I do not know what manner of thing she is. None
of us do. She killed her mother in the birthing,
but that's never enough to account for it.They call me wise, but I am
far from wise, for all that I foresaw fragments
of it, frozen moments caught in pools of water or
in the cold glass of my mirror. If I were wise I
would not have tried to change what I saw. If I
were wise I would have killed myself before ever
I encountered her, before ever I caught him.
Wise, and a witch,
or so they said, and I'd seen his face in my
dreams and in reflections for all my life:
sixteen years of dreaming of him before he reined
his horse by the bridge that morning, and asked
my name. He helped me onto his high horse and we
rode together to my little cottage, my face
buried in the gold of his hair. He asked for the
best of what I had; a king's right, it was.
His beard was
red-bronze in the morning light, and I knew him,
not as a king, for I knew nothing of kings then,
but as my love. He took all he wanted from me,
the right of kings, but he returned to me on the
following day, and on the night after that: his
beard so red, his hair so gold, his eyes the blue
of a summer sky, his skin tanned the gentle brown
of ripe wheat.
His daughter was
only a child: no more than five years of age when
I came to the palace. A portrait of her dead
mother hung in the princess's tower room; a tall
woman, hair the colour of dark wood, eyes
nut-brown. She was of a different blood to her
pale daughter.
The girl would not
eat with us.
I do not know
where in the palace she ate.
I had my own
chambers. My husband the king, he had his own
rooms also. When he wanted me he would send for
me, and I would go to him, and pleasure him, and
take my pleasure with him.
One night, several
months after I was brought to the palace, she
came to my rooms. She was six. I was embroidering
by lamplight, squinting my eyes against the
lamp's smoke and fitful illumination. When I
looked up, she was there.
"Princess?"
She said nothing.
Her eyes were black as coal, black as her hair;
her lips were redder than blood. She looked up at
me and smiled. Her teeth seemed sharp, even then,
in the lamplight.
"What are you
doing away from your room?"
"I'm
hungry," she said, like any child.
It was winter,
when fresh food is a dream of warmth and
sunlight; but I had strings of whole apples,
cored and dried, hanging from the beams of my
chamber, and I pulled an apple down for her.
"Here."
Autumn is the time
of drying, of preserving, a time of picking
apples, of rendering the goose fat. Winter is the
time of hunger, of snow, and of death; and it is
the time of the midwinter feast, when we rub the
goose-fat into the skin of a whole pig, stuffed
with that autumn's apples, then we roast it or
spit it, and we prepare to feast upon the
crackling.
She took the dried
apple from me and began to chew it with her sharp
yellow teeth.
"Is it
good?"
She nodded. I had
always been scared of the little princess, but at
that moment I warmed to her and, with my fingers,
gently, I stroked her cheek. She looked at me and
smiled -- she smiled but rarely -- then she sank
her teeth into the base of my thumb, the Mound of
Venus, and she drew blood.
I began to shriek,
from pain and from surprise; but she looked at me
and I fell silent.
The little
Princess fastened her mouth to my hand and licked
and sucked and drank. When she was finished, she
left my chamber. Beneath my gaze the cut that she
had made began to close, to scab, and to heal.
The next day it was an old scar: I might have cut
my hand with a pocket-knife in my childhood.
I had been frozen
by her, owned and dominated. That scared me, more
than the blood she had fed on. After that night I
locked my chamber door at dusk, barring it with
an oaken pole, and I had the smith forge iron
bars, which he placed across my windows.
My husband, my
love, my king, sent for me less and less, and
when I came to him he was dizzy, listless,
confused. He could no longer make love as a man
makes love; and he would not permit me to
pleasure him with my mouth: the one time I tried,
he started, violently, and began to weep. I
pulled my mouth away and held him tightly, until
the sobbing had stopped, and he slept, like a
child.
I ran my fingers
across his skin as he slept. It was covered in a
multitude of ancient scars. But I could recall no
scars from the days of our courtship, save one,
on his side, where a boar had gored him when he
was a youth.
Soon he was a
shadow of the man I had met and loved by the
bridge. His bones showed, blue and white, beneath
his skin. I was with him at the last: his hands
were cold as stone, his eyes milky-blue, his hair
and beard faded and lustreless and limp. He died
unshriven, his skin nipped and pocked from head
to toe with tiny, old scars.
He weighed near to
nothing. The ground was frozen hard, and we could
dig no grave for him, so we made a cairn of rocks
and stones above his body, as a memorial only,
for there was little enough of him left to
protect from the hunger of the beasts and the
birds.
So I was queen.
And I was foolish,
and young -- eighteen summers had come and gone
since first I saw daylight -- and I did not do
what I would do, now.
If it were today,
I would have her heart cut out, true. But then I
would have her head and arms and legs cut off. I
would have them disembowel her. And then I would
watch, in the town square, as the hangman heated
the fire to white-heat with bellows, watch
unblinking as he consigned each part of her to
the fire. I would have archers around the square,
who would shoot any bird or animal who came close
to the flames, any raven or dog or hawk or rat.
And I would not close my eyes until the princess
was ash, and a gentle wind could scatter her like
snow.
I did not do this
thing, and we pay for our mistakes.
They say I was
fooled; that it was not her heart. That it was
the heart of an animal -- a stag, perhaps, or a
boar. They say that, and they are wrong.
And some say (but
it is her lie, not mine) that I was given the
heart, and that I ate it. Lies and half-truths
fall like snow, covering the things that I
remember, the things I saw. A landscape,
unrecognisable after a snowfall; that is what she
has made of my life.
There were scars
on my love, her father's thighs, and on his
ballock-pouch, and on his male member, when he
died.
I did not go with
them. They took her in the day, while she slept,
and was at her weakest. They took her to the
heart of the forest, and there they opened her
blouse, and they cut out her heart, and they left
her dead, in a gully, for the forest to swallow.
The forest is a
dark place, the border to many kingdoms; no-one
would be foolish enough to claim jurisdiction
over it. Outlaws live in the forest. Robbers live
in the forest, and so do wolves. You can ride
through the forest for a dozen days and never see
a soul; but there are eyes upon you the entire
time.
They brought me
her heart. I know it was hers -- no sow's heart
or doe's would have continued to beat and pulse
after it had been cut out, as that one did.
I took it to my
chamber.
I did not eat it:
I hung it from the beams above my bed, placed it
on a length of twine that I strung with
rowan-berries, orange-red as a robin's breast;
and with bulbs of garlic.
Outside, the snow
fell, covering the footprints of my huntsmen,
covering her tiny body in the forest where it
lay.
I had the smith
remove the iron bars from my windows, and I would
spend some time in my room each afternoon through
the short winter days, gazing out over the
forest, until darkness fell.
There were, as I
have already stated, people in the forest. They
would come out, some of them, for the Spring
Fair: a greedy, feral, dangerous people; some
were stunted -- dwarfs and midgets and
hunchbacks; others had the huge teeth and vacant
gazes of idiots; some had fingers like flippers
or crab-claws. They would creep out of the forest
each year for the Spring Fair, held when the
snows had melted.
As a young lass I
had worked at the Fair, and they had scared me
then, the forest folk. I told fortunes for the
Fairgoers, scrying in a pool of still water; and,
later, when I was older, in a disc of polished
glass, its back all silvered -- a gift from a
merchant whose straying horse I had seen in a
pool of ink.
The stallholders
at the fair were afraid of the forest folk; they
would nail their wares to the bare boards of
their stalls -- slabs of gingerbread or leather
belts were nailed with great iron nails to the
wood. If their wares were not nailed, they said,
the forest folk would take them, and run away,
chewing on the stolen gingerbread, flailing about
them with the belts.
The forest folk
had money, though: a coin here, another there,
sometimes stained green by time or the earth, the
face on the coin unknown to even the oldest of
us. Also they had things to trade, and thus the
fair continued, serving the outcasts and the
dwarfs, serving the robbers (if they were
circumspect) who preyed on the rare travellers
from lands beyond the forest, or on gypsies, or
on the deer. (This was robbery in the eyes of the
law. The deer were the queen's.)
The years passed
by slowly, and my people claimed that I ruled
them with wisdom. The heart still hung above by
bed, pulsing gently in the night. If there were
any who mourned the child, I saw no evidence: she
was a thing of terror, back then, and they
believed themselves well rid of her.
Spring Fair
followed Spring Fair: five of them, each sadder,
poorer, shoddier than the one before. Fewer of
the forest folk came out of the forest to buy.
Those who did seemed subdued and listless. The
stallholders stopped nailing their wares to the
boards of their stalls. And by the fifth year but
a handful of folk came from the forest -- a
fearful huddle of little hairy men, and no-one
else.
The Lord of the
Fair, and his page, came to me when the fair was
done. I had known him slightly, before I was
queen.
"I do not
come to you as my queen," he said.
I said nothing. I
listened.
"I come to
you because you are wise," he continued.
"When you were a child you found a strayed
foal by staring into a pool of ink; when you were
a maiden you found a lost infant who had wandered
far from her mother, by staring into that mirror
of yours. You know secrets and you can seek out
things hidden. My queen," he asked,
"what is taking the forest folk? Next year
there will be no Spring Fair. The travellers from
other kingdoms have grown scarce and few, the
folk of the forest are almost gone. Another year
like the last, and we shall all starve."
I commanded my
maidservant to bring me my looking-glass. It was
a simple thing, a silver-backed glass disk, which
I kept wrapped in a doe-skin, in a chest, in my
chamber.
They brought it to
me, then, and I gazed into it:
She was twelve and
she was no longer a little child. Her skin was
still pale, her eyes and hair coal-black, her
lips as red as blood. She wore the clothes she
had worn when she left the castle for the last
time -- the blouse, the skirt, -- although they
were much let-out, much mended. Over them she
wore a leather cloak, and instead of boots she
had leather bags, tied with thongs, over her tiny
feet.
She was standing
in the forest, beside a tree.
As I watched, in
the eye of my mind, I saw her edge and step and
flitter and pad from tree to tree, like an
animal: a bat or a wolf. She was following
someone.
He was a monk. He
wore sackcloth, and his feet were bare, and
scabbed and hard. His beard and tonsure were of a
length, overgrown, unshaven.
She watched him
from behind the trees. Eventually he paused for
the night, and began to make a fire, laying twigs
down, breaking up a robin's nest as kindling. He
had a tinder-box in his robe, and he knocked the
flint against the steel until the sparks caught
the tinder and the fire flamed. There had been
two eggs in the nest he had found, and these he
ate, raw. They cannot have been much of a meal
for so big a man.
He sat there in
the firelight, and she came out from her hiding
place. She crouched down on the other side of the
fire, and stared at him. He grinned, as if it
were a long time since he had seen another human,
and beckoned her over to him.
She stood up and
walked around the fire, and waited, an
arms-length away. He pulled in his robe until he
found a coin -- a tiny, copper penny, -- and
tossed it to her. She caught it, and nodded, and
went to him. He pulled at the rope around his
waist, and his robe swung open. His body was as
hairy as a bear's. She pushed him back onto the
moss. One hand crept, spider-like, through the
tangle of hair, until it closed on his manhood;
the other hand traced a circle on his left
nipple. He closed his eyes, and fumbled one huge
hand under her skirt. She lowered her mouth to
the nipple she had been teasing, her smooth skin
white on the furry brown body of him.
She sank her teeth
deep into his breast. His eyes opened, then they
closed again, and she drank.
She straddled him,
and she fed. As she did so a thin blackish liquid
began to dribble from between her legs...
"Do you know
what is keeping the travellers from our town?
What is happening to the forest people?"
asked the Head of the Fair.
I covered the
mirror in doe-skin, and told him that I would
personally take it upon myself to make the forest
safe once more.
I had to, although
she terrified me. I was the queen.
A foolish woman
would have gone then into the forest and tried to
capture the creature; but I had been foolish once
and had no wish to be so a second time.
I spent time with
old books, for I could read a little. I spent
time with the gypsy women (who passed through our
country across the mountains to the south, rather
than cross the forest to the north and the west).
I prepared myself,
and obtained those things I would need, and when
the first snows began to fall, then I was ready.
Naked, I was, and
alone in the highest tower of the palace, a place
open to the sky. The winds chilled my body;
goose-pimples crept across my arms and thighs and
breasts. I carried a silver basin, and a basket
in which I had placed a silver knife, a silver
pin, some tongs, a grey robe and three green
apples.
I put them down
and stood there, unclothed, on the tower, humble
before the night sky and the wind. Had any man
seen me standing there, I would have had his
eyes; but there was no-one to spy. Clouds scudded
across the sky, hiding and uncovering the waning
moon.
I took the silver
knife, and slashed my left arm -- once, twice,
three times. The blood dripped into the basin,
scarlet seeming black in the moonlight.
I added the powder
from the vial that hung around my neck. It was a
brown dust, made of dried herbs and the skin of a
particular toad, and from certain other things.
It thickened the blood, while preventing it from
clotting.
I took the three
apples, one by one, and pricked their skins
gently with my silver pin. Then I placed the
apples in the silver bowl, and let them sit there
while the first tiny flakes of snow of the year
fell slowly onto my skin, and onto the apples,
and onto the blood.
When dawn began to
brighten the sky I covered myself with the grey
cloak, and took the red apples from the silver
bowl, one by one, lifting each into my basket
with silver tongs, taking care not to touch it.
There was nothing left of my blood or of the
brown powder in the silver bowl, save nothing
save a black residue, like a verdigris, on the
inside.
I buried the bowl
in the earth. Then I cast a glamour on the apples
(as once, years before, by a bridge, I had cast a
glamour on myself), that they were, beyond any
doubt, the most wonderful apples in the world;
and the crimson blush of their skins was the warm
colour of fresh blood.
I pulled the hood
of my cloak low over my face, and I took ribbons
and pretty hair ornaments with me, placed them
above the apples in the reed basket, and I walked
alone into the forest, until I came to her
dwelling: a high, sandstone cliff, laced with
deep caves going back a way into the rock wall.
There were trees
and boulders around the cliff-face, and I walked
quietly and gently from tree to tree, without
disturbing a twig or a fallen leaf. Eventually I
found my place to hide, and I waited, and I
watched.
After some hours a
clutch of dwarfs crawled out of the cave-front --
ugly, misshapen, hairy little men, the old
inhabitants of this country. You saw them seldom
now.
They vanished into
the wood, and none of them spied me, though one
of them stopped to piss against the rock I hid
behind.
I waited. No more
came out.
I went to the cave
entrance and hallooed into it, in a cracked old
voice.
The scar on my
Mound of Venus throbbed and pulsed as she came
towards me, out of the darkness, naked and alone.
She was thirteen
years of age, my stepdaughter, and nothing marred
the perfect whiteness of her skin save for the
livid scar on her left breast, where her heart
had been cut from her long since.
The insides of her
thighs were stained with wet black filth.
She peered at me,
hidden, as I was, in my cloak. She looked at me
hungrily. "Ribbons, goodwife," I
croaked. "Pretty ribbons for your
hair..."
She smiled and
beckoned to me. A tug; the scar on my hand was
pulling me towards her. I did what I had planned
to do, but I did it more readily than I had
planned: I dropped my basket, and screeched like
the bloodless old pedlar woman I was pretending
to be, and I ran.
My grey cloak was
the colour of the forest, and I was fast; she did
not catch me.
I made my way back
to the palace.
I did not see it.
Let us imagine though, the girl returning,
frustrated and hungry, to her cave, and finding
my fallen basket on the ground.
What did she do?
I like to think
she played first with the ribbons, twined them
into her raven hair, looped them around her pale
neck or her tiny waist.
And then, curious,
she moved the cloth to see what else was in the
basket; and she saw the red, red apples.
They smelled like
fresh apples, of course; and they also smelled of
blood. And she was hungry. I imagine her picking
up an apple, pressing it against her cheek,
feeling the cold smoothness of it against her
skin.
And she opened her
mouth and bit deep into it...
By the time I
reached my chambers, the heart that hung from the
roof-beam, with the apples and hams and the dried
sausages, had ceased to beat. It hung there,
quietly, without motion or life, and I felt safe
once more.
That winter the
snows were high and deep, and were late melting.
We were all hungry come the spring.
The Spring Fair
was slightly improved that year. The forest folk
were few, but they were there, and there were
travellers from the lands beyond the forest.
I saw the little
hairy men of the forest-cave buying and
bargaining for pieces of glass, and lumps of
crystal and of quartz-rock. They paid for the
glass with silver coins -- the spoils of my
stepdaughter's depredations, I had no doubt. When
it got about what they were buying, townsfolk
rushed back to their homes, came back with their
lucky crystals, and, in a few cases, with whole
sheets of glass.
I thought,
briefly, about having them killed, but I did not.
As long as the heart hung, silent and immobile
and cold, from the beam of my chamber, I was
safe, and so were the folk of the forest, and,
thus, eventually, the folk of the town.
My twenty-fifth
year came, and my stepdaughter had eaten the
poisoned fruit two winters' back, when the Prince
came to my Palace. He was tall, very tall, with
cold green eyes and the swarthy skin of those
from beyond the mountains.
He rode with a
small retinue: large enough to defend him, small
enough that another monarch -- myself, for
instance -- would not view him as a potential
threat.
I was practical: I
thought of the alliance of our lands, thought of
the Kingdom running from the forests all the way
south to the sea; I thought of my golden-haired
bearded love, dead these eight years; and, in the
night, I went to the Prince's room.
I am no innocent,
although my late husband, who was once my king,
was truly my first lover, no matter what they
say.
At first the
prince seemed excited. He bade me remove my
shift, and made me stand in front of the opened
window, far from the fire, until my skin was
chilled stone-cold. Then he asked me to lie upon
my back, with my hands folded across my breasts,
my eyes wide open - but staring only at the beams
above. He told me not to move, and to breathe as
little as possible. He implored me to say
nothing. He spread my legs apart.
It was then that
he entered me.
As he began to
thrust inside me, I felt my hips raise, felt
myself begin to match him, grind for grind, push
for push. I moaned. I could not help myself.
His manhood slid
out of me. I reached out and touched it, a tiny,
slippery thing.
"Please,"
he said, softly. "You must neither move, nor
speak. Just lie there on the stones, so cold and
so fair."
I tried, but he
had lost whatever force it was that had made him
virile; and, some short while later, I left the
Prince's room, his curses and tears still
resounding in my ears.
He left early the
next morning, with all his men, and they rode off
into the forest.
I imagine his
loins, now, as he rode, a knot of frustration at
the base of his manhood. I imagine his pale lips
pressed so tightly together. Then I imagine his
little troupe riding through the forest, finally
coming upon the glass-and-crystal cairn of my
stepdaughter. So pale. So cold. Naked, beneath
the glass, and little more than a girl, and dead.
In my fancy, I can
almost feel the sudden hardness of his manhood
inside his britches, envision the lust that took
him then, the prayers he muttered beneath his
breath in thanks for his good fortune. I imagine
him negotiating with the little hairy men -
offering them gold and spices for the lovely
corpse under the crystal mound.
Did they take his
gold willingly? Or did they look up to see his
men on their horses, with their sharp swords and
their spears, and realize they had no
alternative?
I do not know. I
was not there; I was not scrying. I can only
imagine...
Hands, pulling off
the lumps of glass and quartz from her cold body.
Hands, gently caressing her cold cheek, moving
her cold arm, rejoicing to find the corpse still
fresh and pliable.
Did he take her
there, in front of them all? Or did he have her
carried to a secluded nook before he mounted her?
I cannot say.
Did he shake the
apple from her throat? Or did her eyes slowly
open as he pounded into her cold body; did her
mouth open, those red lips part, those sharp
yellow teeth close on his swarthy neck, as the
blood, which is the life, trickled down her
throat, washing down and away the lump of apple,
my own, my poison?
I imagine; I do
not know.
This I do know: I
was woken in the night by her heart pulsing and
beating once more. Salt blood dripped onto my
face from above. I sat up. My hand burned and
pounded as if I had hit the base of my thumb with
a rock.
There was a
hammering on the door. I felt afraid, but I am a
queen, and I would not show fear. I opened the
door.
First his men
walked in to my chamber, and stood around me,
with their sharp swords, and their long spears.
Then he came in;
and he spat in my face.
Finally, she
walked into my chamber, as she had when I was
first a queen, and she was a child of six. She
had not changed. Not really.
She pulled down
the twine on which her heart was hanging. She
pulled off the dried rowan berries, one by one;
pulled off the garlic bulb - now a dried thing,
after all these years; then she took up her own,
her pumping heart -- a small thing, no larger
than that of a nanny-goat or a she-bear -- as it
brimmed and pumped its blood into her hand.
Her fingernails
must have been as sharp as glass: she opened her
breast with them, running them over the purple
scar. Her chest gaped, suddenly, open and
bloodless. She licked her heart, once, as the
blood ran over her hands, and she pushed the
heart deep into her breast.
I saw her do it. I
saw her close the flesh of her breast once more.
I saw the purple scar begin to fade.
Her prince looked
briefly concerned, but he put his arm around her
nonetheless, and they stood, side by side, and
they waited.
And she stayed
cold, and the bloom of death remained on her
lips, and his lust was not diminished in any way.
They told me they
would marry, and the kingdoms would indeed be
joined. They told me that I would be with them on
their wedding day.
It is starting to
get hot in here.
They have told the
people bad things about me; a little truth to add
savour to the dish, but mixed with many lies.
I was bound and
kept in a tiny stone cell beneath the palace, and
I remained there through the autumn. Today they
fetched me out of the cell; they stripped the
rags from me, and washed the filth from me, and
then they shaved my head and my loins, and they
rubbed my skin with goose grease.
The snow was
falling as they carried me -- two men at each
hand, two men at each leg -- utterly exposed, and
spread-eagled and cold, through the midwinter
crowds; and brought me to this kiln.
My stepdaughter
stood there with her prince. She watched me, in
my indignity, but she said nothing.
As they thrust me
inside, jeering and chaffing as they did so, I
saw one snowflake land upon her white cheek, and
remain there without melting.
They closed the
kiln-door behind me. It is getting hotter in
here, and outside they are singing and cheering
and banging on the sides of the kiln.
She was not
laughing, or jeering, or talking. She did not
sneer at me or turn away. She looked at me,
though; and for a moment I saw myself reflected
in her eyes.
I will not scream.
I will not give them that satisfaction. They will
have my body, but my soul and my story are my
own, and will die with me.
The goose-grease
begins to melt and glisten upon my skin. I shall
make no sound at all. I shall think no more on
this.
I shall think
instead of the snowflake on her cheek.
I think of her
hair as black as coal, her lips as red as blood,
her skin, snow-white.
END
5,000 words
Neil Gaiman
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