On A Balcony

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Just a little flash fiction.


The Tiger's heart leapt in fright as he saw the balcony door

wide open. Dashing forwards, panicking he cried out, "Alex!"

  The Cheetah cub was

sitting by the railings, legs dangling through the gaps between the iron bars.

He did not look up as the Tiger approached. 

He was staring out onto the darkened city, the tower blocks down in the

suburbs looking like blocky hills in the darkness.

  "Thank god," the

Tiger whispered, "What do you think you're doing, scaring me like that?! What

are you doing out here."

  "Don't be mad," the

Cheetah cub said, his head held low.

  The Tiger breathed a

heavy sigh. "No... no, I'm not mad. Just... what are you doing, young one?"

  "I was just watching

the cars go by..." he said, quietly.

  The Tiger paused,

holding his tongue as he studied the cub. The spotty coat of the Cheetah was

almost invisible in the blackness, as if the darkness of the city beyond was

ready to swallow him up. He stepped forwards slowly, coming to sit next to the

Cheetah, looking upon his face, lit from below, like an angel staring down into

hell.

  "I don't like

movies," the cub said without warning.

  "W-what?" the Tiger

said, incredulously. The cub had been laughing along with him earlier when they

had been watching the film - some action flick, something with a predictable

plot and slap-stick moments. "Why not?!" he found himself asking, perhaps more

accusatory than he had meant to. He had actually enjoyed it, for once, even

though it had been aimed more towards the young cub's sensibilities.

  "They always end."

The Cheetah cub said, sadly, raising his button nose and staring up into the

starry sky.

  The Tiger was

momentarily stunned, unsure of what to say, instead just following the cub's

gaze in awe. He hadn't been expecting this. "Alex..." he said quietly.

  "It always ends,

every time. I'm sick of endings. I just want them to stop," Alex said,

stubbornly raising his voice.

  The Tiger didn't

know what to say. He was unprepared - so woefully unprepared. He stared at the

young, defiant cub. "...it's cold out here," he mumbled, shivering.

  "Yes," Alex said,

his voice fading in an instant, like the flame of a candle in the breeze. "It

is." The young Cheetah cub leant over, pulling his feet up as his head came to

rest in the lap of the Tiger. He stared up, seeing right through the concerned

face of the Tiger, up and up with his great black eyes. "A story that always

ends," he whispered.

  The Tiger tore his

glance bitterly from the cub. There was too much pain for him to deal with

there. "Not always, dear, sweet Alex," he whispered. "Not always." The city

seemed to shimmer as he spoke again, tears welling in his eyes. "Sometimes an

ending is just the beginning of a new chapter."

  The cub was still.

The Tiger blinked to clear his eyes, and looked down to see the cub asleep,

head buried in his furry legs. Carefully he swept an enormous paw beneath the

small bundle of fur, lifting him up as he stood. Cradling the child, he sighed

and stepped back inside, a soft "Chu-nk" behind him as the door to the balcony

closed.

  "Too many dark

nights. Far too many."