The Visitor: Snapshots: Part 11
Submitted by dmuth on Fri, 2006-02-24 15:34.
Furry Fiction
Naline and I had been laying in the mud for the better part of five minutes, recovering from the shock of being run over by herds of zebras, skydiving without parachutes from miles high, and almost drowning in oceans of water. The sun beat down as it always does in this neighborhood, and pretty soon we were verily caked in hard, brown clay. I decided it would be a good idea to move before we were permanently cooked into the muddy bottoms. We laid there quietly for a couple more minutes, listening to the sound of thundering hooves. After a while, they seemed to fade into the distance. Good riddance! "Would you mind running along?" Now, that was an unusual thing for Naline to say. I sloshed and turned in the mud a bit until I could see what she meant. "Hello? I said would you mind moving on?" Strange. Naline hadn't moved when she talked. Hey, when did it get cloudy? It was then that I realized that it hadn't been Naline talking, and it hadn't been a cloud that blocked the sun, it was a huge... something. Gray. Big. A great big elephant! Cheez louise! She was standing not three feet from us, looking down at us between a pair of great big tusks. Naline's eyes were big as planets, taking in the massive bulk that was the lady elephant. She looked more annoyed than angry, so I figured we'd probably hadn't landed on her kid or anything when we'd fallen in the lake. I sat up as best I could and tried my best diplomatic tone. "How may we help you, madam?" "Look here, you," she emphasized each word by poking me in the chest with her trunk, making sure she had my complete attention. "We have trouble enough traversing the savanna what with zebras and all stampeding around, without having..." she gave us a disdaining glance, "people mucking about in one's drinking water." "Look, I'm sorry, we didn't mean..." She didn't even let me finish my sentence. "We try to keep things clean," she rolled her eyes and waved her trunk in the general direction of the lake, "but there's always some hoodlum or another sloshing around, dirtying up the water." "Hey, it was an accid..." "What would you do if I just went over to your water hole and started kicking up the mud and making it undrinkable, eh?" She poked me in the chest once again. "You wouldn't like it, would you?" "Well, no, actually, we..." "Just shoo!" She waved her trunk as if she were waving a fly away. She turned her head away and dismissed us with a sneer. "Go on with you." "Look, lady," I was having just about enough of her rude arrogance. She was getting on my last nerve, and I was gonna let her know it. "Shoo!" This time, her tone meant business, and I decided it would be a better idea to get moving along. I collected Naline, who was stuck shoulder-deep in silt, and awkwardly attempted to slop out of the mud bank. I tried moving one foot, and then the other, but they wouldn't move properly. I stomped in the mud for a bit, trying to get myself unstuck. I could tell by the elephant's impatient sighs that I wasn't moving fast enough for her. Naline and I finally managed to slop ourselves out of the mud bank and onto terra more firma. We were covered from head to tail with mud in various stages of dryness and hardness. We looked like mud monsters from outer space or something. Definitely not our most presentable moment. "Go on!" A little ways behind the elephant, we noticed a whole herd apparently waiting for the boss lady to get rid of us nuisances. "Shoo!" Naline and I turned in the general direction of the Rock and traipsed away in the sun. As we walked away, the rest of the herd moved in. There were maybe fifteen of them, drinking, sloshing, and rolling about in the muddy shore. The sounds of frolicking and merriment disappeared behind us as we topped a nearby hill. "Who do they think they are?" Naline was livid, furious at the indignities we had suffered. "Why those overgrown..." "Shhh, they've got good hearing, Kitten. Keep it down." She lowered her tone, but not the heat of her ire. "You would have thought we were bugs, the way she treated us." "Look, just keep walking and be quiet." I walked as nonchalantly as I could and waved my hand to hurry her along. "What?" I bet she was wondering whose side I was on. "Shhh. Just trust me. Keep walking and get ready to run." I tried my hardest to suppress a giggle and waved her along again. "Huh?" If her expression was any indication, Naline was perplexed, confused and puzzled all at the same time. "Just..." I vainly tried to hold the laughter in, hurting my delicate pulmonary system in the process. I tried holding both hands over my mouth, but even that failed. "What's going on?" She kinda half frowned and half smiled, wanting to know what the joke was, and trying to figure out if I'd gone completely bonkers. "When we left the water..." a bit of a chuckle escaped my best efforts to suppress it, "...I dropped in..." I started a half trot as I vainly tried to breathe normally because I knew that very, very soon... A chorus of surprised and angry trumpeting blasted in from over the hill. Splashing, running, and near-panicked shouting and yelling all mixed with outrage came in loud and clear from the near distance. The elephants didn't sound very happy at all. "What?" Naline was nearing panic herself. "Cruz! What did you do?" "I dropped in..." I couldn't hold it anymore and burst out in hysterical laughter, "an bitter bomb!" "A what?!?" "A bitter bomb! It's harmless, but it makes the water taste like last year's lemons." The stuff I'd used had actually been outlawed in some of the more civilized worlds because of its unbelievable efficacy at turning nice, pure water into the foulest, bitterest, most undrinkable liquid imaginable. It dissipated after a day or two, but it sure stunk up the place in the meanwhiles. Hey, those rude elephants deserved it! Naline's swift mind quickly realized both the effects and implications of what I'd done. Her realizations came into sharper focus when Ms. Big Boss Lady came tearing over the top of the hill, as enraged as I've ever seen an elephantess be. She looked as if she'd just drunk a supertanker full of vinegar, and she didn't look very happy about it. "Cruz?" "Yeah?" "Maybe we better run." We tore off, running like crazy, with Ms. Mad Elephant chasing us in a most undignified way. It probably made her madder that Naline and I were laughing hysterically as we ran for the hills. I don't know of you've ever had a lady elephant chasing you, steadfast in her intent to squish you into the ground like a bug. In case you haven't, I must recommend it as a most marvelous and effective way to make you run as expeditiously and earnestly as you ever have before. Lioness, mercenary and elephant ripped across the savanna, leaving a trail of dry mud, flying grass, uncontrollable laughter, angry cursing, and torn grasslands in their wake. Fortunately for us, Ms. Boss Lady was soon overcome with the choking, coughing, eye-watering and all around unpleasant effects of the foul stuff I'd dropped into the water. She abruptly abandoned chase, hacking and wheezing, giving us the angriest glare I've ever seen. If looks could kill, every living creature on the side of the continent where Naline and I were standing would have instantly perished. Naline and I didn't want to chance Boss Lady regaining her breath, so we ran and ran, almost falling over each other from laughing and running. It must have been ten minutes or more before we stopped to catch our breaths under a baobab tree. We panted and wheezed and gasped and laughed. My sides hurt like crazy from running and Naline was panting like a pack of dogs. It was unanimously decided that we should find a supply of water very soon, else we'd both die from thirst and exhaustion. Naline knew of a nearby pond, so we marched over directly. It was a nice, clear pond, ringed all around with huge, shady trees. When I say clear, I not only mean that it was free of mud and silt; I also mean that it was clear of crocodiles, hippopotamuses, and mean, rude herds of elephants. That's important when one not only needs to drink huge amounts of water, but also needs to wash off large amounts of dry clay caked in one's hair. We were covered with hardened mud from head to toe. Naline looked like walking pottery. We drank and drank like crazy. Surprisingly enough, the water was cool and fresh; something rare in this part of Naline's world. I wasn't about to complain, though. We drank water enough for eight pairs of mercenaries and young lionesses. "Aaahhh." Naline had sated her thirst and she plopped on the shady ground, belly up and a grin on her face. "Ahem." I tapped her paw, getting her attention. "What?" "We gotta wash off all the mud." "So?" I pointed at the water. Naline quickly realized what I meant. "No! I don't like water!" "Come on, into the drink." Before she could get herself upright and escape, I quickly seized the reluctant lioness. You would have thought I was gonna throw her in a pond full of piranhas, the way she was struggling to get away. She twisted and contorted and kicked her little legs in the air. In the end, it availed her for nothing. "Noooo!" Ker-splush! In she went. "Don't squirm, it makes it harder to wash off the mud." She fought me like the fierce creature that she was, clawing and struggling as best she could. But when she realized that I wasn't letting go 'till she was clean and mud-free, she gave up and let me decontaminate her. I rubbed and scrubbed and laundered her until she was good as new, shiny and squeaky clean. When I judged her to be unmudified enough, I set her back on shore, much to her relief. She looked immaculate and in mint condition, as if she'd never been out of the box. Naline hadn't been very happy about being bathed in such an un-leonine fashion, but even she had to admit that licking all the mud off herself would have been most unpleasant. We left the pond, headed back towards her Rock in the very best of spirits. Naline skipped happily as we went along, pouncing on insects and tall blades of grass. I felt as good as one is supposed to feel when one is on vacation, which is very good. Hey, you know what? Despite things like rude elephants and stampeding zebras, there are pretty good times to be found in the savanna grasslands when you're with your best Kitten friend.
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