Tiffany in
Wonderland
Text ©2007 The Angst Guy
(theangstguy@yahoo.com)
Daria and associated
characters are ©2007 MTV Networks
Feedback (good, bad, indifferent, just want to bother me,
whatever) is appreciated. Please write to: theangstguy@yahoo.com
Synopsis: Tiffany Blum-Deckler goes to Wonderland, and
Wonderland goes to heck.
Author’s Notes: This fantasy crossover began life in August 2003, when the first part was posted on PPMB for no particular reason. It was later expanded and republished on the Sh33p’s Fluff Message Board. Several other Daria fanfic stories have an Alice connection. The interested reader can look up “If You Only Walk Long Enough” and “Wonderlane” for added fun.
Acknowledgments: Thanks to Scarlett, who found an error in
the original story. 8)
*
The
Caterpillar and the seven-year-old girl with long black hair looked at each
other for some time in silence. At long last, the Caterpillar took the hookah
out of its mouth—but before it could say anything, the little girl peering over
the mushroom cap made a yuck face and said, “Ewww.”
The
Caterpillar fixed the child with a stern look. “Who are you?” it
said.
“Tiffany,”
drawled the girl with an air of disgust. “Smoking is gross.”
“It
is not gross,” said the Caterpillar, deeply offended. “It—”
“It is
gross,” said Tiffany, looking him over. “It stinks. And you’re a bug.”
“I am
a Caterpillar, not a bug!” snapped the Caterpillar.
“You
have too many legs,” she pointed out, unperturbed. She pronounced the word
“legs” so that it had two syllables.
“I
would say that you had too few legs,” the Caterpillar retorted, “so
perhaps you are a bug. And speaking of you—who are you?”
“Tiffany,”
Tiffany repeated. She looked down at the mushroom cap over which she peered and
sniffed it. “If I eat this truffle,” she said, “will it make me fat?”
The
Caterpillar threw down his hookah pipe and crawled off the giant mushroom.
“This must be the dreadful child who’s causing all the trouble for the royals,”
he muttered as he left. “I must speak with the Duchess about the kind of people
we’re allowing in Wonderland these days.”
Tiffany
Blum-Deckler sighed. The Caterpillar was the eighth strange creature to have
walked away from a conversation with her since she fell down the rabbit hole in
her parents’ backyard in Lawndale. “People here are so rude,” she said,
her slow drawl giving “rude” two syllables as well. She shrugged and walked
back in the direction of the White Rabbit’s home. She was sure if she only
walked long enough, she would find a bottle of skin moisturizer or at least a
decent all-purpose hand cream in one of the Rabbit’s drawers or closets.
Assuming, of course, that dirty lizard in the coveralls didn’t come back again
and yell at her to leave. So rude.
As
Tiffany walked, however, she quickly discovered she wasn’t going in the
direction she had thought. Ahead of her through the tall blades of grass—which
had curiously turned into trees—she spied a rustic cottage with a thatched
roof. It reminded her of a cottage she had seen in Disneyland that held seven
gigantic bearded fellows and a moderately attractive woman in a very
unfashionable blue-and-white dress who sang about whistling while you worked,
as if anyone could possibly imagine doing actual work or even whistling. Work
was something your parents hired other people to do. Whistling was both
annoying and, oh, so low class.
As
Tiffany drew nearer to the cottage, she noticed that the roof was actually made
of brownish-gray rabbit fur. Tall rabbit ears stuck up from the roof at either end,
from each of which a bit of smoke drifted out. That roof must have cost a
fortune, she thought, thinking of her mother’s collection of furs, which
Tiffany sometimes wore when no one was looking. The rain and sun have
probably ruined it, though. Someone doesn’t know very much about fur care.
Tiffany was secretly pleased that she knew so much about fur care when other
people obviously didn’t. Curious to see if the owners had any un-ruined furs
she could borrow and wear, she straightened her shoulders and made for the
cottage.
Unnoticed
in the boughs of the trees, a large Cheshire Cat looked down on the child and
grinned.
A
small table was set under a tree in front of the house, and around the table
were three chairs. There was space for a fourth chair, but no chair was
present. One chair was occupied by a very large bird that Tiffany thought might
be an ugly chicken with a long, curved beak, and another chair by a creature
that Tiffany thought might be a lion or possibly an eagle, as it seemed to have
parts of each. Between the two sat a small mouselike creature that was fast
asleep, using an empty saucer for pillow. The Dodo and the Gryphon—which is
what the first two creatures were, respectively—were using the sleeping
Dormouse—the third creature—as an armrest.
“Come
on! Have a seat!” cried the Gryphon with a mild Cockney accent, upon spotting
Tiffany. The Dodo solemnly stood up as Tiffany approached, clearing its throat
to murmur, “Welcome, now! Welcome!” and gesturing in an officious manner at the
empty space at the table.
“Thank
you,” said Tiffany, and she took the Dodo’s overstuffed chair for herself. The
Dodo didn’t notice this and tried to sit down, falling over backward instead.
“Here,
now!” cried the Gryphon, ignoring the Dodo and pouring a cup of tea for
Tiffany. “Have some treacle! Fresh from the well!”
Tiffany
lifted her cup and sniffed it. “Is it good?” she asked with a slight frown.
“Of
course!” snapped the Gryphon irritably. “It came from a well, so it ought to
taste well, too!”
“Or
three,” murmured the Dormouse, slightly less than half awake.
“You
mean, it ought to taste good,” said Tiffany, who had been corrected on
this very point of grammar the day before in her second-grade class in Lawndale
Elementary School. She was more than happy to set someone else straight on the
issue.
“Tastes
good? Oh, I like that!” sneered the Gryphon. “Treacle can’t taste
nothing! Where’s its tongue, then?”
“It
has a flavorful nose, so it can certainly smell,” said the Dodo, who had stood
up again and was looking around for its chair.
“It
has a bit of a bite,” said the Dormouse sleepily, “so it must have teeth.”
“Is
that your house?” asked Tiffany in an effort to change the subject, pointing to
the cottage with the fur-thatched roof. All this talk about tea having facial
parts was extremely confusing.
“It’s
as much mine as it is yours,” said the Gryphon airily, leaning back in its
chair to sip its tea. “It’s as much yours as it is his! Hjckrrh!” This
last part sounded like the Gryphon was clearing its throat, which made Tiffany
glare because clearing your throat at the table was very rude.
“The
fine gentlemen who live there,” interrupted the Dodo, who now stood at the
table at the spot where it once sat, “have gone in search of a mythical being
that has invaded our land and is terrorizing the citizens.”
“A
what?” asked Tiffany, who had gotten stuck on the word “mythical.”
“Not
a what,” said the Dodo. “A being.” It leaned close to Tiffany as if imparting a
fabulous bit of gossip. “A human,” it whispered.
“Humans!”
said the Gryphon with contempt, swishing the contents of its teacup. “I ain’t
got no idea at all what they’re good for!”
“Or
five,” said the Dormouse, almost asleep again.
“Is
it okay if I look inside the house for a fur?” asked Tiffany, deciding it best
to cut to the heart of the matter. “I love fur.”
“S’lovely,”
slurred the Dormouse. “S’wunnerful.” It twitched its nose because one of the
Gryphon’s wing feathers was tickling it.
“Well,”
said the Dodo, looking around once more for its chair, “perhaps we should
adjourn and reconvene inside the aforesaid abode to scrutinize its contents for
the desired accoutrement.”
Tiffany
and the Gryphon glanced up at the Dodo with blank expressions, waiting.
The
Dodo sighed and cleared its throat. “I meant,” it said testily, “why don’t we
go inside and look?”
“Whatever’s
your fancy, guv,” said the Gryphon, putting down its teacup and rising from the
table. It poked the Dormouse in the side with a foreclaw. “Our little friend
here can have whatever’s left of the meal that we haven’t yet ate.”
“Or
nine,” said the Dormouse, and it began to snore.
Tiffany,
the Dodo, and the Gryphon had left the table and were making for the front door
of the cottage when horrified cries went up from the forest nearby. Turning,
Tiffany saw a man with an enormous hat standing next to a scruffy brown rabbit.
They jumped up and down at the edge of the wood, pointing and shouting, “It’s her!
It’s her!”
The
Dodo and the Gryphon frowned at each other. “What the devil?” said the Dodo
with a puzzled look.
“The human!”
shouted the Mad Hatter, nearly losing his hat as he jumped about so
frantically. “She’s it! It’s her!” With that, the Hatter and the
March Hare fled back into the trees in indescribable panic.
“Her?”
said the Dodo, and it looked at Tiffany with wide eyes. “They mean to tell us
that—”
“Blimey!”
shrieked the Gryphon, who had finally caught on and now stared at Tiffany in
fright. “It is! Run for it, guvnah!”
In
moments, Tiffany was alone outside the furry-roofed cottage—except for the
Dormouse, which snored away at the table and muttered in its sleep. She shook
her head, and then tried the cottage door. It was locked, of course. Being a
polite and well-mannered sort, she cleaned up after the tea party by pouring
all the tea remaining in the cups back into the pot, then carrying the empty
cups to the cottage and throwing them through an open window. Her own tea set
at home was made of unbreakable plastic. She expected that this set would be
likewise, though the crashing sounds inside the cottage made her wonder.
Cleanup
accomplished, Tiffany set off again in hopes of finding either a hand cream or
a fur coat. It looked like her search would take longer than she’d originally
expected, but she was patient. Perhaps, if she was lucky, she’d find a mall.
Tiffany
reentered the forest and finally discovered a huge gate set between two trees.
It opened with only a touch. On the other side of the gate was the most
beautiful garden Tiffany had ever seen in all her seven years, which was saying
something because her parents had taken her to some marvelous private gardens
in their time, not to mention a few in Europe. All paled into insignificance
compared to this one. Brilliant flowerbeds in spectacular hues of scarlet,
gold, and purple ran riot around crystalline fountains that filled the air with
a cool, refreshing spray. The grass was soft and emerald green, and the azure
sky was bright and breezy warm.
No
one was present at the moment, so Tiffany took her time to talk to the flowers
(who had faces and spoke back in high, squeaky tones), run her fingers through
the bright waters of the fountains, and play with the hedgehogs and pink
flamingoes that wandered about everywhere.
Best
of all, Tiffany could see herself perfectly in the mirrorlike pools scattered
around the gardens. She had fallen into Paradise itself.
This
idyllic life, alas, was interrupted when a large White Rabbit wearing a
waistcoat ran past out of nowhere. “Mary Ann!” cried the Rabbit as it sped past
Tiffany. “Take good care of the house while I’m away! I’ll send for my fan and
gloves later!” And, just like that, it was gone.
“How
rude!” grumbled Tiffany, quite irked that she had been mistaken for a
housekeeper. She looked down at herself and saw nothing in her outfit that
would have indicated she was a common laborer. The Rabbit obviously suffered
from bad breeding.
Before
she could meditate on the Rabbit’s upbringing any further, a large assortment
of soldiers ran by, their eyes glazed with terror. The soldiers would have
looked like oversized playing cards except for their heads, arms, and feet. The
few soldiers carrying spears and swords flung these aside in order to speed
their flight through the garden. None of them bumped into Tiffany, though they
cried “Your pardon, miss!” and “Clumsy of me!” and “Good day!” as they fled by
in panic.
“Must
be a marathon somewhere,” said Tiffany, more to herself than to anyone else.
The playing cards had numbers printed on them, of course, so a marathon was the
perfect answer—until the royalty ran past. First was the Knave, carrying a
mound of strawberry tarts clutched to his chest. He had been in the act of
eating them, judging from the smears of jelly on his face, when he fled for his
life. “Lovely weather!” the Knave panted to Tiffany, but he did not stop to
offer her any tarts. It was just as well because, from the looks of them, the
tarts were not the fat-free sort.
Following
the Knave a few moments later was a Duchess clutching a squalling baby. The Duchess’s
feet pounded the ground as she huffed and puffed on her way. At the last
possible moment, she flung her baby at Tiffany, the better to speed her
departure. Tiffany caught the baby despite her surprise. “Better you than me!”
the Duchess cried without stopping for a moment. “And the moral of that is—”
“Off
with your head!” shrieked a high, feminine voice some distance behind the
Duchess. The Duchess vanished in a second, her moral unfinished.
Tiffany
lifted the infant to her face, hoping that it was not one of those ugly babies
that one is forever forced to praise as beautiful. To her horror, she
discovered it was not a baby after all, but a small pig. “Ewww!” she cried, and
she immediately let it go. It galloped away after the Duchess, squealing madly.
A
perspiring King ran through the garden next, followed close on his heels by an
Executioner (the Ace of Spades, of course). The King was clearly not in shape
for such strenuous exertion. The Executioner tossed his heavy beheading axe
into a fountain and overtook the King as they went out of sight.
Nothing
more happened for several seconds. Tiffany was just about to leave for a less
trafficked part of the garden when the thumping of heavy feet attracted her
attention. She glanced up just in time to see a Queen whiz past. The Queen’s
face was red from running and her eyes big with fear. “Offwithyourheadlater!”
gasped the Queen before she, too, disappeared along the path everyone else had
taken.
This
was too much, even for Tiffany. She immediately set off in the direction from
which everyone had come, to find out why they were running and to see if anyone
else was heading her way.
And
someone was.
“Off
with your head!” came a young girl’s shrill cry not far ahead. Tiffany kept
walking, the idea never once occurring to her that she should be running away
like all the other folk. In moments, she rounded a shrubbery and came face to
face with—another young girl, about her own height, wearing the most marvelous
soft-red-velvet, white-fur-trimmed royal robe imaginable. Tiffany thought she
knew the girl from her class in Lawndale Elementary. She must have fallen down
a rabbit hole, too. Perhaps she was friendly and would let someone borrow her
furs.
“You!”
yelled the brown-haired girl at Tiffany. “Off with your head!”
“It
doesn’t come off,” Tiffany responded after a moment.
“Where’s
that Executioner?” shouted the girl imperiously. She raised a jeweled scepter
and shook it in the air. “Why isn’t he following my orders? Off with his
head!”
“He went that way,” Tiffany said helpfully, pointing behind her. She looked at the fur-trimmed robe the girl wore. “That’s beautiful,” she said with a sigh. “Can I wear it?”
“No!”
shouted the girl. “It’s mine! Sandi Griffin does not share her furs!”
“Oh,”
said Tiffany. She looked so downcast that Sandi—the other little girl—felt a
stirring of pity inside her.
“Very
well,” said Sandi. She pointed the jeweled scepter at Tiffany’s stomach. “If
you will be my loyal handmaiden, you may have the next fur I find. Unless it’s
nicer than this one, of course, in which case you may have this one for your
own.”
Tiffany’s
face brightened. “Thank you!” she said with a shy smile. “I’m Tiffany.”
“Tiffany,” said Sandi. The
scepter lowered and bumped into the grass. “Are you in Lawndale Elementary?
Second grade?”
“Yes.”
“How
old are you?” asked Sandi with a glare.
“Seven.”
Sandi’s
face cleared. “Ah!” she said in a friendlier tone. “I’m eight, so I’ll be in
charge. I was held back a year. I took all this stuff away from the noisy
lady.”
“Cool,”
said Tiffany.
“Let’s
go find some more furs!” said Sandi. She pointed with the scepter in a random
direction. “I think there’s a palace over that way. We’ll break down the doors
and get some crowns and necklaces and gold rings, too!”
“Super!”
said Tiffany. She couldn’t believe her luck. Finally, she knew someone who
could get the ultimate in dress-up attire and accessories!
And
so the two girls wandered off together through the garden, talking of fashion
and furs, and Wonderland was never quite the same again.
Original: 10/23/03, modified 09/04/06, 10/01/06,
06/14/07
FINIS