chapter 16
SIR STEPHAN was indeed talkative. He had a small manor in Frell, a wife, four daughters, and two hounds. The hounds were the joy of his life. "Smarter than pigs, cats, and dragons all rolled together," he said. As we rode, he recounted tale after tale of their bravery and cleverness.
"When do you think we'll reach the giants?" I asked when he stopped for breath.
"Three days, I should think."
The day of the wedding! And we might arrive after it ended.
"Can we go any faster? I don't need much sleep."
"Maybe you don't, and I'm eager to get back to those ogres. But the horse needs his rest. We'll go as fast as he'll take us."
I kicked the horse, hoping to spur him on and hoping Sir Stephan wouldn't notice. Sir Stephan didn't, and the horse didn't either.
Sir Stephan began a tale about exhausted horses and a charge against a dragon.
When he finished, I hastily changed the subject.
"Do you like serving under the prince?"
"Some might not fancy answering to a youngster," he said, "but I'm a toiling knight."
"What's that?"
"Not so noble I can't curry my own horse, nor so greedy I have no time to serve my king."
"Is Char a 'toiling prince'?"
"That's a good description of him, little lady. I never saw a lad, page or prince, so eager to learn to do a thing right."
According to Sir Stephan, Char was almost as wonderful as the hounds. He wasn't only eager to learn, he did learn, and quickly. He was kind. They had departed Frell late because of his kindness. The cart of a fruit-and-vegetable seller had overturned in the road ahead of them.
"When the seller began screeching that everyone would trample his precious tomatoes and melons and lettuces, Char had us right the cart; then he spent the better part of an hour on his hands and knees, rescuing vegetables."
"As he rescued me."
"You're a long mile prettier than a grape or a squash, and you needed a long mile less rescuing. I never caught an ogre so neatly before."
I turned the conversation away from me and back to Char.
"He's smart and he's steady, the prince is," Sir Stephan continued. "Too steady, maybe. Too serious, maybe. He laughs when there's something to laugh at, but he doesn't play enough. He's been with the king's councillors too much." Sir Stephan was quiet for a rare moment. "He laughed more in a morning with you than in two weeks with us. He should frolic with the young folks more, but they're on their best behavior with a prince." He turned his head. "Except for you, little lady." I was alarmed. "Did I behave badly?"
"You acted natural. Not like a courtier."
Manners Mistress would consider me an utter failure. I smiled.
WE SPENT our nights at inns. The first night I retired to my room soon after dinner. I set my Agulen wolf on the table next to my bed so he could protect my sleep. Then I opened my magic book.
On the verso was a letter from Hattie to her mother. On the recto, one to the same lady from Olive. I read Hattie's first.
Dear Mama,
is not my penmanship much improoved? I have been practicing my flurrishes.
The words may be harder to read, and Writing Mistress dispares of my spelling, but when you stand away from the page, is the result not charming?
Sir Peter's daughter has vanished. Madame Edith says she was called away in the night. However, I suspect that Madame Edith is lying and that Ella has run off. There was always something devious and deceetful about her, although her father is such a charming, rich man.
My new tresses are divine, and I emmerged among the other girls again two days ago when they arrived. I suspect my locks may have vanished with Ella. A hartfess prank to play on me, who always treated her with kindness. But I still hope she has come to no harm and has not been eaten by ogres or captured by bandits or caught fire or fallen into bad company, as I often imagine.
The rest of the letter recounted the compliments Hattie had received on a new gown. She ended with a farewell and the largest flourish of all
-- HATTIE
The recto:
Deer Muther,
I hav ben feeling poarly all week. I hav hedakes espeshly wen I reed. You allways say to much reeding is bad for the iyes but Writting Mistress wont lissen. She called me littel moar than an iddiot and sed ther will be no hop for me when I am gron if I dont lern to reed better.
Hattie says Ella was bad to leeve but I think she was bad not to tak me to.
Ella did everything Hattie toled her to. I wish peepul did wat I want. Its not fare.
Yoar
mizrubbel
dawter,
Olive
The whole page was full of blots and cross-outs. Each letter was formed with a wobbly hand, as though the writer didn't know how to hold a pen. Poar Olive!
Her letter was followed by a sad tale about the genie in Aladdin's lamp. He had been forced by Aladdin's false uncle, the magician, to take up residence in the lamp and had been given power to grant everyone's wishes but his own. Before he was captured, he had been in love with a goose girl. The genie spent his years in the lamp longing for her and wondering whether she'd married someone else, whether she'd grown old, whether she'd died.
I closed the book, weeping a little. I wasn't confined to a lamp, but I too was not free.
The size of things began to grow shortly after we started out on the third morning. In the past, objects far away had always appeared smaller than objects close by. But now, the old rule stood on its head. The trees near us were dwarfed by the trees in the distance ahead. At ten o'clock, I saw a pumpkin as wide as I was tall. At eleven, we passed one as big as a carriage.
At noon, we saw a giant. He was building a stone wall out of boulders. It was already twice my height, and I shuddered to think of the livestock it would pen.
When the giant saw us, he trumpeted his pleasure. "Oooayaagik ( honk)!" he called, dropping a rock and thundering toward us, his mouth open wide in a huge smile of welcome.
Our horse reared in fright, and I struggled to keep my seat, till the giant reached down and touched the beast gently on his muzzle. He quieted instantly, and even nuzzled against the giant's thigh.
"Aaaope! Aiiiee uuu koobee ( screech) ooob payiipe aau," I said. It meant "hello"
in Abdegi. "We've come to attend the wedding of Uaaxee's daughter," I added in Kyrrian. "But are we too late?"
"You're just in time. I'll lead you there."
The farm was two hours away. Koopooduk, the giant, strolled next to our horse.
"Is Uaaxee expecting you?" he asked.
"No," I answered. "Will she mind?"
"Mind? She won't be able to thank you enough for coming. Giants love strangers." He paused. "And friends too. Lots of friends and strangers will be there."
We traveled in silence for a while, with Koopooduk smiling down at us.
"Are you tired? Hungry?" he asked presently.
"We're fine," Sir Stephan said, although I was starving.
"Everyone is polite, except giants. We say when we're hungry. Never mind.
There's lots to eat at a giant's farm."
Uaaxee's house was visible an hour before we reached it.
"That's her house," Koopooduk announced, pointing. "It's nice, isn't it?"
"Enormously nice. Hugely nice," Sir Stephan said. "Don't you think so, lass?"
I nodded. My heart began to pound so hard I thought it would catapult me backward off the horse. Soon I might find Lucinda. Soon I might be free.
Ella Enchanted
Gail Carson Levine's books
- Die for Her: A Die for Me Novella
- The Wicked (A Novella of the Elder Races)
- The Twelve Days of Stella
- Stardust - Polvo de estrellas
- Home for the Holidays: A Night Huntress Novella
- A Betrayal in Winter
- A Bloody London Sunset
- A Clash of Honor
- A Dance of Blades
- A Dance of Cloaks
- A Dawn of Dragonfire
- A Day of Dragon Blood
- A Feast of Dragons
- A Hidden Witch
- A Highland Werewolf Wedding
- A March of Kings
- A Mischief in the Woodwork
- A Modern Witch
- A Night of Dragon Wings
- A Princess of Landover
- A Quest of Heroes
- A Reckless Witch
- A Shore Too Far
- A Soul for Vengeance
- A Symphony of Cicadas
- A Tale of Two Goblins
- A Thief in the Night
- A World Apart The Jake Thomas Trilogy
- Accidentally_.Evil
- Adept (The Essence Gate War, Book 1)
- Alanna The First Adventure
- Alex Van Helsing The Triumph of Death
- Alex Van Helsing Voice of the Undead
- Alone The Girl in the Box
- Amaranth
- Angel Falling Softly
- Angelopolis A Novel
- Apollyon The Fourth Covenant Novel
- Arcadia Burns
- Armored Hearts
- As Twilight Falls
- Ascendancy of the Last
- Asgoleth the Warrior
- Attica
- Avenger (A Halflings Novel)
- Awakened (Vampire Awakenings)
- Awakening the Fire
- Balance (The Divine Book One)
- Becoming Sarah
- Before (The Sensitives)
- Belka, Why Don't You Bark
- Betrayal
- Better off Dead A Lucy Hart, Deathdealer
- Between
- Between the Lives
- Beyond Here Lies Nothing
- Bird
- Biting Cold
- Bitterblue
- Black Feathers
- Black Halo
- Black Moon Beginnings
- Blade Song
- Bless The Beauty
- Blind God's Bluff A Billy Fox Novel
- Blood for Wolves
- Blood Moon (Silver Moon, #3)
- Blood of Aenarion
- Blood Past
- Blood Secrets
- Bloodlust
- Blue Violet
- Bonded by Blood
- Bound by Prophecy (Descendants Series)
- Break Out
- Brilliant Devices
- Broken Wings (An Angel Eyes Novel)
- Broods Of Fenrir
- Burden of the Soul
- Burn Bright
- By the Sword
- Cannot Unite (Vampire Assassin League)
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- Cast into Doubt
- Cause of Death: Unnatural
- Celestial Beginnings (Nephilim Series)
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- Club Dead
- Complete El Borak
- Conspiracies (Mercedes Lackey)
- Cursed Bones
- That Which Bites
- Damned
- Damon
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- Dark of the Moon
- Dark_Serpent
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- Darker (Alexa O'Brien Huntress Book 6)
- Darkness Haunts