TheRealFraggle
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 29, 2023
- Messages
- 191
- Reaction score
- 42
Author's note: Alright, everybody, get ready for my next epic 20+-chapter-long Fraggle Rock fanfiction. If you remember my story Fraggle Rock: The Movie this will be similar, though I might try not to kill off too many beloved characters. Anyway, this story takes place years before the start of the original Fraggle Rock series (it's not in canon with Back to the Rock) and provides an origin for Marjory the Trash Heap, though as you will see when you read this, another major character from the show will have their origin described in here too (no, it won't be Scooter - that's the winking emoji). This is not a shipping fanfic like the last story I wrote here (Red and Mokey don't even show up). Once again, prepare to wait nearly a month for this beast of a story to be finished.
CHAPTER ONE
"There we go. Now this place feels more like home."
Fernway reached over and hung the picture on the wall of his cave, sticking it to the rock with Doozer glue. Then he stepped back to admire the picture.
It was a small portrait of a Fraggle happily eating a mushroom. Fernway didn't know who had painted the picture originally. It had belonged to his parents - one of the only things he had to remember them - and had been given to them by another Fraggle even before then. It was so old that the paint had begun to chip away, but seeing it on the wall of his cave made Fernway feel comforted. That painting was one of his only possessions, and he had been carrying it around with him for years.
Fernway couldn't even remember how long he had spent wandering through the caves of Fraggle Rock. All he knew he'd started wandering after he left the Cave of Young, where Fraggle children are raised. He'd been eager to leave the Cave of Young for years, but Pailey, the Fraggle who'd adopted him after the deaths of his parents, had held him back until he was somewhere over a decade old - the standard age of graduation from the Cave of Young. Then he'd packed up his belongings - the painting, a small book of Fraggle proverbs that had also belonged to his parents, and a small blanket - and prepared to enter Fraggle Rock. But as soon as he did, he realized that he would never feel quite right in Fraggle society. Maybe it was just that he missed his parents, but for some reason, Fraggle Rock just didn't feel like home.
So Fernway had wrapped his few belongings in a little bindle, and immediately set off wandering throughout the caves of the Rock, searching for a place where he might feel that he belonged. He'd been pretty sure that this place would be a small, lonely cave, far from the homes of the other Fraggles. But during the few years that he'd been wandering, he'd passed through what felt like all the small, lonely caves in Fraggle Rock, without finding one that felt right to him.
This cave was no different. He'd only been living here a week, after he'd left the Rockdust Caverns. It was cold, damp, and more than a little depressing - perhaps it was a bit too small, even for a runt like him. It felt a little more homely and comforting with the painting on the wall, but still, he knew in his heart that in a few days at most, he'd pack up that painting again and continue his journey.
Fernway reached out and touched the painting. Immediately, some more dried paint chipped off of the worn canvas. He couldn't help but smile. Through all this time when he'd been wandering, sleeping in a different cave every night, this painting had been the one certainty in his life. He always knew it was with him in his bindle, or lying next to him on the floor of some small cavern. Maybe having it on the wall, staring at him all the time, would make him feel that he belonged in this place.
Fernway laughed. The painting really was old - he could hardly even see the Fraggle in the picture anymore. Apparently Fraggles didn't even eat mushrooms any more - they ate radishes. At least, that's what he'd heard from a Doozer, the one time he tried to have a conversation with one. The only food he ever ate was Doozer sticks; they were ubiquitous, and stayed good for a long time. That's what he'd eaten in the Cave of Young as well; he couldn't quite remember, but he might never have eaten a mushroom or a radish in his life.
Fernway spread out his blanket on the floor. The Rock was beginning to grow dark; evening had come, and it was time for him to go to sleep again. As he lay down on the blanket and closed his eyes, Fernway thought about Pailey. What would he think if he could see me now? He spend a decade of his life preparing me to live in Fraggle Rock, and here I am sleeping in some dark cave.
That was Fernway's last thought before he fell fast asleep. It seemed that having the picture on his wall was helping him sleep after all.
CHAPTER ONE
"There we go. Now this place feels more like home."
Fernway reached over and hung the picture on the wall of his cave, sticking it to the rock with Doozer glue. Then he stepped back to admire the picture.
It was a small portrait of a Fraggle happily eating a mushroom. Fernway didn't know who had painted the picture originally. It had belonged to his parents - one of the only things he had to remember them - and had been given to them by another Fraggle even before then. It was so old that the paint had begun to chip away, but seeing it on the wall of his cave made Fernway feel comforted. That painting was one of his only possessions, and he had been carrying it around with him for years.
Fernway couldn't even remember how long he had spent wandering through the caves of Fraggle Rock. All he knew he'd started wandering after he left the Cave of Young, where Fraggle children are raised. He'd been eager to leave the Cave of Young for years, but Pailey, the Fraggle who'd adopted him after the deaths of his parents, had held him back until he was somewhere over a decade old - the standard age of graduation from the Cave of Young. Then he'd packed up his belongings - the painting, a small book of Fraggle proverbs that had also belonged to his parents, and a small blanket - and prepared to enter Fraggle Rock. But as soon as he did, he realized that he would never feel quite right in Fraggle society. Maybe it was just that he missed his parents, but for some reason, Fraggle Rock just didn't feel like home.
So Fernway had wrapped his few belongings in a little bindle, and immediately set off wandering throughout the caves of the Rock, searching for a place where he might feel that he belonged. He'd been pretty sure that this place would be a small, lonely cave, far from the homes of the other Fraggles. But during the few years that he'd been wandering, he'd passed through what felt like all the small, lonely caves in Fraggle Rock, without finding one that felt right to him.
This cave was no different. He'd only been living here a week, after he'd left the Rockdust Caverns. It was cold, damp, and more than a little depressing - perhaps it was a bit too small, even for a runt like him. It felt a little more homely and comforting with the painting on the wall, but still, he knew in his heart that in a few days at most, he'd pack up that painting again and continue his journey.
Fernway reached out and touched the painting. Immediately, some more dried paint chipped off of the worn canvas. He couldn't help but smile. Through all this time when he'd been wandering, sleeping in a different cave every night, this painting had been the one certainty in his life. He always knew it was with him in his bindle, or lying next to him on the floor of some small cavern. Maybe having it on the wall, staring at him all the time, would make him feel that he belonged in this place.
Fernway laughed. The painting really was old - he could hardly even see the Fraggle in the picture anymore. Apparently Fraggles didn't even eat mushrooms any more - they ate radishes. At least, that's what he'd heard from a Doozer, the one time he tried to have a conversation with one. The only food he ever ate was Doozer sticks; they were ubiquitous, and stayed good for a long time. That's what he'd eaten in the Cave of Young as well; he couldn't quite remember, but he might never have eaten a mushroom or a radish in his life.
Fernway spread out his blanket on the floor. The Rock was beginning to grow dark; evening had come, and it was time for him to go to sleep again. As he lay down on the blanket and closed his eyes, Fernway thought about Pailey. What would he think if he could see me now? He spend a decade of his life preparing me to live in Fraggle Rock, and here I am sleeping in some dark cave.
That was Fernway's last thought before he fell fast asleep. It seemed that having the picture on his wall was helping him sleep after all.