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With her nightgown on, Greta lay on her goose-feather mattress and snuggled under the patchwork blankets. Mama and Papa kissed her forehead and told her they loved her and to sleep well, just as they had done every night for the last six years. Papa lit the river-stone fireplace and started burning the logs before barring the oak doors and window shutters, just as he did every night. And so the bitter cold of winter and the singing wolves were kept at bay, and the family who lived in the woods were safe. Greta really should have been asleep by this time. But tonight was not a typical night. This was the night that Saint Nicholas visited.

      It was dark in the lodge except for the orange glow of the fireplace. Flamed shapes danced into the rafters. Greta gasped as she heard the clatter on the roof above. Reindeer hooves, perhaps? Yes…the sound was unmistakable. Greta knew exactly who it was, as certainly as any child would, and Greta knew with even more certainty why he was here.

      ‘Samichlaus ist hier! Samichlaus ist hier! ’ Greta squealed as she escaped from her bed prison. She stepped on the wooden floor and pattered along to the stairs. She passed her Mama and Papa’s room where, from the archway, she saw the dark figures of her parents sleeping amongst furs. She climbed down the stairs slowly, one at a time, steadying herself against the banister before creeping in the shadows, wanting to see but not be seen. For the moment, Greta could only hear her own excited heartbeat until, suddenly, there came a subtle sound. A jingle of sleigh bells, so distant and yet nearby, tempting her with its magical call, far away and faint at first but stronger with each tiny step Greta took.

      ‘Samichlaus, ist daß Sie?’ Greta asked to the air. The bells stopped as if their owner had heard the question, before jingling in reply with even more excitement.

      Greta was transfixed by the sound and, as if to entice her more, the shadows of the fire now danced to the magical bells’ tune. They became orange fairy folk, swirling upon the walls, twisting and somersaulting to each jingle of the bells. Greta, knowing that she had to let Saint Nicholas in, ran to the entrance door.

      The door was barred closed by a huge log, held in place by iron hooks. She strained, trying to push the wood that refused to move even a hair’s breadth. Disappointed but not deterred, Greta turned her attention to the window shutters. Pushing a stool against the wall, she climbed up and tried the latch. The shutter opened with a creaking, revealing a small window, frosted as if Jack Frost himself had pushed his hands against the glass. Greta peered into the darkness, the sound of the sleigh bells now louder than ever. However, all she could see was the moonlit snow and the ancient trees holding their vigil over the lodge. That was, until a huge shadow passed by the window, darting out of Greta’s sight as fast as it had appeared, but not before tapping on the window. Tat, tat, tat.

      Now she knew without any doubt that Saint Nicholas was here. She had to let him in, and she suddenly knew how. By the fireplace, Mama kept a bucket of water just in case the fire became too enthusiastic. Greta, with great strain but more determination, tipped the bucket into the fire. Most of the water poured over her nightgown and the floor, but the bucket and the rest of the water streamed into the fireplace, and the fire died with a dramatic and smoky hiss that made Greta cough. Instantly the music of the bells stopped, and the dancing shadows went dark with only slivers of the moon seeping into the lodge. Black water ran over the fireplace and over Greta’s toes, turning them murky and chilling them with the cold dirty water that ran like blood.

      ‘Samichlaus?’ Greta called up the chimney when the smoke cleared, being careful of the orange embers that were slowly turning black. She invited him down the chimney and into her home.

      ‘Samichlaus, hereinkommen. Samichlaus, hereinkommen,’ she said in her little voice.

      Soot fell from the chimney stack and, with smoke filling the dark of the tunnel, Greta strained to see movement. She stood on tiptoe and leant further forward, and she smiled as Saint Nicholas crawled towards her.

      Except, too late.

      It was not Saint Nicholas that came hungrily for the child this night.

      Mama and Papa woke suddenly to Greta’s shrill screams. A piercing that went through the night and into the hearts of her sleeping parents.

      ‘Greta, ich komme. Greta, Papa kommt,’ Papa shouted as the two ran in the dark, crashing into furniture, and entered Greta’s room. Mama pulled the blankets back, searching for her daughter. Greta screamed again, and her fearful parents, in their terror, followed the horrid sound.

      On the stairway they stopped in their tracks at the sight that befell them.

      ‘Greta?’ whispered Mama, her hand covering her quivering and fretful lips.

      From the dark and the embers and the silver slivers of light they saw their daughter—sweet, succulent Greta, young and tender and plump. She stood by the fireplace and from it an elongated arm with black scales and lengthened fingers wrapped around the tiny girl’s waist.

      ‘Mama? Papa?’ Greta replied with tears in her eyes. And with a terrible movement, as fast as darkness murders light, the arm disappeared up the chimney stack and away taking Greta with it, leaving only a cloud of wet soot where she once stood.

      From the edge of the forest where the mountains begin, a pack of sleeping wolves, huddled together in the cold, were woken. Travelling on the crystal air was a sound to fear in the night—the sound of parents calling out in anguish and loss.

      A sound that would even chill the souls of beasts.

      Moorside, Glossop, England, 23 December 2014

      Katie woke to the sound of her mobile phone humming from the floor. She tried to move but was pinned down by her sister, Emily, on one shoulder and her brother, Jake, on the other. All three had fallen asleep on the sofa. In the partial darkness of the living room, the television was playing to itself. Katie blinked as, from the corner, an orange-looking man in a grey suit sold jewellery to whomever was watching. Her mobile phone screen lit up in time with each vibration. She slipped out from under her siblings, and they stirred but did not wake. Wiping a spot of drool from her chin, she pulled loose strands of hair from her mouth, before bending down to retrieve her phone.

      ‘Hello?’

      ‘Hi, honey, it’s me,’ said me. Me being Katie’s mother.

      ‘Hey,’ Katie replied, yawning. ‘How’s work?’

      ‘Did I wake you?’ Mum asked.

      ‘Not really, I was just resting my eyes. And I just had the weirdest dream.’ Katie stretched in her seat.

      ‘About what, hon?’ Mum asked sympathetically.

      ‘Nothing really, a family living in a forest…somewhere in Europe, I think. Years and years ago, and something else’…’ Katie shuddered, a tingle running down her spine as if someone had walked over her grave. She quickly changed the subject. ‘So, work?’

      ‘Well, it is nearly Christmas Eve, so I’ve had every drunken accident you can imagine coming into the emergency room. I’ve had my shoes ruined by bloodstains from a guy who got into a fight. And I’ve been vomited on twice, so there go my trousers too.’

      Katie laughed affectionately; she could almost see her mother rolling her eyes at the other end of the phone.

      ‘That’s why you became a doctor, Mum. Seven years of medical training to be vomited on.’

      ‘Thanks for reminding me,’ Mum replied. ‘How are Jake and Emily?’

      Katie looked at the pair lying on the sofa. Jake was nine but he was tall for his age, and wide too. Chunky but not chubby, and such a worrier. He lay asleep in his black pyjamas and with his precious ‘Tome’ tucked under his arm. He cuddled the thick book he’d recently latched onto like it was a teddy bear. Emily, at thirteen, was three years younger than sixteen-year-old Katie. She looked like a slightly smaller version of her sister. Tall and slim with blue eyes and long blonde hair. She was

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