Monster said nothing.
When they stopped for lunch, it was by mutual agreement, on the crest of a hill. The valley below them flowed to the horizons in a rich patchwork of colors and textures, as varied as Monster’s pelt. The deep autumn air smelled like rotting apples and cold maple leaves.
? 247 ?
? Castle of Masks ?
“I don’t hunt my own lands often,” Monster said. “But every time I come through, I wonder why.”
“You get enough maiden steak to satisfy you,” Justus said.
Monster turned sharply to look at him. Justus regretted opening his big mouth, but Monster was quiet again. Justus sat on a stone and ate the lunch Valfrid had given him: some jam tarts and dried fruits, a rind of cheese and a skin of weak, once-warm wine. Monster devoured one of the turkeys.
“What, no salt or pepper for the cultured monster who reads?”
Justus asked, when Monster finished with the organs and moved on to crunching the bones.
Monster snorted, his steaming breath raising a cloud of feather fluff from his bloodstained snout. “This turkey thoughtfully ate some herbs, so it was already stuffed.”
Justus stifled a laugh and looked out into the woods. He wasn’t supposed to be enjoying himself. He should have shot Monster through the eye, while the Greve was eating. Now it was too late.
“What are you?” Justus asked suddenly.
Monster met Justus’s eyes. “I am this.”
“But how did you become this? Were you a baby monster, once?”
Justus persisted.
Justus’s arrows were lying within Monster’s reach. The Greve plucked one from the quiver and turned it over in his enormous fingers as he spoke.
“I will tell you a story,” Monster said. “Long ago, there was a rich man, a magnificent hunter, who tried to impress a woman with his prowess. He told her he would bring her a thousand beasts, and so he set about killing everything he could get his hands on—never two of the same kind. Squirrel, hare, grouse, deer, wolf, even fish and snake.
On the last day of his hunt, he killed an owl.
“The owl was a witch’s familiar. The witch found her pet in the rich man’s personal tannery, tacked up to dry on the wall. Devastated and bent on revenge, the witch set about stealing a piece from each of the thousand beasts, and sewed them into a cursed cloak.”
? 248 ?
? Cory Skerry ?
There was a snap, and Monster looked down at the arrow, which had broken into four pieces in his mighty grip.
“She presented this cloak to the rich man and told him that only the greatest hunter should wear it. When the arrogant Greve put on his gift, it transformed him into a bulk of muscle with a thunderous voice and immense strength, indistinguishable from the human he once was. The witch thought herself clever, because now the hunter had become a great prize. Surely another hunter would make short work of him to gain such a rare and strange pelt—but she underestimated the fears of men. No one wanted to risk their life, even when it became clear it would save the lives of others.”
Monster belched and got to his feet. “Forgive me, I didn’t think it would be so brittle,” he said, handing Justus the splinters of broken arrow. “Perhaps the head can be saved.”
Justus wondered what he thought he was doing. He expected to shoot down Monster with these feathered sewing pins? To stab him with his butter knife of a cutlass? Maybe the witch should have made a tinier, weaker monster with her curse.
When Monster took to the trail, Justus followed at a short distance.
Snow began to fall. It caked the hem of his dress, attracting more snow with annoying regularity, and Justus paused periodically to shake it loose so it wouldn’t trip him.
Once Upon a Time: New Fairy Tales Paperback
Tanith Lee's books
- A Coven of Vampires
- Vampire World 1 Blood Brothers
- Invaders
- The City: A Novel
- Sea Sick: A Horror Novel
- Reaper's Legacy: Book Two (Toxic City)
- Ravage: An Apocalyptic Horror Novel
- Property of a Lady
- Monster Planet
- Monster Nation
- Monster Island
- Lineage
- Kill the Dead
- Just Another Day at the Office: A Walking Dead Short
- Imaginary Girls
- His Sugar Baby
- Hellboy: Unnatural Selection
- Fourteen Days