Once upon a time, in a completely
different kingdom, there was a girl who had many bunnies (in fact, she had so
many bunnies that sometimes her house looked as if the floor were covered with
soft fur).
She loved them all, and she could
have kept them in her house, but one day, one of her friends encouraged her to
show them to the villagers, and the girl opened her door and built special pens
for the bunnies. Since she wasn’t doing this for gold, she placed a board near
the bunnies that read “Free to good homes”.
The friend who had encouraged her to
do this mentioned the bunnies to her other friends, and people started coming
to see the bunnies.
Sometimes, the girl made a few
mistakes, and there was a tiny knot in the fur of bunnies that had been put up
for adoption, but it seldom happened, and the girl learnt better than to rush
things.
In the first years, the girl had
regular visitors who came to chat with her a bit before they headed home with a
new bunny to pet and love, but things changed as more people offered bunnies-for-free
and the activity became more usual, so to speak.
Bunnies-for-free became so common
that the girl found herself with a lot of adopted bunnies, but they were almost
all taken by people who didn’t even wait for her to show up and say “Hello!”.
They walked by, took bunnies and left.
The girl could see that the bunnies
were being taken (and loved, because she’d heard stories of breeders of bunnies-for-free
who had to face criticism for offering bunnies in poor health, but not hers),
but apart from a faithful tiny group of people, she no longer saw anyone.
Years and years after she started
offering bunnies, and after she travelled to meet other bunny breeders who gave
her tips to improve her work, the girl decided to try something new, and under
the board that offered her bunnies, she added a piece of parchment that read:
“Dear Visitor, why not wait for me to just chat a bit or leave me an address to
contact you? I’d like some feedback on my bunnies. See you soon!”.
The piece of parchment was long gone
with the wind when the girl decided that the silence hurt too much. She dearly
loved the people who stopped by her house before they picked up a bunny, but these
were a tiny fraction of the people who enjoyed the company of her bunnies.
It hurt.
It hurt, whilst it was supposed to
be fun.
It hurt so much that the girl
decided that it was time to change things for good.
She told her faithful visitors that
her bunnies would be kept in a different place from now on, and that all they
had to do to have one for free was to come see her and she’d take them to the
new pens. She also warned them that the new bunnies were of slightly different
colours.
On the board near the old pens, she
added another piece of parchment that read: “Enjoy the bunnies; they’re the
last ones I’m putting here. Thank you, and goodbye.”.
Then, it started…
First she found letters pinned under
her message asking her to not stop breeding bunnies.
Then…
Then, at last, some of the people
who’d been visiting the pens and taking the bunnies over the past years waited
for her to show up when she fed the remaining bunnies.
The first one said, ‘I know I cannot
force you to go on doing this, but it’d be awesome if you did keep doing it.
Your bunnies are cute beasts, and I like them a lot.’
The girl was so utterly
flabbergasted that she was properly stunned when she answered, ‘Ta! And sorry,
but I can’t go on.’ Then she fed the last bunnies, and when she turned around,
the visitor had already left.
There were a few more visitors like
that. Always people who’d been taking bunnies for years and had never
said a word until then.
Then, there was that visitor who
said, ‘I’ve been getting bunnies from your pens for years, and I’m so sad to
see that you’re going to stop breeding bunnies.’
By then, the girl was beyond sadness
and frustration. She looked at that visitor and yelled, ‘If you liked them so
much, couldn’t you bloody let me know once in all those years?! I’ve never seen
you before. Where were you when I had no one to talk to? It’s too late now. You
broke my heart!’
The visitor looked at the
bunny-breeder and fled, thinking that she’d become mad, or that she thought she
was important whilst she was just breeding bunnies-for-free, or that she was
being unfair because she did see that the bunnies were being taken and that
should have been bloody enough for that girl.
The visitor never understood.
Neither did the others since they’d ignored the first plea for more
communication.
The girl made sure that the first
bunnies were all taken eventually, and she started breeding a new species of
bunnies, and she was damn proud – not because she’d come up with a new species
that she hoped her faithful followers would like, no (she was quite lucid on
that head). No, she was proud for not hitting the strangers who asked her to go
on breeding bunnies-for-free once she’d decided to stop doing that; she really
wanted to, but she refrained from doing it… That, and she was busy chatting
with the visitors of her new pens.
4 comments:
awwww... sorry Dru. Sorry I haven't been around much lately. School just started for both my son and myself, so I've been kinda jacked up at night. Trying to get caught up tonight. If you have any editing for me, I'll do it gladly, but it might take a couple days!
*Hugs*
Oh, Merlin! I hope school's okay (I'm still gathering "stuff" for my future students).
As you can see the reactions to my other writing incarnation's last work made me rather angry. The "please, don't go" from people who had *never* commented made me turn into a pretty version of Vesuvius, circa Pompeii...
I'm a little bit all over the map, so I've got nothing ready and really finished for the moment (I need to read again my latest short story, and I already know I've made two mistakes).
I'm trying to dust off my MA on Forster. Did I offer you that one? If not, would you be interested? (It's a bit "dry", and if it's not your cuppa, I understand)
There's no deadline, so anytime's fine - for everything. ;)
*hugs*
Interested in anything you have, and no, I don't think I've gotten anything from you in awhile. Been reading Big Bang Theory fanfics lately when I run out of homework to do, so anything's good. It's the second week of school for Aidan, so things are starting to settle into a routine for him, which makes him less titchy. I haven't gotten any grades back on any of my work yet in my class, so I have no idea if the professor is liking how I am doing my stuff or not... Hopefully, I'm doing okay. It's week three for me. The quizzes are all A's, but I'm more worried about the essay type stuff. It's an online class, so I'd like to know how he's grading, so I can adjust. If he doesn't like something, I can adjust my writing style to fake it for the course at least... but if I have nothing to go on, grade-wise, I won't know until it's too late to hope for an A in the class. (Grrr... I hate when Profs withhold grades. Seriously? It takes two weeks plus to grade my first weeks submission? Come ON!)
I'll re-check the first chapter of my MA, and I'll Apparate it to you then. It's nothing extraordinary, but it was my first "big" research work (a few aeons ago).
Is Aidan still with the same friends or was there some change?
Not to be on my colleague's side (because I know a lot who are lazy bunnies!), but *if* s/he was given a lot of essays to grade, it can take a bit of time (the year my classes went from 30 to 60, grading was a *killer*). Anyway, I hope everything will be as you want it!
I'll be in your inbox soonish. :)
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