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“Let’s play,” says one with a tenor voice. “Let’s make an air chrysalis.”
“Yes,” replies a baritone. “Since we went to all the trouble of coming here.”
“An air chrysalis?” the girl asks.
“We pluck threads out of the air and make a home. We make it bigger and bigger!”
the bass says.
“A home? Who is it for?” the girl asks.
“You’ll see,” the baritone says.
“You’ll see when it comes out,” the bass says.
“Ho ho,” another one takes up the beat.
“Can I help?” the girl asks.
“Of course,” the hoarse one says.
“You did us a favor,” the tenor says. “Let’s work together.”
Once the girl begins to get the hang of it, plucking threads out of the air is not too
difficult. She has always been good with her hands, so she
is able to master this
operation right away. If you look closely, there are lots of threads hanging in the air.
You can see them if you try.
“Yes, that’s it, you’re doing it right,” the small-voiced one says.
“You’re a very clever girl. You learn quickly,” says the screechy-voiced one.
All the Little People wear the same clothing and their faces look alike, but each
one has a distinctly different voice.
The clothing they wear is utterly ordinary, the kind that can be seen anywhere.
This
is an odd way to put it, but there is no other way to describe their clothing. Once
you take your eyes off their clothes, you can’t possibly remember what they looked
like. The same can be said of their faces, the features of which are neither good nor
bad. They are just ordinary features, the kind that can be seen anywhere. Once you
take
your eyes off their faces, you can’t possibly remember what they looked like. It
is the same with their hair, which is neither long nor short, just ordinary hair. One
thing they do not have is any smell.
When the dawn comes and the cock crows and the eastern sky lightens, the seven
Little People stop working and begin stretching. Then they hide the partially finished
air chrysalis—which is only about the size of a baby rabbit—in
the corner of the
room, probably so that the person who brings the meals will not see it.
“It’s morning,” says the one with the small voice.
“The night has ended,” says the bass.
Since they have all these different voices, they ought to form a chorus
, the girl
thinks.
“We have no songs,” says the tenor.
“Ho ho,” says the keeper of the beat.
The Little People all shrink down to their original four-inch size,
form a line, and
enter the dead goat’s mouth.
“We’ll be back tonight,” the small-voiced one says before closing the goat’s mouth
from the inside. “You must not tell anyone about us.”
“If you do tell someone about us, something very bad will happen,” the hoarse one
adds for good measure.
“Ho ho,” says the keeper of the beat.
“I won’t tell anyone,” the girl says.