Perhaps someday an artist will illustrate this story my mother told me. When I
was little and Mother was trying to get me to go to sleep, she’d tell me
Alliwishus was listening outside the window to hear if I was a very good girl so
he could tell Santa to come and see me at Christmas. I
would love to do a series of Alliwishus stories focused on children in war zones
around the world. "All I Wish Us" (Alliwishus) is what the angels sang
of...Peace on Earth, Good Will Toward Men. Our plea. Our prayer.
Any illustrators out there?
This is the story of exactly how
Jean Bronson Gillis Burson became acquainted with
who told the story to her
children and is now written as imagined by her daughter
Sharman Burson Ramsey.
picture: Elf on stool reading letters

Alliwishus
perched on a high stool in the Reading Room at Santa's Workshop in the
uncharted regions of the North Pole. Usually
the frigid air didn't faze him, but that day he felt cold right down to his
very bones. His chubby little elf
cheeks and the tip of his long, turned up nose were reddened with the bite of
the frost. But, it wasn't the
weather that was the most chilling; it was the despair in the letters he read.
December
20, 1944
Dear
Santa,
All
I want is my Daddy home for
Christmas.
Sincerely,
Randolph
The
letters came in English, French, German, Russian, Italian . . . nearly every
language spoken on the face of the
earth. Yet the message was the
same.
Daddies and brothers were on the killing fields. Those who loved them wanted a
miracle.
He'd served hundreds of years as a Messenger in the Warrior Branch of the
Guardian Angels. But, no matter how many buckets of rain he lifted, he could
not get strong enough to throw a lightning bolt. He was way too little
to be a Warrior Angel like he really wanted to be. He'd only gotten
laughed at when he showed up for the tryouts. They were very loving
laughs, to be sure. Fond chuckles, perhaps. After all, these were heavenly beings.
It was embarrassing all the same.
But
when The
Master had approved the idea of everyone giving to others on His birthday and
had set up Santa Service to help carry this out,
Alliwishus saw his opportunity.
It was the job of all the elves to plant in the hearts of parents and
fellow men the desire to fulfill the wishes and prayers of little children,
the most vulnerable of all human beings.
Alliwishus
had worked hard in Santa Service
ever since that branch of the Guardian Angels had opened several hundred years
ago.
And he did get to wear the coveted green
cap of Santa's Helpers.
But
the previous night, it had seemed the prayers of all his charges reached him
with such a force it reminded him of the last time Halley's Comet had passed
the earth. They struck him like a
typhoon with a vortex so empty it threatened to suck all the hope from the
world. Reluctantly, he had passed
the prayers on to the Master. Alliwishus
knew the pain the Master felt at the evil in the hearts of men that brought
the children such suffering.
Enough
was enough. He had sat there on
the stool long enough. Alliwishus
slid down the leg of his stool clutching a sheaf of letters tightly in his
fist,
flipped the white tassel on the end of his cap out of his eyes,
and marched determinedly to the Main Office. The bells on the end of his
turned up shoes jingled with false cheer.
Once
again he wished he were bigger, more imposing. Who would believe a tiny
little thing like he was could really make a difference? He just knew he
had to try! At his timid knock, a muffled voice bade him enter.

Santa, wearing work jeans and
a flannel shirt instead of his dress velvet and fur, sat upon a worn
overstuffed wing chair on a dais in the center of the control room.
Around him were hundreds of video monitors that scanned the world.
Santa's usually cheery countenance today matched Alliwishus' mournful
look. The kindness and compassion
that gleamed from Santa's warm brown eyes under his shaggy white brows
encouraged Alliwishus so he straightened himself to his full six
inch height and cleared his throat.
"Sir,
I know the Warrior Angels told us to stay out of the War Zone.
But my charges need me. I
know their voices like no other. Doing
something . . . anything . . . is better than sitting around doing
nothing!"
"Alliwishus,
surely you realize how important your work is right here.
The
Master needs you to quicken within
humans the desire to love their
fellow man.
It is the most important work that
can possibly be done."
"Yes,
sir, I realize that, but long distance is not my style," said Alliwishus,
puffing out his chest.
"It's been such a long time since I made my rounds in that part of
the world, sir."
Santa
stared at the monitor focused on the Ardennes Forest of Belgium near
Luxembourg. "War is the
great cancer of the world. So
much suffering . . . and yet they waste their talents and their resources
inventing even more horrible weapons."
As
Santa indicated the monitor he had been watching, Alliwishus saw many of his charges of every nation fighting
one another. Above them,
unseen by the earthly combatants, Alliwishus
watched ferocious spiritual warriors, the forces of Good and Evil.
Alliwishus knew only the prayers of the godly would shift the direction
of the battle.
Something
compelled him toward that war zone. He would not, could not, back
down. Alliwishus
clenched his fist. "I simply
must go, sir."
He
could see that Santa was about to say "no" when a light started
flashing on the headpiece Santa wore. Santa
put his finger to his earpiece and nodded.
With
a look of surprise, he
turned to Alliwishus and said, "Permission is granted.
The Master has called you to special duty."
Then with a nod of his head and with a twinkle of affection in his eye,
Santa dismissed Alliwishus.
When
the door closed behind the tiny elf, Santa mumbled to himself, "Such a
great spirit for such a little being."
Alliwishus
sighed in relief and then hurried back to the Reading Room where he grabbed
his green quilted cape and carefully pulled his wings through the slits.
Then he rode the escalator up to the Telekinetic Teleport on the roof
of the remodeled Workshop. Before
you could say "Rudolph" he was transported to the site of the German
counterattack against the American troops.
Insert picture of
angels battling around Alliwishus and lightning bolt striking him down from
the sky
The
sight was so distressing that he did not notice the thunderbolt thrown by an
Angel of Darkness that caught him in the left wing hurling him through the
air. Alliwishus tumbled down into
the snow, his wing hanging uselessly behind him.
So this is pain, he thought. This
is what human beings fear so. He
winced. In spite of the pain he
felt closer than ever to those he'd come to serve. Now he realized why the Master had felt he had to come to
Earth as a man.
Lying
there in the snow with a broken wing, in the middle of a bomb gutted village
in France was not exactly the time to be philosophical,
Alliwishus thought to himself. But there was nothing to do except lie there until the monitors
scanned him and help would
be sent.
(Alliwishus
did not realize that the Master did not rely on monitors. For the
service the Master had called him to, Alliwishus was exactly where he was
supposed to be.)
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Jean
and Commanding Officer
Meanwhile, one of the American nurses who had landed at
Cherbourg after the D-Day invasion the previous January was having a bad day
as well. Jean
Gillis had been immediately assigned to a hospital train that traveled
from the front lines back to Paris and then to Cherbourg to deliver injured
soldiers to transport ships bound for England or America for more intensive
care. Not the romantic France of
her teenage day dreams, she thought as she trudged through the snow back to
her quarters after receiving the stiff tongue lashing from her superior.
She had a few hours off so when an officer, King Kallen, invited her to go for
a ride, she accepted. A motor
cycle! Being on a battlefield halfway around the world can make a
South Alabama girl do things she
would have had sense enough not to do at home.
Even though she was wearing just about every piece of clothing the Army
issued its nurses, she was still shivering.
Yet while
speeding through the snow covered town, for
a few minutes there's was a peace
in her soul...a while to forget
the war, the misery, the mangled men too young to die, and the unnamed
heaviness.
They
rode through the empty streets of the battle scarred village with the
icy wind whipping their faces turning their eyelashes turn into icicles.
She smiled recklessly when King laughed as he booted the speed making her
squeal. "Just hang on
tight," he teased.
"Stop
this thing! I want to get
off!" she hollered, embarrassing herself with the high pitched squeal
that followed. King just gave a
deep macho laugh and went faster. "Hold on!"
When he turned his attention back to the road, he saw they were right
on a puddle. "Hang on!"
he'd yelled as they hit the slush. The
motorcycle went out of control, immediately sending them into a slide.
Jean went flying off the motorcycle.
She tumbled over and over and landed right at the feet of Captain
Chadwick, the head of nursing.
Humiliated, she looked up at her commanding officer, totally unable
to get up. Bound as she was by
layers of clothing all she could do was flutter like a turtle flipped on its
back. Captain Chadwick looked
down her long patrician nose at her, that country bumpkin nurse under her
command. King rushed over
to help while she fluttered helplessly and spun occasionally on the
ice at Chadwick's feet.
"Don't
touch me!" she'd told King Kallen as he tried to get a grip around her
padded body and pull her to her feet. How
dare he get her in that situation just because he had to
show off! The Captain reached
down to give her a hand with no trace of amusement or understanding on her
face.
"Back to quarters, Lieutenant
Gillis," the Captain ordered. "On
foot!"
Bruised and embarrassed she waddled...waddled!!!...back toward the hotel in which she was quartered with as
much dignity as her bruised and extremely well-padded body could muster. It was because of the bruises
and the care she took with her steps that she saw him.
"Help!"
came a tiny voice. She stopped
and looked around, but saw nothing. "Down
here."
There, only
inches from her army issue boots, lay a tiny creature with gossamer wings that
shone brightly and then began to flicker.
Jean wiped her eyes, thinking snowflakes and her bumped head were
causing her eyes to play tricks on her. She
blinked hard and when she looked back, the creature was still there, his eyes
bright with pain. Curious, she lifted him
gently from the snow and brought him close to her face.
Lord help her if he didn't smile
as if he knew her and nestle even more trustingly in the palm of her hand.
His eyes fluttered and closed.
What
am I doing, she muttered to herself. Nursing
manuals don’t cover elves.
This is crazy. They
don’t cover them because they don’t exist! she
reminded herself. Then what is this warm light in my hand?
She looked around wondering if she looked as foolish as she felt.
Who would believe her if she were to ask for help from someone else?
Captain Callahan would have her committed to the mental ward.
She scurried through the darkness back to the nurses' quarters in the
quaint hotel. There she laid
him on the examining table in the dispensary they had set up in one of the
conference rooms. All she could
find was a tongue depressor to set his fragile wing.
He might
not be real, but he certainly felt real in her hands and the pain on his face
was real enough to pull at her heart. "So,
where do you come from, little one?" she asked as he
grimaced. "And how does one tend to a fiction of one's
imagination?"
Being in France in the middle of a war zone wasn't exactly the sanest thing
she'd ever done any way you looked at it. Besides, somehow, strange as
it was, he seemed almost familiar.
Well,
she’d just have to improvise. She grinned to herself.
The nuns, her teachers back at Saint
Margaret's Hospital in Montgomery where she had trained in Nursing, had always thought she was crazy. But even they had never
dreamed she would presume to nurse an elf back to health.
He groaned so she crushed a granule of aspirin in a spoon and added a
dash of Coke. He licked his lips
and went to sleep.
What
now, she thought? If she left him
and he rolled off the table someone might step on him.
There was nothing to do but carry him to her room.
There she placed him on a pile of gauze in her duffel bag.
She slept little that night worried about her vulnerable, very tiny,
new friend. But, the dull light around him grew brighter as the night wore on.
The
next morning she was supposed to set out for another tour on the hospital
train. She lifted the duffel as carefully as she could, the knot on her head throbbing.
Was she imagining . . . But, there on top of the sheets and towels in
the duffel bag, glimmering away on a pile of gauze lay her strange encounter
of the night before. She secured
the duffel in the corner of her assigned compartment on the train, which,
luckily, she was to occupy alone.
She
did for him what she did for other patients, force fluids and make him as
comfortable as possible. They
shared an aspirin. With an eye
dropper she gave him drops of Coca Cola.
He wrinkled his face at the unfamiliar taste, and then licked his lips,
smacking to indicate his desire for more.
Jean
giggled when he asked, "What nectar is this?
Is it from some flower I do not know?"
"No,"
she answered. "A druggist
invented this in his Columbus, Georgia, and served it at his soda fountain.
Folks from all over liked it so much somebody got the idea of bottling it."
Sure and begorra, her Scots-Irish heritage was coming out. Talking to
the wee ones, she was. No doubt if anyone walked past it would look as
if she were talking to herself!
"We've
never had it in the North Pole," he said.
His chubby little face wrinkled with pain so she gave him another
granule of aspirin. The strange
light that surrounded him grew steadier as the odd little creature gained
strength.
The
nurse closed the door to the compartment and hurried to join the nurses in
checking the supplies for their run to the front lines.
She rubbed the knot on the back of her head.
Did he say North Pole? She
dared say nothing to the other nurses; they would think she had come down with
battle fatigue and would put her in one of the beds their injured soldiers
needed so badly.
A
sharp pain shot through her head and she considered consulting a doctor
herself. A tiny elf from the North
Pole sipping Coca Cola with aspirin and glowing stronger by the minute sounded
like a hallucination. There wasn't time,
even if she was so inclined. She
had to make sure all the windows were covered and not a sliver of light
showed. The train had to be completely shrouded so that it would not be
spotted and bombed.
It took six hours to get to the front.
Then, with bombs exploding around them, they loaded patients, stacking
stretchers in racks three patients high.
Those able to walk occupied compartments with seven other patients.
From the moment they loaded, she was busy administering what pain
medicine they had, answering their cries for water, changing dressings . . .
just trying to make them as comfortable as possible in the dark jolting train.
Several
times she ran back to the compartment to give Alliwishus a dropper of the
precious Coca Cola with a granule of aspirin.
They
later learned they were smack dab in the middle of one the most vicious battles of World War II in
Belgium...the Battle of the Bulge. The
worst cases were burns. The
Infantry had come to fear the flame throwers so much that they had trained
Point Men who specialized in sneaking up behind the enemy flame throwers to
choke them with a jerk of a neck. Their
fellow soldiers relied upon the instinct and quickness of the Point Men to
protect them from the agonizing effects of the sudden burst of flames that
could envelope an entire squadron.
The only light on the train was in the beam of light from the
flashlights carried by the nurses. It
was such a "torch" that Jean carried. She did not realize it
looked like a flame that Point Men were trained to zero in on.
A
Point Man's failure could mean death to his company.
Joey had seen his entire platoon destroyed just hours
before. He had
jumped frantically into the midst of his burning friends to try and save them.
But it was impossible. He only knew he lived...and they were
dead. The fact that he nothing he could have done would have saved them
mattered. He'd failed his friends and in his mind the
shock of seeing his friends killed obliterated everything else.
Now
he stood in the corridor waiting directly
in front of the advancing torch. His target had surprised them once. He
would not fail them again.
Jean walked down
the corridor carrying medications to the men stacked in cots in the
compartments. The light pierced
the Point Man's consciousness and all of his training focused itself on the
source of the potential danger. With each step danger came closer
and closer in the disturbed mind of the soldier.
Stealthily,
in spite of his grave burns and injuries, he rose to fulfill his mission.
Exhausted, Jean reached out to steady herself with the hand holding the
flashlight as she swayed with the train while still balancing the tray in one
hand. Suddenly from the darkness
appeared a grotesque face with clawlike hands reaching toward her, only inches
from her neck. She was frozen
with fear and could not make a sound.
In
her terror she saw a tiny glimmer of light beside the man's face.
Amazingly she heard the soft voice whisper, "Joey, Joey. Time for bed, now. Santa's
on his way. Joey's been a good
boy and Santa knows about the train he wants for Christmas. Sit and sleep."
Miraculously,
the anger and fear that had contorted the man's face now relaxed into its
natural boyish contours. He
couldn't have been more than eighteen or nineteen.
Yet only moments before the hate and rage of war had given him the look
of the gargoyles carved into the Gothic cathedrals that dotted the country.
Jean
leaned against the wall suddenly breathless.
The light came and rested upon her shoulder.
Alliwishus sighed deeply and said. "He is one of my charges.
It is only recently that he quit writing me his letters.
His is one of the many voices that called me into this darkness," he
told her sadly.
The
light flickered and the nurse knew his strength was waning.
"Thank you for coming when you did.
But, you're too weak to be up. Let
me take you back."
Imaginary or not, her danger had been real, and this figment of her
imagination, or Santa's elf, had saved her.
"Another
drop of that strange nectar?"
he whispered.
In
spite of her fear she had to smile. Strange
thoughts whirled through her head. But
she was too busy to ask questions then and he was too weak to talk.
Later
when they were settled again in the hotel where the nurses were quartered,
both slept soundly for hours. When
she awoke she found Alliwishus sitting in the duffel flexing his uninjured
wing. "I can fly with only
one wing as you saw last night. It
is terribly awkward and so I must exercise to build strength.
I am needed," he explained, distress and compassion clouding his
ruddy cheeks.
At
last she understood. She would only
have a short time to ask the many questions that seemed so important.
"Can you tell me about yourself?"
He
continued his flexes as he answered, "My name is Alliwishus and I am in
Santa Service."
"Santa
Service? Why . . . that's only
make-believe."
"Now,
Jean," he said to her amazement, "you only quit believing when your
father died when you were thirteen. I
have heard all your hopes and dreams sitting in the limbs of the Mimosa tree
right outside your window. I
listen to prayers as well as read letters."
Jean's emerald green eyes grew wide with amazement. How could he know so
much about her?
"But,
what are you doing here?" she asked when she finally could speak.
“I
was watching my charges around the world and knew the dangers around you. I
was not paying attention to the dangers around me.”
Sadness
clouded his face. "It seems
there is so little I can do. Yet,
as I did for Joey tonight, I can remind them of a Love that brings Peace.
Wars are won, not on the battlefields, but in the hearts of men.
If men can conquer the evil within themselves, then the collective evil
of War need never be fought. Only Love can conquer the Darkness that would
destroy the Master's own."
After
Alliwishus accompanied her on a few more trips on the hospital train, he was
well enough to leave.
"You,
your children, and your children's children are on my list.
Remind them to be very good. They
will never know when I'll be sitting outside their window," he told her.
"And please, leave some of that bottled nectar out for Santa Claus
on Christmas Eve!" He winked and flew away.
Picture:
Grandmother with three children

"Is Alliwishus watching us now, Grandmother?" asked Brooke
as she pulled her thumb from her mouth and wriggled to get more
comfortable on her grandmother’s lap.
"I
see him! I see him!" her
five year old brother, Drew, yelled jumping up and down in front of the picture
window.
"That
was the Hannahan's car lights. Wasn't
it, Grandmother?" said Cecily, her mature seven year old granddaughter
sitting on the stool at her feet.