"There is a beast in man that must be exercised, not exorcised."
-The Satanic Bible
***
It was Christmas Eve, and Jolly Old Saint Nicholas had one last job to do. A job he dreaded.
Standing at an iron door in the side of a mountain at the top of the world, he lifted a rusted key from a chain around his neck and hesitated for a moment. Maybe this year, just for once, he could skip this part? Maybe everything would be better off if he just left well enough alone...
But no. He shook his head, spilling snow from his crown of ivy. It was his duty to be charitable to everyone in need. And what soul needed charity more than this one? He slipped the old key into the door's heavy lock. It groaned as it turned, like an old ghost.
The door's ancient hinges were still strong after nearly 1,700 years, and it took all of his power to move them. Once the cell door was open the moonlight spilled in and revealed a barren cell, its one small window obstructed by both bars and frost. A single prisoner sat on the stone floor; his chains scraped each other as he looked up.
The prisoner was not a man, although it had a face something like a man. It was not an animal either, although it had horns and hooves and hair in all places. It was a kind of blasphemous man-goat, bestial and ugly, and even the ever-compassionate Saint Nicholas flinched at the sight of it. The heaviest chains forged in all four corners of the world bound it from head to hoof.
They looked at each other in silence for a moment as snow drifted into the cell, blown this way and that by the north wind. Eventually Saint Nick cleared his throat.
"Well, Christmas has come again, you wicked old sinner" he, trying to maintain his customary cheer. "You know what that means."
The great gray goat held out his wrists. Saint Nicholas fiddled with the big key, trying to make it fit the locks on the manacles. "Try to do some good this year?" he said as he worked. He turned one eyebrow up, an expression that half a plea, half a chastisement. "Maybe help someone?"
The chained figure only shrugged. He wasn't the type to make promises, even on a special occasion like this. Saint Nicholas, of course, knew this. But every year he lived in hope.
With a sigh, the saint unfastened the last of the locks. Free at last, the Beast of the Yuletide let out a hearty growl, stretched his legs, winked at Saint Nicholas, and, laying his finger aside of his nose, leapt out into the dark, snowy night, flying through the sky due south, with an unsuspecting world spread out before him.
Grumbling, Saint Nick watched the horned figure vanished. "I'm just a bleeding heart, that's my problem," he said, shaking his head and holding the empty manacles. "One of these days it's going to get me into trouble."
***
Free at last, the beast of the winter festival flew through the night, letting the cold winds blow him wherever he was needed.
He had no name. Which is to say, he had many: On the coast of Scandinavia they called him Nuuttipukki, the Yule Goat. In the Bavarian mountains he was Klaubauf. In Germany he was Ruprecht, and in older times and more temperate climates he was called Azazel, Capricorn, Pan, Banebdjedet, and Baphomet.
His favorite names these days were Old Scratch, or sometimes Old Nickβhis way of making fun of Saint Nicholas. But most often at this time of year, people called him Krampus.
Once, he had been the king of the Yuletide, with its dark midwinter feasts and great fires and ritual offerings. But then a new god came and took away his feasts and his nights off the calendar. Priests replaced him with old men and angels and saints, and now they called this time of year "Christmas" in most places.
But they couldn't do away with him entirely. The Krampus was too old, and his hold on people's hearts too strong. And since Saint Nicholas was obligated to do a kindness to every creature in the world on Christmas, for one day each year he was free again.
Spying a remote village, the Krampus touched down, letting his hooves make the first prints in the virgin snow of the town square. This was a remote place, isolated by wilderness and winter storms, and in the earliest hours of the morning nobody was awake yet. Looking at the snowy rooftops, the Krampus found the place innocent seeming and idyllic to the eye. A perfect place to start.
The first thing he did was sneak into a tailor's shop and steal the most fashionable suit of clothes that fit him. He spent a few minutes grooming himself at one of the long mirrors, opening the curtains on big front window so that moonlight reflecting off the snow outside illuminated him. When he was finished he stopped to admire his reflection. He considered taking a hat to cover up his horns, but decided against it. He liked his horns. Most people did.
Once he'd fixed himself up the Krampus slipped upstairs to where the tailor and his family slept. It was a humble little home, belonging to a most ordinary pedigree. The Krampus peeked at the family members one by one as they dozed, slipping from the shadow of one doorway to the next. Here were two daughters, still in small clothes, and a son near to manhood, all fast asleep in beds of their own. The Krampus' hooves touched the floorboards of their rooms so daintily that he scarcely made noise at all as he crept by.
Coming to the largest of the bedrooms, the Krampus found the head of the household fast asleep. But something was missing: the other half of the bed was empty. The tailor's wife wasn't here.
The Krampus thought:
Here lies a tailor, all snug in his bed, while visions of prayer books dance in his head. But why, me and my, does this man sleep alone? His wife's pillow's empty, as bare as a bone...
Curious, the Krampus went to the spare bedroom, which had until only recently had been a workroom. Here the tailor's wife slept on a cot, far away from her husband's side, and she seemed to be fretting in her sleep. Standing over her, the Krampus pushed her hair out of her face.
How lovely
(thought the Krampus),
her skin, her teeth! And her hair, it encircles her head like a wreath.
Although his touch was gentle, it still stirred the woman to waking. When she saw him standing over her she seemed neither frightened nor surprised. Indeed, she regarded him the way you might an old friend.
Pulling the blankets up over her bosom, she looked the Krampus up and down. And the Krampus, well, he just let her look. Once she was done she said:
"You're not Father Christmas."