WOOOOOT! Holy muffins, it's my first ever 'Lion King' fanfic! EEEE! *shakes my tail and does a happy dance* I'm so flipping excited to get this started!

I hope you all enjoy the read! :D:D:D


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Chapter 1: You Are Worthy


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"Ryan?" Kathrynne Evans called as she opened up the camper door and stepped out into the intense African heat. "Ryan, where are you?"

She walked down the steps and searched further around her camp sight, placing her hands on her hips as her hazel eyes caught sight of the campfire, which had become nothing more than a pile of smoking ash, before they scanned the wide open Savannah around them. A frustrated expression appearing on her face when her call once again went unanswered.

"Ryan Michael Morris, you better answer me!" she yelled in a louder, angrier tone.

"Geeze, I'm right here!" A tired voice said above her, making her look up with a startled gasp as a seventeen-year-old boy with raven hair and hazel eyes identical to her own sat up from laying in the branches of a tree that was growing right beside the camper

"You don't need to yell." he told her right before a big yawn escaped from him.

"Young man, what have I told you about falling asleep out here?!" Kathrynne demanded, watching in disapproval as her son rolled out over the thickest branch and dangled from it with one arm like a monkey. "Not only could you give yourself a stroke in this kind of heat, there are dangerous animals roaming around everywhere!"

"What if one of them decided to make a meal out of you?!"

"Then he better prepare for the worst indigestion of his life!" Ryan casually remarked as he dropped down to the ground and offered her a playful grin. But it was immediately lost when his mother's less than amused expression didn't change in the slightest.

"Mom, you need to relax, as long as I'm in some sort of shade I'm fine." the young man told her with an exasperated sigh. "And besides, weren't you the one who said that the safest place for me to sleep was up in a tree if I was outside?"

"That was only if you didn't have the option to sleep inside a safe, air-conditioned camper!" Kathrynne said as she pointed towards their little home on wheels before she just dropped it with a tired exhale. "Now look, you've let the fire burn out and I want to make sure that you have it going before I head out to meet up with everyone else. It keeps animals away, so you have to keep adding wood and-"

"-And never let the fire die." Ryan recited with an irritated roll of his eyes as he walked past her to kneel in front of the fire pit. "Mom, alright! I had it down after the last thirty times you've told me. You know it's not the first time you've left me here by myself, so stop nagging and go already!"

"I'm not nagging, Ryan, I'm your mother and I worry about you when I leave you alone!" Kathrynne said in exasperation. "Can you really blame me?"

At that, Ryan paused and fell very quiet, body stiffening as his mothers' relatively well-meaning question stirred up angry bitter feelings.

"Actually, I can, since it's your own fault." the young man shot back, his tone sour as he made himself continue to put some more wood over the coals. "You could have worked on saving your "precious" animals just fine without dragging me all the way out here in this boring, sweltering wasteland with you!"

"I mean, that's how it used to go, right?" he added testily.

"Lord Ryan, this again?!"Kathrynne started in exasperation, pinching the bridge of her nose. "Can't we get through one day without you acting like...like-"

"Like dad did?" Ryan asked as he glowered over his shoulder at her while she immediately fell quiet.

"...That's not what I was going to say." his mother said in a quiet voice after a few seconds of silence between them, her lips setting into a thin frown. "Don't put words in my mouth."

Ryan only gave a snort as he looked away from her, pulling out a black zippo lighter that had a metal, roaring lions head on the front from the back pocket of his pants.

"You probably weren't gonna say it, but that doesn't mean you don't think it every time I say something you don't like to hear about this!" He gestured angrily around them as he gave a scowl at the African landscape. "This is the reason it didn't work out you know. For any of us!"

"Protecting the wildlife here is important to me, Ryan!" Kathrynne began, rather defensively. "And it's not fair to blame our separation solely on me, either! Your father made his choice too!"

"Yeah? Well you made yours long before the fights started!" Ryan retorted, viciously grabbing a handful of dry grass and stuffing it under the logs. "He may not have been the most perfect parent, but at least he made the effort to put his family first instead of work or a bunch of dumb animals!"

Kathrynne only stood there, watching her sons add a few more handfuls of grass under the firewood as her sons biting words left her feeling numb and at a loss for words. But even though she felt incredibly hurt, she still had a job to do, so she took in a slow, deep breath and pulled her car keys out from her belt loop.

"Okay. Well...I guess I'll be heading out then." She announced, trying to keep her tone even while tying back her sandy blonde hair in a ponytail and briskly walking over to her dusty green Jeep. "Once it gets dark, stay in the camper and don't come out for anything."

As she opened the car door and grabbed her sun hat from the seat, she paused when she received no answer and looked back to her only child. "I...I'll give you a call once I make it over to base camp."

He made no move to even turn and look at her as he lit his zippo and busied himself with starting the new fire, and as she opened her mouth to at the very least say 'I love you'...she found that she just couldn't get her voice to work. So, as a tear finally managed to escape and roll down her cheek, she just made herself put her hat on and quickly climbed inside the jeep to drive away before she broke down completely.

At that point, Ryan finally got a decent flame started and put his lighter back in his pocket before he stood to her feet, dusting off his knee and watched as his mothers' car left a high trial of dust in its wake before it finally disappeared in the distance. Once he was alone, the young man had lost his anger to immediate regret as he ran a hand through his dark hair while letting out a heavy sigh.

"Man," he started, mentally kicking himself for being such an idiot as he plopped himself down in a red camping chair that was sitting in the shade of the tree. "I went too far...again."

He watched as the flames of the fire grew bigger and mentally scolded himself for once again letting his rotten temper go and run his mouth. Even though he was angry at his mother for making him go with her to the middle of nowhere with absolutely nothing to do, he didn't intend to be so mean to her like this...

He would have to apologize to her when she called, which he hated the very thought. Not because he had to be a man about it and own up to his behavior, but because he didn't have a clue of what he should say.

Though before he could start coming up with how to even start with it, a big yawn escaped his lips, and his stretched his arms over his head.

Being in this kind of heat always made him feel so drowsy, but he didn't mind it too much, and he relaxed in his chair and got more comfortable as he closed his eyes and decided to give himself a few extra winks. He would start putting together his apology before his mother called after he woke up.

A small, ten minuet nap wouldn't hurt anything...


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More then Ten Minuets Later...


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"REEEAGH!"

Ryan gasped, jerking awake when the sound of a terrible screech assaulted his ear drums and made him look around in shock to see that night had just about fallen upon the Savannah. The only light that could be seen was from the rapidly descending sun along with the soft glow of the moon that was beginning to rise high into the sky. And as a weak crackle brought his attention to the fire pit, his eyes widened when all he could see was dimly burning embers that were just about ready to snuff out at any second.

With a loud curse, Ryan jumped out of the chair and quickly grabbed more logs and handfuls of dry grass and threw them in the fire pit before he whipped out his zippo and got to work on bringing the fire back.

So much for ten minutes, he couldn't believe that he had actually slept long enough for it to almost burn out! But he didn't dwell on it for too long when the fire sprung back in full bloom and he sat back in relief, shaking his head as a slight chuckle escaped his lips.

He'll admit, falling asleep out in the open wasn't the smartest thing he had ever done...but at least he had a fire again.

"RRREAAAAAAH!"

The young man looked out across the darkening land when another scream rang out in the air. It didn't sound like it belonged to a person it was too animal-like, almost like it belonged to some sort of monkey if his guess was right.

But monkey or not, the racket it was making was sure to attract the attention of a hungry predator at some point, so it would probably be in his best interest to lock himself inside for the night. So after adding a few more logs to the fire, he folded up his camping chair and started towards the camper.

Though the second he opened the creaking door and put a foot on that first step, he hesitated for a moment and looked back out towards the shadowy plains. Should he really just leave the animal out there? From the noises it made, it seemed like it was hurt, maybe even stuck somewhere and unable to get free by itself.

And the poor thing sounded so scared...

"Nope! No way, mom said stay in the camper!" He firmly stated out loud as he turned back to look inside the space they shared with each other. "Besides, other animals gotta eat too!"

But even as he said it, he still didn't move...was he truly okay with that? If the animal really was caught in something, then survival of the fittest or not, would he really be okay if he made the conscious decision to leave it be and deny it a fighting chance when it sounded like it was pretty close to camp?

"RAROOOOOH!"

That finally did it.

"What mom doesn't know won't hurt her." Ryan finally said as he walked inside to put the chair away and grab a big black flashlight that was hanging on a hook by the door.

"Here I go, walking outside when it's getting dark and risking my neck for some dumb animal…" He muttered, walking out of the camper and closing the door behind him. Taking in a deep breath to steel his nerves and clutching the flashlight in a tight grip before he forced himself to march on. "I'm such a moron."

Though after about five minutes into his little rescue mission, listening to the screeches, he was starting to regret his choice as the sun finally disappeared completely. Leaving him trudging through uneven terrain with the only light he had coming from the flashlight.

Ryan's heart was starting to beat fast and his hazel eyes were wide as they darted left and right, trying to keep a look out through the darkness for anything with long teeth and sharp claws that figured it would get an easy dinner tonight.

He jumped at every sound, and as much as he needed the animal to keep making noise so he could find it, he wished that it wasn't so loud!

Why did he think this was a good idea again? He couldn't believe he was doing something so stupid! This was what his mother did, and he wasn't his mother!

Because unlike her, he saw absolutely no sense in putting his life on the line for animals. Not because he didn't like them or anything, but because he just didn't think they were worth the danger that went into dealing with them.

He should have just stayed in the camper, or at least he should have thought to grab his favorite aluminum baseball bat, one of the few personal items he brought out here with him from his house in America.

At least then he would have had something bigger to defend himself with other then a flashlight, his lighter or the knife he carried with him...

"RRRAGH!"

The young man let out a startled yelp, nearly dropping the flashlight as the latest shriek rang out very close to his left along with rapid scuffling and scratching sounds. peering through the dark, Ryan could just barely make out a small, shadowy figure running back and forth across the ground until he quickly shined the light on it...

Letting out a sigh of relief to see that it was only a monkey.

It was of a somewhat medium size with a dark gray face and white chest, legs and stomach. It also had bright red fur that went along from the dome of its head and all the away across to its long tail, which almost made it look like it was wearing a red hood and cape. If he remembered correctly from the books his mother had back at the camper, this was a patas monkey.

The little simian gave a fearful chitter at the strange light that had suddenly washed over it, and when it finally took notice of Ryan, it bolted. But it didn't get very far when it suddenly jerked from something that was around it's arm and fell heavily on its side with a pain filled screech.

Ryan blinked in surprise, then he held the light at a different angle and noticed something glinting, finally realizing that the poor thing was caught in a thin wire snare. The kind that poachers would set to catch unsuspecting prey.

Slowly, the young man started towards it and he made sure to keep his steps smooth and easy. But despite his attempt to appear non-threatening, the monkey growled, warning Ryan to keep his distance while it bared its little teeth and pulled away as far as the snare would allow.

"Easy, it's alright..." Ryan said in a soft tone as he got down on one knee and put the flashlight on the ground beside him, another growl rumbling out from the little primate before it started gnashing its jaws at him. "Hey, it's okay little guy, I'm here to help."

The monkey stared at him for a long while until it finally stopped showing its teeth, but it still regarded him with a very wary gaze.

Ryan waited a bit longer for it to calm down before he slowly began to reach out a hand. Maybe if it saw that he was gentle, it would relax a little more and begin to trust him. But when the little creature saw his hand reaching for it, it let out a terrified coo that made the young man pause for a moment.

"Easy now, I'm not gonna hurt you." Ryan assured, staring into its eyes which were such a vibrant amber that they almost looked red. "Just...just trust me, at least long enough to get you out of this."

The monkey made no other sound, staring at him as though it were in deep thought. And rather unexpectedly, it took a slow, hesitant step towards him.

So, taking it as a sign that it just might let him touch it without biting or clawing at him, he lightly brushed his fingers over its small head. The fur was soft and plush under his touch, and when it made no aggressive move, he began to stroke it in a smooth and comforting manner until the little monkey actually began to lean into it, letting out a noise that almost resembled a purr.

"See? I'm nice, aren't I?" Ryan asked, smiling a bit.

And once again to his surprise, it seemed to respond to his question by moving closer, keeping it's big amber gaze upon Ryans' face as it slowly climbed right up into lap and clutching folds of his tan, TD–Elite hoodie with camouflage design on the shoulders and sides under the arms in its paws.

It took Ryan a second to process this amazing show of trust, and taking advantage of it, Ryan picked up his light and took the arm that was caught before he carefully started to examine it and cringed a little at the sight. Before he found it, it had struggled so much to get free that the wire was buried deep into the flesh, making painful look lacerations that crossed over each other. The sooner he got it back to the camper the faster he could clean it up and keep it from getting worse.

He just needed to get it out of this snare first.

"Stupid poachers, leaving these things..." He commented distastefully as he put the flashlight between his shoulder and neck and took out his automatic buck knife with a rose wood handle from his back pocket, pushing the button on the handle and releasing the blade before he began to work at the wire. "Well, at least it was only a snare and not something worse."

When he finally cut through, he cradled the monkey in his arm and stood to his feet, shining the light around the area. After he was sure that nothing else was out there with them, he quickly started back to his home on wheels.


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Back at the Camper...


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"Hey, stop that! My fingers are still there!" Ryan said with a short laugh, nudging the face of his furry patient away for the fifth time as it tried to nibble at the bandages he was using to dress its arm. "This would go a lot faster if you'd just sit still and let me do it, you know!"

Once Ryan made it back to the campsite, he wasted no time working on the monkeys' injury.

It let him take out what was left of the snare with hardly any problem other than letting out an occasion yell because it hurt, and even though it wasn't a big fan of the antiseptic, it still let him apply it without biting or scratching him. But by the time he pulled out the bandages, the little monkey was pretty much done with its treatment and started squirming every time he wrapped the thin cloth around its forearm.

"And there we go." Ryan stated as he finally fastened the bandages before stepping away with his hands in the air. "I'll leave you alone now."

The monkey eyed the white wrappings on its arm, sniffing at it curiously before it tentatively licked at it a couple of times before it just decided to leave them alone and looked up at Ryan with its large eyes while the young man smiled down at it, feeling pretty proud of himself that he seemed to have successfully patched it up.

"You can stay here with me until tomorrow." Ryan said as he tousled the fur on its head. "That way I can keep an eye on that arm."

Plus, it would give him some company until his mother came back.

A ringing from his cell phone that he placed over on the arm of the couch made him turn around and leave the monkey on the kitchen. But as he picked it up and turned it over to see who was calling, he failed to notice that the little creatures' large eyes began to glow with a golden light...

Ryan let out a sigh when he saw that the call was from his mother as the memory of their fight before she left came back to him. The whole time he was helping the monkey, he had completely forgotten to work on an apology.

Well, guess he would just have to wing it and hope he wouldn't mess up.

BOOM!

A loud, deafening explosion rang through the air and he cried out as a strong gust knocked him off his feet and sent him sailing across the room until he landed face first in the carpeted floor. It left him feeling dazed, and as he pushed himself up to his hands and knees and rubbed the back of his sore neck, his eyes went as big and as round as saucers at what he saw...

It was a tornado, a freaking tornado going on right in the middle of the room!

Papers, books, even kitchen utensils were swirling around the camper with him trapped right in the middle of it all, only able to sit there and shield his head as he was almost pelted with whatever flew over him while he tried to figure out what was going on!

Suddenly, a small figure appearing at his side startled him into jerking away, slamming his back against the side of the chair.

It was the monkey, standing perfectly still as though it didn't even notice the vortex going on around them and staring at him with those glowing eyes while Ryan stared back in shock and fear. He hardly took his eyes off it unless he needed to avoid getting hit in the head by a passing book or household item that was in the camper, his heart drumming at a faster pace in his chest when the monkeys' body suddenly began to glow with that same golden light that was coming from its eyes.

It started out dim at first, but when the light began to grow bigger and brighter until it almost filled half of the camper, Ryan couldn't help but shield his eyes from the intensity.

"Ryan Morris." He suddenly heard a deep and powerful voice say. "You are worthy."

Worthy? What the heck did that mean?!

"Worthy of what?" Ryan cried, trying to squint through the light to find out who it would that spoke to him. "Who are you?!"

"I am Mufasa, one of the many great kings of the past." The voice said, the wind suddenly picking up in speed. "I have felt kindness at your hand, and I have seen courage within your heart, as such, I have chosen you to embark on this urgent task."

"A..a task?!" Ryan repeated, almost having to yell over the howling of the wind as it grew louder, letting out a gasp and ducked down just as a large pot that came from the kitchen almost hit him in the head "Just what do you want?!"

"You must go to my son." Came his answer. "Earn his trust as you have mine, and with him, save our family from certain doom."

"For it is only you who can lift the grave shadow that blankets their fate."

Ryan gave a cry as the tempest suddenly began to escalate, making him brace himself and dig his fingers into the carpet for fear that he would be swept up and hurled around the camper as well. But as he tried to keep grounded, he began to notice that the bluster of the wind wasn't the only thing he could hear, he could hear voices too...animal voices.

The boy couldn't make out all of them as they seem to meld together, but he could just make out the chattering of monkeys and the whiny of zebras, and there was a particularly loud trumpeting of elephants, but the rest was just too jumbled together for him to him to identify what they were. They never seemed to end, and even though he tried to cover his ears, he could still hear them as they all seemed to painfully wash over him all at once until it felt like his head was about to split in two!

He couldn't help but let out pain filled yell before he began to feel dizzy, and the second his vision started to darken, he collapsed upon the floor from exhaustion.

He was suddenly aware that two large paws were set right before him, and as he weakly lifted his head up, he saw that a huge lion with golden fur and a great red mane was standing over him, tall and proud as his intensely glaring gaze seemed to pierce right through to his very soul.

"Help my family."

Ryan couldn't tell if it was his fading eyesight playing tricks on him...but the big cat seemed to be glowing, just like the monkey had been, as if the sun itself was shining from his body. But trick or not, Ryan couldn't do anything but heavily let his head fall on the carpeted floor as the sea of animal calls continued to crash around in his ears.

And the last thing he heard was the mighty roar of a lion before he finally fell into complete, and quiet darkness...


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Now what's the lesson we've learned here, kiddies? Unless you want a freak tornado that makes animal sounds happening inside your camper, you do not, I repeat, do not pick up stray monkeys X)

Let me know what you think guys, and if you happened to see any spelling or grammar errors, don't be afraid to tell me about them :3