The Tanuki's Temporary Mayor - Ch. 3 Settling in Somewhat
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Summary:
A tired newcomer, still adjusting to being called âmayor,â chooses not to wait for the perfect moment and agrees to a significant town ceremony that lets everyone see them exactly as they are. By nightâs end, with a quiet symbol of their choice rooted in the townâs center and a sense of tentative welcome from its residents, they walk away feeling a little less like an impostor and a little more like someone who might belong here.
Notes:
CW:...Social anxiety / performance nerves (being put in front of a crowd, fear of judgment, scrutiny). Brief impostor-syndrome feelings and self-doubt about being âgood enoughâ. There will be 2 original characters (OCs) in this chapter, though they have a smaller role to play. I'll make sure to include some links in the End if you're interested in some art perchance? Maybe even see my Tumblr? Please enjoy~
     There was a sort of giddiness settling in your chest as you walked back to the neighborhood with the keys warm in your palm. You had to admit it was a blur the entire walk, wanting to get back and see your new house.
     As excited as you were to take a look at what âbasic necessitiesâ were included in the paperwork you signed, you knew that telling Isabelle should be your first priority. If you wanted to play the part of âmayorâ for now, you need to upkeep on paperwork after all.
     By the time you make it back to town hall, your legs are starting to feel the day. The bell over the door jingles as you step inside, and Isabelle nearly pops up from behind the counter, paws still ink-smudged from sorting forms.
     âMayor! Welcome back!â she chirps. âHow did everything go with the house?â
     âWell considering Mr. Nook was kind enough to give me these-â jingling the keys, you have a natural smile creep up on your face, â-I would say weâre on the right path.â
     âPerfect! That would just leave the tree planting ceremony!â The shih tzu pops up from the counter, with a shake of her head as you walk up. âDonât worry though, I understand you wanted to wait until you were better situated. If Bellwoodâs waited this long for a mayor, Iâm sure it will survive a few more days.â
     You hesitate, fingers drumming lightly against the edge of the counter. While Isabelleâs tone is lightâThe folder marked CEREMONIES sits just where the two of you left it earlier, its tab peeking out from a stack of other, less exciting paperwork.
     âActually-â you say, hearing the words form a split second before you commit to them, â-about that...â
     Isabelleâs ears perk, whole body going alert.
     âI know I said Iâd rather wait until Iâd updated my wardrobe and, you know, looked more âmayoralâ.â You glance down at your luggage-wrinkled clothes; the scuffs on your shoes⌠âBut⌠screw it. This is what I look like right now. This is who I am. Maybe itâs better if everyone meets that version first instead of some polished stranger.â
     Her eyes go wide, and then she lights up like someone flipped a switch inside her.
     âY-you mean⌠youâd like to hold the ceremony now?â she asks, almost breathless.
     âYeah,â you say, feeling the decision settle in your chest. âLetâs do it. Tonight. If thatâs even possible.â
     Isabelle practically vibrates in place. âPossible? Itâs more than possible!â She whirls around, snatching the CEREMONIES folder off the stack and hugging it to her chest before slapping it down on the desk. âIâll make the announcement right away!â
     âBut what about all that?â you ask, nodding to the piles of paperwork you spent hours helping her tame the previous night.
     She glances at them once, then shakes her head so fast her bells jingle. âThe paperwork can wait. This is much more important! A tree-planting ceremony is a really big deal, Mayor! Itâs your first official act for the town!â
     Before you can protest further, she darts to the side of the room where a small, somewhat battered microphone rests on a stand beneath one of the wall-mounted speakers. She clears her throat, flips a tiny switch, and the overhead system crackles to life.
     âAhem⌠Testing, testing⌠Is this thing on?â Her voice echoes faintly through the building before she steels herself and speaks with practiced cheer. âAttention, all Bellwood residents! This is Isabelle from the town hall. Iâm happy to announce that our new mayor has decided to hold the tree-planting ceremony this evening in the event plaza!â
     You swallow, suddenly very aware that the whole town can hear every word.
     âIf youâre available-â she continues, â-please make your way to the plaza shortly to help us welcome this new chapter for Bellwood. Thank you!â She clicks the microphone off, then spins back to you, tail wagging in excited little bursts. âIâll grab the sapling and the tools right away. Letâs go, Mayor!â
     Thereâs really no time left to overthink it. Isabelle disappears briefly into a back room and returns with a small wooden crate tucked in her arms, a single young tree nestled in a burlap sack. It makes sense she would have one ready, but the sight of it still surprises you. She balances it carefully, nose scrunching in determination as she nudges the door open with her shoulder.
     You follow her out into the fading light, hoping that your sudden confidence lasts for more than a day.
âââ§ââ
     The event plaza is a simple enough area.
     A shallow, raised plot of earth has already been prepared in the center of the square, ringed by simple stone edging. The soil is dark and freshly turned, waiting. It seems as if someone made short work of the previous mayorâs tree, or perhaps it had been removed long before today. Warm lamplight spills in from the paths as villagers trickle in from every direction, drawn by Isabelleâs announcement.
     Purpose hums in the air.
     You step up onto the raised plot beside Isabelle, trying not to look as awkward as you feel with your hands wringing the bottom of your shirt. The hush that falls over the plaza is soft, expectant.
     At least you recognize most of the crowd. Savannah stands near the front, hooves folded loosely in front of her. Her blue ombre dress is simple and neat, and her expression is open, curious, the kind of quiet interest that makes it feel like sheâs really seeing you. Agnes watches with a small encouraging smile that says âIâve got your backâ even from across the square.
     Tank is easier to spotâbroad-shouldered in a sleeveless shirt, shifting his weight from foot to foot like heâs waiting for the starting gun of a race. Every time you glance his way, he flashes you a big grin and a pumped fist, like heâs mentally cheering letâs go, letâs go, letâs go!
     Closer to the back, a squirrel with soft brown fur and a tidy little dress (Sylvana, if you remember Isabelleâs brief on the walk over serves right) hovers half behind the eagle who was part of the welcoming party yesterday. Peeking around his legs, her tail flicks nervously, eyes wide as she studies you, then dart away whenever you almost meet her gaze.
     In front of her, tall and unmistakable in his sharp lines and folded wings, stands Apollo. The eagleâs beak is set in a firm line, heavy brows casting his gaze in a naturally stern shadow. He doesnât look hostile, exactly, but thereâs a weight to his stare that says heâs taking your measure and filing away every impression.
     âThis is everyone!â Isabelle whispers, clutching the sapling crate. After straightening, she nods. âOkay, deep breath.â
     You donât know if sheâs saying that for your sake or to steady herself, but you end up following the order as she steps forward, raising her free paw.
     âAhemâThank you all for coming on such short notice!â she calls, her voice carrying clearly across the plaza. âAs many of you know, today marks a very special moment for Bellwood. Our new mayor has decided to hold the traditional tree-planting ceremony!â
     Thereâs a soft murmur through the crowd: Savannahâs smile widens, Tank gives a little whoop that makes Agnes elbow him in the side (though sheâs grinning as she does), Apolloâs expression doesnât change much but his wings shift, settling more firmly at his back, and Sylvana edges a tiny bit closer, clutching her paws together.
     âAs is tradition-â Isabelle continues, â-this sapling will grow into a symbol of our townâs futureâof growth, of community, and of the fresh start weâre all creating together.â
     She turns to you, eyes bright. âSoâŚplease take this sapling!â
     Offering it up to you with both paws, tail wagging in small excited bursts, you reach out and accept it. The little tree is lighter than it looks, but the moment it rests in your hands the weight of what it represents sinks in.
     So much has been decided for you in the last twenty-four hoursâthis is the physical representation of your newly chosen path.
     After retreating her paws, Isabelle nods, voice softer but no less firm. âOkay, Mayor. Now plant the sapling by hand. Put your heart in it!â
     Everyone watches expectantly as you carefully step forward. The center of the plot already holds a neat, pre-dug hole, dark soil crumbling softly at the edges. You lower yourself into a squat, your feet sinking slightly in the fresh soil, and ease the sapling down into place.
     For a second, you just hold it thereâone hand steady at the base of the trunkâthe other feeling the roughness of the burlap. The faint give of the soil and the way the crowdâs attention gathers around you like a held breath keeps you frozen for just a moment.
     Then you push the earth back in, firming it gently around the young tree. As you stand straight and clap your hands clean of dirt, the plaza erupts in applause.
     Savannah claps with her whole heart, face lit up. Tank lets out a loud cheer and a triumphant âYeah, Mayor!â that echoes off the surrounding buildings. Agnes whistles between her teeth, grinning wide. Even Apollo brings his wings together in slow, measured claps, and Sylvana flinches at the noise only to clap shyly along a heartbeat later.
     Isabelle is applauding too, eyes shining as she looks up at you like youâve just done something monumental instead of basic gardening.
     When the applause finally tapers off, the plaza breaks into smaller currents of motion. Tank jogs a little circle to burn off extra energy; a couple of villagers drift away, already chattering about dinner plans and tomorrowâs weather.
     You step down from the raised plot, then turn and offer a hand to Isabelle. She accepts with a soft âOh!â of surprise, cheeks tinting as you steady her to the ground beside you.
     Before you can say anything else, a shadow falls across you two.
     Up close, Apollo is even more imposing, his broad shoulders and sharp beak outlined against the dimming sky. Even at a careful distance awayâclose enough to talk, far enough not to loom deliberatelyâhe is still well over a head taller than you. His expression is as serious as ever.
     âSo,â he says, voice a low rumble, âyouâre the new mayor.â
     Thereâs no question in the statement, just a simple, blunt assessment.
     âThis ceremony should prove that well enough.â you answer, trying for steady rather than flippant.
     He studies you for a long moment, eyes narrowed slightly, taking you in from scuffed shoes to travel-creased clothes to the dirt still dusting your palms.
     âYouâre young,â he says at last. âYouâve got a lot on your plate. Bellwoodâs been through⌠a stretch without much direction.â
     You resist the urge to shrink under the weight of his gaze. âIâve heard a bit about that.â
     Apollo exhales through his beak, the sound halfway between a sigh and a huff. âIâll be watching,â he says plainly. âTo see whether youâre really up for the task.â
     The words land with more gravity than threat. Itâs not a warning so much as a promise: he cares enough about this place to pay attention. You square your shoulders, feeling your pulse climb but choosing not to back down.
     âWatch all you want. Iâm going to prove Iâm the real deal.â You say.
     One of his brows ticks up a fraction, like he hadnât expected such a direct answer. He grunts, neither approving nor dismissing.
     âWeâll see,â he says, giving a small, almost imperceptible nod. Then he lifts a wing in a brief, curt gesture that might be as close to a wave as he gets. âDonât make me regret giving you a chance.â
     He huffs, the corner of his beak twitching like he might be suppressing the ghost of a smile. Without another word, he turns and strides off toward the path leading home, wings tucked neatly at his sides.
     You watch him go, the sting of his scrutiny lingering but not as sharp as it could have been.
     âDonât take him too hard,â a small voice pipes up near your elbow.
     You look down to see Sylvana, half-hidden behind her fluffy tail, fingers twined together in front of her dress. She flinches a little when you meet her eyes, but doesnât bolt.
     âHeâs just⌠like that,â she says quietly. âVery serious. Very⌠loud, even when heâs not shouting.â Her ears flick. âBut he cares a lot. About everyone. About the town.â
     âI got that impression,â you say, softening your tone. âI donât mind him being cautious. Honestly, I would be in too in his shoes.â
     She ducks her head, smiling nervously. âStill, um⌠sorry if it felt harsh or anything, Mayor. I know it can be scary having someone stare at you like that. I kind of wanted to hide behind the plaza sign.â She laughs weakly. âI almost did.â
     âYou and me both,â you admit. âBut I meant what I said. I want to earn that trust. His, and everyone elseâs.â
     Sylvanaâs eyes widen at that, some of the tension easing from her shoulders. âO-oh. Thatâs⌠thatâs good. Iâm sure you will. I mean, you already planted the tree and everything.â Her tail flicks again, softer this time. âThatâs a good start, doncha think?â
     âI hope so,â you say.
     For a heartbeat, you both stand there, the silence edged with her shyness. Then she startles, as if remembering something important.
     âAhâumâI should get going!â she says, stepping back. âI told Savannah Iâd help her with dinner prep tonight. If Iâm late, sheâll just make everything herself, and then Iâll feel bad.â
     She gives you a swift, earnest little bow. âWelcome to Bellwood, Mayor. Iâll⌠Iâll talk to you more once Iâm less likely to panic and run away.â Her cheeks warm under her fur, and she gives you a tiny smile before scurrying off down the path, tail bouncing behind her. You watch her disappear around the bend, the plaza slowly emptying until itâs just you and Isabelle standing amid the lamplight and the newly planted tree.
     Isabelle steps closer, paws clasped in front of her chest.
     âWell,â she says, eyes sparkling, âitâs official now. Youâre not just the mayor on paper anymore.â Her smile widens. âYouâre officially the mayor of Bellwood.â
     You let the words sink in this time, feeling them settling differently now that theyâre anchored to a moment, a place, and a tiny tree with your fingerprints in its roots.
     âGuess thereâs no backing out now,â you murmur.
     She laughs softly. âIf you ever did try, I think a few of the villagers might follow you just to drag you back.â
     âIntimidating.â
     âComforting,â she counters gently.
     You glance at the tree, then back at her. âSo⌠what now? Iâve planted the symbol. Whatâs the next step in the âbeing a mayor without messing everything upâ plan?â
     Isabelleâs tail gives a thoughtful twitch.
     âNow,â she says, âyou should use the rest of the day to get familiar with the town. Talk to people. See where they work, where they live, what they like.â She taps a claw lightly against her chin. âRe-Tail is a great place to startâitâs a bit of a walk toward the shoreline, but very important for recycling and resale. The Roost, our coffee shop run by Brewster, is also wonderful if you need a quiet place to rest and meet more residents.â
     She points down one of the adjoining paths. âYou could also explore the beach if you want. Some villagers like to walk there in the evenings, and itâs a good way to clear your head.â
     You nod slowly as she speaks. âRe-Tail first, then maybe tomorrow Iâll check out The Roost. You think they have a limit on caffeine intake?â
     Isabelle giggles behind her paw. âDefinitely not, or Brewster would have cut me off ages ago. Iâll finish up here and return to town hall to log todayâs events and schedule a follow-up on the town rating tomorrow.â
     âAlways working,â you say, half-admiring, half-exasperated.
     She ducks her head modestly as she turns. âJust trying to keep up.â
     Then she looks up again, expression bright. âIf you get turned around on your way to Re-Tail, just check your map. I made sure to jot down important landmarks. Or you could always ask for directions, most folks are more than happy to walk with you part of the way.â
     As Isabelle leaves you to return to town hall, you think of Savannahâs warm smile, Tankâs booming enthusiasm, Agnesâ steady presence somewhere in the crowd. You give the tree one last look, you decide to pull out the map from your back pocket. You already had to cross the river to get to your houseâand it seems the shop is a straight-shot down from it, nestled right next to the cliff side.
     May as well start there.
âââ§ââ
     The building itself is closer to the shoreline that you surmised form the mapâquite a ways from both the train station and town hall. Itâs a wonder that you havenât spotted it before, given the bright pink wood paneling and teal, sloped roofs. A steady stream of what looked like heart-shaped puffs were slowly rising from the curved chimney spout. A charming chalkboard sits outside the door, the small light illuminating the chalk writing on its surface. The heart shaped window on the door was a cute touchâyou had a feeling the owner had to be a big fan of pastels.
     The door sports a similar jingle to the one you heard at both Nookâs Homes and the Able Sistersâ shops. As you get your bearings, it seems youâve walked into the tail-end (no pun intended) of a conversationâ
     The pastel-pink alpaca wearing a red overall-type apron which makes her look like sheâs stepped out of a storybook. Sheâs chatting with a young tanuki who has handed over what looks to be a small stack of items: a couple of cushions, a lamp, and a slightly scuffed end table.
     ââand this one is perfect for upcycling,â The pink alpaca says, eyes shining. âCyrus is going to have a field day with them when he getâs back in town.â
     The tanuki bobs his head enthusiastically. âWe really appreciate you working with us, Reese! Every little bit helps the shop grow, you know?â
     âThank you. With your help, weâve been able to recycle and refurbish so very many things. If your customers keep bringing you items like this, feel free to come and sell them here!â
     âOf course! Well then, Iâll be offâŚâ
     Turning, both animals notice you. You feel a bit awkward, not meaning to intrude. The tanuki boy addresses you first. He offers a polite bow before speaking.
     âAh, hello! âŚwe havenât met, yes? My nameâs Timmy. My brother and I run a shop in the shopping district called Nookling Junction.
     You hover a moment, half out of politeness and half out of surprise. Heâs one of the shop runners for Nookling Junction? You assumed they would be at least high school age, but he barely looks old enough to be in middle school, let alone old enough to be handling ledgers!
     Timmy continues, undeterred by your shocked silence. âIf you have time, stop by our shop sometime! Iâm pleased to have made your acquaintance!â As he makes his way past the door, in a smaller voice he says, âGood to meet you!â before finally pattering out.
     Thereâs no time to dwell on that piece of information as Reese coughs, brushing off her apron in a smooth motion.
     âSorry to have kept you waiting. Welcome to the recycle shop, Re-Tail! Oh! Would you happen to be the new mayor?â Her voice is sweet and warm, like she has never met a stranger in her life. âIâm so happy you decided to stop by our humble little shop! What an honor! My name is Reese. My husband Cyrus and I run this shop together.â
     âNice to meet you,â you say, finally finding your voice.. âAgnes mentioned your shop to me. Custom furniture and⌠resale?â
     âExactly,â Reese says, delighted. âOur shop buys items and furniture to resell here. Weâll also pay a premium for any high-value items listed on the board in front of the shop. If youâve got anything you donât needâold furniture, extra items, even things you find around townâweâre happy to take a look. And Cyrus can give things a second life with a bit of refurbishing.â
     That sounds like just the store you need given the money-making methods that have been mentioned to you. There are a few items on display as you look around the shop, like a proper bed that catches your eye. Maybe you can return the old cot to Isabelle sooner than you thoughtâŚ
     âSo, Mayor-â Reese says gently to pull your eyes back to her, â-if you have something you no longer need, please feel free to bring it by for a fair price!â
     âThank you, Reese.â You introduce yourself properly and give her a firm handshake before looking at her wares.
     While the big potted plant right near the entrance did catch your eye, your aching back is gravitating towards the simple looking bed behind it. âHow much for this?â
     âAh yes, the common bed. I believe that is put up for sale by Agnes.â
     âAgnes put this up for sale?â
     âOh, I was so excited the mayor came by I didnât explain our services properly! My apologiesâŚin addition to selling to us outright, you can set your own price and put items on display for others to buy. Think of it as a flea market spaceâthough no actual fleas please, that would be Blatherâs department.â
     âSoâAgnes put this up for sale and Iâm about to buy it from her?â you ask, a little amused.
     Reese giggles, the sound soft and airy. âThatâs right! She brought it in yesterday. Said sheâd âupgraded her vibeâ and didnât need two beds. Thought it might find a good home with someone new.â She tilts her head. âIf youâd like it, the price is set at 200 bells. All of that will go straight back to Agnes, of course.â
     You look at the bed again. Itâs simple, sturdy, andâmost importantlyânot a camping cot. After being slightly sore from one night on a canvas cot, you didnât want to find out what happened after more. This felt like a necessity you could splurge a bit on, anyways.
     âIâll take it,â you say, already reaching for your bell pouch.
     Reeseâs face lights up. âWonderful! Agnes will be thrilled.â She rings you up with practiced ease, grabbing the recept from the printer it on a receipt spike. Reese looks to you as she jots something down in a small paper pad.
     âWould you like it delivered to your home? We offer same-day within town-limits.â
     You blink. âYou deliver?â
     âOf course,â she says. âNo need for the mayor to drag a bed across half of Bellwood. Itâs a new system we have in collaboration with the postal officeâa little bit of shop synergy to keep everyone afloat. Now, just confirm your address for me?â
     You give her your newly claimed house locationâthe old mayorâs place, now yours in paperwork if not yet in spirit.
     Reese nods as she scribbles. âAlright, weâll have it sent over before the end of today. Cyrus will make sure itâs set up properly...when he wakes up that isâ She smiles, a little conspiratorial. âWeâll also take care of moving out whatever temporary bedding youâve got in there. No sense tripping over an old cot.â
     âIsabelle will be glad to hear that,â you say. âShe loaned me one.â
     âWeâll handle it gently and have it returned to town hall,â Reese assures you. âYou wonât have to lift a hoofâer, hand.â
     With that, you leave Re-Tail feeling lighter, picturing the bed waiting for you instead of an echoing, half-finished room. A small thing, but a real step toward this place being home.
     Speaking of, now was the perfect time to see what you quite literally signed up for.
âââ§ââ
     The sky is painted in soft blues and golds, and the town has settled into that calm, between-hours quiet. The walk itself is quiet pleasant, aside from the slight cramping of your stomach making your non-existent eating for that day properly known. Doing a quick look around, you decide to swipe one of the plump peaches from a tree nearby and snack on it as you meander back.
     The juice exploding on your tongue as you bite down is near heavenly. As you munch away, you see there are several more trees bearing fruit. Aside from a free snack, youâre sure that Reese would buy them from you for a fair price. You make sure to lean forward to avoid getting any juice on your clothes, careful not to bite down on the actual pit.
     Youâre almost at your place when the peach is finished. Unsure of what to do with the pit, you end up tossing it near a different peach tree. It is natural after all, otherwise you would have held it till you got home. A quick rinse of your hands in the river, and youâre nearly to the house!
     âit seems you arenât the only one aiming to check out your newly refurbished home as you spot movement ahead: two figures on the path, wrestling something rectangular up the gentle slope toward your front yard.
     As you get closer, the details sharpen. Two pelicans in matching green postal uniforms, each with a neat little cap perched between their feathers, are maneuvering a wrapped mattress and frame in a kind of awkward sideways-shuffle.
     The one at the front is white with a yellow bill, broad-shouldered and steady eyes narrowed in concentration as he backs up the last step. The one at the back is a rich plum color with white-tipped feathers, beak split in a wide grin as he cranes his neck around the bulk of the bed.
     âCareful, Perry, carefulâleft, your other leftââ the plum one says.
     Perry grunts, adjusts his footing, and the bed manages to get through the banisters with ease.
     You raise your hand as you approach. âUhâŚevening?â
     The plum pelican looks up and brightens instantly. âOh! Hello there!â he says, nearly letting his end of the bed slide before Perry tightens his grip with a pointed look. âOops, sorry, sorry.â
     You wince in sympathy. âDonât let me distract you. Iâd feel pretty bad if your first impression of me is a broken foot.â
     Perry sets his end of the bed down gently and straightens. Up close, his expression is calm, unreadable but not unfriendly.
     âEvening,â he says, voice low and simple. âDelivery for you.â
     Plum feathers steps around the bed, dusting off his hands. âRight! Official business and all that. Iâm Phillip, by the way,â he says, giving you a little half-bow. âThis is Perry. We handle deliveries and pickups for the post office and now for Re-Tail. You must be the mayor everyoneâs been chirping about.â
     âThatâs me,â you say, doing a mock curtsy with your arms. âYouâre delivering my bed?â
     âOne common bed; mattress, frame and sheets included. Very important for a quality sleep, I say.â says Phillip.
     Perry nods once, solemn.
     You glance past them to your houseâyour houseâand stop on the bottom step.
     Last time you saw it, the place was a sagging, splintered wreck, all peeling paint and cracked glass and floors that felt like they might sigh themselves apart. Now⌠itâs not that.
     The walls are straight, the siding repainted in fresh, clean lines. The porch boards no longer groan when you put weight on the first step. The windows are whole, clear panes catching the evening light. Itâs still simple, still small, but the shift is so dramatic it feels like youâve walked onto a film set.
     âLet me get the door for you then.â You take the steps slowly, almost afraid to test them, then reach for the front door. The key Mr. Nook gave you feels heavier in your hand than it has any right to. Thereâs a brief, suspended moment where it could all still be a misunderstanding, a dream, a cardboard façade as Agnes mentioned.
     You slide the key into the lock.
     For a second, thereâs resistanceâthen a solid, satisfying click.
     You exhale and push the door open.
     The inside is a total 180 from what you remember. The floors, once dust-caked and uneven, have been scrubbed and patched. The walls are still bare but no longer flaking; someone has sanded away the worst and given them a fresh coat of neutral paint. The air smells faintly of sawdust and something citrusyâcleaner, maybe? The broken glass is gone, replaced by intact panes that let in soft light instead of drafts.
     âMr. Nook might actually be a magic tanuki.â You think in bewilderment.
     âNot bad, huh?â Phillip says behind you, clearly proud on someone elseâs behalf. âNookâs crew doesnât mess around.â
     âYeah,â you breathe. âNo kidding.â
     Perry hefts his side of the bed again. âWhere?â he asks you simply.
     You step aside and gesture to the main room. âAgainst that wall, if thatâs okay.â
     Between the two of them, itâs short work angling the bed through the doorway without dinging any fresh paint. The pelicans slide it into place, straighten it, and step back to admire the fit after removing the protective plastic. It already makes the room feel less like an empty shell and more like a place a person could actually live.
     Perry steps forward and produces a small clipboard from under his wing, flipping it open. âSignature if you please,â he says, offering you the pen and form.
     You take it, reading the neat lines: confirmation of delivery, receipt of one common bed. Official, tidy, binding in a way that feels oddly comforting. You sign your name in the designated space and hand the clipboard back.
     Perry glances at it, nods once in approval, and tucks the pen away. âAll set,â he says. He tips his postal hat to youâa small, respectful gestureâthen turns toward the door.
     Phillip lingers a step longer, leaning on the door frame with an easy smile. âLooks good on you,â he says.
     You blink. âThe⌠bed?â
     âThe house,â he clarifies, a little grin tugging at the corner of his beak. âMayor with a place to crash. Very official. Very âI run this town but also know where my pajamas are.â Youâre gonna do fine here.â
     Warmth creeps up your neck at the unexpected compliment. âThanks?â you say. âIâm⌠still figuring it out. But this helps.â
     He winks. âIf you ever need forms picked up, packages sent, or just someone to complain to about how heavy ordinances are, you know where the post office is.â
     He straightens, smoothing a nonexistent wrinkle in his uniform. âFor now, get some rest, okay? A mayor needs their beauty sleep.â
     âPhillip.â Perryâs voice floats in from outside, dry but not unkind.
     Phillip sighs theatrically. âThatâs my cue.â He gives you a final two-finger salute. âWelcome home, Mayor.â
     Before he can tack on anything else, Perry appears in the doorway, free wing hooking lightly in the back of Phillipâs collar. With an efficient, practiced motion, he tugs the plum pelican out onto the porch.
     âWork,â Perry reminds him.
     âYeah, yeah, Iâm coming,â Phillip laughs, letting himself be guided away. He twists just enough to call back over his shoulder, âSleep well!â
     Youâre left standing in the doorway feeling a bit odd from the conversation, unsure of what to start doing first. Even after closing the door, you can do little but look at the space. The room is still sparse, the walls still bare, but the bed is real and solid and waiting. Outside, their footsteps fade, and the evening settles around Bellwood like a soft blanket.
     . . .maybe just taking a seat is a good place to start.
     Sitting on the edge of the bed, you let the silence finally catch up to you as you sink down ever-so slightly.
     Uneven flashes of the past two days bombard the quiet of the roomâtrain brakes shrieking, Isabelleâs hopeful eyes, Tom Nookâs steady voice, Mabelâs laugh, Agnes clinging to your sleeves, the signed loan, the key turning in the lock. For a second, youâre not sure whether youâve built something new or just stacked more weight on your shoulders.
     Either way, youâre here.
     You try to sketch out a plan in your head but your thoughts keep fogging over, slipping sideways. Whatever momentum youâve been running on all this time feels like itâs leaking out of you in slow, invisible drips.
     Your stomach cuts in with a loud, insistent growl. Seems that the singular peach you devoured wasnât filling enough for you. Perhaps it would be better if you began by bringing in what little belongings you do have from the tent. Youâre sure Isabelle would want that cot back that she loaned you.
     With some effort, you manage to get yourself up from the bed and get to the door. Opening it, you step out to see that where your tent should be is empty.
     A spot of panic surges through you, but itâs quickly quelled when you see your backpack and suitcase sit neatly beside the door along with the lamp gifted by Isabelle, aligned like someone measured the distance from the wall with a ruler. A folded slip of paper is clipped to one strap, which you peel off and flip over to read:
     Nook requested we collect the tent as soon as you were home. Donât worry, the cot will be returned to Townhall promptly and without harm.
     âŚfollowed by a simple doodle: a lopsided birdâduck? pelican?âwith one eye squeezed into a wink and a goofy, exaggerated beak. The lines are clumsy but energetic, as if whoever drew it did so quickly and happily.
     âA self-portrait, huh?â you say under your breath, picturing Phillip with a pen and a moment of no supervision. It seems to be a common trait that animal folk work freakishly quickly and quietly.
     You smile despite yourself, tucking the note into your pocket. Thereâs a convenient hook for you to place the lamp on, which you do with some effort. After youâre positive it wonât fall and shatter, you drag your luggage inside.
     The house is small but workable. A main room that will eventually be a living space stretches out from the door, with the new bed claiming one wall. To the right, a compact kitchenette: a little counter, a narrow sink, a couple of cabinets that creak when you test them and a fridge. To the immediate left a tiny bathroom sitsâjust enough room for a shower, toilet, and a mirror that catches you off guard when you see your own face in the reflection.
     Two closets flank opposite sides of the door. One is clearly for coats and shoes; a modest clothing rack waiting patiently. The other closet is a shallow space with built-in shelves. You donât exactly have an expansive wardrobe to worry about so folding will have to do for now.
     You start unpacking on autopilot.
     Shirts and pants get folded and stacked. A pair of worn shoes goes on the closet floor. You line up your toothbrush, travel-sized toothpaste, and the small bottle of face wash along the bathroom sink, trying to make it look less like a strangerâs hotel room and more like a place you might actually live.
     Reaching into suitcase, your fingers brush against something that isnât plastic or clothâa smooth, familiar resistance. Your hand closes around it before your brain has time to catch up.
     You pull out a modest self-bound book. The leather cover is scuffed on the corners, the edges softened where hands have held it a hundred times. Straps of darker leather wrap around to keep it shut. You thought you had eft it behind with everything elseâ
     âthe field journal.
     You remember making it together withâŚcutting and stitching the pages, arguing about the right paper weight, laughing when the first attempt came out crooked. Memories of long walks cataloging plants and birds and little things you thought youâd always share were logged in those pages. Pressed leaves, handwritten notes, in-jokes scribbled in margins.
     Back when âweâ felt like an adventure and not a trap.
     Your thumb strokes the spine out of habit. The urge to open it flares upâjust a peek, just to see whatâs inside, to remind yourself that there were good days once, that you werenât always⌠this.
     You catch yourself and freeze.
     Hell no.
     You know how this goes. One page becomes two, then two becomes five, and five becomes you crumbled up on the floor of your knew house reliving a reel of every apology you swallowed, every excuse you made for him, every time he used the âgood timesâ as a leash to keep you in check.
     âNot now,â you say, quietly but firmly, to no one in particular.
     Carefully, you turn away from the bed and carry the journal to the closet with the shelves. You reach for the highest one, stretching on your toes until your shoulder twinges, and slide the book all the way to the back where you canât see it without effort.
     It lands with a dull little thump.
     You grab your now empty suitcase, flip it closed, and hoist it up; placing it directly on top of the hidden journal. Extra weight. Extra distance. If you discover it later, it will have to have been on purpose.
     For now, that part of your life is not invited into this house.
     Your stomach grumbles again; louder and less patient.
     âMessage received,â you mutter.
     Back at your backpack, you dig through the pockets until your fingers close around the crinkled plastic of the off-brand pretzels and the squashed but intact snack cakes you picked up before everything went sideways. Not exactly a balanced meal, but at this point, you need fuel more than anything. Besides, a quick walk outside could get you more peaches if you were truly that desperate.
     You demolish the pretzels first, ignoring how stale and dry they are. Every few bites, you have to stop and rub at your chest, but you keep going until the bag is mostly crumbs. The cakes go down easierâtoo sweet, too processed, but they fill the hollow enough that the edge comes off your hunger.
     Wrappers piled on the counter for a later trash run, you shuffle back to the bed.
     You donât bother taking off your shoes at first, then grimace and kick them off anyway, letting them land wherever they want without much care. You stretch out on the mattress, feeling it give under your weight in all the right ways. No metal bar digging into your shoulder blade, no suspicious spring prodding your ribs.
     Just softness. Support. A place to fall that doesnât hurt. Youâd have to thank Agnes next time you see her.
     You stare at the ceilingâthe new paint, the faint lines where old cracks were patched, the way the shadows of tree branches sway gently across it through the windows. The house creaks once, settling around you, but it feels less like a threat and more like a sigh.
     âI live here,â you say softly, testing the words.
     They donât feel entirely true yetâŚbut they donât feel like a lie, either.
     You let your eyes close, just for a moment, telling yourself youâll get up soon, that you still have things to plan and people to impress and whatever else mayors do. The mattress cradles you in a way you arenât used to. Your body, ignored all day, seizes its chance.
     Before you slip into sleep, however, thereâs a series of knocks at your door that jolts you awakeâtoo polite to be urgent, too persistent to ignore.
     âComing-!â you call, dragging yourself upright. Your legs protest as you pad over the floorboards, every step reminding you how long the day has been.
     You crack the door open and blink.
     Savannah stands on your porch; both hooves wrapped around a glass baking dish covered tightly in foil. Steam fogs the inside, and the smellâsavory, warm, definitely not pretzelsâhits you like a hug you werenât ready for.
     âHi, Mayor!â she says, bright and a little breathless, shifting her weight from hoof to hoof. âSorry to drop by so late. Since you officially moved in today weâd thought itâd be nice to bring you a welcome-home meal.â
     Behind her, half tucked to the side of the porch light like sheâs trying to merge with the shadows, Sylvana peeks out. The squirrel has her paws wrapped around a folded tea towel and what looks like a little tin of herbs, tail flicking in quick, nervous motions.
     Your brain has to buffer for a second before your mouth catches up. âIs that⌠for me?â
     Savannah laughs softly. âUnless youâve secretly got another new mayor hiding in here.â She holds the dish out. âItâs just a veggie bake. Nothing fancy. I figured you might be too busy to cook, what with all the meetings and key-getting and house stuff. Sylvana helped too!â
     Sylvana clears her throat, ears dipping. âI, um, mostly did chopping. And taste-testing,â she admits. âSavannah does the actual oven magic. I just bossed the vegetables around.â
     The joke comes out small but earnest, and you find yourself smiling as you carefully take the pan from Savannah. Itâs warm enough to seep through the towel sheâs wrapped under the dishâthe weight of it in your hands feels absurdly comforting.
     âThank you, both of you. This is so⌠so sweet,â you say, and your voice comes out warbly.
     Clearing your throat, you admit, âI⌠havenât exactly been keeping up with meals today.â
     âWe had a feeling,â Sylvana says, eyes flicking up to your face before darting away again. âFirst days are always like that. You forget your own name before you remember dinner.â
     Savannah nods in agreement. âYou get pulled a million directions and then realize youâve only had coffee and nerves for dinner.â She leans just enough to peek past you.
     Sylvana, braver now that the food is safely transferred, shifts closer and stands on tiptoe to look around you too. âWhoa,â she murmurs. âItâs really empty in there.â
     They both glance into the mostly bare roomâjust the bed and the bones of a home. You shift a bit awkwardly, which is immediately noticed by your company.
     âOh! Sorry!â Sylvana flusters, stepping back a full pace as if sheâs crossed some invisible line. âI didnât mean that in a bad way! I justâumâexpected more⌠chairs? Iâll stop talking now.â
     âItâs okay,â you say quickly. âYouâre right. Itâs pretty empty.â
     Savannah brightens, seizing the lull. âWell, hey, that just means more room for potential. And clutter. And plants.â
     She taps her chin. âSpeaking of potentialâŚâ
     She looks you over, thoughtful but not unkind. âIf you need something nice to wear, you can totally borrow something from me. Iâve got a couple of dresses and sweaters that might work if you donât mind something a little loose. Weâre not too different in size.â
     Sylvana makes a soft sound of agreement. âShe has, like, a whole wall of cardigans,â she stage-whispers. âItâs honestly a little scary. In a cozy way.â
     The offer lodges somewhere warm in your chest. âThatâs really kind of you. Let me⌠think about it? I donât want to raid your closet before Iâve even figured out where my socks go.â
     Savannah giggles. âI suppose youâre allowedâmayor privileges and all.â
     Sylvana glances between you and Savannah, then adds, quieter, âIf you ever want help figuring out what flowers would look good in the plaza, I, um, know a few color combos that photograph really well. For, like⌠newspaper pictures. Or scrapbooks. Not that Iâve thought about it.â Her tail betrays her, flicking faster.
     Silence sits between the three of you for a moment, easy and not. Savannah studies your face, and you can tell she notices the exhaustion youâve been trying to keep tucked away. Sylvana notices too; her ears dip in sympathy as she hugs her little tin closer.
     âYou look tired,â Savannah says gently. âIn a âI did everything todayâ kind of way, not a bad way. I wonât keep you too long. I just wanted to say Iâm really glad youâre here.â
     Her cheeks tint slightly beneath her fur. âAnd, um⌠Iâm happy I got to be one of the first townsfolk to officially welcome the new, cute mayor home.â
     Your brain short-circuits on cute for a half-second.
     âOh! Uh.â You manage a laugh that soundsâhopefullyâless panicked than it feels. âThank you. For the food. And the⌠adjectivesâŚ?â
     Sylvana makes a tiny squeak of agreement. âYou do look nice,â she blurts, then winces. âIn a, um, mayoral way. I meanâthat came out weird. Iâm gonna shut up now before I spontaneously combust.â
     Savannah gives you a small, pleased smile, like sheâs satisfied she said what she meant to. âYouâre welcome. Feel free to just eat it straight out of the pan if youâre too hungry to dish it out. Just be careful, it did come out of the oven just before we walked over here.â
     âAnd this is for sprinkling on top,â Sylvana adds, holding out the little tin with both paws like itâs precious cargo. âItâs a herb blend. Little bit of thyme, little bit of roasted garlic salt. I, um, mix some herbs for Reese sometimes, so I had extra.â
     You take the tin, fingers brushing Sylvanaâs paws for the briefest second. She startles but doesnât pull away, eyes widening before she drops her gaze.
     âThank you, Iâll definitely be using this. Iâll try not to inhale it in one go, but no promises,â you add, trying to lighten the moment.
     âNo promises needed,â Savannah replies, stepping back off the porch. âSleep well, okay? Tomorrow weâll all bother you about trees and flowers and town stuff. Tonight you just⌠exist. In your house.â
     Sylvana edges backward with her, lifting one paw in a small wave. âIf itâs good, um, let us know?â she says. âNot because we need compliments or anything, justâŚto know. For future dinners. And I can, uh, bring you some tea sometime. For paperwork. If you want.â
     Your chest pulls tight in a not-unpleasant way. âIâd like that. Both the bothering and the tea.â
     Savannah waves, backing down the path. âWelcome to Bellwood, Mayor!â
     âGood night, Savannah! Good night, Sylvana!â you call after them, shifting the pan to one hand so you can wave back.
     Savannah throws you a last bright grin. Sylvana gives one more quick, shy wiggle of her paw before the two of them disappear around the curve of the path, their voices drifting faintly as they chat to each other on the way home.
     Youâre left alone in the doorway with a warm dish in your hands, a tin of herbs on top, and your face unreasonably hot.
     You close the door slowly, leaning your shoulder against it for a second.
     Why do so many people in this town low-key / high-key seem to be flirting with you?
     You carry the dish to the little kitchenette and set it carefully on the counter, peeling back one corner of the foil to let the steam escape. It smells like actual food made on purpose, not something scavenged from a vending machine.
     âIs this justâŚbasic decency?â Saying it in your head sounds more pathetic than you expected it to.
     Compliments without strings, offers of help without an expectation attached, people calling you cute without following it up with criticismâhas it just been so long since you experienced anything like that that your brain files any sort of recognition as âdangerâ?
     âŚor is it an animal-folk cultural thingâeveryone a little more tactile, a little more openly warm, a little more forward than youâre used to?
     You donât know.
     What you do know is that, for the first time in a very long time, the attention doesnât feel like a trap.
     It feels confusing, sure. Overwhelming, definitely.
     But not sharp.
     Not weaponized.
     Luckily Mr. Nookâs home package of bare essentials for your home included some simple silverware and cups. You take a fork from the drawer, sprinkle a pinch of Sylvanaâs herb mix over one corner, scoop a generous bite from the edge of the dish, and sink down to the floor in pure bliss.
     Whatever this isâkindness, flirting, or just Bellwood being Bellwoodâyouâre not sure youâre ready for it. But sitting in your own house, working through a home-cooked meal two neighbors made just to welcome you, you think⌠maybe ready isnât required.
âââ§ââ
Here is what Perry and Phillip look like btw












