When Ralph told Ramona about the
strange dream, she was almost outraged, in a quiet way. Ramona is a very
curious Firekeeper, and the unknowns in the story ate away at her sense of
completion.
She just looked at him for a while.
Then, “How can you have a dream like that? The rest of the story must be there
somewhere, Baby! Try to remember!”
“Really. That’s all there was, Mona!
I wish I knew too!” said Ralph. He didn’t mention what he had heard from his
toe. He didn’t think it would translate well to Ramona. When he thought about
it, he figured that the toe speech must have been a sort of dream too. It must
have been. Toes don’t talk. They just get on with their work, which when
analyzed, is pretty much what the dream toe told him, sending feedback from
ground level.
“But, Ralph Baby, what did the men
expect to find in the box? It must have been some kind of treasure, right? Some
woman must have fooled them somehow. But how did that happen?” said Ramona,
urgently.
“Yeah, not only were they angry when
they saw the bones, they were terrified, and I’m not sure why? What’s so scary
about an ancient box of old dead bones? And whose bones were they,” said Ralph.
“I wonder if that small of a box must have held very small bones.”
“Brrr!,” said Ramona. “See, there’s
a story there, hiding.”
“We don’t even know if it really
happened, Mona. It might just be a crazy dream,” protested Ralph.
Maeve had been listening carefully
from her usual perch on Ralph’s left shoulder. She looked from person to person,
thoughtfully.
“I’ve heard a story like that,” she
said. “I don’t even know if it’s true. My dear mate’s original family lived
many day’s flight toward the sunrise in another deep and dark forest full of
many tales.”
“How does his story go?” said
Ramona.
“I will try to remember,” said
Maeve. “But it has been a very long time since I spoke to him.”
“That’s alright, Birdy,” said Ralph,
reaching up to give her a little pat on
her black feathers.
“It goes like this: One time there
was a rich farmer. He saved all his earnings in cash. Never banks. He was
afraid of banks.
“He had an old wife, for he was old
too, but they had no children to inherit this good farm. They also had three
local men for farm workers.”
“Did the farmer keep his money in
that wooden box?” said Ramona.
“That’s what Moshe* said he did,”
said Maeve. “One day, he took most of his money, in the box, into the forest
and buried it, marking the spot with river stones. He told his old wife where
the box was buried, and then after a few years he died.”
“But, in the dream there were only
bones in the box, not money or any kind of treasure!” said Ramona.
“In the story Moshe told me, the
farmer made a false bottom in the box. The gold and bills were under the false
bottom. For a joke the farmer piled a bunch of sheep’s bones on top of that
fake bottom. Or maybe, he did it to scare anyone who found the box because they
would think it was a burial,” said Maeve.
“Why did the farm workers come to
dig it up like sneaks at night?” said Ramona.
“Oh you know. They were there to rob
the old woman. She must have let slip that the box was buried under those
rocks. Maybe she promised them something?
“Maybe they threatened her to get
her to tell where it was. Moshe didn’t know,” said Maeve. “But when they saw
nothing but bones they were angry and felt that she had tricked them. He didn’t
say what became of the box or the money after they had run away.”
“In my dream, there was someone
watching, a park ranger,” said Ralph. “I bet he came back the next day and
investigated. I don’t think they were supposed to be doing sneaky stuff in the
park at night.”
“I wonder if the ranger was able to find
out whose money it was and return it,” said Ramona.
“In a proper story, he would have done
that,” said Ralph. “But my dream didn’t go that far.”
“And Moshe didn’t know that part of
the story, or he would have told me,” said Maeve.
“I still think it’s strange how
angry and frightened the men were,” said Ramona.
“They probably thought the bones
were human, and when they realized that they were being watched, thought that
it was a burial and that they would get blamed for a death,” said Ralph. “But,
you know, maybe it didn’t happen at all. It was just a dream.
“Oh, Mona, wise and merciful Firekeeper,
let’s let the dream fade away. Let’s take our Cherry up to the meadow. Now is a
good time to visit Koba, the Star Child, and his caretakers as well! The day is
warm and beautiful and full of pleasant whispers.
“Who knows what wonderful and true
things we will meet this day?”
“Oh, Baby! You’re right! We have better
things to think about!” said Ramona. “I miss that child so much already that my
heart hurts for him!”
“Evermore!” said Maeve as she lifted
off, soaring into the middle of the glorious air.
So, like truly heroic characters in
all the best tales, the group of four set out for the meadow immediately.
Maeve flew overhead. Cherry drifted
along beside her parents. Ralph and Ramona held hands as they walked. When they
came out into the open all eyes could see the leafy dome of the Alder Tree
House and in their eagerness, no one gave the old dream a single thought. It
was quite forgotten.
🍀
*Moshe
was Maeve’s old mate's name.