Based on a true story.
‘Twas the night before Christmas, when down at the school
all the children were lined up to see some fat fool.
The mommies were handing their babes to this bloke,
Whose breath smelt of liquor and some sort of smoke.
The children all clambered with a similar goal:
kissing up to the jolly old chap from North Pole.
They knew they’d been naughty; they knew they’d been nice;
They hoped the ol’ elf was kinder than wise.
When it was my turn, there arose a great clatter,
Mom swooped me from Santa--Oh what was the matter?
Two women burst in--cross the room they did run,
Leading an officer with a glistening gun.
“But Mommy, oh Mommy, why’s Santa in cuffs?
How will I tell him the marvelous stuffs
I’m hoping to find in my stocking tomorrow?
They’re taking away Santa; it fills me with sorrow.”
That night my poor mom was forced to explain
How the man in the suit was just playing a game.
Not the real Santa, but rather an actor,
Who’d taken the gig and drove here on his tractor.
She tucked me in bed and my rosy cheek kissed,
“The real Santa knows all the things on your list.
He’s watching you always, so get off to sleep;
If he knows you’re awake, then your toys he’ll just keep...
"...and take them to children who do what is right.”
And with that, she left me alone in the night.
The wind, it was howling; the shadows they grew,
Forming sleighs full of toys melting into dark goo.
And then, in a twinkling, I heard on my ceiling
Scratching and clawing, and the furnace a-squealing.
Try as I might, I could not enter slumber.
I worried how Santa could pass through raw lumber.
We had not a fireplace, chimney, nor flue.
Mom said he’d get in, but I hadn’t a clue
How that would be possible with doors all locked tight,
As they’d been ever since we were robbed one cold night.
I remembered the footprint left on a blank paper
The robber had stepped on as he carried out his caper –
The clear size-ten boot print, it’s match never found...
The burglar, we thought, could still be around.
He’d smashed a flocked skunk bank to snatch coins inside,
Not realizing the statue was worth more to this child
Who liked to gaze at it up on the shelf tower,
and think about Bambi and Thumper and Flower.
My parents had no worry on this snow-laden evenin’
That Santa may open a path for this heathen.
This cold-blooded skunk-killer still out on the lam--
And my folks doing nothing--I needed a plan.
I could lay out a trap for the skunk-thievin’ jerk,
But if Santa fell prey, I would be in deep dirt.
And I was a fraidy-cat, plum-full of dread
At the thought of the boogey-man under my bed.
So, in bed I did stay, my head full of “what ifs”--
Burglars are scary, so are all-seeing elves--
If the burglar came in, what would happen then?
Even worse, what if Santa’s feet were size 10?
This happened when I was about 4 years old.
Explains a lot.