Category Archives: Uncategorized

MC K-ROO & THE DREAM OF THE BALD BEAR KING (DREAM #1)

MC K-Roo awoke with a start, the jolt coursing through his tail to such a degree that he was almost knocked from his bed entirely; for it was one of those dreams ending with a fall of sorts.

In the dream, The Furry Fury is at a dinner table. And everyroo is serving him & everyroo is being served. Though it is not exactly clear how it’s all happening, it all begins like this: there are suddenly all of these arms coming from behind everyroo around the table, all in the steady process of placing plates & bowls & cups, knives & forks & spoons. And as they all reach in— arms & wings & paws of animals of all kinds, coming in all shapes & sizes— they do not come from directly straight back, but at a 45° angle. Upon their completion of the task of setting the table, everyroo present sees that there are vessels & plates & utensils— picking them up & examining them even, as if to verify the fact of their being what they appear to be— and everyroo is hungry, their mouths extremely dry.
        The Troopa is no exception, and so his eyes light up when arms from behind him return with what can only be the main course. As if from behind a soft, black curtain of vertical night (or of filmic special effects, even): arms serve onto all’s plates steaming cuts of choice meats, heaping spoonfuls of mashed potatoes & various grains, local as well as eclectic vegetables of every kind— and all having been prepared in all ways imaginable; as if fit for a king of a boundless kingdom. Ladlefuls of a sort of never-before-seen soup soon appear, which seems to have everything in all the world within it— indeed, the smell of everything upon the table somehow seemed to be a smell summing to all things ever.
        But then most peculiarly was this: the heavy goblet-like cups began to fill, simply & just like that, without having been poured into at all: upwards from nil, a meniscus was birthed & rose until reaching a line adequate to satiate the animal it would serve.
        The Furry Fury almost couldn’t believe his eyes, thought perhaps he was seeing things. And so he directed his gaze to the cup of the kangaroo next to him: only to find the very same thing happening before his clear-yet-deerblack eyes.
        “Holy jeepers! Did you guys see that? CHRIST!!!!,” the Fury exclaimed, with almost nothing but joeylike excitement. “…almost nothing but” was because: the one other thing evidenced in his eyes was the fact he was incredibly hungry & thirsty— and so before he could but hear anyroo’s reply or comment upon his, all he could hear was the food he was somehow already chewing in mouth, the gulps of that which arrived from his cup. And it tasted like nothing else on Earth he’d ever before tasted, despite that it could only have come from the Earth itself.
        Whereupon the cup refilled itself, and more hands-from-behind replaced new & different food upon his plate & into his bowl. Yet when he looked around the table, no one else was eating— even as everyroo had been served the same incomparable & impeccable dishes. With his face looking down at the delicious provisions before him, his eyes then looked askance to the table’s head. And that’s when he noticed— at the very head of the table & for the very first time— a balded bear wearing a crown, looking down & past that which was there before him. Whereupon Kangaroo instantly knew: this was The Bald Bear King.

And as K-Roo began to raise his gaze to the King, the whole room, table & spread & animals & all, began turning upside down, as if his gaze were the sole lever upon which everything within the room rested.
        It was then & at the very moment just before K-Roo’s gaze met the gaze of The Bald Bear’s that he was jolted awake.

FRIDAY NIGHT / SATURDAY MORNING

A song suddenly coursed through his heart, stirring memories & retrieving images of times having had as much fun with friends as was possible without anyroo getting hurt, excepting of course the livers of all. The song’s chorus went I go out on Friday night / and I come home on Saturday morning, sung by the rooette in Nouvelle Vague, covering The Specials. How much this song was attached to a particular weekend in Providence, Rhode Island, wherein with friends he stayed with strangers & did just as the song sang. Indeed, he remembered awaking the next day & being slightly drunk still, having to soon drive home nevertheless, enveloped by a sunlight perfect & morning air crisp. Somehow— & it was important to know how, he felt— it was one of his happiest memories.
        And now, this evening— around a decade later— he was struck by a nostalgia, almost overcome by a nostalgia. And it was a nostalgia akin to the kind felt for his childhood spent with his father, all of the days of his happy youth. Not only could ten years ago never be returned to, but its contents couldn’t be reached back into & pulled back to the present; or, more precisely: not, at any rate, with the same (largely positive) emotional results as experienced before.

It was in this manner that the Rooster realized that something had newly shifted in his heart, that something was indeed different from prior. For while some nostalgias can be 1) somewhat slaked by possession of an object from the desired former time, or 2) hopelessly stared at upon entering a photograph, dwelling in memory— there was nothing actually, physically, really blocking him from calling up those same friends & purchasing a bus ticket & grabbing a pint of whiskey & having a go at the town anon & anew, like in the happy days of old.
        And yet there was a block, all the same & immovably: it was mental and emotional, partly having to do with the imagination, and perhaps the word necessity, as well (though he couldn’t say why these last two words came to his tongue’s tip). Suffice it to say: he just wasn’t feeling it anymore; and that, it seemed, was that.

You either are or you are not feeling it; and he just wasn’t any longer. But those times, the times when he was: he loved intensely, despite how they may’ve adversely affected his health in many ways. Yet he also knew he could never go back, not like he once did, not as blissfully fully & with the same wanton abandon. Those days are gone, he said to himself aloud— to the tune & in the words of another chorus line, this time from The Magnetic Fields.
        And while it was a good thing in most ways, it was also sad in others. It was sad that such brands of fun affected the body in such a lousy manner; they were happy times, overflowing with that certain [temporarily] limitless exuberance of emotion which only alcohol makes possible, takes hand in hand like hand in glove.

That the song & the images coming to mind along with it triggered in him nostalgia — a nostalgia he could no longer respond to in the same manner as he might’ve just a few years back— caused him to realize that something in him had changed. Not, however, that this necessarily guaranteed anything as regarded his future actions, however. To wit: if in fact it really was the case that he’d grown out of certain shoes: when could he expect for new shoes to arrive in their place? and would he regularly wear them anyways when they came? what would keep him from opting to just endure the constricting pain of persisting in his old-yet-familiar shoes until they were really trashed & in tatters? leaving his feet bloodied & in blisters? The answers would have to remain to be seen.

PLATY DOWSING

Platypus was riding in her shotgun position as always. Her eyes scanning the horizon, the heavens above & earth below— seeing what was to to be seen, smelling what was to be smelt; hearing what was to be heard, feeling what was to be felt. There against K-Roo’s belly & with her head poking out from his pouch, she was in a certain sense equivalent to a watchwoman perched upon a ship’s mast. In another sense, the word symbiotic defined their relationship quite well, what with how each helped the other get to where both were off in the going to go, their aims & goals being kindred & alike.

I’m not feeling so great. Can we pull over?,” she said.

Kangaroo had been bounding along into the lonely open, an open which seemed never to close. Not even close with the night: for when down went the sun & whereupon the horizon died into darkness, the openness of the bright barren & clear simply passed the baton along to another, opposite openness of the dark impenetrable & endless. Neither was much of a home for a kangaroo, he sometimes felt; and yet both, in the end, absolutely had to be, needed to be without question.
        Yet nevertheless & notwithstanding being in the midst of his musings (mused to the metronome of his own steady pace) Kangaroo came to a stop. Platypus climbed out, briefly stretching her platyarms & legs as she did so, immediately after which she moved into a hunch.

You alright?” asked K-Roo. Platypus had sat down, looking around. Kangaroo reached into his pouch for some water, pulling out a bottle containing not as much as he hoped to find. “Here. Take this.”

Platy took the bottle & drank, her dribbles making dark the dust around her platylips. As eagerly as she drank & as thirsty as she was, she stopped perfectly halfway & handed the remainder to K-Roo. “Here,” she said, “you have the rest.”

I’m fine,” returned K-Roo, in casual protest, who clearly wasn’t fine at all; droplets of sweat seemed to terminate from half the entirety of his fur’s follicles.

It’s my water. Drink it.” K-Roo didn’t argue and drank; it was, after all, Platy’s bottle that he’d pulled out. Watching K-Roo gulp the last drop, Platy couldn’t help but notice that if the sweat dripping from this drinking marsupial were to be collected back into the very bottle from which they drank, quite likely it would’ve filled right back up; their supply being finite, this was an issue. As evenly as she could muster she expressed “We’re going need some more of this… in the coming days.” Upon looking up at K-Roo— who didn’t seem to register the weight she’d intended to convey— she then added “And we’d best get to the task of finding it soon.”

Where? And where are we, anyways?” asked K-Roo.

Platy scanned the horizon, listened to the wind & watched the manner in which the sun fell, noting the time upon her watch’s face, as well. She then looked down at the ground below, touching it. First with her delicate webbed hands, then with her soft body as a whole. After some minutes of feeling the Earth upon her furry belly, she climbed back up into K-Roo’s. Pointing yonder, she said “Over there. I think it’s over there where we’ll find a well. Let’s try for it.”

You’re the boss,” smiled K-Roo as he bounded away. The ground they’d left from was hard, almost cousin to the concrete of the City. Tumbleweeds blew in from different directions, and the couple drops of water they’d spilled camouflaged via evaporation & absorption into the natural color of the unforgiving desert. The few living creatures around (mostly of the hardscrabble burrowing variety, or else insects of great tenacity) looked up, and— knowing the well towards which K-Roo & Platy bounded— chattered intently, and quickly agreed upon conjointly investigating the situation. To see what was to be seen, perhaps, as they say.
        Not a soul had gotten water from this particular well in decades, perhaps even nearly a century. And if the well they were off to was indeed the one suspected, each & every one of them had to wonder: was not that well reputed to be a sham well? a kind of cultural mirage for the foolish? an empty, dry hole that only looked of water to those “believing” they were seeing as much? For since the beginning of the earliest any of them could remember, it’d always been said that that fabled well was really nothing but a fable after all.

So it would all have soon to be seen. Presently visible for the moment, however: was a kangaroo & a platypus bounding off under a boundless night, beneath a slow trickle of stars bringing forth to bear. And in differing degrees & at varying speeds: with a motley audience of the curious trailing behind.

In Which Kangaroo Leads a Horse to Water & Watches It Not Drink, Hoping It Does Soon

The Marsupial Troopa did not count upon the fact that one of the very first things he’d be writing about in 2014 was abused roos & the abusearoos who abused them. But life tends to bring about things unexpectedly, and so it was that on New Year’s Day he found himself calling a domestic violence hotline. Mere weeks ago he couldn’t have foreseen that he’d be making such a call, whereupon from the other end of the line a femaleroo’s voice would say, after almost 10 seconds of his unexpected silence, “Hello?”, to which he’d quickly exhale syllable enough (“Hi…”) so as to communicate that she shouldn’t hang up. Doubtless she knew this silence from many a caller; it wasn’t out of the question she knew it from experience, a long or even short time ago.

Now his pause was over, & now he was talking. He listened as he heard himself saying things like “textbook codependent relationship,” “schizophrenic alcoholic,” and “glass vases thrown at her face,” all of which were facts. Like paint is a fact. He would say all of these things, all of these facts— they were tangible, real: for however manipulable in form, they were nevertheless indisputable in origin: as a paintfact, a red smear was always red, and an orange smear was still a smear that had red in it, however softened with yellow it may have been. Both paint & facts had certain inarguable qualities (from which could be deduced histories) about themselves. “Threw her onto the floor” and “grabbed her around her neck, choking her,” were also sentences he found rolling calmly from off his tongue, all said with the same matter-of-factness he might have used standing in front of a painting, remarking upon a particular “green in the foreground” or a certain “gold around the halo, in the upper left.”

Yet in his mind’s eye an interesting thing happened when he watched the analogy run into the following limitation: the canvas, the surface by & upon which these facts came to life as forms, simply didn’t exist: all he saw were paint dabs & brushstrokes suspended in a vacuum, slowly gathering themselves into various shapes & textures, and then those said shapes & textures inching towards other shapes & textures, gradually becoming like a painting— except that no canvas existed beneath, and so in places could be seen through: consequently seeming more imaginary than real.

As he spoke on and described to a gentle-voiced strangeroo the violence— violence he’d never seen but had recently learned of— he could not readily picture the face of his rooette friend Maybelleroo in pain & with fear. He could not see her crying, couldn’t see her face twisted & with tears rolling down the sides of her gentle snout & then falling down upon anotheroo’s violent & clenching fists— so foreign was the idea of her image being affected by anything but love, joy, or positivity generally.

But what was unimaginable for him was lived daily by her. And, it wasn’t changing: she wasn’t leaving her abuseroo, whom she said just needed help, and whom she said she could help to help. Other specifics of the situation could be found— it has to be said— in most any of the many articles on domestic violence published in any of the many womenroos’ magazines published monthly; he’d read a few of these before, which often ran pictures of the authoroos. Having read the entirety of text he’d glance back to the image of the kangaroo from whence they came, and wonder: “Why would— how could— a rooette like that put up with being treated that way by such a bastard fuckeroo?” Unable to answer the question, he’d at least rest assured that none of the ladyroos in his circle of friends would ever stand for such abuse, all of it being considerably beneath their intellectual level.

Yet the situation wasn’t a purely intellectual matter, and as such: measure of “intellectual level” was irrelevant. Other than intellectual tools were required. And not only other than intellectual tools, but moreover whatever tools were taken to the task, the regions of her psyche they’d need access to were ones to which Maybelleroo would never grant him permission. So, here’s where he stood: if breaking down & presenting to her her situation as it objectively appeared wouldn’t get her to leave— a description of which took note of her situation’s a) regrettable commonplaceness, b) indisputable dangerousness, and how c) leaving her abuseroo was the only solution that ever worked for the millions of other womenroos who’d been there before [whereupon he supplied hotline & related counseling numbers]— there seemed little he could do to help her, and it was extremely depressing. For never before in his life had he 1) sat beside a kangaroo of intelligence & listened to her tell of her problems, 2) recognized immediately & expressed to her that these problems-as-described comprised an identifiable situation with a name, having support networks offering help to kangaroos in her position, only to 3) listen to her maintain “No, my situation is different— he just needs to get better,” straight-faced save for a slight frown.

MC K-Roo, like many a roo, knew about facts and how to weave them together so as to make a narrative. Yet more to the point & as presently seen: in life, certain facts were plainer than others, and when they accumulated past a certain point— especially in proximity of other related facts— virtually assembled themselves into narratives sans assistance. Whenever as much happens, accordingly are created narratives in kind: familiar narratives, in short. Maybelleroo’s situation added up to the familiar narrative of codependency. It’s here worth noting that part of the point of narratives— what with their readily-identifiable beginnings, middles, and endings & all— is that if you can identify which narrative you’re in and you don’t like how it ends: you can take steps to change it, if not remove yourself from it altogether entirely.

And so there held in K-Roo’s paw was a very sharp point. So sharp it caused him to bleed, and as he bled, he mused: “If this point is sharp enough to make me bleed, might it not also be sharp enough to sever Maybelleroo’s ties with that fuckeroo? That fuckeroo I have to remember not to call ‘fuckeroo’ in her presence (per the advice of the womanroo from the domestic violence hotline), lest she get defensive of him?” It was worth a try.

And so he tried.

But she did not want to leave him; and so he failed.

As K-Roo’s head sank down in dejection, Platy’s rose up from out of his pouch in response, intercepting his gaze before it hit the rockbottom below; over their shared lifetimes she’d developed a bit of a sixth sense for his need of her. Straightaway she asked if his friend Maybelleroo was a romantic and when Poochypouch [one of Kangaroo’s akas] replied “Yes,” Platy followed by asking if Maybelleroo also thought she could help her abuseroo get better or change, to which K-Roo sighed “…yes.” Platy then asked K-Roo if Maybelleroo had other friends who were pressuring her to break free from her abuseroo, and the MC answered “Most of them. Not all. Most.” Then Platy spoke.

“There’s the saying Love conquers all and there’s the saying History repeats itself— both of which make promises about the future. Each, however, uses a different mechanics: the first is voiced from the emotional present (like an encouragement, almost a battle cry of “Onward, ho!”); the second is voiced from the known past (like a warning, or a crossroads sign pointing towards an alternative path).

“The power of ‘Love conquers all’ is drawn from the emotional energy a kangaroo feels about hisher imagined goal; often less emotionally, ‘History repeats itself’ instead draws its power from recollected facts. You could say that the former has all the force of an (inherently) emotionally-charged mental image of a desired outcome, and that the latter’s force is restricted to however a kangaroo might feel about a particular photograph of something he/she wished never existed. Moreover, whenever ‘History repeats itself’ gets said, there’s usually a situation unfolding behind which there’s already considerable momentum towards likelihood of repetition.” Mentally reviewing Maybelleroo’s current dilemma, Poochypouch concurred with a nod.

“And if you don’t mind my being subtle,” which P-Pouch did not, “when ‘Love conquers all’ plays through a kangaroo’s mind, it’s typically as if the roo is saying it oneself— whereas when ‘History repeats itself’ plays through, it’s often instead as if the roo is hearing it said. Given this slight-but-critical difference, one could argue that the first saying arises from a subjective perspective, the latter from adopting a more objective one.”

Like anyroo, Kangaroo knew which way rooman nature tended towards when the options were between subjective & objective truths, and he didn’t entirely like the implications. “So you’re saying history is more powerful than love?”

“No,” replied Platy with some surprise, “almost to the contrary: history is nothing less than the record of love expressed alternating with the aftermath of love withheld (or even love misdirected).While this made sense, K-Roo also furrowed his brows a bit.

“Love will conquer all— except for when it’s called upon to conquer the wrong thing. My concern for your Maybelleroo is that she’s expecting love will save her relationship with her abuseroo— and it won’t because it’s not a viable relationship. This is also to say: it seems Maybelleroo is confused about where the love is needed in her life: and since she’s being physically beaten & verbally abused, and is moreover believing receipt of these attacks is her own fault, I think it’s safe to say she doesn’t really love herself.”

Here is where The Rooster said “Okay,” but with an extended pause to either side of the word.

For he had some reservations. Primarily: he had a level of mistrust about— & subsequent caution around— too-slick sounding (often armchair) diagnoses of a psychological nature, of which “X doesn’t love himherself” could very well be. Platy understood & didn’t disagree with his policy of wariness, adding that she indeed often felt the same. She also & importantly went on to say that her analysis of Maybelleroo could hardly be considered complete: other factors neither of them knew about most certainly existed, factors Maybelleroo would likely never share; notwithstanding these limitations— as well as citing the danger of waiting for “complete knowledge” before acting— Platy stood by her assessment.

“I know Maybelleroo well enough to see she has some issues with her self-esteem that are excluded from the persona she shows you. With that there, we can deduce that at some level, she’s not the kangaroo she wants to be, and accordingly doesn’t feel she’s the sort of ‘whole, total-package rooette’ who deserves to be loved completely. This being the case— & without pretending the preceding comprises a complete, causal explanation for the problem— it’s pretty clear she, at least at some level, doesn’t love herself.

“Now, conveniently for her,” Platy continued with a darker sarcasm, “she seems to have found anotheroo who’s all-too-happy to not love her completely— yet who’s careful enough to express kindness enough to make her feel wanted just enough to stick arounduntil he blows up again, whereupon she leaves again… until she returns to him again (since he ‘just needs help’ & she just wants to help)… whereupon he apologizes & becomes ‘nice’ again… and they get close again… until the tensions-largely-by-his-calculations build again & he blows up… again— with this cycle repeating ad infinitum until it can’t.

“P-Pouch: we’re talking some textbook douchearoo behavior here. We’re talking about a situation in which the guyroo knows his good-looks alone— serving to allay the ladyroo’s doubts & insecurities about her own body— make it so he almost doesn’t need to use verbal manipulation to keep her confined to his orbit. And you know what else? It’s entirely possible that that detail there— how it’s she who repeatedly chooses to return to his abuse helps keep him from feeling guilty about his doucheness. Even as we & anyroo else can see how at the end of the day he’s repeatedly abusing anotheroo— not something that roos who love themselves do— that’s the level of complete & total sociopatharoo we’re dealing with here.”

And so there before him The Rooster saw a confusion of planets & suns: a pair of planets orbiting each other, and a pair of suns meandering vaguely in orbit of the orbiting planets— yet with each sun slipping off a little farther away with each revolution, leaving the pair of planets in increasing degrees of darkness & cold. “That’s not love,” mused K-Roo.

So he then reached into the vision and separated out the planets, gently setting each one into orbit with its proper sun. Now spinning about in his imagination were a pair of distinct solar systems, each being self-contained & -sufficient units— whereupon Platy herself entered into his vision, reaching out & gently nudging one solar system in one direction, and the other in another. With the two self-contained systems now orbiting each other, thusly was created a greater & heretofore unseen system. In this newly revised vision the planets shone brighter in some orbits & darker in others, but as a totality were always more closely bound together with each revolution, were ever warmer each time— just as they’d be for forever & until death; and “That,” blinked K-Roo, “is love.”

“I won’t disagree,” remarked Platy,“but will add that another measure of as much— to call attention to your latter vision’s even distribution of love upon both lover & the loved— is in how neither collapses into darkness if the other leaves, be it for a time or for a different forever, should some significant shift occur in one life which isn’t reciprocated in the other.”

“So, basically you’re saying that part of what’s necessary is like in that one Katy Perryroo song where she sings ‘I found I had to love myself the way I want you to / Love me’?”

“Better yet would be the next verse when she kicks it up to ‘I’m gonna love myself the way I want you to / Love me,’ but, yes: if we’re considering Maybelleroo’s predicament & those planets, I’d say that following Ms. Perryroo’s lead is where we want for our friend be.”

And so Kangaroo & Platy ended their conversation in agreement. What they had agreed upon was the nature of anotheroos’ problems; the fact that Maybelleroo still had problems wasn’t lost on either of them. For while the disjoint of “theory & practice” was trouble enough already, it paled in comparison to that of otheroos’ theory as regards otheroos’ practice. This is also to point out that even if Maybelleroo were witness to her friends’ conversations & visions just now, high were the chances of her continuing doing as she did, for roos will generally do as roos have usually done. Suffice it to say, this is owing to the fact that roos quite easily get confused: hence the well-known term confusearoos, of which more will be spoken at another time.

For the day was long enough already as it was. And while K-Roo had a sense of closure in theory which felt good on the one hand, the sharper sense of closure not existing in practice— viz., for Maybelleroo— was a salted open wound on the other. As often happened when he felt conflicting things to the degree he didn’t know what he was feeling, he went outside to the streets. Many a roo were out & about as well, the City was alive and breathing. It was good to be in a world with a pulse. It was strange to be in a world with so many different pulses, and as such it was strange, in a way, to be in the City; the City was where you chose which world you wanted to inhabit, neighbor to otheroos who, bouncing along right beside you, lived in worlds far apart from yours & yet shared all the same.

But tonight he wanted to live with Maybelleroo, who was very far away & who wasn’t doing well. He walked into a bookstore and picked up a copy of Helping Her Get Free by Susan Brewsteroo, per recommendation of the gentle-voiced stranger from the hotline. Outside through the trees the stars were out, and he could readily feel the imminent change of season in both air & dress. He didn’t know where he would live in 5 years, let alone ten. He didn’t know whether she was being hit right now, or else if she was crying. And if she was crying, he didn’t know if she’d tell him why— really why— she was; as much as he loved her, their relationship was now different from what it was once. He knew very little about certain things, and how odd it was that some of these seemingly many things pertained to a few of the ones he cared about most.

The Rooster & The Fountain

The Rooster awoke. And the first two things he did were one: to breathe deeply— wholly & from the gut— & to love himself. Staring up at the blank ceiling from his bed, and feeling all of the love he had for any external thing— an artwork, book, film, other animal, ideal or principle, place or song, anythingelseatall— and take that love emanating from his heart & shower it back upon the entirety of his self. The image: the self as fountain.

And what struck him was this: the logic of it all, simple & true: all of this love he gave to others & other things: if he did not right now at this very critical moment in his life turn his heart upon himself: he would not survive. Therefore would he forfeit the possibility of loving all of the aforementioned. Put otherwise & perhaps more simply: if he wanted to keep loving the things he loved, he had to love himself first. Otherwise a misstep into an impossible-to-step-back-from darkness was all but certainty.

He told his revelation to Platy, waking her from her sleep to do so. She was tired & confused at first, hearing it all as if in a dream. The stars were out, the moon nigh full as well. After a few moments of getting her bearings, she nodded. And then said: “Yes, Yes you do— that’s what I was telling you about. You got it. Now do it. It’s one thing to know it, and quite another to do it. I see it in your eyes that you feel it; you’re on it. Now do it.”

And in this manner, the first of the heretofore closed doors were opened. Kangaroo was not perfect, was still quite rough around the certain edges in many ways. But he didn’t have to be perfect to be loved. And so loving himself— in all of his areas of perfection & failure both— was how he brought a start to his new day. And so the Fountain he became.

After a time, Platy turned back to K-Roo and said something more: “K-Roo. You know, if you become the Fountain, the goldfish are soon to come.” Before he could ask precisely what she meant, she had turned away with & on purpose, nestling back into his pouch: K-Roo had to— and so would soon— find out for himself.