Detroit. Late December. Santa was running late for his appointment. He was stuck in traffic on I-75. Santa was driving an old car.
The car had been giving him fits. The vehicle had been in the shop for a week. The car had needed a new alternator. The godless auto mechanics had charged him $500 bucks to replace it, plus labor. It was highway robbery.
They were taking Mister Claus to the cleaners.
Plus, Santa’s home heat pump had quit working. His wife had called for an estimate from a repairman. The heater guy said the old heat pump unit was shot. So they would need a new heater. We’re talking a lot of cash.
Santa didn’t make much money. He was a blue-collar guy. His main gig was working at an automotive assembly plant.
He had been working there for 39 years, welding Dearborn steel. His department-store Santa gig was only part time. A seasonal job.
The gig started one year when Santa’s beard went white, and a coworker told him he looked a
lot like Kris Kringle.
The rest was history. Santa grew his beard out. He invested in a costume. It was a good side job.
But his financial life was falling apart. He was hemorrhaging money. They were living on peanuts, and his wife was buying groceries with pocket change. It was shaping up to be a hard candy Christmas.
And right now, Santa was late for an appointment at the Children’s Hospital of Michigan. He was supposed to meet a little boy and deliver holiday cheer. But right now, he was gridlocked in traffic.
Santa glanced at his watch. He was 45 minutes late, and traffic still wasn’t moving.
Santa slapped his steering wheel and used an expletive. Not a bad word. But an expletive.
Then, his car died.
Santa had to call AAA. Finally, after 90 minutes of waiting around for a ride, Santa…