Someday my prince (princess?) will come
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Author's Note
I've been in a bit of a silly mood again and this time it has resulted in a fairy tale. It's a strange fairy tale, full of anachronisms, princesses who talk to animals, a ninja, and bits of my oddball humor. And it's all topped off with a suitably romantic fairy tale ending. There's also quite a build up before you get to the juicy bits, so hang in there.
Enjoy,
Wax Philosophic
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The events and characters in this story are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
All characters are at least eighteen years of age, and you should be too if you're reading this.
*
Long, long ago, in an enchanted forest
Princess Lingonberry woke to golden light of morning streaming through the window of her spacious bed chamber high atop the castle where she lived. She threw aside the cozy goose down comforter, sat up and stretched, basking in the glorious warmth of the sun as its shining rays played upon her creamy white skin and silken sheets.
Half a dozen goldfinches floated effortlessly through her bedroom window, singing a happy song and clutching in their tiny talons a crown of the finest laurel branches that they had fashioned in the forest only moments ago. With a gentleness befitting a princess, they placed the crown atop her golden hair that was already shiny and full of body despite the fact that she had only recently awakened.
Princess Lingonberry smiled and raised her long slender index finger into the air and beckoned one of the birds to alight. The tiny creature landed and turned to face her as she spoke. "Good morning my fine feathered friend," she said. "Please thank your brothers and sisters for this beautiful crown that you have made for me on my wedding day. I shall cherish it always."
The little bird tweeted its happy reply and then flew off to relay the joyful news to the rest of the flock. Because of course it is known that all princesses speak bird, and there's at least one bird in every bunch that is fluent in princess.
"O Glorious day!" Princess Lingonberry said to no one in particular. And it was, for today on her eighteenth birthday, she was to be wed in an opulent ceremony taking place this very evening, right here on the castle grounds. Nothing could possibly spoil her mood on such a fine morning. Nothing except for ... O Bother. What was that racket?
The princess sprang from her bed, put on her dressing gown and floated gracefully to the window. She looked down upon the courtyard below and spied the source of the disturbance, clad in a black dress and a severe black corset topped off with a long black cape, its starched collar standing straight up.
So much dreary black clothing could only mean one person. Mother's step-sister Luna. And accompanying her as always, was her snarling beast of a dog. She was going to ruin everything.
"I will not have that woman and her mutt ruining my wedding day," the princess muttered as she stormed down the wide spiral staircase, her silken slippers swishing against the fine Italian marble.
"What is that woman doing here!" Lingonberry demanded of her parents as she burst into their throne room. "Who invited her? It certainly wasn't me. She's going to ruin everything! That -- that mutt will surely slobber on my wedding cake!"
The princess glared at her mother and father who saying nothing, hung their heads, refusing to meet their daughter's gaze.
"Mother! Father! Do something. Tell her she cannot come to my wedding. She's not invited! I won't allow it!"
The princess's tirade was met by a long and uncomfortable silence. It was her father who spoke first. Though still dressed in his kingly robes and perched upon his royal throne, he somehow looked smaller than the man she knew. Tired. Defeated.
"I'm sorry Lingonberry," he said, "but we cannot send her away."
"Why not?" the princess demanded. "It is my wedding day, and I say she is to be chased back to that dark and dreary tower she calls home."
The king hung his head in his hands. "I'm sorry my daughter, but it is not such a simple matter."
"O Daddy, do tell your men to send her away! I will not have her here. Not today. Not ever!"
"My dear Lingonberry, how shall I tell you this?" The king stood and stepped toward the princess with outstretched arms.
Princess Lingonberry drew back. "Unless you're going to tell me she is leaving, save your breath Father."
"Dearest," her mother spoke. "What your father is trying to say is that we were not always so well off as we are now ..."
"And the payments on the castle were more than we anticipated," her father put in. "We thought we landed a great deal on an adjustable rate mortgage, and then everything went to hell in a handbasket. Rates went up, the bottom fell out of the market ..."
"My dearest, the fact is that we needed money. And my step-sister Luna -- well, she offered to help us out. And in return, on your eighteenth birthday ..."
"Save it mother. I'm not interested."
"O You will be, deary. You will be," Luna's voice cackled as the doors to the throne room burst open. A pale-skinned woman with a headful of untamed raven and silver hair strode into the room, cape billowing out behind her, the heels of her black leather boots clicking on the marble tile and echoing throughout the hall.
Behind her, a breathless armor-clad guard threw up his hands and shrugged. The king waved him off and he slunk away, closing the door behind him.
Luna stepped forward.
"One year, no more," the queen said, spitting defiance as she stood.
"That was the deal, dear sister. And I shall honor it."
"Do not call me that. No relation of mine would ever be so cruel as to take a child from her mother."
Luna raised her nose in the air. "Come along now, Lingonberry. See you next year, dear sister. Tah-tah and all."
And with that the woman in black spun on her heel and strode off as quickly and as purposefully as she had entered. She left with the struggling Princess Lingonberry securely in her grasp and the snarling wolf-hound bringing up the rear.
*
That same day, on the other side of the forest
Princess Solange stood just outside her family's castle beside a grand and gilded carriage that was harnessed to a pair of sleek white Arabian geldings. She clutched a tall mug of latte in her hand, and after taking a long pull on the mug, she wiped the foam from her lips with the back of her hand.