The Carrot Pie
Once upon a time, there were three small, mini lop-eared rabbits named Bunny, Jackson, and Bear.
Bunny was the prettiest, smartest, ad most clever. She was white with patches of gray and tan. Her nose was gray on the end and her paws had tan tips. She also had long eyelashes, black eyes, very soft fur, and long tannish gray ears that draped over her shoulders.
Jackson was a little, white boy bunny, smaller than Bunny, with bright blue eyes, very large back feet, and long ears that hung from the side of his head and rested on the ground when he was eating carrots.
Bear was a chocolate brown, boy bunny too. He had brown eyes and drooping ears that flopped when he hopped. His fur was thick and bushy. That’s why Bunny called him Bear.
Bunny, Jackson, and Bear lived together in a little bunny house on the edge of the wood next to the meadow near Farmer Cox’s carrot patch where he grew tons of fat, orange carrots in his fertile fields. His carrots were the best in the land. Bunny, Jackson, and Bear loved carrots more than anything else and visited the farmer’s fields almost every day to taste his delicious carrots and bring some home for dinner.
Bunny, Jackson, and Bear stored their carrots in their bunny house under their beds and in their closets. Every day Bunny, Jackson, and Bear would count out how many carrots each one had hidden away.
Now Bunny was very tricky when it came to carrots. She could never carry back enough carrots to eat, and she did not like the hard work that it took to get them home. So she got her carrots by other means. When Jackson and Bear were not looking, she would borrow a few from them and eat them. Then she would say, “Ha, ha.”
Whenever Jackson and Bear counted their carrots again, they were always short of the last count and never could figure out where they went. Meanwhile, Bunny enjoyed Jackson’s and Bear’s big fat carrots and secretly always said “Ha, ha,” when they weren’t around.
One day when Jackson and Bear discovered that they had almost no carrots left because Bunny had hidden them, they went to tell Bunny what happened. Bunny said , “Don’t worry. I’ll look around the house and see if I can find them. They might be here.”
Sure enough. She knew right where to find them, of course, because she had hidden them. When she somehow discovered the whole bunch of carrots that she had hidden from them, they were so happy that they kissed tricky Bunny and made her a nice carrot pie - her favorite - from their carrots she had found.
Before Bunny went to bed that night, she lay in her bed thinking of the the nice carrot pie that she had tricked Jackson and Bear into cooking for her and said, “Ha, ha.”
Bunny was the prettiest, smartest, ad most clever. She was white with patches of gray and tan. Her nose was gray on the end and her paws had tan tips. She also had long eyelashes, black eyes, very soft fur, and long tannish gray ears that draped over her shoulders.
Jackson was a little, white boy bunny, smaller than Bunny, with bright blue eyes, very large back feet, and long ears that hung from the side of his head and rested on the ground when he was eating carrots.
Bear was a chocolate brown, boy bunny too. He had brown eyes and drooping ears that flopped when he hopped. His fur was thick and bushy. That’s why Bunny called him Bear.
Bunny, Jackson, and Bear lived together in a little bunny house on the edge of the wood next to the meadow near Farmer Cox’s carrot patch where he grew tons of fat, orange carrots in his fertile fields. His carrots were the best in the land. Bunny, Jackson, and Bear loved carrots more than anything else and visited the farmer’s fields almost every day to taste his delicious carrots and bring some home for dinner.
Bunny, Jackson, and Bear stored their carrots in their bunny house under their beds and in their closets. Every day Bunny, Jackson, and Bear would count out how many carrots each one had hidden away.
Now Bunny was very tricky when it came to carrots. She could never carry back enough carrots to eat, and she did not like the hard work that it took to get them home. So she got her carrots by other means. When Jackson and Bear were not looking, she would borrow a few from them and eat them. Then she would say, “Ha, ha.”
Whenever Jackson and Bear counted their carrots again, they were always short of the last count and never could figure out where they went. Meanwhile, Bunny enjoyed Jackson’s and Bear’s big fat carrots and secretly always said “Ha, ha,” when they weren’t around.
One day when Jackson and Bear discovered that they had almost no carrots left because Bunny had hidden them, they went to tell Bunny what happened. Bunny said , “Don’t worry. I’ll look around the house and see if I can find them. They might be here.”
Sure enough. She knew right where to find them, of course, because she had hidden them. When she somehow discovered the whole bunch of carrots that she had hidden from them, they were so happy that they kissed tricky Bunny and made her a nice carrot pie - her favorite - from their carrots she had found.
Before Bunny went to bed that night, she lay in her bed thinking of the the nice carrot pie that she had tricked Jackson and Bear into cooking for her and said, “Ha, ha.”