If Winter Comes
by
Garry Engkent
Once upon a time, 1923, a young immigrant grumbled about the snow, so much of it. Jack Frost overheard and said: “If you don’t like it here, you can go back where you belong.”
Twice upon a time, 2001, an immigrant’s child complained about the snow, piles and piles of it. Santa Claus and his elves overheard and said: “If you don’t like it, go back where you belong.”
Thrice upon a time, 2032, a senior Asian citizen from an immigrant family moaned about shoveling the mounds of snow. A white neighbour overheard and said: “Go back where you belong!”
Garry Engkent is Chinese-Canadian. Has a Ph.D. , taught at various universities and colleges--now, retired. Co-authored three college writing texts. Currently, pounds out short stories. Most have a Chinese immigrant slant, c. 1950-70s, e.g. “Why My Mother Can’t Speak English.” And dabbles in the SF/ horror genre, e.g. “Immigrant Vampire.”
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