How to Fracture a Fairy Tale

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How to Fracture a Fairy Tale Page 16

by Jane Yolen


  It was midmorning before Grandfather Dragon moved. He had been up most of the night thinking, checking the wind currents for scents, keeping alert for dangerous sounds carried on the air. When morning had come, he had moved away from the cave mouth and fallen asleep. When Grandfather awoke it was in sections. First his right foreleg moved, in short hesitations as if testing its flexibility. Then his left. Then his massive head moved from side to side. At last he thumped his tail against the far rocks of the cave. It was a signal the little dragons loved.

  Sskarma was first to shout it out. “The story! He is going to tell us the story!” She ran quickly to her grandfather and curled around his front leg, sticking her tail into her mouth. The others took up their own special positions and waited for him to begin.

  “And what good was this gift of sound?” asked the old dragon at last, picking up the tale as if a night and half a day had not come between tellings.

  “What good?” asked the little dragons. Sskar muttered, “What good indeed?” over and over until Sskitter hit him on the tip of the nose with a claw.

  This gift of sound said Grandfather Dragon which made the creature king, could be used in many ways. He could coax the birds and beasts into his nets by making the sound of a hen calling the cock or a lioness seeking the lion or a bull elk spoiling for a fight. And so cock and lion and bull elk came. They came at this mighty hunter’s calling, and they died at his hand.

  Then the hunter learned the sounds that a dragon makes when he is hungry. He learned the sounds that a dragon makes when he is sleepy, when he looks for shelter, calls out warning, seeks a mate. All these great sounds of power the hunter learned—and more. And so one by one the lesser dragons came at his calling; one by one they came—and were killed.

  The little dragons stirred uneasily at this. Sskarma shivered and put her tail into her mouth once more.

  So we dragons named him Ssgefah, which, in the old tongue, means “enemy.” But he called himself Man.

  “Man,” they all said to one another. “Ssgefah. Man.”

  At last one day the Great-Grandfather of All Dragons looked around and saw that there were only two dragons left in the whole world—he and his mate. The two of them had been very cunning and had hidden themselves away in a mountain fastness, never answering any call but a special signal that they had planned between themselves.

  “I know that signal,” interrupted Sskitter. She gave a shuddering, hissing fall of sound.

  The old dragon smiled at her, showing 147 of his secondary teeth. “You have learned it well, child. But do not use it in fun. It is the most powerful sound of all.”

  The little dragons all practiced the sound under their breaths while the old dragon stretched and rubbed an itchy place under his wing.

  “Supper!” hissed Mother Dragon, landing on the stone outcropping by the cave mouth. She carried a mountain goat in her teeth. But the little dragons ignored her.

  “Tell the rest,” pleaded Sskarma.

  “Not the rest,” said the old dragon, “but I will tell you the next part.”

  3.

  “We must find a young Man who is unarmed,” said the Great-Grandfather of All Dragons. “One who has neither net nor spear.”

  “And eat him!” said his mate. “It has been such a long time since we have had any red meat. Only such grasses and small birds as populate tops of mountains It is dry, rib-y fare at best.” She yawned prettily and showed her sharp primary teeth.

  “No,” said the Great-Grandfather of All Dragons. “We shall capture him and learn his tongue. And then we will seal a bargain between us.”

  His mate looked shocked. Her wings arched up, great ribbed wings they were, too, with the skin between the ribbings as bright as blood. “A bargain? With such a puny thing as Man?”

  The Great-Grandfather of All Dragons laughed sadly then. It was a dry, deep, sorrowful chuckle. “Puny!” he said, as quietly as smoke. “And what are we?”

  “Great!” she replied, staring black eye into black eye. “Magnificent. Tremendous. Awe-inspiring.” She stood and stretched to her fullest, which was 450 slithes in length. The mountaintop trembled underneath her magnificently ponderous legs.

  “You and I,” said the Great-Grandfather of All Dragons, “and who else?”

  She looked around, saw no other dragons, and was still.

  “Why, that’s just what you said last night, Grandfather,” said little Sskitter.

  Grandfather Dragon patted her on the head. “Good girl. Bright girl. Perceptive girl.”

  Sskar drew his claws lazily over the floor of the cave, making awful squeaks and leaving scratches in the stone. “I knew that,” he said. Then he blew smoke rings to show he did not care that his sister had been praised.

  But the other dragons were not afraid to show they cared. “I remember,” said Ssgrum.

  “Me, too,” said Sstok.

  They both came in for their share of praises.

  Sskarma was quiet and stared. Then she said, “But more story, Grandfather.”

  “First comes supper,” said Mother Dragon. “Growing bodies need to eat.”

  This time they all listened.

  But when there was not even a smidgen of meat left, and only the bones to gnaw and crack, Mother Dragon relented.

  “Go ahead now,” she said. “Tell them a story. But no nonsense.”

  “This is true history,” said Sskitter.

  “It’s dumb!” said Sskar. He roared his roar again. “How could there be us if they were the last of the dragons!”

  ‘‘It’s a story,” said Sskarma. “And a story should be its own reward. I want to hear the rest.”

  The others agreed. They settled down again around Grandfather Dragon’s legs, except for Sskar, who put his back against the old dragon’s tail. That way he could listen to the story but pretend not to be interested.

  4.

  So the Great-Grandfather of All Dragons the story began once more flew that very night on silent wings, setting them so that he could glide and catch the currents of air. And he was careful not to roar or to breathe fire or to singe a single tree.

  He quartered town after town, village after village, farm after farm, all fitted together as carefully as puzzles. And at last he came to a young shepherd boy asleep beside his flock out in a lonely field.

  The Great-Grandfather of All Dragons dropped silently down at the edge of the field, holding his smoke so that the sheep—silly creatures—would not catch the scent of him. For dragons, as you know, have no odor other than the brimstone smell of their breath. The black-and-white sheepdog with the long hair twitched once, as if the sound of the GreatGrandfather’s alighting had jarred his sleep, but he did not awaken.

  Then the Great-Grandfather of All Dragons crept forward slowly, trying to sort out the sight and sound and smell of the youngling. He seemed to be about twelve Man years old and unarmed except for his shepherd’s staff. He was fair-haired and had a sprinkling of spots over the bridge of his nose that Men call freckles. He wore no shoes and smelled of cheese and bread, slightly moldy. There was also a green smell coming from his clothes, a tree and grass and rain and sun smell, which the Great-Grandfather of All Dragons liked.

  The boy slept a very deep sleep. He slept so deeply because he thought that the world was rid of dragons, that all he had to worry about were wolves and bears and the sharp knife of hunger. Yes, he believed that dragons were no more until he dreamed them and screamed—and woke up, still screaming, in a dragon’s claw.

  Sskar applauded. “I like the part about the dragon’s claw,” he said, looking down at his own golden nails.

  Sskitter poked him with her tail, and he lashed back. They rolled over and over until the old dragon separated them with his own great claws. Only then did they settle down to listen.

  But when he saw that screaming would not help, the young Man stopped screaming, for he was very brave for all that he was very young.

  And when he was set down in the lair
and saw he could not run off because the dragon’s mate had blocked the door, the young Man made a sign against his body with his hand and said, “Be gone, Worm.” For that is how Man speaks.

  “Be gone, Worm,” Sskitter whispered under her breath.

  And Sskarma made the Man sign against her own body, head to heart, shoulder to shoulder. It did not make sense to her, but she tried it anyway.

  Sskar managed to look amused, and the two younger dragons shuddered.

  “Be gone, Worm,” the Manling said again. Then he sat down on his haunches and cried, for he was a very young Man after all. And the sound of his weeping was not unlike the sound of a baby dragon calling for its food.

  At that, the Great-Grandmother of All Dragons moved away from the cave mouth and curled herself around the Man and tried to comfort him, for she had no hatchlings of her own yet, though she had wished many years for them. But the Man buffeted her with his fist on the tender part of her nose, and she cried out in surprise—and in pain. Her roar filled the cave. Even the Great-Grandfather closed his earflaps. And the young Man held his hands up over the sides of his face and screamed back. It was not a good beginning.

  But at last they both quieted down, and the Manling stretched out his hand toward the tender spot and touched it lightly. And the Great-Grandmother of All Dragons opened her second eyelid—another surprise—and the great fires within her eyes flickered.

  It was then that the Great-Grandfather of All Dragons said quietly in dragon words, “Let us begin.”

  The wonder of it was that the young Man understood.

  “My name,” he replied in Man talk, in a loud, sensible voice, “is Georgi.” He pointed to himself and said “Georgi” again.

  The Great-Grandfather of All Dragons tried. He said “Ssgggi,” which we have to admit was not even close.

  The Great-Grandmother of All Dragons did not even try.

  So the youngling stood and walked over, being careful not to make any sudden gestures, and pointed straight at the GreatGrandfather’s neck.

  “Sskraken,” roared the Great-Grandfather, for as you know a dragon always roars out his own name.

  “Sskar!” roared Sskar, shattering a nearby tree. A small, above-the-frost-line tree. The others were silent, caught up in the story’s spell.

  And when the echo had died away, the youngling said in a voice as soft as the down on the underwing of an owl, “Sskraken.” He did not need to shout it to be heard, but every syllable was there. It made the Great-Grandfather shiver. It made the Great-Grandmother put her head on the floor and think.

  “Sskraken,” the youngling said again, nodding as if telling himself to remember. Then he turned to Sskraken’s mate and pointed at her. And the pointing finger never trembled.

  “Sskrema,” she said, as gently as a lullaby. It was the first time in her life that she had not roared out her name.

  The youngling walked over to her, rubbed the spot on her nose that had lately been made sore. “Sskrema,” he crooned. And to both their astonishments, she thrummed under his hand.

  “She thrummed!” said Sskitter. “But you have told us . . .”

  “Never to thrumm except to show the greatest happiness with your closest companions,” the youngest two recited dutifully.

  “So I did,” said Grandfather Dragon. With the tip of his tail, he brushed away a fire-red tear that was caught in his eye. But he did it cleverly, so cleverly the little dragons did not notice. “So I did.”

  “Fah!” said Sskar. “It was a mistake. All a mistake. She never would have thrummed knowingly at a Man.”

  “That’s what makes it so important,” answered Sskarma. She reached up with her tail and flicked another tear from the old dragon’s eye, but so cleverly the others never noticed. Then she thrummed at him. “Tell us more.”

  5.

  The youngling Georgi lived with the two saurs for a year and a day. He learned many words in the old tongue: sstek for red meat and sstik for the dry, white meat of birds; ssova , which means “egg,” and ssouva, which means “soul.” Learning the old tongue was his pleasure, his task, and his gift.

  In return, the Great-Grandfather of All Dragons and his mate learned but one word. It was the name of the Man—Georgi. Or as they said it, “Ssgggi.”

  At the end of the year and a day, the Great-Grandfather called the boy to him, and they walked away from the sweet-smelling nest of grasses and pine needles and attar of wild rose that Georgi had built for them. They walked to the edge of the jagged mountainside where they could look down on the rough waste below.

  “Ssgggi,” said the Great-Grandfather of All Dragons, speaking the one word of Man’s tongue he had learned, though he had never learned it right. “It is time for you to go home. For though you have learned much about us and much from us, you are not a dragon but a Man. Now you must take your learning to them, the Men, and talk to them in your own Man’s tongue. Give them a message from us. A message of peace. For if you fail, we who are but two will be none.” And he gave a message to the Man.

  Georgi nodded and then quietly walked back to the cave. At his footsteps, the Great-Grandmother of All Dragons appeared. She looked out and stared at the boy. They regarded one another solemnly, without speaking. In her dark eyes the candle flame flickered.

  “I swear that I will not let that light go out,” said Georgi, and he rubbed her nose. And then they all three thrummed at one another, though the Man did it badly.

  Then he turned from the saurs without a further good-bye. And this was something else he had learned from the Great-Grandfather, for Men tend to prolong their good-byes, saying meaningless things instead of leaping swiftly into the air.

  “It is their lack of wings,” said Sskarma thoughtfully.

  Georgi started down the mountain, the wind in his face and a great roar at his back. The mountains shook at his leaving, and great boulders shrugged down the cliff sides. And high above him, the two saurs circled endlessly in the sky, guarding him though he knew it not.

  And so the Manling went home and the dragons waited.

  “Dragons have a long patience,” the two youngest saurs recited dutifully. “That is their genius.” And when no one applauded their memories, they clattered their own claws together and smiled at one another, toothy smiles, and slapped their tails on the stone floor.

  6.

  In dragon years continued Grandfather Dragon it was but an eyelid’s flicker, though in Man years it was a good long while.

  And then one day, when the bright eye of the sun was for a moment shuttered by the moon’s dark lid, a great army of Men appeared at the mouth of the canyon and rode their horses almost to the foot of the mountain.

  The Great-Grandmother of All Dragons let her rough tongue lick around her jaws at the sight of so much red meat.

  “Sstek,” she said thoughtfully.

  But the Great-Grandfather cautioned her, remembering how many dragons had died in fights with Men, remembering the message he had sent with the Manling. “We wait,” he said.

  “I would not have waited,” hissed Sskar, lashing his tail.

  His sister Sskitter buffeted him on the nose. He cried out once and was still.

  At the head of the Men was one Man in white armor with a red figure emblazoned on his white shield.

  It was when he saw this that the Great-Grandfather sighed. “Ssgggi,” he said.

  “How can you tell?” asked the Great-Grandmother. “He is too big and too wide and too old for our Ssgggi. Our Ssgggi was this tall,” and she drew a line into the pine tree that stood by the cave door.

  “Men do not grow as dragons grow,” reminded the Great-Grandfather gently. “They have no egg to protect their early days. Their skin is soft. They die young.”

  The Great-Grandmother put her paw on a certain spot on her nose and sighed. “It is not our Ssgggi,” she said again. “He would not lead so many Men to our cave. He would not have to wear false scales on his body. He would come to the mountain by himself. I
am going to scorch that counterfeit Ssgggi. I will roast him before his friends and crack his bones and suck out the marrow.”

  Then the Great-Grandfather of All Dragons knew that she spoke out of sorrow and anger and fear. He flicked a red tear from his own eye with his tail and held it to her. “See, my eyes cry for our grown-up and grown-away Manling,” he said. “But though he is bigger and older, he is our Ssgggi nonetheless. I told him to identify himself when he returned so that we might know him. He has done so. What do you see on his shield?”

  The Great-Grandmother rose to her feet and peered closely at the Man so many slithes below them. And those dragon eyes, which can see even the movement of a rabbit cowering in its burrow, saw the figure of a red dragon crouched on the white shield.

  “I can see a mole in its den,” said Sskar. “I can see a shrew in its tunnel. I can see . . .”

  “You will see very little when I get finished with you if you do not shut up,” said Sskitter and hit him once again.

  “I see a red dragon,” said the Great-Grandmother, her tail switching back and forth with anger.

  “And what is the dragon doing?” asked the Great-Grandfather even more gently.

  She looked again. Then she smiled, showing every one of her primary teeth. “It is covering a certain spot on its nose,” she said.

  7.

  Just then the army stopped at a signal from the white knight. They dismounted from their horses and waited. The white knight raised his shield toward the mountain and shouted. It took a little while for his voice to reach the dragons, but when it did, they both smiled, for the white knight greeted them in the old tongue.

  He said: “I send greetings. I am Ssgggi, the dragon who looks like a Man. I am taller now, but nowhere near as tall as a dragon. I am wiser now, but nowhere near as wise as a dragon. And I have brought a message from Men.”

  “Of course they did not trust him. Not a Man. Did they?” Sskar hissed.

  “They trusted this Man,” said Sskitter. “Oh, I know they did. I know I do.”

 

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