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The Reign of Pearls & Poison, a fairy tale for enlightenment
Torches make circles of orange light in the dark castle passage. The crone has been here before, many times, to give rescue from what behaves savage. She will lead you to safetyâbut enlightenment is required for suffering to cease. Listen to her tale echoing along the stone wallsâŚlisten, with humility.
Itâs up to you to find what meaning you will.
A king once fell in love with an unusual maiden in a faraway land. They married right away, for they seemed to recognize each other. The king and his new queen returned to his kingdom with its castle on a cliff by the sea. Every evening they held hands as court poets gave them pearls of wisdom for their reign. The maiden who had become queen lived the life of a bloomed red rose, untilâ
The king started doing strange and mean things.
He ordered that the castle must have no more than arrow slits for windows, so their home became dank and dark. He never slept and began to imagine the sins of everyone around him. These he announced after trumpets at court. Knights and peasants alike stood shamed by false or needless accusation, with most being deemed monsters.
âI must weed out the evil to secure my kingdom,â said the king to his queen after spending a lovely spring day inside dark chambers with men in hoods and long robesâhis advisors.
One morning the king summoned the queen out onto the castle battlements. He asked her to keep watch with him, looking out over the forests, cliffs, cove, and sea for what he said could be witches and beastly invaders.
âHis fearful temperament only grows,â said the queen later to her grimalkin. In case you didnât know, a grimalkin is a cat. This one was enormous. And strangely orange.
One evening, the queen heard an odd clinking noise as her husband paced the battlements. Baffled, she peered down at the graceful branches of the dryad forest, expecting to see beautiful trinkets hung there as a gift to the lovely tree spirits. There were none. Her grimalkin hissed and arched its back beneath the kingâs wide-legged stance when his highness stopped to clutch and shake his head. The queenâs gaze snapped to her husbandâs narcissistic face. For verily, the clinking came from inside his brain!
âFetch the healers,â the queen ordered once she had the king in bed. But he refused any treatment. Meanwhile, his advisors hummed and covered their ears, pretending nothing was loose within their kingâs head. Â Â
From then on, the king pleased himself declaring his own glory while condemning others as a way to spend his days. Anyone not bowing at his passing were accused of conspiracy against the crown.
You can imagine how the kingâs madness was soon renowned.
The queen walked on her knees after him along the battlements. âYour people must be ruled with pearls, not poison,â she entreated.
The kingâs face twisted. He reached down over the battlement wall where a dryad leaned her tree close to eavesdrop on their conversation. The spirit cried out when he plucked from her wood body. The king turned with a flourish and offered the dryadâs greenery to the queen, saying, âMy dear, think of it as a fig leaf, with which to cover your mouth.â
The queen no longer knew her beloved at all.
When summer arrived, the queen asked for a ship to sail to her homeland for a visit. The king refused. âMy queen will not mingle with dirty foreigners,â he said. âBesides, there are witches where you come from. Even your own sister, is it not true? There are rumors!â Â
The queenâs only comfort was her orange grimalkin. It purred and slipped infinity circles of protection between her slippered feet.
Unwilling to give up hope, the queen invited poets to the battlements to speak their pearls of wisdom within the kingâs hearing. But all the while the kingâs hooded advisors assured him that poison worked better than pearls to secure a kingdom.
The queen became so very cold inside. She locked herself and the weirdly orange grimalkin in her private chamber. There, she crawled into the hearth with its red embers, overwhelmed by belief that she had married nothing more than a beast.
The queenâs tears sizzled where they fell. Her gown smoked and caught fire. This is when she heard the voice of the Crone speak from within the flames:
Your despair is borne of monstrous lies
no different than his hate;
Release your faith in thoughts that hurt–
Speak truth and free your fate!
The queen remembered all the pearls ever given her by poets. One by one she recited them in her head as she went up in a toasted blaze. When it was over, the grimalkin leapt into the queenâs arms, and she emerged from the fire the glowing embodiment of a pearl. For her confusion that life had anything to do with hate or despair was burned to ash.
âI would be cruel, too, if I believed as my husband does,â said the queen to the grimalkin. For her mind was open and willing to see. âMy heart holds compassion for him, yet not senseless loyalty. Itâs clear that I must leave.â
This is how the queen was set freeâby love and clarity. It was bound to happen, for this is the way of things. Understanding always comes. Eventually.
Lightning slashed and thunder crashed. The queen peered through arrow slits in her chamber walls to see an offshore tempest brewing. She stepped out on the battlements to see the dryad forest against the castle waving their leafy handsâthe tree spirits seemed to beckon her, as if with furtive message.
âLook there!â exclaimed the queen. A ship appeared to wait offshore. In the tossing blue sea, she caught sight of moon faces and long tails flipping over. The queen whispered, âIs this your working, Sister?â
The grimalkin bristled and arched its back beside her. The queen sensed danger, too. She ran back to the chamber to see axes splitting her locked chamber door. Falling at the hearth, she grabbed up embers in her hands. She chanted a spell over them. The embers glowed fierce red, and she scattered them on the floor only to turn and grab up more.
The door crashed open.
The kingâs guards screamed and fell back as their boots caught fire from a burning stone floor.
âIt will only buy us a little time,â said the queen to the grimalkin. There was nowhere to go but the battlements. There, she found her husband racing toward her. The queen caught up the grimalkin in her arms to hold it tight, climbed to stand upon the top of the battlement with her gown whipped by wind, squeezed her eyes shutâ
And fell back.
A dryad caught her with its arms of branches. Cradling the queen just long enough to gaze at her with solemn goodbye, the tree spirit swiftly passed her on. The queen held her breath as she swished through a blur of rustling leaves in face-filled trees, ever faster at downward angle, when suddenly she felt a slip. A dryad had dropped herâ
Over the edge of the cliff.
Our queen screamed as she plummeted through misted air. Down the steep slope of earth, another dryad leaned into the salty winds. The spirit reached up and caught the queen in its limber limbs in such a way to slow her fallâinto yet another dryadâs branched and waiting arms.
Moments later the queen stood in a daze on the beach of the cove with sticks and leaves in her hair. Amazed at her rescue, she tilted back her head to look up the steep cliff where dryads lashed their limbs at the king and his men giving chase.
The grimalkin leapt from the queenâs arms and transformed back to human before touching sand. This was necessary, for grimalkins despise going into the sea for a swim. Even when mermaids are involved. Â
âSister, you planned our escape!â the queen said, throwing her arms around the grinning woman with orange hair. But there came a curdling scream.
The two sisters turned to see the king tumbling down the cliff.
When he came to a stop, it was upon a large rock to crack open his skull. This was a grace, for hundreds of clinking vials of poison popped right out of his head.
âLeave me alone,â the king sputtered into sheets of rain. He scrambled away from his queen. âYouâre a witch!â He squinted, recognizing the brilliant orange hair of the queenâs sister. âWas sheâŚyour cat?â
Bellowing in rage, the king made fists in the sand. He blinked. Opening his fingers, he found vials of poison in his hands. Insane, he shoved them back in his mind as fast as he could.
But not all of them. Â
âDonât leave me,â begged the king, reaching out for his wife. Deep In his eyes, the queen recognized the man she once knew. And yetâŚshe knew he had work to do.
The queenâs sister watched the kingâs men making their battered way down the cliff toward the cove. In a peculiar voice like a grimalkinâs mew, she said to the queen, âCome into the waves, we must go with the mermaids to the shipânow.â
âNo,â said the king. âShe will stay by my side, for I am king!â
Buffeted by gales, the queen knelt before the king one last time. âOur marriage is complete,â she said gentle in his ear.
He grabbed her hand and began to weep. âIf you go, my wife, Iâll never see you again.â
The queen ignored the insistent clicking of mermaid song behind her, as well as her sisterâs plaintive mewing. She pressed her forehead to her husbandâs and spoke with her lips touching his. âBelieving false things doesnât make them true. This is why the damage they do cannot be made real, cannot forever capture you. I will see you again. If not in this life, then another. Or this one over again. I will come to you then, for we must meet until our union is the same as when time first began.â Â
She walked into the waves before the kingâs men could assault her, calling back over her shoulder, âTo save your kingdom you must remember that pearl the poets once bequeathed: Â
âThe unseen truth of you is beauty, for the soul is not a beast.â Â
This story is the Crone’s version of Beauty and the Beast. It’s inspired in part by that whirling dervish Hafiz, who said in his verse that poets are life boats when you need to jump ship.
Featured image of crown by Ruth Archer
Strangely orange cat made so by my youngest, Jared Baker
Ship at sea image by Comfreak–though I added flipping tails of mermaids đ
GORGEOUS DRYAD ART BY JOANNA WOLSKA, who generously gave me permission to use her dryad for this story–THANK YOU!!!
IF YOU LIKED THIS GRIMALKIN-Y STORY, AND YOU HAVEN’T ALREADY, I HOPE YOU SUBSCRIBE TO CRONE TALES.
I love comments, will you please leave one below? Thank you ever so much for reading.
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The Widow with a Perfume Cart, a fairy tale for enlightenment
A winter’s snow has fallen all the day long. Sit by the window, pour the steaming tea, and imagine walks through woods long, long ago. The crone is ready to tell a tiny tale, so open your mind and heart and find what meaning you will.Â
A young widow wheeled her perfume bottles in a cart to the goodly summer fair. There a minstrel sang of broken ships and maidens held hands as they whirled. The widow caught the eye of a handsome merchant selling doves from a cage, and smiled.
âUgly witch!â he said, and spat upon her dress.
Hurrying past the merchant, she found a patch of muddy garden at the edge of the fair. She pulled back the cloth over her cart and arranged her perfume bottles for view. âFor luck! For love!â she sang out. âFor good humour!â
Villagers pretended they didnât see her. Late in the day, a gaggle of maidens shouted that her perfumes did stink. A peasant boy threw a cabbage at her head. The young widow knew her perfumes contained good things. âPlease,â she begged, holding out the bottles she so loved. At last she ran to hide in the woods.
It was the same at each goodly fair. The widow arranged her beloved perfumes in her cart and received cabbages to the head.
One clear autumn day she overturned her cart in a fit. âThey donât want what I have to give,â she lamented. Many a night she imagined the queen learning of her beloved perfumes and what might happen next. A Decree Against Cabbage! Come winter the young widow swore never again to think of her perfumes. She took up rug-braiding, and come spring she died inside.
To her surprise, she felt fresh and new. Laughter poured from her mouth at the notion that cabbage mattered at all.
The young widow knew her perfumes contained good things. At the next goodly fair and each one thereafter, the widow stood at her perfume cart and offered what she had to give. How could she not?
She loved. She loved. She loved. Â Â
Heaven on earth is like this. Â
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Do you feel like who you are or what you have to give isn’t wanted by the world?
Love overwhelms all. Even feelings of rejection, or the experience of rejection, or confusion, or monumental sadness.
Love. Is. Absolute.
Whatever you love, include it in your life. You may need to pay the rent or weed the yard, and do that. But never, ever leave out what makes you fresh and new. Even if it makes no sense to others around you (they are not responsible for your soul), or itâs impractical (why would that matter?), or your small self tries to talk you out of it (let that part of you die and find laughter at what the small self took so seriously).
The Real You loves, and loves, and loves. The Real You IS heaven on earth. It has been all along. That’s what brings the laughter.
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