Sunshine, a cool breeze blowing, an endless expanse of rolling hills and knee-high grass, the flock wandered through it all. The sheep grazed under the watchful eye of their shepherd. The shepherd looked out over the hills, crook across his back. He smiled. The flock was whole. The sheep were safe. The grass was filling, and the world was simple. The shepherd liked the simple things. His crook took his weight. Lily, his dog, kept the flock nice and tight. Mostly white as a cloud, a few dots of black sheep nestled in the core. They all followed the whistles and the bark. They moved as a single rolling unit, circling the shepherd's hill with lackadaisical ease. They bleated. The shepherd smiled and sat on a smooth patch of grass. Lily barked again and a rebellious spirit fell in line.
He trusted them. They trusted him. The herd drifted with the clouds above. The shepherd checked the sun and saw that it was late enough to indulge. Not responsibly indulge, but the day promised to be long. He rummaged in his satchel and found his snuff box. The motion was practiced and easy. He fought back the urge to sneeze and let the hit run through his body. A calm to the edges, a sluggish urge to move as the actual motion lagged behind the thought to move. The shepherd put his legs long and stretched back.
The grass embraced him and all that was left of his sense lingered on the clouds. White puffs curling and swimming. There was a rose in one, a face in another, and a tower to throw down lightning bolts in the last. A soft smile and a head full of clouds and nothing more to draw the attention away. The sheep kept bleating and Lily kept barking. That was almost, not quite, a problem. Lily barked when there were problems. That was why he kept her around.
And it didn't stop. She had a problem for him to solve and the snuff made it hard to care for a second. Even now, it was more of annoyance than a bit of panic. But there was enough through the muted mind to get up and away from the crowds. The crook came back to take his weight. Lily was irate. The problem was not solved. A quick glance of the flocks showed a good number, but Lily's count was off.
She led him down the hill and the flock milled about, spreading away from one another without that invisible fence to pen them in. The shepherd picked his way through the grass. Bleating, not the placid jostle for the better blade from the masses, but desperate and frightened. He overtook the dog and ran towards the noise. A misplaced step and a trapped limp, that's all that was.
And the shepherd was right. There was a sheep stuck in the earth like a crop. The experience was the same. Evey other day, the same thing, a wayward hoof through the earth and the panic rolled through the poor animals. The thing broke his heart with cries of pain. Lily barked again and set up a protective march to ensure no one would break through.
"Oh, poor baby," the shepherd sighed, "You got yourself in damn fine pickle. Let me see what I can do."
The sheep kept thrashing. it felt a presence stalking it in a circle. Things only circled when they meant to pounce. The shepherd clicked his tongue and set the work. The sheep wasn't one of his. The amount of wool suggested the thing had been feral for a good long while. A year at least, thriving with the wildflowers and the grass of the glades.
The shepherd pounced. The sheep kicked and thrashed, but that was the worst of it. A hand came to part the wool and a soothing rhythm came with the touch. The sheep bleated and thrashed. The hand was nice, but the snare around its hooves was tight.
"Easy, friend, easy," he purred, "We're here to get you out and back to where you need to be. You've stepped in a sinkhole and got tangled up in some roots. Happens to the best of us. But take it easy. That's how we get out of this."
The meandering bleats from the shepherd kept the sheep calm, even as he pulled a knife from his belt. The sharp metal slipped under notice, even right when the blade touched the ankle. But the hand was calm and the voice was song and the knife was nothing, nothing at all. The shepherd worked through the roots and they fell away. The sheep went back to kicking and thrashing. Freedom was so close, so close. The shepherd backed away. The sheep had it under control. The last of the roots fell away and the poor sheep was no longer poor.
It was just hurt. The weight and the torque went down to the bone. The sheep couldn't take the steps. The shepherd dusted off his clothes and clicked his tongue again. The sheep went back to being poor. Despite the luscious grass and the balmy day, the sheep could not survive without an ambulatory way of life. He sighed. Lily barked a little bit more. The sheep were starting to scatter and run. The shepherd grabbed the sheep's legs and lifted. His arm burned. His strength knitted to his core and he started walking. The sheep on his back was laden with wool and that was the only thing he allowed himself to feel. The sheep had to get home. The flock needed water first. He would corral them earlier than he probably should, but he suddenly had a very good reason to come home early.
"Alright friend," he said to the sheep on his back, "We're going to the river now. We'll get you something to drink and head home. I'm afraid the shearing will have to wait until tomorrow. I imagine that I'll be a bit too knackered to do anything about it tonight."
---
The shepherd was right. He was tired when he returned. The sheep didn't fight after the second or third time he had to pick the poor thing up. He set the sheep down under a roof and let the rest of the flock mill and turn through their pen for the night. Lily went to her little home and the shepherd retired to his cottage. The moon was only a sickle in the night. The shepherd did not dream.
He ate a leisurely breakfast and finished off the set of scones he picked up from the village bakery. That was another bit of choring to do when he had the time. Chasing down Dammon for an actual fair price for the wool, checking on that new set of shears that Dammon said he would make, and generally avoiding Dammon as much as possible outside of those two things. But for now, these shears would work. The wool was still on the sheep. He still had enough food for a good long while. He'd be fine. He whistled as he left his cottage and lily took the order to start corralling the unruly.
The new sheep did not need the bark and threat. It was already waiting for him at the station, injured leg not even a thought in its head.
"Friend," The shepherd sighed, "If you were faking it yesterday to get carried around, I'll be rather upset."