Dust rose in dense plumes over the road, shimmering
in the brutal heat of a summer midday. For now the plains stretched
on to eternity beneath a blue sky so clear and bright as to be
painful. But in the far distance, mountains rose, shreds of clouds
caught around their peaks.
A
woman walked on the road, trudging in the weary way of someone who can see
their destination and knows how very far they still have to go. Dust
coated her ordinary, ill-fitting clothes. She toyed with a section
of her long, dark gold hair, attempting to braid it but only catching it in
tangled snags.
A
punishment! Beana thought as she walked. It had been labeled as
a mission, but this task could only be cruel. But the Prince
doesn’t punish…
Privately,
she had to think that if he did, this was an excellent way of doing it.
Stop
sulking, she ordered herself. You make your bed, you lie in
it. Wasn’t sulking what had gotten her in trouble in the first
place? So what made her think it would work better the second time
around?
She
hated arguing with herself. She always won.
To
relax her tired feet, Beana dropped down to all fours. In the breath
of an instant, the tall, slim woman shifted seamlessly to a large, dark brown
goat, with lighter tan patches across her spine. The transformation
wasn’t one of flesh and bone; if anything, it seemed that the viewer had
changed, not Beana.
She
needed the extra legs as the hours trailed by and the mountains drew closer,
until they obscured the entire horizon. Beana was a child of the
flatlands; she’d only seen mountains once before, and she’d been glad enough to
stay away from the border of worlds.
Her
cloven hoofs clopped to an awkward halt. The ground had been rising
for some time, but only now did it slope sharply upward. If she took
another step, she would be on the mountain.
Be
there for her, Beana. Be her mother and best friend. But
above all, watch over her.
“I
hear you, my Prince,” she muttered. “And I’m still faithful.”
She
drew in a deep breath and stepped onto the mountain.
*****
Hours passed as Beana struggled up the inhospitable
path. Rocks slid beneath her feet, clattering back down the
mountain; with two legs she surely would’ve turned an ankle by
now. As it were, she fought her way past tiny, precarious houses and
small farms. A pen of goats watched the newcomer with slit pupils.
Amidst
the poor farms, perched high on a ledge, rose an incongruous
villa. The path twined past it; Beana glanced curiously at it as she
passed. A wooden fence rose around its sprawling
garden. Ivy twirled around the rough-hewn boards.
A
warm breeze whisked through the garden, trailing the long willow strands and
carrying the sharp fragrance of starflowers. It reminded Beana too
much of home; head down, she slunk past it, pushing and pulling her way up the
mountain.
Her
fellow knights didn’t bother with this, Beana thought grimly, hauling herself
onto another rocky shelf. They lounged in cool forest glades while
she sweated beneath the sun.
No
sooner had she thought this than the temperature plummeted to an icy
coolness. Beana’s breath frosted, and a woman stood where the goat
had been.
The
road flattened out ahead of her, dark spruce trees crowding in on either
side. An eldritch light, barely larger than a firefly, flickered
blue, then purple amidst the deep needles. It drifted across the
path, then winked out, only to reappear a few feet away. The wind
rose with a sigh, shivering the spruce trees. Full night had fallen.
Not
a path, Beana realized. A Path.
Carefully,
she stepped backward—and nothing. Her heel crunched on fallen
evergreen needles.
No
going back, she thought. Only forward. I will make
it up this mountain.
The
floating lights drifted away as she walked cautiously down the
Path. All was quiet, save the River as it burbled and murmured,
crossing her way. Here it was a deep brook, silver with
moonlight. When Beana gazed into it, a goat stared solemnly back.
Fragile
knight, an undulating voice said. Not strong
enough. So fragile.
Was
that the River, or her own thoughts? So strange the two should
agree.
No
sooner had Beana stepped over the River than her surroundings flickered
again. Red sunset spilled across the mountain and pooled in the
smallest, saddest farm Beana had ever seen. Not even a farm; just a
house, crookedly propped up with its back to the mountain. Even with
her vivid senses, Beana didn’t see or hear a soul.
A
dark brown goat again, she clopped slowly across the yard, delicately picking
her way around the piles of cut slate. The more she saw of the
house, the more she disapproved. Each wall leaned
unevenly. The ceiling sank wearily, as though it would touch the
floor, and the bitter scent of smoke filled Beana’s throat; it didn’t have a
chimney.
“Well,”
she said with forced optimism. “It looks like I have my work cut out
for me.”
Behind
her, a child giggled.
Stay
calm, Beana thought, even as she stood frozen. The Prince
told you she was an unusual child. She craned her senses;
nothing. Not a single sign that any living thing might be behind
her.
You
had to think living, didn’t you, you silly old goat? With
a shudder, she pushed thoughts of dragons out of her head and
turned. “Rose Red?”
The
hidden girl giggled again, this time from behind a pile of slate. It
was more sloppily cut than the others; a heap of rocks, really. But
even as Beana watched, it twitched almost imperceptibly.
“Rosie?”
she said quietly.
The
heap unfolded itself into something of roughly human
proportions. Scrawny limbs, a bony torso. An overlarge
head perched on unhealthily thin shoulders. Most distinctly of all,
every inch of the creature’s skin was mottled dark and light
grey. Someone had cared enough to dress it in a tan smock.
A
broad, shy smile split the craggy face, but Beana didn’t notice. She
was busy with a new, unwelcome truth.
Her
new charge was a goblin.
*****
Almost three weeks later, Beana stepped through a
doorway into the Haven Library. The quiet, forest-like room was less
serene than usual. A woman with dark hair and skin and a pretty,
exotic face stood before her desk, barely managing to hold on to a squirming
bundle.
“Good
morning, Beana,” Dame Imraldera said in a precise voice. “I assume
you came for Rose Red.”
“No!”
her writhing bundle screamed. “Bad goat lady!”
“Hello,
Rosie,” Beana said, smoothing a smile off her face. Indeed, Rose had
never been so Red. Imraldera had secured her in what Beana thought
was Eanrin’s scarlet cloak.
Wordlessly,
the Lady of the Haven passed the cloak and its contents to
Beana. She took it awkwardly.
“We
don’t get along very well,” she said wretchedly as Rose Red screamed, pushed
with inhuman strength, and otherwise attempted to escape
captivity. “I’m still irked that Eanrin got Una. I bet
she has lots of governesses to keep her in line.”
Imraldera
still didn’t say anything. She pressed her lips together in a way
that made Beana think she was angry.
“She
found the Path two weeks ago,” Beana said, feeling a need to explain
herself. “Since then she adores exploring the Wood
Between. I know it’s dangerous for a child, but I”—her voice climbed
as Rose Red grabbed a fistful of her long hair and pulled—“I can’t
keep her out of it. She made it as far as the Tiger’s demesne last
week before I found her and dragged her back.”
“I
am experienced in child care,” Imraldera said in a chilly voice, “and I can
assure you that dragging is not the most effective method.”
Beana
cringed. “Sometimes it’s the only way.” To change the
subject, she said, “Did you know that I found her in the River
yesterday? She had gone wading. A princess wading in the
River. Can you believe it?”
Perhaps
not the most tactful comment, she thought as Imraldera ushered her out.
*****
Rose Red had settled down somewhat by the time they
made it back to the mountain. Her eyes drooped; Beana, a goat, had
to firmly press up against her bony shoulder to keep her from
toppling. She couldn’t help a stab of relief as Rosie retreated to
her tiny pallet and slept.
Beana
knew she shouldn’t leave the house. But it had been weeks since
she’d been away from the goblin…
A
few minutes later, a goat walked leisurely down the mountain. She
felt a thrill of forbidden happiness as she strolled past the
villa. Rosie’s adopted father labored in the garden, trimming the
starflowers and pruning the willows Beana had so admired. He didn’t
look up as she passed.
Changing
fluidly between forms, Beana walked as a woman down the mountain
road. Upon reaching the goats, she stopped and leaned against the
fence. The goats, recognizing one of their kind even in a different
form, huddled around the fence, politely asking her for
food. Sensible creatures, goats.
Kids
born only that spring crowded around their elders. The smallest, a
fine-boned, spotted tawny, bumped into Beana’s hand respectfully.
Wait
a minute…
“He’s
a fawn,” she said, loud in her surprise.
“That
he is,” a gruff voice agreed. Beana started as the farmer sidled
amid the goats, running a hand over their bony flanks. The delicate,
golden-brown fawn rubbed its head against his knee; he patted it absently.
“What
happened?” Beana said, taken aback. “How did you come by a fawn?”
“Not
me.” The farmer gestured to his goats. “It happens
sometimes. Someone mistakes a doe for a buck, and the fawn winds up an
orphan.” He reached out and patted a spotted brown-and-white goat on
her bony flank. “This one lost her kid in the spring. She
adopted the fawn, treats him like he’s her own. They’re maternal
creatures, goats. Accepting. She’ll never leave that fawn
behind.”
Beana
forced a laugh. “Are they really?” Clearing her throat,
she continued, “I suppose there’s always one who doesn’t accept the fawn.”
“Sometimes.” The
farmer ran his hand down the fawn’s back; it flinched, skittish, then relaxed
under his touch. “But they always come around.”
Beana
lingered a while longer, than thanked the farmer and set off
again. She had barely made it to the villa when she spotted a small
figure in a tawny smock, uncoiling ivy from the fence.
“Rosie!”
she said in alarm, breaking into a jog, then a sprint. The goblin’s
tiny, rocky face turned up in surprise when Beana skidded to a halt, her cloven
hooves clattering on the stone.
“Sweetheart,
you can’t wander off,” she said, catching her breath. Rosie’s forehead
puckered in confusion. “The people around here won’t accept you, not
like I—not like…”
Not
like I have? she thought bitterly. This girl’s own mother
thought she’d be better off away from her family. Her adopted father
and I are the only things she has, and he’s gone all day. I’m all
she has, and what have I done? I’ve flinched every time I’ve looked
at her. I see the goblin so hard that I can’t see the girl.
Why
did the Prince send me? Why did he send me if I’m not strong enough
to take care of this girl?
“Let’s
go home,” she said finally. Rosie obediently knotted a hand in
Beana’s short hair and toddled next to her as they started up the mountain.
*****
That night, after Rosie had gone to sleep and while
the gardener still labored at the villa, Beana set stacked stones in a rough
circle before the house. She filled the hollow with dry branches,
and with a flick of her flint, fire curled around the dead wood.
The
woman sat on a stack of slate, leaned her folded arms on her knees, and stared
into the flames. A white blanket draped around her shoulders for
warmth. The reflected sparks rose in her glassy brown eyes.
In
the morning, she would go home. Not because she wanted to escape
Rose Red, but because she simply didn’t know enough to care for
her. She didn’t know anything about children. Clearly,
she had proven that many times over in the past few weeks.
The
small house was dark and silent as Beana crept through it. Embers glowed
in the hearth; she’d have to extinguish them thoroughly before she left.
“Beana?”
The
woman cringed. “Go back to bed, Rosie,” she mumbled. The
walls pressed in on her; in a panic she stumbled back out amid the stacked
stones. The fire licked at the walls of its prison.
“Can’t
leave,” Rose Red said stubbornly. Her rough mouth formed the words.
“I
know I’m not supposed to leave, but sometimes people just aren’t able to… why
am I even explaining this to you?” Beana threw up her hands and
dropped down on a pile of slate by the fire. “It’s complicated,
Rosie. I’m just not good enough for this.”
How
long had she wanted to say that aloud? Not just about raising a
child—about being a knight, about being a good person. About feeling
comfortable in her own skin. About—
Everything.
Something
light settled on Beana’s head. She glanced up, then to the side.
Rosie
sat next to her, all but hidden in the rocky crag. Beana opened her
mouth, and a circlet of ivy tipped off her hair. Not just
rough-woven leaves; a cunning diadem of twirled and braided ivy, spring-green
sprigs wrapped in delicate wildflowers. Rosie, with the agile
fingers of her kind, had woven it.
Thank
you, sweetheart, she tried to say, but her throat closed and her eyes
opened. She crumpled, tears sliding down her cheeks, running into
the corners of her mouth and down her chin. She opened her mouth
again, but only a breathy, wet exhale croaked out.
Rosie,
oblivious to her nurse’s weeping, parted Beana’s hair, then wound small
sections together into a braid. As Beana sat there, tears spilling
from her eyes, Rosie calmly and gently braided her hair around the ivy circlet,
tidily securing it to her head.
“Thank
you, sweetheart,” Beana managed, pushing the words out. She ran her
fingers over the braid; it spiraled around her head like a crown. “Thank
you, Rose Red.”
“Stay?”
Rosie asked.
Beana
nodded jerkily. “I-I’ll stay.”
Rose
Red nodded decisively, like she had never doubted it. With the
solemn air of toddlers who had gotten what they wanted, she held up her hands
for the fire to warm. They lowered slowly as she examined the seam
where Beana had pushed two stone tiles together. A quick adjustment,
and they fit together perfectly.
“Thank
you for getting the ivy,” Beana said, fighting for control over her ragged
breathing. “But I don’t think you should go down there
anymore. The people who live there would be frightened if they saw you.”
And so I condemn her to a life alone?
she thought as Rosie nodded reluctantly. Never able to leave the
house lest someone sees her?
A
rush of determination flooded Beana, more than she had felt in some
time. She may not be able to leave the mountain, but she won’t
live in fear.
Idly,
her fingers toyed with the white sheet across her shoulders. A
long dress… maybe some gloves… a veil… It would be difficult to
hide a goblin’s identity, but Beana thought she could manage it.
“Come
on, Rosie,” she said. A dark brown goat rose wearily from beside the
fire. “We’d better get to bed. I don’t suppose you know
where I can find some needles…”
She’d
spent years wondering why she felt so alone, why the Prince had never helped
her. But now, as she curled up next to Rose Red’s pallet, Beana
rather thought he had.
They’re
maternal creatures, goats. Accepting. She’ll never leave
that fawn behind.
1 comment:
That was lovely; your words were so beautiful and descriptive!
I thoroughly enjoyed it,
~Rose Maiden
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