Mistermafio
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Chapter 4 – Friendship Early that summer, Horse had been getting quite comfortable with his new partner and their respectful, mutual silence. Though a thought had started to fester itself in the back of Horse's brain, the kind of thought that plants itself deep within a mind. Only to be forgotten and re-discovered time and time again. The kind of thought not even the most hardy horse could keep to himself: curiosity. It had started when Horse was treading around the little field one summer's morning. He had seen Goose and his thoughts absentmindedly dwelled towards his new companion. How he had seen creatures like him before, geese they called themselves. Only every other occasion he had seen the gray and orange birds, they had done what birds tend to do. They had flown. Either many miles over his head, or quickly away from him as he was merely approaching them for a friendly conversation. Horse had not put a lot of thought into this fact before that summer's morning. But after the realization hit him, he could not ever let it go. Not completely. Try as he might, he did not seem able to imagine a reason for Goose's incapability of flight. At least, not a logical one. Horse did not confront Goose with this information though- as Horse was, and had always been, a polite horse. And the question was not his to ask. Still though, Horse had noticed. He had not been able to unnotice it quite to his satisfaction yet, when he was sauntering around the field a few weeks later. Little did Horse know though, Goose was having similar thoughts of his own. Goose had seen quite a lot of horses in his day. And had always thought them large, majestical creatures. Horse, however, did not look like Goose remembered horses to look. First of all, Horse was quite a lot smaller than the horses he grew up with. Goose had speculated this to be largely because of his own increase in size, but that would hardly account for the shear difference between memory and reality. Unless, of course, Goose had turned into a giant some time before meeting Horse, and just not noticed. The second thing Goose was thinking about, was Horse's tendency to saunter around lazily instead of frantically spinning around and putting himself and others in quite imminent danger. This too was highly unlike any of the horses Goose had seen before. Not to say he didn't enjoy a little quiet, but it certainly put a dent in the goose's expectations of the world. Goose too carried his questions with him for just a few days too long, afraid to ask them. As for Goose and Horse, as for all gentlemen (be it man or animal) of the world, the fear of being rude far outshone the fear of living without answers. After all, restraint is what separates the civil, from the frank. It was Horse who's charade faltered first. He had been resisting the urge to ask for too long. Damn civility, damn restraint, he needed to know the answer and he needed it now. “Tell me, mister Goose,” he started, suddenly (and to the joy of countless flies) breaking a silence many weeks in the making. “You claim, and look, to be a goose. Still I have yet to see you fly away from this place and towards a better future, like so many of your kin seem to do.” He looked at the gray creature, his expression a mixture of joy and shame. Though it is tough to read the expression on a horse's face, so this detail managed to slip right past the goose. Whom returned the question promptly with one of his own. Talking over a muffled buzzing, yet sarcastic, answer the flies had already started providing. “I shall tell you why I am unlike my kin, mister Horse, if you will tell me why you are so unlike yours. It seems a fair deal.” Goose made sure to have his answer sound as nice as possible, without offending, or attacking his new friend. Whom he had started calling friend the second he knew the Horse was interested in his life too (not that many seconds ago). The horse grinned and began to speak, slowly and with merit: “I am indeed not like my kin, and never have been. My mother was a strong mare, resilient and fast. My father was a work horse, bred for power and courage. I was to be a horse fit for a king, instead I turned out to be rather more fit for kid's birthday parties than kings. Provided the king spoken off is not of child's size and weight. I am not smart or fast or strong, but I am still alive, and that seems to be what counts these days.” Horse paused and looked at Goose, the weight of a thousand world's seemed lifted from his chest. This was something he had not shared in a long, long time. Horse felt much better about himself, and his life, when Goose began to speak. “The man who took me here, the farmer. He acquired me on a marked. I was for sale to be slaughtered, when he saw me and bought me. I had been fearing for my life since I was a wee little chick, and that day was no different. The farmer did not kill me however. Nor did he eat me, for that matter. He took something much more valuable to me than my life, my flight, and threw me in here with you.” A silence filled the field, not even violated by the song of the flies. A silence lasting several seconds, or several years, depending on who you'd ask. Before the Goose continued: “and it was the best thing that ever happened to me.” Goose smiled, though Horse would not know, as geese lacked the lips to actually show they smiled, and continued a little more sheepishly; “I was lucky to find a friend, in these twilight days of my life.” Horse too smiled, and replied happily: “So was I, my friend, so was I.”
< Message edited by mistermafio -- 10/29/2011 7:20:47 >
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