by Nina Watson
It was Christmas Eve and Jane Appleby was leaning parched
and harrowed, against the door of the village hall. Pint sized Shepards were
trying to beat the living daylights out of each other with their crooks, Wise
Men were shoving ‘frankincense’ up their noses in a bid to burn them off and
the baby Jesus was currently missing a limb.Every year Jane got lumped with
organising the nativity for the Christmas church service, perhaps because they
thought she could deal with the tykes, seeing as she was the headmistress of
the local primary school. She’d had nightmares of kings with no gifts and
Joseph deciding to divorce Mary in the wake of her surprise pregnancy for
months, and a permanent headache due to the extreme decibel at which the
children shouted their lines. They hadn’t even rehearsed in the real
performance space yet and Jane just wasn’t sure if the gold bejewelled manger
was going to fit at the altar of the church. Wirey arms attached to a screaming
pair of lungs wrapped around Jane’s legs, and she looked down to see the Virgin
Mary (otherwise known as Ella Jenkins) wailing with her tea towel slipping off
of her little head. “What’s wrong sweetheart?,” Jane asked wearily. “It’s
Mickey! He hit my baby with his stick and now his arm has come off! HE’S KILLED
MY LITTLE JESUS!” The little girl continued to cry as Jane looked over to see
her lead Shepherd proudly swinging
Jesus’ detached body part from the end of his crook, the little savage. She
untangled Ella from herself and handed her over to her Mother, snatched the arm
and the rest of Jesus from the very disturbed Shepherd and started to walk
home, thinking of where her old glue gun might have got to.
*
Christmas Day was often associated with stress; the stress
of cooking, presents and trying to keep Grandad away from the whiskey. However the
Maplebottom church nativity was on a whole other stratosphere. Jane was nursing
a hip flask full of Beroca, in the hopes that it would give her the much needed
energy to struggle through the chaos of the day. Proud parents and grandparents
filled the pews of the little church, murmuring to each other about how excited
they were to see their little angels. ‘Backstage’ Jane had managed to get the
children together in a ramshackle group, checking fake beards and adjusting
tinsel halos. She looked at the children; some nervous, some excited, some
currently trying to shove a toy sheep down their tunic with no success. Whatever happened out there, be it good or
bad, Jane was proud of the cast. She had worked hard and the children, well,
they had turned up at least. As a hush fell over the congregation, Jane nudged
out Joseph and Mary and practically pushed Angel Gabriel out the door, Jane
fell back onto her chair with sheer exhaustion. Now, time to contend with the
turkey.
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