A Krampus Country Christmas: Day 16
Chapter 16: Krampusnacht Approaches
Snow came early that night. Thick, heavy flakes fell
straight down without drifting, as if the sky were simply giving up and dumping
everything it had left.
Holly stood at the window long after Max had gone to bed,
watching the storm settle over the ridge. The farmhouse creaked under the cold.
The wind hummed low and strange against the eaves. Something about it set her
teeth on edge. She tried to shake it off. Storms happened. Weather happened. But
this felt deliberate.
As though December itself had decided to lean in close and
whisper.
Max hadn’t told her about the dreams yet. Not all of them. Just
that morning, he had mentioned something about a “red forest,” the trees
glowing like embers, the snow falling upward instead of down. She’d assumed it
was the result of too much cocoa and not enough sleep. But later, as she tucked
him in, he held her hand tighter than usual.
“Mom… if someone comes for me on Christmas… would you be
scared?”
She brushed his curls back. “Nobody’s coming for you, Max.”
He nodded, but his eyes lingered on the dark corner of his
room like he expected something to step out.
She’d stayed with him until he slept. She’d stayed longer
than that. Long enough to realize she was afraid, too. Of what, she wasn’t
sure. Or maybe she was but didn’t dare say it.
Max hadn’t told her about the dreams yet. Not all of them. Just
that morning, he had mentioned something about a “red forest,” the trees
glowing like embers, the snow falling upward instead of down. She’d assumed it
was the result of too much cocoa and not enough sleep. But later, as she tucked
him in, he held her hand tighter than usual.
“Mom… if someone comes for me on Christmas… would you be
scared?”
She brushed his curls back. “Nobody’s coming for you, Max.”
He nodded, but his eyes lingered on the dark corner of his
room like he expected something to step out.
She’d stayed with him until he slept. She’d stayed longer
than that. Long enough to realize she was afraid, too. Of what, she wasn’t
sure. Or maybe she was but didn’t dare say it.
That Nick hadn’t shown up for dinner was enough to leave Holly
uneasy. For days, he’d been everywhere — trimming trees, fixing fences,
reviewing cookie economics as though her business were a sacred relic in need
of preservation. And after the snowfall kiss, he’d been gentler. More present.
But today? He’d been distant. Distracted.
At the tree lot earlier, she’d caught him staring at the tree
line, muscles taut beneath his coat, as if listening to something only he could
hear.
“Nick?” she’d asked.
He’d blinked out of it, murmuring, “Just preparing. The
season has demands.”
Now that the storm was here, she couldn’t shake the feeling
that “the season” had little to do with caroling and cocoa and stocking hung by
the fire with care.
Near midnight, she heard a noise outside. Not footsteps.
More like heavy claws dragging across old wood. Her heart stuttered. She
grabbed her lantern and stepped onto the porch. The sharp December wind stung
her cheeks.
“Nick?” she called. “If that’s you, this isn’t funny!”
The wind swallowed her voice. The movements stopped. She
held her breath. A moment later, a low voice emerged from the dark.
“Miss Winters?”
Holly nearly dropped the lantern. Nick stepped into the
light like he’d been carved from the night itself. Tall, rigid, snow dusting
his coat and hair. Only his eyes were warm, though even they carried a tension
she hadn’t seen before.
“Nick, what on earth—?”
“I’m sorry,” he said, cutting her off. His voice was steady
but strained. “I didn’t mean to alarm you.”
He hesitated, glancing toward Max’s window.
“You should stay inside tonight.”
Her stomach tightened. “Why? What’s happening?”
Nick opened his mouth, closed it, opened it again. He looked
like a man trying to decide whether to drop a bomb or swallow one.
“It’s nothing,” he said at last. “But the storm. It can be
unpredictable.”
“You’re shaking,” she whispered.
He swallowed hard. He was shaking not from cold but from
something else. Fear? No. Conflict.
“I’ll see you in the morning,” he said, stepping back into
the dark.
“Nick—”
But he was gone. Not walking away. Gone. Like the snow had
simply closed around him.
Holly stood on the porch long after, lantern flickering,
trying to breathe through the dread curling in her chest.
In the woods nearby, three shadowy figures slithered
through the snow, whispering to each other in voices thin as broken icicles.
“He’s losing control,” one hissed.
“He’s delaying the assignment,” another crooned.
“He’s compromised,” the third giggled.
The whisper rose through the trees, winding toward the red
forest in Max’s dreams.
Krampusnacht was coming.
And Krampus — whether he wanted it or not — was being called
home.
My new comedic sci-fi novel, Someone Else's Book Club, is available on my website or through Amazon!
Comments
Post a Comment