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Alice on Top of the World

Alice on Top of the World

Chapter One
Into the Abyss

It was many years later when Alice found herself on another adventure—though, to her surprise, she was once again a child, no older than when she first tumbled into Wonderland and slipped through that curious Looking Glass.

“How curious,” she whispered, trying to recall the girl she had once been.

Suddenly, the White Rabbit appeared before her, looking impatient. “Took your time getting here,” he quipped.

“I beg your pardon?” Alice replied, recalling how rude he could be—particularly when he felt so inclined.

“I said you took your time. You should have been here fourteen years ago,” he huffed indignantly, hopping briskly away.

“But,” Alice stuttered, running after him, “I have no idea how I arrived, let alone why I’m so late!”

“We accept no ifs or buts here—by now, you should know that,” the Rabbit said, as a door suddenly materialized beside him. Without hesitation, he pushed it open. “Hurry up—please don’t dawdle.”

Alice hurried through the doorway, struggling to keep pace with the rapid-hopping Rabbit. She wondered if he’d got out of bed on the wrong side that morning, for he seemed quite grumpy on such a lovely day. The sun shone brightly, warming everything around them.

“I wonder where I might be,” she mused, admiring the pink forget-me-nots that lined a winding path before her. “Am I in Wonderland?” she asked, just as another door—similar to the first—appeared.

The Rabbit gave her a peculiar look. “Of course we’re not in Wonderland,” he said, opening the door with a flourish. “We’re on top of the world.” Then, with a wink, he scurried down another winding path, bordered by more pink forget-me-nots.

“The top of the world?” Alice gasped, surprised. “That’s impossible!”

The Rabbit stopped and turned to face her. “Then how can you be here if it’s impossible?”

Alice hesitated, flummoxed by his question. The only reply she managed was, “I bet you’re mad!”

“Mad? Oh, that all depends,” the Rabbit said, with a sly grin. “Depends on whether you mean mad or mad.”

“That’s silly,” Alice insisted. “They both mean the same thing.”

“Not quite,” replied the Rabbit, his eyes gleaming. “If you’re mad number one—and someone calls you mad number two—you might just be very mad indeed about such a fundamental mistake.”

“I’m not mad!” Alice declared, stamping her foot in frustration. She changed the subject, noticing another door had appeared. “Look—another door. Shall I try opening it?”

The White Rabbit reached for the handle, but the door stubbornly refused to budge.

“May I try?” Alice asked, feeling quite un-mad.

Standing back, the Rabbit said nothing. Instead, his tiny, beady eyes watched her intently.

Alice grasped the handle and pushed. The door swung open easily, revealing a dark, yawning hole. She stepped through without hesitation and tumbled into a vast, gaping abyss.

“No, I don’t want to go back up there—no matter how tempting the top of the world might be,” she muttered, staring at the tiny speck of light far above her. “It’s much too far!”

Before she could grasp what was happening, something passed her by in the darkness—she couldn’t see what, only hear its rushing sound. Clinging tightly, she rode it out of the well.

Surprisingly, she found herself on the back of a baby hippopotamus, its skin as smooth as silk. She wondered how she’d managed to stay on long enough to escape that shadowy place. But before she could think further, she slipped and slid off the hippopotamus, landing heavily on the dusty ground.

“I don’t like this place,” she moaned. “I don’t like it at all.”

“You don’t like it?” squawked the baby hippopotamus, its voice high-pitched and surprisingly cheerful for such a hefty creature. “How do you think I feel? There’s not a drop of water in sight—none! And we hippos need water—lots of it!”

Alice brushed dust off her dress and nodded politely. “Mr. Hippopotamus, thank you for the ride—truly the most comfortable hippopotamus ride I’ve ever had.” (Though she omitted to mention she’d never actually ridden one before.) “Thank you again.”

“My dear child,” he replied, “you’re so light I hardly felt you at all. Feel free to jump on my back anytime I pass by, if you need another ride out of that dark place.”

“Thank you,” Alice said with a smile. “I’ll keep that in mind—and treasure your kind offer.”

With that, the hippopotamus sank back into the darkness, searching for water. But before he could begin, another soft landing echoed nearby—though it was nowhere near as gentle as Alice’s.

Before she could say “Jack Robinson,” the White Rabbit reappeared—this time riding backwards on the baby hippopotamus’s back, heading toward the bright light ahead.

He scolded Alice for falling down the hole, then paused. “If there’s going to be any hole-falling around here, we’ll need a vote—decide who’s first and who’s second,” he declared. Alice nodded, though she suspected he might be quite mad—or maybe both.

Suddenly, a new winding path appeared before them. But this one was different—less inviting. Instead of pink forget-me-nots, enormous, green aspidistras with snapping beaks awaited, their mouths wide and hungry.

“Come on, Alice,” urged the Rabbit, rushing past the threatening plants. “We need to get to the top of the world!”

Alice gasped as the first aspidistra snatched at his thick fur, tearing a large wad from his back. “We must return to the top of the world,” he insisted, seemingly unbothered by the danger.

Not wanting to admit she was a little frightened of the strange, snapping plants—and not eager to ask for help—Alice prepared to step down that perilous path.

But the Rabbit was already far ahead. Alice hesitated, closing her eyes and taking a tentative step. She hoped—just hoped—to catch up with him before the plants could reach her.

No sooner had she begun than one of the beaks lunged for her left ear, another yanked her hair, and a third tried to nip her nose.

“Stop that!” Alice shouted. “Stop it this instant, or I’ll dig you all up and replant you with rhubarb!”

The beaks froze midattack, and Alice inspected her head. Everything was intact. She heaved a sigh of relief.

“Thank you,” she said. “I can’t imagine what’s gotten into you—plants aren’t supposed to be terrible, awful things.”

As she gazed at the towering, beak-mouthed plants, she thought she heard a faint cry. “Who’s crying?” she asked.

Despite listening carefully, she heard no reply—only the swaying of the plants’ stalks. Then they began to shake, their beak mouths moving high above her.

“Stop that,” Alice commanded. “Tell me—who’s crying?”

One of the plants, swaying more than the others, began to speak. “She’s crying,” it said softly, “the little offshoot near my wife—see?” A long, leafy arm pointed across to the right.

“Your wife?” Alice asked in surprise. “Plants can get married?”

“Yes,” the plant replied, swaying gently. “Can you see them?”

“I might, if you’d stop swaying,” Alice said, feeling a little dizzy. “You’re making me feel sick.”

“I can’t help it,” the plant admitted. “When we’re upset, we sway. It’s our way of expressing how we feel—like when the wind blows through us, and we don’t like it.”

“Oh, I’m sorry,” Alice said kindly. “Is there anything I can do to help?”

“You could promise not to dig us up,” the plant whispered, voice trembling.

“Of course I won’t,” Alice promised, “not after how rudely I was treated. I only said that because I was frightened.”

The plants stopped swaying, allowing Alice to see the tiny aspidistra nestled under its mother’s broad leaves. Without fear, she moved closer, reaching out to the little one.

“I’m truly sorry,” she said softly. “If I upset you, please forgive me.”

“Yes,” the baby plant replied, trying not to sob. “And we’re sorry for frightening you. We’re just so hungry… normally we’re happy, with smiling beaks to greet travelers.”

Confused, Alice asked, “Hungry? How can you be hungry when your roots find all the food you need?”

“Fertilizer,” the mother explained. “All plants need it at some point. But none of us have had any for ages. I’ve never even seen it!”

“This is terrible,” Alice muttered, scratching her head. “I’ll find you some—enough to feed you all.”

The beaks seemed to smile—if they could—and began chattering excitedly about the fertilizer mine. Alice listened as they described a place she’d never seen, where the precious stuff was stored.

“Where is this mine?” she asked.

“I’m sorry,” the mother admitted. “We don’t know exactly. But we believe it exists.”

Determined to help, Alice promised, “I’ll find you fertilizer. I’ll make sure you have enough to grow strong and happy.”

CONTD

a new alice in wonderland story

 

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Mad Mr Viscous glueing again

Mad Mr Viscous glueing again

Free eBooks for everyone, for sure, at… free eBooks for everyone

Mad Mr Viscous, the owner of a glue factory, is hell-bent on making his fortune, selling glue made from his secret ingredient – horses. Determined to put a stop to it, Jimmy and his best friend Eric set off on a fantastic adventure, battling witches, warlocks, animalistics – and MAD MR VISCOUS.

In a town, not so distant, where shadows often grew,
Stood a factory tall and eerie, owned by Mad Mr. Viscous, too.
A place where whispers grew to tales of old,
Where children’s feet grew cold, when they were told,
Of the glue that bound the very souls of the town so true.

Mad Mr. Viscous, with his wild cackling laugh,
And eyes that gleamed like a madman’s half-lit staff,
With his apron stained and his hat askew,
He’d stir and mix, brew and cast,
The stickiest glue that ever was.

He’d gather the ingredients under the moon’s pale glow,
In his cauldron of secrets, in his workshop of woe.
Bones of the lost and the tears of the damned,
All to make his potion so grand,
A glue that could hold fast what the world did not know.

The factory chimneys, they’d belch forth a smoke,
Thick and black, like the darkest of jokes,
It wrapped around the town like a shroud,
Silencing the cries of those who’d dared approach,
To the lair of Mad Mr. Viscous, in his glue factory so cloak.

The walls were thick with the whispers of the trapped,
Their cries for help forever enrapt,
In the sticky embrace of the glue so foul,
A prison of despair, a fate so cruel,
Where the lost souls of the town did forever dwell.

He’d catch the town’s secrets, the whispers in flight,
With his glue, he’d bind them tight,
To the pages of his tome of lore,
Where they could speak nevermore,
Forever silenced in the glue factory’s lightless well.

The townsfolk lived in fear, each day anew,
Of the madman and his glue that grew,
They knew not what he sought to achieve,
What twisted plot did he conceive,
In the heart of his factory so fell and fell.

One brave soul, young and bright, did dare,
To venture forth in the moon’s gossamer glare,
With a heart of hope and a sprig of peppermint,
To set the secrets and souls free from their glint,
And to bring an end to the madman’s reign so fell.

In she crept, through the doors of despair,
The smell of amber and fear in the air,
The cauldron bubbled with a witch’s brew,
As Mad Mr. Viscous sang his tune so true,
Oblivious to the girl with the minty flair.

With a touch of the mint to the cauldron’s side,
The glue began to loosen its tie,
The whispers grew louder, the smoke grew thin,
As the souls began to unbind,
From the madness that had held them there.

The secrets flew out, a storm of white,
Their voices now free to take flight,
They soared through the town, a silent scream,
Exposing the lies of the madman’s scheme,
And the truth was revealed to all to see.

Mad Mr. Viscous, his plan unfurled,
Faced the wrath of the souls of the world,
They bound him in his own glue so fast,
In his factory that was now theirs at last,
And the town, once bound, was free and clear.

The chimneys now smoke-free, the air so mild,
The children laugh, their spirits wild,
The glue factory stands, a monument of old,
But now it’s a place of tales so bold,
Where Mad Mr. Viscous’s spirit is forever curled.

So if you’re ever in a town so blue,
Where whispers of the past come through,
Remember the girl with the minty might,
And the madman who lost his fight,
In the glue factory that saw the light of day appear.

 

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Free eBooks for EVERYONE – it’s true!

Free eBooks for everyone, for sure, at… free eBooks for everyone

an american man enjoying himself in ireland

 

 
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Posted by on June 30, 2025 in ebooks, free, free ebooks

 

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The Crazymad Writer Writes Again

The Crazymad Writer Writes Again

The Crazymad Writer Writes Again. Yes. it is true, I am writing again, in a mad frenzy to tell you all that I know.

 

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October 23rd, 1973

October 23rd, 1973

The price of gas increased by 400% and there were long queues at Gas Stations during the 1973 Oil Crisis.

The crisis was caused by the war in the Middle East and OPEC deciding to cut oil supplies as a way of forcing the rest of the world to stop support for Israel.

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Posted by on October 23, 2020 in ebooks, free, free ebooks

 

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eBooks for FREE

eBooks for FREE

Yes, they are really and truly FREE

eBooks for free

 
 

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Free eBooks during lock-down

Free eBooks during lock-down

Now that you have nothing to do, being in lock-down, you can read one or more of my free eBooks. ENJOY.

https://play.google.com/store/books/author?id=Gerrard+Wilson

smiling horse

there once was a man with a horse

 
 

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Free eBooks – really and truly

Free eBooks for sure

https://youtu.be/RpcApV7krHA

It’s a Near Year with even MORE opportunities to download eBooks for free, a gift from me to you. See ya.
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Alice in Wonderland Christmas

Christmas: A Carol Betwixt

Christmas: A Carol Betwixt,

The Fog

Ali-bonkers

The Witches

HARRY, oh she is a Rotter

Mad Mr Viscous

Beetle About

Horrible Horace

The Three Faerie Sisters

Bertie the Beetle

The Circus of Grotesques

Cracks in the Pavement

Danger is my Middle Name

The School Fete

Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About the E.U. But Were Afraid to Ask

Hobnail Boots

I Fell Down a Waterfall

Aliens Landed in Ballykilduff

Skewed Rhymes

A Beer in a Burger Bar

And a whole lot MORE!!!

I am The Crazymad Writer of children’s stories.

Click HERE to visit my online book shop,

where you can download my eBooks for FREE

 
 

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