1
âK enny, look!â My little sisterâs face lit up with a big smile. She held up a ballerina doll for me to see. âIsnât she beautiful?â She sighed. âThis is the one I want for Christmas.â
My mom took Kristi to see the ballet Sleeping Beauty last month. Now thatâs all she talks about, all day long. Ballerinas. Ballerinas. Ballerinas.
âAre you sure this is the one you want?â I asked her.
Kristiâs head bobbed up and down. âOh, yes!â she said.
âLetâs see if she can twirl.â I took the doll from Kristi and spun her around on her head.
âKenny! Stop. Youâre ruining her hair,â Kristi wailed.
The doll spun to a stop. She fell flat on her back and her eyelids jammed shut.
âLook, Kristi. She is the one you want,â I exclaimed. âShe can be Sleeping Beauty.â
I tossed the doll on a shelf.
âKenny! Give her back to me!â Kristi brushed her short blond curls from her face. âI have to show her to Santaâso heâll know what to bring me for Christmas.â
Christmas.
Thatâs why I was stuck hereâin the middle of Dalbyâs Department Store. On Christmas Eve. In the toy department. With Santa and his dumb elves and my six-year-old sister, Kristi.
Itâs not that I have anything against Christmas. I mean I like the presentsâitâs all the âpeace on earthâ stuff I hate.
Anyway, Mom said I had to watch Kristi while she finished up her Christmas shoppingâwhich ruined my whole night.
I think Christmas Eve is the best night of the year. Itâs when I sneak into our neighborsâ yardsâand unscrew all the lightbulbs on their Christmas trees.
Kristi tugged on my sleeve. âCome on, Kenny.We have to get in line to meet Santa. I have to sit on his lap and tell him what I want.â
âSanta had to go back to the North Pole,â I told her. âWe canât see him. Heâs not here anymore.â
Someone tapped me on the shoulder.
Uh-oh. I hope itâs not Mom. I hope she didnât hear me just lie to Kristi. Iâll be in for it big-time.
It wasnât Mom. It was worse.
Timmy Smathers. A real nerd. And the shortest kid from my class at Shadyside Middle School.
âHi, Kenny!â Timmy greeted me with his big goofy smile. âIsnât this toy department awesome?â
I stared at him blankly for a second. Then I glanced down at him and said, âOh, Timmyâitâs you. For a second I thought you were one of Santaâs elves.
Timmyâs smile faded from his face. He hates when anyone mentions his height. So I do it as much as I can.
âHi, Kristi!â Timmy turned to my sister. âDid you tell Santa what you want for Christmas?â he asked in his squeaky little voice.
Kristi shook her head. She peered down at her sneakers.
âSanta isnât here anymore. He had to go back to the North Pole,â she whispered. âKenny said so.â
Then she glanced up at me. Her lower lip trembled.I spotted a big fat tear slide out of the corner of her eye and down her cheek.
âHey! Donât cry, Kristi.â Timmy smiled his goofy smile again. âKenny made a mistake. Santa is sitting in his village right now. He wonât leave until all the kids get a turn to talk to him.â
Kristiâs face turned beet red. She scrunched up her noseâher angry look.
âYou lied to me, Kenny!â she yelled. âTake me to Santaâs Village. Right now!â
âBye, Kenny. Merry Christmas!â Timmy shouted cheerfully as he strolled away from us.
âBye, Tiny. I mean Timmy,â I called back. âMerry Christmas!â
âIf you donât take me right now, Iâm telling Mom how you lied to me about Santa,â Kristi threatened.
âOkay! Weâre going. Come on,â I groaned.
I grabbed Kristiâs hand and tugged her toward the end of the toy
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