It's that time of week again! This week's bedtime story was originally written for my ABC Animals series of children's books, but unfortunately, it never saw the light of day. I decided it felt wrong to keep this character and her story languishing on my laptop, so here it is!
Eleanor The Envious Elephant
Eleanor
Elephant couldn’t help envying her classmates.
She often found herself wishing she was as pretty as Kirstie Koala, or
as confident as Harry Hippo. She even
wished she was as quick to speak her mind as Alana the Angry Alligator.
To make
matters worse, Eleanor was in her final year at Jungle Junior School and she
just knew that when she started at
Jungle Senior, she’d find even more
creatures to envy.
Eleanor was a
bright pupil. Her teacher, Mr Leopard,
often praised her for her hard work and good manners. She was helpful, kind and her classmates
liked her a lot.
But Eleanor
wasn’t content. When she caught sight of
her reflection, she’d sigh. Her ears
were too big. Her skin was too
bumpy. Eleanor envied other animals, who
seemed to look just right, whilst she felt clumsy and awkward.
She tried
not to show it, but deep inside, Eleanor was a rather unhappy elephant...
One
afternoon, as school was finishing, Sally Swallow, the school secretary popped
her head around the classroom door.
“I’ve got a request from Archie Aardvark,” she said. “Miss Giraffe usually helps run the art club
after school, but she can’t today. Would
one of our older students like to help out instead?”
The children
began rolling their eyes. “As if I
haven’t spent enough time at school,”
Alana Alligator snapped. “Count me out!”
One by one,
they made their excuses, until there was only Eleanor left. She shifted in her seat and took a deep breath. “Okay.
I’ll help.”
Mr Leopard
smiled. “That’s really kind of you,
Eleanor. Archie Aardvark will be very
grateful. I’ll make sure Mrs Swallow lets
your mum know you’ll be late home.”
Eleanor
watched as her classmates began grabbing their coats and bags. “Thanks,” Kirstie Koala said. “I’d have offered, but I’ve promised to help
mum get ready for my sister’s birthday party.”
Eleanor
nodded. “It’s fine,” she said. But she didn’t feel fine.
Trudging down
the corridor, Eleanor felt uneasy. What
if the art club members didn’t like her?
What if they laughed at her big ears, or bumpy trunk? She gazed at Lindsey Leopard and Jennifer Jaguar
as they made their way past. They were
so pretty and graceful! Eleanor caught
sight of her own reflection in the glass as she reached the door to the Art
Club. She was so... Different.
With a sigh,
Eleanor pushed open the door. Inside the
classroom were two round tables, with eager animals sitting at them. The room was filled with the sound of excited
voices.
Archie
Aardvark grinned. “Welcome to Art Club,
Eleanor. Thank you so much for helping.”
Eleanor
managed a smile. “You’re welcome,” she
replied. “What would you like me to do?”
Archie
glanced over his shoulder at the two tables.
“The older animals are using mirrors to paint self-portraits,” he told
her. “The younger ones are making cards
for their friends and families. Our job
is to keep an eye on everyone and help if they get stuck. Okay?”
Eleanor nodded. Archie smiled and joined the youngsters, who
were chattering as they glued sequins onto brightly coloured pieces of card. Eleanor trudged to the other table.
“Do you want
to paint a self-portrait?” Stephanie
Salamander asked. Eleanor shrunk back. She hated
looking at herself in the mirror.
She was always finding things she didn’t like and that only made her
envy everyone else more. She shook her head.
“No thanks,”
she replied.
Stephanie
Salamander picked up a round mirror and stared into it. She shrieked with laughter. “Look how slimy my skin looks, close up!”
Gerald
Giraffe stared at himself in a long, rectangular mirror. “My legs are so thin,” he chuckled. “And
look how long my neck is!”
Eleanor
frowned. They were laughing at themselves! She
glanced into one of the mirrors. All she
saw was rough skin, tiny eyes, enormous ears...
She sighed. There didn’t seem
much to laugh about. Yet the children
were giggling so much that Tamara Tree Frog leaped away from the card she was
making and came hopping across the room to join in.
“I have big,
bulgy eyes!” She cried as she caught
sight of herself in the mirror.
Rhianna
Rhinoceros laughed. “You should join in,
Eleanor. It’s fun.” She held up a mirror and peered into it. “Look at my wrinkles. I look like I’m a hundred years old!”
Eleanor was
confused. “But you’re supposed to have wrinkles,” she
said. “You’re a rhinoceros.” She turned to Tamara. “Those bulgy eyes are just right for
you. There’s nothing wrong with any of you.”
“We know,”
Tamara replied. “But don’t you ever look
at yourself and notice funny little things like these?”
Eleanor
sighed. “All the time,” she said. “I wish I could change my big ears and silly
nose.”
“But then
you wouldn’t be you,” Tamara
gasped. “I sometimes wish I was as big
as you are...”
Eleanor’s eyes
widened. “You want to be like me?”
She interrupted. She’d spent so
long envying others that she’d never even imagined that anyone might admire her.
Tamara
nodded. “Yes,” she said. “But then I think of how silly I’d look. Whoever heard of a frog the size of an
elephant?!” She paused. “And if you had a different nose, or smaller
ears, don’t you think you’d look silly, too?”
Eleanor
smiled in spite of herself. “I suppose
so.”
Rhianna held
out a mirror. “Come on Eleanor,” she
said. “You’re a work of art, just like
we are. Why don’t you join in?”
Eleanor
grinned. “Okay!”
Tamara
hopped back to finish the card she’d been making as Eleanor took a seat at the
table. The rest of the time passed in a
haze of laughter, as the animals painted their pictures and hung them up to
dry. Before long, it was time to tidy up
and go home.
Archie
Aardvark thanked her for her help, before Eleanor went to fetch her coat and
bag. Then, just as she was leaving, she
heard a voice.
“Eleanor,
wait!”
Eleanor spun
round to see Tamara Tree-Frog hopping towards her, waving something in her
hand. Archie Aardvark and the rest of
the animals from the Art Club were watching and smiling.
“We wanted
you to have this,” Tamara said. She
handed Eleanor a pink envelope with her name written on it. “Archie said we could make a card for anyone
we wanted, so we made this for you.” She
smiled. “It’s to say thanks and... Well,
you can read it.”
“Thank you,”
Eleanor replied.
She opened
the envelope to reveal a pink card with a blue elephant on the front, made from
sequins and glitter. Eleanor smiled. She opened the card and read the words:
“To Eleanor,
Thank you for helping us today. We think you’re perfect, just the way you
are!
Love from everyone at Art Club xxx”
A lump formed in Eleanor’s throat. She found herself grinning as she stood,
surrounded by all the other animals. She
felt good. She felt perfect.
“Thank you so
much,” she beamed. As the animals smiled
back at her, Eleanor knew that she didn’t have to spend her time envying anyone
else. She was fine as she was!
Soon, everyone began saying their goodbyes and heading
to their separate jungle homes. Eleanor
watched them leave, with a smile on her face.
As the last animal disappeared from view, Eleanor caught sight of her
reflection in the long, rectangular mirror and smiled.
Her ears were big.
Her skin was bumpy. Her nose was
long.
And she wouldn’t have it any other way.
THE END
Whoa, Emma, that's a great story....don't we all think we are unusual looking....yet we try to hide it....and unless we have a BFF or a group to hang with, it can be a hard road...
ReplyDeleteOnce again, your story is wonderful!
Aw, thank you, that really means a lot! :-)
ReplyDelete