Read Santa's Newest Reindeer Online
Authors: Denis Trom
Earth. Some you can see from Holly Valley, and some you can-
not. From our viewpoint on Earth, the stars in the constellation
of Orion seem to outline the picture of a hunter. Orion, in Greek mythology, was a giant hunter killed by the goddess Artemis.”
The twins were fascinated by Jeepers’s knowledge. He knew
more than their teachers did! They were like sponges, soaking
up Jeepers’s words of wisdom. Their only movements were the
natural blinking of their eyelids.
“Two constellations are thought to look like bears—Great
Bear and Little Bear. The tail and hips of the Great Bear are
also known as the Big Dipper. Polaris is the last star in the
handle of the Little Dipper. It shines to the north and is called the North Star. The two stars at the end of the bowl of the Big
Dipper always point in the direction of the North Star.
“Santa uses the constellations and the stars within each pat-
tern as a celestial roadmap guiding him on his annual worldwide
sleigh ride every Christmas Eve. Other space travelers, like
Santa’s elves, also use this means to navigate on their destina-
tions. Needless to say, Rudolph and the eight tiny reindeer are
the critical in-flight navigators.”
Wil and El ie strained left and right, trying to see what
Jeepers was talking about.
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“There it is. See it! There’s the North Star. And there is the
Big Dipper!” they hollered in unison, drowning out Jeepers’s
explanations.
“I think I see Orion,” exclaimed Will, nodding his head
toward its position in the sky.
“Yes, I seee it!” yelled Ellie. She thrust her right arm from
under the comforter, drawing a line of sight on Orion. Simul-
taneously, a stab of ice-cold air dove under the opening in the
comforter caused by Ellie’s excitement. She quickly repositioned
her arm and closed the gap.
The two stargazers screamed aloud as Cosmos misjudged his
speed and turned too late. The cutter’s sharp runners scraped the North Star’s surface, plowing deep scars in its surface. Normally it was a short, direct flight from Idaho to the Arctic Circle, but not with the wayward Cosmos. He had his own ideas of how and
when to get to a destination. But Jeepers was ready for him this
time. Jeepers’s muscles flexed tightly as he pulled back on the
reins. The cutter bounced and swerved several times before he
regained control. Cosmos arched upward, swinging the reckless
cutter to the left and back to the right. He was showing off for
the twins—a smart-alecky move that Jeepers did not like one
bit. He snapped the reins again, and Cosmos responded with
a burst of lightning speed, pulling the careening cutter back
into alignment. Jeepers shook his fist at the spirited reindeer,
muttering under his stubby beard. Cosmos didn’t seem to like
Jeepers’s reprimand. He dropped his head and budding antlers
and kicked his rear hoofs high above the little driver’s head in
an act of defiance.
“Sorry ’bout that,” the elf apologized, tweaking the reins and
catching his breath. “I told you Cosmos is a very young reindeer
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and is in training. This is his first solo flight without another reindeer copiloting,” explained a flustered Jeepers, avoiding any blame for the inattentive driving. The twins didn’t seem overly
bothered by the rough ride, nor did they hear Jeepers scolding
the rebellious reindeer. Ellie and Will were enchanted by the
endless beauty of the starry universe.
“Tell us more! Tell us more! What are the stars made of?”
begged the twins, who by now were leaning over his muscular
shoulders to get a better view.
“If you promise never to tell anyone, except your parents and
grandparents, I will tell you a secret, but you have to promise
me,” threatened Jeepers, looking first into Ellie’s eyes and then into Will’s. When he was convinced that he could trust the two
earthlings, the little driver cleared his throat.
“Cross your heart and hope to die?”
“We prommmise,” they vowed, marking their hearts with
the form of an X.
“All the twinkling stars you can see, and those stars you can’t
see, are the souls and spirits of former elves who worked for
Santa at the North Pole. They are here all the time—day and
night—but you can only see Santa’s elves when the elves want
to be seen, and that is always at night.”
The two were overwhelmed by the secret Jeepers had just
shared. They stared at the millions upon millions of twinkling
stars. They felt they were not alone. The twinkling stars seemed
to wink at them. Will and Ellie tried to ask Jeepers questions,
but the tightness in their throats prevented any words from
coming forth and nothing more was said. To them, Jeepers’s
secret was simply more proof that Santa Claus did exist. Millions
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upon millions of stars could not all be wrong. The Milky Way
was proof in itself. Ellie and Will were more convinced than
ever that they were on their way to Santa’s Village.
Jeepers directed the twins’ attention to a point directly
between Cosmos’s antlers. “Straight ahead is the Arctic Circle.
During the winter, the sun stays below the horizon and no
human can see Santa’s Village. During midwinter or twilight
time, light is provided by the moon and stars in addition to the
magical northern lights and a clean, bright cover of glistening
snow. The secret of the Arctic Circle is that regular time changes into magical time for Santa’s elves and reindeer. Anything is
possible at Santa’s Village. Remember, you promised not to tell
any secrets I share with you, right?”
The small celestial cutter seemed to be suspended in midair as
the twins heard Jeepers talking to someone other than Cosmos.
They strained to eavesdrop, but their body harnesses held firmly.
Magically, a clear glass dome appeared abruptly on the hori-
zon. The cutter stopped nearly on top of it. The twins looked
down and saw a small village with little buildings, little people, little trees, little roads, little animals, little everything!
“We have been cleared to enter the Globe. Santa is here, and
he and all the residents are looking forward to meeting with
you,” reported the wee helmsman.
The twins were speechless. Ellie and Will had seen hundreds
of snow globes. Their Aunt Gail had collected snow globes
for a long time. Santa’s Village looked identical to the snow
globe on her mantle. She had boxes of snow globes stored in
her closets and as many boxes in her attic. It was fun running
through her house, shaking as many of the snow globes as
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possible before they were yelled at. Aunty Gail said the twins
were going to get all of them as a gift someday. Mom hoped
the twins had their own house by then, but they never asked
what she meant by that.
Jeepers smiled and winked at them. “Ha, ha, ha! Ho, ho, ho!
Oh what fun! We are in a holding pattern for an open runway
that has a gentle uphill slope just in case Cosmos overshoots
his coordinates. Don’t worry. We practice this precaution with
all reindeer trainees. Once in a while it’s necessary, but it rarely happens.” Based on what happened as they skirted by Orion,
Jeepers hoped it would not happen again. One close call per
trip was one too many.
The fog separated, creating a clear landing path for the
travelers. Jeepers jerked back on the reins, and Cosmos’s speed
slowed. The cutter dropped forward into a deep descent, which
thrust their bodies against the straining body belts. The com-
forter fell about their feet as they grabbed the back of the
driver’s seat. The action reminded the twins of the rocket
whirly ride at the state fair. They couldn’t get enough of that
daredevil ride and usually spent nearly all their money on that
one ride. The cutter leveled off at about fifty feet, floating
above the domed village.
“What you see is Santa’s Village. It is sealed in a silvery
glass bubble top and a weatherproof base. Yes, it looks like a
snow globe because
it is
encased in a snow globe. Of course, you know what a snow globe is. The bubble protects the village
and all its inhabitants from stormy weather and intruders. You
could fly over this spot all day and never see it, but everyone
in the village sees you.”
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The sled jostled from side to side as it tilted forward and
backward, gliding between the two thick fog banks. Jeepers’s
many years of experience were being tested, steadying the craft’s pitching and rolling. The fog banks blended together behind
them, erasing any evidence of the cutter’s pathway into the
snow globe.
“Welcome to Santa’s Village!” yelled the wee elf as the sled’s
runners glided smoothly onto the icy tundra. “Ha, ha, ha! Ho,
ho, ho! Oh what fun!”
Ellie and Will shrieked with joy.
“Nothin’ to it. Been there, done that many times,” smirked
the veteran driver.
The gigantic sliding glass doors closed, sealing the globe
from all inhospitable elements. While Jeepers led Cosmos and
the cutter to the reindeer barn, happy faces and robust cheers
welcomed them. Ellie and Will rubbed their eyes and pinched
each other. They could not believe what they were seeing.
Gathered before them were endless numbers of little people
in multicolored clothes and stocking caps. They saw short people
and even shorter people. That is to say, Ellie and Will were as tall as the elf adults, and the elf children stood only up to the twins’
waists. Even the dogs and cats were miniature size. Could they
really be at Santa’s Village? Certainly they must be dreaming.
Every Christmas Eve, Mom would read “’Twas the Night
Before Christmas” to them. When everyone had retired for the
evening, the twins would sneak downstairs and hide behind
the couch, hoping to see Santa Claus come down the chimney.
While they believed in Santa Claus, not only were they going
to see Santa, but they were going to meet him.
Seeing is believing, but meeting is convincing!
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The wind caught the storm door and slammed it against the side
of the house, nearly scaring Peg and Grams to death. The noise
scared them out of their comfortable chairs and propelled them
to see what had caused the commotion. They tippy-toed their
way through the dark rooms, fearful of banging their shins into
a protruding table or chair. As they peered around the kitchen
corner, Bill lunged to keep the door from crashing again.
“Did you find the kids?” begged Peg, helping to close the
door. She only counted two people, and they were big people.
“Where are my babies?”
“No, but . . .” replied Gramps. Before he could utter another
word, the two women quizzed them endlessly on where they
searched and who they had recruited to help them.
“We need something hot to drink—coffee, hot chocolate,
tea—anything to warm our innards,” demanded Bill as the two
men removed the last of their winter clothes.
They warmed their bodies near the wood-burning kitchen
stove until the hot drinks heated them from the inside out.
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Shuddering with spastic chills, Bill recounted the steps they
had taken on their quest to find the children. He related how
they came upon unusual animal tracks and footprints that sim-
ply disappeared into thin air. From there they trudged to the
neighbors’ houses, but most were unwilling to leave their homes
and families, and some neighbors were not home or did not
answer the door. Those who were willing to help would do so
when the storm let up and it was safe to go outside. Bill and
Gramps knew it would be a difficult chore to get people to
help, even though children were missing. They made plans to
meet at the Taylors’ front gate when the storm broke. Since the
power lines were down, no one knew what the weather forecast