Far away, in a valley tucked away up in the mountains, there stood a toy-making village.
All children young and old took pride in their village trade and learned
well the crafts of their fathers and mothers. Throughout the entire
world, no one could build toys as fine as theirs. Growing up, boys and
girls would make toys and give them to each other to play. As the children grew older, however, they wished to
exchange and play with something finer. So the children would go into
their homes and dig out their precious little box and pull out the loveliest toy they had. For years they had been adding embellishments and
colour to the wooden structure and they grew tired of keeping it locked
away in a box. Very soon into their young adult years, these fine toys
would be brought to be played with. Some children would give their
special toy to anyone, others only gave it to people they cared
specially about. Still, one by one, year by year, the toys would wear
and break. The children would do what they could to fix it, but it would
never be the same. In this village there lived a girl of sweet nature.
Unlike the other girls her age, she kept her toy safely in its locked
box. Sometimes boys would come up to her and encourage her to play with
their toys, hoping for hers in return. Sometimes, when she was lonely or
the toy looked specially fun, she didn't feel as though she could help
herself, and would take up the toy and play with it. Sometimes, but very
rarely, she would open her box and bring out her toy, but it was never
long before she quickly took it back and locked it safely in its case.
Afterwards she would open it up and gaze at it, then she would cry. It
never looked as nice as it did before she took it out and gave it to
someone to play with. The village girls and boys and adults all told her
the toy was hers and that she should bring it out to play with before
it was old and ugly and no one wanted it anymore. They told her she
should add embellishments, because, though hers was plain and pretty, it
was still too plain. She wondered why she didn't feel that way. Maybe it
was because it was her only connection too her parents. She never
remembered them treating it like a toy, they treated it like a treasure
and gift. She wished she could take her toy out and play with it, but it
was always too precious and she was too afraid it would break and soil.
One days while walking the length of the valley she looked up to see
smoke floating into the air. She thought it looked like smoke from a
chimney. There was a legend, she recalled, about a toy maker who lived
farther up in the mountains. He made the finest toys and it was by him
that the first villagers learned their art. Maybe he could tell her
about her toy. Maybe he could fix it! And make it the most beautiful toy
ever! The girl ran back to the village, grabbed her box, holding it
close, and followed the smoke cloud. It was not long before she appeared
in a clearing. At the centre was a log cabin. There was also a garden.
In it an old man was working. The girl smiled. There was something
friendly and grandfatherly about this elderly man.
"Hello, young lady,
how can I help you?" He said, turning around.
"Are you the grand toy
maker?" She asked.
"I don't make toys," he said, "I make treasures." He
couldn't be referring to what had always been called their toys, she
thought and hoped. How dreadful if what they played with was really a
gift from this man. If that were true, how many hours he must have
laboured over each one, she thought. "I see you
have my gift for you in that box you carry. Do you bring it with you
everywhere?" He remarked, to her surprise. Without saying a word, she
held it out to him, even though everything inside of her wanted to hold
it closer so he couldn't see, there was some stronger force that wanted
desperately to give it to him. With a gentle smile, he took the box. "It
needs a key," he mentioned.
She searched her pockets and clothes, but
realised to her despair that she had left it at home. "I don't have it,"
she exclaimed.
"Do you wish I could see it?" He asked. The girl nodded.
To her surprise, the man opened the box as though there were no lock.
"Lovely," he exclaimed to her.
She did not know what to say. All she
could think of was all the times she had let it be played with and all
the times the villagers told her that her treasure was plain and not
pleasing. "It is chipped right there," she mentioned.
"Don't think
about that," he told her, "my son will be home soon and he can fix it
for you. I think it is beautiful."
"Do you really?" She asked.
"Of
course I do!" The friendly man cried, "what is not to love about this
wonderful gift."
"It is terribly plain, despite the colour," observed
the girl.
"It is tastefully embellished, see how your own decor adds to the structure rather than distracts it," he extolled her workmanship, "it compliments each other very nicely."
"It is tastefully embellished, see how your own decor adds to the structure rather than distracts it," he extolled her workmanship, "it compliments each other very nicely."
Never before had the girl's
heart soared like it did now. She had only always known that whatever
she did, her treasure was never good enough for long. "So it is a gift,"
she spoke up. The man nodded. "Did you make all those precious things?" she asked.
"I did," he nodded.
"Why?"
He looked at her quietly then said, "I give each person a piece of my craftsmanship so they can then share it with whoever they choose. It was meant to resemble the beauty and uniqueness of each person and to be shared with the one they chose to spend the rest of their lives with. There is a difference, however. While the treasure can be damaged and can not be mended by anyone but my son, for to him I passed on my art, your value can not so much as be dented."
The girl had never heard something so wonderful. "Has anyone else been to see you?" she asked.
"Yes, a little boy, but he isn't so little anymore. He still comes and visits me quite frequently. I think he is out with my son."
The hours ticked by and by, and the old man and the village girl talked and talked. She confessed and cried over her little treasure and apologized for
being careless with it. He did not condemn nor excuse her, but it was
such a relief to have someone listen. He encouraged her not to listen to the villagers who did not know their own hearts and minds, let alone her's. Then they spoke of wonderful things, happy things, and sad things. It was growing dark when they heard the front door open and two voices coming in. One was saying good-bye to the other.
"That would be my son," the man told her. "Immanuel," he called, "a village girl has brought us her treasure and needs it to be mended."
"Yes, Father," the young man said brightly, coming over, "Hello, my name is Immanuel. Would you like me to renew your treasure?"
The girl nodded, wondering why he asked her, when his father already said so."Where is it?" The father handed the box to the girl, who timidly handed it to the son. Immanuel took the box over to the table and gingerly opened it, bringing out the treasure. The girl's face flushed when she saw it, but it flushed even more when she saw Immanuel take out his own treasure. Her eyes widened at how beautiful it was. His hands moved skillfully over both treasures, until at last, to her horror, he seemed to break his.
"What are you doing," she nearly cried, then she saw he was using the pieces from his own to mend hers. "That was not worth it," she felt like saying, but the caring look in the father's eyes and the peaceful look in the son's convinced her that they believed it was.
It was not long before her treasure was shining brighter than she had ever seen it. Immanuel lifted it up and gave it to her, "Now you have a piece of my treasure in yours. I hope it will stay safe, but never be afraid to come back to me to fix it for you."
"Thank you," the girl gasped, tears filling her eyes. She could hardly believe he thought that her treasure was precious enough to take from his own, but now her heart believed it too, and her soul soared with joy.
He smiled, "May I walk you back to the village?"
"Yes, please," she answered.
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Sorry it's late!
- Lynsi Keye
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Sorry it's late!
- Lynsi Keye
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