Ben came in and kissed his sister on the cheek. They had never been really close but he always respected his baby sister.
With out saying a word her handed her the repaired rose and she took it from him. She looked at it and a single tear ran down her cheek.
He wiped it with his thumb. "That's as good as I could fix it for you Tinker Bell."
She smiled, her brother had called her this since she was little. "Thank you Big Ben." Her whispered voice said.
"You remember me and spoke." Ben said.
"Tinker Bell has to always fly toward Big Ben to go home."
"Yes, she does." Ben looked over at Zane. He did not like this man for causing all this trouble to his sister but was glad he was the one to get her to talk instead of that man.
"I need to go my Tinker Bells. I'll come back to see you soon." Ben said.
She smiled at him. As soon as he was gone she laid the rose down and started to read.
◇◇◇♡♡♡◇◇◇ THE VALIANT LITTLE TAILOR
One fine day a Tailor was sitting on his bench by the window in very high spirits, sewing away most diligently, and presently up the street came a country woman, crying, "Good jams for sale! Good jams for sale!"
This cry sounded nice in the Tailor's ears, and, poking his diminutive head out of the window, he called, "Here, my good woman, just bring your jams in here!"
The woman mounted the three steps up to the Tailor's house with her large basket, and began to open all the pots together before him. He looked at them all, held them up to the light, smelt them, and at last said, "These jams seem to me to be very nice, so you may weigh me out two ounces, my good woman; I don't object even if you make it a quarter of a pound."
The woman, who hoped to have met with a good customer, gave him all he wished, and went off grumbling, and in a very bad temper.
"Now!" exclaimed the Tailor, "Heaven will send me a blessing on this jam, and give me fresh strength and vigor;" and, taking the bread from the cupboard, he cut himself a slice the size of the whole loaf, and spread the jam upon it.
"That will taste very nice," said he; "but, before I take a bite, I will just finish this waistcoat."
So he put the bread on the table and stitched away, making larger and larger stitches every time for joy.
Meanwhile the smell of the jam rose to the ceiling, where many flies were sitting, and enticed them down, so that soon a great swarm of them had pitched on the bread.
"Holloa! who asked you?" exclaimed the Tailor, driving away the uninvited visitors; but the flies, not understanding his words, would not be driven off, and came back in greater numbers than before.
This put the little man in a great passion, and, snatching up in his anger a bag of cloth, he brought it down with a merciless swoop upon them. When he raised it again he counted as many as seven lying dead before him with outstretched legs.
"What a fellow you are!" said he to himself, astonished at his own bravery.
"The whole town must hear of this." In great haste he cut himself out a band, hemmed it, and then put on it in large letters, "SEVEN AT ONE BLOW!"
"Ah," said he, "not one city alone, the whole world shall hear it!" and his heart danced with joy, like a puppy-dog's tail.
The little Tailor bound the belt around his body, and made ready to travel forth into the wide world, feeling the workshop too small for his great deeds.
Before he set out, however, he looked about his house to see if there were anything he could carry with him, but he found only an old cheese, which he pocketed, and observing a bird which was caught in the bushes before the door, he captured it, and put that in his pocket also.
Soon after he set out boldly on his travels; and, as he was light and active, he felt no fatigue. His road led him up a hill, and when he arrived at the highest point of it he found a great Giant sitting there, who was gazing about him very composedly.
But the little Tailor went boldly up, and said, "Good day, friend; truly you sit there and see the whole world stretched below you. I also am on my way thither to seek my fortune. Are you willing to go with me?"
The Giant looked with scorn at the little Tailor, and said, "You rascal! you wretched creature!"
"Perhaps so," replied the Tailor; "but here may be seen what sort of a man I am;" and, unbuttoning his coat, he showed the Giant his belt.
The Giant read, "SEVEN AT ONE BLOW"; and supposing they were men whom the Tailor had killed, he felt some respect for him.
Still he meant to try him first; so taking up a pebble, he squeezed it so hard that water dropped out of it. "Do as well as that," said he to the other, "if you have the strength."
"If it be nothing harder than that," said the Tailor, "that's child's play."
And, diving into his pocket, he pulled out the cheese and squeezed it till the whey ran out of it, and said, "Now, I fancy that I have done better than you."
◇◇◇♡♡♡◇◇◇
Bella yawned and had become sleepy. Zane scooped her up and placed her in bed. Covering her up like a child he laid his head on her stomach, "My sweet Bella, my beautiful beauty. Please come back to me. Please I need you to love me once more."
Then he felt her hand upon his head as she seemed to stroke his hair. He hoped this was a sign she was on her way home.