funny gnome battle

Captured Tales

View

The Acorn Avenger

by Bill Tiepelman

The Acorn Avenger

The Gnome, The Nut, and the Nonsense Somewhere in the leafy middle of nowhere, between the edge of β€œdon’t go in there” and β€œoh hell, why did we come in here,” lived a legend. Not a tall legend. Not even an average-sized legend. No, this one came in just under three feet if you didn’t count the hat. And you had to count the hat, because it was about the only thing that gave him presence. He was The Acorn Avenger, and if you were expecting heroics involving dragons, maidens, or great bloody quests, you’ve come to the wrong wood. This was a gnome whose most daring battle to date had been against indigestion. But oh, did he strut. Bark armor clanked around his stubby frame like an overenthusiastic child wearing too many Lego pieces, while his faceβ€”ruddy cheeks, twinkling eyes, and a beard the exact shade of spilled cream aleβ€”beamed with dangerous self-confidence. On his chest, slung by ropes that looked like they’d been borrowed from an old clothesline, bounced his closest companion: Nibbs the Acorn. And no, not just an ordinary acorn. Nibbs had a face. A wide-eyed, perpetually startled, wooden face. Worse yet, it talked sometimes. Or sang. Or squeaked. Depending on the mood. The locals called it cursed. The Avenger called it β€œbackup vocals.” On this particular morning, The Acorn Avenger was stomping through the forest with the air of someone who believed the trees were secretly applauding him. His boots squelched in the mud, his bark armor creaked like an old door hinge, and Nibbs bounced merrily with every step. β€œOnward, noble steed!” he shouted at no one, since he owned no horse and was, in fact, simply walking. β€œI don’t think I like being referred to as a steed,” Nibbs muttered. His voice was somewhere between a kazoo and a squeaky drawer hinge. β€œI’m more of a sidekick. Or a tambourine.” β€œSidekicks don’t usually hang off my sternum,” the Avenger replied, puffing his chest proudly. β€œBesides, you’re lucky. Some gnomes lug around pocket watches. Or shovels. You get to be the chosen nut.” β€œYou say that like it’s a promotion,” Nibbs grumbled, then fell silent as a squirrel scampered past. The squirrel gave them both the kind of side-eye usually reserved for drunk relatives at weddings. You see, the animals of the forest had learned to endure The Acorn Avenger. He wasn’t malicious. He wasn’t cruel. He was just… loud. He once spent three consecutive nights challenging owls to staring contests. He accused raccoons of plotting against him because they wore β€œbandit masks.” And once, he drew his bark sword against a deer, declaring, β€œUnhand the grass, villain!” The deer continued chewing and, as expected, won the duel by default. Still, the gnome was tolerated. Mostly. Until the mushrooms began to organize. But I’m getting ahead of myself. That morning, the Avenger climbed atop a mossy rock, striking what he believed to be a heroic pose. His hat drooped left in protest, but otherwise it was magnificent. β€œHear me, Whispering Wood!” he cried, his voice echoing weakly through the mist. β€œI am the Acorn Avenger, defender of twigs, scourge of beetles, the bane of damp socks, andβ€”most importantlyβ€”the only one here with a musical nut!” Nibbs squeaked like a deflating balloon to punctuate the moment. Somewhere in the underbrush, a rabbit muttered something rude in Lapine. Birds ruffled their feathers and muttered to each other like gossipy grandmothers. Even the trees seemed unimpressed. But The Acorn Avenger didn’t noticeβ€”or chose not to. Confidence, after all, is the art of ignoring reality with enthusiasm. β€œAdventure awaits, Nibbs!” he boomed, hopping off the rock and immediately landing ankle-deep in a puddle. Bark armor is not waterproof. He squelched forward anyway, determined. β€œToday, destiny calls!” β€œDestiny sounds damp,” Nibbs said dryly. β€œAnd smells like wet bark.” β€œNonsense,” the Avenger snapped. β€œDestiny smells like victory! And perhaps roasted chestnuts. But mostly victory!” They trudged deeper into the forest, unaware that something small, spongy, and deeply offended was already watching them from the shadows. Something that had had enough of his nonsense. Something… fungal. The Fungus Among Us Every great hero has a nemesis. Achilles had Hector. Sherlock had Moriarty. The Acorn Avenger? Well, he had mushrooms. Yes, mushrooms. Don’t laughβ€”it’s terribly rude. These weren’t your harmless β€œtoss them on pizza” kind of mushrooms. These were the puffed-up, resentful, perpetually damp kind, with little round heads and a grudge against anyone who stepped on them (which, in fairness, the Avenger did frequently and with dramatic flair). Our gnome had a habit of kicking at toadstools whenever he wanted to β€œmake an entrance.” He once leapt from behind a log shouting β€œPrepare to be astonished!” and stomped squarely onto a mushroom ring, scattering spores everywhere. To him, this was harmless fun. To the fungi, it was an act of war. And fungi, unlike squirrels or deer, didn’t forget. They multiplied. They whispered in damp corners. They waited. On this damp morning, as the Avenger sloshed deeper into the trees, an entire conclave of mushrooms gathered in the shadows. Puffballs, shiitakes, chanterelles, even a terrifyingly pompous porciniβ€”all arranged in a circle that looked suspiciously like a committee meeting. Their leader, a massive, sulking morel with a voice like wet corduroy, cleared his nonexistent throat. β€œThe gnome must go.” Gasps echoed around the ring. A portly button mushroom fainted. A deadly-looking Amanita tried to clap but succeeded only in wobbling. β€œHe mocks us,” the morel continued, darkly. β€œHe tramples our rings. He spreads our spores without consent. Worst of all, he makes jokes about β€˜mushroom puns.’” The mushrooms shuddered collectively. One piped up timidly: β€œBut… what if he’s the chosen one? You know, foretold by the prophecy?” β€œProphecy?” the morel snapped. β€œThat was just graffiti on the side of a log. It said β€˜Fun Guys Rule.’ It wasn’t divine, it was vandalism.” Meanwhile, blissfully unaware of the fungal plot, The Acorn Avenger continued tromping through the wood, narrating loudly to himself like a bard who’d been fired for excessive enthusiasm. β€œMark my words, Nibbs, today we shall encounter great peril, test our courage, and maybeβ€”just maybeβ€”find that legendary tavern with the half-priced mead pitchers!” β€œI’d settle for finding a towel,” Nibbs muttered, still squeaky with damp. The gnome paused. β€œDo you hear that?” β€œHear what?” β€œExactly. Silence. Too silent. The kind of silence that suggests dramatic tension.” He narrowed his eyes. His bark armor groaned like a cranky chair. β€œThis can only mean one thing… ambush.” Of course, he was correct. But not in the way he thought. He expected goblins, maybe wolves, possibly tax collectors. What he got was… mushrooms. Dozens of them. They emerged slowly from the underbrush, wobbling like damp cupcakes, forming a circle around him. Some glowed faintly. Some spat spores into the air like smoke bombs. It was less intimidating than the Avenger’s imagination had promised, but stillβ€”he had to admitβ€”eerily organized. β€œOh no,” Nibbs groaned. β€œNot them again.” β€œAha!” The Avenger puffed out his chest. β€œVillains! Foes! Fungus fiends!” He raised his barky fist. β€œYou dare stand against the Acorn Avenger?” β€œWe dare,” said the morel leader, his voice damp and gurgling, like soup simmering resentfully. β€œWe are the Mycelium Collective. And you, sir, are a menace to soil stability, spore sovereignty, and good taste in general.” β€œI’ll have you know I am beloved by all creatures of the forest!” The Avenger shouted, though the birds, squirrels, and one deeply unimpressed fox nearby rolled their eyes in unison. β€œBeloved?!” scoffed the Amanita, wobbling forward dramatically. β€œYou’ve urinated in no fewer than three fairy rings.” β€œThat was ONE TIME!” the Avenger shouted. β€œAnd technically, twice. But who keeps count?” β€œWe do,” the mushrooms intoned together. It was like a choir of damp towels. Nibbs sighed. β€œYou’ve really done it now. You don’t anger mushrooms. You don’t mock mushrooms. And above all, you don’t step on mushrooms. You should’ve known better. You’re basically at war with a salad bar.” β€œSilence, acorn!” the morel roared. β€œYou, too, are complicit. You hang upon the chest of this fool, squeaking your support.” β€œOh, don’t drag me into this,” Nibbs snapped. β€œI’ve been trying to unionize for years. He doesn’t listen.” The Avenger gasped. β€œUnionize? You… you traitor!” Before Nibbs could respond, the mushrooms began to advance. Slowly, yes, because they were mushrooms and their legsβ€”well, they didn’t technically have legs, but they sort of shuffled in a way that implied locomotion. Still, there were many of them, and they encircled the gnome with grim determination. Spores drifted into the air, glowing faintly in the morning light. It looked less like a battle and more like an aggressively weird festival. β€œThis is your end, Acorn Avenger,” the morel declared. β€œThe forest will no longer suffer your antics. Prepare to be… composted.” The Avenger tightened his fists, bark creaking. His hat twitched heroically in the breeze. β€œVery well. If it is war you want, it is war you shall have.” He grinned madly. β€œI’ll make mulch of the lot of you!” β€œThat’s a terrible pun,” Nibbs whispered. β€œPlease don’t say that again.” And with that, the battle of gnome versus fungus officially beganβ€”though whether it would end in glory, disaster, or the world’s weirdest soup recipe remained to be seen. The Spores of War The air grew thick with spores, glowing like fireflies on a drunken bender. The mushrooms shuffled closer, their damp caps glistening with menace. To the casual observer, it might have looked like a salad slowly closing in on a man who really should’ve stayed home. But to the Acorn Avenger, this was destiny. Finally, a battle worthy of his legendβ€”or at least a battle that would look impressive in his memoirs if he exaggerated the details (which, of course, he would). β€œNibbs!” he barked, striking a pose so heroic that his bark armor immediately squealed in protest. β€œToday we make history. Today we show these fungal fiends what it means to face the power of gnome-kind!” β€œPower of gnome-kind?” Nibbs muttered. β€œThe last time you flexed that power, you lost an arm-wrestling contest to a dandelion stem.” β€œThat stem had been working out,” the Avenger snapped back. He unslung his bark swordβ€”really just a sharpened plank he’d stolen from a picnic tableβ€”and brandished it with wild confidence. β€œFace me, spongy scoundrels!” The Mycelium Collective advanced, puffing spores like disgruntled chimneys. The morel leader stepped forward dramatically. β€œYou will fall, gnome. You will rot beneath our caps. The forest shall sprout from your foolish remains.” β€œOver my hat!” the Avenger bellowed. He leapt forward, which was impressive in spirit if not in distance (gnomes don’t leap very far). His sword came down with a thwack, cleaving a puffball in two. Spores exploded everywhere like someone had shaken a bag of flour in a sauna. He coughed, sneezed, and shouted, β€œFirst blood!” β€œThat’s not blood,” Nibbs squeaked, muffled by spores. β€œThat’s fungus dust. You’re basically sneezing on your enemies.” β€œSneezing is my weapon!” the Avenger declared proudly, before unleashing an almighty sneeze that blew three button mushrooms onto their backs. The mushrooms retaliated. One Amanita hurled spores like a smoke bomb, filling the clearing with a choking haze. Another launched itself bodily at the gnome, smacking into his armor with a wet splut. The Avenger staggered but remained upright, laughing maniacally. β€œIs that all you’ve got?!” β€œThis is getting ridiculous,” muttered a fox, watching from the sidelines. β€œI came here for a quiet breakfast and now I’m in the middle of a fungal circus.” The Avenger swung his sword in wild arcs, chopping down mushrooms left and right. But for every one that fell, three more shuffled forward. The forest floor pulsed with life, the hidden network of mycelium beneath the soil whispering, summoning reinforcements. Tiny mushrooms sprouted instantly at his feet, tripping him. He fell backward with a grunt, his hat sliding sideways. β€œVictory… is slipping…!” he groaned dramatically, flailing like an upturned turtle. Nibbs swung against his chest with each movement, squeaking in protest. β€œStop rolling, you idiot, you’re crushing my face!” Just as the mushrooms prepared to bury him beneath a tide of damp caps, the gnome’s eyes lit up. β€œOf course!” he cried. β€œTheir weakness!” He yanked Nibbs free from his chest straps and held the acorn aloft like a divine relic. β€œNibbs, unleash your secret weapon!” β€œWhat secret weapon?!” Nibbs squealed. β€œThe one I’ve been saving for this very moment! You know, the… uh… thing!” β€œI don’t have a thing!” β€œYes, you do! Do the… squeaky scream!” Nibbs blinked his wooden eyes, then sighed. β€œFine.” He opened his tiny acorn mouth and let out a noise so shrill, so piercing, it made bats drop from the treetops and worms evacuate the soil in protest. The mushrooms froze. The spores quivered in midair. The forest itself seemed to pause, as though embarrassed to witness such a sound. The gnome seized the moment. He scrambled to his feet, sword raised, and shouted, β€œBehold! The power of the Acorn Avengerβ€”and his terrible, terrible nut!” With one final, heroic sneeze (it was mostly phlegm, honestly), he charged through the stunned mushrooms, scattering them like bowling pins. Caps flew, spores popped, and the morel leader toppled into a puddle with an indignant splush. When the spores finally cleared, the battlefield was a mess of trampled fungi and damp gnome footprints. The Avenger stood panting, his hat askew, his armor smeared with questionable goo. He raised his sword triumphantly. β€œVictory!” β€œYou’re covered in fungus,” Nibbs observed flatly. β€œYou smell like a compost bin. And I think you have mold in your beard.” β€œAll part of the heroic aesthetic,” the gnome replied, striking a pose despite his dripping state. β€œFrom this day forth, let it be known: The Acorn Avenger fears no fungus! I am the champion of the Whispering Wood! Protector of squirrels! Defender of damp places!” The fox watching nearby rolled its eyes. β€œCongratulations,” it muttered. β€œYou’ve won a war against side salad.” Then it trotted off, unimpressed. And so the forest quieted again, the Mycelium Collective scattered but not entirely defeated. Somewhere beneath the soil, spores whispered their vows of revenge. But for now, the Acorn Avenger strutted home, squeaky nut in tow, already planning how he’d embellish this tale at the tavern. And if anyone doubted him? Well, he’d simply shout louder until they gave up. That, after all, was the true power of the Acorn Avenger: unstoppable confidence, questionable hygiene, and an acorn with lungs strong enough to wake the dead. Β  Β  Bring The Acorn Avenger Home If you enjoyed the absurd saga of bark armor, squeaky nuts, and mushroom mayhem, you don’t have to leave it in the forest. The Acorn Avenger can march straight into your life with a range of whimsical treasures. Dress up your walls with a Framed Print or a bold Metal Print, perfect for adding a splash of fantasy and humor to your dΓ©cor. Prefer something more personal? Jot down your own epic gnome-versus-fungus chronicles in a handy Spiral Notebook, or carry a piece of his mischief everywhere with a quirky Sticker. Each item features the playful, richly detailed imagery of The Acorn Avengerβ€”perfect for fans of fantasy art, woodland whimsy, or anyone who just really, really hates mushrooms.

Read more

Explore Our Blogs, News and FAQ