The Bull Who Made Rainbows
In a dusty farm at the edge of the world, there lived a tiny dog named Pip. Pip was no bigger than a pumpkin, with floppy ears that bounced when he ran. His best friend was Barnaby, an enormous bull with a coat the color of storm clouds and horns that curved like crescent moons.
Barnaby was the gentlest bull who ever lived. He let Pip nap on his back. He shared his sweet hay. But most wonderfully, Barnaby had a secret magic.
Every morning at dawn, Barnaby would walk to the old stone well at the far end of the pasture. Pip followed, his paws tap-tapping on the hard ground. Barnaby would lower his massive head and touch his nose to the water inside.
Then something amazing happened. The water would begin to glow — first blue, then green, then gold — and suddenly, a rainbow would shoot up from the well, arching across the sky and landing somewhere far away.
One day, the well ran dry. No matter how Barnaby tried, only dust came up when he lowered his head. The sky stayed gray and cloudy. For three days, no rainbows appeared.
Pip knew what he had to do. That night, when the moon was full, the little dog dug a hole all the way to the stream beyond the hills. His paws grew sore. His nose got dusty. But Pip kept digging, because he knew Barnaby's magic made the whole world brighter.
Water began to trickle through the tunnel. It flowed into the old well, sparkling in the moonlight.
When morning came, Barnaby touched his nose to the water again. This time, it sparkled brighter than ever. The rainbow that shot up was so enormous it wrapped around the sun, making the whole sky dance with colors.
Pip and Barnaby learned something that day: even the biggest magic needs the smallest help. And that's why, if you look carefully on a rainy day, you might still see an old bull and a little dog, walking together somewhere between the rain and the rainbow.