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What had definitely been a bad idea had been going to the North Pole in the first place. What had he been thinking? That people wouldn’t mind a werewolf so much up there? That he could be free to be a wolf as much as he wanted and never have to worry about people? That hadn’t worked out so well, and when he’d tried to go home by sneaking on the plane and ambushing the crew, things had gone straight to handbasketdom.

He’d been wandering around, half-man, half-wolf, and increasingly hungry since he’d dug himself out of the snow that had buried the plane on impact. The human part of him knew there were weather and satellite monitoring stations near the pole—faking the paperwork for a job at a monitoring station was what had got him to the North Pole in the first place—so he figured he’d find someone or something useful eventually so long as he didn’t starve first. Luck or Fate had offered up the reindeer with the funky face and Matthias had grabbed the opportunity with all paws.

He was rooting for “good bits” when the man in red showed up. . . .

He was a medium-sized fellow with a neat, full beard as thick and white as the snow and he had a funny sort of hat that sat on his head in a floppy red peak, something like a small bishop’s miter that had gone a bit soft. A black shadow clung to his back and stout black boots stuck out under his long red coat of thick wool trimmed in white fur and held closed by six fancy gold braid things down the front. He held a tall walking stick that looked like a gold shepherd’s crook in one red-mittened hand as he stood in the gateway of the stockade and clucked his tongue in disappointment.

“Ahh . . . me. This does present a problem.”

Matthias raised his head and growled his best menacing growl. He was stuck in the back corner of the stockade under a half-shed that kept the snow off the manger, and the easiest way out would mean running toward the man in red. His human brain was still a bit groggy and he wasn’t thinking as well as he might have had he been a little less wolfy and a little less excited by the kill. He hoped the fellow would just back away so he could hop the fence and follow the man to whatever conveyance had brought him. Then Matt could steal it and get the hell out of the Frozen North. Or at least that was the first plan that suggested itself to his half-lupine brain and it sounded like a good one to him.

But the man held his ground and peered at the werewolf draped in reindeer innards. “Don’t I know you . . . ?” the man queried. He held out his free hand and a black book extruded from the shadow behind him and slid into his grasp. He glanced at the pages. “Hmmm . . . Oh, yes. Matthias Vulfkind. Haven’t seen you in quite a while, Mattie, and it appears you’ve been very, very naughty indeed. And now, poor Rudy, too. Ah, what will I do with you?”

Matt stared at the man in red and growled again, forming rough words in his half-human throat even as an entirely human idea began wriggling around in the back of his mind. “Who are you?”

The man in red gave a sad smile. “It has been a while, but you called me Rider and Sunnercla when you were very small and not so shaggy. Do you remember?”

Matthias shook his head. He thought it might be best to just rip the man’s throat out and get on with his plans, but the man seemed to calm him in some eerie way and he just couldn’t do it. It seemed . . . wrong, which was a concept the werewolf had not bothered with in a long time.

The man shook his head, too. “No? Well, then. I am Nicholas of Myrna. Most people call me Santa Claus now.”

Matthias drew back in surprise as the idea in the back of his head popped to the front like a tiny lightbulb exploding. Oh no, it couldn’t be. . . . “Father Christmas?”

Santa Claus nodded. “Yes, that too. And Saint Nicholas and Kris Kringle and many other names. And as it is Christmas Eve and you’ve eaten my lead reindeer, I’m afraid I find myself in a bit of a predicament, Mattie.”

The werewolf looked at the bloody carcass of the red-nosed reindeer that lay spread around him and cringed. “Uh-oh.”

“Indeed,” Saint Nicholas said with a nod. “While it’s within my power to raise a child from the dead, I’m afraid it doesn’t work on reindeer. So, it’ll have to be you, Matthias Vulfkind.”

“Oh no!” Matt howled. He leaped to scramble over the nearest part of the stockade fence and found himself floating in the very thin air of the North Pole’s perpetual winter like an ornament from a Christmas tree’s bough.

“Oh, yes. Though you are now a man and half a beast, your childhood memory of me gives me power over you this day.” Saint Nicholas held his crozier aloft as if the hook magically held Matthias in the air.

“I’m no deer!” the werewolf objected. “I’m big and I’m hairy!”

“Reindeer are hairy, too. You’ll do.”

“I’m a predator!”

“The deer won’t mind—they’ve run with stranger creatures than you.”

“But I can’t fly!” the werewolf barked, which was certainly true when you considered the recent fate of the airplane.

“I can fix that. . . .” said Sinterklaas.

Saint Nicholas reached his free hand into his pocket and brought out a fistful of something that glittered and chimed with the laughter of small children. He flung the stuff toward the werewolf, muttering in Latin—Matt didn’t know the words, but he rememberd the sound from his time in Catholic school—and a cloud of sparkling brown dust burst into the air and settled over Matthias.

The dust smelled of cinnamon and brandy and it tasted of gingerbread and apples, and where it fell into his eyes, Matt saw visions of magical creatures in diaphanous raiment who danced and spun on colored ribbons of magic. He sneezed and snorted and shook his fur, whimpered and rubbed his face in the snow, but he couldn’t get rid of the stuff or the strange feeling that crept over him. And then the werewolf was overcome with a giggling, effervescent sensation as if his whole body were made of champagne bubbles. And oh, it tickled! And oh, it itched! And oh, how it made his nose wriggle and twitch and he didn’t care for it one bit.

He set up a howl and pawed at the sky, which made him flip into the air and execute a perfect aerobatic loop that would have been the envy of any stunt pilot. He didn’t like that much, either, especially when he knocked his head against the stockade railings on his way back down.

“Oh! Oh, what is that . . . stuff?” he moaned.

“It’s Christmas Cheer,” Kris Kringle replied. “It’s made of the dust of Christmas cookies, some mulled wine, and a bit of Christmas magic. And cinnamon, because I’m very fond of cinnamon. Perhaps a hint of brandy, too. Just to keep warm, you understand.”

“It’s nasty!” Matthias whined, pawing at his poor, sensitive nose. He just couldn’t get the smell of cinnamon out of it.

“Funny,” said Father Christmas, stroking his beard thoughtfully, “I didn’t know you were related to Ebenezer Scrooge. . . .”

“Who?”

“Oh, never mind. He reformed. Maybe you can, too.”

Matthias growled.

“Now, now. None of that.” And with no more than a nod, Santa summoned two elves who seemed to rise up from the very ground on each side of Matthias. They had long pointy ears and pointed chins and slanted, pointy eyes—in fact, they were altogether pointy and pale and rather terrifying. They reminded him of the administrators at the children’s home and the nuns who’d rapped his knuckles with rulers and he quailed in remembered fear.

Without a word, the two elves put their hands on the werewolf and guided him out of the stockade and around a stand of firs to the courtyard of a large stone house that Matthias was quite sure couldn’t have been there before. In the middle of the courtyard stood a huge, old-fashioned sleigh that was painted bright red with shiny black trim. A horse had been painted just in front of the driver’s seat, and as Matthias was led past it, the painted horse turned its head to watch him. The werewolf shivered and turned his gaze to the team of eight reindeer harnessed to the strange vehicle.