Luca ran to the door and flung it open. The moonlight hit the snow, making the whole world look like it was made of diamonds. There, near the old well, stood a figure wrapped in a heavy red coat, his beard flowing like a frozen waterfall. He didn’t carry a heavy sack of plastic toys; instead, he carried a wooden crate filled with red apples, golden walnuts, and whistles carved from hazelnut wood.
Little Luca sat by the frosted window, humming a familiar tune: "Moș Crăciun cu plete dalbe..." He looked at his grandfather, who was stoking the fire. "Grandpa, why does the song say his hair is 'dalbe'?" Luca ran to the door and flung it open
The old man smiled, his eyes twinkling like the star atop their tree. "Because 'dalbe' isn't just white, Luca. It’s the color of the first snow that hasn’t been touched by a single footstep. It’s the color of peace." He didn’t carry a heavy sack of plastic
Suddenly, a soft thump-thump echoed from the roof. Luca froze. Outside, the village children began to gather, their voices rising in a clear, rhythmic chorus. They were singing the winter carols—the Cântece de iarnă —that had been passed down for a hundred years. "Because 'dalbe' isn't just white, Luca
The man with the "plete dalbe" didn't speak. He simply nodded to the music, his boots crunching in time with the children's song. As he handed Luca a polished apple, the boy realized the magic wasn't just in the visitor, but in the music that brought the whole village together under the cold, bright stars.
The village of was tucked so deep into the Carpathian Mountains that even the wind seemed to whisper in riddles. It was Christmas Eve, and the air smelled of sweet cozonac and pine needles.