The Promise: Part 3
Submitted by dmuth on Thu, 2006-02-23 20:30.
Lion King Fanfiction
CHAPTER: OUR LITTLE SECRET Isha did not know if Kako had heard any of the snide remarks. She grimaced with embarrassment as she went to see Mabatu's mother and clear things up once and for all. "Isha!" Kako said with her usual sunshine. She nuzzled Isha and patted her shoulder with a paw. "You're so sweet taking care of my Baba. He had such a good time last night, he was talking about it on and on!" "Oh?" Isha smiled timidly. "Anything I should know about?" Kako's ears twitched, but she made nothing of it as if she didn't hear the question. Isha was not about to ask it again. Baba saw her and came running up, eyes shining. "Isha! Isha!" He pounced on her, kissing her with his soft, warm tongue and rubbing her face. "Hello, Rat Fink!" He smiled broadly. "Hello, Isha!" Sitting next to her, Baba looked at his mother and said, "Guess what I'm going to do when I grow up!" "I like guessing games," Isha said quickly. "Baba, I have a little secret for you if your Mom doesn't mind." "A little secret?" Kako said with a grin. "Ooooh, sounds serious!" "Oh it is," Isha said slyly with a wink and a smile. Gently but urgently, she nudged the smiling cub around a few rocks and bushes, then said as calmly as she could, "Baba, I don't think you should tell your Mom about us yet. In fact, you shouldn't tell anyone." Mabatu's ears sagged. "Oh." "Honey Tree, getting engaged is a big step. At your age, you could still change your mind." "But I won't!" He nuzzled her. "I love you, Isha! I'd marry you right now if they'd let me." "I believe you, Fuzzy Love." Trying not to hurt his feelings, she nuzzled his small body and kissed him. "Just follow my advice and hold off until you get older, like when you're approaching your mantlement. Then when you say it, they will understand it the way I do. You see, if you DID happen to change your mind...." "But I won't! I love you! I really do!" "I know. But let's just say IF you did, you wouldn't have to make it up to me. And I'd understand." "You DO love me back, don't you?" "What do you think, Baba?" She lay down and with her paw easily scooped her small suitor to her side. Fondling him with a paw, she purred, "You're a special part of me, and if you were taken away, it would leave a wound that would bleed. You're my little golden treasure." Mabatu began to grunt with pleasure at her touch. "If you really love me, it won't be a long two years. The days will speed past, but don't wish them away. Once you cross that threshold and become a lion, all your free and easy days of cubhood are gone forever. Understand me, Rat Fink?" "Yeah." He pushed out from under her paw and rubbed his face against hers. "I love you." "I love you too." CHAPTER: WE'RE TALKING KINGS AND SUCCESSIONS Only two and a half months after Elanna married Taka, she began having contractions. She was in danger of having a miscarriage, or at least that's what Kako could gather from a few snatches she overheard. The hyena guards would not let her too close to Taka's cave, and they would not give her a straight answer. An old mandrill was escorted quickly to the cave, his hyena guard supremely impatient with his unsteady, lumbering gait. Kako had heard of Rafiki. Whisperings from the hyenas and a few disparaging remarks from Taka would lead her to believe that some evil sorcerer was being confined in the baobab. The other lionesses, however, told a different story. She did not know what to believe. Rafiki passed close by Kako. He paused and looked at her. In a kind and bashful voice, he said, "My dear, I don't believe I've seen you before. Has it been that long?" The mandrill yelped as one of the guards nipped his flank. Quickly he drew his fingers in blessing across her cheek and started on before he could be bitten again. Kako was watching and listening, but was in a poor position to tell what was going on. She would have to ask Uzuri later. The conversation was anxious and rose and fall, but she could make out very little. Then she heard very clearly, "Rafiki! Do something! Anything! My son, my son!" A few moments of near absolute silence went by. If this mandrill was really a great sorcerer, he would perform some great spell, probably in exchange for his freedom. That was the plan, wasn't it? "Aiheu," she whispered, "give him the power. Give him the power." After a few moments, she heard a loud cry from the cave. It was not an apelike sound but the heart-rending howl of a fully-grown male lion whose strength and courage could not even keep a small cub from dying before his eyes. Isha, her ears and tail drooping, went past bearing a small dead male. "Oh Isha," Kako whispered, pawing her shoulder as she walked by. Isha looked around, her eyes red with hopeless tears. Soon after that, escorted by hyenas, Rafiki dragged past as well. Kako watched the grief stricken mandrill limp by, leaning heavily on his staff. If possible, he looked even older and more bent than before. Taka came out on the promontory and shouted in his anguish, "If there is a God...." He took in a deep breath and concluded, "....please help me!!" He sat on the end of the promontory, his face bent low and sobbed. Fabana slipped alongside him and held up her finely chiseled nose, howling like her heart would crumble. Even the lionesses that hated him most were silent, transfixed by the depth of their grief. Then Taka raised his muzzle to the sky, pulled in a deep breath and roared with pain. All of the lionesses took up the sound. The hyenas howled and yammered, and from a nearby acacia, a flight of weaverbirds scattered like a living cloud. The silence that followed could almost be nudged by a paw. All eyes were on the dark-maned lion as he trudged down the promontory. Still weak in the knees, Taka wended his way down Pride Rock and crept slowly to where Kako stood with her son. "It seems the Gods have spoken," Taka said. "There will be no prince from my line." His chin began to tremble and tears spilled down his cheeks. "She can never....the damage has...." Fabana quickly pressed her shoulder against his. "Remember, son. You're a king." Taka did his best to keep some royal dignity, but he looked like a trembling blade of grass caught in a strong wind. Kako quietly padded over and kissed him. "I'm so sorry. You poor dear-I mean, Your Majesty." "Kako, you came to me from the gods. Your goodness is one of the few things that can laugh at the curse that burns my blood." He sighed, and with great effort said, "Mabatu is my Prince, and your future King." "You honor us, Bayete." He looked at Mabatu. "Hello, sport." "Hello, Your Majesty." "You are a prince now. You should call me by my name, or if you feel like it, you may call me...please call me....Dad?" Mabatu came and sat next to him, burying his head in Taka's mane. "I love you, Dad." "I love you too." He kissed Baba. "You're my last hope, son. Go to sleep a little early tonight `cause tomorrow, I'm waking you at sunrise. I have something I want to show you." "What?" "You'll see." CHAPTER: ON THE PROMONTORY Mabatu stood on the end of the promontory with Taka and saw the sunrise. "Look at the light," Taka said. "See how splendid it makes the plain look? That is my kingdom, and someday it will be yours." "When?" "When I die," Taka said, solemnly. "Then I hope I never get to be king," Mabatu said. "What a beautiful, foolish notion! We all have to go into the east when our time comes. What makes life worth living is what you do with the time you have. Like this morning. I made sure I woke up to show you this, because it was important to me. When I'm seated among the stars, I'll look back on this memory and smile." "Me too." Mabatu leaned against Taka's dark mane. "So Dad, when you were my age, did your dad do this with you?" Taka said, "My father was...." He stiffened and his jaw began to quiver. "He was always.... I mean, we never...." The words stuck in his throat. Tears began to stream down his face. "What's wrong?" "Oh nothing." He wiped his eyes with a paw. "Please, don't watch me cry. Please? Just go run along and see your mother--I'll be with you in a minute." Reluctantly, sadly, Mabatu nuzzled his king and stalked down the promontory leaving Taka alone with his private grief. "Aiheu! Roh'kash! Anyone!" Taka cried in an anguished voice that echoed off the distant hills. "If you're really out there, why did you take my son?? Why??" He dropped his face to the ground and sobbed helplessly.
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