Khuzaymah Saves the Day Khuzaymah was a rather long, and quite skinny cobra. He lived under a
red sandstone boulder that sat next to a very prickly cactus. He loved
his home. Once a year the cactus would bloom with a few orange-red
flowers, and they would fill the air with their sweet scent. He loved
the hot desert sun of Egypt, and how it heated the coral pink sand that
surrounded the boulder. Khuzaymah was a little bit different from the other cobras. Instead
of slithering across the sand, he did something unusual. He held the end
of his tail in his mouth and he rolled along the sand like a hula-hoop.
Since he was so different, the other desert animals sometimes made fun
of him. One day, as Lateefa the lizard was scuttering across the burning
sand, she happened to see Khuzaymah rolling towards her. She stopped and
began to laugh. She laughed, and laughed, and laughed, as he came
rolling past her. Lateefa the lizard had never seen a cobra roll before.
"Why don’t you slither like the other snakes? You look so
funny!" she called out to Khuzaymah. But Khuzaymah just kept on rolling. He couldn’t say anything back
to her because he’d have to let go of his tail, and he was having too
much fun rolling around in the desert. Saabira the scorpion was taking her four babies out for their first
walk to teach them about the dangers of the desert. "Children, you
must be very careful. You must watch out for….." Saabira was
interrupted as Khuzaymah rolled right in front of her family. "…….rolling
cobras?" she continued. She suddenly burst out laughing. Her four
babies started to laugh too. "Children, rolling cobras…Ha! Ha!
Ha!… are very dangerous. Ha! Ha! Ha!" She couldn’t talk. She
was laughing too hard. Her stinger bounced up and down in the air as she
and her babies laughed at Khuzaymah. He hadn’t seen Saabira the scorpion and her family. He knew he’d
better be more careful. He tried to hiss, and stick out his wiggly
tongue, but he couldn’t do that and hold his tail in his mouth at the
same time. He was having too much fun rolling around in the desert sand
to let go. Bari and Basit were two buzzards. They were flying high in the sky,
looking for some lunch. They loved to eat any kind of dead animal, so
were always searching the ground below for a meal. "What is
that?" Bari asked, pointing with his wing to a large area covered
with acacia trees. "It looks like a cobra rolling along in the sand," answered
Basit. "Let’s take a closer look!" The two buzzards swooped
down towards Khuzaymah. "Why, it is a cobra. Look! It’s got its tail in its mouth and
it is rolling like a hula- hoop. Have you ever seen anything so funny
before, Basit?" Bari the buzzard asked. Basit couldn’t answer. He had fallen to the ground and had landed
on a cactus. He was laughing so hard that he didn’t notice the sharp
barbs sticking into his feathers. Bari fell down and started laughing
too. They both watched Khuzaymah roll through the acacia trees with his
tail held tightly in his mouth. Khuzaymah could hear the two buzzards laughing at him, but he didn’t
care. He was having too much fun. He kept rolling along happily, until
he bumped into something. He had knocked into it so hard, that he’d
almost bitten his tail right off. He lay there for a few moments with
his eyes shut. When he opened them, he saw that he’d bumped into a
pile of bones. There was a huge, sun-bleached skull, that must have
belonged to a dead elephant. It was lying partially buried in the sand. Khuzaymah was tired, and he was hot. He crawled into the skull
through the hole where an eye had been. He curled up into a ball and
fell asleep. It was shady and cool in there. He woke up a little while
later to something sharp poking him. "Get out of here! This is my
skull!" screamed Shamsa, the spider. She’d been out looking for
her lunch and had come to find the cobra curled up in the skull. He
slithered back out of the hole onto the hot sand. "And stay out of
here! Be on your way!" Shamsa spider added. Khuzaymah grabbed a hold of his tail, being very careful of his
partly bitten off end, and rolled away. "What in the world?"
laughed Shamsa. "You don’t slither? What kind of cobra are you
anyway? Ha, ha, ha, ha." Khuzaymah rolled faster, and faster, so that he could get away from
Shamsa the spider. After he’d rolled for about an hour, he was tired
again. He didn’t notice a big hole, and fell right into it. He lay at
the bottom of it with his tail in his mouth. "Well, what have we here?" asked the old desert fox who
lived in the hole. Khuzaymah let go of his tail and answered, "I’m Khuzaymah, the
cobra." "What were you doing with your tail in your mouth?" Hasib
the fox asked. Khuzaymah didn’t answer. "You look tired, and hungry. You can stay here with me and rest
for a while if you’d like," the fox said. "Just leave my
gold alone. That’s all I ask of you." He pointed to a pile of
gold artifacts lying in the corner of the hole. Next to the artifacts
stood a shovel and a small pick. Khuzaymah assured the fox, "You don’t need to worry about me.
I don’t care about ancient Egyptian artifacts." Hasib invited Khuzaymah to go with him to find some food. "There
are some delicious dates growing on a palm, at the oasis. Do you like
those?" Khuzaymah didn’t care for dates, but decided to go with Hasib
anyway. The fox climbed out of the hole and ran off. Khuzaymah grabbed
hold of his tail and started rolling behind Hasib. Neither of them saw
Shakur the lion. He was standing on a rock watching the two animals.
"What in the world is that?" he asked himself. Coming quickly
towards him was a fox, and a cobra holding its tail in its mouth. The
lion had never seen anything so funny before. He began to laugh. Hasib saw the lion. Lions liked to eat foxes. He started running
faster and faster. Khuzaymah could hardly keep up with him. Hasib found
another hole in the ground and jumped inside. Khuzaymah followed him.
They could hear the lion laughing for hours, and knew they had to stay
inside until it was gone. Shakur laughed long into the night. As the morning sun rose from behind a sand dune, Hasib realized how
happy he was to have a friend; someone he could do things with.
Khuzaymah was happy to have a friend, someone he could roll around the
desert with. The next time you are out in the Egyptian desert and you see a snake
roll by with his tail in his mouth, following a running fox, you’ll
know who they are. Shop
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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