This is the story of a little girl. She knew she was a girl, but no one seemed to believe her. Well. Her best friend believed her...
by Edeyn Hannah Blackeney
-- a title that DOES have only one word, is safe for everyone to read.
Being a girl didn't mean you had to be interested in tea parties and dollies and makeup and dresses. Being a girl was just... being a girl. The best part about being a girl? NOT being a boy. Of course.
So she didn't insist that she was a girl to her family, because they all insisted that she was a boy. She would just smile and nod and go on about her business, ignoring their lack of ability to perceive reality. What can you do but humour those that are unable to think? Poor dears.
When she was only 6 years old, she and her best friend told one of her cousins, just over 2 years older than her. The cousin was able to see the little girl, because she was intelligent and wise and nice enough to listen. So then there were three of them that knew, and they would sometimes play the girly games, even though all three were actually kind of tomboyish.
One night, when all three were sleeping over at the cousin's house, they all played dress-up in the party dresses and church going frocks that the cousin had in the back of her closet and tried not to think about most of the time. The little girl was given a lacy, white dress with a pretty blue sash and matching hair ribbons. It was the most feminine of the dresses, but she happily tried it on anyway. Then, thinking about how silly her family was in their thinking of her she exclaimed, "Look! It has a blue sash! Blue is for boys!"
All three of the girls burst into fits of giggles.
They enjoyed times like this now and then, but the three of them were close friends and swore never to abandon each other. A couple of years later, the cousin and her family had to move away, but they knew she wouldn't be gone forever... so the little girl and her best friend played as before, just with one fewer.
One day, one of the little boys in the neighbourhood talked his granddad into building him the most wonderful of treehouses. It was in 4 different trees, and they were connected by slat and rope bridges. It had gables and paneling and it even had a railing and a porch! It was the greatest treehouse anyone had ever seen! Even the county newspaper showed up to take pictures and sing praises of the wonderfulness of the treehouse.
The little boy and his best friends proudly climbed up the rope ladder and pulled it up after them. Then they stood on the porch and looked at all the children in the neighbourhood, as a king and his advisers surveying the peasants of the land.
They held a long roll of white cotton between them and with a SNAP! they unfurled the banner they had painstakingly drawn the night before.
As it fell open to reveal the cryptic message, the king affixed the little girl (that everyone still insisted was a boy) with a haughty glare and pointed directly at her.
"And this goes for YOU, too!" he proclaimed, as the words became clear, only slightly marred by the rolling:
Every eye in the courtyard was upon her as she failed to react the way they all felt she should. After all, no boy would take such an insult lightly!
She doubled over with laughter.
She laughed so hard her best friend had to pound her on the back until she could breathe again.
The two walked off arm in arm with several of the other girls in the kingdom -- for this neighborhood had truly become such -- and went to see a man about some lumber. The little girl's Gran'fa was a twinkle-eyed Irishman, and he owned the local lumbermill. With but a single pout and a bit of explanation -- including admitting to Gran'fa that she was, indeed, a girl -- they were gifted with all the top quality lumber they wanted, he also gifted his granddaughter all the assistance of all the workers of the mill.
That afternoon, the little girl and her best friend revisited the castle with the flying buttresses and the bridges and the gables... with a tape measure. They were able to get what they came for before the king and his men even understood they were being raided, and then the girls were away. Spirited by their own swift feet and gales of laughter.
By sunset the next day, the castle of the king was overshadowed -- nay... downright put to SHAME -- by the castle of the Two Queens.
The little girl and her best friend unveiled a fortress to end all fortresses, built mostly by the hands of the laborers that toiled in the mill for the little girl's Gran'fa. It stood proudly amongst the leaves, almost organic in the way it twisted about, a spiraling staircase around the trunk of the main tree in such a way that it did the tree no harm.
The Castle of the Two Queens stands today, still... a quarter century later, a full eight inches higher than the King's Castle (which also still stands). It winds about eleven trees and has escape poles, safety chutes, and is all but impenetrable. It has been many colors over the years as it has passed through hands to new Queens, but the one feature that has never changed -- though it has been meticulously replaced with exact copies -- is the flag flying above the main tree, proudly stating:
Comments
Edeyn, A really cute story
Edeyn,
A really cute story and the moral of the story seems to me to be "pay back is a "B***h. That little girl really had an excellent head on her shoulders and knew how to use it.
J-Lynn
Thank you
So I did. This is what came of it. I saved the chatlog, and looked at the timestamps, from her request to the final line was only about 7 minutes. Not bad for off the cuff, huh?
Edeyn Hannah Blackeney
Such a cute and worderfull story....
This is such a cute and wonderful story, presented in such a petite yet unbreakable shell. This story has just made it to my personal list of GREAT stories, and I'm sure it will end up at the same place for many others.
-HuGgLeS-
-P
Huh?
Thanks again!
Edeyn Hannah Blackeney
How to describe this story....
When recommending this story to a friend, I was trying to think of a good but short. and poignant way to describe this story.... And what I came up with is SHOES!
This story, is short, poignant, and of the same timeless/classic quality of SHOES by Heather Rose.
That, I fear, is the best praise I could EVER give for any story.
-HuGgLeS-
-P
Whoa. High Praise Indeed!
Edeyn Hannah Blackeney
Sweet modern FairyTale
This had a decidedly fairytale like feel for me. Maybe it was the bastions of childhood that called to me. Tree houses, and castles in the sky, Oh My!
Great tale Edeyn!
hugs!
grover
I hadn't thought about that
Edeyn Hannah Blackeney
treehouses are fun
A really fun story. Reminds me of the old song "Anything You Can Do I Can Do Better"...
We can bemoan the fact that boys and girls are not more universally egalitarian in
who they choose to play with, but the whole "cootie issue" is pretty compelling.
I love the description of the structures themselves, how elaborate they were.
As a kid, a lot of the fun of treehouses seemed to be in making them
better & better. But a spiral staircase? Never thought of that...
[A plug here, if I may: This inspired me to dust off my own MOTHER OF ALL TREEHOUSES
story (Danny Robinson's Treehouse)and post it over on FICTIONEER.
It's short, a sort of a cautionary tale about megalomania...]
We now return to our regular programming:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qTl00248Z48
.
I'll bet you can guess
When the cousin moved back at the end of the summer, she loved the treehouse, by the way... Heh. I'm still close to the cousin, and she's still one of my favourite people.
Edeyn Hannah Blackeney
Shocked
Edyen, if this is just a few minutes then I really want to see what you could do with hours...
and I have a fairly decent idea who the little girl is and if I am correct she is still a wonderful and bright person today.
The answers to all of life's questions can be found in the face of a true friend
The answers to all of life's questions can be found in the face of a true friend
seven minutes, not bad
I'll admit I steered clear of this. Too much cutesy I figured. But a comment spurred me to take a look and ya know... never had a treehouse. But the little tow haired kid used to wander off alone down the hill into the bush. Wandered along the creek and cleared the blocks and watched and listened to the water bubble as it flowed more free and the light danced in the tiny waterfalls and he would sit on the banks of the waterhole on that dark sand and wonder about the whole thing.(Ever had a yabby suck your toes?)You know the water and the things in it, the trees the sand and the sky and what it all was or maybe meant and who was he anyway. Of course a few years later he started to wonder about things like he and she, but that was after. When school started and there were more people and you had to be... something. And his hair darkened up and well maybe 'he' wasn't, ya know. Would have liked a treehouse I think.
Lovely story Edeyn.
Kristina
If you can't join 'em...
...beat 'em at their own game!
OK, so it's a subversion of the more familiar phrase, but works especially well for this tale.
And if you ever revisit that neighbourhood, and the tree houses are still standing, see if you can take a few photos of them :)
--Ben
As the right side of the brain controls the left side of the body, then only left-handers are in their right mind!
"no boys allowed!"
Cute.
Thanks to random solos, I found this one, and just had to say how much I liked it.