a sorta fairytale
by Sascha
He woke up.
"Come! Quickly, now! You must run!"
He yawned and stretched.
"I ask of you, what sort of trick is this, master fox? Have you been
at the farmer's sheep again and are searching to displace the
blame?"
He cracked his neck and rose on all four, turning his head to greet
the sun.
"'Tis no trick, but fear for my life, and yours, master bear, as the
Adversary has entered our realm and he is hunting!"
The sun warmed him, and he delighted in the morning. This would be a
fine day, indeed. Mayhaps he find honey or blueberries on his walk
today.
"What? Speak you true? For this would be a most horrible and
unworthy lie, even from one such as you."
He padded out of his cave on heavy paws, thinking of the sweet
stickiness of honey.
"Tis true! 'Tis so! And we must haste, master bear! For the Black
One's lackeys come, and they move quickly and leave no one alive."
Not far away, another, smaller being awoke, opening his eyes and
seeing that daylight had come. It was a warm day and he rolled over
on his back to sun his fiery red stomach for a moment, then he rose,
intending to find apples for breakfast.
"Master hare...We must warn -"
"Forgive me, but there is no time!"
The little red was quick and agile, and was soon standing under the
appletrees, gazing up at them hopefully. Apples lay on the ground as
well, but they were old and not nearly as tempting as those on the
tree's branches. He went back a few steps, crouched and jumped high.
And they run.
His teeth clanged together as he missed the apple he was aiming for,
and fell head over tail back to the ground, tumbling around before
coming to a definite stop against another tree. He lay there rattled
and confused by this turn of events.
"We must rest, master fox. We have run far and hard, and surely we
can afford some hours of sleep. No, do not object. It will not help
us if we fall over from exhaustion. Better we regain our strenght
and run farther in the morn."
The big brown came strolling into the orchard, stopping at the sight
of the fox with his front paws placed as far up the tree's trunk as
he could stretch, claws firmly dug into the tree. The brown tilted
his head and watched the fox's struggles. They appeared to be in
vain.
"Pray tell, master fox, what are you attempting to accomplish?"
"I did not get the scent of the Black Ones until it was too late.
I... Perhaps more could have been had the time to run for safe
lands, had I been quicker. Had I not been so slow in understanding."
The fox jumped in surprise, dislodging his claws and spinning around
to face the brown. His tail lashed, brushing away fallen leaves.
"Why, grandfather! I did not expect to see you here."
"I did not expect to see you, either," the bear replied, padding
closer, curious now.
The fox eyed him. He took a few steps to the side and back again.
The bear watched him silently.
The fox yipped and performed an odd little dance, ending it with a
grin and a staring match.
The bear yielded first, lacking the red one's patience in such
things, and asked again. "What were you doing when I arrived?
Climbing the tree, master fox?"
"It was not your responsibility to call warning, master fox. And we
do not know that none other made it. You're not the only perceptive
animal in the forest, and many would surely run upon scenting such
evil. The birds would certainly have escaped, flying far ahead of
us. Do not carry guilt for something you could not prevent."
"Do I seem a treeclimber to you?"
"Before I would have spoken no, but now I mind you mayhaps have
cat's blood in your ancestry, causing you to climb tall trees with
no thought of how your descent would pass." The brown was amused and
showing it, the big black eyes shining with mirth.
"As it happens, I was not climbing," the fox snapped. "I was
attempting to look up between the branches, for I thought I saw bees
flying thence and where there are a gathering of bees, there would
surely be --"
"Honey," the bear breathed.
"Precisely." The fox sat in the manner of foxes on the ground and
looked up at the big bear in front of him.
"How were you planning to get to the honey, small as you are?" the
bear asked, nearly drooling at the thought of it. "No matter.
Move aside, master fox, and allow me to have a look."
The red moved aside willingly enough, looking intently at the bear.
The bear walked over to the tree and rose to his hindlegs, front
paws holding tightly around the slender apple tree. He looked up
among the surprisingly plentiful branches, searching for a beecube.
His struggles dislodged several apples, which he shook off.
The fox yipped happily and snapped as many apples as he could before
disappearing quickly into the woods.
The bear stopped searching for bees and sighed. "I've been fooled
yet again, have I not?"
And again they run.
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