Way
back in the 1970s, I regularly entered the 250-word competitions set in The
Writer magazine, and won a number of times. For one December competition,
entrants were asked to choose one of the following: 1. Write a description of a
snow scene. 2. Scrooge is not impressed by Marley’s ghost and does not change. Rewrite
the end of ‘A Christmas Carol’. 3. Write a Christmas song. Some 90% of entrants
chose the snow scene.
The
following (220 words, using my penname Platen Syder) won the first prize and
the princely sum of £3, with the judge’s comment ‘… and also made me feel
really cold’:
An
exquisite miracle, the birth of snow. It began just after darkfall, drifting
lightly, snowflake crystals forming unique geometric patterns, brightening the
barren colourless land.
But
the serenity didn’t last.
Above
and far beyond, more snow-clouds were building up, deep grey and massive,
overshadowing the spruce trees and gently sloping snowdrifts.
A
wind whispered round the solitary log-cabin, dissipated the thin ribbon of
chimney-smoke. Distant cries of wolves floated on the air. The moon shone
wanly.
Then
it started. The blizzard!
Unmeasurable
gale-forces swooped out of nowhere. The ponderous snow-clouds unzipped
themselves and poured out their innards. It fell like the fleece from pillows
until the winds snatched the flakes and the sudden mortifying frost covered
them.
Transformed
into a savage wall of darting ice-spicules, the snowstorm lashed and hacked at
the old man’s log-cabin. The winds howled hauntingly, battering at the warped
wood.
Inside,
the oil-lamp on the rough-hewn table cast an unsteady yellow glow.
The wolves bayed again, nearer now.
Reindeer-bells clanged discordantly outside as the poor creatures panicked in their stalls. The chimney whistled harshly. Sparks flew bright red onto the bear-rug in the hearth and a choking cloud of smoke and freezing wind gusted into the room.
“I’m not going out in that tonight – there’ll just have to be two Christmases next year!” growled Santa Claus.
* * *
Miss
Eleonor Clayforth was second (whose entry ‘not only befitted Scrooge, but
struck at the tarnished image of commercial Christmas’), and Miss S.B. Wilson
was third with her ‘poem rather than a song… a very fine piece indeed’).
If you enjoyed this short story, you might like my
collection Spanish Eye, published by
Crooked Cat Publishing, featuring Leon Cazador, private eye in 22 cases; poignant, humorous, even.
US: http://amazon.com/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Canada: http://amazon.ca/dp/B00GXK5C6S
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Austria: http://amazon.at/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Italy: http://amazon.it/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Spain: http://amazon.es/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Japan: http://amazon.jp/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Canada: http://amazon.ca/dp/B00GXK5C6S
UK: http://amazon.co.uk/dp/B00GXK5C6S
France: http://amazon.fr/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Germany: http://amazon.de/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Austria: http://amazon.at/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Italy: http://amazon.it/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Spain: http://amazon.es/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Japan: http://amazon.jp/dp/B00GXK5C6S
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