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CHAPTER TENTH Prince Marvel Wins His Fight When
the door had closed on the Royal Dragon,
King Terribus turned again to Prince Marvel, while his crimson face
glowed with
embarrassment, and his front eye rolled with baffled rage as he thought
how
vain had been all his efforts to kill this impudent invader of his
domains. But his powers were by no
means
exhausted. He was a mighty king — the
mightiest
of all in the Enchanted Island, he believed — and ways to destroy his
enemies
were numerous. "Send for a hundred of my
Gray
Men!" he suddenly cried; and a courtier ran at once to summon them. The Gray Men would obey his orders without
question, he well knew. They were
silent, stubborn, quick, and faithful to their king.
Terribus had but to command and his will would
be obeyed. They entered the room so
quietly
that Nerle never knew they were there until he turned and found the
hundred
gray ones standing close together in the center of the hall. Then Prince Marvel came to Nerle's side and
whispered something in his ear. "Will you obey my
orders?"
they heard the king ask. And the Gray
Men, with their eyes fixed upon their master, nodded all their hundred
heads
and put their hands upon the dangerous three-tined forks that were
stuck in
every one of the hundred belts. Prince Marvel handed one
end of a
coiled rope to Nerle, and then they both sprang forward and ran around
the spot
where the hundred Gray Men stood huddled together.
Then they were pulled closer together than before
— closer, and still closer — for the prince and Nerle had surrounded
them with
the rope and were tying the two ends together in a tight knot. The rope cut into the waists of those on the
outside, and they pressed inward against their fellows until there was
scarcely
space to stick a knife-blade between any two of them.
When the prince had tied the rope firmly King
Terribus, who had been looking on amazed, saw that his hundred Gray Men
were
fastened together like a bundle of kindling-wood, and were unable to
stir hand
or foot. And, while he still gazed
open-mouthed at the strange sight, Prince Marvel tilted the bundle of
men up on
its edge and rolled it out of the door. It
went rolling swiftly through the courtyard and bounded down the
castle steps, where the rope broke and the men fell sprawling in all
directions
on the marble walk. King Terribus sighed, for
such
treatment of his Gray Men, whom he dearly loved, made him very unhappy. But more than ever was he
resolved
to kill these impudent strangers, who, in the very heart of his kingdom
where
thousands bowed to his will, dared openly defy his power.
So, after a moment's thought, Terribus
beckoned to a dwarf who, robed in gay and glittering apparel, stood
near his
throne. "Summon the royal Dart
Slingers!" he said, with a scowl. The little man bowed and
hastened
away, to return presently with twenty curiously crooked dwarfs, each
armed with
a sling and a quiver full of slender, sharp-pointed darts. "Slay me these
strangers!"
exclaimed the king, in his gruffest voice. Now Nerle, when he beheld
these
terrible Dart Slingers, of whom he had heard many tales in his boyhood,
began
to shiver and shake with fright, so that his teeth rattled one upon
another. And he reflected: "Soon
shall I be content, for these darts will doubtless pierce every part of
my
body." The dwarfs formed a line
at one side
of the gloomy throne-room, and Prince Marvel, who had been earnestly
regarding
them, caught Nerle by the arm and led him to the opposite wall. "Stand close behind me
and you
will be safe," he whispered to his esquire. Then each dwarf fixed a
dart in his
sling, and at a word from their chief they all drew back their arms and
launched a shower of the sharp missiles at the strangers. Swift and true they sped,
each dart
intended to pierce the body of the youthful knight who stood so calm
before
them. Prince Marvel had raised his right
arm, and in his hand was a small leather sack, with a wide mouth. As the darts flew near him a strange thing
happened: they each and all swerved from their true course and fell
rattling
into the leathern sack, to the wonder of the royal slingers and the
dismay of King
Terribus himself. "Again!" screamed the
king, his usually mild voice hoarse with anger. So again the dwarfs cast
their
darts, and again the leathern sack caught them every one.
Another flight followed, and yet another,
till the magic sack was packed full of the darts and not a dwarf had
one remaining
in his quiver. Amid the awed silence of
the
beholders of this feat the merry laughter of Prince Marvel rang loud
and clear;
for the sight of the puzzled and terrified faces about him was very
comical. Plucking a dart from the sack
he raised his arm and cried: "Now it is my turn. You shall have back your darts!" "Hold!" shouted the king,
in great fear. "Do not, I beg you,
slay my faithful servants." And
with a wave of his hand he dismissed the dwarfs, who were glad to rush
from the
room and escape. Nerle wiped the tears
from his eyes,
for he was sorely disappointed at having again escaped all pain and
discomfort;
but Prince Marvel seated himself quietly upon a stool and looked at the
scowling face of King Terribus with real amusement. The monarch of Spor had
never before
been so foiled and scorned by any living creature.
Defeated and humbled before his own people,
he bowed his crimson head on his hands and sullenly regarded his foe
with his top
eye. Then it was that the idea came to
him that no ordinary mortal could have thwarted him so easily, and he
began to
fear he was dealing — perhaps unawares — with some great magician or
sorcerer. That a fairy should have
assumed a mortal form he never once considered, for such a thing was
until then
unheard of in the Enchanted Island of Yew. But
with the knowledge that he had met his master, whoever he might
prove to be, and that further attempts upon the stranger's life might
lead to
his own undoing, King Terribus decided to adopt a new line of conduct,
hoping
to accomplish by stratagem what he could not do by force.
To be sure, there remained his regiment of
Giants, the pride of his kingdom; but Terribus dreaded to meet with
another defeat;
and he was not at all sure, after what had happened, that the giants
would
succeed in conquering or destroying the strangers. "After all," he thought,
"my only object in killing them was to prevent their carrying news of
my
monstrous appearance to the outside world; so if I can but manage to
keep them
forever in my kingdom it will answer my purpose equally well." As the result of this
thought he
presently raised his head and spoke to Prince Marvel in a quiet and
even
cheerful voice. "Enough of these rude and
boisterous games," said he, with a smile that showed his white teeth in
a
repulsive manner. "They may have seemed
to my people an ill welcome to my good friend, Prince Marvel; yet they
were
only designed to show the powers of the mighty magician who has become
my
guest. Nay, do not deny it, Prince; from
the first I guessed your secret, and to prove myself right I called my
servants
to oppose you, being sure they could not do you an injury.
But no more of such fooling, — and pray
forgive my merry game at your expense. Henceforth we shall be friends,
and you
are heartily welcome to the best my kingdom affords." With this speech Terribus
stepped
down from his throne and approached Prince Marvel with outstretched
hand. The prince was not at all deceived,
but he
was pleased to see how cunningly the king excused his attempts to kill
him. So he laughed and touched the hand
Terribus extended, for this fairy prince seemed to have no anger
against any mortal
who ventured to oppose him. The strangers were now
conducted,
with every mark of respect, to a beautiful suite of apartments in the
castle,
wherein were soft beds with velvet spreads, marble baths with perfumed
waters,
and a variety of silken and brocaded costumes from which they might
select a
change of raiment. No sooner had they bathed
and
adorned themselves fittingly than they were summoned to the king's
banquet hall,
being escorted thither by twelve young maidens bearing torches with
lavender-colored flames. The night had fallen upon
the
mountains outside, but the great banquet hall was brilliant with the
glow of a
thousand candles, and seated at the head of the long table was King
Terribus. Yet here, as in the
throne-room, the
ruler of Spor was dressed in simplest garments, and his seat was a
rough block
of stone. All about him were lords and
ladies in gorgeous array; the walls were hung with rare embroideries;
the table
was weighted with gold platters and richly carved goblets filled with
sweet
nectars. But the king himself, with his
horrid, ugly head, was like a great blot on a fair parchment, and even
Prince
Marvel could not repress a shudder as he gazed upon him. Terribus placed his guest
upon his
right hand and loaded him with honors. Nerle
stood behind the prince's chair and served him faithfully, as an
esquire should. But the other servants
treated Nerle with much deference, noting in him an air of breeding
that marked
him the unusual servant of an unusual master. Indeed, most curious were
the looks
cast on these marvelous men who had calmly walked into the castle of
mighty
Terribus and successfully defied his anger; for in spite of his
youthful
appearance and smiling face every attendant at the banquet feared
Prince Marvel
even more than they feared their own fierce king. |