Mickey-s Once Upon A Christmas Instant

“The gear,” Mickey whispered. “It’s the key.”

“A gear? Worthless!” Scrooge kicked it. The gear flew into a snowbank and vanished.

The first repeat was a nuisance. The second was frustrating. By the tenth, Donald was screaming, “WHY CAN’T I FINISH THIS TRAIN?!” Huey, Dewey, and Louie just shrugged. “Maybe it’s a lesson, Uncle Donald,” said Huey. Mickey-s Once Upon A Christmas

“It’s me, Mr. McDuck. I think you have something of Donald’s.”

Meanwhile, Goofy was trying to hang a star on top of his tree. “A-ya-hyuck! Almost… got… it!” The ladder wobbled. The tree wobbled. Finally, the star flew up, bounced off the ceiling fan, and landed perfectly on Max’s head. “Perfect, Dad!” Max laughed, hugging his clumsy father. “The gear,” Mickey whispered

“It’s not worthless,” Mickey said softly, holding out his hand. “It’s the part that makes the train whistle. Without it, Donald can’t give his nephews their gift. And without giving, Mr. McDuck, Christmas is just a day on a calendar.”

In the kitchen, Minnie was in a sugary panic. “Clara Cluck’s recipe said a pinch of nutmeg, but I used a pound !” she sighed, waving a handkerchief to clear a cloud of spice. Daisy, helping to frost cookies, just smiled. “Don’t worry, Minnie. The spirit of Christmas covers a multitude of baking sins.” The gear flew into a snowbank and vanished

Scrooge opened his mouth to refuse, but Pluto ran in, licked his hand, and dropped a new, un-chewed red ribbon at his feet. For the first time in years, Scrooge McDuck smiled.