Spring
Sprig
By: Hannah
Williams
With the stealth
of a wraith, the figure crept through the vines towards the dozing tiger. The leaves of the ivy whispered to one another
in anxious tones as they watched the stalker’s process.
The tiger was a
beast of colossal size, and his black stripes slashed across his coat like
scars. His side rose and fell heavily.
The hunter was
getting closer.
Disturbed by a
distant dream, the flaming orange tiger shifted.
The figure froze.
But the tiger
slept on.
Inching forward,
the figure coiled itself for a spring.
It leapt—!
"GROAAWWLLL!”
the tiger roared out in shock as a small body pounced on his stomach. With mind-blowing quickness, he doubled his
body up, grabbling with his claws for his attacker.
But his paws
touched nothing but air.
A peal of childish
laughter filled the morning, chiming in with the purr of the vines and the soft
chuckles of the waterfalls. The great
tiger heaved himself to his feet, no longer afraid, but decidingly put out and
irritated. “Dragons eat you, Spring
Sprig!” he roared, saliva flicking off his razor-edged fangs. “Dragons devour you a thousand times!”
“Make it a
thousand and a half, Lord Bright as Fire!
Oh do!” a child’s voice giggled.
To this response,
the tiger could do nothing but growl.
“Where are you?”
he snarled. “Where did you go?”
“I’m up here,
silly kitty.” A small figure dropped
from the top of a nearby wall onto the ground and waved.
It was a
girl.
She was very small,
and looked only about ten. She wore
short pants that flared out just below the knees, and her shirt sleeves shaped
like flower petals over her shoulders.
The material of her attire was silk green. A tangle of dark brown curls sprouted from
her head, generally falling behind her back, though a few rebellious ringlets
sprung out over her forehead and around her cheeks. Many flowers were woven in her cork-screw
hair. Her pink lips were curved up in a
joyful smile that bespoke of her childish innocence. She giggled again, not in the least
intimidated by the towering tiger who glared at her so darkly. “I scared you,” she said in the
self-satisfied way that comes so naturally to children. “I scared you really bad.”
“You did,” the
tiger admitted. “Don’t ever do it
again.”
She stuck her
lower lip out in a pout. “That’s no
fun. Really it’s not.”
He just growled.
Ignoring his deep
rumble, she half walked, half danced, over to a long stone table that stretched
the entire length of the roofless hall that was draped in green vines. Her bare feet made smudge prints on the
golden tile beneath the leaves. As soon
as she reached the table, she jumped up on top of it and began to trot along
its length, having no eyes for the hundred stone princes who sat in chairs on
the table’s either side.
“Where is your frog,
child?” the tiger snapped.
"The giant
one that I ride?”
“Do you have any
others?”
“Indeedy. I lo-ve all froggie woggies.” She smiled at
him, scrunching her eyes up tight.
“Where is it?”
“Ferdinand is outside the borders of your
realm. He wouldn’t come in for the life
of me. He’s scared of you, he is. Scared stiff.”
The gigantic cat
licked his whiskers. “As you should be.”
“Fiddlesticks,”
she laughed.
With deft agility, Sprig skipped along the
table, going over and around tall platters of glistening fruit. She kicked one apple off the top and bounced
it from ankle to ankle, as she continued the stretch of the stone table. Whether she noticed that one side of the
table was torn apart and crumbling, she did not say. “You missed me, didn’t you?” She kicked the apple high into the air,
leaned forward, and caught it between her teeth. One hand popped up to remove it from her
mouth, part of it tearing away with a delectable crunch. “Say you did, Ragniprava!”
With a ferocious
roar, the tiger leapt forward, put his front paws on the table, and reared up
to eye level with her. “Do not call me
by my name! I forbid it!”
Even though the
strength of his roar blew her hair back, Sprig didn’t bat an eye. “By the Flowing Gold, are you missing an
eye?”
Deflated, the
tiger sank back on his haunches. “Yes,”
he grumbled. “I had two guests
recently. One was a prince.”
Sprig’s eyes
widened, and in a moment she was dashing back along the table, examining the
face of each stone prince, while exclaiming, “I didn’t see a new one. What happened?”
“Sit still for a
moment, and I’ll tell you,” the Lord Bright as Fire ordered.
She clapped a hand
over her mouth and giggled. “I can’t be
still. You know that.” To prove it, she suddenly kart-wheeled across
the table—not once, but down the entire length!
Ragniprava gasped
and covered his eye with a paw.
Another spiel of
laughter sounded right in front of him, and he looked up to see Sprig before
him, hands on her hips. Hesitantly,
afraid of what he might see, he peeked behind her.
But all the towers
of fruit remained untouched.
She sat down at
the edge of the table, her hands touching the stone in between her upright
knees, like a frog. “If I bounce just a
little, I might be able to hear your story.”
Glaring at her,
the tiger lord stalked away. He
began. “I was patrolling my demesne for
I had felt a sudden presence. You know
my skill in stealth, and I approached the trespasser without alerting him. It was some dark-skinned fellow; one who, I
thought, was out looking for my skin. I
surprised him—ha! He scrambled up a
tree, and I in my dignity…”
“In all your
dignity,” Sprig repeated.
“…did not go up
after him. We exchanged a few terse
words, but then I felt the presence of another.
One of much greater power than the terrified mortal I’d trapped. Along came a cat. A blind cat of all things. He spoke to me; he DARED address me as
Ragniprava!”
“I like him already,”
the girl giggled, even though she received a fiery scowl.
“So I chased him
up a tree, and then low and behold—
“POOF!” Sprig
shouted, flinging her arms wide. “He
turned into a big fat hippo, and he broke the branch, and he fell on top of
your head, and you landed on a stick, and gouged out your eye! End of story.”
The look
Ragniprava gave her could have withered a full-grown tree. “Do you want me to continue or not?”
“Am I stopping
you?” she grinned.
The tiger groaned,
a long-suffering groan, before continuing.
“He turned into a man.”
“Ooooh.”
“SHHH! He turned into a man clad in scarlet with
patches over his eyes. And there they
were: two men in two different trees.
Well, after some dialogue, we came to an agreement. They would amuse me, and I would allow them
to come attend my feast.”
“Sooo generous.”
“SHHH! The scarlet one assured me he could entertain
me for he was Sir Eanrin, Chief Poet of Rudiobus.”
“Ah-HA!” Sprig
cried. “I know him! I’ve seen him before. He’s the greatest poet of all time.”
“Greatest poet of
all time or not, he bored me to death.
Ugh. What an awful lovey-wuvy
song he composed. I had just made up my
mind to eat them both, when the mortal stole the original tune and put comical
words to it! Oh! It was beautiful!” The tiger laughed, and threw back his shaggy
head. The laugh would have scared anyone
but Spring Sprig. She laughed right
along with him.
When the tiger
stopped laughing, he resumed. “The look on the Chief Poet’s face was
priceless. Losing my eye and the rest of
the following ordeal was almost worth it for that insulted, and disgusted, and
shocked look on his face. Anyway, I
switched to my man form, just like this.” As he spoke, the tiger was no longer
there, but instead Sprig looked at a huge man with glossy ebony skin, but the
next moment he was back to being a tiger.
“So I led them to my home.” He paused proudly. “And invited them to dine. Sometime through the meal, I realized that
the mortal man was keeping a secret from me, and I used my heart-probing skills
to discover the truth. He was a PRINCE!”
Sprig knew what
this meant. She glanced back at the
hundred stone princes. They were the
tiger’s collection. Every prince who
came to Ragniprava’s realm was turned into stone by the tiger to sit at the
long table. Not a practice Sprig
approved of, but she said nothing.
“I went to attack
him in tiger form, and then that cocky cat, that miserable man, that petty
poet, hit me like one of the Fallen, and we rolled off the table onto the
ground! The audacity! The boldness! The—
“Persnickityness!”
Sprig finished.
The tiger stopped
in his pacing (for he had begun to pace) and frowned at her, but his rising
anger cooled. “Clearly, there was only
one thing to be done. I split myself.”
Sprig’s eyes
widened. Even she had no smart remark to
this.
Faerie lords and ladies
had three lives. They could save them…or
they could use them all at once. By
splitting himself, Ragniprava had used two of his lives.
Her eyes darted
around. Here was one. Where was the other? She stopped bouncing and leaned in to listen.
“My first me leapt
forward to get the prince, while my other me gave pursuit to the crimson-clad
poet. The prince had hidden underneath the
table, and switching back into man form, I began to hack through the stone with
my mighty sword. Eventually he came out,
and he tried to stop me with a flimsy little beanpole. My sword crashed down on it and…” He halted and growled furiously, his tail
lashing at a hundred miles per hour.
Sprig
fidgeted. “Yes?”
“My sword
broke. Broke! I morphed to tiger form, and attacked
him. But then that me was suddenly
killed.”
“Oh!” Sprig
squeaked, at this unexpected conclusion.
Then after a long pause she asked, “By whom?”
“How should I
know? I wasn’t there to see. Meanwhile,
the other me, this me, chased the cat-man down the dark corridors of my
realm. He dared to face me with a knife,
and I sprang for the kill. But he ducked
and rolled under me, and the next thing I knew, as I pivoted around in
surprise, he plunged the knife right into my eye!” The Lord Bright as Fire threw back his head
and released an earth-shattering roar of rage.
He looked down to
see Sprig staring at him big eyed.
“And?”
“The poet got
away. I was too angry to chase him. Now what do you think?”
For a moment,
Sprig froze, aware of her precarious position.
Ragniprava
glowered at her. She’d been rooting for
the little cat. The thought irked
him. If she should say so out loud, he
knew he would not be able to contain his wrath.
“I think…” she
hesitated. Then she threw back her own
head, flowers flying, and laughed. “I
think you look like a big ugly pirate!
Yo ho matey, and ninety-eight bottles of ale!”
The waterfalls’
and vines’ laughter stopped abruptly, and the forest’s humming stopped, leaving
only the bell-like laughter of the child in green, as they waited in suspense
to see the tiger’s reaction.
Ragniprava stared
at her for a moment, his golden eyes narrowing.
But as she continued to giggle, the ferocious expression on his face
slowly melted away, and for a moment there was even a hint of a smile on his
sharp fangs. He shook his head. “Oh…You are impossible,” he huffed. “You can’t take anything serious.”
“I can’t. I tried, and it was incredibly boring!” Sprig
gasped, her smile stretching from button ear to button ear, dimples in her
cheeks. Without a sign of warning, she
leapt to her feet, and swooped down in an exaggerated bow. “I fear now, Lord Bright as Fire, that I must
leave your exulted demesne and hop on my way.
Ferdinand gets awful lonely if I leave him too long.”
“Yes, yes, be off,
I wish you’d never come,” he growled.
Grinning, Spring
Sprig bobbed down and kissed the tiger right on his nose.
A shocked look
swept over his face, followed by something almost like bashful pleasure. “Oh, go away,” he commanded gruffly.
Laughing gaily,
she somersaulted over him, tumbling down in the lush carpet of vines. “Good-bye, good-bye!” she called starting to
run backwards down the hall, and blowing the Faerie lord kisses. “I’m off to see the Mher King! There I’ll build a sandcastle! And then I shall drop by and visit the Lord
Who Walks Before the Night! And then
I’ll go treasure hunting! And
frog-catching!” She had vanished now,
and her voice became far and distant.
Somewhere, a long ways off, there was a joyful ribbet of a frog.
Silence.
Ragniprava perked
his ears, straining to catch one last sound.
Her cheery voice
came far away, caught on the paths of the wind.
“And if I see Eanrin of Rudiobus, I’ll tell him you said hi!”
“Oh, go away, and
good riddance,” he grumbled to himself.
Another laugh, and
then all was quiet.
She had passed
from his demesne to another.
The tiger sat
alone in his roofless hall. The stone
princes were poor company, and the vines and waterfalls made boring chatter.
His sides inflated
out as he heaved a great sigh.
Already he missed
Spring Sprig, the little girl in green who rode on a frog, bringing joy and
laughter wherever she danced.
10 comments:
What a wonderful story Hannah!!! I LOVED it! So very very good!
Haha! That was great! :D
What a great character!! :) I loved the interactions between her and the Lord Bright as Fire... So clever and such a neat look into a rather "unlovable" character! Nicely done! :)
~Amber
Thank you, everyone, for your kind and encouraging comments on my story.
I had a lot of fun writing it. Spring Sprig was a character inspired by a description of an odd faerie during the last pages of "Heartless". From there my mind kind'of flew away. I found her very amusing, especially with how lightly she takes Lord Ragniprava, who of course hates to be taken lightly.
Thank you, Anne, for hosting this contest and for so graciously putting my illustration of "Spring Sprig" up on your blog as well.
And thank you judges for volunteering your time to analyze and critque our work!
I can't wait to see the rest of the stories hereafter.
Clara, the title of your story has me much intrigued. I'll read it in the morning!
Loved it! :) Just out of curiosity...how many stories were submitted?
Okay, that was cool. Now I want to go find that part of the story and read it.
I love pairings of this sort, and this was beautifully handled! Brava, Hannah!
@Taisia: There were 24 total stories and poems submitted for this contest. And they were all fabulous! Looking forward to sharing the rest of them with all of you. :)
Fantastic! I absolutely adore this story. You did a brilliant job, Hannah!! I LOVED IT!!
I can't wait to read the other stories!
This is a wonderful story, Hannah Williams! Spring Sprig is adorable. :)
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