
Here is one of the actual scenes depicted in Part Two of "Toying Around".
In desperation of wanting something (anything) to eat before lunch time, a very young (and very hungry) 'Lupine' raids all of the lunch pails in the back of his classroom. In spite of the fact that all there was to consume were nothing but dried fruits, the ravenous wolf cub consumed them all anyway...
By the time he devoured the last morsel, his belly stuck out between his football shirt and shorts, and every step he took resulted in a rattling noise from within (as if he was a furry maraca)!
It sort of makes you wish you'd gone back to reread Part Two again, doesn't it?!
'Lupine' © WolfgoneWide
In desperation of wanting something (anything) to eat before lunch time, a very young (and very hungry) 'Lupine' raids all of the lunch pails in the back of his classroom. In spite of the fact that all there was to consume were nothing but dried fruits, the ravenous wolf cub consumed them all anyway...
By the time he devoured the last morsel, his belly stuck out between his football shirt and shorts, and every step he took resulted in a rattling noise from within (as if he was a furry maraca)!
It sort of makes you wish you'd gone back to reread Part Two again, doesn't it?!

Category All / Fat Furs
Species Wolf
Size 800 x 551px
File Size 36.8 kB
The dried fruit reference was based on an old joke I'd heard on "Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In" (an American comedy/variety series that was before your time)...
An Indian (Native American) medicine man told TV viewers about prescribing dried fruit to one of his patients, to be eaten every day, "...until one day, he accidentally fell into the lake... and he blew up!"
If you'll excuse the expression, I sort of 'expanded' on this concept, and used it for my story (and, subsequently, for these doodles).
Personally, I would've enjoyed just dealing with the wolf cub's rattling belly alone.
An Indian (Native American) medicine man told TV viewers about prescribing dried fruit to one of his patients, to be eaten every day, "...until one day, he accidentally fell into the lake... and he blew up!"
If you'll excuse the expression, I sort of 'expanded' on this concept, and used it for my story (and, subsequently, for these doodles).
Personally, I would've enjoyed just dealing with the wolf cub's rattling belly alone.
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