Written and Illustrated by Carol Moore
Once upon a time there was an old woman who loved baking gingerbread.
She would bake gingerbread cookies, cakes, houses and gingerbread people, all
decorated with chocolate and peppermint, caramel candies and colored frosting.
She lived with her husband on a farm at the edge of town. The sweet
spicy smell of gingerbread brought children skipping and running to see what
would be offered that day.
Unfortunately the children gobbled up the treats so fast that the old
woman had a hard time keeping her supply of flour and spices to continue making
the batches of gingerbread. Sometimes she suspected little hands of having
reached through her kitchen window because gingerbread pieces and cookies would
disappear. One time a whole gingerbread house vanished mysteriously. She told
her husband, "Those naughty children are at it again. They don't
understand all they have to do is knock on the door and I'll give them my
gingerbread treats."
One day she made a special batch of gingerbread men because they were
extra big. Unfortunately for the last gingerbread man she ran out of batter and
he was half the size of the others.
She decorated the gingerbread men with care, each having socks, shirt
and pants of different colors. When it came to the little gingerbread man she
felt sorry for him and gave him more color than the others. "It doesn't
matter he's small," she thought, "He'll still be tasty."
Putting the rack on the kitchen windowsill she left it there to cool and
went to finish her laundry. The gingerbread men lay quietly, their frosted eyes
gazing at the sky with its puffy clouds.
At that moment a voice came from nowhere. "Get up. Get up. Come
with me."
Everyone looked to see who was speaking.
It was a butterfly flying just outside the window. Butterflies are
naturally beautiful, but her wings were an exceptionally pretty marbled blue.
"Come with me," she urged again.
The gingerbread men didn't react except to keep staring. All but the
smallest gingerbread man who jumped up from the tray and leaped off the kitchen
windowsill onto the grass below faster than you could say "hurry."
"Where are we going?" he asked breathlessly.
"Away." And before the butterfly had finished speaking
children appeared in the yard. Spying the little gingerbread man they started
shrieking with delight and began chasing him.
"Stop, stop," they shouted. "We want to eat you."
But with his little legs churning the gingerbread man only ran faster.
He yelled,
"I won't stop.
Run, run as fast as you can.
You can't catch me.
I'm the gingerbread man."
And truly those children could not catch him. Once out of their sight he
continued running until he had reached a pasture where two horses were grazing.
He sat down on a rock near the fence.
"Don't stop," said the butterfly fluttering nearby.
"I want to rest," he argued.
That was a mistake as one of the horses trotted over to the fence and
whinnied. "Oh you smell so good little gingerbread man. Come over here so
I can smell you better."
The little gingerbread man shook his head, but suddenly that horse
jumped the fence and began galloping after him, so he had to run even faster.
He called out,
"I outran children and I'll outrun you.
Run, run as fast as you can.
You can't catch me.
I'm the gingerbread man."
And truly, that horse could not catch him.
The next time he rested the little gingerbread man took care to lie
amongst the grass well off the road where no one would see him.
"Everybody wants to eat me," he complained to the butterfly.
"Do you want to eat me, too?"
Laughing she answered. "I love the smell of gingerbread. It's
better than my favorite flowers. But I sip nectar, not gingerbread. Besides,
you're my friend and friends don't eat friends."
Pleased to hear that he had a friend the little gingerbread man was
about to reply when again they were interrupted. A farmer's dog with a keen
nose had come to investigate. Licking his muzzle at the sight of the gingerbread
man, the dog said.
"Excuse me for interrupting, but little gingerbread man you look so
good. I mean tired. Please stay awhile and rest if you like."
As the dog talked, he stepped closer and closer. The closer he stepped,
the more nervous became the little gingerbread man. When the butterfly flitted
from her grass perch in alarm, the little gingerbread man took off running with
the dog nipping at his tiny heels. He shouted,
"I outran children. I outran a horse,
and I'll outrun you, too.
Run, run as fast as you can.
You can't catch me.
I'm the gingerbread man."
And truly that dog could not catch him.
At last the little gingerbread man and the butterfly reached a stream.
It wasn't a very big stream unless you are a tiny gingerbread man. To
him it was a river. From out behind a bush sauntered a red fox stopping to
stretch because he had just awakened from a nap. Looking at the gingerbread man
he said nonchalantly, "May I help you?"
The butterfly was quick to respond. "No thank you. We're going to
fly across this stream. We don't need your help."
Smiling, the wily fox glanced at the butterfly before turning to the
little gingerbread man, "You're going to carry him? I've no doubt Ms.
Butterfly that you have good intentions, but you're only a bug. You couldn't
carry anything anywhere, let alone this gingerbread man across the stream.
You'll drop him. I guarantee it!"
The little gingerbread man was confused. He knew that his butterfly
friend had good intentions but could she really carry him? He doubted it. Her
wings were so thin and delicate. The thought of him falling into the cold water
and crumbling to damp bits was frightening. He said to the fox, "I outran
children. I outran a horse, and I outran a dog. Will you keep me safe and not
eat me?"
"Of course!" the wily fox quickly assured him before the
butterfly could object. "I eat only meat and I had a full meal just before
my nap. Here, ride on my bushy tail. Let's go before I change my mind."
So the little gingerbread man climbed onto the fox's tail and they
entered the water.
Unfortunately the fox's tail began dipping into the water. "You're
too heavy for my tail, he said. Climb onto my back."
The little gingerbread man did as he was asked.
But the water began creeping up the fox's back forcing the little
gingerbread man to climb higher to the fox's neck. "That's not good
enough, I'm afraid," said the wily fox. "Climb to my head."
Now the little gingerbread man was terrified, but what could he do? He
climbed to the fox's ears.
"Oh, little gingerbread man, you have to climb onto my nose,"
insisted the wily fox, "otherwise I can't help you. Don't you see the
water is getting even deeper?"
So the little gingerbread man reluctantly climbed onto the fox's nose.
The moment he did, that wily fox tossed him into the air, opening his jaws wide
with anticipation. The little gingerbread man's eyes rounded with fear because
he knew he was going to be eaten. It didn't matter now how fast he could run.
But the little gingerbread man and the wily fox had forgotten about the
butterfly. She swooped into that fox's jaws, grabbing her friend by one leg and
rescuing him from an awful fate. She flew higher and higher until the stream
and the fox were but spots on the landscape.
"You can carry me," cried the little gingerbread man.
"Yes,"
she answered. "I'm stronger than you could imagine. Now I'll take you
somewhere safe."
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She flew with him over farm fields and forests and even mountains. It
felt like they had been in the sky forever when they reached a lake, its
waters calm like pale glass. There was an island in the middle of the lake
lined with forest trees. And among the trees was where the butterfly took the
little gingerbread man. She flew down, down, and down until they came to the
foot of a pine tree.
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The little gingerbread man could not believe his eyes. Beneath that pine
tree was the most beautiful gingerbread house.
Through the front door of the gingerbread house came a gingerbread man
and a gingerbread woman. Seeing the butterfly and her companion they smiled
excitedly waving their gingerbread hands.
"Oh, what have you brought us?" cried the gingerbread woman.
Evidently she knew the butterfly very well.
"I think that's obvious, dear" said the gingerbread man.
"She's brought us a gingerbread boy. Do you realize that now we can be the
family we always wanted?"
It was true. The butterfly had intended all along to bring these three
together. The little gingerbread man had not known that he was, in reality, a
gingerbread boy. It was all so sudden, but wonderful. When both his gingerbread
parents each gave him a loving hug he knew he was home.
The gingerbread family went inside their gingerbread house to celebrate
with the butterfly remaining outside on the roof. She was content just smelling
the gingerbread and sitting there quietly, whether it was day or night.
They all lived happily ever after.
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