mistakes Posts

True Thad

Once upon a time, a guy named Thad was sleeping under a tree, trying to avoid his dog. He had only slept for maybe and hour or two when he was rudely awakened by someone standing over him and making many obnoxious throat clearing noises.

He was about to be very mad indeed, but he found that it was not his dog, asking him to do the dishes, after all; it was the most beautiful woman he had ever seen.

In the most beautiful voice he had ever heard, she told him that if he could guess who she was, she would take him home with her.

“Are you…my mother?” he asked, which was really sort of a silly question, as he knew his mother was home with the dog, probably washing the dishes.

“Are you..Madonna?” he asked.

“Do you speak of the Virgin Mary?”

“No, the singer.”

The lady shook her head.

“Are you…the lady from up the hill?”

“Close enough.”

She pulled Thad up on her horse with her, and they galloped away. As they rode, she explained that she was the Queen of Faerie, and that he was very lucky indeed, since she had chosen him to be her mortal lover.

As they rode, she pointed out three paths: the path to Heaven, the path to Hell, and the path they would ride on, which led to Faerie.

“What’s that path?” Thad asked, pointing to an overgrown road next to the one they had turned down.

“That one leads to Creepy Jim’s house.” the Queen informed him. “I wouldn’t go down that path.”

As they rode, Thad was sure they passed through meadows of guts and jumped over gates made of bone. But the lady held him, and told him he would reside in Faerie with her for but seven years, and as long as he ate nothing, nor spoke not a word, he would return home with the gift of prophecy, and the inability to lie. However, if he did eat or speak, he must remain in Faerie forever.

And so they rode into Faerie, where courtiers and horses greeted them with songs and cheer.

As they stopped, Thad reached into a basket of baked goods offered to him and bit into a cupcake. “Hey guys,” he said. “What’s up?”

The Queen of Faerie began to feel as though she’d made a grave error, indeed.

The End.

Source: Thomas the Rhymer

The Hitchhiker Who Needed a Tan

Once upon a time, a woman was driving alone, thinking about chickens, when she very nearly ran her car right into Something.

When she used the rear view mirror to investigate, she saw only a very pale young girl in a very white dress standing just off the side of the road.

She must be looking for a ride, the woman figured, and backed up to pick the girl up.

For a few miles, they made some attempt at conversation, but the girl gave short answers, and vague ones. Finally, the woman, just managing not to ask her why she was so pale and wouldn’t she like a tan, thought to ask her just where her home actually was.

The girl explained that it was on the hill, just past the graveyard, and then the woman Knew.

And so, despite the girl’s protests that the house was on the hill, and not in the graveyard itself, the woman left her at the entrance to the graveyard, and was too creeped out to watch her make her way back “home”, or, indeed, give her back the sweater she had left on the passenger seat.

But in the light of the next day, things seemed less scary, so she made her way back to the graveyard, thinking to lay the sweater down by the ghost girl’s grave. However, after realizing she did not know the girl’s name or date of birth, she decided instead to take the sweater to her parents.

Two people opened the door, and as she expressed sorrow for their loss, and tried to explain the otherwordly way in which she’d gotten the sweater, she thought she could see the girl behind them, scowling and trying to say something.

The couple mostly looked confused, and eventually, the girl declared that she was giving up, and was going to go back inside and watch TV. Still, the woman felt confident that she had done a Good Thing, and even so, resolved not to pick up hitchhikers without tans ever again.

The End.

Source: The Pretty Girl in the Road, American folktale.