A teaser from  Chapter 3 of the sequel to Smokey. The scene is the group of animals on a quest  to save the homeland of Smokey and his family from an evil entity. Smokey and  Dar the Coyote are leading the quest from the spirit realm. They have recruited  many new friends to help them, including Skunk, Grounder the Groundhog, Buck  the giant deer, Mr. Bobcat and several others. In this scene, they are taking a  break from their journey by a river when Skunk and Grounder  are ambushed by a couple of rogue  coyotes that are not members of their group…  
                                "Skunk  and Grounder waddled together to some berry bushes and began plucking the  berries and gobbling them down. After getting their fill, they rolled in the  dirt and soaked up the warmth of the sun. Within minutes, they were sleeping  soundly.  
                                                                  Skunk was the  first to awaken at the low growling sound he heard. He rolled over onto his  feet, looking around for the noise, blinking his eyes trying to get fully  awake. Then he spotted the coyote and smiled. “Hello,” Skunk  said to the animal.  
                                  The coyote  moved closer to Skunk and lowered its head, its lips rolled up over its teeth  as it growled louder. Skunk looked questioningly at the coyote. Why is  he mad? The coyote snapped at Skunk as the small animal backed up,  tripping over the sleeping groundhog. Now awake, Grounder rolled over onto his  stubby legs, stood on his hind legs and looked at the coyote. Another coyote,  the one that had traveled with them, came around the corner of a big boulder  and joined its friend, snarling and snapping its teeth at them. Now the skunk  and groundhog were both trying to back away from the angry beasts. 
                                                                  Smokey, Dar  and the others heard the noise and quickly ran to where the coyotes had the  smaller animals cornered. Dar walked in between the coyotes and Skunk and  Grounder.  A look of relief came across the smaller animal’s faces as  their friends arrived, but the coyotes could not see Dar or Smokey. The biggest  coyote moved closer to Skunk, and Grounder tried to run, but his path was  immediately blocked by the second coyote.  
                                                                  A blanket of  fog began to crawl up the coyote's legs, chilling them to the bone. It spread  out around them and began to rise up as it took the shape of a large animal.  Dar emerged from the fog. “Leave them alone!” His voice boomed.  
                                                                  The biggest  coyote jumped back away from Dar, a look of shock and surprise on its face.  “Old Dar, how can it be, you are dead!”  
                                “Yes, but I  can still see you and your evil ways.” Then he looked at the other coyote,  recognizing the animal. “I see you have made new friends who are just as evil  as you!” 
                                                                  The other  coyote backed away, a look of terror in its eyes.  
                                                                  Dar advanced  on the biggest coyote. “I told you many moons ago, you are not welcome anywhere  I am, and I am everywhere now!”  
                                                                  Smokey stepped  from the fog and stood next to Dar. The coyotes both growled at him, but backed  farther away, trying hard to hide their fear.  
                                “I see you  still have your Cat friend,” the big coyote said with a snarl. “He looks as  dead as you, Dar.”  
                                "Dar has many  friends now,” Smokey growled.  
                                                                  The animal  glared at Smokey, then back at Dar. “I should have killed you years ago; too  bad somebody beat me to it. Maybe I’ll still have the chance with your son!”  
                                                                  The big animal  lunged for Dar and ran through him, as if Dar were made of smoke. It rammed its  head into the boulder behind them. It turned, shook its head and lunged at him  again, tripped and fell into the sand.  
                                                                  Frustrated  now, the coyote stood and stared at Dar. It walked back and forth, studying  him. “Will you not fight me?” Then a look of sudden awareness came across its  face. “Will you not fight me? Or maybe you cannot fight me?”  
                                                                  The big coyote  walked over to Skunk, raised its paw, looked over at Dar and swatted the  smaller animal. Skunk rolled across the ground, then struggled to stand, stunned  from the blow.  
                                                                  Dar stepped  closer to the coyote. “I am warning you, leave these animals alone and leave  this place!”  
                                “Or what? You  will kill me? What will you do, old Dar?”  
                                                                  The bobcat  trotted down the sandy beach, walked over and stood next to Dar and Smokey.  “Why don’t you pick on someone your own size,” he said as he eyed the two  coyotes.  
                                “You are  hardly our size. Maybe you should think before you speak,” the second coyote  snarled. “Besides, this is none of your business.”  
                                “But it is my  business,” replied the bobcat. “These are my friends. You want to fight? I’ll  give you a fight!”  
                                                                  The big coyote  took a step towards the cat, and the cat tore into him. Blood and fur flew as  the two of them rolled across the ground tearing at each other.  
                                                                  The second  coyote tried to get closer to the animals locked in battle, snapping at the  bobcat as they rolled past, trying to help his friend. Buck ran towards the  coyote, head down, and hit the animal like a bulldozer. He lifted the coyote  into the air, entangled in his antlers and hurled him out into the river.  Flailing wildly in the water, the animal tried to regain its footing. Buck  snorted and stomped out into the water and scooped the animal into his antlers  again and hurled it back onto the beach. He turned and stomped back onto the  beach and was about to scoop up the coyote again when it rolled away from him,  ran down the beach and up onto the rocks to escape, leaving its friend behind.  
                                                                  The bobcat and  big coyote separated. Circling each other, eyes locked, each waiting for the  other to make a move.  
                                                                  One of the  coyotes with the group started to get into the fight when Dar stopped him. “No,  let the Cat do this.”  
                                                                  Silence filled  the air. There was no breeze, no sound. Even the river was quiet as nature  itself watched the fight unfold. Buck raised his foot and stomped it on the  ground and snorted angrily. That was all it took. Like a trigger being pulled,  the bobcat and coyote lunged at each other and were again locked in mortal  combat. Snapping at each other as they rolled on the ground, the bobcat saw the  throat of his enemy flash in front of him for a brief second. The big cat sunk his  teeth into the coyote’s neck and violently shook its head from side to side as  the coyote howled in pain.  
                                                                  Trying to free  itself from the cat's grip, the coyote turned and pulled away, pushing against  the cat with its paws. When the bobcat realized the coyote was no longer  fighting, it let go of the animal and watched as it staggered a few feet away  and sat on the ground.  
                                                                  The coyote had  received the worst of the battle. The meat on its muzzle was shredded to the  bone, its fur dripping blood from the multiple claw and bite wounds the bobcat  had inflicted. Its neck was torn open from a deep but non-fatal wound. It sat  in the sand, breathing heavily, trying to nurse its wounds. Skunk walked over  to it, lifted his tail and started to spray the animal. Then he stopped and  looked up at the coyote, torn and bleeding, the fight gone. The only thing left  was fear, pain and defeat.  
                                                                  Deciding the  animal had suffered enough, Skunk lowered his tail and started to walk away,  then stopped and turned back to the coyote. He walked over, reached up and put  his tiny paw on the coyote's blood soaked face. “You should really try to be a  nicer animal.”  
                                                                  The coyote  stared after Skunk  as he waddled away, and then looked around for its friend, shock and dismay  on its face as it realized it had been abandoned. The animal turned to Dar,  Smokey, the bobcat and all the other animals on the beach watching it, stood  and slowly limped up onto the boulders and rocks and back up to the trail.  Stopping momentarily, it looked back at Dar, lowered its head and trotted away. 
                                                                  Smokey and Dar  watched it leave. “Maybe the next time we see him, it will be in the spirit  realm.”  
                                “He will never  be in this realm, Smokey. Not unless he changes. His soul is evil. When he  dies, he will go to the dark realm.”  
                                                                  Smokey walked  over to Buck and the bobcat. “Thank you for helping us. I’m sorry you got into  a fight with them, but you saved Skunk and Grounder! Are you guys okay?” 
                                                                  The bobcat  laughed, “I told you I would fight for you, and I always keep my word. Besides,  nothing like a good fight to get the blood flowing.” He looked down at his  wounds. Blood poured from numerous puncture holes where the coyote had bitten  him. The cat rolled in the sand, packing the small, hard granules into the  wounds to stem the bleeding. He sprang to his feet. “I’ll be fine!” He laughed.  
                                                                  Buck rubbed  his antlers in the sand. “Sand fleas,” he said.  
                                                                  Smokey gave  him a questioning look. “What?”  
                                                                  Buck smiled.  “Sand fleas. They are a bigger problem than those Coyotes were!” Buck laughed  and trotted away." 
                                Stay tuned for the action packed sequel to, 'Smokey, One Life.'                                    Smokey
                                   
                                   
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