The Story of the Cobbler (or How to Succeed in Publishing)
Kurt loves to cobble. (okay, so he looks young for his age) |
Kurt the Cobbler lived in Fabelonia, a
small village on the outskirts of Famenfortunia. Shoemaking was his trade, one
that he had worked at all of his 84 years. Kurt had white hair and bright green
eyes that sparkled in his wrinkled face like emeralds pushed into dough. All
day long and most of the night, Kurt worked at his bench, hammering heels,
snipping leather, lacing laces, and, basically, cobbling. He was very good at
his trade.
On this particular day, Kurt was
finishing a commission for the village banker, Fickle Salesia. Fickle was as
thin and bitter as a piece of lemon rind. He had ordered a pair of high boots
made of butter-soft coypu leather lined with goose down. Kurt was very proud of
the boots. He was polishing the final brass eyelet just as Fickle traipsed into
the store, plopped his bony butt on the threadbare ottoman, and waved Kurt
over.
The old shoemaker knelt in front of
Fickle and slipped the boots on his long narrow feet. They fit as if they had
been dabbed on with a fairy hair brush.
Fickle
stood up and admired the shoes. He turned this way and that. Finally, he
harrumphed. “I don’t like them.”
“You don’t like them?” Kurt sat on his
heels, pushed the bifocals back on his head, and squinted at the stringy banker.
“They’re too something or other.” He
leaned over, pulled off the boots, and stormed out of the store.
Kurt had worked on those boots for two
weeks, accepting no other commissions (not that there were any forthcoming).
Now he had no money, no buyers, and no food. But he had lots of shoes. He gazed
lovingly at the rows of handmade shoes that slept beneath the pitted wood of
his workbench. There were satin slippers and wooden clogs and ladies’ high
heels and children’s soft soles and moccasins of all textures and boots of all
heights.
Kurt’s stomach growled. He lifted
himself up and took his bamboo fishing pole from a corner of the small shop. “I
think I’ll go fishing.” Fishing for fish was the only way Kurt could get food
now.
Several hours later, Kurt trundled
back into the village. A tiny fish hung on a string from his waistband. Just
then, Bloggy the cat came screeching around the corner. Old Missus Crit shouted
after her, “And stay off my stoop.”
Bloggy stopped short in front of Kurt,
staring hungrily at the tiny fish on his waist. Kurt looked at the cat and then
looked at the fish. He leaned over, plucked the fish from the hook, and
gingerly held it out to Bloggy, who snapped it up in a thrice.
“Good kitty.”
Bloggy took off with nary a backward
glance.
Kurt just shook his head. A bluebird
twittered by. In its beak, it gripped a piece of croissant, still fragrant from
the oven. Kurt followed the aroma up the street to Bettina Barista’s bakery.
People streamed into the store, ordering glistening cakes and pastries that
were arrayed on glass shelves inside the window.
Bettina waved to Kurt and came from behind
the counter. She had rosy cheeks and a great big heart inside her great big
bodice. “Kurt, I heard about that stingy stickler Salesia. Here, have a loaf of
bread. It’s a day old but it’ll fill your belly just the same.”
His eyes misted over. As he turned to
leave, he gazed at all the sugary delights and had an idea.
He hurried back to his cobbler’s shop.
He cleaned the bow window and wiped the wood shelves that faced the street.
Cradling his shoes, he assembled them pair by pair inside the window. Then he
went back to work, hammering, measuring, snipping, and polishing.
It wasn’t long before an elegant
gentleman with lace at his throat and a velvet sack full of coins on his waist
came into the store. “Good day, my dear
cobbler. I am Alastair Barnes, a nobleman in this area. I noticed those fine
boots in your window.” Barnes pointed to
the shoes that had been rejected by Salesia.
(Barnes, it should be noted, was a rather short gentleman but his feet
were long and narrow.)
“I should like to try them on.”
Try them he did. They fit him even
better than they had fit fickle Fickle.
Barnes was so pleased with the boots
that he told his friend King Gustav about them. Kurt the Cobbler was
commissioned to the King. He was never hungry again. To thank Bettina for her
inspiration, Kurt made her a special pair of wide width slippers with insoles
as soft as meringue.
And he lived happily ever after.
Writing + reading = success |
Of course, there’s a moral to The
Story of the Cobbler. After all, he lives in Fabelonia. There are actually five
morals:
- Learn to fish (just in case).
- Help others (promote authors you like).
- Display your wares (aka: blogging).
- Don’t let fickle sales get you down.
- Keep on cobbling.
...and look for my newest pair of shoes (aka: book) The Genie Ignites from Boroughs Publishing Group.
Best Wishes,
Kellyann Zuzulo
www.kfzuzulo.com
What Would You Wish For?
Comments
Post a Comment
We would love to hear from you but hope you are a real person and not a spammer. :)