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True love always wins, even across shuttered realms and decades of time. |
His name is Nathan Vach, and he's having terrifying dreams. Left alone after his father and brothers die in the Second Ogres war, and after his mother perishes from illness, he retreats into his family's big home far from anywhere. But the dreams continue to plague him, so he decides to visit a metaphysician in Munchkinland. There he learns startling news: that he has a gift for someone--a Soul Gift. It's a Gift that will be a great blessing to he or she destined to receive it. Walking home, he has no idea just how powerful that Gift is--or the individual who, unbeknownst to him, will soon try to claim it. Read on!
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Part One
Part Two
Part Three
Part Four
Part Five
Part Six
Part Seven
Part Eight
~~*~~
Part One
Part Two
Part Three
Part Four
Part Five
Part Six
Part Seven
Part Eight
~~*~~
N.V.
~~*~~
ALWAYS FORGETTING
ALWAYS FORGETTING
----
~~*~~
You might be wondering how, if I took a forgetting potion, I
have recalled everything that happened.
Allow me to tell
you.
I woke in my own
bed, stretched as I sat up, and stood. All those false memories were waiting
for me—ones that I would base the next sixty-six years of my life on.
That’s right. I’m
writing this tale as an eighty-six-year-old man.
Zelena had been
thorough in her potion-making. She had indeed covered all the bases. The troll
bridge was empty, just as I hoped it would be. I got home safe and sound and hoping
to see Brynn again, to maybe give her my Soul Gift. The plot hole of my
recovery time was filled by doing what I always had: by simply living my sad,
lonely life. Nothing really memorable had occurred during that time; nothing
worth fretting over or getting excited about. It all added up perfectly.
She had tweaked the
potion. I became restless in a way I had never experienced before. I wasn’t
interested in holing up anymore. Eventually I packed my bedroll (she had even
replaced the stolen one, along with my shirt) and trekked to Lageb, where I met
an elder councilwoman who was involved in a fight against the mayor to keep
taxes from being raised. Somehow that interested me when in the past I wouldn’t
have cared less. I promised her that on my way home to my ultimate destination,
which was to see Brynn again, that I’d help her. I left Lageb feeling something
very like dawn rising in my chest after a long, melancholy night.
Outside of Echeld,
the Munchkin village where Brynn lived, I had a sudden compulsion to walk up a
trail I knew led to a lovely lookout. It was still early in the day, and I was
in grand spirits, so I shrugged and ambled up the trail.
At the top were a
cluster of boulders. One of them had ornate six-inch initials engraved on it:
N.V.
My initials!
Another compulsion
overcame me, this one the urge to touch the stone. I did. The stone cracked. I
backed up a quick step.
From it issued a
beautiful, almost solid red glow. It focused like a lighthouse beam on my
chest, and I felt a wonderful warmth radiate to my fingertips, and this
incredible sense of being found, and tremendous joy. And then I fainted.
When I woke, I sat
up and shook myself off (I was covered in leaves and pine needles) and glanced
with amazement at the stone.
The initials—were
gone! The stone was whole again! It was like I had hallucinated the entire
thing!
I scrambled to my
feet and glanced around. Was this a trap? Had I been robbed?
I rifled through my
belongings. Everything was there, including my money. Judging by the daylight,
I had spent most of the afternoon unconscious. Sunset was maybe an hour off.
What the hell happened?
I went to the rock
and cautiously touched it. Nothing happened. Bewildered, I turned to collect my
things, and that’s when I saw it—a note half-buried by the leaves where I had
been lying. I stooped, picked it up, and unfolded it. It was on fine white
linen. I brought it to my nose. It was odorless. The loopy cursive suggested
that a woman had written it. It said:
Half-and-half
It’s not such a laugh
A moment in the sun
Lost kisses won
She’s waiting for you
And to her you must be true
While always forgetting ...
that I love you
It’s not such a laugh
A moment in the sun
Lost kisses won
She’s waiting for you
And to her you must be true
While always forgetting ...
that I love you
I was certain that
it was a note that a heartbroken Munchkin had written to her lover, who for
some reason had forgotten about their love and had gotten himself involved with
another. I went to put it back, thinking that I had no business keeping it, but
again I felt a strong compulsion. This one urged me to keep it. It was even
stronger than the compulsion that led me to the magical cracking boulder, so I
put the note in my pack and got on my way. I was very excited to see Brynn
again, and maybe, if things were going well, to share the unsettling events of
the day.
She greeted me at
the door with a brilliant and disarming smile. A hint of her perfume greeted my
nose. It was like smelling heaven after a sunshower. It mixed with my spinal
fluid and lodged in my soul. I knew I’d never forget it, that it was hers and
hers alone.
We married a year later. We would spend the next fifty-eight
years together. We made my lonely home one of joy and community and children—three
to be exact, who grew up, got married, and gave us grandkids, eleven at last
count, and two great-grandchildren.
Brynn was
everything to me. I loved her, and will forever. She helped me heal from the
loss of my family. And she gave me a new one.
With her father’s
help and connections, I soon became a very involved member of not only Echeld,
but Lageb, too. Five years after I watched my bride walk up the aisle towards
me, I ran for and became mayor of Lageb.
(Oz was a
constitutional monarchy that, in its less authoritarian eras, actually strived
for something that appeared democratic.)
A couple of weeks
after I woke from the forgetting potion, I found something remarkable in a
forgotten corner of the cold shed. It was a wand! It looked like it had been
fashioned from one of the local trees. When I picked it up an overwhelming warmth
issued from it into my hand. Magic! Somehow it gifted me with a message, which,
extraordinarily, sounded like me
whispering:
I’m yours. Learn to use me.
So I did. Over the next six and a half
decades I learned the ways of magic. I learned, as I had after my family died,
by teaching myself. I spoke to wizards and witches. I traveled widely in
pursuit of knowledge whenever I got the chance.
Most practiced in
the magical arts tried to tell me that magic was “light” or “dark.” They tried
to tell me I had to choose one. But every time I hefted my wand I could tell—I
could feel—that it wanted me to learn
both, that both were far more related and mixed than those purists could
possibly imagine.
So I learned both.
I became powerful. Over time I became very powerful.
Zelena’s “stuffed
hat” sister witches turned out to be magical fascists who eventually tried to
outlaw all magic and magical creatures save themselves, convinced, as all
fascists are, that only they can handle the responsibility brought by power, be
it magical or political.
Zelena, who I
became distantly familiar with as a regular citizen does of its leaders and
utterly unaware so much more had occurred with her, had already banned one of
them, Glinda; but the other two, upon Zelena’s departure to another Realm, formed
a joint dictatorship and began actively persecuting the citizenry. Lageb and
Echeld’s locals came to me and urged me to confront them. Two years later I
did. On the Dragon Piss Road
outside the Emerald
City , we did battle. They
were no match for my combination of light and dark magic, and both fell. Oz,
delivered from their totalitarian clutches, rejoiced.
I went home feeling
extraordinarily humbled and proud, thinking that my days as a hero were now
comfortably over, and that I could relax and be with Brynn and my children and
continue being of service to Lageb and Echeld. But a knock on my door half a
year later ended that wish for the next thirty-four years. At the door was Mr.
Dinys, my father-in-law, with about a hundred Munchkins and maybe twice that of
humans, all bearing torches. They had a massive petition. They wanted me to be
the next king of Oz, and weren’t going to take no for an answer.
A year later I sat
for the first time on Oz’s throne not as a young man in love waiting for his
wicked one (not knowing I had done so, of course), but as the ruler of the
entire land.
I’d like to think I
was a good ruler. Always uppermost were the wishes of the people, especially
concern for those least fortunate among us. With that in mind I formed a
cabinet of advisers that included mostly Munchkins and women. Of Munchkinland,
since they were a province
of Oz and one I cared
about dearly, but one that had been entirely neglected by countless royals in
the past, I worked very hard to “bring them into the fold,” as it were. That
work paid off handsomely for everyone in countless ways.
I ramped up Zelena’s
program to clean up the Dragon
Piss Road and the villages along it. By doing so I
created lots of well-paying jobs. Unemployment fell to almost zero. I empowered
local constables to be much stronger in protecting their citizens from bandits
and trolls. With Xenophon Dunk’s help as one of my chief advisers, we found a
way to fund free medical care for all citizens. No one would ever have to
suffer the grief I did when Mom died. “Vach-care” was immediately very popular.
As for the trolls,
I tried working with them. I really did. But they had no interest in peace,
having for some reason decided that I was a serious threat, and so Oz, for
three awful years, went to war within our own borders. Trolls, it turned out,
were much better at organizing and banding together for a cause than I ever
thought possible. Outrageously, many men joined them. Even more outrageously,
many wizards and witches banded together to prevent me from using my powers to
bring a swift and decisive end to the conflict.
The Troll War was
bloody and tragic, and finally ended when I and my own special unit of wizards
and witches found and exterminated the last traitorous mage, thereby releasing
the curse he and his vile accomplices had cast upon my powers.
I sat imperiously
on Oz’s throne and watched the bloated, narcissistic, orange-tinted “King” Pūtrump,
who managed to bring together thousands of his kind and men into an
astonishingly tough and formidable fighting force, grovel on his knees three
steps below.
I didn’t sit often in
that chair. When I did, the citizenry knew I was royally pissed off. I had
taken more than a month to consider a punishment, one worthy of the crimes the
trolls and their men, wizards, and witches perpetrated upon Oz’s citizens. The
one I came up with Zelena would have been very proud of.
I stood and waved
my wand, and “King” Pūtrump’s heart of hearts, along with the heart of hearts
of every single troll in Oz, and the men who joined them, burst out of his, and
their, chests. No one saw it coming.
Tens of thousands
of blackened heart of hearts gathered like a vile, swirling cloud above the Emerald City . I crossed the main moat and with a
brilliant flash from my wand destroyed it. I flourished my wand again and the
hearts descended to form what became known as the Troll
Bridge —an arching, high bridge into
the Emerald City made of the heart of hearts of
every troll in Oz, and the men who took up arms in their cause.
Since I possessed
them all, I could command them to do anything, and they would be compelled to obey
me—forever. So I commanded:
“Until you die, every one of you, should you
be seen by any human or Munchkin after three days hence within the borders of
Oz, you will happily and faithfully serve them at their pleasure for a period
not to exceed ten years.”
I knelt and jammed
the tip of my wand into the earth. A bright yellow circle of light expanded
rapidly from it and disappeared in all directions out of sight.
“As for all adult trolls who did not fight, they
shall lose their heart of hearts for every moment they are in Oz. If they choose
to leave Oz, they can retrieve them. These hearts will be located in a special
treasury built just for this purpose. If these trolls choose to make trouble of
any kind on their way out, we will hunt them down and leave their bodies where
they fall. The same curse applies to all trolls visiting us from other lands. SO
BE IT!”
I stood. The large
crowd surrounding me stared both at me and the quickly forming Troll Bridge
in awed silence. “King” Pūtrump and his lieutenants looked small and feeble.
“As for the men who took up arms against
Oz,” I roared, “I say today: you
behaved as trolls, so you will join them as trolls yourselves!”
Another flourish of
my wand, and every man who took up arms in the trolls’ evil cause, or
collaborated with them in any way, no matter where they were, seen or unseen, turned
into trolls.
There hasn’t been a
single sighting of a troll within the borders of Oz in almost twenty-seven
years. The Troll Bridge , though it started with a faint
red, disparately pulsing glow, became more and more like any stonework bridge
as the trolls died off. It is almost entirely stone today. Just a few heart of
hearts remain.
Shortly after that I
offered to resign as king. I felt it only right. Under my watch many of Oz’s
sons and daughters had died in battle, and many fields had been blackened by
the violence of war and soil wet by spilled blood. I decreed the citizens
should vote on it.
They did. By an
overwhelming margin of twenty-six percent, the citizens of Oz declared they wanted
me to stay as their monarch. And so, for the same number of years as my margin
of victory, I continued to sit on Oz’s throne.
When it came time
for me to step down, I could have chosen one of my kids to take the throne, and
thought I might choose one of them. But none of them were interested. So I
picked my closest adviser, a wise and eminently qualified Munchkin named Hilari.
She was best friends with Cheräs Dinys, my father-in-law, who had recently
passed away. Her ascension to the throne as the Queen of Oz will stand in my
mind as one of my greatest joys, for never before had a Munchkin been ruler of
the land that they had shared with humans for thousands of years. I went back
to Lageb, to our home, and there I lived in peace and joy with my Brynn for the
next twenty-one years.
An interesting
aside. When I handed the Royal Scepter to Hilari, a wondrous warmth issued from
my hand, quite unbidden, into the Scepter and into her hand. I could tell she
felt it too. I had felt similar moments during my life with others. It seemed
every time it happened that the person who experienced it with me went on to do
great things. I never knew what that thing could be except a Soul Gift.
Notably, I didn’t
experience any more visions. At least, nothing you would call visions. Nothing
that I was sure were visions.
Hilari indeed
turned out to be a great queen. I’d say as far as rulers go, she was, in my
opinion, better than all of them, including me. She sits on the throne to this
day.
As far as Brynn
went, I never felt such a sensation with her. It never occurred. I reasoned
that the Gift I had to give her was of a different nature, perhaps, and so was
much more subtle, and convinced myself that I had indeed given her one. She
spoke many times of how blessed she was, how fortunate, and how happy. That was
good enough to convince me.
The illness that took her was sudden and, for a time, excruciatingly
painful. The kingdom’s finest healers couldn’t touch it. Neither could I. They
guessed that it was some form of consumption.
Desperate for help,
I decided to summon help from Misthaven—the Enchanted Forest .
I remembered the stories of Rumpelstiltskin, the wizard who finally ended the
Third Ogres War.
His power was
legendary. If anyone could save my Brynn, it was he. I needed only go to one of
the old portals, crumbling and no longer functional, and utter his name three
times. Rumpelstiltskin was rumored to be so powerful that he could breach the
barrier between our Realms and provide assistance.
I was warned that
he was a trickster and would do nothing without getting something very valuable
in return. As a former monarch, I didn’t worry about it. I had access to more
wealth than any man or woman should ever have.
I materialized next
to the first portal from the Emerald
City (about ten miles
away from it) and pulled my wand from my pocket and held it up.
“Rumpelstiltskin,”
I intoned as I was told was needed. “Rumpelstiltskin. Rumpelstiltskin.”
I stepped back and
waited.
He materialized out
of a cloud of swirling red smoke fifteen minutes later. We gazed at each other
silently, sizing each other up.
I had been told he
looked like an imp, with scaly gray skin and wild eyes and long nails. He was
known as “The Dark One” for his endlessly nasty deeds. But the wizard standing
before me didn’t have wild eyes or weird skin or unnatural nails. He had short
parted gray hair and an impatient smile, and wore a tasteful crimson coat.
“Yes? Can I help
you?”
I pocketed my wand
and approached and held out my hand in greeting. He took it.
“I’m sorry,
Rumpelstiltskin,” I began, eager to get right to the point. “Forgive me for
taking you away from your life. My wife is very ill and I am desperate for
help. I thought you might be able to help her.”
He studied me with
interest. “You must be very powerful to get my attention across shuttered Realms.
What is your name?”
“Nathan Vach, sir,”
I said, releasing his hand and bowing. He continued to watch me with interest.
“Retired King of Oz.”
“May I see the wand
you were just holding, sire?”
“Of course.”
I pulled it out of
my pocket and handed it to him. He studied it with fascination for a long time.
“This is a married wand,” he observed
as though unable to believe it.
I didn’t know what that meant, so I asked. He
studied it for some time longer, then handed it back. “A married wand is a wand
that has married both light and dark magics and integrated their power. Such a
thing has been theorized for thousands of years but never achieved, not even by
me.”
He stepped closer. “Would
you mind if I checked your heart?”
I wasn’t afraid of
him. I wasn’t afraid of anything but losing my beautiful wife.
“Sure. Go ahead.”
He thrust his hand
into my chest and yanked my heart of hearts out. I unbent from the pain and
looked.
My heart of hearts
was a beautiful, swirling, dynamic mix of dark and light. They danced like
lovers, twisting and twirling around one another mesmerizingly. The Dark One
was fascinated.
“In centuries of
magic, I have never seen this before,” he whispered. “It’s almost as if ... as
if ... this heart is a fusion of ... two
hearts, not one.”
He brought his
stare to me. “Nathan Vach, you say?”
“Yes, sir.”
I thought at that
point that he might try to control or manipulate me, or attempt to strike a
deal. But he didn’t. Entirely reasonably, he thrust my heart of hearts back
into my chest, wiped his hands, and said, “Shall we see what we can do for your
bride, Your Majesty?”
“Yes,” I returned,
flummoxed, “let’s. Please.”
I flourished my hand
and we disappeared in a cloud of green-white smoke for my home.
But there was
nothing Rumpelstiltskin could do except fashion a potion to lessen Brynn’s
pain. No healer had been able to do even that much. It required, coincidentally,
a portion of my heart of hearts magically dissolved into brandy. He handed the potion
to me. “This will last a month.” He gave me a look that told me a month was
more than enough. Brynn reached up from bed and shook his hand and thanked him.
“You are more than
welcome, Your Majesty,” he said, grasping her hand in both of his with great
grace.
We magicked back to
the portal.
“Forgive me, sir,”
I said once the smoke cleared, “but I was told that you did nothing without a
deal.”
His smile was one
of regret and hard-won wisdom. “I’m happy to say that those days are long since
over. Your bride is very ill, sire. I am glad to be of whatever service I can
render.”
He glanced down at
the Dragon Piss Road .
“You know, I’ve got no use for all the gold I’ve created over the centuries. There
are mountains of it. So I think I’ll leave Oz with a little gift.”
He withdrew from
his cloak a fabulous dagger that bore his name and waved it over the road.
The tired yellow of
the piss colored over in all directions with a sheen of brilliant, actual gold. I gawked down at it and
started laughing.
“My God! You’ll
have the entire population out here trying to chip it up!”
“It’s enchanted. They
won’t be able to do any harm to it. Besides, I’ve learned to the chagrin of my
ex-wife that if you want to be truly good—” he grinned and crinkled his nose—“you’ve
gotta be a little bad.”
I laughed again. We
shook hands. He inclined his head. “I hope to meet you again, sire.”
“And I you,
Rumpelstiltskin. And please. Just Nathan to my friends.”
“Will do. Just
Rumpel for me, Nathan. Someday I may have need of your remarkable powers. If I
call for you, would you be willing?”
“To the degree my
advanced age allows and won’t slow you down in your mission, of course,” I
said. “I am forever grateful for your help, Rumpel.”
He smiled sadly.
“Best be off to your wife.”
“Thanks again.”
He bowed and disappeared
in swirling red smoke back to Misthaven.
I went back to
Brynn.
She died twenty-two
days later. They were, thanks to Rumpelstiltskin, painless days. She died surrounded
by me, our kids, grandkids, and great-grandkids. The day after we buried her in
the field behind the house, I mixed the remaining potion with more brandy and
downed it. But I knew even as I did that nothing would take away the pain of my
Brynn’s passing.
Once the funeral
was over, once the kids had gone back to their lives, I sat in this big house
alone. Just like I did all those years ago.
Eight years passed.
I hadn’t seen it in decades. I’d forgotten entirely about
it. I’d kept it on the hearth in a small jeweled case I believe once belonged
to Mom, and which Brynn kept her most treasured knickknacks. I opened the
lockbox one day on a lark, something different to do, and there it was, yellow
with age. I dug it up and read it again.
Half-and-half
It’s not such a laugh
A moment in the sun
Lost kisses won
She’s waiting for you
And to her you must be true
While always forgetting ...
that I love you
It’s not such a laugh
A moment in the sun
Lost kisses won
She’s waiting for you
And to her you must be true
While always forgetting ...
that I love you
At first I didn’t
recognize it. And then the memories returned: my initials on the boulder. The
boulder cracked open when I touched it and issued red light into my chest. I
fainted. When I woke, I found this note under the leaves where I had lain.
As I stood there,
gazing at this lovely bit of verse, the words floated off the page and melted
into green smoke that surrounded my face. I inhaled, and the smoke went into my
lungs.
And just like that,
the true memories of my time with Zelena returned, slowly at first, then with
more and more force. I leaned against the hearth, clutching my heart, overwhelmed,
breathless.
She had enchanted
that path and had taken my Cruxx to the outskirts of Echeld, where she had
protected it and hidden it inside an enchanted boulder. She knew I would visit
Brynn again. It’s entirely possible that she had seen to it that the forgetting
potion compelled me to go.
Memories!
My sweet Zelena!
The troll attack. She rescued me. She nursed
me back to health. I fell in love with her. Desperately in love. And she had
fallen in love with me.
We exchanged hearts. I rescued her pendant
and destroyed the troll encampment.
We made love. I gave her half my heart, and
she gave half of hers to me.
I drank the forgetting potion.
I had to sit down.
I was certain I was going to have a heart attack.
Brynn’s perfume ...
was Zelena’s. She must have somehow
given it to Brynn! In all the time my sweet bride and I were together, I never
smelled its like on anyone else!
How had Zelena known
of Brynn? I never told her! But then, while healing, I had gibbered! Zelena
told me I had! Was that how she learned of her?
I don’t know how
long I sat there staring at nothing at all and sipping air like I’d never get
to again, but it must have been hours, because when I came to myself, it was
the middle of the night. Twelve hours had passed just like that.
Without Zelena’s
heart, I never could have ruled Oz. I never could have done a thousand things
without that darkness. That necessary
darkness.
I wondered what she
did with my light. With my Soul Gift. Did she use them to make for herself an
amazing life? Was she even alive? I prayed she was, and that her life had been
beautiful and epic, that my Gift had helped her. I prayed that prayer and
didn’t stop through the night. I wasn’t tired; I had no desire to sleep.
I somehow knew that
the forgetting potion lost its force with her the exact moment it did with me.
Wherever she was—please let her be alive!—she
too was remembering everything. I didn’t know how I knew that; I just did.
Zelena, if she lived, was remembering
our time together too.
I studied my wand.
Before I went back to her with her pendant, I had gone to the forest where she
had been searching for a very special wood for wands, had found that wood, and
had fashioned this very instrument. I came back to this house and there, with
the whole of Zelena’s awesome magical skills and power focused intensely by the
pendant, had worked furiously to prepare it for the future. I knew she had to
leave me.
This wand had the
answer should she ever return. I had put that answer in it and locked it
magically away, only to be unlocked when it came time to remember our
incredible time together. I called upon it, and the answer came immediately to
me. When it did I sat in my lonely house and wept for fear and joy.
Was she still alive?
Morning dawned. I was sitting on the porch. From the forest
a lone figure emerged from the shadows. Fifty feet away she pulled her cloak
off her head and smiled, tears bright in her eyes.
The dying embers of
a god’s campfire that was her hair was now colored with plentiful gray the same
color as ash. But the sapphire in her eyes hadn’t dimmed even a little. And
though she walked slightly stooped from advanced age, she still strode towards
me like she owned the whole of Oz. It was a stride that couldn’t be mistaken
for anyone else’s.
“Hello, Nathan.”
I stood and went to
her. I cupped her face. We kissed. We hugged. We cried.
The perfume she
wore was new. It lodged itself in my heart—the heart that was once half hers,
half mine, now a married, integrated mix of both—and into my spinal fluid. It
would remain with me for all time. I took a deep, deep breath and prayed that
when it came time for me to die, that I would do so in her embrace.
When I could see
again, when the tears had subsided a little, I gazed down at her pendant. It
was white and empty of magic.
She had no magic
either. I knew then what the light in my heart, and my Soul Gift, did for her.
She had given up her magic so that she could find her happy ending. So that she
could, whether or not she knew it at the time, return to me.
My wand was ready.
I held it up between us.
“Ready?”
She grasped my hand
and nodded with happy expectation.
A new day. A new life. And a magic bean, one of two Zelena
had used to return to Oz.
I gazed at the home
I’d spent my entire life in. I’d like to return to it someday. But not for a
while, I think.
The kids will
understand. They’ll find the note I left them. This lovely home is theirs now
to use as they saw fit.
Zelena, unstooped now
by age, her pendant green and potent once more, kissed my cheek. Her hair
blazed red in the sun. I exulted once more in the feel of those wondrous lips
against my flesh and gazed down upon myself. Having a twenty-year-old body once
more was phenomenal, truly something to envy.
No. Something to N.V.
With her arm in
mine, I threw the bean and watched as a portal opened next to my lifelong home.
We walked through
it, and it closed behind us.
~~*~~