SEVEN DWARVES LIVED in the house on ____ Street. They landed there by chance -- driven by work and finances to a place they could be comfortable living in, all seven of them. Their neighbors looked at them once, and then looked away. That was fine for five of the dwarves; the sixth sometimes longed for someone to stare back at him.
The seventh kept his own quiet council, and waited for what might come.
The work
they did was simple, but so much relied upon it: the workings of the secret
world clockwork within our own. The dwarves did not remark on it: they woke,
dressed, went down into the mines, and came home. Their neighbors did the same.
Chores were done, television watched, bills paid and Christmas cards sent. Half
or more of those cards came back, every year: no such resident, forwarding
expired. Five of the dwarves shrugged and dropped the returned cards into the
bin. The sixth deleted the incorrect addresses from their list.
The seventh sat in a window and did not let himself sigh for the
connections lost.
There were never new names to add to the list.
Time
passed, work continued, and the dwarves were not happy. They were not, in any
sense of the word, unhappy. There were seven of them, after all, and this was
how life had always been. Until one day into that life came an intruder. She
rested on their stoop, hunched and cold, her black hair matted and her snow-white
skin dark with bruises.
The girl had no reason to be on ____ Street. She had no job that took
her there, no cause to settle in that town. But as she was thin, and lonely,
the dwarves took her in.
“Be welcome,” they told her, and gave her a bed and a spoon, and a room
with a lovely view. “Be welcome, and leave your past at the door. Whatever
haunted you this far will bother you no more.”
The unhappy girl took to her spoon, and her bed, and her lovely view,
and took the dwarves at their word. And when the dwarves went off to their work
the next day, she remained behind in the house on ___ Street, and made herself
at home.
Each night when the dwarves came home, they found floors swept so clean
no debris might trip an unwary foot, fresh flowers placed in vases, and windows
washed to bring the beautiful view even more clearly in. The oven simmered with
food when the dwarves were hungry, and in the evening eight pairs of hands made
the chores pass even more swiftly than seven did.
The flowers faded and were replaced by branches of evergreen, cut from
a tree in the back yard. The windows were covered by curtains, and she learned
to make stew for eight.
Slowly the girl began to raise her head, and her hair was a shining
fall of black thread. Her skin faded into an expanse of white linen, and her
long neck arched when she tilted her head at a question. Her lips were blood
red, and her teeth bone white. But she did not speak loudly, and she did not
laugh.
Dwarves one through four and seven thought that everything was fine. The
fifth dwarf thought it would be all right, in a matter of time. The house was
clean, the chores were done. They could focus on the work and not useless,
cluttery things. And the girl had a place in the workings of it all. Surely
that was enough to calm and soothe her.
True, the girl put things away differently, and her part of their
singing while they worked was high to their low, but these were small things,
minor flaws, and everyone knew that her voice would deepen, and she would
learn.
The sixth dwarf was the one who noticed that the girl remained thin,
and that she spent as often outside looking into the view as inside looking
out.
“Come in” he would say to her, standing on the doorstep. “Come in, come
out of the cold, come out of the heat, come out of the rain.” And she would
come in, her hand gentle on his arm and her blue eyes soft as she looked at
him. And the sixth dwarf would stand in the doorway, and look at where she had
stood, then shake his head and close the heavy oak door behind them.
In a county
not so very far away, the sound of that door closing one evening echoed
throughout a room built of mahogany and steel. It was a private room, a secret
room, set off from the rest of the house by structure and spells, and one wall
entire was a mirror that reflected back what it should not have seen.
“You thought you were so clever, so sly and swift. But I found you, did
I not? And my work is not yet done.” The woman turned to her worktable, and
considered her tools. She was not merely regal in pose, but a witch-queen of
strength and skill and malice, and she did not suffer her victims to leave her
grasp before she was done with them.
The girl had fled. But she had not escaped.
The woman smiled; a cold tiger’s smile. “Strings to take the girl’s
freedom from her, and bind her to pain,” she called softly. “Spikes, to close
her dreams away from her, and hold her to shame.”
Her long, strong fingers picked what she needed, and the witch-queen
hummed as she began.
“Allo,
love,” a peddler greeted the girl as she reached to clean the windows of
winter’s grit. The girl turned her head to see a young man standing there, his
pack over one shoulder. He had a wicked eye and an appealing grin, and the girl
put her back to the wall and stared him down. He reminded her of someone, but
she could not remember who. “Care to see what I ‘ave to buy?”
She cast a glance over him. “You’ve nothing I want, peddler,” she told
him in her quiet voice. “Nothing at all.”
“What?” He mimed shock, as though he could not believe that. He was a
charming man and he sold what he came to sell. Especially the items he had been
ordered to offer this delicate little thing. “But I’ve things all pretty girls
want. Silver-spun laces to tie up your blouse. A goldenwood comb for your hair,
to shine like stars against the night.” He reached into his bag and displayed
the pretties, to tempt her.
“I am not a pretty girl,” she told him, knowing his kind. “And I want
nothing from you.”
She stared him down, and he looked away, driven down by her direct
gaze. He fumbled with his bag as though to find something else, and looked back
at her, but her rag and her water were back at work on the window and she did
not acknowledge him.
She was not a pretty girl, and she had no use for pretties. Pretties
belonged to other girls. And so he went away, defeated, and the witch-queen had
no satisfaction.
That night when the dwarves came home, and ate their meal and sang
their songs as they helped with the dishes, she lowered her voice another
notch, to better blend with them.
The seventh dwarf noticed, but did not think to praise her. The sixth
dwarf thought she was still a note off. Two missed her harmonizing, but didn’t
know why.
She went to sleep in her bed, in her room with the lovely view, and did
not dream of goldenwood combs or silver-spun laces, or a man with a rakish
crooked smile and a glint in his eyes, but of blue sky and a fresh wind blowing
her away.
The third
dwarf fell ill one evening, and coughed so hard his voice gave out. The girl
made him soup which he did not want, and tucked him into his bed, where he
fretted and sulked. And she almost smiled. And she was not a pretty girl, but
the seventh dwarf, seeing her sidelong, thought she looked like a Queen.
And the witch-queen, back in her workroom, knew.
“My dear,
my dear.” The dwarves were at work, and the girl was sweeping the stoop. The
sun was warm and bright, and she wore a small floppy hat and a gauze shirt, to
protect her skin.
“My dear, my dear,” the voice said again. A woman stood on the stoop
before her, small and delicate as a finch, her gray hair fluffed like dandelion
seed. “You are so thin, my dear, I fear a stiff breeze and you might take
wing!"
The girl cocked her head, and rested her broom. She did not think she
was thin. Her bones were too long, her walk ungraceful, and her nose too wide.
But she could wield a broom and wash a dish, and her voice might someday be
deep enough to fit in.
“Too thin, and such a pale look, and oh you need strength to keep up
with seven such busy men!”
The woman rummaged in her shopping basket, held under one arm, and
reached into a brown paper bag. “My dear, my dear. Here you are. Such a bright
and glossy apple, to feed you what you need.”
The girl took the apple. It was slick and cool in her hands, the red
polished, and the stem pale brown.
“Eat, eat!” the woman cried, her old skin paper-thin, her teeth small
and white. Her eyes were dark and shadowed, and the flesh on her face was firm.
The girl wasn’t hungry. She never was. But the woman was waiting, and
the expectation was there.
It was not sweet, the apple red, nor tart. The girl chewed and
swallowed, trying to identify the flavor. A tang of salt, the slide of honey,
the twist of a lemon, and the bitterness of ash. She knew them all, as they
slid down her throat and entered her system. Lies. Lies, bitterness, and
loneliness combined, polished to look like protection
The girl recognized the flavor, and, eyes meeting the old woman’s, she
took another bite.
The fourth
dwarf saw her first, and grumbled to himself. “Sleeping in a sunbeam like a
useless cat. No dinner tonight except what we make, and late, at that.”
“You’re too hard on the girl,” the third said. “There are leftovers
that will do, for one night at least.”
“She is not sleeping,” the seventh one said.
Her pale
limbs rested at her side, after they carried her in and placed her on her bed.
Black silk hair brushed over her shoulders, and a blush of red rested on her
cheek.
“What shall we do,” they wondered. This was not something they knew.
“Put her back where we found her,” one said. “Pretend we didn’t know.
They stared at him until he shrunk down a little more.
“Call a doctor,” another said.
“She does not breathe,” they pointed out. “A doctor can do no more.”
“Then an undertaker,” the sixth said, practical as ever.
They stared at her, still and peaceful on the bed, and could not bring
themselves to cover such stillness with dirt.
“A casket. A glass casket, to keep her safe and still,” the seventh one
said.
They did not all agree, but in the end it was what they did. A glass casket,
laid on her bed. Fitted with velvet and goose down below her, and placed so
that the view could come in.
And she watched them all with eyes of pale blue, and no marks upon her
skin.
In a fairy tale,
a prince might have saved her, ridden up and kissed the poisoned apple away.
But there were no princes on _____ Street, only seven small men who didn’t know
what do.
And one thin girl who bit and chewed, andyet could not find the
strength to spit the last piece away.