Home Sweet Home
The Nile river flowed silently past the
pyramid, which stood majestically against the reddening sky of
morning. The sun cast its rays down on the desert sands, awakening
the peaceful land. The only sounds that could be heard were a few
birds chirping, and a small herd of cows mooing off in the
distance.
Tiy and Yuya, two glossy black ibis, woke
up in their nest, which was just a few feet back from the
riverbank. Each of them stretched their wings, then stood up and
straightened their long, spindly legs. Without uttering a sound
they made their way down through the tall reeds to the swift
flowing water of the river. The sun rose higher in the sky and
soon the heat became suffocating. The birds felt the warmth
through their black feathers. Tiy and Yuya started pecking around
the bottom of some long fuzzy reeds, and in the black gooey mud
for wriggling bugs, and
little fish that were splashing about in the shallow waters near
the river's bank. When they spotted a fish they'd poke at it with
their sharp curved beaks.
As Tiy and Yuya were busy eating, they
spotted some children up the river, not very far away, swimming
and splashing, and having lots of fun. A small boy was scooping up
handfuls of mud and throwing it up into the air. It fell back
down, landing with a SPLAT! in the river. His beautiful brown eyes
and shiny brown hair were matted with drying mud. The little girl
beside him wasn't quite as happy about the mud sticking to her
dress. Tiy watched them with delight.
A dhow floated past, its sail fluttering
in the whispering breeze. Tiy's eyes shifted to the man and woman
on deck, watching them as they wrestled with the current of the
river Nile.
As Yuya swallowed a large scarab beetle,
he glanced up to see a barge float by; piles of
pomegranates, oranges, and lemons lay stacked on the deck. He took
a deep breath and could smell their citrussy fragrance. He bent
down again to poke a fish, and was right in the middle of gulping
it down when he noticed that the water was starting to get deeper,
and running much faster. Tiy noticed it too. She looked up and saw
some big black clouds. "It must be raining up
river," she said to Yuya. "We'd better leave before the
Nile floods," she urged.
They tried to go, but their feet were stuck,
like big suction cups, in the mud. Tiy started to call for help.
"Help! Help us! We're stuck!" she cried.
Yuya still had the fish in his beak. He
called out, "Haaaalllllth!" It was too hard for him to
say
the word 'help' when he had a fish stuck in his mouth and throat.
The two ibis tried to pull their long legs out, but they wouldn't
budge.
Tiy looked up the river. The dhow had
sailed off, the barge was gone, and the children playing in the
river were nowhere to be seen. She looked around frantically. Out
of the corner of her eye she saw something that frightened her.
Coming towards them was a very hungry looking crocodile. It's tail
was swishing back and forth as it moved closer. Tiy squawked,
"Help! Help! Help!" Closer and closer it came. She could
see it's sharp teeth. She hit Yuya with her wing.
He looked up and saw the crocodile too.
"Haaaallllth!" he screamed again. They both began to
tug, and tug, and tug, trying to get their feet unstuck. Just at
the last minute, as the crocodile
opened his mouth wide to swallow them, their feet gave way, and
they flew back to their nest. Yuya, with the fish still in his
beak, dropped into the nest. He let go of the fish, which arched
and wiggled around.
The rain came, and was soon pouring down
on Tiy and Yuya. They curled up and pulled their wings over their
heads. It rained so hard that their nest filled up with water, and
all the mud and reeds around them were soon covered with a few
inches of floodwater from the river. The fish swam right over the
edge of the nest, and back into the swirling waters of the Nile.
All night long it rained.
The next morning, after the rain had
stopped, and the river had receded, Tiy and Yuya knew that they
were going to have to find somewhere else to get their bugs and
fish from. It was just too dangerous for black ibis to feed near
the river!
They flew out of their soggy nest and
headed to dryer land....near an ancient obelisk, half-tipped over,
and jutting out of the hot desert sand. After they'd rested there
for a few minutes, Yuya noticed a small lizard dart by. He watched
it scurrying about, trying to find shade. Tiy had spotted a small
scorpion that was trying to find relief from the heat under a
rock. They were both about to catch and eat their prey when a loud
snort came from behind them. They turned around slowly to see a
long, slimy tongue, and two googley eyes staring at them.
Terrified, the ibis flew up into the sky and headed west.
The came began to laugh. He'd never seen
such scared birds before. He sat down in the shade of the obelisk
and watched the black ibis fly off until they were just two small
black dots. The lizard lay in the shade, and the scorpion crept
under the rock. None of them had a care in the world.
Tiy and Yuya looked desperately for a
place to land, a place where they could build a new nest, and
could catch fish and bugs without being eaten themselves.
"Let's go there," said Tiy, pointing with her wing to a
river down below them.
Yuya followed her down. They landed in
the hot sand. Yuya looked around. "Hmmmm, this is the
strangest river I've ever seen. There are no palm trees, no reeds,
nothing. What is this place?" he asked.
Tiy thought the same. "Well, at
least we don't have to worry about crocodiles sneaking up on us.
Let's go and find something to eat," she said.
The two ibis walked around, prodding the
side of the river with their curved beaks. They couldn't find any
fish. "Aha," cried Yuya. "Bugs!"
Tiy looked over to where Yuya was. There
was a whole pile of ants, a ton of centipedes, and as many spiders
as any glossy black ibis could ever eat! "Payday!" she
cried out with delight. The two birds gobbled down the insects
until they were full, then lay down against a rock. A tall dark
shadow soon engulfed them. Tiy cracked her eye open a little bit.
"Yikes!" she squawked. She jumped up, pulling a half
asleep Yuya with her. "Look! What is that?"
They stood back and watched the huge ship
as it sailed slowly by. "How can such a big ship go in such a
narrow river?" Tiy wondered. As she was looking at the ship,
she saw a sign. It read, 'SUEZ CANAL. "Oh, so that's why
there are no fish. It's not a river. It's a canal."
The two birds decided to stay at the
canal. They built a nest out of bits and pieces of things that had
fallen off of the passing ships. It was comfortable enough for
them. The ibis never had to worry about floodwaters, or crocodiles
again. Even though there were no fish, there were enough bugs to
last them forever. What more cold a glossy black ibis ask for?
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the Virtual Khan el-Khalili, the Store for Egypt Lovers Design, Layout and Graphic Art by Jimmy
Dunn, an InterCity Oz, Inc.
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