A little
ways away the road the teddy walked was interrupted by a river. By the river
side a squirrel lifted one rock, then the other, looking this way, then that.
On the river bank stood a swaying pile of rocks, about to fall over at the
slightest hint of breeze. The teddy knew there was no breeze because on the
other side of the river sat a boat with white sails, and the sails had no wind.
The rough cloth of teddies had trouble feeling wind well, and perhaps that was
lucky because it made sure teddies rarely felt cold.
"Hello,
squirrel," said teddy.
"How
do you know who I am?" asked the squirrel, immediately fascinated. It ran
a lap around the teddy, looking at it from all angles.
"Everyone
knows a squirrel is a squirrel," said the teddy, confused.
"Everyone
has not told me that yet," said the squirrel. "In fact, I was born
just two days ago, so that may be why."
The teddy
felt this conversation was perhaps taking strange direction, and besides, the
squirrel's spinning was making it dizzy. "You have not happened upon a
fine green tree, or any shiny decorations?" it asked.
"Nope,"
said the squirrel, and went back to the rocks.
"What
are you up to here?" asked the teddy, eyeing the rickety tower of rocks.
"I
am building a bridge," said the squirrel. "You see, there are
soldiers on that boat on the other side, and I aim to join their ranks, but
first I must get across the river."
"This
doesn't look terribly much like a bridge," hummed the teddy.
The
squirrel squirmed. "I know, I know," it said with a sad voice, or at
least the teddy thought it might be sad. Squirrels were difficult to know,
because they tended to sound happy always, even when they really weren't.
"I got fine instructions for how to build a bridge from the nice panda
that lives up the road," the squirrel went on. "We're related, you
see. But I lost the instructions, and now I'm not sure."
The teddy
pondered on that family tree for a moment.
"Gah
you caught me!" exclaimed the squirrel, and the teddy jumped. "I
didn't lose it, exactly. It was complicated and I don't like reading. I hid it
so I wouldn't need to read it, I thought I could build the bridge without. But
now I can't remember where I put it, I've looked everywhere. Who knew building
a bridge would be so difficult!"
"Not
me," said the teddy, although it thought it might have suspected it just a
little.
The
squirrel tossed down the rock it was holding. "I give up!"
"Don't
give up," said the teddy. "I will help." And so it picked up the
rock, figuring that since it was so much taller than the squirrel it could put
the rock at the top of the tower much easier.
"No,
no, be careful!" the squirrel warned.
The words
were barely out, before the tower quivered under the weight of that little
extra stone, and collapsed with a terrible clatter.
2 comments:
"I was born just two days ago"
This amuses me.
Squirrels mature fast, it would seem.
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