Note: I made a list of prompts, and wrote a bite-sized story for each one. They don’t live in the same universe, but they’re all a little off-kilter from what you might expect from holiday fare. And if you pay attention, you’ll notice that the last line of each story becomes the first line of the next. Also? You can listen to these stories at my podcast website: BathtubMermaid.com.
She hums a song as ancient as dust.
It rolls low in her chest, a tune older than the Pole itself, older than winter, older than the first fires lit by human hands. The sound vibrates through the workshop floorboards, down through the packed ice, deeper still through stone and mantle and molten dark—until the earth answers back with a faint thrum of its own.
The elves pause. One by one.
They always do.
They freeze like candle flames caught mid-flicker, pointed ears tilting toward the source of the song. Their eyes—silver, green, gold—grow brighter. Not warm, not friendly. Bright like gemstones turning toward the hammer.
Mrs. Claus keeps humming. She must.
Tonight is the Night of Deepest Descent, when the elves renew their magic. A cheerful phrase on the calendar for those above ground; a necessary dread for those who know the truth.
Her husband—“Santa” to the winking masses—sits in his study polishing spectacles, pretending not to hear. He hates this part. Always has. Kindness comes naturally to him. Old power does not.
But she was born to it.
The North Pole chose her long before it chose him.
The elves begin to sway, tiny hands lifting, palms down, as if feeling for something rising. Their shadows stretch unnaturally long across the walls, thin and whip-like, curling like smoke even though there is no fire.
Then comes the cracking sound.
Like ice under too much weight.
Like the world taking a breath.
A seam forms along the center of the floor—hairline, glowing faintly red. Not the red of holly berries or candy stripes. The red of magma. The red of origin.
One of the elves—Perrin, the smallest—steps forward and touches the seam with reverence. His fingers spark blue. The magic rushes up through him, a surge of ancient power that makes his eyes roll back white for a heartbeat.
Then he exhales softly, and the seam closes.
The workshop exhales too—wood settling, machinery sighing, the air losing its electric bite.
Mrs. Claus finally lets the last note fade.
Perrin looks up at her, eyes their normal crystalline green again. “It is done,” he says, voice thin but steady. “We will be strong for another turning.”
He returns to the others, and they slip back to their tasks as naturally as snowflakes settling into a drift. Their humming resumes—light, cheerful, perfectly harmless.
To most ears.
She walks to the window. Beyond it, the eternal polar night stretches wide and blue, the aurora shimmering overhead like a curtain of spirits.
Her husband says her name softly, once, then again.
She doesn’t turn.
The floor beneath her feet still holds a faint warmth, as if the earth hasn’t finished exhaling. Outside, the aurora shifts color, and for an instant she thinks she sees movement under the ice—nothing defined, just a ripple, the world remembering something older than winter.
The room cools.
The shadows lengthen.
Somewhere in the deep, a single pulse answers itself.
She closes her eyes, listening.
The wind changes.









