It was raining hard, and the temperature was close to 15 degrees Celsius. To make matters worse, the old bus stop's roof was in a ill shape, completely unable to sustain the amount of water pouring from the sky, leaking severely. I shivered, ten spite the fact that I was warmly dressed in a thick, wind-breaker hoody and a pair of baggy jeans.
Being a alligator, a cold-blooded animal, it should be obvious for me to despise such climate and would search for better shelter, but I had little choice but to stay; I was in the very heart of the industrial district, dozens of miles from my home, and walking in this weather was out of the question.
"Come on!" I thought, frustrated, looking at my watch. "Where is it?"
The bus, and my ticket to warmer conditions, was at least half an hour late. It happened sometimes, for the vehicle was a old, rusty thing, often experiencing trouble of some sort, laboring for the last thirty years bringing folks like me in and out of the city.
Speaking of folks, I was not alone at the bus stop, for there were others sharing my silent torment: a overweight male badger, a tall male fox, an attractive female cat, and a very athletic tiger, all looking as solemn, and most like feeling as irritated, as me.
I could hear the sound of a deep rumble coming down the street, followed by the loud bang of a car backfiring, and around the corner, through the pouring rain, came the bus, wipers wiping frantically over its front window, its old, weary driver, a human, sitting behind the steering wheel.
"Finally!" I though, sighing with relief.
I could not wait to get out of here! Crawling up the street, it came to a halt before us, and the doors opened. Being in front of me, the badger and cat were the first to enter, and then me, but when I tried to climb in, I felt a powerful force shove me out of the way.
I tripped and fell into a puddle of freezing water, soaking my clothing. I looked up to sneer at the perpetrator but discovered it was none other than the athletic tiger.
"Stay out of my way, twerp," he said, climbing into the bus.
I wanted to give him a piece of my mind, but I thought twice; confronting a 6 foot, well-built, cocky tiger such as him would be life-threatening if you were a 5 foot, 140 pound weakling such as me.
Instead I held my tong, glaring and thinking angry thoughts as I picked myself up from the wet ground. No one seemed to have noticed how I was rudely pushed towards the ground, or perhaps they just didn't care. Such was the life in the big city; you either grow hard or leave.
Luckily for me the bus had lots of open seats, and I sat as far away as possible from the tiger, staring out the window, which I had to wipe clean every now and then, for it kept fogging up after a while.
The first stop the bus made was also my stop, which was at another bus stop in a small neighborhood. I hurried out, more than glad to be one step closer to escaping the awful weather.
The rain was letting up, but it still meant that I had to get a little wet on my journey home (not that I was much dry from my fall earlier). With a sigh, I pulled up my hood and ran as fast as I could down the sidewalk.
I lived in a two-story house at the end of a cul-de-sac, a sturdy brick structure with a steel roof. In the driveway I saw a red van, and I knew that my brother was home.
Being a maintenance worker at a top security business, he always left early and came home late from his job, meaning that I couldn't catch a ride in and out of town with him.
But today he was rather early, which annoyed me a little; one might think if he got some down time he would come to fetch me instead of allowing me to wait at some gloomy bus stop.
"Hey, Jack, I'm home!" I called, after I ran up the porch and opened the door. "Where are you?"
"In the living-room, Martin," came his voice.
Jack was a big guy; even sitting on the sofa, watching TV, he seemed rather large. But height was not the only thing he had on him: he was a bodybuilder, but he also had some pudge on him. It was stereotypical, him being the big, big brother while me being the little, little brother.
"O, and there's a package for you, too," he continued.
"A package?" I asked.
"Yeah, you know?" he said, "That thing that's wrapped up in plastic wrap? It's on the kitchen's table."
It was odd: I could not remember ordering anything. Frankly, I was too poor do do stuff like that, but still, even if it was some mishap with mailing system, I was curious.
It was small, wrapped up in brown paper. With my sharp claws I ripped it open. Digging through the styrofoam, I found an even smaller, blue, round box.
After pulling off the bow that held it shut, I took away the lid and saw a piece of jewelry inside.
But what was it?