Kris

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by J. J. Ruscella




  Behind Every Myth Lies the Reality

  KRIS

  The Legend Begins

  Part of the Santa is real series based on the original story by J.J. Ruscella

  KRIS

  The Legend Begins

  J.J. Ruscella

  with

  Joseph Kenny

  Kris—The Legend Begins

  by J.J. Ruscella with Joseph Kenny

  Published by HigherLife Development Services, Inc.

  400 Fontana Circle

  Building 1 – Suite 105

  Oviedo, Florida 32765

  (407) 563-4806

  www.ahigherlife.com

  This book or parts thereof may not be reproduced in any form, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or otherwise—without prior written permission of the publisher, except as provided by United States of America copyright law.

  Copyright © 2010 by J.J. Ruscella

  All rights reserved

  ISBN 13: 978-1-935245-41-4

  ISBN 10: 1-935245-41-4

  Cover Design: r2c Design—Rachel Lopez

  First Edition

  10 11 12 13 — 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  Printed in the United States of America

  To the man who fills our heads with dancing sugar

  plums and dreams of wondrous toys. And to all

  those who assist with his deliveries each year.

  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1 Delivering

  Chapter 2 Rebuilding

  Chapter 3 Expectations

  Chapter 4 Home

  Chapter 5 The North Pole

  Chapter 6 The Great Delivery

  Chapter 7 Returning

  Chapter 8 Comfort and Joy

  Chapter 9 Searching

  Chapter 10 Silent Night

  Chapter 11 Redemption

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  The Prologue

  There are some among you who may say, and may believe, the story I am about to tell is but a myth. A fanciful legend. A tall tale full of wishful imaginings. That no soul so steeped in pain or so lost and inconscquential as a snowflake on a mountain drift could ever have chanced to rekindle hope in a life that seemed so endlessly beyond control.

  Yet I am here to comfort you. To tell you this tale with great earnestness and confidence. And to assure you it is true. For this is more than a story of pain and suffering, of helplessness and fear, of confusion and endless wanderings, of separation and loss. This is a story of hope. A story of transformation. A story of great passion and forgiveness. Of mystery and magic. Of beauty and wonder. And of the Majesty of the world.

  Yes, my children, you can believe me when I tell you this story is true, for it is a story long known and long told. It is a story from my heart. And I know that it is true. For it is my story. I am Kris and this is my gift to you.

  Chapter 1

  Delivering

  Flickering flames of orange and red reflected in the eyes of my brothers and sisters as we looked on the burning remnants of our childhood home. I snapped the reins, and Gerda responded intently. Through the snow we slipped, gliding furiously over the trails and across the crests of hills. When at last we stopped to look back and measure our distance, black clouds of smoke rose in pillars to the skies. The mountains of Norway were all I had ever known, but our once sacred, now savaged, mountain enclave faded into distant smoky memories of all we had lost and left behind.

  Aged Gerda, her strength not what it once was, tired quickly. As we went ahead, we slowed to a more measured pace, giving us time to think and focus on the moment, if not the future. Which way should I go? Which way to safety?

  Inside the sleigh, Garin, my weary brother of nine, waited. He denied the world his sadness as he played with a toy wooden bear, the only familiar element he was allowed to carry on our desperate journey.

  The snowy-blond twins, Tamas and Talia, were only seven. They sat in awkward silence and clutched each other’s hands. I hoped their bond would not be broken somewhere along our path. If nothing else, they might have each other as a reminder that they had once belonged to a family.

  My freckled sister of five, Kendra, held our sleeping younger sister of three, Jess, in her arms. Kendra stroked Jess’s curly red hair. They seemed to glow with a gentle radiance in the illumination of my torch.

  Shivering next to my mother was my beautiful, violet-eyed two-year-old brother, Owen, who began to cry.

  My mother smoothed her palm down Owen’s cheek. “Hush.”

  We paused momentarily atop the ridge that was the boundary to our mountain home. Near the end of the trail stood an ancient, sprawling tree that was burdened and twisted like the weakened body of a dying elder, a tree I had climbed countless times but no more. From the tops of those branches I had look out across the lowlands and dreamed of a different life. One I was now destined to discover.

  The children huddled around my once beautiful mother, now as twisted and as tormented as the tree looked to me. They seemed to be waiting for something, some clue, some comfort, and so I began a song that was familiar to them—a favorite we sang each winter as Christmas was approaching.

  Crystal snowflakes, crystal night,

  keep my brothers in your sight.

  Watch my sisters, safe and dear,

  through this Yule and through this year.

  Falling snowflakes from above,

  each unique and filled with love!

  Keep them safe until I call

  my Christmas wish as snowflakes fall.

  How I loved my brothers and sisters. How I lamented every mean word and accidental bruise born of childish arguments. How I wanted us to be safe, to remain together. My mother would not allow me to care for them in her absence. Back in the village, I had argued with her, insisting I could find a home for us all and watch over them.

  “I am thirteen!” I exclaimed. “I have had my coming of age.”

  She only scoffed at me, mocking my earnest desires.

  “You are just a boy. A crumb. Not yet a man,” she said, while struggling to catch a painful breath. “You cannot care for these children or protect them.”

  She cut me cruelly with her words. Furious and frustrated, I struggled to fight back welling tears.

  “You must leave them,” she continued harshly. “Tie them to the pillars at the crossroads. Leave them in the road for travelers to find. Together you are doomed to be discovered for what you are. There is little chance they will live, unless some stranger should discover them and take pity. They are in God’s hands now.”

  How could I leave my brothers and sisters tied helplessly along the roadside in the bitter cold? God would find them? God would give them shelter? Who would give them shelter, except to place them in a shallow grave or leave them buried under mounds of snow and ice?

  I hated her.

  I realize now that I did not want to face her undeniable truth. I knew I would have to separate them as my mother commanded, and I hated her for what she asked me to do, even if she was right.

  For who would take in so many desperate souls? Who would willingly provide us all with sustenance and shelter? Though none of us showed signs of the illness, who would endanger themselves with the plague God had brought upon my innocent village?

  Each time I asked myself those awful questions, I knew with certainty I would have to unlink our fingers, if not our hearts, and find new families and new homes for them to start their lives again. While I hoped our love would never fade, I had to face the grim reality: they would not survive another day in this cold if I did not find them sanctuary.

  We swept across the wasteland seeking salvation, some modest place of shelter from the peri
ls of winter’s hostile breath, until before us a windblown roadhouse appeared like a gift from heaven.

  Who will be first? I thought to myself.

  Then I saw my mother struggle to free herself from Owen’s desperate grasp, and I knew she had already made the choice. I hid the sleigh among the trees and looked to my mother.

  Gently, she stroked Owen’s face and spoke to him almost teasingly. “As happy as I am to be getting an uninterrupted sleep, I will miss you at night, crawling in bed with me. When I see your smiling face, all is right with the world. No more night scares now. Sing them away, like your father would.”

  Owen couldn’t fully form words yet, but he had a language all his own that he spoke just to us. At night when our father would sing as my mother slowly rocked him, Owen would sing along in his little sleepy voice.

  “You are the most wondrous thing,” she said to him. “I knew all too well these days would end. And though I am not ready, it is time you were off without me. I love you more than words can say.”

  I took Owen’s hand and cautioned the others to be silent as I started off toward the isolated roadhouse. Watery eyes revealed their understanding.

  It was a long march across the snowy meadow. Owen did his best to keep up with me, nearly waist-deep in the snow, until I swept him up into my arms and carried him the rest of the way.

  Gently I sat him on the stairs and began to make a small snowman, forming the mounds and molding the face. Slowly he joined in.

  I left him playing on the steps, quietly backing away to rejoin the others. Owen gurgled and laughed the way children do.

  Just then the roadhouse door swung open and slammed against the wall. Owen began to cry. The roadhouse man, a grizzled, ham-handed giant, filled the doorway. He gazed out past Owen shrieking on his steps. Then he saw me, skulking off into the distance, and yelled,

  “Hold!”

  I was driven by fear that he would pursue me. I did not hold. I ran faster than I had ever run before, spurred by my stumbling anguish. Don’t catch me. Don’t follow me. Don’t look at me. Don’t see me for what I am, for what I’ve done.

  I had left my little brother behind in the hands of a strange giant, a man who could squash him in his mighty grasp. Sobbing, I ran, fearful that I had made the greatest mistake of my young life in leaving him there alone. The distant cries of my brother proclaimed my betrayal.

  Please forgive me. God forgive me. Let this be a home. God give him a home. Please, if you are up there, don’t abandon him the way I have. Give him love.

  But I had little faith in a world where love was scarce. Whatever hope I had was dashed when I looked into my mother’s swollen eyes.

  “Get on with it,” she commanded.

  The morning sun glanced off the crystalline snow and sprayed a glaring light upon our ragged and weary group.

  In such a harsh light as this, we now found ourselves illuminated, our desperation exposed as our sleigh moved forward across the powdery snow.

  The devil time now became our enemy, waiting for us to falter, watching with glee as we drifted onward in hope of finding yet another way station or sheltered hostel in which to deposit one more piece of our hearts.

  As we moved ahead, I noticed feral shadows peppering the snow, interrupting its glaring whiteness in slinking, threatening movements. Wolves, I thought. Or was I so tired that my mind now birthed twisted imaginings?

  Vicious wolves, I imagined, marking time, waiting for us to hesitate or pause, so they might strike. This was their land, their hunting ground, their home, not ours.

  Wolves know the value of time and how quickly it passes and changes us. They know the value of patience and of waiting for opportunity. They surround their prey and paralyze it with fear while they stalk and distract and close their ranks in anticipation of the moment when they might spring.

  The whole world can feel full of these savage predators, always advancing, always stalking, always ripping away at our youth. But sometimes the world offers salvation, and sometimes the wolves are imagined.

  Another modest cottage. Another chance to dispense a desperate and hungry child and save him from the wild and release him to the vagaries of fate.

  Bread. The sweet scent of bread. Hot loaves placed upon a windowsill to cool by the mistress of the house. Hot loaves of bread calling to me, making my mouth water, coating my wind-parched lips.

  We all smelled it. Our forgotten hunger now pulled at our rumbling bellies. And again our mother chose, another boy, a twin, my brother Tamas.

  “I am torn,” my mother said to him, “by wanting to know what kind of man you will be when you are grown up and wanting to keep you, my child. I cannot imagine a time when you will not be my little man. You were so excited to be six and with the toy whistles and bells your father hid about the house. So very frustrated with your sister for taking forever to find the gifts and then to play with each one before she moved on to the next treasure hunt. You are stubborn and bullheaded, and I love that about you. I hope you keep those qualities as you get older. I look at you and I see such possibilities. How excited I am for you and your new life.”

  As my mother kissed and held him, he reached for our sister Talia. I pulled my brother Tamas toward the house and the scent of freshly baked bread. He began to fight me, screaming. I placed my hand across his mouth to silence him and held him fast, though he kicked and lashed out at me in his desperate anger. I was so afraid I might hurt him as he fought. But what could hurt him more than tearing him from his family? He would hate me for leaving him here alone.

  He struggled. I walked.

  I told myself over and over this must be done. “This must be done!” I said aloud.

  I ignored his tears. I ignored his pleas and his struggles. Then, suddenly, he stopped fighting. The tension released from every muscle in his body. Talia’s fingers intertwined with his. She stood there holding his hand, their look sharing what only twins could possibly understand.

  For a moment they glanced up at me with tears in their eyes, then turned and walked to the cottage.

  How brave they were, how trusting. How beautiful they were, like lost angels filled with grace walking hand in hand as they approached the cottage door.

  Who ever could have dreamed when they were born that such a day as today would arrive? My mother’s glorious twins, her pride, now pushed aside and sent out into the world alone.

  I rushed to the windowsill and snatched one loaf of bread for the others, then ran back to the sleigh, nearly breathless in my desire to flee. The twins knocked upon the cottage door.

  Of all the pain I had ever felt, none was so savage as the misery of separation. When my father died, I felt a wound that would never heal. He did not mean to leave us, I now know. But as he died, I was filled with rage.

  “How can you leave us?” I demanded to know as he lay there dying. “How can you go and not think to take us with you?” I shouted when he was gone.

  I wanted to walk with him no matter where he went, in worlds dark or distant. I wanted him to be strong and take my hand or caution me away from dangerous dispositions. He was my heart.

  It was not so much the pain of loss but its permanence that echoed again and again for me—loss that could not be reclaimed in this world, or maybe even in the next. Everything I counted on was gone. Every memory. Every hope. Every small achievement measured by this man whose death left me abandoned one winter day. I was not ready to take on this world alone.

  This is how my brothers and sisters must have felt. They had trusted that our parents would be there. That I would be there as an older brother should be. But that too was denied by my mother. I blamed her. However wrongly, I did blame her.

  I knew I could not end our reckless journey until each of my brothers and sisters was given some chance, some place of shelter. So on we went, our sleigh glancing across the rugged terrain.

  After we traveled for so long that it felt we might soon come to the world’s end, the music of mighty axes a
nd the singing of lumberjacks floated out from a distant stand of trees. I reined in Gerda and slowed our pace, listening to the rhythm of the axes as I planned our next engagement.

  THWACK, THWACK, THWACK, THWACK,

  A lumberjack’s life is a worrisome one, though some call it free from care.

  THWACK, THWACK, THWACK, THWACK,

  It’s the ringing of the axe from morning till night in the middle of the forest fair.

  THWACK, THWACK, THWACK, THWACK,

  While life as a jack can be bleak and cold while the wintery winds do blow,

  THWACK, THWACK, THWACK, THWACK,

  As soon as the morning star does appear, to the wild woods we must go.

  Then came a mighty and thunderous CRACK, and a giant tree surrendered its majestic form to the earth.

  Garin did not wait for my next thought. He never seemed to need the rest of us. That is not to say he wasn’t part of us. He loved us, and we him. Sometimes he would play with the rest of us, and sometimes he was a kind of loner. It amazed me how independent he was at nine years old.

  He leaned his tired frame across the bench and kissed my mother on the cheek. The kiss held for just the slightest moment, and as he leaned back my mother spoke words to him that rang in my ears for years to come, “Don’t ever let them know where you are from.”

  Before I stopped the sleigh, Garin leapt out onto the snowy ground and began his trek toward the lumberjacks. I loved that he struck out on his own without looking back. He got that from our father.

  He was strong and embraced his new calling with resolute purpose, like some tragic champion of old. My deep sadness and regret was that he might someday forget us all in his effort to cut away the painful past, forgetting all the happiness that once lived there.

  The sleigh came to a stop, and I watched as he walked across the snowy expanse. He didn’t look back.

  THWACK, THWACK, THWACK, THWACK,

  Some would leave their friends and homes and others they love dear,

 

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