As told by Suzy
Once, before our time, there was a certain little
house made of stones and wood. It was like a fairytale cottage of the best
type. The little house was situated at the entry to a wild and deep forest. The
forest was seldom entered by man or man’s companion animals. It was too
forbidding. Just like the forests in all the fairytales, the thorns must have
been two whole inches long. If one insisted on entering this forest, all sound
became muffled. The air was still, stifling.
Besides Sofie, in this house lived a
cat. He was one of those famous butter-colored toms. His name was Marc. He was
a lover of butter, as a purely sane fellow. That’s where the old lady who also
lived in the house comes into this story. Many cats are provided with a saucer
of cream in the morning. It’s true! However, this old lady made and sold
butter, since she possessed two adorable doe-eyed light brownish cows, Elsa and
Helga.
Marc received a pat of butter each
morning, before going out to hunt. Not only did Marc keep Elsa and Helga’s barn
clear of mice, but he also crept into the dark deep forest looking for better
prey. Sometimes a rabbit, sometimes a serpent. If he caught a big rabbit he
brought it home to Sophie to cook for both of them.
As you can imagine, once Marc had
eaten his butter and licked the little green glass saucer clean, he thanked
Sofie and slipped out of the daytime cat door. At night it was closed, so Marc
did have to be home before night.
Anyhow, he went out to hunt. First
the barn. No mice scurried before him. Clear.
So Marc set out to enter the dark
forest, by a certain little tunnel he had built through the bottom of the
thorny vines. First he flushed out a robin. No dealing with that. Then he was
insulted by a pair of noisy crows. He ignored them.
“Get to the point of the story,
Suzy,” I said.
“OK, here goes,” she said.
Leaving the crows behind, Marc paced
deeper and deeper into the forest. Presently, as they used to say, he came to a
huge old grampa of a tree. Perhaps it was a cedar. They are special anyhow. Down
near its roots was a rather obscure looking opening, like some animal’s home burrow.
Marc felt that he had never seen it before. He was intrigued.
As he was considering whether he had
indeed never seen this burrow before, someone popped out of it. Marc sat back
on his haunches and wrapped his long yellow tail around himself.
Oh, you know the type of creature it
was. He was about the size of a big rabbit, but upright in carriage like a man.
Like all the folk of his breed, he looked wise and cruel and crafty. His skin
was the color of forest loam, as was his little knitted tunic. His feet were
too big for his body and bare. His eyes were black as currants, but a lot more
shiny. His grey hair was plaited into two braids which hung forward over his
little shoulders. Likewise he had a long grey beard, braided in one long plait.
He smiled at Marc.
Hello, well met, Marc.
Yes I know your name!
Come with me!
Down in earth below,
I have the finest butter a cat
could wish for!
All for you!
Marc laughed, thinking of Sofie and
Elsa and Helga and the green glass saucer.
Oh, Levon. Yes I know your name!
I see that you think me simple.
Not so!
May God confound you!
I’ll not go below.
The little fellow screamed a scream
of dinner thwarted and frustration, turned on his gnarly little heel and
vanished into his burrow, which vanished likewise behind him.
“I didn’t think I had seen this hole
before,” said wise Marc, the butter-loving cat.
On the way home after all of that he
caught a mole and had it for his supper. He arrived home long before dark,
entering the cat door in Sophie’s door and took a lovely nap in front of her
little blue enameled stove. Later, Sophie shared her chicken stew with him,
then she put the plank over the cat door, so no creatures could creep in during
the night.
The End
“That’s a pretty good story, Suzy. I
didn’t know you had it in you,” I said.
“Thanks,” said Suzy with a smile and
in a little creaky voice.
“By the way, how did Marc know the
faery’s name,” I wondered.
“The crows told him he better look
out for Levon,” she said. “They were rudely teasing him.”
“And how did Levon know Marc’s name,”
I said.
“Snooping at windows, hanging around
Sophie’s barn,” said Suzy.
“Well, that ties it all up into a
neat bow!” I said.
That’s The Real End
😸