Little Red Riding Hood
Once there was a little girl who always wore a red hooded cloak. Everyone called her Little Red Riding Hood.
One day, her mother said, "Grandmother is sick. Take her this basket of bread and soup, but stay on the path through the woods."
Little Red Riding Hood set off. The woods were dark and deep, but the path was clear. She walked and walked, singing to herself.
Then she met a wolf.
"Where are you going, little girl?" asked the wolf, smiling his most charming smile.
"To Grandmother's house, on the other side of the woods," said Little Red Riding Hood.
The wolf ran ahead by a shortcut. He got to Grandmother's house first, locked Grandmother in the closet, put on her nightgown and glasses, and climbed into bed.
When Little Red Riding Hood arrived, something seemed different.
"Grandmother, what big eyes you have!"
"All the better to see you with, my dear."
"Grandmother, what big ears you have!"
"All the better to hear you with, my dear."
"Grandmother, what big teeth you have!"
"All the better to —"
But before the wolf could finish, a woodcutter who had heard the commotion burst through the door. The wolf leaped out the window and ran away, never to return.
Grandmother came out of the closet, a little rumpled but perfectly fine. Little Red Riding Hood hugged her tight.
And from that day on, she always stayed on the path — and never talked to wolves.