Sent to us by Sormista Pal
In the snowy village of Starhollow, Christmas was almost here. Every child wrote their wishes on tiny silver papers and hung them on the giant Wishing Tree in the village square. But what they didn’t know was that high above the tree, hidden between the shimmering branches, lived a tiny Christmas fairy named Rimella.
Rimella had sparkling wings that glowed like moonlight and a wand shaped like a snowflake. Every Christmas, she helped grant wishes by sending warm light into children’s hearts, guiding them toward kindness, bravery, or joy — the real magic of Christmas.
But this year, Rimella felt worried.
Her magic was fading.
Each time she waved her wand, its glow grew weaker.
“What if I can’t help the children this Christmas?” she whispered.
One frosty evening, as Rimella rested on a snowy branch, she noticed a little girl named Tia walking toward the Wishing Tree. Unlike the other children who came giggling and excited, Tia looked unsure. She held her silver wish paper close to her chest.
Rimella fluttered down softly. “Hello, little one. Why so sad?”
Tia looked up but couldn’t see the fairy — only a tiny light dancing in the air.
“I… I don’t know what to wish for,” Tia said quietly. “Mama says Christmas is for sharing and caring. But I don’t know how to make other people happy. I’m too small.”
Rimella’s wings twinkled.
A child wanting to make others happy?
That was the purest kind of wish.
She landed gently on Tia’s mitten. This time, Tia saw her clearly — tiny, glowing, and beautiful.
“You can start with one kind thing,” Rimella said softly. “A smile, a hug, a small help — every good deed shines brightly in my world.”
Tia nodded. “Then I wish… I wish I could make someone’s Christmas better.”
Rimella tapped the silver paper with her wand. A warm, gentle glow rose from it — but then the wand flickered weakly.
“Oh dear,” Rimella whispered. “My magic is almost gone.”
Tia’s eyes widened. “Can I help?”
Fairies usually helped children, not the other way around. But Rimella felt a tiny spark of hope.
“Kindness gives magic strength,” she said. “If you do something truly kind, my magic might return.”
The next morning was Christmas Eve. Tia woke early, remembering Rimella’s words.
“What can I do that’s kind?” she wondered.
Then she saw her neighbor, old Mr. Thistle, struggling to shovel snow from his doorstep. Tia put on her boots and rushed outside.
“I’ll help you!” she said cheerfully.
Mr. Thistle smiled, surprised and grateful. They worked together, laughing as snowflakes landed on their noses. When the doorstep was finally clear, he patted her gently.
“Thank you, sweetheart. You made my Christmas morning brighter.”
At that exact moment, high in the Wishing Tree, Rimella felt a warm burst of magic fill her wings.
Tia’s kindness shone like a star.
Rimella zipped through the air, twirling with new energy. She sprinkled magic dust over Starhollow — lighting lanterns, brightening windows, and making the snowflakes sparkle like tiny crystals.
That night, when Tia returned to the Wishing Tree, she saw Rimella sitting proudly on the highest branch, glowing brighter than ever.
“You did it,” Rimella said. “Your kindness brought back my Christmas magic.”
“Really?” Tia asked, her eyes shining.
The fairy nodded. “The greatest Christmas wish isn’t for toys or sweets. It’s the wish to make someone else happy. That wish always comes true.”
Rimella lifted her wand and let one final burst of magic sprinkle over Tia’s head. It felt like warm snowflakes landing softly in her hair.
“May your heart always shine,” she whispered.
And from that Christmas onward, the people of Starhollow said that whenever someone did something kind, a tiny fairy light appeared nearby.
Some say it was Rimella smiling.
The End!
Moral of the Story:
The greatest Christmas magic comes from kindness. When you help someone, you make the world brighter—just like a fairy.
