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A princess of Landover.
by Terry Brooks.
IT'S ALL HAPPENING AT THE ZOO The crow with the red eyes sat on the highest branch of the farthest tree at the very back of the aviary, dreaming its dark and terrible dreams. Had there been substance to those dreams, they would have scalded the earth and melted the iron bars and steel-mesh netting that held it prisoner. Had there been substance, they would have burned a hole in the very air and opened a pa.s.sage to that other world, the world to which the crow belonged and desperately needed to return. But the dreams were ethereal and served only to pa.s.s the time and grow ever darker as the days wore on and the crow remained trapped.
The crow was Nightshade, Witch of the Deep Fell, and she had been absent from Landover, trapped in her current form, for more than five years.
She thought about it every day of her captivity. She sat on this branch, aloof and apart from the other birds, the ones that lacked the capacity for critical thinking, the ones that found some measure of happiness and contentment in their pitiful condition. There was nothing of either happiness or contentment for her, only the bitter memories of what had been and what might never be again. Her lost world. Her stolen life. Her true ident.i.ty. Everything that had been hers before she sought to use the girl child of the King and Queen for her own purposes.
Mistaya Holiday, Princess of Landover, was the child of three worlds-and of parents who knew nothing of what she needed or what she could become, who knew only to keep her from a destiny that would have made her the witch's own.
Even the sound of her name in the silent roil of the witch's thoughts was like the burn of acid, and her rage and hatred fed on it anew. It never lessened, never cooled, and she was quite certain that until the child was dead or hers once more, it never would. She might be kept a prisoner in this cage for a thousand years and might never regain her true form, and still there would be no peace for her.
In her tortured mind, the witch replayed the last moments of her old life, the way it had all been, had all ended, and had suddenly become the nightmare she now endured. The child had been hers: subverted and won over, committed to her new teacher of dark magic. Then everything had gone wrong. Set against the girl by circ.u.mstances and events beyond her control, she had tried to make the child understand and had failed. Confronted by the child's parents and allies, she had fought back with magic that had somehow been turned against her. Instead of the child being sentenced for insubordination and disobedience to banishment in a foreign world, she she had been dispatched instead, made over into the form of her familiar. had been dispatched instead, made over into the form of her familiar.
She had tried endlessly to reason out what had happened to make things go so wrong, but even after all these years she could not be certain.
The other birds avoided the crow with the red eyes. They sensed that it was not like them, that it was a very different species, that it was dangerous and to be feared. They kept far away from it and left it alone. Now and then, one of them erred and came too close. That one served as an object lesson to the others of what might happen if they failed to be careful. It was never pretty. It was seldom even quick. The other birds tried not to make mistakes around the crow with the red eyes.
Which was the best that Nightshade, Witch of the Deep Fell, could expect if she failed to escape.
Vince stood at the edge of the enclosure and studied the odd bird just as he had been studying her for the better part of the five years following her abrupt and mysterious appearance. Every day, right after he got off work-unless there was a pressing reason to get home to his family-he stopped for a look. He couldn't have explained why, even if pressed to do so. Woodland Park Zoo was filled with strange and exotic creatures, some of them species so rare that they had never been seen in the wild. The crow with the red eyes was one of these. Whether she was truly a species apart or simply an aberration was something ornithologists and experts in related areas had been trying to determine from the beginning, all without success. It didn't matter much to Vince. He just found the crow intriguing and liked watching it.
What he didn't much care for was the way the crow seemed to like watching him, those red eyes so intent and filled with some unreadable emotion. He wished he knew its story, but he never would, of course. Crows couldn't talk or even think much. They just reacted to the instincts they were born with. They just knew how to survive.
"How did you get here?" Vince asked softly, speaking only to himself, watching the bird watching him.
It had popped up at the local animal shelter, not there one day and there the next, come out of nowhere. He still wondered how that could be possible. The shelter was a closed compound, and birds didn't just fly in or out. But this one had. Somehow.
The experts had tried to trap it repeatedly after it had been transported to the zoo, hoping to get close enough to study it more carefully. But they should have thought of that before they released it into the aviary. All their efforts had failed. The bird seemed to know their intentions ahead of time and avoided all their clumsy attempts to get their hands on it. They had to content themselves with studying it from afar, which they did until more pressing and fruitful pursuits had turned their heads another way. If the bird had not been a bird, but one of the big cats or lumbering giants of the African veldt, it would have gotten more attention, Vince thought. There would have been more money for research, more public interest, something to drive the effort to learn its origins. Vince knew how things worked at the zoo. The squeaky wheel got the grease.
Vince watched the bird some more, perched way up there in the branches, a Queen over her subjects. So regal. So contemptuous, almost. As if it knew how much better it was than the others.
He shook his head. Birds didn't think like that. It was stupid to think they did.
He glanced at his watch. Time to be getting home. The wife and kids would be waiting dinner. There was a game on TV tonight that he wanted to see. He stretched, yawned. Tomorrow was another workday.
He was walking away, headed for the parking lot and his car, when something made him glance back. The crow with the red eyes was watching him still, following his movements. Vince shook his head, uneasy. He didn't like that sort of intense scrutiny, especially not from a bird. There was something creepy about it. Like it was stalking him or something. Like it would hunt him down and kill him if it were set free.
He quit looking at it and walked on, chiding himself for such foolish thinking. It was just a bird, after all. It was only a bird.
UNEXPECTED CONSEQUENCES.
Headmistress Harriet Appleton sat straight-backed at her desk, a huge wooden monstrosity that Mistaya could only a.s.sume had been chosen for the purpose of making students entering this odious sanctum sanctorum feel uncomfortably small. The desk gleamed gem-like beneath repeated polishings, perhaps administered by girls who had misbehaved or otherwise fallen afoul of the powers that be. Surely there were many such in an inst.i.tution of this sort, where fair play fair play and and justice justice were primitive, possibly even pa.s.se, words. were primitive, possibly even pa.s.se, words.
"Come in, Misty," Miss Appleton invited her. "Take a seat."
Said the spider to the fly, Mistaya thought.
Wanting nothing so much as to tell this woman exactly what she could do with her suggestion, she nevertheless closed the door behind her and crossed to the two chairs placed in front of the desk. She took a moment to decide which one she wanted, and then she sat.
Through the window of the headmistress's office, she could see the campus, the trees bare-leafed with the arrival of December, the ground coated with an early-morning frost and the stone and brick buildings hard-edged and fortress-like as they hunkered down under temperatures well below freezing. New England was not a pleasant place for warm-blooded creatures at this time of year, and the buildings didn't look any too happy about it, either. Hard to tell with buildings, though.
"Misty," the headmistress said, drawing her attention anew. She had her hands folded comfortably on the desktop and her gaze leveled firmly on the young girl. "I think we need to have a talk, you and I. A different talk than the ones we've had previously."
She reached for a folder, virtually the only item on the desk aside from the telephone, a stone image of an owl, and a school cup filled with an a.s.sortment of pens and pencils. There was a framed picture, as well, facing away from Mistaya. Although she was interested in who might be in the picture, she could not see without standing up and walking around to the other side of the desk, something she would under no circ.u.mstances do.
The headmistress opened the file and made a point of shuffling through the pages it contained, even though Mistaya was quite certain she had already read it enough times to have memorized the contents. Miss Appleton was irritating, but no fool.
"This is your third visit to my office in less than three months," Harriet Appleton pointed out quietly, voice deliberately lowered in what Mistaya could only a.s.sume was an effort to convey the seriousness of the situation. "None of these visits was a pleasant one, the sort I like having with my students. Even more distressing, none of them was necessary."
She waited, but Mistaya kept quiet, eyes locked on the other's sharp-featured face-a face that reminded her a little of Cruella De Vil in that dog movie. Were there no beautiful headmistresses in the schools of America?
"The first time you were sent to me," the headmistress of the moment continued, "it was for fomenting trouble with the grounds crew. You told them they had no right to remove a tree, even though the board of directors had specifically authorized it. In fact, you organized a school protest that brought out hundreds of students and shut down cla.s.ses for three days."
Mistaya nodded. "Trees are sentient beings. This one had been alive for over two hundred years and was particularly well attuned to our world, an old and proud representative of her species. There was no one to speak for her, so I decided I would."
The headmistress smiled. "Yes, so you said at the time. But you will remember I suggested that taking it up with either the dean of students or myself before fomenting unrest among your cla.s.smates might have avoided the disciplinary action that followed."
"It was worth it," Mistaya declared, and sat up even straighter, chin lifting in defiance.
Harriet Appleton sighed. "I'm glad you think so. But you don't seem to have learned anything from it. The next time you were in this office, it was the same story. You didn't come to me first, as I had asked. Once again you took matters into your own hands. This time it was something about ritualistic scarring, as I remember. You formed a club-again, without authorization or even consultation with the school teaching staff-to engage in a bonding-with-nature program. Instead of awarding patches or other forms of insignia, you decided on scarring. An African-influenced art form, you explained at the time, though I never understood what that had to do with us. Some two dozen scars were inflicted before word got back to the dean of students and then to me."
Mistaya said nothing. What was there to say? Miss Appleb.u.t.t had it exactly right, even if she didn't fully understand what was at stake. If you didn't take time to form links to the living things around you-things besides other students-you risked causing irreparable harm to the environment. She had learned that lesson back in Landover, something the people of this country-well, this world world, more correctly-had not. It was exceedingly annoying to discover that the students of Carrington Women's Preparatory were virtually ignorant on this point. Mistaya had provided their much-needed education in the form of a game. Join a club; make a difference in the world. The scarring was intended to convey the depth of commitment of the partic.i.p.ating members and to serve as a reminder of the pain and suffering human ignorance fostered. Moreover, it was accomplished using the sharp ends of branches shed by the trees that were part of the living world they were committed to protecting. It made perfect sense to her.
Besides, the scarring was done in places that weren't normally exposed to the light of day.
"I didn't see the need to bother anyone about it," she offered, a futile attempt at an explanation. "Everyone who partic.i.p.ated did so voluntarily."
"Well, their parents thought quite differently, once they found out about it. I don't know what your parents allow you to do in your own home, but when you are at Carrington, you have to follow the rules. And the rules say you need permission to form clubs or groups actively engaged on campus. The students are underaged girls, Misty. You You are an underaged girl. You are only fifteen!" are an underaged girl. You are only fifteen!"
Well, technically, perhaps. If you measured it by how she looked. Her real age was a matter of debate even in her own home. There was the age you were physically and there was the age you were mentally. There was the number of years you had lived and the extent to which your mind had developed. When you were born from a seedling nourished in the soil of a land where magic was real and a part of you, the commonly accepted rules about growth did not necessarily apply. No point in getting into that, however. Miss Harriet Half-Wit would never understand it, not even if Mistaya spent from now until the end of next year trying to explain.
"Which brings us to the present and the point of this third visit," the headmistress continued, shaking her head to emphasize the point. "Even I didn't think you would ignore my second warning about not acting on your own when it had been made clear to you that it would not be tolerated under any circ.u.mstances. What were you thinking?"
"Is this about Rhonda Masterson?" she asked incredulously.
"Yes, it is about Rhonda. It is exactly about Rhonda. She's hysterical! She had to be sedated by the nurse. Her parents will have to be informed. I can't imagine what I am going to tell them. That you traumatized their daughter by threatening her? That you scared her so badly that the entire school is talking about it? I am appalled, Misty. And I am angry."
Mistaya could tell that much. But she still didn't see the problem. "She called me a name. She did it in front of everybody. She did it to make me angry, and it worked. She got what she deserved."
"For calling you a name? What name?"
Mistaya tightened her lips. "I can't repeat it. I won't."
"But what did you do to her to frighten her like that?"
Well, that was hard to explain, and Mistaya knew she better not even try if she wanted to keep the truth about herself a private matter. Princess of Landover, born of a human come from this world and a sylph who occasionally turned into a tree-how could she explain that? Telling them the truth about her father was out of the question. Telling them about her mother might give some credence to her commitment to saving trees, but it wouldn't do much for her overall credibility. Telling them about her real life, which was not in Landover, Maryland, as they all thought, but in the Kingdom of Landover, which was another world entirely, would only lead to them locking her up for evaluation. There just wasn't much she could say.
Still, she had to say something.
She sighed. "I just told Rhonda that if she kept this up, I was going to get her, that's all."
But Harriet Appleton was already shaking her head in a sign of dissatisfaction with the answer. "It had to be something more than that to frighten her the way you did. You whispered something to her, and then-this is what some of the other students told me-you ... you did something else to her."
Other students. Rhonda's sycophantic followers, all of them blue-blooded East Coast snots from lots of money and little brains. They had been on her case since she arrived at Carrington, making fun of her, teasing her, pulling mean tricks on her, doing anything they could to make her life unpleasant. This time they had pushed her too far. Though forbidden to do so under any circ.u.mstances, she had used her magic. Just a little of it, but enough to make them sit up and take notice. A quick conjure of an image of someone she knew from Landover, someone they should hope they never encountered in real life.
She had shown them Strabo. Up close and personal. Especially Rhonda, who had been made to smell the dragon's breath.
"What is it that I am supposed to have done?" she asked, deciding to turn this around.
"The girls said you made a dragon appear right in front of Rhonda."
Mistaya feigned disbelief. "I made made a dragon appear? How am I supposed to have done that? Magic or something?" a dragon appear? How am I supposed to have done that? Magic or something?"
Miss Appleton frowned. "I don't know, Misty. But I think maybe you did what they said. You are an unusual young lady. You have demonstrated a capacity for commitment that exceeds that of the other students. You are a natural leader and a determined, if all-too-frequently reckless, advocate of the causes you believe in. Once you have set your mind to a task, it seems nothing deters you. You are a brilliant student. Your grades are excellent. If anyone could make Rhonda think she saw a dragon, you could."
She leaned forward. "The point is, you did something that terrified this girl. This isn't the first time you've broken the rules, and I am quite certain that if things continue on as they are, it won't be the last. I cannot have this sort of disruption. This is an inst.i.tution of learning. In order for that learning process to function as it was meant to, the students must adhere to the rules for proper behavior and apply themselves accordingly. I don't like using this term, but students must find a way to fit in fit in. You don't seem to feel that this is necessary."
"You're right, I don't," Mistaya agreed. "I think we are here to discover ourselves so that we can do something important with our lives. I don't think we're meant to fit in; I think we're meant to stand out. I don't think we are meant to be like everyone else."
The headmistress nodded and sighed. "Well, that's true for when you are older, but not for when you are in a college-preparatory boarding school like this one. Carrington trains you for growing up; it isn't a chemistry cla.s.s for the actual process. Not the way you see it, anyway."
She reached into the folder, produced an envelope, and handed it to Mistaya. "You are suspended from Carrington effective immediately, Misty. The details of the reasons for this are contained in this letter. Read it over. A copy has been sent to your parents. I have tried calling them, but cannot reach them at the home number. I suppose they are traveling again. I did reach a Mr. Miles Bennett, your father's attorney, and he promised that he would try to get word to them. But it might be better coming from you. You don't have to leave until the end of next week, when cla.s.ses are finished and the Christmas break begins."
"My parents ...," Mistaya started to say, then forgot the rest and went silent. Suspended? For making Rhonda Masterson see a dragon? This was ridiculous!
"I want you to go home and think about this conversation," Harriet Appleton continued, refolding her hands on top of the file. "If you can persuade yourself to become a student of the sort that Carrington expects you to be and if you can convince me that you can be one of those students, I will consider reinstating you." She paused. "Otherwise, I am afraid you will need to find another school. I'm sorry, Misty. I truly am."
Mistaya stood up, still in shock. "I understand," she said. "But I don't think it's fair."
"I am certain you don't," Miss Appleton agreed. "Go home and think about it. After you've done so, maybe you will be of a different mind. I certainly hope so. I would hate to lose you as a student at this school."
Mistaya turned and walked from the room. All she could think about was how angry her father was going to be.
She stalked out of the building into the midmorning cold, her frustration building incrementally as she replayed the particulars of her meeting with the headmistress and the events leading up to it. She didn't care all that much about the suspension. In truth, though she would never admit it aloud, she wouldn't care if she were expelled altogether. She hated Carrington and she hated the other students and she hated this entire world. It was her father's and not hers, but he had forced her to come to it, anyway. Talk about misguided thinking!
It's time for you to learn about places other than this one, Mistaya. You need to spend time with other girls your own age. You need to have your education broadened by travel and new experiences. Questor and Abernathy have done what they can, but now ...
Blah, blah, blah. Her father. Sometimes he was just too thick. She didn't need anything other than what she had in Landover, and she certainly didn't need the ha.s.sle of living in a world where there was never anything new or interesting happening. She hated the smells, the tastes, and much of the look of it. She hated her cla.s.ses, which were dull and uninformative. Who chose the subjects they studied there, anyway? Was there a single cla.s.s on connecting with nature in a meaningful way? Any material on the traits and cla.s.sification of mythical creatures? Was there any book that smiled on Monarchy as a form of government and suggested there might be more to it than beheadings and adultery?
Still, none of this would be happening, she knew, if she had been able to control herself. It didn't help that Rhonda Masterson had a building on campus named for her family and that she would be a fourth-generation alumna when she graduated. Carrington valued loyalty and wealth, and the Mastersons had both. She, on the other hand, had neither. At least, not in this world. She was a Princess, but only in Landover, a place no one here even knew about. She had no standing of the sort that Rhonda Masterson had. She was just someone to be brushed aside.
She made up her mind in that instant. If they wanted her to leave, fine, she would leave. But she wasn't waiting until the end of next week to leave; she was leaving right now. She was going home where she belonged.
She changed directions abruptly, breaking off her trek across campus to her English literature cla.s.s, and instead turned toward her dorm. A few other students pa.s.sed by on their way to cla.s.s, casting furtive glances, but none of them spoke. She stalked on, tightening her determination even in the face of what she knew would be waiting for her when she got home. She could already hear her father. But what could he do about it? She was suspended and she had been told to go home and that was what she was doing. He would have to live with it.
There was no one in her dorm room when she opened the door. Her roommate, Becky, had gone home for the weekend. A tall, athletic girl with a scholarship in basketball, she was always running home to her family in New York. Which was fine. Mistaya liked Becky. She didn't pretend to be anything she wasn't, and she wasn't afraid to let you know how she felt. Becky had been involved in every mishap Mistaya had organized since her arrival, a full accomplice in all her efforts. But Becky never got in trouble for it. She knew how to be a part of things without standing out. She knew how to blend in-something Mistaya knew she had yet to learn.
She sighed. Miss Appleton had pointed to Becky with pride as an example she would do well to emulate-a clear demonstration that the woman didn't have a clue about Becky's subversive side.
Mistaya began packing her clothes and her books and her personal effects, and then quit right in the middle of her efforts. Everything she cared about was back in Landover, not here. She left it all where it was and called a cab. While she was waiting, she wrote Becky a short note to the effect that this place wasn't for her and she wouldn't be back. Becky could have what she wanted of her stuff and throw out the rest.
Then she marched down the hallway to the front door to wait for her ride. She found herself smiling. She couldn't help it. She was excited about going home. The reason didn't even matter. It was enough that it was happening.
She rode the cab to the airport, caught a long flight to Dulles and then a short one to Waynesboro. Money wasn't an issue when you were a Princess of Landover. She thought about her life as she traveled, measuring the length of the road gone past and estimating the distance of the one yet to be traveled. It wasn't easy to do when you were half fairy. Her differentness from other girls was hard to overstate. Nothing about her life had proceeded in recognizable fashion. She had not grown up at a normal rate, not even by Landover's standards, her progress from infancy to girlhood achieved in quantum leaps. Talking at two. Walking at three. Swimming at four. Months Months, not years. Then status quo for almost a year, one of her many dormant periods when nothing seemed to change. She was in one of those periods just now, her body in a kind of suspended animation. Physically, she was a fifteen-year-old with a twenty-two-year-old mind. But emotionally, she was off in the Twilight Zone. She couldn't describe it exactly, couldn't put a name to what she was feeling, only that she was feeling something something. It was like an itch that kept working at her no matter how hard or often she scratched at it. She was restless and dissatisfied and hungry for something she didn't have but couldn't identify.
Maybe going home would help her figure out what it was. She certainly hadn't been able to do so at Carrington. All of her adventures with trees and nature and Rhonda had just been things to keep her occupied. Her subjects were boring and easy. She was already thinking and working at college level, so there wasn't much to be learned at a preparatory boarding school, despite what her father might think.
Mostly, she thought, she had learned to be rebellious and troublesome. Mostly, she had learned new and interesting ways to break the rules and drive the teachers and the administration crazy.
She smiled. If nothing else, it had certainly been a lot of fun.
On landing, she called a private car service and had a town car take her up into the Blue Ridge Mountains along Skyline Drive. The day was sunny and clear, but the temperature was way down in the thirties. The car drove with the heat on, and Mistaya shed her heavy coat for the duration of the ride, which ended twenty miles later at a wayside turnaround overlooking the George Washington National Forest, south of Waynesboro. A small green sign with the number 13 lettered in black, a weather shelter, and a telephone identified the location. She had the car pull over, slipped her winter coat back on, and climbed out. The driver gave her a dubious look when she told him he could leave, but she a.s.sured him she would be all right, that someone was meeting her, and so he shrugged and drove off.
She waited until he was out of sight, waited some more to be sure, and then walked across the highway to the trailhead and started along a winding path leading upslope into the trees. She breathed the sharp, cold air as she walked, feeling refreshed and alive. She might hate some things about her father's world, but not the mountains. Ahead, an icy stream that had slowed almost to freezing trickled down out of the rocks, the sound faintly musical. She found herself thinking of the weather in Landover, which would be warm and sunny. There were storms, rain and wind and gray clouds, and sometimes there was even snow. But mostly there was sunshine and blue skies, and that was what she was expecting today. She wondered how long it would take her to reach the castle, if she would find anyone to take her there or if she would have to walk.
She wondered, quite suddenly and unexpectedly, if Haltwhistle would be waiting to greet her.
The possibility that he wouldn't show up made her frown. She had been forced to leave him behind when she left for Carrington. Landover's inhabitants, human and otherwise, could not pa.s.s through the mists as she could. Her father was the exception, but that was because he had the medallion of the Kings of Landover, and that allowed him to go anywhere.
She, on the other hand, could pa.s.s through because of how she was made-an amalgam of elements culled from the soils of three worlds.
Making her different from everyone else.
She grimaced. Maybe her father would take that into consideration when he heard about the suspension.
STRANGE CREATURES LIKE HERSELF.
Mistaya continued to climb until the leafless winter trees hid all traces of the highway behind a screen of dark trunks and limbs and a thickening curtain of mist. The little falls had been left behind, and even the trickling sounds of its waters had faded. Ahead, the mist was growing more impenetrable, swirling and twisting like a living thing, climbing into the treetops and filling in the gaps that opened to the sky.
Had she not known what to expect, all this would have frightened her. But she had traveled between worlds before, and so she knew how it worked. The mists marked the entry into Landover, and once she pa.s.sed through them, she would be on her way home. Others who found their way into these woods and encountered the mists would be turned around without realizing it and sent back the way they had come. Only she would be shown the way through.