and lifted her into the air, and she gaspedâas she always gasped when he touched herâand then she was high enough in the air to reach the apple. And she picked it.
And then, instead of putting her down, he threw her into the air. Gretel screamedâbut not in fear. And he caught her and threw her up again, and she was laughing. And he threw her up a third time, but this time he threw her too near an overhanging branch, and she reached up to protect her head, but too late, and she cried out in pain. When he lowered her to the ground, red blood was running in a narrow rivulet down her face. Her forehead had struck the branch and left a deep cut just above her eyebrow. She was having trouble seeing out of her left eye through the steady stream of blood. The young man knelt before her. He gazed at the cut. Very gently, very slowly, he applied his lips to it, and he sucked the blood away. Gretel did not know what to think of that. Then he took from his pocket the piece of tattered twine that he used to fix the childrenâs toys, and he wrapped it around her head, so that it ran crosswise over the cut. He smiled at Gretel. And when he took the twine away and wiped the blood from Gretelâs face, she saw that the bleeding had stopped and that her head no longer hurt at all.
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Now, dear reader, I seem to detect in you a growing unease about this handsome young man. I must say, I think that is very unfair of you.
Do you suspect a flower, just because it is beautiful?
Or a doctor, for his mysterious healing power?
Or the postrnan, because you donât know where he sleeps at night?
Very unfair indeed.
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Oh, and while Iâm thinking about it, you should go ahead and rehire that babysitter that came by for the previous story. Make her take the little ones out to a movie this time. A G-rated movie. Or an R-rated movie, for that matter. Whatever it is, it probably wonât be as bad as what youâre about to read.
I know, you donât believe me. âHow much worse could things get?â you ask.
Believe me. Much worse.
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As Gretel and the handsome young man walked in from the orchard that night, they talked about this and thatâthe weather, the apple crop, the upcoming Harvest Feastâuntil suddenly he turned to her and asked her if she didnât wonder where he lived. Gretel, shyly, replied that she did wonder sometimes. He asked if maybe she would like to see his house. Her heart fluttered, and she told him she would like to very much, and she thanked him for the kind invitation. And then she asked the handsome young man where his house was.
âA little ways into the forest,â he said.
âIn the forest?â
He laughed. âYouâre not afraid of that silly old forest, are you?â
âNo,â she lied.
âIâll leave a path of ashes for you to follow. Howâs that?â
Gretelâs heart floated up near her mouth. âThatâs good,â she said.
But that night, when she returned home and told the widow that she was going into the Schwarzwald to visit the handsome young man, a great fight began. The widow forbade her from going. It was not right for a child to visit a manâs house in the first place, she said. And the fact that it was in the Schwarzwald? Did Gretel know nothing of that place? Was she a fool?
Gretel was furious. She raged and cried all that night. The next day, her face red and puffy, she told the handsome young man that she could not come, that the widow would not allow it. He smiled and told her not to worry, that they were still friends. But he talked to her less that day. She watched him from afar. Rarely did his gaze turn to meet hers.
Heâs forgetting me, she thought.
At the end of the day, the handsome young man turned toward the tavern without even glancing at Gretelâas if she no longer even existed.
Just before he disappeared inside the tavern door, Gretel ran and caught
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