Witches and Forests
Once there was a child born of the forest who did not cry. She did not laugh, either. Nor did she sigh or gurgle or plea or revolt.
She merely watched.
The forest, seeing children pass by who raged and laughed, sometimes one and then the other, and sometimes both at once, grew concerned and gave some thought to this curious child.
It brought a witch to the child, for it knew witches for what they were: healers, helpers, and smart women who took on the tasks before them and rarely failed.
The witch took to tending the child, feeding her, clothing her, rocking her to sleep.
This witch sang, and when she did, the child smiled. When the witch went out one night to tend an illness, though the forest watched over her, the child cried and when the witch returned, the child laughed.
The child grew, and raged and laughed, sometimes one and then the other, and sometimes both at once. The witch grew, and sighed and cried and laughed and smiled often. The forest watched all this, and would have smiled often, too, had it lips to do so. But it didn't. And so it sighed.
Its breath caught the child's hair. She smiled, and felt safe.
Would that the lot of them had witches and forests.