It happened on Christmas Eve, last night. It took place in an ordinary Georgia living room. It was late. Elevenish. The Christmas tree was glowing. A space heater was humming.
Five-year-old Samantha was fast asleep on the sofa waiting for Santa Claus to arrive.
They call her “Sam.” The girl has tight brunette curls and eyes like a Kewpie doll. The irony here is that Sam announced back in October that she quit believing in Santa. And to be honest, who could blame her? This year has been ridiculously hard on children.
When the pandemic hit, her dad lost his job. He took a new job driving eighteen wheelers, and it’s been hard on Samantha’s family. Her father has been all over the U.S. this year, far from home. In fact, he almost didn’t make it home for Christmas. This is what earning a steady paycheck looks like sometimes.
“Santa isn’t real,” Sam told her dad over and again.
“Yes he is,” said Dad.
“How do you know he’s real? Have you ever seen him?”
“Well, no, but
I’ve never seen a billion dollars, either.”
No matter how her dad tried to convince her, skepticism is a condition that cannot be undone without granite proof. Sam’s dad finally suggested how about Sam stay up late on Christmas Eve to see for herself.
Well, it sounded like a good idea. The only problem was, Sam is a girl with an IQ in the quintuple digits. She was not to be convinced easily.
Even so. Here she was, lying on this sofa, this miniature Doubting Thomas, holding onto a final thread of childhood.
The first noise to waken the girl was a deep rumbling sound. Like a diesel earthquake. This was followed by her dog, growling at the backdoor. The dog’s tail and ears were high.
“Could this be it?” she thought. “Could this be him? No way. Not possible.”
Sam arose.…