A Christmas Story

CavLancer

This aint fertilizer
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Jan 2, 2003
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CavLancer's 'A Christmas Story'

When I was in the army a Russian SAM took out Santa and the sleigh and there wasn't much left of the reindeer worth eating. Came down on the west side of the 'wall' that divided West and East Germany, right in my sector of patrol. We did what we could but Santa was already gone, the damn commies killed him with their damn commie missile. Guts, blood, and toys everywhere. Our efforts were on the reindeer which were torn up too but we got some good steaks out of Blitzen and a shoulder roast off the one with the red nose. We could even work by the glow of that red nose until it too faded and died. Iirc that one's name was Frosty, but I'm not sure.

Anyway my point is that since the mid 70s its all been a cover up. The Superpowers working together for once and using lasers to create Santa holo images on clouds all under the cover of Reagan's supposed missile shield (no wonder it was so expensive) and the Reds anti satellite lasers. They accounted for all the sightings after that fateful, gruesome, Christmas eve. Leaders in East and West knew that if it got out that Santa was lost (slaughtered) over the border that the alliances on both sides might fall apart in disgust and they would lose their power and that is one thing the powerful can never abide. But...the West hung together once word did finally leak out mainly because it was a Russian missile that did the nasty thing to old Saint Nick. So, no more Russian Empire, no more Warsaw Pact. Only the heads of state knew in the end, they said the kids (and their families) didn't have a need to know. Typical. Me, I think they were paid off by a consortium of capitalists only too eager to take over from Santa...at a price. If everyone knew Santa was dead nobody would get a cut, and think of all the jobs that would be created, they were doing everyone a favor! That's how they think, the rich. Soon after the Santa body doubles started showing up in malls. No coincidence that. You could always tell because the 'gifts' weren't free anymore. Well if they aren't free they aren't gifts, right? But the greedy bastards pulled it off anyway.

That cold, snowy, Christmas night in Germany back in the mid 70s I was with my company and the damn supply had broken down again. I recall thinking '****, I wish Santa would bring me a ****in steak' when there was a bright light in the sky and then several seconds later the sound of the explosion. I always thought it interesting how the speed of light and the speed of sound put a few seconds between the two. Both were faster than the speed of Santa and the rest of the wretched mess plunging from the sky which arrived in our midst like the wrath of gawd a few seconds later. Light, (couple of secs) explosion sound, (couple of secs) Santa, splat. Kind of fun when you think about it. I mean, you know, they all started at the same place, same time. Physics, I'm into that stuff.

So as it turns out I, CavLancer, am the last one to ever receive a present from Santa, the real Santa, a nice juicy reindeer steak. I think that ought to mean something to somebody.

These stories are supposed to end on an upbeat note, Christmas coming and all, so I'll give it a whirl. Kind of tough though, all things considered. No matter if the commies murdered Santa, or the capitalists ripped us off, they only did what they could be counted upon to do. Christmas Is a time of family and for those who carried the ball after Santa fell, its a time of giving. So whether you're a little child toddling out of a warm bedroom on Christmas morn to find the glowing tree swathed in gifts or a cold and hungry soldier in the field wishing someone would think of him, Christmas is what we make it, and if you are forgotten then when it comes your turn, remember the forgotten. Other than that, I don't know. Keep your head down. Anyway, Merry Christmas, one and all.

:),
CavLancer

The End

Anyone have A Christmas Story to share?
 
Something about a temporary armistice for both opposing armies during Christmas. They celebrated together in the battlefield. Probably apocryphal. Models of human behaviour in warfare would indicate this is the case.
 
Wasn't that WWI though? My story is set in the mid 1970s (cold war era, not actual war) and its about Santa being shot down by a surface to air missile. They didn't have those back then. :)
 
Anyone have A Christmas Story to share?

When I was in the army my battalion was on DRF1 (defense ready force) during a Christmas, and thus we could not go more than ~40minutes from base. My fiance was still in university and I had no family around for hundreds of miles. I ate Christmas morning breakfast/lunch at the Waffle House with a guy from my company who I didn't know at all (and he was a redneck) :(

I don't celebrate Christmas, but it was still miserable because I do celebrate family cohesion.
 
Eco, I know what Christmas alone is like. All I can say is it is better to light a single candle than to curse the darkness, and I'm not the first to say it. Somewhere out there there is someone facing Christmas alone, maybe someone you know. Something to consider.
 
I don't celebrate Christmas, but it was still miserable because I do celebrate family cohesion.
Wow, that was brilliant Eco. Exactly how I feel. I hope to be back with my family (my new family not my birth one) by this Christmas for that reason. :) Like it or not holidays stand out in one's memory (my memory at least & I'd imagine most members of the society that celebrates said holiday) so it's important to make them count even if you try to tell yourself it's just another day & you don't care.
 
That's the spirit Narz, Merry Christmas! Hope you get home to loved ones okay...and hope you kids want to be home to their birth family as well, which depends on...who? ;)
 
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