AI3 – Gemini Ending (with instructions) – 02/13/26
And all the world heard, and came to the edge of the stream to see the marvelous sight. From the nearby village, children skipped down the muddy paths, and from the farm, the anxious Mother-cat followed the scent of catnip and damp earth.
When they arrived, they didn’t find crying, naughty kittens. Instead, they found the willow trees adorned with the softest, silver-gray tufts imaginable. The kittens had become so cozy in their sap-beds that they had shrunk just a little bit, turning into velvety buds that clung tightly to the bark. They looked so comfortable that the Mother-cat simply purred, realizing that for once, she knew exactly where her children were and didn’t have to worry about them chasing after grumpy cows.
As the years went by, the “Pussy-willows” became the official heralds of spring. Every time the Wind came blustering through the valley, he would puff out his cheeks and howl, “I’m telling! I’m telling! They aren’t plants at all! They’re just furry adventurers who got stuck!”
But the kittens didn’t mind. They enjoyed the sunshine, the cool mist of the stream, and the fact that they never had to wash behind their ears again. The only person who was truly confused was the neighbor’s dog. He would spend hours sniffing the willow branches, tilting his head in bewilderment because the trees smelled distinctly of milk and mischief, yet they never once ran away when he barked.
The humorous twist, however, came many seasons later. A very old, very wise botanist came to study the trees. He poked at a fuzzy bud with his magnifying glass and whispered, “Remarkable! A plant with fur!”
At that exact moment, the Wind gave a mischievous tug at the branch. The Pussy-willow bud didn’t bloom into a flower or a leaf. Instead, it let out a tiny, muffled “Meow,” and a single, miniature gray tail flicked out from the bark, swiping the botanist right across the nose.
The scientist ran back to town claiming the trees were haunted, but the Wind just laughed. He knew the secret was far better than science—it was simply a case of a very long nap that had accidentally turned into a permanent career.
Would you like me to try a version where the kittens actually make it back to the barn, or perhaps one where the Mother-cat joins them on the branches?
