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The town fox and the country fox

Feast or famine, urban sprawl or rural bliss, One fox doesn't know when he is well off.

By Raymond G. TaylorPublished 2 years ago Updated 7 months ago 5 min read
Trash-raiding foxes: Gemini/RGT

"You must visit me in my country manor, dear boy," said Darcy, between mouthfuls of lamb kebab topped with dribbles of sweet n sour sauce. Smythe tore into a cardboard carton exuding the aroma of last week's KFC.

"Why would I want to leave this bounty?" said Smythe, indicating the spilled contents of a trash can from which he had selected the remains of a barbeque rib. He took no notice as Darcy jumped at the roar of a passing motorcycle, hiding momentarily under the engine-space of an adjacent Audi.

"A little rural peace and quiet would do you no harm," said Darcy, emerging from behind the kerbstone, his muzzle covered with the remnants of some sticky sauce, peppered with road dirt.

"We'll see," said Smythe, having moved on to lap up a morsel of pepperoni and a fragment of pizza crust. They continued their nocturnal feast until confronted by a ferocious barking dog, straining at its leash and dragging a pet behind it. The two foxes slunk off into a nearby builders' yard.

"Dogs are the devil," said Smythe as they both hid behind a pile of truck tires.

"Well, come with me then my dear chap, to my arcadian bliss, where you will see precious few of those fearsome fellows."

Smythe was eventually persuaded to follow his friend Darcy to the latter's country domain. They spent two days and nights following the iron roadway, picking at morsels along the way. Smythe was not impressed with the meagre fare provided by the hedgerows and rail embankments, but was spurred on by Darcy's stories of the country banquets that awaited them.

Arriving the next morning, they took a brief breakfast from a heap of discarded farmyard vegetables, before bedding down for the day. Darcy showed Smythe a hidden entrance to a cosy lair beneath a huge haybarn. Not before they had snapped up a wayward duck that had strayed too far from its fishpond. Darcy showed Smythe how to pluck the feathers before tearing open the carcass to share with his urban paw-pal. They spread the feathers to cushion their overday beds.

The following night, they arose early with poultry on their minds, as Darcy had been telling stories of a huge hen house, barely protected by a thin wire fence. After an hour or two of digging, they managed to gain access to the wooden structure but, try as they might, they could not claw or chew their way through the wooden walls of the hen house.

"Never mind Smythe, old chap. There are plenty of pickings to be had elsewhere."

Smythe was unimpressed and, being taken on what he considered a wild goose chase, found no meat for their meal, having to make do with hedgerow fruits and the odd shrivelled chestnut left behind by the squirrels. Come morning, they were tired and fairly famished.

"Where is all this fine food you promised me," grumbled Smythe.

"Be patient, dear fellow," said Darcy, himself wondering where to go next to find the nourishment they both needed. That's when he thought of the wheat field nearby. "Here we are, dear chap," said Darcy as they reached the outer hedge of a series of fields of wheat, ripe and ready for the harvest that very day.

"But what is it?" asked Smythe, surveying the vast expanse of golden field before him.

"This is a wheat field, my dearest friend," said Darcy, condescending to explain. "This is where we find our breakfast."

Smythe, nibbling a few ears of wheat, was still not convinced.

"Grass? nothing but grass. How is a respectable fox supposed to sustain himself on such bland and unpalatable stuff? Where is the spice, where is the savour?"

"Patience, dear fellow. It is not the wheat we seek, but the succulent little field mice, hundreds of 'em, that reside herein."

Suddenly, there was a loud and piercing peal of a trumpet call, rising above the hedgerows, shocking them both into silence. Darcy recognised the sound at once as that of the hunting horn. He froze on the instant, momentarily in abject fear, before composing himself.

"What, by the holy Mother Vixen, is that?" exclaimed Smythe. Immediately following the hunting horn, came a wall of sound produced by the barking of dozens of hounds. "Dogs?" he asked, feeling his fur stand erect from every inch of his body.

"Dogs?" said Darcy, thinking quickly. "Don't worry about them. They are caged and tethered and can do us no harm. In this rural realm, dogs are the slaves of the pets, and not the other way around, as you are used to in your sophisticated city."

Was there or was there not just the merest hint of sarcasm in this observation.

"Really?" said Smythe.

"Oh yes, and that sound you hear is the call to breakfast."

"Call to breakfast?"

"Oh yes, call to breakfast. The clarion call to break our fast from the cornucopia, the table of the gods."

"But what do you mean?"

"Here, in the countryside, foxes are revered as the god-like creatures we truly are. From time to time, the people of the countryside will offer us sacrifice. They will lay before us great heaps of young lamb, calf, hen, duck, and piglet for our delectation. We need only grace their table with our presence and dip our snouts into the trough, as it were. They alert us to their offering with that high-pitched, tinny sound we know as the trumpet call. They leave those low-born canine curs in their cages to yap and howl and bark, as they watch us gorge our fill. The dogs are lucky if they are allowed to eat our leftovers. It is a ritual of this rural idyll."

"Oh, really?" said Smythe, trying to grasp the implications of this speech. Perhaps Darcy was right. Perhaps in this rural kingdom foxes received the adoration they truly deserved. Perhaps, in the countryside, foxes were not the underdogs they are in the city, scavenging for scraps in the wee hours. Perhaps, in this rural domain, foxes received their proper recognition.

"Well then," he continued. "Where do we go to join this feast?"

"Why, my dear friend," said Darcy, rubbing his forepaws together. "You simply follow the sound of the hunt... er... breakfast...ing horns... Follow the call of horns, and you will be directed to the feast. Run along, and I will catch up with you shortly."

With this, jowls slavering, Smythe trotted away in the direction of the sounding horns and the barking of the excited foxhounds.

Darcy slunk off to his haybarn hidey hole, congratulating himself on his perspicacity.

Later that morning Darcy, poking his snout out from the shelter of his foxhole, observed the whole procession. Hounds, horses, riders in red, led by the terrified town fox, leaping and galloping and running across the fields in the distance. At length, Darcy's friend, exhausted, made a final dash for a stream... but to no avail. In an instant, the hounds were upon him.

Darcy grimaced as he heard the final panicked scream of the trapped fox, his friend Smythe, as the cruel fangs of the hounds ripped the poor town fox to tattered ruin.

"Ah well!" Darcy sighed, philosophically. "It could have been worse... It could have been... ME."

O ~ 0 ~ o ~

Short StoryFable

About the Creator

Raymond G. Taylor

Author living in Kent, England. Writer of short stories and poems in a wide range of genres, forms and styles. A non-fiction writer for 40+ years. Subjects include art, history, science, business, law, and the human condition.

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  • Imola Tóth5 months ago

    I didn't see that coming. My naive brain thought it will be a cute tail about how either fox finds the others life way better and make a move haha! I never thought about how animals would think of our human habits or even use them to their advantage or sacrifice their friends. But then, foxes are cunning.

  • Sandy Gillman5 months ago

    Poor Smythe never stood a chance! I loved your fable with a twist of black humour.

  • Rachel Robbins5 months ago

    Oh, poor Smythe! I have foxes in my garden. I would say that suburban life suits us all perfectly.

  • Susan Fourtané 7 months ago

    Fantastic story. I thought first it was an example of theriocentricity but as soon as Darcy showed his very human evil personality I thought it is anthropomorphic instead. Lots of food for thought here.

  • Gosh that Darcy is so vile! I felt so sad for Smythe, the way he was betrayed 😭😭😭😭😭😭 Loved your story!

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