Black Forest: Kingdoms Fall (18 page)

Read Black Forest: Kingdoms Fall Online

Authors: Riley Lashea

Tags: #Fantasy

BOOK: Black Forest: Kingdoms Fall
10.21Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Finger thrusting up at her, Cinderella glanced at the other dwarves, who looked at her as if she was a most horrific sight, and wondered if Big Papa was
not right. In the past, it had often been her inability to submit that had gotten her into her greatest trouble. If she had only let her stepmother say
those horrible things against her real mother, she never would have earned her fiery punishment. And, if she had just let Esteban touch her at his will,
she might have survived the coming night.

It was only in turning to meet Rapunzel's eyes, though, that it occurred to her what she had done, and the realization overwhelmed Cinderella so she could
scarcely speak.

"You will have to stay here," she said, every fear she felt since they entered the kingdom coming back to grip her.

"Not without you," Rapunzel whispered.

Cinderella shook her head in protest, but reaching out to her, Rapunzel stilled the motion. "We survived a few hours," she declared. "We will survive a few
more." But the tears that formed in her eyes contradicted the words.

"Lady-cries!" one dwarf shouted suddenly.

"No, no, no," cried another. "No lady-cries!"

Eyes falling from Rapunzel to the mass hysteria suddenly at their feet, Cinderella had no idea what they went on about, but she knew she would not allow
Rapunzel to follow her into the snow. She would tie her to the loft's ladder if that was what it took to keep her from going back out into the deadly
storm.

"If they go, I go." Snow White's voice came as surprise, and Cinderella looked over to find her bellybutton-to-nose with Big Papa.

"Fine!" Esteban raged. "Go then, Traitor. No one will miss you..."

"Esteban, close your stinking mouth," Big Papa ordered. His eyes turning to Cinderella, he clearly saw her something of a beast, but Cinderella was less
concerned with what he thought of her than with what he chose to do. "Just this one night," he returned to his original decision.

"What?!?" Esteban cried, pushing past the others to Big Papa. "You said it yourself. You said she would betray us when the tall folk came, and look it, Big
Papa, she is a traitor already. And that one is scary." He gaped wild-eyed in Cinderella's direction. "Don't let her stay here."

At the nudge to her ribs, Cinderella glanced at Rapunzel, who tilted her head toward Esteban in a manner that advised Cinderella to make amends.

"All right," Cinderella took a calming breath. "Perhaps, we could start over. Esteban, is it? You keep your hands to yourself, and I will keep my feet to
myself."

"Agreed, Esteban?" Big Papa asked when Esteban stared at Cinderella with burning eyes, a light growl rumbling through his chest.

"I still think she is scary," Esteban uttered.

"Just one night." Big Papa took Esteban's reply as acceptance. "Now, feed my face."

The matter closed, the rest of the dwarves followed Big Papa back to the table, but Esteban lingered to point two curved fingers at Cinderella as if he was
putting the hex to her, which succeeded only in making Cinderella smile, though she did think to wait until he was at the table to let it materialize.

"Thank you," Rapunzel breathed, clasping Snow White's hand gratefully.

"You did save my life," Snow White responded.

"Yes, thank you," Cinderella declared. "I feel I owe you a great debt."

Eyes drawn by the movement over Snow White's shoulder, she looked to find Esteban throwing an obscene gesture her way.

"And I do seem to have made a true enemy," she added. "Do you think he will kill me in my sleep?"

"Oh, do not worry about that," Snow White said with a small laugh. "You will not sleep."

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
Bucking Tradition

C
inderella and Rapunzel did not leave the dwarves' cabin the following morning, though, as dawn broke over the horizon, Esteban stood at the bottom of the
ladder yelling, "All right, all right. You've had your night. Now get up and get gone," and motioned with his thumb over his shoulder.

Watching Rapunzel lift her head exhausted and bewildered, to blink down at him, Cinderella simply rolled over and pulled the covers above her ear.

When the dwarves at last made their departure, Esteban did so with the heaviest stomps his small body would produce, and Cinderella went through all the
effort to raise her arm in one of the crude gestures Esteban had been sending her all night, only to have Rapunzel reach up and pull it down before the
dwarves could see.

It would be a few hours more before either of them stirred again, the grueling expedition of the previous day taking its toll. Despite Snow White's
assurance that they would not, they did, in fact, sleep, even with the dwarves' chorus of unpleasant noises. For, along with their thunderous snoring, the
dwarves did everything in sleep that they laughed about while they were awake.

Coming into consciousness with a dormant weight draped across her upper half, Cinderella glanced at the tousled flaxen tresses beneath her chin,
recognizing at once how blessed they were to be waking in such a sheltered state when the day before had looked so bleak. The loft was exceedingly cozy in
comparison to sleeping conditions Cinderella had known and those that could have been. Aside from Rapunzel's tower, it was the most comfort she had known
in many years, and she would have liked it for eternity, but, chest tingling where Rapunzel was heavy atop it and stomach starting to growl, she knew the
feeling could not last.

Reluctantly lifting Rapunzel off to resettle her against one of the pillows, Cinderella watched light eyes unsheathe, fixing her with a miffed, confused
look.

"Sorry," she whispered, as Rapunzel's expression melted back into a sleepy smile, a warm hand closing around Cinderella's wrist as her eyes fell closed
again.

Heart clenching at the small, unconscious gesture, Cinderella studied Rapunzel in sleep, unable to fathom what she had done to be worthy of such a kind,
beautiful soul constantly reaching out for her.

Reluctantly breaking the delicate hold, she rose to her knees to peer past the railing, but saw Snow White nowhere. Stepping carefully over Rapunzel's
sleeping form, Cinderella discovered Snow White halfway down the ladder, sprawled next to the fire with a large sheet of parchment blank on the floor
before her.

"Good morning," she called softly, springing from the second rung to the dirt floor, but Snow White did not answer. "Good morning," she raised her voice a
notch, but Snow White continued to stare into the fire without so much as a blink.

Watching her back rise and fall, Cinderella decided she was more alive than the night before and drifted about the cabin, taking in its piles of things.
Among the food supply, she found a hefty late-season tomato and rubbed it against her borrowed nightgown, the fabric too soft not to have been stolen from
someone of substantial financial means.

"May I eat this?" she asked, but again Snow White failed to respond. Stepping over her, Cinderella bent to stare into Snow White's eyes, which looked right
through her, as if they did not see her at all. "Hello," she prodded, hand waving before Snow White's face. When she continued to stare unflinchingly,
Cinderella knew whatever Snow White was looking at was not in front of her at all, but somewhere inside her head.

With a sigh, she left the girl to her meditation, placing the tomato on the table, hungry enough for her stomach to give another low growl, but not hungry
enough to eat something apportioned for the night's meal and give the dwarves another reason to throw her out into the storm that had howled late into the
night.

As she pressed back the wood tie that held the window shut, the shutter fell open, and Cinderella peered out at the forest. "Wow!" she exclaimed with
enough surprise that Rapunzel groaned and shifted in the loft.

A blanket of snow, so thick it nearly reached the bottom pane, met her vision, and any belief Cinderella held that they could have survived the night
without shelter disappeared as she watched a gust of wind pick up the upper layers of snow and blow it across the land.

"Quite a snowstorm, is it not?"

The question invaded the silent cabin so suddenly Cinderella startled into the window, cracking her head against the sturdy wood pane, wondering how many
head knocks she could withstand before she went completely simple.

"Oh, I am sorry," Snow White said. "I always seem to hurt people lately when I fall deep into thought."

"Who else have you hurt?" Cinderella questioned, rubbing her eye with the ball of her hand as she turned from the window.

"Well," Snow White said, pushing to her knees, "a few nights ago when the dwarves returned home, they had been trying to clap me out of my state for quite
some time. When I did come to, I frightened Esteban so greatly he stumbled into the fire."

Pain and faintness dissipating instantly at the thought of Esteban running around with his pants ablaze, Cinderella laughed. "I cannot believe the dwarves
go out in such weather," she said, glancing back to the window. "Do they not sink right to the bottom?"

"Snow shoes," Snow White grinned. "They traipse right over it. I am sure today they will do some of their finest work with the explorers certain to be
trapped by the weather."

"Ah," Cinderella returned. "I knew the little ones were not on the up and up." Moving back to the table, she snatched the tomato from its edge. "May I eat
this?"

"Yes, of course," Snow White replied, but Cinderella heard only the first word before sinking her teeth into the generous fruit's side.

"What are you drawing?" she asked around a most satisfying bite.

"Nothing," Snow White sighed heavily.

"Then, what are you thinking so hard about drawing?" Cinderella questioned, chew slowing in concern as she watched Snow White withdraw into herself.

For a time, Snow White said nothing. She only stared at the parchment, as if willing her image to draw itself. "My mother," she finally replied, and
Cinderella heard the nearly imperceptible catch in her voice, the same catch she always felt in her own throat each time she spoke those words.

"She is dead," Cinderella uttered.

"Since I was very little," Snow White returned quietly. "I had forgotten what she looked like... until the night I came here. I was alone in the forest.
Scared. Death, it was chasing me. Then, my mother appeared, like an angel, and led me here. I hoped to sketch her before I forgot what she looked like
again, but I seem to have already forgotten."

Pulling the nearest chair from the table, Cinderella's knees felt weak as she sunk down onto it, setting the tomato on the table's edge. Opening her mouth
to speak, she closed it again, not sure what she wanted to say. She had never been good at telling people the truth of her life, until Rapunzel, and, even
with Rapunzel, it was not always easy.

"My mother died when I was young too," she finally said.

"Oh," Snow White breathed, eyes finding Cinderella's. "What happened to her?"

"She just got sick," Cinderella shrugged, glancing away, fearing the questions that always seemed to follow the announcement. When Snow White did not ask
any, Cinderella knew it was because she already knew their answers. "So, how long is winter in this kingdom?"

"What do you mean?" Snow White's brow furrowed slightly, and Cinderella felt a sliver of anxiety as she realized she may have said too much. "You are not
from this kingdom?"

"No," Cinderella replied carefully.

"You are from Fitzburg, then?" Snow White asked, and Cinderella thought to borrow the lie. Looking to the loft, she wondered if Fitzburg was a good place
to be from to keep Rapunzel safe.

"Jaxtonia?" Snow White tried again when Cinderella took too long in answering.

Returning her gaze to Snow White's expectant expression, Cinderella imagined how false life would feel if she had to lie her way through the rest of it. "I
have heard of neither of those places," she confessed.

"Then, where do you come from?" Snow White looked at her with simple curiosity, and Cinderella weighed the potential consequences of telling the truth,
before deciding, without truth, there was no reason to have run from Naxos, or from Troyale for that matter, where untruths were in ample supply.

"I come from a kingdom called Troyale," she replied, wanting nothing more than to trust Snow White. "And Rapunzel, she is from a kingdom called Naxos."

Staring at her as if she spoke gibberish, Snow White gave a sudden, spurting laugh. "Are you making that up?" she questioned.

"No," Cinderella assured her.

"But I have not heard of either of your kingdoms either," Snow White returned, and Cinderella knew she must tread lightly, for there were many things
people feared, but none so much as those things they did not understand.

"I know," she uttered. "Rapunzel and I... we did not arrive in this kingdom in what one might call a usual way."

"Then, how did you arrive?" Snow White questioned at once, and Cinderella tried to swallow past the vines that formed inside her throat.

"The season after my mother died," she started, deciding the entryway of the cow best saved for another time, "when blades of green pushed up through the
earth, I planted a tree at my mother's grave. Recently, there was a festival in my kingdom, and my stepmother and stepsisters did not want me to go. When I
went to my mother's grave, a dress descended for me and I was made clean and unblemished."

"Like magic?" Snow White asked in awe.

"Yes," Cinderella nodded. "like magic."

"Once at the festival, the prince..." Cinderella searched for the words to explain. "He was drawn to me and refused to take other partners."

"A prince?" Snow White enthusiastically asked.

"Yes," Cinderella replied. "I do not know what he desired in me."

"I do."

Smile coming softly to Cinderella's lips, she glanced to where Rapunzel looked down from the top rung of the ladder. "How long have you been awake?"

"Long enough," Rapunzel said, continuing down the ladder and sliding into the chair next to Cinderella to take up the eating of the tomato, her free hand
warm on Cinderella's thigh through the fabric of the borrowed nightgown.

Other books

Freeze Frame by Peter May
The Long Result by John Brunner
La madre by Máximo Gorki
Clockwork Blue by Harchar, Gloria
The Alien Years by Robert Silverberg
Christmas Nights by Penny Jordan
The Long Descent by John Michael Greer