"Lee-Monstrosity" - читать интересную книгу автора (Lee Mary Soon)MARY SOON LEE MONSTROSITY A seagull flew through Fera's dreams all that night. Its wings stirred the air over her head, its cry stirred a yearning she could not name. Fera woke with that yearning, a wild, irrational thing that she thrust aside impatiently. Today would be as yesterday, and the day before, and the many years before that. Wishing wouldn't change that. She stood up from her bed, her claws clicking on the marble floor. Standing hurt her back. After a minute, she sank down onto four legs and padded into the bathroom. Gold and silver fittings winked at her in the winter sunlight. The mosaic floor showed lilies and yellow roses, and the amethyst of the royal insignia. Only in the cobwebbed splinters of the fractured mirror did Feta see ugliness. She made herself stare at her shaggy, brutish reflection, as she had every day but the first -- that long-ago day when she had torn through the castle, saliva slobbering down the matted fur of her face as she yowled in madness. Fera twisted the tap on with one awkward paw, and bent forward to let the water stream over her head. The chill water braced her, but something was wrong, an emptiness lurking inside her. With dripping wet fur, she paced out to the garden. Snow crusted the lawn, iced every twig and branch, frosted the edges of the winding paths. At her coming, the birds flew away, calling out warnings to each other: Alarm! Alarm! The monster approaches! Fera stalked across the snowy lawn, her damp clotting with frost in the piercing cold. She understood the bird's speech, and every warming call bit into her, hard though she tried to ignore them. But there was one friend who would listen to her without running away. She left the garden and entered the wood where Wolf lived. "Wolf" called Fera, her tail wagging in anticipation. No answer. "Wolf!" still no answer. Fera stopped and sniffed the wind, scenting for Wolf. There, to the east. But there was another smell too, a human smell, and an iron undercurrent flavoring the air. Blood. She raced toward the smells. Intruder: there was a human intruder. She came to a glade where a silver-gray carcass by gutted on the ground, where an old man crouched over Wolf's body, the warm blood coating his fingers, a knife in his hand. The man had not heard her approach. In a great leap Fera knocked him over. The knife dropped soundless into the snow. She opened her jaws over the wrinkled folds of the old man's thin neck. "Please," croaked the old man. "Spare me." And Fera paused her teeth dimpling his skin. Maybe because he didn't struggle underneath her, maybe because it had been so long since a human had spoken to her, she raised her head and let the old man free. She covered the fallen knife with one heavy paw. "Why? Why should I spare you?" The old man started as he heard her speak. He pushed himself into a sitting position, shivering. "I beg your forgiveness. I lost my way in the snowstorm. I was cold, I --" "You trespassed on my lands and murdered my friend." Fera looked at Wolf's still body. Her throat closed up, and she could not speak. The old man fumbled and pulled a leather bag from under his coat. "I have money I can give you in compensation --" Fera growled. "I don't want your money. You will come to my castle. If you are civil company, I shall let you live. If not--" She bared her teeth. "But my sons," said the old man, "my sons are waiting for me. They will think me killed." "I care not what they think," said Feta. With one claw, she ripped the gold chain that was all she wore from around her neck. Gently, she laid the chain on Wolf's open chest. Gently, she pressed her nose against his cold nose, and for the last time breathed in his deep, comforting odor. Then she turned to the old man and bared her teeth again. "To the castle." At supper that night, the old man sat at the. opposite end of the banquet table. His eyes widened as he studied the crystal goblets, the green jade bowls resting on the jade plates. He didn't ask why the goblets were empty, the plates bare of food. "Supper," said Fera. The banquet hall darkened for a moment, shadows appearing and disappearing in a heart's beat. When the light steadied, soup steamed in the bowls, roast beef waited on the plates, and raspberries and tangerines lay heaped beside jugs full of cream. "That's a useful trick," the old man said dryly. Fera grunted in reply. The old man was trying so hard not to show his discomfort with her, nor surprise at his surroundings. He had said nothing when he first entered the castle, but she had watched his gnarled fingers rub at the silks and jeweled ornaments, as if he didn't quite believe they were real. Now she watched as he lifted his soup spoon and sipped at it. Lowering her own head, she licked up the soup from her bowl. Over the rim of her bowl, she eyed the old man. He looked at her, looked back at his soup, looked at her again, and then picked up his bowl and drank from it directly. Feta raised her head, soup dribbling down her chin. "I won't be offended if you use the silverware." "Perhaps not, but I'd feel awkward," said the old man. And when he'd finished the soup, he picked the meat and vegetables up in his fingers. Neither of them spoke again until the meal was over. Then the old man said softly, "The wolf that I killed, could it speak too?" "Aye." Feta stared fixedly at the white expanse of the tablecloth. "I am sorry," said the old man. "I would give much to undo that slaying." Fera looked up from the tablecloth and met his gaze. "I would know your name." "Petrov. And yours?" "Fera." "And your friend the wolf's?" "I called him Wolf, nothing more." Silence fell between them again. The silence stretched into the second day, and the third day, and the fourth, broken only when Feta ordered supper, or Petrov asked a simple question -- where the towels were kept, or how he should clean his shirt. They spent most of the time in the library. Feta paged clumsily through book after book. Sometimes she was distracted by Petrov shifting in his chair, and she would glare at him, all the more irritated if he was too absorbed in his reading to notice. Sometimes she stared out the tall narrow windows at the snow, remembering how Wolf tossed his head when he was amused, the way the coarse hairs of his coat had shaded from red-brown to silver-gray over the years. On the fifth evening, Petrov looked up from a history book and asked quietly, "When may I go home?" Feta growled deep in her throat but said nothing. Firelight played in the hearth behind Petrov. He looked old and shrunken against the bright flames. "May I leave here in the spring?" "No," said Fera. She gazed into the flames, seeing a silver-gray carcass spread-eagled in the snow. "May I leave in the summer?" "No," said Feta. "You killed my companion. Now you will keep me company." Petrov raised his eyebrows. "Well, that makes perfect sense, seeing how much pleasure you're deriving from my company." His tone was dry, but when he turned back to his book something in the set of his shoulders, in the way the lines pulled in around his eyes made him look sad. Feta shook her head impatiently: why should she care how the old man felt? She picked up her own book, but her muscles ached, and she couldn't find a comfortable position in the chair. With a growl, she set the book down. "Do you play chess?" Petrov nodded slowly. "Will you play a game with me?" Petrov nodded again. "I'd like that." Feta showed him where the chess set was. Without any fuss Petrov set the pieces up, his gnarled hands still better suited to the task than Fera's paws. They played in silence, but Petrov smiled as he laid down his king at the end. "Good game. Do I get a return match?" And so they played another game, and played again the next day. A week later they were varying chess with backgammon and cards; a week after that they discovered a mutual interest in mathematical digressions. On dry days they shared brief walks outside, Petrov cocooned in a ridiculous abundance of scarves and sweaters. When it snowed they wandered inside the castle. Petrov liked to visit the art gallery on the second floor best. Each time the paintings were different, save for the one at the end of the first hallway: a portrait of a young girl with ivory-smooth skin, red lips curved in a smile, gold-bright hair. Petrov often paused there, and raised his eyebrows in question to Feta. But the spell held Feta silent: she knew that once she had been the girl in the portrait, but she could not speak of it, could not say anything of her life before the curse was laid upon her. In the third month of Petrov's stay, they were walking together in the garden. The lawn was mostly clear of snow, the air full of smells and growth and green. Feta sniffed busily, and pointed out the first crocuses, not yet in bloom. Petrov beamed, his mouth crinkling at the corners. He sat down on a bench, and rubbed at his left knee. "Spring's my second favorite season. Do you have a favorite?" "Summer." Feta growled softly, remembering warm nights spent in the woods, rolling over in the long sweet-scented grass. "Summer's too hot and proud," said Petrov. "I liked it best when I was a child. Then when I was a young man, I switched to preferring winter, just because no one else liked it. My wife ..." He stopped, and for a moment he looked frail and lost. "My wife liked autumn most, and now I do too, from harvest through to first snow. Crisp apples, the colors of the leaves, bonfire days. I remember her best in autumn." Feta scowled, her insides knotting up. Petrov was unhappy and she, she felt guilty. But she shouldn't -- he was the trespasser, the murderer. She thought of Wolf and tried to summon anger, but it twisted into grief. "I'll be back soon." She left Petrov alone, and ran for the cover of the trees. There in the shadowy gloom, where the snow still lay on the ground, she paced back and forth. She'd take Petrov to the gallery again this afternoon. He'd put this mood behind him soon enough. She turned it over and over in her mind, but it was useless. Guilt still ate at her. Finally, furious with herself, she galloped back to Petrov. "Go," she growled. A burning, prickling sensation tore at her insides. "You're free to leave. Take what you need from the castle -- boots, food." "My thanks." Petrov stood up. His face was stiff, unreadable. He laid one hand on her shaggy back. "I'll go home to my sons." "Aye," said Feta. "Do that." Petrov's hand tightened on her fur. "I'll miss you." Feta stared at him, but none of what she wanted to say would emerge. In the end, she just muttered, "Go." "I'll come back," said Petrov. "There's no need." Feta turned and walked away. In the weeks after Petrov departed, Fera stayed in the woods. She ate grubs and squirrels, mice and rabbits, taking fierce pleasure in their squeals as she caught them, savoring the blood-scent as she trapped small creatures in her claws. She did not speak. She tried not to think in words. Words were sharp-edged, the broken halves of conversations. At night she slept in the glade with Wolf's body, by now a cage of bones open to the rain and wind, the two of them silent. Gradually she lost track of time. It might have been a month later, it might have been two when she heard a distant clattering, the faint boom of the bell at the gate to her grounds. Petrov. Fera raced for the gates, muscles pumping the long mile till she reached the iron gates. Outside stood a young, exquisitely handsome man. His full lips curled in disgust as he looked at Feta, then altered to a forced smile. He held out one smooth white hand in greeting. "Good day, milady. My name is Omegon, son of Petrov." He pulled his hand back after barely brushing Fera's extended paw. "Petrov's son," said Feta, trying to keep the disappointment out of her voice. "Come in." "Why, thank you. I was passing by, and, since my father has told me so much about you, I thought I should pass on his good wishes." Omegon gestured behind him at a black horse and two saddlebags. "If you would see that my belongings are taken care of." Feta stepped toward the horse, and watched it skitter backward. "Maybe Petrov forgot to mention that most animals are scared of me. You will have to take the horse to the stables yourself." "Very well," said Omegon, but two spots of high color stood out beneath his elegant cheekbones, and Feta didn't like his peevish tone. Indeed, apart from his appearance, she wasn't sure that she liked this young man at all. But she thought of his father and tried to stay civil. "The stables are over there," she said. "I'll be waiting for you at the main entrance to the castle." Ten minutes later, Omegon joined her at the castle doors. His mouth opened to a red "0" as he took in the marble hallway rising to the wide curve of the mahogany stairs. He swiveled his head to study the ornate ceilings, the details picked out in gold and silver, the sculptures and paintings, and the fifteen-foot tall crystal windows. His delicate pink tongue licked his lips once. "I see my father did not exaggerate the beauty of your castle." After a moment's hesitation, he added, "Or of your gracious ladyship, of course." Fera snorted before she could control herself. Petrov would never have described her as beautiful: sturdy, maybe, or muscular. Recovering some of her manners, she asked, "Have you journeyed far? Are you hungry?" "Two days' ride, and I confess I am a little hungry." Feta led him to the dining hall. Her feet left muddy tracks on the floor, and she was acutely aware that she must smell like a barnyard. She noticed Omegon's nose wrinkle once or twice, but when he was seated at the far end of the banquet table, he seemed to relax. Indeed his eyes positively sparkled after Feta had said "Dinner" and the dishes had filled with food. He took out a thin leather book from his pocket and flicked through the pages. "What is that?" asked Feta. He flushed. "Nothing, just a hobby of mine. I, ah, study the lore of enchantments." "I've studied the.history of enchantments, too, though I have been unable to find any texts that contain much more than hearsay." Fera leaned forward in her eagerness, a chunk of meat dangling forgotten from her claw. She caught a glimpse of the cover -- illustrated with something that looked like a frog -- before Omegon thrust the book away. "I'm sure my humble book wouldn't interest you, milady." His knuckles whitened on his silverware, and he sliced one neat portion of meat. He lifted the meat on his fork, and elegantly swallowed it. Taking a sip of wine, he added, "Has anyone ever told your ladyship how eloquent your eyes are?" Fera snorted. "I wouldn't have guessed that Petrov would teach his sons to be flatterers. Or did you come by it naturally?" Omegon had the grace to look discomfited. "It's not, that is, I do realize your ladyship's appearance is unusual. But there can be much beauty in the unexpected." Feta blinked. In the long-ago, men had whispered to her such sweet things as this young man did. But now, now either he had too much wine, or he was shortsighted, or he was a liar. She found herself hoping it was one of the first two. Even if only for one evening, she would like to be able to pretend that she was beautiful again. Omegon stood up, and rested his arms on the back of his chair. Smiling at her, he started to sing. "A flower in a garden, a jewel in a crown, ten thousand look for beauty where they know it will be found." His voice was pure and rich, taking the simple tune and giving it depth. Feta closed her eyes and listened. "A princess in a palace, a rainbow in the sky, let thousands look for beauty where they know it will be found. But I would see the cactus bloom, and I would see you smile, and know your love I'd found." Warm, sweet breath wafted over her face. Fera opened her eyes just in time to see Omegon lower his lips to hers, and she believed, yes, she believed that he loved her, as youth must surely sometimes love, wildly and without rational cause. For one moment his mouth pressed against hers, and then he stepped backward, his expression darkening. "You look just the same!" Feta touched her lips with the edge of one paw, probing the spot where he had touched her. There was a huskiness to her voice that she didn't recognize. "How else would I look?" The young man sank into a chair, and buried his face in his hands. "Beautiful, like a princess. My father was right. I'm nothing but a fool." The thin book slipped onto the table, and Feta saw the title "On Enchantments to Recover Ensorceled Princesses. From Frog Princesses to Beasts." She laughed, because anything else would have been too painful, and because she had been as much of a fool as this young man. More so, since she was old enough to know better. Not every curse can be lifted, even by a young man's kiss. "At least," said Feta finally, "you sing well." Face still hidden in his hands, Omegon muttered, "I am sorry, Feta, for lying to you. I, I think I'd like to leave now." And he ran from the hall without another word. Fera waited for him at the main gate, the book clutched tight in one paw. "I believe you forgot this." "Thank you." He hesitated. "That song, my father made it up when he came home. He thinks you found him too old and too boring. He thinks that's why you sent him away, but he never stops talking about you, on and on and on." The peevish note had returned to Omegon's voice, but Feta barely noticed. Something stirred in her, wildly and without rational cause. "Tell him I miss him. Tell him I would like it if he came to visit." And on a day in early summer, not so many weeks later, Petrov came riding to the castle. His hair was gray and his skin was wrinkled, and his knuckles were swollen with arthritis. But Feta found him beautiful enough. And if, in the darkness of some night, they held each other close for comfort, it is none of our concern. MARY SOON LEE MONSTROSITY A seagull flew through Fera's dreams all that night. Its wings stirred the air over her head, its cry stirred a yearning she could not name. Fera woke with that yearning, a wild, irrational thing that she thrust aside impatiently. Today would be as yesterday, and the day before, and the many years before that. Wishing wouldn't change that. She stood up from her bed, her claws clicking on the marble floor. Standing hurt her back. After a minute, she sank down onto four legs and padded into the bathroom. Gold and silver fittings winked at her in the winter sunlight. The mosaic floor showed lilies and yellow roses, and the amethyst of the royal insignia. Only in the cobwebbed splinters of the fractured mirror did Feta see ugliness. She made herself stare at her shaggy, brutish reflection, as she had every day but the first -- that long-ago day when she had torn through the castle, saliva slobbering down the matted fur of her face as she yowled in madness. Fera twisted the tap on with one awkward paw, and bent forward to let the water stream over her head. The chill water braced her, but something was wrong, an emptiness lurking inside her. With dripping wet fur, she paced out to the garden. Snow crusted the lawn, iced every twig and branch, frosted the edges of the winding paths. At her coming, the birds flew away, calling out warnings to each other: Alarm! Alarm! The monster approaches! Fera stalked across the snowy lawn, her damp clotting with frost in the piercing cold. She understood the bird's speech, and every warming call bit into her, hard though she tried to ignore them. But there was one friend who would listen to her without running away. She left the garden and entered the wood where Wolf lived. "Wolf" called Fera, her tail wagging in anticipation. No answer. "Wolf!" still no answer. Fera stopped and sniffed the wind, scenting for Wolf. There, to the east. But there was another smell too, a human smell, and an iron undercurrent flavoring the air. Blood. She raced toward the smells. Intruder: there was a human intruder. She came to a glade where a silver-gray carcass by gutted on the ground, where an old man crouched over Wolf's body, the warm blood coating his fingers, a knife in his hand. The man had not heard her approach. In a great leap Fera knocked him over. The knife dropped soundless into the snow. She opened her jaws over the wrinkled folds of the old man's thin neck. "Please," croaked the old man. "Spare me." And Fera paused her teeth dimpling his skin. Maybe because he didn't struggle underneath her, maybe because it had been so long since a human had spoken to her, she raised her head and let the old man free. She covered the fallen knife with one heavy paw. "Why? Why should I spare you?" The old man started as he heard her speak. He pushed himself into a sitting position, shivering. "I beg your forgiveness. I lost my way in the snowstorm. I was cold, I --" "You trespassed on my lands and murdered my friend." Fera looked at Wolf's still body. Her throat closed up, and she could not speak. The old man fumbled and pulled a leather bag from under his coat. "I have money I can give you in compensation --" Fera growled. "I don't want your money. You will come to my castle. If you are civil company, I shall let you live. If not--" She bared her teeth. "But my sons," said the old man, "my sons are waiting for me. They will think me killed." "I care not what they think," said Feta. With one claw, she ripped the gold chain that was all she wore from around her neck. Gently, she laid the chain on Wolf's open chest. Gently, she pressed her nose against his cold nose, and for the last time breathed in his deep, comforting odor. Then she turned to the old man and bared her teeth again. "To the castle." At supper that night, the old man sat at the. opposite end of the banquet table. His eyes widened as he studied the crystal goblets, the green jade bowls resting on the jade plates. He didn't ask why the goblets were empty, the plates bare of food. "Supper," said Fera. The banquet hall darkened for a moment, shadows appearing and disappearing in a heart's beat. When the light steadied, soup steamed in the bowls, roast beef waited on the plates, and raspberries and tangerines lay heaped beside jugs full of cream. "That's a useful trick," the old man said dryly. Fera grunted in reply. The old man was trying so hard not to show his discomfort with her, nor surprise at his surroundings. He had said nothing when he first entered the castle, but she had watched his gnarled fingers rub at the silks and jeweled ornaments, as if he didn't quite believe they were real. Now she watched as he lifted his soup spoon and sipped at it. Lowering her own head, she licked up the soup from her bowl. Over the rim of her bowl, she eyed the old man. He looked at her, looked back at his soup, looked at her again, and then picked up his bowl and drank from it directly. Feta raised her head, soup dribbling down her chin. "I won't be offended if you use the silverware." "Perhaps not, but I'd feel awkward," said the old man. And when he'd finished the soup, he picked the meat and vegetables up in his fingers. Neither of them spoke again until the meal was over. Then the old man said softly, "The wolf that I killed, could it speak too?" "Aye." Feta stared fixedly at the white expanse of the tablecloth. "I am sorry," said the old man. "I would give much to undo that slaying." Fera looked up from the tablecloth and met his gaze. "I would know your name." "Petrov. And yours?" "Fera." "And your friend the wolf's?" "I called him Wolf, nothing more." Silence fell between them again. The silence stretched into the second day, and the third day, and the fourth, broken only when Feta ordered supper, or Petrov asked a simple question -- where the towels were kept, or how he should clean his shirt. They spent most of the time in the library. Feta paged clumsily through book after book. Sometimes she was distracted by Petrov shifting in his chair, and she would glare at him, all the more irritated if he was too absorbed in his reading to notice. Sometimes she stared out the tall narrow windows at the snow, remembering how Wolf tossed his head when he was amused, the way the coarse hairs of his coat had shaded from red-brown to silver-gray over the years. On the fifth evening, Petrov looked up from a history book and asked quietly, "When may I go home?" Feta growled deep in her throat but said nothing. Firelight played in the hearth behind Petrov. He looked old and shrunken against the bright flames. "May I leave here in the spring?" "No," said Fera. She gazed into the flames, seeing a silver-gray carcass spread-eagled in the snow. "May I leave in the summer?" "No," said Feta. "You killed my companion. Now you will keep me company." Petrov raised his eyebrows. "Well, that makes perfect sense, seeing how much pleasure you're deriving from my company." His tone was dry, but when he turned back to his book something in the set of his shoulders, in the way the lines pulled in around his eyes made him look sad. Feta shook her head impatiently: why should she care how the old man felt? She picked up her own book, but her muscles ached, and she couldn't find a comfortable position in the chair. With a growl, she set the book down. "Do you play chess?" Petrov nodded slowly. "Will you play a game with me?" Petrov nodded again. "I'd like that." Feta showed him where the chess set was. Without any fuss Petrov set the pieces up, his gnarled hands still better suited to the task than Fera's paws. They played in silence, but Petrov smiled as he laid down his king at the end. "Good game. Do I get a return match?" And so they played another game, and played again the next day. A week later they were varying chess with backgammon and cards; a week after that they discovered a mutual interest in mathematical digressions. On dry days they shared brief walks outside, Petrov cocooned in a ridiculous abundance of scarves and sweaters. When it snowed they wandered inside the castle. Petrov liked to visit the art gallery on the second floor best. Each time the paintings were different, save for the one at the end of the first hallway: a portrait of a young girl with ivory-smooth skin, red lips curved in a smile, gold-bright hair. Petrov often paused there, and raised his eyebrows in question to Feta. But the spell held Feta silent: she knew that once she had been the girl in the portrait, but she could not speak of it, could not say anything of her life before the curse was laid upon her. In the third month of Petrov's stay, they were walking together in the garden. The lawn was mostly clear of snow, the air full of smells and growth and green. Feta sniffed busily, and pointed out the first crocuses, not yet in bloom. Petrov beamed, his mouth crinkling at the corners. He sat down on a bench, and rubbed at his left knee. "Spring's my second favorite season. Do you have a favorite?" "Summer." Feta growled softly, remembering warm nights spent in the woods, rolling over in the long sweet-scented grass. "Summer's too hot and proud," said Petrov. "I liked it best when I was a child. Then when I was a young man, I switched to preferring winter, just because no one else liked it. My wife ..." He stopped, and for a moment he looked frail and lost. "My wife liked autumn most, and now I do too, from harvest through to first snow. Crisp apples, the colors of the leaves, bonfire days. I remember her best in autumn." Feta scowled, her insides knotting up. Petrov was unhappy and she, she felt guilty. But she shouldn't -- he was the trespasser, the murderer. She thought of Wolf and tried to summon anger, but it twisted into grief. "I'll be back soon." She left Petrov alone, and ran for the cover of the trees. There in the shadowy gloom, where the snow still lay on the ground, she paced back and forth. She'd take Petrov to the gallery again this afternoon. He'd put this mood behind him soon enough. She turned it over and over in her mind, but it was useless. Guilt still ate at her. Finally, furious with herself, she galloped back to Petrov. "Go," she growled. A burning, prickling sensation tore at her insides. "You're free to leave. Take what you need from the castle -- boots, food." "My thanks." Petrov stood up. His face was stiff, unreadable. He laid one hand on her shaggy back. "I'll go home to my sons." "Aye," said Feta. "Do that." Petrov's hand tightened on her fur. "I'll miss you." Feta stared at him, but none of what she wanted to say would emerge. In the end, she just muttered, "Go." "I'll come back," said Petrov. "There's no need." Feta turned and walked away. In the weeks after Petrov departed, Fera stayed in the woods. She ate grubs and squirrels, mice and rabbits, taking fierce pleasure in their squeals as she caught them, savoring the blood-scent as she trapped small creatures in her claws. She did not speak. She tried not to think in words. Words were sharp-edged, the broken halves of conversations. At night she slept in the glade with Wolf's body, by now a cage of bones open to the rain and wind, the two of them silent. Gradually she lost track of time. It might have been a month later, it might have been two when she heard a distant clattering, the faint boom of the bell at the gate to her grounds. Petrov. Fera raced for the gates, muscles pumping the long mile till she reached the iron gates. Outside stood a young, exquisitely handsome man. His full lips curled in disgust as he looked at Feta, then altered to a forced smile. He held out one smooth white hand in greeting. "Good day, milady. My name is Omegon, son of Petrov." He pulled his hand back after barely brushing Fera's extended paw. "Petrov's son," said Feta, trying to keep the disappointment out of her voice. "Come in." "Why, thank you. I was passing by, and, since my father has told me so much about you, I thought I should pass on his good wishes." Omegon gestured behind him at a black horse and two saddlebags. "If you would see that my belongings are taken care of." Feta stepped toward the horse, and watched it skitter backward. "Maybe Petrov forgot to mention that most animals are scared of me. You will have to take the horse to the stables yourself." "Very well," said Omegon, but two spots of high color stood out beneath his elegant cheekbones, and Feta didn't like his peevish tone. Indeed, apart from his appearance, she wasn't sure that she liked this young man at all. But she thought of his father and tried to stay civil. "The stables are over there," she said. "I'll be waiting for you at the main entrance to the castle." Ten minutes later, Omegon joined her at the castle doors. His mouth opened to a red "0" as he took in the marble hallway rising to the wide curve of the mahogany stairs. He swiveled his head to study the ornate ceilings, the details picked out in gold and silver, the sculptures and paintings, and the fifteen-foot tall crystal windows. His delicate pink tongue licked his lips once. "I see my father did not exaggerate the beauty of your castle." After a moment's hesitation, he added, "Or of your gracious ladyship, of course." Fera snorted before she could control herself. Petrov would never have described her as beautiful: sturdy, maybe, or muscular. Recovering some of her manners, she asked, "Have you journeyed far? Are you hungry?" "Two days' ride, and I confess I am a little hungry." Feta led him to the dining hall. Her feet left muddy tracks on the floor, and she was acutely aware that she must smell like a barnyard. She noticed Omegon's nose wrinkle once or twice, but when he was seated at the far end of the banquet table, he seemed to relax. Indeed his eyes positively sparkled after Feta had said "Dinner" and the dishes had filled with food. He took out a thin leather book from his pocket and flicked through the pages. "What is that?" asked Feta. He flushed. "Nothing, just a hobby of mine. I, ah, study the lore of enchantments." "I've studied the.history of enchantments, too, though I have been unable to find any texts that contain much more than hearsay." Fera leaned forward in her eagerness, a chunk of meat dangling forgotten from her claw. She caught a glimpse of the cover -- illustrated with something that looked like a frog -- before Omegon thrust the book away. "I'm sure my humble book wouldn't interest you, milady." His knuckles whitened on his silverware, and he sliced one neat portion of meat. He lifted the meat on his fork, and elegantly swallowed it. Taking a sip of wine, he added, "Has anyone ever told your ladyship how eloquent your eyes are?" Fera snorted. "I wouldn't have guessed that Petrov would teach his sons to be flatterers. Or did you come by it naturally?" Omegon had the grace to look discomfited. "It's not, that is, I do realize your ladyship's appearance is unusual. But there can be much beauty in the unexpected." Feta blinked. In the long-ago, men had whispered to her such sweet things as this young man did. But now, now either he had too much wine, or he was shortsighted, or he was a liar. She found herself hoping it was one of the first two. Even if only for one evening, she would like to be able to pretend that she was beautiful again. Omegon stood up, and rested his arms on the back of his chair. Smiling at her, he started to sing. "A flower in a garden, a jewel in a crown, ten thousand look for beauty where they know it will be found." His voice was pure and rich, taking the simple tune and giving it depth. Feta closed her eyes and listened. "A princess in a palace, a rainbow in the sky, let thousands look for beauty where they know it will be found. But I would see the cactus bloom, and I would see you smile, and know your love I'd found." Warm, sweet breath wafted over her face. Fera opened her eyes just in time to see Omegon lower his lips to hers, and she believed, yes, she believed that he loved her, as youth must surely sometimes love, wildly and without rational cause. For one moment his mouth pressed against hers, and then he stepped backward, his expression darkening. "You look just the same!" Feta touched her lips with the edge of one paw, probing the spot where he had touched her. There was a huskiness to her voice that she didn't recognize. "How else would I look?" The young man sank into a chair, and buried his face in his hands. "Beautiful, like a princess. My father was right. I'm nothing but a fool." The thin book slipped onto the table, and Feta saw the title "On Enchantments to Recover Ensorceled Princesses. From Frog Princesses to Beasts." She laughed, because anything else would have been too painful, and because she had been as much of a fool as this young man. More so, since she was old enough to know better. Not every curse can be lifted, even by a young man's kiss. "At least," said Feta finally, "you sing well." Face still hidden in his hands, Omegon muttered, "I am sorry, Feta, for lying to you. I, I think I'd like to leave now." And he ran from the hall without another word. Fera waited for him at the main gate, the book clutched tight in one paw. "I believe you forgot this." "Thank you." He hesitated. "That song, my father made it up when he came home. He thinks you found him too old and too boring. He thinks that's why you sent him away, but he never stops talking about you, on and on and on." The peevish note had returned to Omegon's voice, but Feta barely noticed. Something stirred in her, wildly and without rational cause. "Tell him I miss him. Tell him I would like it if he came to visit." And on a day in early summer, not so many weeks later, Petrov came riding to the castle. His hair was gray and his skin was wrinkled, and his knuckles were swollen with arthritis. But Feta found him beautiful enough. And if, in the darkness of some night, they held each other close for comfort, it is none of our concern. |
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