Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow, Creeps in this petty pace from day to day,

To the last syllable of recorded time; And all our yesterdays

have lighted fools The way to dusty death.

Out, out, brief candle!

Life's but a walking shadow,

a poor player That struts and frets his hour upon the stage And then is heard no more:

it is a tale Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, Signifying nothing


Wednesday

A Midwinter’s Jest

 

The Great Sack Swindle

The eaves of the Whispering Woods held a breath that smelled less of winter and more of an over-scented apothecary. It was a thick infusion of ancient sap and peppermint frost, sharp enough to bite the nose with a metallic tang. Silver-leafed branches—draped in tinsel-moss like a giant’s discarded finery—shimmered with a beauty utterly wasted on Young Falstaff. He stumbled through the thicket, braying a festive carol that bore no kinship to any known melody. His mind was a soft porridge of wild berries and the persistent, prayerful hope that some charitable soul was, at this very moment, tapping a fresh barrel of Sack. To Falstaff, a "sacred grove" was merely a wasteland where the taverns were tragically far apart.

High above, perched upon a rowan branch, Puck watched with the predatory lethargy of a cat on Christmas morn. He was currently embroiled in a wrestling match with a string of enchanted fairy lights tangled in his wings. To the fey, boredom is the devil’s own workshop; seeking a cure, he drew a wand of warped rowan, his emerald eyes dancing with a wicked spark.

"A touch of festive fire to wake these leaden heels," Puck whispered.

He snapped the wood. Magic erupted—not as a gentle dusting of snow, but as a violent, lilac-hued seizure of the senses. The Wild Magic of the Fells kicked back like a startled mule, shattering the "Forget-Me" spell in a violet ripple that tasted of copper and over-spiced fruitcake.

Crack!

The sound was as if the world itself had been pulled like a giant cracker. Puck tumbled from his perch, wings fluttering like a singed moth, while below, Falstaff froze mid-lurch. They blinked at one another with the vacant, honeyed smiles of men who had wandered into a room and promptly lost the reason for their existence. Their wits were now as hollow as a child’s stocking on Boxing Day.

"God save you, master," Falstaff rumbled, his voice echoing as if from the dark depths of a tun. "I have a notion I was seeking... a thing? A liquid virtue? I feel a monstrous thirst, yet I cannot recall the cup."

"I am a sugarplum!" Puck giggled, landing like a drunken bee on Falstaff’s shoulder. "The world has turned quite purple, has it not? The trees look poised to dance a galliard, but alas, they have forgotten the steps."

They were sharing a jest with a particularly stoic rock when the mist parted. It did not drift; it shrank back, fearing the figure stepping into the light. Loki wore no divine gold. Cloaked in a mud-caked mantle and wielding a heavy iron ladle like a scepter, his grin was a splinter of ice—sharp enough to draw blood from a glance.

"Greetings, ye festive architects," Loki purred, his voice a silken thread pulled through a bed of thorns. "I am the Royal Relocator of Midwinter Greenery. I have come for this Great Pine; 'tis overdue for its annual tinsel-scrubbing. The King and Queen demand it be burnished until it shames the moon."

"A scrubbing?" Falstaff blinked, his heavy jowls quivering. "Water is for fish and laundry, Master Relocator. Sack is for men. Have you such a vintage in your train?"

"Oceans of the stuff," Loki lied, his tongue nimble as a lute-string. He gestured toward his black cart. "But this 'weed' is too cumbersome for a solitary god. Lend your strength to the loading, and I shall grant you the Cask of Eternal Sack—a draught so golden it makes the stars seem dim and watery."

"Sack for the sugarplum!" Puck clapped his tiny, numb hands, spinning in a dizzying circle.

Under the violet haze of the spell, the desecration began with a grin. Falstaff threw his bulk against the ancient Christmas tree, fueled by the phantom ache of a dry throat. With Puck trilling a nonsensical madrigal about holiday grapes, they tore the heart from the forest. The roots surrendered with a sound like a thousand snapping violin strings. They heaved the shimmering pine onto Loki’s cart, and the god whistled a jagged tune as he snapped the reins.

"A fair wind to you, gentlemen," Loki called. "Merry Midwinter! Enjoy your vintage... if your memory can find the road to it!"

Falstaff and Puck stood amidst a gaping, muddy crater in the earth, waving with earnest idiocy until the cart vanished into the grey.

"A most civil gentleman," Falstaff remarked, his brain feeling like a bowl of soggy sippets. Above them, the woods fell into a terrifying, hollow silence—a stillness so heavy it felt like the held breath of a winter wind.

The Price of a Bonus

For a heartbeat, the world held its breath. Then, the silence began to hum—a low, thrumming vibration that started in the soles of Falstaff's muddy boots and climbed up his shins, turning the stillness into a shivering, metallic expectation. The grey veil of the woods didn't just part; it was punctured.

The heavy silence was not merely broken; it was pulverized. A mechanical shriek, as shrill as a tea kettle screaming in the pits of Hades, tore through the shivering air. Out of the fog lumbered the Gilded Cricket—a long-haul wagon of such brassy ambition it seemed to insult the very earth. It belched soot smelling of roasted chestnuts and scorched engine oil, a mechanical dragon in a winter wood. As it ground to a halt, its gears emitted a rhythmic protest that sounded like the festive groan of a dying giant.

Mouse leaped from the driver’s seat before the wheels had ceased their spinning. She struck the frost-covered earth with the precision of an acrobat, a lead-lined delivery case tucked under one arm. With a sharp, practiced flick, she adjusted her heavy goggles.

"Out of my way, ye idle dreamers! I am behind the clock, and the union offers no grace for holiday sloth!" Mouse’s voice was a whip-crack across the clearing. "I carry the Star of the North for King Oberon. I require a signature, a clear site for installation, and three copies of the safety waiver in triplicate. Time is a fleeting coin, and we are currently bankrupt!"

She tapped a frantic, staccato rhythm against her scanner, her eyes fixed upon the logistics of the ‘Midwinter Weave.’ She did not look up until she reached the exact center of the clearing. There, she stopped.

Mouse stared into the massive, muddy crater—a hollow in the gut of the world, a raw wound where the heart of the forest had been plucked like a ripe plum. The silence of the hole was louder than the whistle of her wagon.

"Puck," Mouse said, her voice dropping into a dangerous, dry rasp. "By what devilry is there a vacancy where my delivery site should be? Why do I gaze upon common dirt instead of a Christmas tree?"

Puck sat in the muck, his fingers fumbling as he tried to braid three blades of grass into a tiny, pathetic wreath. He looked up, his eyes still filmed with the violet glass of the spell. "The butterfly whispers that the tree has gone to its ablutions," he giggled. "A most civil gentleman with a golden vintage took it upon his sable cart. He promised us a liquor that tastes of liquid noon!"

Falstaff nodded from a nearby stump with the dazed conviction of a saint. "A Cask of Eternal Sack, Mouse. A noble quest, truly. Though the barrel is somewhat blurry. Perhaps 'tis a self-pouring vessel? One that hath a soul and knows when a man’s cup feels the ache of loneliness?"

Mouse stared at them for five frozen seconds, the air around her humming with the static of a rising fury. She reached into her utility vest, withdrew a vial of Glimmerdelve Smelling Salts, and cracked it between her fingers. A cloud of pungent, ammonia-scented blue smoke erupted, biting through the lilac haze like a winter gale.

Falstaff let out a sneeze so violent it nearly sent his bulk tumbling from the stump. Puck shrieked, shaking his head until his ears flopped like wet laundry. The violet light in their eyes did not fade; it shattered, replaced by the biting cold of reality and the crushing weight of their own magnificent stupidity.

"The Christmas tree!" Puck wailed, his wings buzzing in a frantic panic. "Oh, by wing and sting! It was Loki! He played upon my boredom as if it were a cheap lute!"

"And he has stolen my Sack!" Falstaff cried, staring at his mud-stained hands as if they were traitors to his throat. "A plague on all such silver-tongued tricksters!"

"Peace, you fools! Forget the wine!" Mouse snapped, slamming her scanner into the wagon’s rack like a closing trap. "The King and Queen approach at a royal clip. If they find the heart-tree gone, they won't merely dismiss me—they’ll plant us as decorative lawn ornaments. I have seen the King's topiary; those gnomes are not stone, they are former contractors who missed a deadline!"

She did not wait for their terror to take root. She seized Puck by his tunic, hoisting him toward the wagon’s iron step. "Falstaff, stow your bulk in the back! Puck, find me a ley-line signature before the trail grows cold! We are going into the Fells to reclaim that tree, and we shall do it before the King finishes his afternoon stroll!"

"But the Fells are predatory!" Puck cried. "The rocks there eat carolers!"

"Losing my delivery bonus is a fate more fearsome than any mountain," Mouse retorted. She hauled herself into the driver’s seat and yanked the steam-lever.

The Gilded Cricket roared to life, chimneys belching thick, defiant smoke as it charged into the mists. As the wagon gained speed, the mist curdled, turning from the soft silver of the woods to a harsh, flinty iron. The roar of the engine deepened until the soft loam beneath the wheels gave way to the unforgiving grind of high-altitude shale.

The Stoneheart Heist

The Gilded Cricket lurched to a halt behind a jagged pillar of Stoneheart granite, which smelled distinctly of frozen disappointment and old grudges. Mouse peered over the dashboard, her goggles magnifying the scene in the valley below. The air here felt ancient, thick with the scent of frozen peat and the sharp, piney tang of aggressive holiday spice.

Loki, looking far too pleased with his own villainy, stood upon the porch of a mead hall built from timbers that had witnessed the birth of the world. He was supervising two hulking frost giants as they dragged the Christmas tree toward a massive stone vat. It bubbled with an ominous, sickly green glow.

"They are not merely brewing a midwinter ale," Mouse muttered, checking the mana-readings on her scanner. "They’re concocting a 'Seasonal Spirit Infusion.' If they drown the bough in that vat, the fey magic will be diluted into a thousand gallons of terrible, artisanal beer. The heart of the forest turned into a holiday microbrew for monsters."

"And the King’s wrath shall be a thousand times more bitter," Puck squeaked, shivering so hard his wings hummed like a tiny, distressed kazoo. "He hath a most royal hatred for over-hopped infusions!"

Mouse turned to the knight. "Falstaff. I require a distraction—a performance to occupy their hands and drown their senses. Can you handle a giant’s festive thirst, or is your stomach as small as your wits?"

Falstaff’s eyes brightened, a spark of legendary confidence igniting in his gaze. He adjusted his belt—a firm, grounding gesture of a man preparing for battle. "You speak to a man who once out-drank a barrel-maker's entire Christmas stock upon a mere dare. If the task involves a cup and a seat at the table, consider me your jolly champion. Besides," he growled, "that frost-bitten trickster owes me a cask of Asgardian Sack, and I mean to collect the debt in spirit!"

The plan commenced with the subtlety of a rogue sleigh crashing through a cathedral window. Falstaff marched into the hall, Puck hovering on his shoulder like a glowing, slightly terrified ornament.

"Greetings, ye masters of the mountain!" Falstaff bellowed, slamming his fist against a table that sat at his shoulder height. "I have heard the giants of the Stoneheart peaks are the mightiest drinkers in Valeria, but looking upon your pale faces... I suspect you are better suited for sipping peppermint tea with tiny, knitted doilies! You are but thin-potation peddlers and water-drinkers!"

The frost giants froze, their massive, ice-blue countenances turning toward the tiny human. Loki, perched on a high dais like a mischievous elf on a shelf, arched an eyebrow. "And what bold morsel is this, who dares to beard the lions in their own festive den?"

"I am Sir John!" Falstaff shouted, ignoring the god. "And I challenge your champion to a duel of spirits! If I win, the tree remains dry and you surrender your finest vintage. If you win, you may use my family crest as a festive platter for your miserable microbrew!"

The giants let out a roar of laughter that shook the very foundations of the hall. They were mesmerized; they had never seen a creature so small possess a belly so ambitious. A giant named Thrym sat across from Falstaff, hoisting a flagon the size of a chimney. Puck zipped about, "accidentally" spilling a vial of Festive Fey-Dust into the giants' mead to ensure their focus remained blurry and joyful.

As the giants began to chant, the duel commenced—a study in rhythmic absurdity. Thrym took breaths that sounded like gales through a canyon, beginning the slow, tectonic tilt of his stone vessel. Across from him, however, Falstaff was a blur of festive motion. His silver cup was a tiny spark in the firelight, dancing from the table to his lips and back again with the frantic speed of a hummingbird. For every one slow, thunderous gulp the giant took, Falstaff drained his cup ten times, hammered it onto the table for a refill, and insulted the giant’s choice of footwear with a master’s eloquence.

"A plague on this watery swill!" Falstaff roared. The giants leaned in, captivated by his stamina. "It hath not two-pennyworth of Sack in a gallon! Drink up, you mountain-moulded knaves, or yield to your better!"

While the hall roared with fascination, Mouse moved like a ghost. She slipped from the Cricket, vanishing into the deep shadows and reaching the stone vat. Her fingers traced the air as she cast a silent Blur spell to mask her movements, then hitched the tree to a pulley system of enchanted silk. With a series of precise maneuvers, she signaled the Cricket, which rumbled toward the back door, its wheels muffled by a magical silence.

The giants roared another cheer as Falstaff belted out a truly terrible high note. Mouse snapped the final restraint. The Great Pine slid out of the hall on the silk line, landing perfectly in the bed of the wagon. Mouse sprinted across the rocks, leaping into the driver's seat just as the giants realized the "entertainment" was but a shroud for theft.

"I win!" Falstaff roared, swaying dangerously. "Bring me the Sack! The sun-drenched gold you promised!"

"No, you are prisoners!" Thrym bellowed, his giant hand scooping up both Falstaff and Puck like toys. "A great champion makes a fine trophy for the mantle!"

Mouse did not hesitate. She slammed the steam-lever. The Gilded Cricket burst through the side doors, brass plating shattering the ice-wood as she drifted the heavy wagon in a wide, screaming arc.

"The ride is leaving! All aboard for salvation!!" Mouse yelled.

As she sped past, Puck used a burst of fey-light to blind the giant. Thrym roared and dropped them. Falstaff and Puck tumbled through the air, landing with a heavy oomph right upon the pine branches.

"Drive, Mouse!" Falstaff cheered, his voice delightfully slurred. "The mountain is spinning like a giant dreidel!"

"That is but the rift-drive engaging!" Mouse yelled, flooring the pedal. The wagon roared out of the Hall of Giants, leaving a fuming Loki in their wake. The world outside began to stretch, the jagged peaks elongating into grey streaks of static as the engine’s howl reached a fever pitch. The smell of cold granite was suddenly incinerated by a friction-born heat, the air warping until the harsh mountain sky bled back into the deep, twilight indigo of the valley below.

The Star of the North

The Gilded Cricket screamed back into the Whispering Woods, its brass pipes glowing a cherry-red that hissed against the biting air like a thousand angry geese. Mouse stood at the reins, her knuckles white as bone and her jaw set with structural grimness. She steered the heavy wagon through a needle-thin gap between two ancient oaks; the timber groaned as the brass chassis cleared the bark by the mere thickness of a holiday card.

"The hour! Speak the hour!" Mouse barked, her goggles reflecting the blur of silver leaves.

Puck scrambled to the roof, his wings buzzing with a frantic, electric energy. "The King’s procession hath reached the silver brook! I see the banners of the High Court fluttering like phoenix wings! We have but moments, Mouse—perhaps fewer, if the Queen’s pace is as swift as her temper!"

"Falstaff, prep for deployment! Stir your blood, man!" Mouse commanded.

Falstaff, still swaying from the lingering fog of the giants' mead, felt the urgency hit him like a bucket of ice water. He stood in the bed of the wagon, bracing his boots against the vibrating sideboards and gripping the thick, sappy trunk of the Christmas tree. His muscles bunched beneath his soot-stained tunic like coiled pythons.

As the wagon skidded into the central grove, Mouse slammed the brakes. The Gilded Cricket drifted in a wide, muddy arc, its iron wheels carving deep furrows before stopping precisely at the lip of the empty crater.

"Heave! For your life and my bonus, Heave!" Mouse yelled.

Falstaff let out a roar of pure, desperate strength—a sound pulled from the very marrow of his bones. With a grunt that shook the remaining needles, he hoisted the massive pine and thrust it downward. The roots struck the soft earth with a heavy thud, seating themselves perfectly back into the history of the grove. It was the most accurate piece of gardening ever performed by a man who was, by all legal definitions, quite drunk.

Mouse did not tarry. She snatched the lead-lined case, leaped into the air, and scrambled up the boughs with the agility of a clockwork spider. Using a quick Blur to ghost through the thickest needles, she reached the summit just as the sound of fey trumpets—high and terrifyingly regal—echoed through the trees. With a precise, mechanical click, she snapped the Star of the North onto the crown.

The Star erupted. A wave of brilliant, alchemical gold light washed over the grove, smoothing ruffled needles and knitting torn roots back into the ancient soil. The muddy ruts of the wagon vanished, replaced by a pristine carpet of white snow that fell as if by divine decree.

Mouse slid down the trunk, smoothing her vest and checking her scanner just as the mist curdled into the shape of a royal court. Oberon stepped forward, his crown a tangle of frozen briars, followed by Titania, whose grace made the falling snow look clumsy and leaden.

"Ill-met by moonlight, or perhaps ill-timed by clockwork," Oberon murmured, his eyes tracking a lingering wisp of soot that dared to defy the magic. "You stand upon a grave that was filled but seconds before our arrival. Do you think the King of Shadows blind to the scent of freshly turned dirt?"

Titania leaned toward the tree, her fingers brushing the needles. "The wood weeps, Oberon. It has been moved with a frantic, mechanical haste. It smells of iron and... is that the fermented breath of a giant I smell upon the wind?"

Mouse did not flinch, holding out her scanner with a steady hand. "Gaff Incorporated prides itself on ‘Enhanced Structural Integrity,’ Your Majesty. The tree is seated, the Star is calibrated, and any ‘iron’ you perceive is simply the scent of industrial efficiency. Sign here, please. Our policy allows no refunds for acts of the gods or momentary lapses in reality."

Oberon looked at the steady, golden light, then at the wobbly, mud-covered Falstaff, who gave a sweeping, slightly dizzy bow. The King pressed his signet ring to the scanner's sensor.

"A magnificent installation," Oberon conceded, a ghost of a smile touching his lips. "The light is... singularly brilliant this year."

"And the sack, my Lady," Falstaff added with a hiccup and a wink that nearly toppled him, "is but the scent of a knight's victory in the holy service of his thirst!"

As the King and Queen joined their court in a harmonious, ancient carol, the trio retreated to the wagon. Mouse climbed into the driver’s seat, a small, tired smile finally breaking her grim expression as the scanner chimed: Delivery Status: Complete.

Puck curled up on a pile of burlap, while Falstaff sat on the tailgate, unwrapping a wedge of liberated giant’s cheese.

"We did it, Mouse," Falstaff said around a mouthful of cheddar. "Christmas is saved, and the world is right again. Though I still maintain that Loki owes me a barrel of the sack he promised."

Mouse pulled the rift-lever, and as the Gilded Cricket hummed toward the horizon, Puck looked back at the fading grove and whispered to the frost:

"If we shadows have offended, think but this, and all is mended: that you have but slumbered here, while these visions did appear. And this weak and idle theme, no more yielding but a dream."

The wagon vanished into the mist, leaving only the steady, golden glow of the Star behind.