JimAndFrank
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Okay, so to start off the new year and to celebrate the end of my writers block, I've decided to write a series of short stories starring individual Muppets before the troupe was ever formed. Basically, I'll be writing about the Muppets who I think had the hardest and worst back stories to show just how much better their lives became once the Muppet Show began.
So, I hope you enjoy my first addition to the collection. Read on!
Miss Piggy:
As the Iowa sun finally started to droop down beneath the horizon in the 7th hour of the day, tranquillity seemed to be only moments away. The day had seen its usual challenges followed through, duties of which the residents of this particular farm grew weary, but none more so then the third eldest daughter of the farm’s matriarch.
This particular adolescent girl presently sat cross-legged upon one of the smaller haystacks, her hands preoccupied in her blonde, straw-textured hair while her eyes merely sought the stars. There was nothing too peculiar about this young girl, who seemed to want nothing more to embody the glow and beauty of those faraway jewels. Releasing a hand from a lock of hair, she reached out towards the brightest star in the sky, scheming, hoping, and wishing that she could possibly one day caress it in her palm.
On this night, unfortunately, it appeared not to be so. The girl gave a sigh of anguish and let her hand fall to her lap. Just as the cicada and cricket prone silence started to settle in, she slipped off her haystack and started to make for the farmhouse. Perhaps tomorrow would bring about an opportunity for her to grasp. Maybe tomorrow...
“PIGATHIA LEE!”
Uh oh.
“Pigathia in here, NOW!”
Groaning, Pigathia redirected her path towards the rundown barn, knowing from past experience that it was much better just to face the music immediately rather than to dance against it. Straining to keep her composure, the teenaged pig prepared herself for the grumpy old sow’s umpteenth rant for the week. She neatened her hair as she pushed a wall of reeds back and shoved the rusted barn door open. Squeezing through the narrow gap the door would only ever allow, Pigathia locked eyes with the source of her dread.
Gaunt and beady green eyes, greying brunette hair matted like a bristled rug, deep lines along the contours of her face and a look of deepest contempt. Pigathia fought the impulse to run and stared back just as intensely
Yes, this was certainly Mrs. Lee.
“Have I done something wrong, Mother?” Pigathia quietly asked, passively lowering her head in an attempt to make herself smaller.
“What kind of stupid question do you call that, girl?” Mrs. Lee grouched, “Of course you’ve done something wrong, you hardly get anything right!”
“Well,” Pigathia started again, pushing her anguish down to her toes, “What have I done that’s displeased you?”
Mrs. Lee irritably gestured around the space. ”Why don’t you tell me? Look around you and tell me what you see.”
“I see a barn.”
“What kind of barn?”
“A messy one...”
“EXACTLY!” snarled Mrs. Lee, “What was the one thing I asked you to do today?”
“To clean it up,” Pigathia answered truthfully. Unfortunately, a pig with such a vivid imagination as hers can be prone to lose track of both time and responsibility. “Mother, believe me. I tried, but there’s no way I can do it all myself! There is so much mess and I can’t even reach most of it!”
“Here we go again with your pathetic little excuses!” sighed Mrs. Lee, looking ready to throttle the poor girl, “I’m growing tired of your disobedience. How can you be so selfish while your brothers and sisters pick up your slack?”
“Mother, I do just as -!”
“AND what about me?” snapped Mrs. Lee as if Pigathia hadn’t intercepted, “I’m doing everything I can to keep a roof over our heads!”
If ‘doing everything I can’ means sitting on the porch all day, accompanied only by a bottle of whiskey and barking orders at your twenty children, then Mrs. Lee is a freakin’ battler against the odds.
Pigathia, her ratty moth-bitten rags and the fact that she had no shoes all disagreed with Mrs. Lee’s claim. “Well, if Daddy were still here-“
“WELL HE AIN’T IS HE?!” Cried Mrs. Lee, losing all composure, “Your daddy’s dead isn’t he? Taken by his own stupidity! If the ******* tractor hadn’t gotten ‘im, then I would ‘ave! Now, get to work! You ain’t leavin’ ‘ere til this place is shinin’ brighter than the White ‘ouse!”
Pigathia yelped as Mrs. Lee grabbed her around the waist and shoved her further into the barn. The poor girl lost her footing, causing her to fall face forward. She turned herself over just in time to see her mother locking the door. Pigathia scrambled to her feet screaming and threw herself into the door, banging and calling for freedom, but to no avail.
Eventually, the young pig gave up and slid to the floor, tears beginning to emerge. She brushed her fringe out of her face. A huge exhale did nothing to ease her stress. This was not fair and this was not right. How could she keep going like this? Would it be like this for the rest of her life? Surely not!
It took some time for Pigathia to completely settle down into a state of calm. This couldn’t go on much longer. She was tired and scared. A young pretty pig such as herself should be out there, in the world being spoiled and adored by handsome boys. Not struggling day to day with barely a scrap to eat. Where was the fairytale story promised to her by all those fables?
There was no fairytale. There was just Pigathia and the fiasco known as her reality. If she was going to break free, it was going to have to be on her own terms. And it had to be tonight.
There must be a way out of the barn. There has to be.
In a frenzy, Pigathia once again rose to her feet and started to feel every unblocked area of the tin wall, searching for some sort of weakness. In her efforts, she scraped and cut her hooves on the obstacles hidden in the darkness, but her adrenaline prevented any true pain being felt. Abandoning her method to running her hands on the rusted metal, she began knocking on the wood.
Knock. Knock. Knock. Knock.
This continued for a time until finally- Knock. Knock. Knock. CREAK!
A-ha! A breakthrough! But how to break through it?
Realising that there really wasn’t anything else for it, Pigathia lined her meek, but strong leg up to the weak section of wall. Giving out a loud cry, she slammed her hoof into the tin. With a loud crunch, the tin gave way leaving a hole just big enough for her to escape through. Without a second thought, the young pig broke free and began to sprint for the front gate.
Excitement bolted through Pigathia like several electric shocks. Nothing in her conscious was holding her back or questioning her actions. This was it. Some may call her selfish for abandoning her siblings, but she didn’t care. Her mother had always shown love for them, so it was only natural that the victimised daughter could leave without regrets.
Once past the gateway, Pigathia began the strenuous journey to the bus stop. Perhaps if she acted sweet enough, the bus driver would allow her to ride for free.
What do you know? It worked!
“And what would your name be, my sweet?” asked the gruff, kindly bus driver as she stepped up next to him.
“Um...” she thought about it for a moment.”Uh, my name is....Piggy. Yes, it’s Piggy.”
“Well, little Miss Piggy, it won’t be long til you’re on your way.”
And how right the bus driver was.....
So, I hope you enjoy my first addition to the collection. Read on!
Miss Piggy:
As the Iowa sun finally started to droop down beneath the horizon in the 7th hour of the day, tranquillity seemed to be only moments away. The day had seen its usual challenges followed through, duties of which the residents of this particular farm grew weary, but none more so then the third eldest daughter of the farm’s matriarch.
This particular adolescent girl presently sat cross-legged upon one of the smaller haystacks, her hands preoccupied in her blonde, straw-textured hair while her eyes merely sought the stars. There was nothing too peculiar about this young girl, who seemed to want nothing more to embody the glow and beauty of those faraway jewels. Releasing a hand from a lock of hair, she reached out towards the brightest star in the sky, scheming, hoping, and wishing that she could possibly one day caress it in her palm.
On this night, unfortunately, it appeared not to be so. The girl gave a sigh of anguish and let her hand fall to her lap. Just as the cicada and cricket prone silence started to settle in, she slipped off her haystack and started to make for the farmhouse. Perhaps tomorrow would bring about an opportunity for her to grasp. Maybe tomorrow...
“PIGATHIA LEE!”
Uh oh.
“Pigathia in here, NOW!”
Groaning, Pigathia redirected her path towards the rundown barn, knowing from past experience that it was much better just to face the music immediately rather than to dance against it. Straining to keep her composure, the teenaged pig prepared herself for the grumpy old sow’s umpteenth rant for the week. She neatened her hair as she pushed a wall of reeds back and shoved the rusted barn door open. Squeezing through the narrow gap the door would only ever allow, Pigathia locked eyes with the source of her dread.
Gaunt and beady green eyes, greying brunette hair matted like a bristled rug, deep lines along the contours of her face and a look of deepest contempt. Pigathia fought the impulse to run and stared back just as intensely
Yes, this was certainly Mrs. Lee.
“Have I done something wrong, Mother?” Pigathia quietly asked, passively lowering her head in an attempt to make herself smaller.
“What kind of stupid question do you call that, girl?” Mrs. Lee grouched, “Of course you’ve done something wrong, you hardly get anything right!”
“Well,” Pigathia started again, pushing her anguish down to her toes, “What have I done that’s displeased you?”
Mrs. Lee irritably gestured around the space. ”Why don’t you tell me? Look around you and tell me what you see.”
“I see a barn.”
“What kind of barn?”
“A messy one...”
“EXACTLY!” snarled Mrs. Lee, “What was the one thing I asked you to do today?”
“To clean it up,” Pigathia answered truthfully. Unfortunately, a pig with such a vivid imagination as hers can be prone to lose track of both time and responsibility. “Mother, believe me. I tried, but there’s no way I can do it all myself! There is so much mess and I can’t even reach most of it!”
“Here we go again with your pathetic little excuses!” sighed Mrs. Lee, looking ready to throttle the poor girl, “I’m growing tired of your disobedience. How can you be so selfish while your brothers and sisters pick up your slack?”
“Mother, I do just as -!”
“AND what about me?” snapped Mrs. Lee as if Pigathia hadn’t intercepted, “I’m doing everything I can to keep a roof over our heads!”
If ‘doing everything I can’ means sitting on the porch all day, accompanied only by a bottle of whiskey and barking orders at your twenty children, then Mrs. Lee is a freakin’ battler against the odds.
Pigathia, her ratty moth-bitten rags and the fact that she had no shoes all disagreed with Mrs. Lee’s claim. “Well, if Daddy were still here-“
“WELL HE AIN’T IS HE?!” Cried Mrs. Lee, losing all composure, “Your daddy’s dead isn’t he? Taken by his own stupidity! If the ******* tractor hadn’t gotten ‘im, then I would ‘ave! Now, get to work! You ain’t leavin’ ‘ere til this place is shinin’ brighter than the White ‘ouse!”
Pigathia yelped as Mrs. Lee grabbed her around the waist and shoved her further into the barn. The poor girl lost her footing, causing her to fall face forward. She turned herself over just in time to see her mother locking the door. Pigathia scrambled to her feet screaming and threw herself into the door, banging and calling for freedom, but to no avail.
Eventually, the young pig gave up and slid to the floor, tears beginning to emerge. She brushed her fringe out of her face. A huge exhale did nothing to ease her stress. This was not fair and this was not right. How could she keep going like this? Would it be like this for the rest of her life? Surely not!
It took some time for Pigathia to completely settle down into a state of calm. This couldn’t go on much longer. She was tired and scared. A young pretty pig such as herself should be out there, in the world being spoiled and adored by handsome boys. Not struggling day to day with barely a scrap to eat. Where was the fairytale story promised to her by all those fables?
There was no fairytale. There was just Pigathia and the fiasco known as her reality. If she was going to break free, it was going to have to be on her own terms. And it had to be tonight.
There must be a way out of the barn. There has to be.
In a frenzy, Pigathia once again rose to her feet and started to feel every unblocked area of the tin wall, searching for some sort of weakness. In her efforts, she scraped and cut her hooves on the obstacles hidden in the darkness, but her adrenaline prevented any true pain being felt. Abandoning her method to running her hands on the rusted metal, she began knocking on the wood.
Knock. Knock. Knock. Knock.
This continued for a time until finally- Knock. Knock. Knock. CREAK!
A-ha! A breakthrough! But how to break through it?
Realising that there really wasn’t anything else for it, Pigathia lined her meek, but strong leg up to the weak section of wall. Giving out a loud cry, she slammed her hoof into the tin. With a loud crunch, the tin gave way leaving a hole just big enough for her to escape through. Without a second thought, the young pig broke free and began to sprint for the front gate.
Excitement bolted through Pigathia like several electric shocks. Nothing in her conscious was holding her back or questioning her actions. This was it. Some may call her selfish for abandoning her siblings, but she didn’t care. Her mother had always shown love for them, so it was only natural that the victimised daughter could leave without regrets.
Once past the gateway, Pigathia began the strenuous journey to the bus stop. Perhaps if she acted sweet enough, the bus driver would allow her to ride for free.
What do you know? It worked!
“And what would your name be, my sweet?” asked the gruff, kindly bus driver as she stepped up next to him.
“Um...” she thought about it for a moment.”Uh, my name is....Piggy. Yes, it’s Piggy.”
“Well, little Miss Piggy, it won’t be long til you’re on your way.”
And how right the bus driver was.....