This story illustrates how people from all
- This story illustrates how people from all generations, culture, walks of life, and philosophies can come together and compose something coherent. It all started with a stolen line
- , a boy named Pete, and a 1976 issue of National Geographic magazine he'd found in a dusty box in the attic. On the cover was a whale in Patagonia. As Pete stared at the cover,
- the whale began to move, slowly oscillating at first, then diving and surfacing, and finally addressing him. "Pete," prophesied the whale, "you will die unlived and unloved at the
- mercy of two young goldfish." The whale made it's final oscillation, then dived, and disappeared forever. Pete turned pale and considered the whale's morbid prophecy.
- What if the whale's prediction became reality? Pete was terrified of goldfish. He couldn't imagine a worse scenario then trusting his well-being to one! He shivered.
- I refused to consider it the other way as well. He would bait that hook when it came to it but for now, Peter had other things to thwart that whale's predictions over. Goldfish han
- djobs were 1 thing but franchising was out of the question? Where did the whale think we were going to find that many goldfinches? You weren't 1 moment a fish then a bird the next.
- "Not unless you're a Zazipop Critter," chuckled the whale. "Behold!" The whale's stage hands wheeled out a fishbowl, in which something floated. "Looks like a dead moth to me."
- said a loud man in the audience. "Look again, Loud Man!" the whale said, and clapped his fins. At once the Zazipop Critter rose from it's watery grave and began to flit about the
- aquarium, the crowd cheering. Loud Man was not as happy. The whale lifted and dangled him by a leg. The Critter swam near. Extending Loud Man, the whale shouted one word: “LUNCH!"
- Started
- 2013-04-07 06:28:56
- Finished
- 2018-05-31 20:15:45
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