Once upon a time is a stupid way to begin a story. And nobody, absolutely nobody in the history of the world has ever lived ever after, happily or otherwise. It's all nonsense. The fact is, "once upon a time" is just another way of saying "I'm skipping a lot of important bits to get to the fun part."
Which is fine.
A proper story starts somewhere in the middle, and ends just a little later than the middle. It leaves out all sorts of important, uninteresting things in the beginning, like how the heroine became the morbid, sorry person that she was, and how of course she didn't smile, after all what did she have to smile about?
Then it tells of the intriguing and entertaining challenges and torments that truly tested her patience, but given all of the sorrows and trials she's already seen in her sad, sorry existence, she's predictably well prepared. She rises to the occasion so that everyone can learn a good life lesson from her perseverance and ingenuity, without having to actually live through all of the stress and discomfort and really, it must be said, years of absolute hopelessness that she actually endures.
And then the poor girl is left hanging, presumably with a glowing future ahead of her. But they don't actually tell you about that, which would be the only truly fun part, at least for the heroine, because in reality she has to pick up the pieces of a shattered life, and then live for some while after, though certainly not ever after, while everyone else goes off for a calm bite of bread pudding and a nice cup of tea, with honey, and then a good night's rest.
But that's just the way it has to be.
So, fine. Here we go. Once upon a fucking time...
* * *
Prince Charming was anything but, unless you are into pandering to a self absorbed, narcissistic twit in exchange for lavishing yourself in his substantial wealth. He didn't ride a white charger. He was pulled around in an ornate, comfy carriage, and a new one every year, certainly, like a spoiled toddler pulled about screaming and sniveling in a shiny, new, red wagon. He didn't even carry a sword. He had expendable people to do that sort of thing for him. Anyway, swords were sharp. Incompetent idiots should not be allowed near sharp tools, unless you want to be rid of them once and for all.
There was no grand ball. All of the ladies didn't dress up in beautiful, flowing gowns, trying to win his attention simply by radiating beauty, which he sagely ignored because he looked into their inner souls and saw their innate ugliness. What they did, instead, was to try to get his attention, and they succeeded, simply by exposing their cleavage, boosted by wearing breath seizing bustiers, and by squealing loudly and enticingly as he fucked them in any corner of the palace that was conveniently semi-private.
His father certainly didn't give him the chance to choose his own bride. No, his bride was chosen even before he was born, as dictated by political necessity. That hardly mattered, however, because he would of course have as many young mistresses as we wanted, when the time came. That was where the radiating beauty part came in. If you wanted to be able to tell your friends that you'd been banged by the prince, then beauty, or dressing and flirting like a slut, or just plain flashing your tits, was your ticket.
Let's face it, Prince Charming was, and always would be, a complete fuck.
* * *
"Asswipe!"
The shrew bellowed the name, ending the last syllable in a long, drawn out shriek that turned blood to vinegar.
"Asswipe! Dump the spittoons and the chamber pots! They smell to high heaven. Stop putting it off, and do it now!"
Again, that last was said with another drawn out shriek that turned yet more blood to vinegar.
The words grew louder, along with stomping footfalls, warning of the dragon's impending approach. She wasn't a dragon, really, she was her mother, but it helped to think of her as a dragon. If she was a mother, then the world was too far gone to be bothered with, and checking out of the world just now simply didn't seem like the way to go. At least, not yet.
"Asswipe? Asswipe! Where the fuck are you?"
Aswen shoved the copy of Military Stratagems with Political Considerations back into its spot on the shelf. She'd gotten through seven pages this time before being interrupted, a record for the month.
Asswipe, as she was called, did not have an evil step-mother and two cruel, selfish step-sisters. No, she had an evil real mother, one that corrected and ordered and bellowed and sincerely commented. She didn't criticize, she commented. "I'm not saying this to be cruel," she would begin, "I'm just saying that if you did something, anything, really, with your hair, well, everyone might not look down on you quite so much. Although there really isn't much you could do, I suppose. It's a shame, really. I don't know how Nelly got such nice hair, and you got that."
The word "that" dripped off her tongue like spittle.
Not that her own motherly version of kindness was reserved exclusively for Aswen. She had plenty of love to go around. It wasn't that Aswen was the least favored. All of her sisters were treated equally. Their mother picked at all of her children as if they were scabs, peeling back the ugly, crusty bits that had formed from repeated tongue lashings, only to open the wound and start the bleeding all over, with one more lucky chance at a burning infection from which they might never recover.
"Asswipe, so help me God, if you're pretending to read again..."
Oh, and yes, Aswen wasn't nicknamed anything so quaint and back handedly pretty as "Cinder Ella." That would be far too kind.
Aswen also had seven siblings, not two, all sisters, and every one of them as nasty and selfish and grasping has her own mother. Hell, Aswen was that way herself, really. You had to be. When you had seven siblings, and you spent thirteen hours a day waiting hand and foot on the laziest, stupidest, most obscenely disgusting royal family any kingdom had ever known, well, you learned to take what you could get, when you could get it, without hesitating. If you waited for someone to hand it to you, you died young and emaciated and, well, you really just got what you deserved. The world would be a better place with you out of the God damned way.
"Asswipe," her mother screamed as she burst into the room like a seething storm wave. That was really the only way she knew how to enter a room. If she wasn't all sound and fury, she was asleep. In fact, she even slept with sound and fury, which made sleeping hard on everyone else.
Before she could begin the same tired, old tirade, Aswen slipped into, through and past what narrow space was left between her voluminous mother and the door jamb, with one heavy, tall, bronze spittoon, sloshing with a noisy, revoltingly slimy sound, cradled in two wiry but necessarily strong arms. She made a show of bumping one shoulder into the wooden archway, then almost spilling the contents of the spittoon, before clumsily recovering, with apparent luck, just in the nick of time.