Contest #116 winner 🏆

240 comments

Funny Fiction Contemporary

First and foremost, I just need to assert what was right and what was wrong. I think, before you can apologize for things you’ve done, you need to really isolate and evaluate exactly what you did wrong, and it’s very rare that you, uh, you know, haven’t done anything right in the midst of all you did wrong. So, I would like to assert that, yes, I made mistakes. I made many mistakes. I hurt people. Well, not people, but, you know, living things. I hurt living things and I hurt them by damaging their property and terrorizing them, and for that, I am very sorry, and I stand here, humbly, in front of you today, with my tail between my legs--literally--to say that I do apologize for the wrong I’ve done. Not for the right I’ve done, obviously, because I don’t need to apologize for what I’ve done right, and I have done some things right, but I don’t need to apologize for those things. Just the wrong things.

Uh, but, uh, yeah, the, yeah, the, um--

The straw.

I apologize for the straw. Why you would build a house out of straw in the first place is a mystery to me, but--That’s not my, uh--That’s not the point. The point is, one of you wanted to build a house of straw, and I destroyed that house. I blew it down. Not that it takes much to blow down something made out of straw. A strong wind could have blown it down. A gust. A breeze. You built the house fairly close to the ocean, so I expect there would have been a lot of sea wind coming off the coast, and that leads me to think your house wasn’t long for this world anyway, but sure, yes, I was the one who blew it down, and I have to own that, and so I do. I own it. I own it and I apologize for it. I blew down the house and I was going to eat you, but you ran away. I don’t think I should have to apologize for wanting to eat you, because that’s, you know, my nature, but I get how my nature and your existence don’t jive, and I believe we should all be able to live together peacefully in this world, but I would like to remind you that eating, you know, kale, isn’t really an option for me, and, uh, you know, attempted murder isn’t murder. It’s different. That’s why they have a different sentence for it when you get convicted of it in court. When you do get convicted. Which isn’t often, because it’s so hard to prove. I mean, it’s almost impossible to prove someone’s intent, but, sure, I did attempt something, and for that, I am sorry, because that’s wrong and so is blowing down a flimsy house that was going to come down at any moment anyway because somebody didn’t want to take the time to build their home properly with decent materials.

So. I’m sorry for all that.

Um.

In regards to the sticks, I would like to say that I maintain sticks are only slightly harder to blow down than straw, but there was, yes, an intent there, to blow the house down. And to eat the owner of the house. And to maybe use the sticks to start a fire that I would then roast the owner of the house over while lathering said owner in barbecue sauce. Yes, all of that is true, and none of it is right, and I apologize for all of it. I will say that because I couldn’t catch the owner of the house, nothing happened other than destruction of a fire hazard, but nevertheless, there was destruction. There was trauma. There was hurt. And I have to understand that and make space for it moving forward. That I brought about and manifested hurt in the lives of swine. A fire could have hurt many more people. Not a nice fire that you can control while you cook your dinner, but a real fire that could start at any moment if some pig decided to light a candle in the middle of his twig dwelling, but it’s not about what might have happened, it’s about what did happen, and what happened was I blew the house down. I huffed. I puffed. I got a little winded. I huffed and puffed some more. Down went the house. I own that. I didn’t eat the pig because he ran away, because somehow pigs are terrible at building houses, but they are fantastic at running away from wolves, so that’s fine, he ran, I chased. And, uh, then…

Then I hit a wall.

A brick wall.

We all have to hit that brick wall, don’t we? Finally found a house I couldn’t blow down. But you know what I could blow down?

Myself.

And that’s what I did.

I stood there and with all the breath in my furry body, I blew, and blew, and blew. But I could not blow that house down. And as I sat there, on the grass, the dew still fresh from morning, knowing that breakfast, lunch, and dinner was staring out a window from a brick house, mocking me, taunting me, and jeering at me, I knew I needed to take a good, hard look at my life and make some changes.

That’s why I’m here today--not at the end of my journey towards being a better creature, but somewhere in the middle. I’m asking for forgiveness. For the straw. For the sticks. Not for the brick, because that house was built well and I believe it got sold the following year for double what it cost to erect, and so, good on that pig, because he must have gotten the architecture gene his siblings didn’t. Me, I’m just going around to different wolf packs, talking to the pups about making good decisions.

Mostly I just tell them to stick to chickens.

You tell them the sky is falling, and the next thing you know, they’re walking right into your cave. No houses you need to gather up your breath support for and no riddles like with goats or grandmothers that give you indigestion. Just good, old-fashioned deception.

So you see, I’ve learned.

I’ve come a long, long way.

October 18, 2021 02:56

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240 comments

Delia Tomkus
21:14 Nov 10, 2021

Ok I love this

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Jill K
20:39 Nov 10, 2021

Ha ha, fresh & funny. Loved the pacing and the "trauma." Thank you : )

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Story Time
21:31 Nov 10, 2021

Thank you Jill

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Joanne Ewart
17:33 Nov 10, 2021

Great story. I really enjoyed your take on the wolf!

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Story Time
17:35 Nov 10, 2021

Thank you Joanne

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Theresa Lowley
09:59 Nov 07, 2021

I loved this ,, always wanted to read from a different perspective

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Story Time
03:13 Nov 08, 2021

Thank you, Theresa.

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Taylor Stepp
02:38 Nov 07, 2021

i like how you gave a creative story for the wolf of 3 little pigs. and i hope the 3 little pigs forgive the wolve

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Story Time
03:49 Nov 07, 2021

Thank you Taylor.

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23:12 Nov 06, 2021

A very enjoyable read!

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Story Time
03:50 Nov 07, 2021

Thank you very much.

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Rie Sanders
18:59 Nov 06, 2021

I loved this story - hilarious! The voice was perfect!

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Story Time
20:42 Nov 06, 2021

Thank you Rie!

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Maurice Jackson
09:58 Nov 06, 2021

Thank you for such an engaging story with some very funny lines.. ‘I stand here with my tail between my legs… ‘who would build a house of straw?’. Can’t stop laughing. Haha.

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Story Time
20:42 Nov 06, 2021

Thank you Maurice.

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Anya Kurz
23:32 Nov 05, 2021

"You know what I could blow down? Myself." WOW. That's just...wow. Harsh words there, Kevin.

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Story Time
23:49 Nov 05, 2021

Ha thank you Anya.

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Graham Kinross
23:55 Nov 04, 2021

I laughed at a lot of this. Makes me think of a teenager on the stand in court, confessing, apologising and also bragging a bit because they're not quite repentant. The wolf seems more disappointed with failure than regretful. Feels like the testimony of Fantastic Mr Fox.

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Story Time
16:01 Nov 05, 2021

Thank you Graham

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23:27 Nov 04, 2021

I love this so much I would slather it in barbeque sauce and marry it. LOL. Great work! The voice is WAY too accurate. :D

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Story Time
16:02 Nov 05, 2021

Thank you Charlene.

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Susmita Ghosh
05:05 Nov 04, 2021

Something which keeps the the reader guessing..and juggle about the concept. Nice read.

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Story Time
15:58 Nov 04, 2021

Thank you Susmita

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Morgan Stanley
03:20 Nov 04, 2021

This was an amazing story! One of the best I've read to be honest. I read it to my sister and we were both so invested. Great story and great writer. Amazing job 👏

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Story Time
15:58 Nov 04, 2021

Thank you Morgan.

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Dennis Reilly
23:14 Nov 03, 2021

I found true brilliance in you taking a fairy tale, and turning it into a modern scenario of court. I loved the comedic side of the story. I love stories that keep me interested and make me laugh, you did just that.

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Story Time
23:29 Nov 03, 2021

Thank you Dennis!

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Renda Hanson
19:56 Nov 03, 2021

Superb story and as Fawn mentioned, a great author voice. Well deserved win!

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Story Time
19:57 Nov 03, 2021

Thank you so much, Renda.

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Renda Hanson
20:01 Nov 03, 2021

You're welcome. I look forward to reading more of your stories.

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JamillOz Gamer
14:39 Nov 03, 2021

had a good laugh reading this

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Story Time
16:20 Nov 03, 2021

Thank you Jamill.

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Emily James
14:04 Nov 03, 2021

OMG This story was great, Good job!

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Story Time
16:19 Nov 03, 2021

Thank you Emily.

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Deniz Southon
20:20 Nov 02, 2021

Amazing, it was nice to be in the wolf's perspective. I loved this sooo much it is great. Thank you for making this Kevin.

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Story Time
21:25 Nov 02, 2021

Thank you Deniz!

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Lin Darroe
15:56 Nov 02, 2021

Loved the story , very creative and I loved the perspective !

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Story Time
17:03 Nov 02, 2021

Thank you Lorraine!

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M. M.
13:16 Nov 02, 2021

This is an interesting read, you have two types of narrative's going on, I like the creativity and bold topic, awesome job on the metaphor, congrats!!!

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Story Time
17:03 Nov 02, 2021

Thank you Mickey!

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