Fritz and Balthazar: Their adventure with tree spirits
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Fritz and Balthazar - Bodo Henningsen
On a clear autumn day, Lou the owl was doing as she did almost every day: sitting fast asleep, hidden in a crook of a branch.
The old oak tree in which Lou lived was still full of leaves, so it really was an ideal hiding place. As usual, there was heavy traffic on the main road which skirted the area, but the creatures who lived there were used to it.
But suddenly a new sound grew louder and louder and eventually settled over the tree with an enormous roar.
It felt like a hurricane. The thinner branches of the oak bent and shook. Almost all of the leaves blew away. Lou huddled closer to the tree trunk as the hurricane ruffled her usually immaculate plumage.
Now, through the suddenly naked branches, Lou could see a helicopter above the tree in which there were three people: the pilot, the co-pilot and the boss of the highway planning department.
The boss was saying To straighten out this road here, all we have to do is remove one old oak tree!
The pilot replied: And then you could build a rest area where the bend used to be.
The helicopter turned and disappeared, and silence returned. Lou laboriously groomed her feathers and closed her eyes. Two jays landed on top of the tree and wondered why almost all of the leaves were lying on the ground. Usually they knew everything that happened near the edge of the forest, but they hadn’t noticed the helicopter.
Soon life in and around the oak tree returned to normal.
Deep inside the old oak lived Big Cloud, the old spirit of the tree. He had lived there from the very beginning.
All of the animals as well as the many younger tree spirits in the forest called him Big Cloud. There was a reason, of course: every time he took an extra deep breath he looked exactly like a huge cloud of fog. Even though he usually slept during the day, he had once played a joke on Jack and Cracke, the two jays, by making the tree disappear in a big cloud of fog in broad daylight, so that they could not land after one of their patrols. This was Big Clouds way of punishing them for constantly disturbing his sleep during the day with their loud screeching.
And then, in the spring, it happened. A family of mice who lived under the tree was industriously hunting for food when a heavy jeep turned