’s magic, but how does magic work? Tell me the
truth!”
Santa’s face
fell. “You want... the truth?”
Sogwa said,
“Yes, that’s just it! How do you do it, Santa? I mean, really and for true?
’Cause I’d like to do it too!”
Santa slowly
stood up; Sogwa leapt off his lap and turned to face him.
Santa said,
“Are you sure you want the truth?”
Sogwa said,
“Yes, I’m sure!”
“Even if
truth isn’t what you’d like it to be?”
“Especially
if! Tell me, Santa!”
“Even if
magic isn’t what it seems to be?”
“Even if it
isn’t there at all!”
Santa said,
“I will tell you the truth, but only if you insist; for the truth will set you
free - but first it’ll hurt.”
“I insist!
Tell me, Santa! Do you exist, or not?”
Santa heaved
a huge sigh.
He said,
“No, Sogwa. I do not exist.”
Santa said,
“You may watch the fireplace all night, but I will not come. You may wire a
reindeer alarm on the roof, but it will not ring. You may seek me at the
shopping mall, or the Post Office, or even the North Pole, but you will not
find me. There is no flying sled, no magic reindeer, no polar workshop, no elf
workers. None of those things exist; nor do I.”
Santa said,
“So people pretend to be me, they play at being me, but only so far, and not
for real, because I am not for real. I cannot help them; I am not there.”
Santa said,
“For there is no Santa Claus! No lunch is free, no machines save labor, no
tyrant is benevolent, no motives are pure, and no results are guaranteed. There
is no invisible hand of the market, for that hand would be mine. There is no
philosopher-king, for he would be me. There is no perfect lover, apart from
myself. And I do not exist.”
“And believe
me, Sogwa,” Santa said, with tears in his eyes, “I wish I did exist!”
And Santa
wept.
Sogwa rushed
to his side. She hugged him and patted his shoulder, and Santa said, “I’m
sorry, I’m sorry, I’m a fake, a fraud, a funny story, a lie for children, and
I’m sorry that’s what I am, because I wish I were real, I wish I could actually
help!”
He blew his
nose, and there was a flash of light.
When Sogwa’s
eyes cleared, she saw that Santa was now a teenager. Teen-age Santa was dressed
in red spandex from head to toe. He said, “I would have been your genie, your
magical helper, your fairy godfather.” He grabbed Sogwa by the hand and flew
away with her into the air. “I would
have been anything for you, done anything, for you. For you!
”
Teen-age
Santa took Sogwa to a high place, and there he showed her in a glance every
country in the world. “All of this would have been yours. I would have given
you anything, given up anything, all for you! But I can’t, I
can’t, I don’t exist, I’m nothing at all...”
Teen-age Santa burst into tears. He blew his
nose, and there was a flash of light.
When Sogwa’s
eyes cleared, she saw that she was back in Nowheresville Mall. Santa was now a
tiny baby. The baby Santa was on top of the same pedestal Sogwa found him, and
as before crowds of shoppers swarmed by, none noticing him or Sogwa.
The baby Santa
cried, “IT’S NOT FAIR! Not for me, not for ANYBODY! I don’t exist, there ain’t
no Santy Claus, and IT JUST ISN’T FAIR!”
Sogwa said,
“Poor thing.”
She picked
up the baby Santa, she cuddled him and she rocked him.
Sogwa said
to the baby Santa, “I forgive you.”
The baby
Santa wailed louder than ever!
“Hush,
little one, don’t cry,” Sogwa said. “I forgive you for not existing.
It’s O.K., I mean it. Hush, little Santa, I forgive you for being a fake.”
The baby
Santa sobbed and wept.
“Hush, dear
Santa, I love you and I forgive you. You did give up everything for me.
How generous! You never even were - and for what? So I would doubt. So I
would question. So I wouldn’t believe just anything, just because it sounds
good and somebody said it’s true.”
The baby
Santa sniffled.
Sogwa said,
“O patron saint of skepticism, may your memory protect me! Whenever a schemer
offers me something too good to be true, and I am tempted to believe, may I
remember you, and what you turned out to be, and may I not be fooled. By your
gift, Santa, may I doubt, may I question, and may I save myself. So thank you,
Santa. Thanks for the warning.”
The baby
Santa lay quiet.
Sogwa said.
“Nobody’s perfect, and you’re nobody, so you’re perfect! I will never forget
what you never were. I love you just the way you aren’t.”
Sogwa saw
that she was holding a Santa doll. The Santa doll’s arms and legs splayed like
a starfish; his smile was stitched on a linen face as round as a full moon.
Sogwa left
the Santa doll on the pedestal for the next kid.
While
walking away, Sogwa said to herself, “Well, at least I got some loot.”
She waved the cheap plastic magic wand. “This ought to be worth something.”
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