The Great Lazarene Story

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Feux

Councilor (75%)
Minister
D. Minister
Foreign Affairs
Councillor (CLS)
Internal Affairs
Citizen
Lazarene
Verified
Joined
Nov 16, 2024
Messages
1,249
Feather
ƒ54
The rules are simple...just add more of the story with ChatGPT or something you wrote.

Roger had always trusted Tubbius. Ever since the two raccoons met behind the bakery dumpster on Juniper Street, they'd shared everything—crusts, cozy gutters, and even dreams of one day owning their own patch of forest free from dogs and humans.

But that morning was different.

They'd ventured deep into Wrenwood Forest, chasing the smell of something roasted. Maybe marshmallows. Maybe sausages. Roger never found out.

Tubbius, with his twitchy nose and twitchier morals, had scurried ahead through the underbrush. "C'mon, Rog! I smell magic!" he called.

Roger had hesitated at the old stone archway. It looked ancient—older than squirrels, older than trees. "Tubbs," he called out. "Wait up!"

But Tubbius didn't wait. He never really did.

Hours passed. The woods grew darker, colder. Roger's stubby paws ached. The chirps and rustles that once sounded like music now felt like warnings.

"Tubbius?" he called.

Only the wind answered.

The betrayal sank in slowly, like dew seeping into fur. Tubbius had left him. Whether by accident or design, Roger didn't know. But he was alone now, and the woods no longer smelled like magic—only moss, fear, and faint traces of burnt sugar.
 
Roger sat beneath a bent pine, its needles whispering secrets above his head. His stomach growled, not from hunger, but from that hollow ache only disappointment brings. He wrapped his tail tighter around himself, breathing slow. The smell of burnt sugar was fading now, replaced by something... tangier. Earthier. Sharp and strange.

His nose twitched.

There, under a leaf mottled with silver spots, a glisten. A toad—fat, speckled, and disturbingly serene—blinked up at him with eyes like wet marbles. It didn't move when he crept closer. Didn't flinch when he sniffed.

Roger had seen a lot in his time behind dumpsters, but this toad didn't smell like trash or pond. It smelled like heat lightning. Like copper and candied apples. Like everything in the world about to tip over.

His tongue flicked out before his brain could catch it.

The toad blinked once more.

Then the forest shifted.

The trees stretched tall and impossibly thin, swaying like kelp in an unseen current. The moss began to hum in a minor key. Stars blinked in the dirt, and the air filled with the sound of Tubbius's laugh—but slowed down, like syrup dripping from a spoon.

Roger's fur stood on end. He stumbled backward and the ground rippled like pudding beneath his paws.

"Tubbs?" he called again, though it came out as a chirp, then a trumpet, then a bell tolling deep in his chest.

And that's when he saw it.

Not Tubbius.

Not the toad.

But the archway again—glowing now, pulsing with the breath of a sleeping thing—and just beyond it, a forest that wasn't Wrenwood anymore.

Not quite.

Still, something in Roger pulled him forward. Maybe it was the toad. Maybe it was hope.

Or maybe, just maybe, it was the magic Tubbius had smelled first.
 
Roger took a breath—not deep, not brave, just enough to move. Enough to remind himself he was still a raccoon, still real, still Roger. The glow of the archway wavered, not with the wind but like a candle inside someone else's dream. He stepped closer.

Each pawstep felt… uncertain. Not wrong, exactly—more like he was stepping on thoughts rather than earth. Beneath his claws, fallen leaves whispered things he didn't understand, but somehow remembered.

The toad was gone.

Or maybe it had never been there at all.

The archway loomed, taller now, wide enough to swallow not just him but the entire neighborhood back on Juniper Street. For a moment, he thought of the bakery dumpster, the sour-sweet smell of day-old danishes, the way Tubbius used to hum when they curled up beneath a soggy pizza box.

Then he heard it again: laughter. Not Tubbius's laugh this time.

Softer. Higher. Older.

It came from beyond the arch.

Roger hesitated—because even brave raccoons pause when the world shifts under them. But he wasn't brave. He was just… tired. Tired of waiting. Tired of not knowing.

He stepped through.

The world beyond was skyless. Not dark, not light—just color. Swirls of ochre and ultramarine. Trees that bled leaves shaped like clocks. Rivers that burbled upward in reverse. And there, not far from the edge of everything, sat Tubbius.

He looked the same. But his eyes glinted like polished beetles, and something in his posture said he'd been here a long time.

"Rog," he said, without turning. "You made it."

Roger blinked. "You left me."

Tubbius shrugged, tail curling like smoke. "I didn't know how to bring you. It only opens once, and only if you want it. You wanted it."

Roger's breath caught. He didn't know if it was anger or relief. "What is this place?"

Tubbius finally turned, and his grin was crooked but real.

"It's what comes after the world ends," he said, "and just before it starts again."

Then he held out a paw.

And Roger, despite everything, took it.

Because maybe the world had tipped over. Maybe the forest was broken. Maybe nothing would ever smell like burnt sugar again.

But Tubbius was here.

And sometimes, that was enough.
 
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