Alan Cadman
A glass of sherry
I still
cling to precious memories of that magical time when I was a little girl. On
Christmas Eve, just before bedtime, my parents would remind me to leave Santa
Claus a glass of sherry and a mince pie by the fireplace.
One year I wrote to him and asked for a doll; the one with long blonde tresses
that I’d set my heart on for months. I thought he’d forget, but of course it was
in my room when I blinked my eyes open the following day.
My mother and father passed away a few years ago; I’m now forty years of age. I
still have that toy, which I simply named Dolly. She maybe threadbare, hair
thinning, but I’m clutching her close to my chest at the moment. My bedside
clock is displaying 1.30 December 25.
The front door slams against its frame. I tremble under the duvet; touch my
bruised face. He stumbles upstairs singing the first line of “We Wish You a
Merry Christmas”, over and over again. I kiss Dolly on her
head.
The bedroom door crashes wide open. I wish it was Santa standing in front of me
instead of my husband. I wait, knife in hand. Whatever happens next, I’m certain
only one of us will see the break of dawn this Christmas
morning.
* * *
About the author:
Alan has
been writing short stories for ten years. In 2011 he made the short list for one
story and a prize winner for flash fiction. He also won first prize, of £100, in
a poetry competition in 2013. The three accolades were awarded by the
best-selling UK magazine for writers. His work has been read out on Internet
radio and published in hard copy magazines and e-zines.
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