Read How to Save Your Tail Online
Authors: Mary Hanson
“Y
uck,” groaned Muffin. “How do you get snout-warts, Mack?”
“By being mean and evil,” said Bob, looking Brutus right in the eye.
“Elsie should have eaten those rats while she had the chance,” said Brutus. “Like when they were telling stories.”
Bob skittered under a lacy linen napkin and shivered.
“Did the rats ever see the warthog again?” asked Muffin.
“Yes,” said Bob, peeking out from beneath the napkin. “They built his chimney.”
“Did the warthog ever get married?”
“As a matter of fact, he married the three rats’ niece—my grandma Lois—but that’s another story.”
“Wow!” said Muffin. “I want to hear all about it!”
“I don’t think so,” said Brutus, preparing to pounce. “We had a deal, remember, Muffin? Stories first—we did that part—and now … a crunchy, chewy bedtime snack.”
The rat piped up from under the napkin. “You did have a deal,” he said. “But you know, this
particular story is
about
a deal. Too bad you won’t get to hear it.”
“Please, Brutus?” purred Muffin. “Pretty please with tuna on top?”
Brutus melted. “This better be good, Mack,” he said. His stomach growled. “Are there any more cookies?”
So the rat gave each cat another cookie and some fresh milk and told them about Mustard, Squeak, and Bubbles’s niece, Lois, who knew what it meant to be hungry, how to work hard (sort of), and the joys of raising a family.
O
nce upon a time, after her mother ran away with the circus, my stunning but starving grandma Lois wandered the countryside looking for a job. By and by, she came to a castle with a sign on the door:
Now, Lois did not know whether she could spin a roomful of straw into gold, but she figured it was worth a try.
She knocked on the castle door, introduced herself to the housekeeper, and followed her to a
big room stuffed with straw. A spinning wheel topped by a golden spindle stood near the fireplace.
“You must spin all of this into gold by tomorrow’s dawn,” said the housekeeper, “or die a grisly death.”
“Land sakes,” worried Lois, once she was alone. “The sign didn’t say anything about death. And, and … this room is soooooo big!” She tried the door, but it was locked. She looked for a window, but the straw reached all the way to the ceiling. She thought about tunneling through the straw to find a mousehole, but she just didn’t have the strength. At last, she decided there was nothing for it but to begin spinning.
Lois trod the wheel and drew a thread that was fine, smooth, and handsome. But it was not gold. Worse yet, by midnight she had spun only one small skein.
“Oh, my pink nose and yellow teeth!” she cried. “I shall never spin the straw to gold by dawn and shall die a grisly death!” At this thought, she wept so bitterly that she didn’t notice the ugly little man who tumbled out of the fireplace.
“Hey!”
he shouted. “What’s with the racket?”
Lois squealed in surprise. “Who are you?” she asked, horrified by his dirty hair, long arms, and unruly tail.
“I’m the Castle Chimney Troll,” he said. “They call me Rumpelstiltskin. What’s the problem?” His red eyes squinted as if blinded by her stunning good looks.
Lois could not know he was just plain nearsighted.
“I said I could spin straw to gold so that I could become Queen, but I can’t spin it to gold at all, and if it’s not done by dawn I’m dead,” she said.
“Not to worry, goodness no,” said the Troll. “I will spin the gold. But in return, you must promise that, after you marry the King, you will give me your firstborn child.”
Lois had a good heart and did not want to give away her firstborn, but she realized that there would not be a firstborn if she was dead. So, being a practical creature, she said “Okay.”
The Troll set to work at once and the whirr of
the spinning wheel hummed Lois to sleep. When she woke, the first sunbeams sparkled through the window on piles and piles of spun gold. A note on the golden spindle read:
“Remember your promise. Signed, Troll.”
The housekeeper arrived a moment later. She clapped and chortled and pinched Lois’s whiskery cheek, which was rosy with relief. “It’s so lovely,” exclaimed the housekeeper, “not to have to plan another grisly death!” Then off she bustled to plan the wedding.
The King turned out to be a warthog, but when they kissed at the ceremony he changed into a frog.
Oh well
, thought Lois,
nobody’s perfect
.
In time, Lois gave birth, and joy filled the household. But that night, at the grand celebration, the Chimney Troll popped into the ballroom.
“It’s time to complete our bargain, Your Majesty,” he said. “You owe me your firstborn.”
Lois sobbed. The servants were distraught beyond words, and the Frog King was hopping mad.
But the Troll said, “A deal is a deal.”
And so, in the end, Lois, as true to her word as ever a rat was, gave him her firstborn.
The Troll was so delighted with his prize—and so nearsighted—that he still did not notice that Lois was a rat and that her firstborn was a litter of thirteen baby rats. He took the basket and headed for the chimney.
“But Mr. Troll,” said Lois, “a chimney is no place to raise a family.”
“Don’t be silly,” said the Troll. “I’ve got a country place under the bridge by Billy Goat Hill. We’ll be most comfortable there.” And
zip!
He was up the chimney and out into the wide world.
It was not until the Troll got home, warmed a bottle of milk, and lifted the blanket that he realized he had more babies than he had bargained for.
The babies woke up, and since they had a little
of their frog-dad in them, began croaking. And since the Troll had only two hands and the babies were always hungry, the croaking went on day and night. And since baby frog-rats are wiggly
and
hoppy, every time he tried to change one little diaper, the others wiggled or hopped away and the Troll was forever chasing them this way and that, under bridge and over hill.
In no time, the babies grew and each asserted its own individual personality. One slurped his food. Another never flushed the toilet. Another left half-eaten sardines under the Troll’s bed. One put half-eaten chicken pot pie inside his pillowcase. One stuck chewing gum in the Troll’s hair while he napped. One threw up in his slippers. One blew bubbles in pea soup. Another thought this so funny, she laughed till she snorted the soup out her snout. One repeated everything the Troll said. One burped
with her mouth open. Another chewed bugs with her mouth open. One even tied up the Troll with twine while another pulled out his long, gray whiskers, one at a time.
They all jumped on the beds and left muddy pawprints everywhere and played rock-and-roll music and chewed the Troll’s shoes and scurried around on the bridge late at night going “Trip trap, trip trap” and crawled into his underpants—while he was wearing them.
Finally, there came a day when the Troll decided he’d had one too many whiskers ripped from his face. He stuffed the rats in a sack and took them back to the castle.
The Troll knocked on the door, and the housekeeper showed him in. She took him to the throne room.
“I’ve brought your children back, Your Majesty,” the Troll said.
“How thoughtful,” said Lois, “but no, thanks. We have enough already.” Just then, eighty-two baby frog-rats tumbled through the throne room, playing leapfrog with muddy paws. “After all,” she reminded him, “a deal is a deal.”
And so the Troll had no choice but to throw the sack of babies over his hunched back, turn on his hairy heel, and shuffle out of the castle with his tail between his legs.
He was so frazzled, he began talking to himself on the way home.
“Geeze, Rumple. You had a great life—wallowing in ashes, rummaging through garbage, picking on billy goats. Remember that? But you had to go and ruin it, didn’t you? ‘Let’s adopt!’ you said. Now look. Never a moment of peace. Rats croaking you up at the crack of dawn. Rats making you play hide-and-seek all the time, and you’re always
It
. Rats begging for a pet snail and
you end up having to feed it. I don’t care if it
is
a cute snail. What were you thinking?”
Just then, Griselda, the smallest rat of all, chewed a hole through the sack, crawled up onto the Troll’s shoulder, and hummed a little song.
As she nuzzled next to his neck, the baby’s whiskers tickled the Troll’s big, hairy ear and melted his old Troll heart.
“Maybe it’s not so bad after all,” he said, and decided then and there to make the best of things.
And in time, the Troll learned to like rock and roll, shaved his whiskers, bought bigger underpants, and, along with his little family, lived happily ever after.
“P
lease tell me that Rumple-what’s-his-name eventually got wise and ate the little boogers,” said Brutus.
“Of course not,” said Bob. “One never eats one’s own family.”
“I’m glad the Troll and the babies lived happily ever after,” said Muffin.
“Well, actually, I exaggerated. It wasn’t
ever
after,” said the rat. “Only for a time. One day, the Troll married a dreadful shrew who nagged him to death. After that, all the children took off to make their fortunes—except my aunt Griselda and her ugly stepsister.”