Everyone Makes Mistakes by xx_weewoo_xx
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Snow. The one thing you never, ever think you’d get tired
of. Oh, we’ve all got fed up of people throwing snowballs at us, or the wet coat
that stays wet for the rest of the day. But actual, crunching under foot snow?
No. Nobody that I know, anyway. Maybe if you have to shovel of all the front drives
in the neighbourhood, fair enough. But everyone else…? Snow is something that
belongs, somehow.
Now, thinking of all that snow, and making footprints
and snow angels. Wouldn’t you just hate it if that was taken away from you?
No, that’s not the right choice of words. What I mean is, wouldn’t you be sad
if all that snow was there, but you couldn’t enjoy it?
***
Terror Mountain was covered in snow for most of year. Even in summer. Muggie
remembered glorious sunny springs, and summers full of songs and laughter. He
sighed mournfully. It was so silent up here. The type of silence that wraps
itself around you until you feel you are going to suffocate, the type of silence
that fills you with dread and places a huge weight on your shoulders.
Then Muggie used his extra-sensitive mutant Ixi
ears to listen to the silence.
He found that it wasn’t empty. Listening carefully,
he could hear the far away laughter and giggling screeches of a snowball fight.
He smiled at the sound, even though hearing the sound filled him with a deep,
deep sadness. Though maybe ‘filled’ was the wrong word, because the sadness
left a gaping hole in a corner of his heart.
In his cabin, with the wood fire burning cheerfully,
the frowning mutant aisha seemed somewhat out of place. Muggie had a right to
be frowning. No owner, no friends, no sun. It was a hard life.
Suddenly, out of the corner of his eye, something
caught Muggie’s attention. Though he didn’t like venturing out in broad daylight,
Muggie’s curiosity got the better of his gut instinct. Cautiously he edged towards
the cabins single window to peer outside. Seeing nothing, he plodded over to
the door. Opening it, he stepped outside. As he stood, blinking in the doorway,
the first thing that hit him was Happy Valley far below. The tiny neopets that
scurried to and fro seemed tiny. A single teardrop fell from his eye. He wished
more than ever before that he could be down there, without a care in the world.
But he had had his chance, that was gone now.
With a small sniffle, he turned away, after remembering
what he had originally come out for. Darting to the side of the cabin, the sight
he saw gave him a suck a shock his legs collapsed from under him a he crumpled
in the snow. Fyora was having a snowball fight with Taelia the Snow Faerie and
the Space Faerie!
He blinked. Even the Faerie Queen had time to
come out here and enjoy the snow. She had a kingdom to run, and yet here she
was, giggling and throwing snowballs as though she was a child.
This got Muggie thinking. If the Faerie queen
could have fun in the snow, why couldn’t he? But he already knew the answer
to that. Last time he tried most of the other neopets ignored him completely.
The ones who didn’t, never, ever had any good words to say. They all told him
to go away. Leave them alone. He was so ugly. Don’t look in any mirrors, they’ll
crack. Eaten anybody recently? The list went on and on. Eventually, he fled.
He fled, crying and stumbling to his cabin. And he hadn’t been down there since.
He knew he deserved what he got, for being so
curious. Too trustworthy. Too mouthy. Yet another list that went on and on.
Despite all he had heard about him, Sloth’s sickly sweet words sounded too good
to be true. And that’s what they had turned out to be. He wished now he had
never been so foolish, but wishes weren’t going to get him anywhere.
But that is where Muggie was totally, and utterly,
wrong.
The Faeries playing in the snow had failed to
notice Muggie up until now, but they saw him sitting there and knew immediately
that’s something was wrong.
Fyora, despite the coldness, knelt down in the
snow in front of Muggie.
“Tell me little one,” she said gently. “What
is wrong?”
It was a while before Muggie answered, not being
used to such gentle words. He told the Faerie Queen everything. He missed nothing
out.
The Faerie queen looked sympathetic at his tale
of sadness. He was only young with too much life left to be so sad. She decided
to help him.
“If you could have one wish,” she said to him,
“what would it be? Think carefully.”
“I… I wish…,” Muggie stuttered, trying to find
the right words, “I wish I could be anybody who is happier than me.”
“Anybody?” asked Fyora.
“Anybody.” Muggie replied firmly.
So Fyora started to whisper the spell to change
Muggie into a green aisha. Half way through the short chant she winced as though
somebody had just pinched her. Oops! She’d said the wrong words. She kept going
however, knowing that whatever happened if she stopped would be much worse.
She could always change him to a green aisha with the right spell afterwards,
she thought.
When she had finished, there was a brief flash
of purple light and a puff of yellow smoke, then the air cleared.
Fyora stared at the confused looking Snowbunny
that sat in the snow where Muggie had been. The little creature examined its
paws. It hopped slowly and unsurely towards a small pool of water nearby. Peeping
at its reflection as though the puddle held a monster, it stared at its own
reflection. Then it hopped, more surely than before, to where it had originally
been. The Snowbunny looked up at Fyora with its big, blue eyes. A look of realisation
followed by pure delight crossed its features.
The Snowbunny hopped into the Cabin nearby, and
with some difficulty shut the door, but not before carefully wedging it open
with a stone. As it disappeared inside the cabin, Fyora turned to the other
two faeries, whose faces captured the phrase ‘dull surprise’ perfectly.
“Well,” she said, not managing to keep the surprised
tone out of her voice, “that was the best mistake I ever made.”
***
That evening, a small mutant Ixi, trudged blindly through the snowstorm howling
around her.
It was only chance that she saw the light from
the cabin fire.
Only chance she found a beaten path to the cabin.
Only chance that it contained a Snowbunny, who
hopped up to her as soon as she entered and snuggled next to her as they both
slept by the fire.
It was only chance that the Snowbunny seemed
to understand what the Ixi was going through.
It was only chance that the two became the best
of friends.
But are you sure it was only chance?
Maybe...
Maybe it was something MORE than chance...
But what else could it be, if not pure luck?
Destiny? Nah, Couldn’t be ;)
The End
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