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Rapunzel: The One With All the Hair Page 8
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“Yes, I know. But when you hear what I have to say, you may feel differently.”
He looks doubtful, but I rush ahead.
“First tell me this: Had you ever seen that kind of bug before? The one that your son swallowed?”
He scratches his bald head for a moment and then says, “No, I don’t believe I have.”
“And when you said the Great Forest was quiet like after a rain, had it actually rained that day?”
He stops to think, then shakes his head.
I continue. “Is it possible the witch was the only person in sight because she scared everyone else away?”
He wrinkles his brow. “I suppose that is possible.”
I lean forward. “Steven, I have seen one of those giant flying bugs before. It was the day the witch showed up at my home to take me away. Three of them were flying around her head, but she didn’t shoo them away like anyone else would have. I believe the witch set you up from the very beginning. She handpicked you for your skills. She waited until you and your son were alone in the tunnels and then commanded one of those bugs to fly in his mouth. She knew you would run out into the open, and she made sure she was the only person you could go to for help. You are not truly in her debt at all.”
I hold my breath as I watch his expression change. It goes from doubt, to uncertainty, to consideration, to acceptance, and finally lands on fury. His green skin turns a deep purple.
“You are right,” he says, his voice shaking with anger. “She set me up. I owe her nothing.” He sits rock-still, seething. I am slighty afraid he will explode into tiny green pieces. Who knows if his species explodes when angered to such a degree?
I reach out and touch his arm. “Are you going to be all right?”
“All this time away from my family for nothing,” he says in measured tones.
“You can go home tonight, Steven. We both can.”
He leaps to his feet and starts pacing. “I believe something escaped your notice,” he says.
“What do you mean?”
“Think about it, Rapunzel. If the witch set me up, she set you up, too.”
“But I am here because of a deal she made with my parents.”
“Exactly,” he says, extending his hand and helping me stand. “Out of the blue, your mother suddenly craved rampion more than anything in the world, right? Even though she knew the only place to find it was the witch’s garden, which was off-limits. She did not consider your father’s safety by making him steal it, nor the welfare of the babe she was carrying, even though she had prayed for years to be with child. Now tell me: Is your mother the type of woman who would ever do such a thing?”
I stare at him for a moment, going over his words in my head. I can hear Mother clapping when I sewed my first pillow, and laughing when I tried to cook my first meal and wound up putting so much pepper in the roast that Father sneezed until the sun came up the next day. I can see her crying in anguish when the witch dragged me away. I have been blind to the truth this whole time.
“No!” I tell Steven, my voice rising. “My mother would never have put me or Father in harm’s way. Mother was bewitched! I am such a fool!” I fall to the floor and bury my head in my hands. All this time I thought my parents were to blame, when they were duped as much as I.
“Come, Rapunzel,” Steven says, kneeling at my side. “Pack up your trunk. It is time to take our leave of this place.”
In a daze, I do as he says. It takes only a moment to pack my meager belongings. I tuck a sleepy Sir Kitty into my dress pocket and stand back as Steven carries the trunk up to the attic with him, and then returns for me. He lifts me off the ground as if I weigh no more than a goose feather. When we reach the attic, I see what a dreary place it is. At least the tower room has a window. He hurries me over to the stairs and grabs his own oil lamp to light our way down the dark staircase. The stairs twist around in a spiral, and I am dizzy by the time he pushes the bottom door open. The warm breeze is the first thing to greet us. The second, about to step foot into the clearing, is the witch! Her gaze has not alighted on us yet, but it is only a matter of seconds.
“Run!” I tell Steven, pushing him away from me and grabbing my trunk from his hands.
“I will not leave you behind,” he insists.
“We must run in opposite directions. She cannot catch us both! Your family needs you. Go to them and hide where she cannot find you. I will figure out another way.”
He hesitates, and in that second, the witch sees us and starts running wildly toward the tower.
“Please, Steven,” I implore him. “Leave now, or both of us are doomed!”
“I will never forget you, Lady Rapunzel,” he says, kicking up a trail of dust as he runs into the forest toward home.
“Nor I you,” I reply to the wind.
I do not bother to run. There would be no point.
The witch is upon me in seconds, dragging me by the hair up the stairs. I am too exhausted to protest. Thankfully, Sir Kitty remains silent and hidden deep in my pocket. I am sure in her wrath the witch would not look kindly upon her. When we reach the open trapdoor in the attic, she tosses my trunk through it and I hear it crash to the floor below. I will not be surprised if she tosses me next. Tightening her grip on my hair, she says, “You are a stupid, stupid girl. I shall have to lock these doors, now that you know of the stairs. Who will feed you now?”
I had thought MY PARENTS would feed me now. I had never planned on darkening the witch’s doorstep again. But I am too miserable to answer her. I may never speak again.
“Off with you,” she says, fire in her eyes. She pushes me toward the trapdoor and I grab on to the rope and wrap my ankles around it like I have seen Steven do. It takes me much, much longer to reach the bottom, and when I do, my hands are raw from the rough twine. As I step over to my trunk, I feel a whoosh of air followed by a thump behind me. The witch has cut the rope.
“Now throw it out the window,” she commands.
All the fight now gone from me, I drag the rope to the window and push it out.
I am truly trapped now.
I am still in disbelief as I lead our horses to where Andrew stashed the tomatoes. This is not the Elkin I thought I knew. He now has a big grin on his face and is humming the tune the jester was singing the night we got caught. I am pleased by this turn of events, but I still do not fully trust him and will be watching him carefully. As we ride, I glance back and see him take the basket of arrows off his back and tie it to his saddle. I follow suit, and also stash my hat and cloak inside one of the saddlebags. Ah, much better.
“There it is,” Elkin sings out, pointing to a tree a few feet to our right. Andrew has hung the satchel on a low tree branch so I will not have to dismount. He is very thoughtful that way. I plan on giving him what is left of my portion of the treasure after Elkin takes his share. I shan’t be needing it. Not that Elkin would, either, but somehow I doubt he would be so quick to give it away.
I grab the satchel off the branch and am surprised at how light it is. I reach inside and pull out a paltry four tomatoes. There were supposed to be THREE TIMES that number. I reach in again and pull out a note from Andrew. With my back to Elkin, I read the note:
Prince, the garden was bare of tomatoes. I had to beg the head cook to give me these. I told him you and Elkin had to use them as target practice before the hunt. Sorry I could not provide more. Good luck! Your friend and loyal page, Andrew.
My first thought is to call the whole thing off. The book said that one tomato reaching its target would be enough to fell the troll, but it would give us little room for error.
“Do hurry,” Elkin says. “We do not know how long the hunters will remain in the forest.”
He is right. It is now or never. I stick the tomatoes into a saddlebag and hang the empty satchel back on the tree. The empty bag is the signal Andrew came up with to let him know the plan is under way.
“Ahem,” Elkin says, holding out his hands.