JOHN MORRESSY
REFLECTION AND INSIGHT
WITH SPOT'S HELP, KEDRIGERN wrestled the large awkward
bundle carefully into the
cottage as Princess looked on with anxious interest. It was
wrapped in heavy
cloths, tied securely, and from the amount of grunting the wizard was
doing, it
was of considerable weight.
"Is it very heavy?" she asked.
"Very," he said, putting
it down gingerly and taking a deep breath.
"You're lucky you had Spot to help you."
He
rubbed his lower back and groaned. "Even with Spot's help, I was tempted to
use a
levitation. I should have. My back will ache for a week."
"What is it?"
He smiled and began
to untie the cord that encircled the bundle like the strands
of a great web. That done, he
turned back the folds of thick cloth, pausing with
his hand on the last one. "You're going
to love this. A pity it's promised to a
client, Sigert of the Nine Shallow Ponds. But I'm
looking for another, for us."
"What is it?" she repeated, her interest increasing.
He flung
back the last cloth and spread his arms in a gesture of revelation,
beaming at her all the
while.
"A mirror?" she said.
"That's right, my dear. You've often said that you'd like to
have one by the
door."
"Only a little one, so I can check to see that my coronet is on
straight, and my
wings aren't all bunched up under my cloak. This one is...it's sort of
elaborate,
isn't it?"
"This is no ordinary mirror, my dear."
"I can see that. It's very nice, really,"
said Princess, leaning closer to the
surface and studying her reflection. "No warps or
wiggly places in the glass."
"It's a magic mirror."
She took two steps back and looked at
him sharply. "I've had one bad experience
with a magic mirror, and I don't want another.
Don't bother getting one for us,
please."
"Moggropple's was a unique problem. And it
involved five mirrors. This is only a
single mirror, and all it does is talk."
"I don't
care. I don't want a tricky mirror around the house."
Crestfallen, Kedrigern said, "I
thought that something like this might be nice
for those times when I'm away on business
and you have no one to talk to but
Spot."
"I appreciate the thought, but no." She took his
hand, smiled to soothe his
feelings, and said, "Anyway, talking mirrors must be very rare.
And terribly
expensive."
Kedrigern gestured airily. "I got this one for a song. An
incantation, actually.
Against pains in the joints."
"Well, you won't find another on such
terms, I'm sure. Besides, I'd sooner talk
to Spot when you're away than to a mirror," said
Princess.
"Whatever you say, my dear. But as long as it's here, why don't you take a
look."
She smoothed down her dark blue gown, straightened her coronet, and stepped
before the
mirror. She half turned, fluttered her wings, then rose from the
floor and did a slow
pirouette.
"It's a very nice mirror," she said.
"Say something to it."
She frowned. "What
does one say to a mirror?"
"How about 'Here's looking at you'?"
Princess gave him a pained
glance. She pursed her lips thoughtfully, and after a
time said, "Mirror, how do I look?"
The surface of the mirror shimmered like a pool in a gentle breeze. Colors
flashed and
flickered across it, then slowly faded. A silvery voice said, "How
do you look? Very good,
for a woman your age."
Princess's hand shot up, snatched the cloth, and flung it over the
face of the
mirror. "That will be quite enough out of you," she snapped in a voice cold
enough
to frost the glass. Turning to Kedrigern, she said, "A hand mirror will
suffice. A silent
one," and fluttered from the room.
"As you wish, my dear," he called after her.
He was
relieved by her decision. An attractive and serviceable hand mirror was
easily obtained.
Talking mirrors were hard to come by and very nearly priceless,
even when the seeker was
well-known and much respected, with extensive contacts
in the magical community. He could
not expect to be lucky twice.
After receiving Sigert's plea for assistance, it was months
before Kedrigern
even got wind of a faint rumor of a magic mirror, and many more before he
actually traced it down, ascertained its provenance, and satisfied himself of
its
authenticity. Haggling over the price dragged on for two more months, and
might have taken
longer if the owner, an aging seneschal, had not been stricken
with a painful bout of
rheumatism. Transporting the mirror intact to his cottage
took Kedrigern another full
month. The whole operation consumed so much time, in
fact, that there was none left for the
usual full-scale safety check. The mirror
was to be a surprise birthday present for
Sigert's queen, and only if he
departed for the Kingdom of the Nine Shallow Ponds the very
next morning and
encountered no obstacles along the way could Kedrigern hope to deliver the
mirror on Brissault's birthday.
With the help of Spot and a very small levitation spell he
stowed the mirror
safely in a wagon, surrounding it with padding and protective spells.
Princess
chose not to accompany him on the journey. "In the first place," she explained,
"I am a princess, not a freight-handler. And in the second place, from what
you've told me,
the Kingdom of the Nine Shallow Ponds is not a happy place. I
don't want to take along,
slow, uncomfortable journey just to be surrounded by
gloom."
"I intend to dispel the gloom,
my dear."
But she had decided, and was adamant. After a brief but tender farewell, he set
out just before dawn, aching and yawning, comforted only by the thought of a
generous fee
and a chance to save a marriage.
The weather was benign and his journey was uneventful.
Kedrigern had ample time
to ponder the misfortunes of the royal couple. Having won the
confidence of both
king and queen, he had been made privy to all the details.
Sometime in
their third decade together, no one could say exactly when, things
began to go wrong
between King Sigert and Queen Brissault. Petty quarrels
swelled into full-blown arguments.
Familiar mannerisms became irritants. Casual
phrases elicited barbed responses. Angry
silences sometimes lasted for days, and
only a state occasion would have Sigert and
Brissault speaking to one another
again, albeit coolly and formally.
Sigert, who still loved
his wife deeply, tried to figure out where things had
gone wrong. He could not. He
consulted his counselors and advisors and the
wisest men in the kingdom, and while they
were able to suggest a number of
causes, they could not agree on a solution. They were in
accord on war, taxes,
and ceremonials, but not on domestic relations. Some said that women
required
flattery; others prescribed extravagant gifts, separate palaces, or beheading.
In
the end, they were no help.
Unknown to the king, Brissault, who loved her husband every bit
as much as he
loved her, was following the same course, except that she was consulting with
wise women. But they were no more help than the wise men. A venerable nun told
her that men
at any age were still small boys in many ways -- a fact she well
knew. One learned woman
suggested aloofness, another submission, a third poison.
No one offered advice that she
found acceptable.
A year passed, and then another, and the domestic tension remained
unresolved.
One winter morning, after particularly sharp words over breakfast, Sigert
wandered
through the palace deep in gloomy thought. Muttering under his breath,
he trudged aimlessly
up flights of stairs and paced down corridors long
unvisited. Eventually he found himself
standing before a familiar door. Lost in
his brooding, he had come to his old nursery.
Memory bade him enter. The chamber
faced the east, and the early sunlight gave it a
cheerful air. The bright
pictures on the walls, the toys that lay scattered at random, and
the old story
books aroused a pleasant nostalgia.
He picked up a dusty book of tales that
lay nearby and settled in the window
seat where he had spent so many happy childhood hours.
Leafing through the book,
he came upon the story of the magic mirror. It had been one of
his favorites,
and he read it once again, hoping to recapture some of the innocent wonder
of
those days. He paused after completing it, cried out in gratitude, and
immediately reread
it. After the second reading, he hugged the book to his
breast and laughed aloud. Here was
the solution. He would give Brissault a
mirror as a birthday present, a magic mirror that
would make her appear forever
young and beautiful. Such a rare and encouraging gift would
demonstrate the
feelings he could not seem to express otherwise. She would be happy again.
Their
quarreling would end and they would be reconciled forever.
Having no knowledge of
magic himself, he summoned Kedrigern, who had worked
effective and timely spells for his
father, and for himself in his youth, and
entrusted the work of finding and acquiring the
mirror to him. While at the
castle, Kedrigern had picked up another assignment. He was
pleased to be
wrapping both up with a single journey.
As time ran on, Sigert grew uneasy.
When Kedrigern presented himself at the
castle on the very morning of Brissault's birthday
to announce that the mirror
awaited their majesties' pleasure, the king was elated.
"Where
is it?" he asked.
"I've had it placed in the queen's bedchamber, Your Majesty," said the
wizard.
"Her Majesty is in the great hall right now, accepting a present from the
Goldsmiths'
guild. The Saddlers are arriving after them, and then the
Fishmongers. Her Majesty always
bathes and changes her clothes after a meeting
with the Fishmongers." Sigert paused to do
some mental calculation. "We've got
about an hour. Let's go and inspect this mirror," he
said, rising.
The mirror stood in the center of the queen's bedchamber. It was very tall,
rising from a massive silver base inlaid with precious stones. It was covered
with a richly
embroidered cloth.
"Remove the cloth. We want to see the mirror," said the king.
Kedrigern
dismissed the servants, then removed the heavy cloth himself. It took
a bit of effort.
"Why
didn't you have the servants do that?" Sigert asked.
"Just a precaution, Your Majesty. I
don't want them looking into the mirror
until I've had a chance to test it out."
Sigert took
a step back, away from the mirror. "Have you brought a dangerous
object into this palace
without testing it?"
"I've checked it for curses and trick spells, Your Majesty. I can
assure you
that it's perfectly safe."
Sigert looked relieved. "That's better. What else do
you have to do before we
can use it?"
"Well, I know it talks. I have to determine whether it
has other powers, and if
it does, which ones we want to utilize. The man who sold me the
mirror didn't
know much about it. He wasn't even certain that it was magic, but I could
tell
right away."
The king looked less relieved. "Could it be dangerous?"
"Not dangerous,
Your Majesty. At worst it might be...." Kedrigern paused to
search for a less alarming term
and at last said, "Unpredictable. Tricky.
Surprising."
"We do not like surprises in our
palace," said Sigert, frowning. "We want
nothing untoward to happen to Her Majesty."
"There
is no danger, I assure you, Your Majesty."
The king pondered. Over the years, besides
putting on weight, Sigert had become
pompous and self-important, but he was no more so than
other kings, and less so
than many. He really did love Brissault, and wanted to make her
happy once
again. He lacked not good will, but comprehension. He simply could not
understand
how a woman married to him and reigning at his side could be unhappy.
He studied the
mirror, extending a hand to touch the frame but stopping short of
actual contact. He
concealed his hesitation under a spacious gesture and said,
"It's nicely made. We like all
those little cherubs and ribbons and bands of
flowers."
"Exquisite, isn't it? You don't
often get that kind of workmanship in a magic
mirror. People seem to think that if it's
magic, it doesn't have to look good,
"Kedrigern said, frowning at the thought of such an
unprofessional attitude.
Sigert ventured a quick peek into the mirror. He turned to the
wizard, frowning.
"The glass is foggy. Are you sure you got a good mirror?"
"Oh, it's
perfectly fine, Your Majesty. There's a small spell on it, to
discourage the idle and the
curious."
"Well, get it off, so Her Majesty can use the thing."
Kedrigern murmured a few
words and moved his hands in an intricate gesture. The
glass cleared. King and wizard saw
their reflections. "Looks good to us. What
powers do you think it has?"
"First and foremost,
it's a speaking mirror." Raising his hands and gesturing,
purely for dramatic effect,
Kedrigern said to the mirror, "Speak to me, mirror."
A shimmer ran over the reflections.
The thin silvery voice said, "Speak to you?"
"Yes, speak. You're a talking mirror."
"A
talking mirror," the mirror said.
"Tell us a story," said the king.
"A story?" repeated the
mirror.
"Yes, do that."
"I'll do that."
"And don't repeat everything we say," said the king.
The mirror was silent for a time, as if rehearsing. Then, with another shimmer
over the
reflected figures, it began to speak. "Once there were three bears,
Papa Bear, Mama Bear,
and Baby Bear, and they lived in a house in the woods. A
little girl named Goldilocks was
--"
"Is that the best you can do?" the king interrupted.
"Best I can do," said the mirror.
"You're repeating again," Kedrigern said.
After a pause, the mirror said, with manifest
effort, "I am a mirror. That's
what I'm supposed to do."
"We find it annoying. Stop it this
minute," said the king. "Do you hear? That is
a royal command. Stop repeating. Be
original."
Their images wavered and dissolved. For a moment, the glass was entirely empty;
then new images appeared. Sigert screamed, staggered back, and covered his eyes.
Kedrigern
blanked the mirror with a quick emergency spell and steadied himself
against a chair. He
took a few deep breaths to calm his nausea. The king peeked
out at him from between his
fingers, then pointed to the mirror. "What were
those things in there?" he said in a
strained whisper. "Can they get out?"
"No danger of that, Your Majesty. They're imaginary."
"What kind of imagination could conjure up monstrosities like those?" said the
king,
shuddering.
"The mirror's. It was obeying your command."
"Our command?" the king cried,
going pale.
"Your Majesty told it to be original."
"We did not command it to terrify us. If
it tries anything like that ever again,
we will have it smashed to smithereens. Does it
understand?"
Kedrigern observed the tremulous patterns on the darkened face of the mirror.
"It does, Your Majesty."
Sigert stood arms akimbo, looking hard at the mirror. "We begin to
doubt that
this was a good idea," he said. "It might be best to smash the thing anyway.
Magic
mirrors are too tricky for our liking."
"Trickiness is their nature, Your Majesty."
"And yet
it is a unique object, and we do not wish to give it up."
"Not many of these around, Your
Majesty. This may be the only one in existence.
It would be a shame to have to destroy it."
The mirror was by this time displaying a dazzling pattern of swirls and zigzags,
and the
frame could be seen to tremble ever so slightly. In a subdued voice, it
said, "I will obey
Your Majesty to the best of my ability. Please do not smash
me."
King and wizard exchanged a
glance. The king said, "No more fits of creativity.
Is that understood?"
"Understood, Your
Majesty."
"Shall I clear it now?" Kedrigern asked.
Sigert nodded in assent, and Kedrigern
removed the spell. Their reflections
appeared.
"Very well, mirror. What else can you do?"
Sigert said.
"Aside from what you saw, I can only speak and reflect."
The king looked
disappointed. "Can't you make our wife look young and beautiful?
We thought you magic
mirrors did things like that."
"A common misconception. We cannot, Your Majesty."
The king
sighed. "A pity. Her Majesty has been unhappy of late, and we believe
that we know the
cause. She has always been the fairest in the land, but lately
she's been hearing talk of
beautiful young princesses in the neighboring
kingdoms, and we think that is upsetting her.
Making her feel old. Women don't
like that. They want to look young and beautiful all their
lives," said the
king, confidently repeating what several wise men had told him. "A magic
mirror
that attests to her unfading beauty would do a lot to cheer her up."
"Her Majesty is
still a beautiful woman," said Kedrigern.
"Unfortunately, she's excessively self-critical.
Always finding little things
wrong with her hair or her dress. Wrinkles around the eyes.
That sort of thing.
We try to be helpful, but we don't seem to do much good. Can't you
touch up her
image somehow, mirror?"
"I am only a talking mirror. Transformation is not
within my power, Your
Majesty."
The king sighed again. The mirror was silent. Abruptly,
Kedrigern laughed aloud
and began to rub his hands together energetically. "No need to
worry. I've got
the solution," he said.
"You have?" king and mirror asked with one
astonished voice.
"I have. Can you memorize a few lines very quickly, mirror?"
"Exact
replication is my forte."
"Good. Her Majesty will be here soon. No time to waste."
The
wizard rushed to the queen's dressing table, where he copied something onto
a scrap of
parchment. He then scribbled something else on another scrap, which
he tucked into his
sleeve. With a conspiratorial grin for the king, he read the
first piece to the mirror.
They rehearsed for a few minutes, until Brissault was
heard entering the bedchamber.
The
queen seemed in a good humor. Seeing Sigert and the wizard and the mirror,
she gave a
little exclamation of surprise and delight. "A birthday present! For
me! Oh, what a lovely
mirror! Such an exquisite frame! Sigert, you're a dear,
generous man!" she cried.
"This is
no ordinary mirror," said the king.
"It's a magic mirror! Isn't it a magic mirror? Just
what I've always wanted! Oh,
that's so sweet of you!" she said, kissing Sigert on the
cheek.
"We're glad you like it," he said.
They hugged, and she kissed him again. "You can be
so thoughtful when you really
try. But it's all cloudy. I can't see myself in it."
"If Your
Majesty will simply repeat this phrase while standing before the
mirror," said Kedrigern,
handing her the slip of parchment which he had
concealed in his sleeve.
She took the
parchment, studied it, and said, "Mirror, mirror, standing there,
tell me truly: am I
fair?"
Lights flickered deep within the mirror. Colors blazed and swooped and curled in
diminishing
loops, spiraling toward the center, growing ever fainter until
finally they cleared and
only the queen's reflection showed. From within the
glass a deep voice said, "Happily I do
my duty: hail to thee, world's reigning
beauty!"
"World's reigning beauty? Does that mean
that I'm the fairest of them all?"
Brissault cried.
"What you see is clearly true: no one's
half as fair as you," said the mirror.
Delighted, the queen turned to the king. "Is it
really so?" she asked.
He shrugged and said, "We have never known a mirror to lie."
She
embraced him, kissed him, and withdrew to her dressing room. At the doorway
she turned and
said, "Wizard, I would have you stay to instruct me in the
properties of this wonderful
gift."
Sigert looked smugly at Kedrigern and at their images in the mirror. When the
door
had closed behind Brissault, and he was certain that she was out of
earshot, the king said,
"We think we handled that rather well."
"Let's see what the mirror thinks." Turning to the
mirror, Kedrigern said, "Tell
us, mirror: are we clever?"
In reverent tones, the mirror
said, "King and wizard, are you ever! Brilliant
king and brilliant mage, keenest thinkers
of the age!"
The king winked at the wizard, who returned the wink. Sigert cocked his crown
at
a jaunty angle and swaggered from the queen's bedchamber looking very pleased
with
himself.
In a little while Brissault reentered the room. She looked around to make
absolutely
certain that she and the wizard were alone, locked the door, and went
to the mirror. She
folded her arms, and in a stem no-nonsense voice said, "All
right, mirror, let's have the
truth."
"The truth?"
"Your Majesty--" Kedrigern cried in alarm, but she cut him short with a
gesture
and said, "Stay out of this. Come on, mirror. Cut the flattery."
"Flattery?"
"And
stop repeating everything I say. Come on, out with it."
The mirror ran through a rainbow of
color, then cleared. "The truth. Very well.
Your Majesty is twenty-two pounds overweight
and badly needs a new hairdresser.
And that gown... I wouldn't wrap a dead dog in that to
bury it."
The queen stood silent, tapping her foot. She turned to Kedrigern, who shrugged
helplessly. "Mirrors can't lie, Your Majesty."
"Oh, can't they? What was all that about
'world's reigning beauty'?"
"Your Majesty is a very beautiful --"
"I've seen my best years,
Kedrigern. I'm holding up well, but I'm no longer the
world's great beauty. So why did the
mirror say so?"
Looking sheepish, Kedrigern said, "Poetic license. As long as it spoke in
rhyme.
. . ."
"Very ingenious. But remember, you're working for me as well as for Sigert."
Brissault studied her image. After a long and thoughtful pause, she said,
"You're right
about the gown, mirror. Sigert picked it out, and he has no sense
of color. And I've never
been completely satisfied with the Royal Hairdresser.
But twenty-two pounds?!"
"Your Majesty
would look trim if she lost fifteen. But she would look svelte if
she lost twenty-two.
Trust me."
"Svelte is unnecessary. Trim will do. But I am in no hurry. His Majesty thinks I
wish to look like a sixteen-year-old princess. His Majesty is wrong." The mirror
shimmered
discreetly and said nothing. Brissault went on, "I will have my
favorite dresses brought
out, and you will tell me frankly how I look in them. I
will also try a few new hairdos
that I have seen in recent months. And I will
cut out pastries at breakfast and have only
light sauces with dinner. You will
inform me when I am trim."
"As Your Majesty commands,"
said the mirror.
"And if His Majesty should ask, tell him I'm delighted to know that I am
the
fairest in the land. And tell him that he's the kindest and most thoughtful of
kings.
He'll expect to hear that," said the queen.
"Yes, Your Majesty."
"And now you can go to
sleep, or do whatever you magic things do when you're not
doing magic things," said
Brissault. "Kedrigern, you did well. I think this
mirror can help solve our problems. Now
cover it over. We have private
business." When the mirror was obscured, she said, "Did you
get the ring?"
From inside his tunic Kedrigern drew forth a small black box. He unlocked
and
opened it, and placed it in her hands. She looked wistfully on the glittering
quincunx
of two rubies, two emeralds, and a single diamond, identically cut.
"It would have made
such a lovely anniversary present," she said with a sigh.
"The decision is up to you, Your
Majesty. I took it on approval."
She gazed on the ring for a long time, then shook her
head. "No. It won't do.
Sigert is a good man and means well, but he doesn't understand
women and
probably never will."
She took up the ring, turning it, watching the light that
flashed from its
facets and glowed in its heart. It was a beautiful piece of work, but its
value
lay not in beauty alone.
"Perhaps the Ring of Insight will change him," Kedrigern
suggested. "It confers
perception on the wearer."
"Too much perception. With this ring on
his finger, Sigert could not be
deceived. Isn't that so?"
"That is the virtue of the ring
Your Majesty."
Brissault sighed again, a deeper, sadder sigh. When she learned of the Ring
of
Insight some years ago it had seemed the perfect gift, an expression of faith
and trust
that would make her feelings clear to Sigert as words could not, and
restore their old
relationship. When Kedrigern had informed her that the ring
might be available, she had
instructed him to acquire it whatever the cost. Now
she saw that it was simply not possible
to give Sigert the ring. Someday,
perhaps, but not yet.
"Sigert will be better off with a
present of a nice new set of robes. Something
warm and comfortable, with his favorite motif
of forget-me-not and dragon worked
in gold on the pockets. And a nice pair of matching
slippers to wear around the
palace in the evening."
"Thoughtful gifts, Your Majesty. And
very useful."
"Take back the ring, Kedrigern."
"Have you no wish to wear it yourself?"
"Never.
And if you're sensible, you'll not slip it on your finger."
Kedrigern smiled. "I don't plan
to, Your Majesty."
"Very wise of you. Sigert's a good man at heart, and we love one
another. We
have our little differences, but all things considered, he's been a decent
husband."
She paused, then added, "And our chances of happiness together will be
much improved if we
both retain the ability to be deceived now and then."