Little Fur-Skin
A retelling
Once, in a great and vast land far from where we now sit, there was a grand kingdom.
It was a bountiful, blessΓ©d land, filled with mighty forests that grew in rich soil; the people were kind, glad and good, and they were magnanimously ruled by a loving, just king. Tall as an oak, with ginger locks and fine beard, when he laughed, the rumbles coursed like triumphant drum-beats across the land and stirred one and all with merriment. His queen was a fine and gracious woman, wise beyond the kenning of the kingdom's most cunning philosophers, and as beautiful and bright as the sun, so they whispered. The radiant, golden tresses she bore hung to her waist in soft waves.
It was said that she was so breathtakingly lovely there were none to equal her upon the Earth.
This king and queen were blessed with a daughter in their early years, whose hair shone with the same pure-gold light as her mother's, though she had her father's eyes. The princess grew sweet and wise both, but in her tender life she would face the greatest sorrow she had ever known.
Her mother, the queen, fell ill.
It was not a swift illness. Many doctors were called to the ailing woman's bedside; many remedies and treatments were tried to cure the queen, but nothing prevailed. The king offered rewards of gold, of land, of noble titles and knighthoods to
anyone
who could save his beloved wife, but none succeeded. The princess spent her days tending her mother with love and dutiful care, and though it eased the elder woman's suffering, both knew their days together grew short. The queen watched her daughter grow from precocious, energetic child to tempered, intelligent woman, all from her sick-bed. It was bittersweet for the queen, watching her daughter grow knowing she could not enjoy it as a parent should.
The princess reached her eighteenth year, and her mother soon came to know that her time had come. In a final burst of emotion and delirium so near death, she called her husband to her side and railed:
"After I leave this world, my husband, should you ever wish to marry again, you must promise!" The woman warbled, feeling the frigid touch of death upon her. "Promise me that you will only take a wife as beautiful and wise as I- and only if her hair is as golden as mine!"
She never meant it as a curse.
The king was stricken by this odd demand, but her distress was so clear, her wail so heartbreaking, he took his queen's hand and shushed her. She calmed under his touch, her rheumy eyes dropping shut.
"I promise, my darling. I promise. Rest now."
The queen fell quiet and drifted into sleep. The king hastened to the door and called for his daughter, so that they may say their final goodbyes before the hour came.
That lovely woman had faded through illness, but she did not lose all her worldly beauty, and no doubt carried it with her to the next. The princess and her father sat vigil at the bedside all night and wept, and before the next morning broke, the queen breathed her last, and finally found her peace.
Before long, all the traditional and necessary rites of death were undertaken, and the kingdom fell into a country-wide period of mourning. During those months of grieving, the king gave absolutely no thought to ever marrying again- he loved his wife, and his heart was in pieces at her loss. However, as the pain eased and the time passed, his advisors gathered and encouraged him to take another bride.
"The people need a Queen," they told him. "A new queen may give you a son," they pestered. Gradually the king healed enough to move forward, and he agreed to seek another wife.
Princesses and noblewomen from many neighboring kingdoms were invited to visit the king. He visited many lands in turn. Even peasant women and those of the middle castes were sought in hopes of finding a lady as beautiful and wise, with as golden hair as the late queen. Though the king understood the need to remarry, he would still honor his departed love by keeping his promise, no matter how strange he found it.
The search went quickly, but no one woman could meet his wife's request. The king met with wise women, beautiful women, and women with golden hair, but if they were wise and beautiful, they seemed not to match her shade- and if they had equally radiant locks, they were not as wise or fair as the late queen. The king grew frustrated, and as the search wore on, he grew despondent, grief rising once more.
While her father had mourned, and then begun his still-fruitless quest to find her mother's equal, the princess had been acting in place of her mother to aid and guide the people of the land. She was a dutiful young woman, then nearing her twentieth year, and she was learning rapidly how to be a good leader. In their king's apparent descent to madness, the citizens of the kingdom looked to their steadfast princess, and saw with open hearts that she had blossomed.
The princess had grown into a wise, clever, compassionate, beautiful woman, with her mother's lustrous, waist-length golden hair. She was the very picture of the late queen, and much beloved by the entire kingdom.
It so came that the king returned home after a long bout of traveling, still having found no bride. He'd become sick in his heart after so much failure, and he yet reeled from the loss of his wife. He feared he'd returned to find his dominion in shambles, his people miserable, but lo! They prospered, having found their harmony once more. Astonished, the king spoke with his advisors, asking how his subjects had remained so well, even as he suffered.
"The princess has done an admirable job of ruling in your absence, sire," his eldest advisor said. "She has become a wise ruler, and maintains order with kindness."
"And she has grown into a fine woman," said another idly, thinking only that the praise would cheer the king. "She is quite the image of her mother."
None of this was intended to worm into the king's distraught mind and cause him to consider folly, yet the words would not leave him. When he entered the throne room, where he would normally address his nobles and take audiences from his subjects and visiting dignitaries, he found his daughter there, offering counsel to a pair of quarreling farmers.
"Messire Laidon, Messire Millaran, since this jeweled necklace you brought me was found on the boundary between your fields, it belongs simultaneously to both of you and neither of you. Therefore, since it cannot belong to either of you alone, we shall pay a reward for its discovery, and each of you shall receive an equal share. The necklace was likely lost upon a voyage and I'm sure its rightful owner would like to have it back. Is this agreeable?"
The king watched with pride and awe as his comely daughter negotiated the truce between the men. The farmers agreed, and both of them departed with a heavy, jangling purse, content to have made a gain. The princess gave the necklace in question to the royal treasurer to be cleaned, and tasked a messenger to visit the nobles with an inquiry on the missing article. The king stood watching her every move, and at once realized that his daughter had grown up a wise, beautiful woman, with hair as every bit as golden as her mother's.
It was then a terrible longing seized the king's heart. His daughter finished her duty and greeted him with a warm smile. She was sad to discover the quest to find a new bride had still not succeeded, but being who she was, she reassured the king:
"Fear not, father, the right woman is just waiting to be found!" She pressed a kiss to his cheek and left to see about his supper and a hot bath to rest his weary bones. The man watched her go, his eyes fix'd to the curves of her body beneath her sapphire-blue gown. His grief eased as his body turned lascivious, and the knowledge remained stuck in his mind. The princess, his daughter alone, was her mother's equal. As the king stood, struck to the heart by the sudden bolt of his lust, long absent, he vowed to take his daughter to wife.
In his years of agony over love lost, never again to be found, the king had fallen ill in his mind and spirit. An immoral love for his daughter grew wildly, and even as he called his advisors to him mere minutes after she left the throne room, his cock was still hard as stone. He remained so as the men gathered, and he told them what he planned.
"I have traveled far, to many neighboring lands, and I have met many eligible women, yet the only one that is an equal to our beloved queen is my daughter, the princess. Therefore, I shall marry my daughter, and she shall become queen."
The royal advisors were aghast.
"This cannot be!" They cried. "Such a marriage is a sin against all Creation, and will surely bring ruin upon our kingdom!" The advisors' protests continued, as they were all horrified by the very idea. They pleaded with the king rightly until he grew angry and roared for silence.
"SO I HAVE SPOKEN, SO IT SHALL BE DONE!"