Something happens, and then because of that, something else happens. That’s a story. When we tell it, it becomes a narrative. Although we could spend many hours talking about terminology, and how to break down all the parts of narrative, we can say for now that basic narrative comprises a story, often arranged into a plot. Very basic narrative may not have imagery, theme, characterisation and all the other elements we’ll be looking at in this book, and the story and the plot might be the same thing. So what is the most basic possible narrative? ‘The cat sat on the mat’ is not a narrative, because it tells no story: nothing happens and no change occurs. It is a statement. ‘The cat sat on the mat and then went outside to look at birds’ is two statements, and although something happens, it doesn’t happen because of something that has happened before. In other words, it doesn’t work according to cause and effect. ‘The cat was shooed off the mat and so decided to go outside and look at birds’ is a narrative because it tells a story based on cause and effect. The cat is outside now partly because she was on the mat before. This narrative is a simple chronological story that has not been plotted. ‘The cat was outside watching birds. She had been comfortable on her mat before Rachel came and shooed her away’ is now a plotted narrative, because it is not simply chronological. In the narration, the past happens after the present, not before.