Fairy Tales
"Tell me again about the
Fairies, Gran," the tiny girl knelt at her
great-grandmother's feet, picking the lavender blossoms
that sprung up among the meadow grasses.
A tan doe and her spotted fawn grazed quietly nearby,
undisturbed by the presence of the humans encroaching
upon their territory. The old woman had always been one
to blend in well with nature, being from the Highlands
of the Old Country, she'd spent most of her life amongst
the wild things. The little girl, too, being cut from
the same cloth as her grandmother - or so she had always
been told - was as comfortable in the meadow as she was
in her own kitchen.
"Which one is it you want to be hearin' about, my wee
one?" The old woman asked with a smile on her lips, for
there was only one for which the little girl ever asked.
"Tell me the one about the Fairy King," was her reply.
A chuckle rumbled deep in the old woman's throat, as she
stroked the spun gold of her granddaughter's hair,
letting the silky strands slip through her fingers. "Oh,
aye, I'll tell ye then. The Fairy King, he was a grumpy,
old codger ..."
"What's a codger Gran?" The tiny girl interrupted with
her standard question and her great-grandmother chuckled
again.
"It means he was grouchy all the time, with a nasty
disposition."
"Why?"
"Weel, he was old as the stars and his bones creaked
with his age, ye see. It took him a whole of a half hour
to rise from his bed in the morning, his joints ached
him so. Now hush until I'm finished, my wee one."
The small girl hopped up onto the log on which her Gran
sat and snuggled close to the old woman's girth. "Okay,"
was her only reply.
The old Scot proceeded to tell of the old Fairy King and
his many aches and pains and how, on the nights of the
full moon, he went to the meadow and danced with the
fireflies and all the fairies of the land would be
compelled to join him, for he was their king. And on
these nights, his pains would leave him and he would be
young and fair again.
Then, one day, as the king was taking his daily walk,
stretching his painful joints, he happened upon a bonny
young maiden, doing her needle work in the peace of the
meadow. But, when he approached her, she was taken aback
because he was so old and malformed with age and
arthritis. The Fairy King was hypnotized by her beauty
and reached for her hand for to give it a kiss but the
lass pulled back, appalled, and shrieked, dropping her
needlework and running from the place as quickly as her
feet would take her.
The old king was furious that she would treat him with
such disrespect and he picked up the sewing she had
thrown aside and held it between his fingers. He was a
tracker, you see and could find anyone by a personal
item they left, just like a bloodhound, he was. So he
tracked the girl back to her house, a small cottage in
the glen, and waited til night, for there was a full
moon. And, when he began to dance outside the girl's
window, she was awakened by the fireflies and she saw
the King with his fairy court and she was mesmerized by
his youth and beauty and compelled to dance with him.
And he took her away and made her his bride.
The great-grandmother stopped here, waiting for the
question that always came. "But, Gran, didn't she see
him, next day all old and ugly and get scared again?"
A smile curled the old woman's lips and she answered
with her ready reply, "Oh, the King was fair good with
magic and he cast a spell that the maid should only see
him as young and handsome. So ..."
"They lived happily ever after," the little one sighed
and laid her head upon her grandmother's breast.
Just then a sound came from far away across the meadow
and the tiny girl lifted her head as if to listen.
"Taffeta, Gran, dinner." A voice floated across the
field and Taffeta popped up from her seat, instinctively
giving her grandmother her hand.
"That would be mama, calling us in," she stated
matter-of-factly.
The shadows were growing long in the meadow and the sun
would set before too long. The autumn nights were brisk
of late and Gran would take her time getting back to the
house. Her bones creaked, like the old Fairy King's,
these days and her gait had slowed to a lumber. It
didn't stop her from coming to sit with wee Taffy,
however, and breathe the fresh air. Too much hustle and
bustle in the house for her, she said, and Taffy tended
to agree. They were of one mind, the old woman and the
tiny girl. Taffy's mother called it spooky.
By the time they made it back to the house and washed
up, dinner was on the table, piping hot and smelling
delicious. Taffy's father, Charles, was already seated
at the head of the table and Gwen, Taffy's mother,
bustled around the kitchen with last minute
preparations.
"Come, sit, Gwen," was Charles' nightly reprise. "You're
buzzing around like a fly, you make me nervous."
Setting the last few items on the table, Gwen finally
succumbed and seated herself opposite her husband. The
four comfortably settled, clasped hands, bowing their
heads for grace, which was their dinner tradition.
"So, did you two have a nice day out of doors?" Charles
asked of the girl and her grandmother. "It was quite
warm today, for autumn."
"Oh, yes," young Taffy replied, warmly. "Gran told me
about the Fairy King."
The tiny girl did not see the sideways glance her
grandmother gave to her mother. "Gran," irritation
tinged Gwen's voice. "I've asked you not to fill her
head with those stories. You will give her nightmares."
Gran made an indignant noise in her throat. "Someone's
got to remember them once I'm gone. And lord knows, you
have no interest. I'm just passing down the Scottish
traditions. Besides, the wee bairn is old enough to know
the difference between real and make believe, aint ye,
Taffy?"
A broad smile spread across the little girl's face. "I
like to watch the fairies dance outside my window at
night," she replied, brightly.
Charles couldn't suppress the chuckle that rose up from
his throat.
Gwen shot him a look. "Charles, don't encourage them!"
"Oh, Gwen, relax. All children hear fairy stories when
they're young. And a good imagination is a healthy
thing. Shows intelligence," he sounded almost proud, but
looked down at his plate in concentration.
"And I wish you wouldn't call her Taffy, sounds like
candy. Her given name is Taffeta."
"Weel, ye can't name a child something like 'Taffeta'
and expect no one to give her a nick name. It's only
natural."
Gwen huffed and dropped the subject, paying attention
only to her dinner. Gran winked slyly at her
great-granddaughter who answered with a grin and the
rest of the meal was eaten in silence.
That night Gwen was awakened by the voice of her
daughter, gently whispering in her ear. She opened her
eyes and forced them to focus. She saw Taffy standing in
front of her, her tiny brow knit with a frown.
"What - what is it, honey? Are you sick?" Gwen pushed
herself up on one elbow.
"Gran is cold," she said, her voice sounding small. "I
covered her with the blanket, but she's so cold."
Gwen reached for her robe and slipped her feet into her
slippers. The autumn days were warm but the nights had
taken on a chill. "Honey, why are you in Gran's room?
You should be in bed."
"She called me. I heard her voice in the dark calling
me, but when I went to see, she was asleep. Now she is
so cold. C'mon," she tugged at her mother's hand.
"Okay, honey, I'm coming."
Just then Charles stirred on his side of the bed.
Opening his eyes, he squinted and mumbled, "Wassamatter?"
"Nothing, Charles, go back to sleep."
Taffy practically dragged her mother down the hall
toward the old woman's room. The pair entered the room
and there on the bed lay Gran, as peaceful and still as
if she were sleeping. Gwen knew, however, as soon as she
came through the door that her grandmother was gone. She
instinctively grabbed her daughter and pulled the girl
to her side, trying to shield her from this tragedy.
There was almost a hint of a smile on the old woman's
face.
"Charles," Gwen's voice came out in a ragged whisper.
She felt glued to the floor, her feet unable to move.
Taffy broke away from her embrace and went to her
grandmother's side. She picked up her hand and held it
to her small cheek.
"She's so cold, mama." Her daughter's actions spurred
her into motion. She went to her daughter's side and
took the old woman's hand from her's.
"Go wake your father."
Taffeta did as she was told and soon Charles stood at
her side, staring down at the still body that had once
been Gwen's grandmother. He put his arm gently around
his wife's waist. "We should call someone," he said,
finally.
The next few days were a bustle of activity. Charles
took time off from work while Gwen dealt with the task
of burying the dead. A constant parade of people trooped
in and out of the house, bearing casseroles and words of
sympathy. Gwen kept a brave face and Charles played the
supportive husband, all the while, Taffy played quietly
and tried to stay clear. She understood that the
visitors only meant well, but she found herself rolling
her eyes at their expressions of good thoughts. At first
she had responded with the truth, her Gran was not gone
- she simply wished to dance with the fairies in the
moonlight. After a stern warning from her mother to
"stop that nonsense", she learned to smile and remain
silent.
The day of the funeral brought strife between husband
and wife. Gwen felt a funeral was no place for a four
year old. Charles, on the other hand, said death was a
part of life and that the ceremony would help Taffeta to
say goodbye. He ultimately won and Taffy, dressed in her
brown church dress with the pleats and tiny yellow and
orange flowers, accompanied her parents to the
graveyard.
Taffeta sat quietly at the edge of her
great-grandmother's grave in the folding chair that sat
under the green awning brought in to shade the
on-lookers from the warm autumn sun. She swung her feet
and tried hard to listen to the minister as she knew she
ought to do, but soon her mind wandered and her
attention was drawn to a blue and black butterfly that
flitted across the air over her Gran's coffin. Suddenly
and not of her own volition she was on her feet and
following the fluttering insect as it rose higher in the
sky and danced away from the gathering.
Gwen, who had not seen her daughter's exit, sat rigidly
in her seat, dark hair pulled tightly back into a bun.
Her face was drawn from exhaustion but no tears stained
her cheeks. She had yet to shed a single one. She
glanced sideways and saw Taffeta bouncing across the
cemetery lawn, arms outstretched in her effort to
capture the butterfly. Gwen sprung to her feet and raced
after the girl. "Taffeta," she hissed, trying not to
disrupt the minister's speech.
Charles saw his wife and joined the exodus. Gwen grabbed
Taffy by the arm and pulled her back. "What in the world
are you doing?"
"It's Gran, mama, look!" The young girl pointed toward
the butterfly that had settled itself upon a sprawling
oak.
"Will you stop this outlandish behavior! Your
grandmother is not a butterfly, she's -."
Charles pulled Taffy from her mother's grasp and gripped
his wife by both arms. "Leave her alone, now, Gwen."
Taffeta moved silently to a nearby rock and sat down to
watch the butterfly, seemingly unaffected by her
mother's outburst.
"Children process things differently than we do." The
patience in his voice was strained. "It's difficult for
them to understand death. She's just trying to ..." He
stopped when he saw the tears well in his wife's eyes.
"Difficult for her?" She said, her voice a hoarse
whisper. "I don't understand!" She bent her head then
and let the sobs overtake her. She had held the tears
pent up for days and now there was no stopping them. She
fell against her husband's chest and he wrapped her
gently in his arms.
"All I can think about is the last night of her life,"
Gwen sobbed. "We argued. I got on to her about the fairy
tales. The last words she heard from me were harsh and
critical." Gwen took a deep, steadying breath and wiped
her tears with her handkerchief.
"But, Gwen," Charles tried not to smile, as he knew the
nature of the two women's relationship, "the two of you
have always bickered. That's just how you were with each
other. Don't feel bad."
"But, why, why did it have to be that way? Why couldn't
it be easy, the way it was with Taffeta?"
"Gwen, we are what we are. You are practical and direct
and no-nonsense. Three of the reasons I love you. And
just because you two didn't see eye to eye, didn't mean
she didn't love you."
"But, did she know I loved her? Will I ever know that
now?"
"She knew, sweetheart, she knew." He stroked his wife's
back and they both turned to watch their daughter as she
peered diligently up at the old oak. "And you'll always
have a little piece of her right there."
That evening, Gwen and Taffeta sat on the bed, amongst
the teddy bears and baby dolls, looking at one of
Taffy's favorite story books. Suddenly the four year old
sprang to her feet and ran to the window, pulling the
curtain to one side. "Look, mama. Gran is dancing with
the fairies!"
Gwen had the overwhelming urge to pull the curtain shut
and chastise her daughter. Then she saw the twinkle in
the little girls eyes. She looked so much like her
grandmother, Gwen couldn't help but smile. She joined
Taffy at the window and saw the sparkling of the
fireflies as they flitted about the front yard. And
there, amongst them, was the figure of her grandmother.
She was not old and bent and gray, but young and
beautiful as in her youth.
"See, mama. Doesn't she look happy?"
Gwen pulled the little girl close to her and smiled.
"Yes, Taffy, she surely does."
King and Queen Fairy, 1910
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