A FABLE
Written by Nancy Jill Thames
Prologue
Being an asthmatic as a child my husband was allergic
to mold, mildew and pet dander. As an experiment to see if he still had pet
allergies as an adult, for two weeks we tried adopting two kittens which proved
disastrous, culminating in the use of flea bombs and taking the poor little
things to the shelter.
After moving to a different local and our daughter
begging for a pet of some kind, we allowed her to buy a rat, which she named
Sandy, and we all absolutely fell in love. Sandy didn’t produce mold or mildew,
instead, she produced something far worse – pet dander. As a result, our dad almost died from asthma until he
told me the rat must go.
I wrote this story to help our children realize that
our father was the most important person in our family and we needed to protect
him from harm. And so Sandy left our family via the animal shelter
where hopefully someone gave her a home, a home where her little life and
antics would bring them all the fun and laughter and love she had given to us.
Maybe your family, too, at some time must make a
sacrifice. Here’s the first story I ever wrote.
In olden times, when some
people used magic spells to get what they wanted, there was a small kingdom
called The Kingdom of Good. Birds flitted from tree to tree in this land, light
was everywhere, and peace was in everyone. Across the river to the north lay
the Kingdom of Evil, a place of darkness filled with spiders and evil
vibrations. Although the two kingdoms existed side by side, the only thing
bringing them together was the school.
The two most popular kids in
the school happened to be two boys, a friendly, handsome lad named Ted from the
Kingdom of Good, and a brooding, sinister, smart alec named Death from the
Kingdom of Evil. Ted made high grades and was kind to everyone. Death often cheated
and was mean to everyone, but since half of the students were from the dark
land, they though Death was great.
One day, Ted caught Death
cheating on an Old English test and the principal had to expel him from school
because that was the rule. As he left the school, Death turned to Ted and
vowed, “I will have my revenge someday, somehow, for what you have done to me.”
Ted grew up, fell in love,
got married and had two children, a girl and a boy. Ted loved his family and
was always giving them gifts to show just how much he loved them. They were all
very happy. One day, as they were walking in their lovely garden, Ted told his
wife, Honey, about Death’s vow for revenge and warned her she must guard the
house from anything that likened itself to the Kingdom of Evil. Somehow Ted knew
that if she allowed darkness to come in, he would go blind. If she allowed
spiders and their webs into their home, he would go deaf. And if she allowed
vibrations in, his heart would fail. So, dutifully, Honey cut vines from the house
so no darkness would enter. She chased the spiders out, and swept away their
webs with her broom.
The children, Girl and Boy,
were allowed to have friends over to play after school, but Smell, Rot, Noise,
and Dirt caused evil vibrations and made everyone upset. They were never
invited back. Other children like Sweet, Kind, and Peace played happily with
Girl and Boy and they were always welcome.
By this time, Death also had
a child. His name was Sneak, and although he was handsome in an odd sort of way,
he was evil and spied on Girl and Boy and kept his father informed of Ted’s
activities as well. When Sneak told Death how happy Ted and his family were,
Death became jealous and his anger was stirred up again with the memory of the
humiliation he suffered because of Ted’s exposing him as a cheat.
Death cast a spell disguising
Sneak as a good child and sent him to play with Ted’s children after school one
day. Girl and Boy invited Sneak into their home and introduced him to Ted and
Honey, not knowing he was the son of Death. Sneak made a good impression on
everyone and by the end of the afternoon the whole family had accepted him as
being wonderful, polite, and very entertaining. Ted thought something was
vaguely familiar about Sneak but dismissed it from his mind as “fancy” and went
about his work.
Honey became so busy making
extra snacks for Sneak and spending time with him (because he was so much fun
to be around) that she forgot to trim the vines and Ted began to lose his
sight. Seeing Honey and the children so happy whenever Sneak was there, Ted
decided not to say anything about his blindness.
Summer came and happily for
everyone, school let out. Honey began inviting Sneak to stay for dinner and she
often invited him to stay the night. It was a home filled with joy and laughter
but everyone was so busy having fun that they forgot to kill the spiders and
sweep away their webs. Ted began to lose his hearing as well as his sight, but
he loved his family so much that he didn’t complain or say anything at all. He
just kept it to himself and stayed in his garden so no one would notice he was
almost blind, and no one would notice he was growing weaker.
Honey and the children
enjoyed Sneak’s company so much that they asked him to come and live with them.
It seemed that the more they were with Sneak, the more fun they had and they
hungered for more. The family hardly paid any attention to their father unless
it was to ask him for things they wanted. They didn’t realize that Ted was now
totally blind and deaf because vines covered the house and the spiders roamed
about, freely.
One day, Honey wanted to ask
Ted to buy her some new clothes for a party she was giving to celebrate Sneak’s
coming to live with them. She called for
him, “Ted, Ted,” but no one answered. She asked Girl and Boy if they had seen
their father but they were so busy having fun with Sneak that they said they
hadn’t seen their father for days.
Honey looked all over the
house frantically calling, “Ted! Ted!” but she couldn’t find him. Finally,
Honey went into Ted’s garden. There he lay on the ground, dead. Honey cried, “Oh, Ted, Ted, what have I done? I forgot to
trim the vines and I didn’t kill the spiders but why did you die? Where were
the vibrations? I couldn’t feel them or see them. Oh, Ted, I loved you so much
and I’m so sorry.”
Honey cried for hours and
finally realized she must tell the children. When Girl and Boy were told their
father was dead they were very, very sorry, but they, too couldn’t understand
why he died.
Without their father to
support them there was very little money left to live on. Sneak didn’t want to
live with them anymore because they were poor so he deserted them and went home
to his evil father, Death. Sadly, Honey took Girl and Boy and left their home,
which they could no longer afford, and went into the forest seeking shelter.
There, they found an old abandoned stone house and make it their home.
Girl and Boy collected
firewood for fuel and Honey planted a garden of vegetables. With the last of
the money she bought a few chickens to raise for meat and eggs and a cow for
milk. That was all they had.
As their clothes turned to
rags, laughter and fun disappeared from their lives. Soon, Honey died from hard
work and Girl and Boy grew up orphaned and poor. Boy had to work as a laborer
in a field and Girl did kitchen help because they couldn’t afford any more
education to do anything else. Their beloved father, the one who had given them
everything, was dead. Their mother was dead and Sneak was gone.
Death laughed when his son
Sneak told him how he moved in and spread his vibrations unseen by anyone in
the family. He laughed as he told his father about Honey having so much fun
that she forgot to trim the vines and kill the spiders. Death said, “I now have
my revenge. Ted is finally dead because he shamed me for cheating. Ted made the
fatal mistake of loving his family more than they really needed. They were
happy enough without my jovial son. They just didn’t realize it until it was
too late.”
If only Ted had told his
wife, “I’m going blind. You must cut the vines.” If only he had told her, “I’m going deaf. You must kill the spiders and destroy their webs.” If only he had
told his family, “My heart hurts whenever I’m around Sneak. He must be the
source of the evil vibrations.”
But Ted was fooled into
thinking his family loved laughter and merriment more than they loved him. It
wasn’t the lack of love that kept them from cutting the vines and killing the
spiders and sweeping away their webs, and they didn’t realize evil vibrations
were weakening Ted’s heart. He was wrong about their not loving him enough.
Honey and the children just didn’t know how he felt, and now they were ruined.
The End
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