190 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
190 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
BIG RED RIDING CAPE
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AUTHOR UNKNOWN
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Once upon a time there was a little girl who had a red cape and a red hood.
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She was on her way to grandma's house with a basket of food because grandna was
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hungry and tooolazy to feed herself. The girl had to go through the woods to
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get to grandma's house because thats the kind of story this is. Onthe way she
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sang a song she wrote. Here are the words.
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A tisket, a tasket,
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A green and yellow basket.
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I put a letter in the top And on the way I dropped it.
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I dropped it, I dropped it
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And on the way I dropped it.
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A little boy picked it up
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And put it in his pocket.
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Yeah, the chick really cooked. But it was this very song that got her into
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trouble. The wolf heard her from a long way off and decided that he was hugnry.
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He figured he had three options: he could steal the basket and eat the food; he
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could steal Little Red Riding Hoood and eat her; or he could steal the song and
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make a bundle and never be hungry again.
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Needless to say, being pretty slick as wolves go, he decided stealing the
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song was infinitely better. After all the food would be gone in ten minutes, if
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that; and "Red," as he affectionately began thinking of her, would probably only
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last through the evening. But he was sure that the song would become a classic
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(with the right promotion, of course). So he set off in the direction of Red's
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mellifluous voice.
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Now, at this point, the wolf knew what his goal was, but he didn't have a
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plan. He just had the basics down: he'd make friends with her, get her to
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invite him home, slip her a mickey ransack her house for the sheet music, and
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split. Simple, yet effective. Yes indeed. Very effective. Very effective.
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He lit out in the direction of her voice, and pretty soon came upon her
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skiping merrily along. Red was actually not one to skip, but she'd gotten a
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blister from the long walk and it helped keep pressure off the bad foot. The
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wolf followed her a ways, slinking behind trees and such wolf nonsense, until
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she'd finally had it and sat down for a rest. for a rest.
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He decided the best approach was to ask about her health and if he could be
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of service (a little gallantry couldn't hurt). He started "ahem-ing" and
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clearing his throat as he moved in, so she wouldn't get too freaked out. When
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he finally reached her he said, "Pardon me lovely lady, but if you are in some
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kind of distress, I do hope you will allow me to be of assistance.) (pretty
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smooth, huh?)
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Well, Red had only heard that kind of talk on television, so she looked up at
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him like he was crazy. But, she thought, if he was so anxious to "be of
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assistance," maybe she could get him to take the basket to grandma's for her.
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"Oh, sir," she said, trying to remember what they had sounded like in The Count
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of Monte Cristo. "Perhaps you would be so kind as to deliver this basket of
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food to my grandmama (with the emphasis on the last "ma"). She is ill and has
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no one to care for her." (And, she wanted to add, she eats like a horse, but
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decided against it.
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Whoops, thought Red. She hadn't baragained on this. But she thought, why
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not; he looks harmless enough. So she gave him grandma's address and her own
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and started making her way back home.
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Now, this was just the opening the wolf was looking for. "I would be
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delighted, my dear," said he. "Just tell me where I may return the basket."
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The wolf, of course, being hungry, waited until she was out of sight and sat
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down to eat. There was fried chicken, biscuits, potato salad, and some rhubarb
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pie for dessert. No doubt about it -- Red was a terrible cook, but at least he
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was full. All he had to do now was wait until dark and show up at Red's house.
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Meanwhile, Red skipped on home to soak her foot. She'd been home about an
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hour when the phone rang. It was grandma asking where her food was. Red
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explained what had happened and told grandma to call out for a pizza and put it
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on Red's tab. But it made her very suspicous of the wolf's motives, and she
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decided that maybe it wasn't such a good idea to have given him her address.
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What to do, what to do. "Ahah!" she exclaimed (with the emphasis on the
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"hah"). "I'll just invite the guys over -- just in case." See, she worked with
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a band called "Big Red and the Capelets," (a motley bunch of hoods with hearts
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of gold) and even though they weren't rehearsing that night, she knew where to
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find them.
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Red called the local pool hall and asked for Dizzy. When he answered, she
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told him what the story was and requested the honor of the guys' presence at her
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place ASAP. When he hung up, Dizzy raced over to tell the guys. They
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immediately cleared the tables they'd been shooting on (see, they'd kind of been
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playing poorly to hustle a couple of newcomers), collected their dough, hung up
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their cue sticks, and jumped in their '67 white Volkswagen convertible, called
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White Flash.
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in no time at all, they were knocking on Red's door. Red told them that they
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could just hide in the bedroom. When the wolf showed up, she'd make some excuse
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to leave the room to see if he was up to no good -- and if he was, they should
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jump him.
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The guys did as they were told, and about five minutes later, they heard a
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knock at the door. The wolf had come courting, flowers in the basket and a
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bottle of Chateau Neuf du Pape, vintage 1932. Red greeted him cordially and
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told him it was too much. Being the rake that he was, he just bowed low, saying
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"Not at all, mademoiselle."
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He figured he had it made. It was just a good thing that he couldn't hear
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the guys going "ugh," "feh," and "boo" from the next room.
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Anyway, Red asked him to squat and went to the kitchen for glasses and a
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vase. While she was out of the room, the wolf pulled a little vial of sleeping
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powder out of wherever wolves keep things, ready to slip into her wine when her
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back was turned.
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Red returned and poured the wine, put the flowers in the vase, and sat down
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on the chair farthest from the wolf. They were actually both a little
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uncomfortable, knowing that they were trying to put one over on each other. So,
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besides some "ahems" and general throat clearing, not much was happening. You
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could definitely call it a less than thrilling encounter.
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Needless to say, the natives in the back room were getting restless. They
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had the bedroom door open just a crack so they could see out, and they were all
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crouched and piled on top of each other so each one could eyeball the scene
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himself.
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All of a sudden, Wazoo's got a charley horse in his leg and it buckled out
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from under him. Since Uriah had been sitting on his shoulders, they both fell
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over with a thud, knocking over the lamp by the bed, turning on the clock radio,
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and spilling hot wax from the candle onto Island's kneecap (he always wore plaid
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Bermuda shorts).
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When the wolf heard all the to-do, he jumped from his chair and made a
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beeline out the door. In the midst of the meelee, the guys scrambled to their
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feet and leapt out at him. The wolf was fast, boy. No doubt about it. But,
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unfortunately for him, one of the disadvantages of a tail is that it's never
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quite up to where you are. So, with the amazing presence of mind that comes
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only from years of dealing with turkeys, Red slammed the door -- right on the
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poor wolf's tail.
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He was caught. Boy, was he caught. And, boy did that hurt.
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Not being one to hide his true feelings, the wolf let out a scream loud
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enough to wake grandma at the other side of the forest. Red then opened the
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door, and the wolf fell panting to the ground.
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Just as he thought he'd bought it for sure, the guys came bounding out onto
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the porch, yelling "That's it! That's what we've been looking for! It's great!
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Oh wow!" and the like.
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With tears in his eyes and blood on his tail, the wolf started begging
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"Please don't kill me. I promise I'll be good. I'll never bother any of you
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again and I'll get a 99-year subscription to ROLLING STONE --anything."
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"Kill you?" asked the guys. "Whose talking about killing you? That sound
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you made -- can you make it without getting a door slammed on your tail?"
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The wolf definitely thought that he had encountered several institution
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escapees, but figured he'd play along. He didn't have much choice. So he tried
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a few shrieks and screams.
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He was actually not doing too well, until he remembered his Stanislavsky
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training, and recreating the pain in his mind, he let out one heck of a hoot.
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The guys jumped off the porch and congratulated him, pumping his paw up and
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down giving him noogies in the shoulder. Finally, he just said, "I hate to
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interrupt this, but what's going on?"
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Dizzy, being the sharpest member of the group (which, of course, is not
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saying much), brought his exuberance under control and blurted out "That sound,
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that sound, that sound!" Red finally intervened and told the wolf that there was
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a particular sound that they had never been able to get on the synthesizer.
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They knew it was just the sound they needed to make a million seller out of a
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tune they'd written -- and it was the sound he'd just made.
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Since they knew the wolf wasn't going anywhere, Red and the guys stepped up
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on the porch for a quick meeting. Then Red went over to the wolf and explained
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their proposition. They wanted him to join the band as a permanent member, but
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since he'd been basically rotten, he had to make up for it by bringing grandma
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her food four times a week. If he agreed, they'd let him live. If not, they'd
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wear him next winter.
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It was certainly an offer he couldn't refuse. So after bringing grandma her
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food the next morning, they all went into the studio to lay down the extra wolf
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tracks.
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About a month later, a very famous disk jockey named Jack, who had empathy
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for wolf sounds heard the tune, and PR'ed it into a big hit. Now Red's got a
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new mink cape, the guys each have his own Mercedes, grandma's got a live-in
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servant, and the wolf got plastic surgery for his tail. And they all lived
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happily ever after.
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