The Visitor: Snapshots: Part 10
Submitted by dmuth on Fri, 2006-02-24 15:34.
Furry Fiction
"Heeey, what's wrong with you?" I had just now flashed in and found my now-all-grown-up-but-still-my-little Kitten gloomy and downhearted. She was sitting on the edge of a cliff on the side of a gorge, staring out into the sunny distance. I sat next to her and gently stroked her neck. "What's going on?" She sighed as tears welled up in her eyes. "Gramma 'Fina died." "Oh..." Poor Naline. She'd been really close to her grandmother. She was always telling me stories of the things she'd said or done. Even though Naline had long left her kitten days behind, she still adored her grandmother as much as she did when she was three months old. "I'm really sorry." "We'd been expecting it for a while," she stared down into the deep cliffs of the gorge, blinking the tears away, "she was really old." "But it doesn't make the pain any less, does it?" I silently read her face, gauging the hurt and the sadness. "Little bit." "Hey, I'm sure that wherever she is now," I nodded up to the brilliant blue sky, "she's really happy." A single cloud was in the sky, throwing its shadow on the savanna lands. The shadow undulated and waved as it traveled across grass and trees and hills. It seemed almost like a living thing, traveling as if with purpose, unstoppable towards the horizon. I followed the shadow for some time, watching it first cast a dim twilight on the trees as it neared, then completely engulfing them in shade, then finally releasing them once more to the blinding sunlight. But after a while, I noticed the shadow diminish and grow less and less dark. At first, a few patches of light appeared in its middle. Then a few more. Then, as it slowly moved along, the cloud gradually disappeared until it vanished completely, leaving the sky clear and clean, blue from start to finish. I was suddenly awakened from my cloud-watching trance by a movement of Naline's head. She was looking down into the gorge. At a hawk, flying down below us. Like a miniature cloud, the hawk cast its own little shadow on the canyon floor as it zipped hither and thither. "You think so?" Naline's eyes followed the hawk as she talked. "I think so what?" "You think she's somewhere, out there, happy?" "Sure, Kitten." "I don't know, I've been thinking..." She followed the hawk as it wove and danced its way around canyon walls and sheer cliff faces. "You've been thinking what?" "I've been thinking that maybe there's no 'out there.' Maybe there's no 'there' after we..." she hesitated at the word, as if something dreadful would happen upon its utterance "...die." Oh, so it was like that. The afterlife is one of those things that living beings think and worry and argue about, but always without success because mostly one has to quit being a living thing in order to find out really what's what. But then it's too late, isn't it? "You think so?" "Well, my father always says that we'll become stars and go to the sky after we die. But I'm not so sure. Maybe it's just one of those things that they tell cubs. Maybe..." she stared and sighed and thought, unable to finish her sentence. "Kitten, look at me," she turned her head and gave me the full attention of her shining emerald eyes, "I can personally guarantee you that there is definitely a 'there' there." "How do you know?" "Been there. Took the tour. Got the T-shirt." "Really?" She examined my expression in minute detail, making sure that I wasn't joking around or playing silly games with her. "Seriously for real?" "Scout's honor." Lemme see, how could I explain this so that Naline would understand it? "You see, being in the freelance mercenarying good-guy business, you get calls and jobs from the most unexpected places. Some time ago, I got a call from the Big Cheese, from the Main Man, from the Head Honcho #1 Guy himself. He had a job for me to do and so on and so forth. Best thing was, I got to go to Heaven for the interview. I've been back a couple of times since." "Heaven?" "You know," I pointed a finger towards the sky, "up there." "Really?" Naline's gaze went from me to the sky and then to me again a couple of times. "No fooling?" "No fooling." "You've been up among the stars?" "Sure." I'd actually literally been up among the stars, but I knew what Naline had meant. "What was it like?" "Classy. Nice weather. Nice people. Pleasant place to be." Naline's gaze followed the hawk as it rounded a sheer rocky formation and disappeared from sight. She sighed again, but she didn't sound quite as forlorn as before. I think now she had hope, she had something to look forward to. "Hey, if I'm ever back there again, I'll make sure to look your grandmother up." "Promise?" "Promise." I put my arm around her side and laid my head on her strong shoulder. In the sky, a new cloud began to form out of the humid daytime mists. She didn't have to worry about death, Naline didn't. Not for a long, long time.
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