Teach the chime a lullaby
Cat, Bird and the Fiary in the Land of the Hobbits!
In the sunny hollows of the Hobbit country, a cat with a polka-dot scarf, a bird who recited numbers, and a tiny fiary with mismatched wings met by a stream that giggled when stones skipped. The Hobbits waved from their round doors, and the trio bowed because manners are the best sort of magic in a land of small folk. The bird had learned to count to twenty in exchange for breadcrumbs, the cat could find lost socks by smell, and the fiary practiced spelling new words so dust bunnies turned into letters. Today they faced a puzzle: the stream's song had gone flat, and without its tune, the garden clocks would forget how to tell time. The cat twitched an ear, the bird fluffed its feathers, and the fiary tapped a wing against her forehead until an idea popped like a bubble. Instead of following a map or insisting on rules, they decided to invent ways to fix the melody by mixing counting, rhyme, and color into a recipe for sound. They scattered pebbles painted with numbers, sang silly rhymes about moonbeam muffins, and sprinkled rainbow dust that smelled faintly of lemon and library books. As each strange ingredient joined the stream, tiny notes bubbled up—first a squeaky C, then a warm G, and finally a laugh that sounded like a bell and a kitten at once. The Hobbits sat on their porches, astonished, and the clocks hiccupped back into proper ticking as the stream learned a new song made of playful rules. The trio grinned, knowing they'd taught everyone that sometimes making a problem into an experiment is its own sort of wisdom.
They stepped back and coaxed the porch clocks onto the grass, and to everyone's delight brass faces and painted porcelain cuckoos found their feet and began to sway. Their ticks braided into a jaunty drumbeat that pulled the stream's new notes into a steady rhythm while shadows of hop-flowers twirled like tiny partners. A Hobbit toddler tumbled into a clap, a proud grandfather clock tried a formal two-step and bumped a teacup into a sheepish spin, and even the garden's shy sundial rolled a fraction and learned to bow. When the last note faded, time felt friendlier—enough to let small lost things wander back home—and the trio promised to teach more steps after tea.
They spread a checked cloth on the grass and assembled a make-do oven from a brass teapot and a turned sundial, deciding to fold moonlight into batter and bake a batch of sweet, singing cakes. The bird measured spoons with cheerful counting, the cat raided the laundry for a pair of lost socks to use as oven-mitts, and the little fiary whispered spelling charms while sprinkling lemon-and-library dust like sugar. When the warm puffs came out each one hummed a clear note, and as the Hobbits bit into the tiny songs their memories popped back into place: a toddler found a missing button, a grandfather clock remembered its polite two-step, and the stream took a crumb and kept the tune in a gentle loop. They passed the cakes around with steaming cups of tea, and as the last crumbs slipped into the water the stream learned a lullaby that would keep its melody steady through rain and rabbits, leaving the trio to grin at how a pinch of baking had mended the village's small rattles.
After tea they packed the brass-faced porch clocks into a neat caravan and set their paws and wings toward the winding rise where the village's old clockmaker kept his workshop. The path smelled of oil and wood shavings as the trio clambered up, the clocks clicking like compact companions and the stream's new lullaby threading through their footsteps. At the doorstep a thin, spectacled man with silvered hair and a cuff perpetually smudged with grease paused from an enormous grandfather mechanism and listened until a small smile unbent his serious face. He reached into a drawer and handed them a curious brass key that hummed faintly when held, saying he had been searching for just such a tune to coax the hill clock into proper greeting, and invited them inside to set the great chimes right.
They took the humming brass key and formed a small constellation of clocks beneath the hill's broad dome, paws, wings, and fingers arranged like conductors around a silent conductor's baton. The cat traced the bell's lip to find its deepest whisper, the bird counted steady beats and cued each swing, and the fiary darted inside the bell to tuck a soft web against the clapper until the tone bloomed warm and true. When the clockmaker wound the great mechanism and the trio matched their tiny voices to the bell's slow breathing, the chime answered with a honeyed chord that made the hillstones tremble in delight and sent the village chimneys puffing a tidy applause. With the great bell now singing a friendly, punctual hello, the brass key grew still in their hands as if content, and the clockmaker smiled as the workshop filled with a very satisfied kind of time.
They settled around the great bell and folded the week's tiny melodies into a single hush, murmuring the stream's lullaby softened by the oven's last hum and the bird's careful counting. The bell listened like a patient ear, its metal skin warming as the fiary tucked a silvery stitch of spellwork into the rim and the cat rubbed its polka-dot scarf against the clapper to remind it of home. When the first low note poured out it was the same honeyed chord as before but gentled into a cradle-song that made the hill's stones exhale and the workshop's gears slow to a sleepy, punctual tick. Outside, chimney smoke curled into lullaby-shaped loops, hobbit footsteps softened into whispers, and even the caravan of brass-faced clocks seemed to rock themselves to rest while the clockmaker rested his head on his palm and let the village breathe.
What should happen next?
Pick a path. You can also use number keys 1–9.