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Puppeteer
02-15-2015, 07:00 PM
Hey,
I rarely ever write although I used to as a child. This was meant to be a children story but it turned out to be something different.
Please judge and criticise, hope you enjoy it, thanks a bunch. (:



There once was a wolf who lived high up a mountain.


In hours of sunlight, the wolf watched the sheeps go about

their day. The sheeps were well aware of the wolf’s gaze upon

them and lived in fear of its gigantic teeth. They knew that when night fell

and lit only by its hanging moon; the wolf would come down from its steeple.



Half a day was spent lazing around

the green grass by the sheeps, that same half was spent roaming around rocky mountains

by the wolf. The other half was spent sleeping with one eye open by the sheeps

and that same half spent quietly watching them by the wolf; waiting for the

opportune moment that it would finally grind its jaw in their cloud like white

coats. And so night did fall.



The wolf zig-zagged its way to the spacious plains of the

earth and finally reached its destination; the sheep enclosure. A little forest

stood next to it. Its inanimate pines, the wolf thought, had always been its

closest friends. For they did not speak, nor make noise, nor think, nor feel.

There was not an ounce of judgment in them. These, he said, must truly be happy

to express so little.



With its gentle paws, the wolf took a few steps towards the

enclosure very careful not to break a twig. The wolf knew that if it was to

wake the sheeps, all would be lost and lose the chance use its bite. On the other hand, the sheeps counted on the twigs

like their human masters counted on their ear screeching devices when a stranger was too close

to home. The sheeps also knew that the wolf held trees and twigs in high

regard; that though they could not betray the wolf by themselves; the wolf could help them

do so by a single misplaced move.



But the twigs did not break and even if it did, the wind in

the imposing pines’ arms would muffle the sound. And so the wolf took its steps

towards the closest sheep. This was the punishment for every sheep that did not

follow the pack; they would have to sleep at the border of the group. ‘’Oh what

a drag, these sheeps thought, sometimes, we wish we were wolf, to be free to

roam the peaks of the earth, to be free and wild, away from the bustle of the

blinding grounded white clouds.’’



And so the wolf came close. Its drooling tongue and

stalagmite teeth, its fiery yet focused eyes, its pointy ears aware; wise like

ancient pyramids.

This was it, thought the wolf. Every day it sat on top of its

mountain watching the sheeps. Oh them that laugh and know not the loneliness of

the rocky mountains, them that play all day so care free, the naïve look in

their eyes, their clumsy walk. And I, I who swoon in dry typhoons, who cannot

accept acceptance yet suffer the pressure of belonging, crucified on my

mountain, prophet like I scream the same words ‘’Why hast thou forsaken me ?’’.

A bite inside their fur is all I need. A taste of their blood, a touch inside

their souls, the wolf thought, would be just like when its paw touched

the surface of a lake, calmly disturbing the sleeping water.



And so the wolf slowly entered the enclosure. There it was,

the momentarily punished sheep. The wolf approached, spy like and unheard, its

mind in a storm of thrill, running, buzzing, exploding, imploding. And so it bit.

The sheep woke from its dream in horror as the wolf gazed down in its flesh.

The sheep watched its dripping blood on its perfect cloud suit, a river of life

set free in the spirit sea. In its manic trance, high on ecstatic rage, the

wolf suddenly found itself belonging. I am now part of you, screamed the wolf in its fury.

Every night you are part of us, said the sheep. It is you who chooses to go

back to your mountain for you only belong in the moment, you are blessed with

the present of your bite, yet your curse is past and future. As for I, it is

the present that is curse. I thank you for your bite for I waited upon it and

dreamed of it like every day you wait for the night. The wolf did not listen,

the wolf bit harder and harder as the other sheeps ran around the enclosure

with fear. The wolf now satisfied, raged with gladness and happiness, feeding

also from the scared and scarred looks from the rest. The punished sheep’s body

laid on the grass, but its good self now bound for the river Styx, a cruise upon Charon’s

boat. And the wolf, bringer of peace in all its splendour with a crown of fire in

the manners of Atilla, went back to the mountain, satisfied of its deed

and forgetting its deed, exiled by its own being, but fully ready to do so again tomorrow.

YesNo
02-16-2015, 05:32 PM
I liked the last paragraph of this fable describing the wolf belonging and the "present of your bite". I didn't understand how the wolf's curse was past and future, but perhaps that doesn't matter. The plural of sheep is sheep, not sheeps, but it is a minor point.

Puppeteer
02-16-2015, 08:39 PM
The answer to it is that the wolf is going to dream of the past night during the day (present/the wolf stands on top of the mountain longing for the past night) but also dreams of the next night/the future of another bite, therefore the wolf can only live and feel true in the present.
And yes, English is my second language, I refused Word telling me wrong.