Eva Demoore
It was raining all day. So Rob sat near
the window. He didn’t know what to do.
So he looked round the room. But
he saw only his usual things. There were two chairs, two armchairs, a bed, his
table, a wardrobe, a mirror and shelves with his favorite books. The backpack
was under his bed. And his fluffy funny dog was sitting near him.
Suddenly Rob had an idea. He wanted to play hide and seek. He knew that his dog liked to play hide and seek too. So he began to count. The dog ran to the kitchen to hide. It was her favorite place. Rob knew that he could find his pet under the old armchair. He went to the kitchen. But this time he couldn’t find the dog under the armchair. Rob looked round the kitchen. But he didn’t see the dog. Rob looked behind the sofa and under the table. Then he opened the fridge. But there was no dog there either.
Rob sat down on the chair and began to think. He couldn’t understand where his dog could be. Suddenly he saw a very strange thing. A wet bird flew up to the kitchen window and leaned against the glass.
Rob wanted to watch the bird. But suddenly
huge dark clouds covered the sky and he saw a lightening which seemed so enormous and scary that the
boy felt kind of fear.
For the first time in his life he thought
that nature could be absolutely mad. Rob approached the window and opened it. The bird flew inside the kitchen.
It was a raven.
Rob forgot about the game. He looked at
the raven with interest. He was surprised where it flew from.
It wasn’t easy. The bird flew to the
fridge. The fridge was very big and Rob put a chair to it. But when he was on
the chair the raven suddenly flew to the sofa. Then he flew to the cupboard.
Rob
pulled a chair to the cupboard. But the raven flew again. This time he sat down
on the floor.
Rob thought a little more about how to
catch the bird. But then he thought that it was silly of him to try to dry the wild
bird. He felt that the raven didn’t like it.
The boy was impressed. He thought that all birds and animals liked cakes. Even his dog ate it with pleasure. Here he thought about his pet again, but only for a moment. He didn’t want to go to the other rooms.
He didn’t want to leave his mysterious
guest alone. So Rob stayed in the
kitchen. He thought that he could treat the raven with something different. So
he took brown bread and put some shortcuts to the plate. But the raven ignored
the plate completely.
“Thank you, Rob! You are a good boy!” the
raven said suddenly n a man’s voice.
At first Rob couldn’t speak. The boy was
shocked. He felt terrible. How did the raven know his name. The boy had other
questions too. But the only thing he was able to utter was “Why didn’t you eat
the cake?”
The
raven was in no hurry to answer. It bent its head and stared at the boy
amazingly. “Birds eat only simple food.”
Rob looked at the raven with surprise. “But I saw many times how birds ate different
sweet things: cookies, biscuits and cakes.”
“Only city birds eat all food which people
eat. But we, free forest and field birds, eat only food of nature.”
“You should use only healthy food,”
remembered Rob his mum’s words. Then he said to himself ”I thought cakes are
healthy food.”
The raven looked at the boy attentively and
said “Cakes are for pleasure. So we
never eat them. Only stupid creatures eat food for pleasure.”
Rob thought it all over and said “I agree
with you.” And then he said to himself indignantly ”I am talking to a bird! Am
I getting mad?”
“No
you are not,” answered his inner question the raven.
“How
do you know what am I thinking about?“ demanded Rob.
The raven said nothing.
”You can read people’s minds,” guessed the
boy.
“Could you please clarify that?” asked Rob politely.”It sounds like you have some important message for me.”
“I
do, I do,” simply said the raven.
“It’s
kind of strange to hear you talking in a man’s voice,” confessed Rob.
“Not a big deal… You do talk with your dog
every day.”
“That’s different,” said Rob. “Everyone
talks with dogs. They are smart.”
“Nobody
would believe me, if I said I communicated with a raven,” he went on in a
minute.
“I can understand it,” sighed the raven.”People
consider birds stupid.”
“Some
of us do,” agreed Rob. He felt uncomfortable at the mentioning of this fact. But
to Rob’s relief the raven changed the theme and began to talk about wild life.
“Please do me a favour,” asked Rob when
the raven had told at least a hundred of unbelievable stories about life in
wild nature. “Describe in particulars those mysterious cases which you have
just mentioned and I’ll write down the details.”
“No way,” said the raven. “You are not
supposed to know the secrets of how to turn into somebody else.”It looked Rob
over and continued categorically. “I shouldn’t even have mentioned that to
you.”
“I am here only to give you a message,” he
said in a little while in a more friendly tone.”You got it and I should fly
back. Now you know that the future depends only on you and your appropriate
interaction with us – wild life.”
“I promise I’ll treat you all with
respect,” said Rob ardently. “Can you stay a little bit longer?” he asked with
hope removing the plate with crumbs from the sight. “I have so many questions to ask.”
“We have discussed the major matter,” softly
reminded the raven. “What else do you want to know?”
“I can’t believe you are a regular bird,” the
boy confessed.
“I am not,” admitted the raven. “The
majority of ravens are ancient spirits who decided to stay on the Earth
forever. For so we love our planet that we desire to serve it faithfully and
preserve its wild nature in harmony.”
“You sound like a great spirit,” said Rob.
“I mean one of the greatest spirits.”
“I wish you could hear them!” said the
raven. “I mean the ones who got transformed,” he added. “Hope one day you will understand all birds when
you hear their talk.”
“You may be sure I’ll listen to ravens and
other birds from now on,” said Rob with determination.
“Next time I see a raven, I’ll remember you
and your words,” he smiled. “But do tell me how it happened that you started
talking like a man.”
“I was a man,” suddenly declared the raven.
“A shaman from a faraway island.”
“A shaman who is under a spell,” guessed the
boy. The raven didn’t hurry to reveal
the whole story.
”You were turned into a raven by an evil wizard
who wanted your power?” continued his contemplations Rob.
“No,” was the answer. “I am just an
enchanted raven.”
“An enchanted raven?” inquired the boy.”That’s
sounds amazing.”
The raven listened to the boy patiently. “So
you deny that you were turned into a bird?” asked Rob with curiosity.
The
raven burst out laughing. “Nobody can transform a real shaman without his own
will. And it was my personal choice to become a raven.”
“Your sacrifice you mean?” asked Rob cautiously.
“Not a sacrifice but a decision,” corrected
the raven.”A promise to the wild nature to stay in that shape until the day of
great changes.”
“But why? Why did you take that decision?”
the boy repeated several times. “What made you transform into a bird?” he
insisted. “It’s so nice to be a person.”
“For centuries we lived happily on our
faraway island until one day white men sailed there,” started the raven after
he had descended to the armchair opposite the boy.
“You mean Europeans?’ asked Rob. But the
raven didn’t answer his question. “What did they do?” he posed another one.
“Started building a town,” Rob heard in a
while.
“It isn’t appropriate to do it without the
permission of wild life,” said the raven indignantly.
Rob thought it all over and said “I agree
with you, great shaman.”
“I don’t have a right to be called great
shaman. I guess I was an ordinary one.
May be, even a primitive one. Real but not shrewd enough, for I let them built
the town. I didn’t save the wild life on the island,” said the raven with a
sigh. “So call me just an enchanted raven,” he asked.
“What happened to your people?” asked Rob
with interest.
“I transformed everybody into birds,”
informed the shaman.
“They couldn’t stay on the island
otherwise,” he explained.
“The
white men captured our lands completely.”
“They destroyed your civilization?” inquired
Rob.
“It was just a settlement,” whispered the
raven. “A peaceful settlement surrounded by wild life.”
“But why do you call yourself enchanted?”
demanded Rob.
“Because I am enchanted,” answered the
raven. “Enchanted by life itself. Enchanted by nature,” declared the raven. “I
admire this world with its sunrises and dawns, its forests and mountains, various
creatures inhabiting it, the stars in the sky and magnificent oceans, colourful
leaves and purity of numerous springs.”
“Me, too!” informed Rob.
“So protect it!” reminded the raven one
more time.”Keep in mind the future of the planet depends on you.”
“I’ll do my best,” promised the boy.
“We, too. We do our best,” informed the
raven. “Now that we are birds.”
“Will you stay birds forever?” asked Rob
with regret.
“When
everyone lives in the harmony with the nature some of us may turn into people
again,” said the raven.
“How about you personally?” demanded the
boy.
“It’s
not so significant if I become the shaman again or stay forever a raven. What
matters is EVERYONE SHOULD LIVE IN HARMONY WITH THE NATURE, RESPECTING WILD
LIFE AND LOVING OUR GREAT MOTHER – THE EARTH,” he emphasized.
Rob
wanted to ask about the place where the raven lived. But the raven flew up to
the window-sill again, this time with a resolution to leave the kitchen.
“Please, tell this message to everybody,” he
asked looking straight into Rob’s eyes and added in a while, “And open the
window. It’s time to fly away.”
Rob looked out of the window. “It is still
raining,” he began doubtfully.
And at once he heard a familiar barking. “Where
have you been all this time?” Rob addressed his pet. The dog only waved her
tail happily.
“I’ve been looking for you everywhere,”
rebuked her Rob. You missed the whole story.”
“Did I really?” yarned the pet.
“You did,” said Rob. And then he told his
pet about the raven.
“You could have invited me,” rebuked him the
dog.
“I couldn’t find you.”
The
dog expressed her doubt.
“I really looked through all the rooms,”
assured her
Rob.
“But for the hall,” the dog sounded hurt.
“You don’t like the hall. You had never
stayed there or hid there when we had played before.” explained Rob. “I know it
very well. So there was no reason to go there.”
“There was one,” interrupted him the dog. “The
hall smelt of a neighbour’s cat today. I
wanted to teach her good manners.”
“Did
you manage it?” asked Rob with curiosity. He knew very well about the unfriendly
relationship of his pet with the neighbour’s cat who always tried to peep into
the hall. Sometimes she even managed to penetrate the hall. And from time to
time even to greet Rob’s family inside their own flat, which was very insulting
for the dog.
“A bit of scratching is always useful when we deal with cats,” the dog explained with enthusiasm. “I expect you can see it one day,” the dog continued in a minute terribly proud of her plan.
“And I expect you to treat her friendly,”
said Rob with determination. “The dog stared at the master in surprise. “You
want me to let that neighbour cat to penetrate our apartment…”she uttered
in disbelief.
“You have spent days trying to give a bit of
scratching to that little neighbour
animal.”
The dog slightly growled at the mentioning
of her
enemy. “But let’s be honest,” Rob continued. “It’s you who gets a bit of
scratching mostly,” he reminded.
“Not a big deal,” interrupted him the pet. “You
can’t guess how good I am at scratching now…Much better than her,” estimated
the dog her own
achievements. “So one day she even won’t dare to think about her evil plans
concerning our apartment.” Rob listened attentively.
“She used to come to us without invitation,”
the dog proceeded.
“Not a big deal,” said Rob. “All neighbours
visit each other sometimes.”
“Not that often,” said the dog and looked at
Rob suspiciously. “It isn’t the reason for treating each other
badly,” the boy said patiently.
“You
try to reconcile us?” the dog asked indignantly in a moment.
“Kind of,” confessed the boy.
The dog contemplated the matter a minute and
figured out that the master was concerned about her own safety. She
couldn’t imagine any other reasons for the sudden loyalty of the master to that
terrible little monster who regularly risked to purr in somebody else’s
apartment or flat as Rob said.
“In most cases it was me who got a bit of
scratching,” admitted the dog. “But I promise I’ll teach her a lesson. I can
manage it now.”
“How about leaving her alone?” asked the
boy.
“That is let her wave her ugly tail in front
of all of us in the middle of our own living room?” inquired the dog.
“That is exactly what it is for everybody,“ agreed
the dog. “Ordinary. Very ordinary. Extremely ordinary,” she repeated with
enthusiasm. “But she is so terribly proud of it,” the dog growled with
indignation.
“Cats
are terribly proud of themselves in general,” Rob confirmed.
“We don’t talk about in general,” his pet
corrected him. “And talking in particular I briefly described my intentions
mentioning her ugly tail. That’s my plan for the nearest future.” She barked
with relief.
“Remember about your last week’s experience,”
gently reminded Rob.
“I do, I do,” nodded the dog. But she felt by
the boy’s voice that he didn’t approve her idea about the ugly tail. At least she didn’t notice
his smile.
“Currently the situation has changed,” the
dog went on n a feeble attempt to persuade her master to support her regular activity against the inquisitively curious
neighbour’s pet.
“The situation has changed indeed,” admitted
Rob. “I guess great changes are ahead all of us!” he declared.
The dog got a little scared “What do you
mean?”
“Don’t worry!” calmed her the boy. “These are
positive joyful happy changes.” And then he explained to his dog the necessity
of agreeable neighbourhood and the whole message of the enchanted raven.
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