Chapter 12

THE STUPIDEST ANGEL’S CHRISTMAS MIRACLE

Sundown, Christmas Eve. The rain was coming down so hard that there didn’t appear to be any space between the drops—just a wall of water, moving almost horizontally on wind that was gusting to seventy miles per hour. In the forest behind the Santa Rosa Chapel, the angel chewed his Snickers and ran a wet hand over the tire tracks at the back of his neck, thinking, I really should have gotten more specific directions.

He was tempted to go find the child again and ask him exactly where Santa Claus was buried. He realized now that “somewhere in the woods behind the church” wasn’t telling him much. To go back to get directions, however, would dilute somewhat the whole miraculousness of the miracle.

This was Raziel’s first Christmas miracle. He’d been passed over for the task for two thousand years, but finally his turn had come up. Well, actually, the Archangel Michael’s turn had come up, and Raziel ended up getting the job by losing in a card game. Michael had bet the planet Venus against his assigned task of performing the Christmas miracle this year. Venus! Although he wasn’t really sure what he would have done with Venus had he won it, Raziel knew he needed the second planet, if for no other reason than that it was large and shiny.

He didn’t like the whole abstract quality of the Christmas miracle mission. “Go to Earth, find a child who has made a Christmas wish that can only be granted by divine intervention, then you will be granted powers to grant that wish.” There were three parts. Shouldn’t the job be given to three angels? Shouldn’t there be a supervisor? Raziel wished he could trade this in for the destruction of a city. That was so simple. You found the city, you killed all the people, you leveled all the buildings, even if you totally screwed it up you could track down the survivors in the hills and kill them with a sword, which, in truth, Raziel kind of enjoyed. Unless, of course, you destroyed the wrong city, and he’d only done that what? Twice? Cities in those days weren’t that big, anyway. Enough people to fill a couple of good-size Wal-Marts, tops. Now there’s a mission, thought the angel: “Raziel! Go forth into the land and lay waste unto two good-size Wal-Marts, slay until blood doth flow from all bargains and all the buildings are but rubble—and pick up a few Snickers bars for yourself.”

A tree waving in the wind nearby snapped with the report of a cannon, and the angel came out of his fantasy. He needed to get this miracle done and be gone. Through the rain he could see that people were starting to arrive at the little church, fighting their way through the wind and the rain, the lights in the windows flickering even as the party was starting. There was no going back, the angel thought. He would just have to wing it (which, considering he was an angel, he really should have been better at).

He raised his arms to his sides and his black coat streamed out behind him on the wind, revealing the tips of his wings folded underneath. In his best pronouncement voice, he called out the spell.

“Let he who lies here dead arise!” He sort of did a hand motion to cover pretty much the general area. “Let he who does not live, live again. Arise from your grave this Christmas and live!” Raziel looked at the half-eaten Snickers he was holding and realized that maybe he should be more specific about what was supposed to happen. “Come forth from the grave! Celebrate! Feast!”

Nothing. Nothing whatsoever happened.

There, said the angel to himself. He popped the last of the Snickers bar into his mouth and wiped his hands on his coat. The rain had subsided for a bit and he could see a ways into the woods. Nothing was happening.

“I mean it!” he said in his big scary angel voice.

Not a damn thing. Wet pine needles, some wind, trees whipping back and forth, rain. No miracle.

“Behold!” said the angel. “For I am really not kidding.”

A great gust of wind came up at that second and another nearby pine snapped and fell, missing the angel by only a few feet.

“There. It’s just going to take a little time.”

He walked out of the woods and down Worchester Street into town.

 

“Wow, I’m famished all of a sudden,” said Marty in the Morning, all dead, all the time.

“I know,” said Bess Leander, poisoned yet perky. “I feel really strange. Hungry, and something else. I’ve never felt this before.”

“Oh, my dear,” said Esther, the schoolteacher, “I can suddenly think of nothing but brains.”

“How ’bout you, kid?” asked Marty in the Morning. “You thinking about brains?”

“Yeah,” said Jimmy Antalvo. “I could eat.”