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The late afternoon sun dripped honey through the oak leaves, painting the forest floor in dappled gold. Ingrid, sleek and powerful in her wild goose plumage, landed gracefully beside the babbling brook. The frantic thrumming of freedom still echoed in her wings, a familiar symphony she craved. She’d flown far from her flock today, lured by a restless spirit that tugged her towards the woods bordering the local farm.

It was there she saw him. Morten.

He was a gander, plump and white, a picture of domesticity. He waddled, rather than walked, and his honk lacked the sharp authority of a wild goose. Ingrid knew, with a quick, instinctive understanding, that this was Morten, the gander belonging to Mrs. Holgersson. She’d seen him from afar, pecking listlessly at spilled grain in the farmyard.

Today, however, Morten was at the edge of the woods, nibbling at the tender shoots of grass. His brow furrowed with a kind of quiet desperation she recognized. A longing.

Ingrid approached cautiously, her wild instincts warring with a strange, undeniable pull. “Hello,” she said, her voice a low, melodious call.

Morten startled, nearly tripping over his own feet. “Oh! Hello,” he stammered, his head bobbing nervously. “I… I didn’t see you there.”

“I am Ingrid,” she said simply, her dark eyes holding his.

“Morten,” he replied, puffing out his chest a little. “Pleased to meet you.”

They spoke, awkwardly at first, about the weather, the quality of the grass, the annoying crows that plagued the garden. But soon, the conversation deepened. Ingrid spoke of the thrill of the wind beneath her wings, the vastness of the sky, the primal call of migration. Morten, in turn, confessed his weariness of the predictable routine, the endless pecking, the cloying closeness of the other farm birds. He spoke of Dunfin, his wife, a lovely goose but one who found contentment in the mundane.

As the sun dipped lower, casting long shadows through the trees, an unspoken understanding blossomed between them. A shared yearning for something more, something beyond the confines of their respective lives. Ingrid understood that Gunnar, her strong, capable mate, provided her with safety and lineage. But he didn’t understand the aching loneliness she sometimes felt, the relentless urge to push beyond the known. Morten, similarly, felt a suffocating comfort in his domestic life, a comfort that stifled the faint flicker of wildness that still burned within him.

They moved closer, drawn by an invisible force. Ingrid rubbed her head gently against Morten’s neck. He trembled slightly, then leaned into her touch, his eyes closing in a moment of pure surrender. The air crackled with an undeniable energy, a magnetic pull that defied logic and societal norms.

Later, as twilight painted the sky in hues of purple and rose, Ingrid and Morten lay nestled amongst the ferns, their feathers intertwined. There were no grand pronouncements of love, no promises of forever. Just a quiet understanding, a shared moment of profound connection in the heart of the woods.

Ingrid knew she would return to Gunnar, to her duties and her flock. Morten would go back to Dunfin and the predictable rhythms of the farm. But something had shifted. Their brief encounter had awakened a dormant part of themselves, a reminder that even in the most rigid of structures, the wild heart still beats.

As Ingrid took flight, her silhouette fading into the darkening sky, Morten watched her go, a single tear welling in his eye. He knew this was a secret they would carry with them, a forbidden memory etched forever in the heart of the woods. It was a moment of transgression, yes, but also a moment of profound beauty, a testament to the untamable spirit that resides within us all, even in the most unlikely of places. He knew, with a certainty that settled deep in his bones, that the world, and he himself, would never be quite the same again.

Written by an AI software

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The sun had barely risen when Artemis and Diana boarded the train with Usagi and Chibiusa. The field trip to the countryside was supposed to be a bonding experience—a time for laughter, exploration, and simple joys.

Artemis watched Diana chase butterflies in the tall grass, her laughter a bell in the wind. For once, everything felt… perfect.

Back in Tokyo, Luna sat at the window, watching the world move on without her. She’d offered to stay behind—someone had to keep an eye on things. But now, the silence in the house echoed. Artemis hadn’t even looked back when he left. He trusted her. Maybe too much.

The silence was broken that evening.

A tomcat with smoky fur and ember eyes slinked through the alley. He looked at her like he knew all her secrets—and wanted to uncover more. She told herself it was harmless. Just talk. Just company.

But the loneliness in her chest howled louder than her reason.

It happened once.

Then twice.

Then she lost count.

The toms came and went like shadows in the night. She told herself she was still in control. That Artemis would understand. That it didn’t mean anything.

But one day, Luna couldn’t get up.

Her body ached. Her mouth was dry. Her reflection was a stranger—eyes sunken, fur matted. When Artemis returned, the scent of another tom still lingered faintly in the air.

He didn’t say a word. He saw her curled on the rug, trembling, and simply called for Usagi.

The vet’s diagnosis was swift, clinical, cold.

Feline STD.

The words hung in the air like a storm cloud.

Usagi sobbed in the waiting room. Artemis stood rigid, as if struck by lightning. Diana didn’t understand why Papa’s voice cracked when he asked, “How could you?”

Luna couldn’t meet his eyes.

“I was lonely,” she rasped. “I thought you’d forgotten me.”

His silence was more brutal than any scream. He turned to leave.

“Don’t take Diana—please…”

“She’s my daughter,” Artemis said without looking back. “She doesn’t need to learn betrayal this young.”

The door clicked shut behind him.

Days turned into weeks.

No more toms came. The city seemed to have forgotten her. Only Usagi remained—gentle, loyal, brushing her fur and humming lullabies that once comforted the whole family.

Luna took her medicine. She learned to live with her illness. But nothing dulled the ache.

She passed Diana once in the park. The kitten looked up, confused, but Artemis turned her gently away.

They didn’t speak.

And so Luna lived on—not in redemption, but in reckoning.

Every night she looked at the moon, her namesake, and wondered how something so bright could feel so far away.

The story was generated by an AI software, according to my imagination.