Not without some sense of guilt, I went to her desk and rummaged through the drawers. In the lowest of them, which I had to force open with a paperknife, I found a copy of my file, including my medical records. A single item in those records had been asterisked and heavily underlined. It read:
Suffered a severe physical trauma at age six which resulted in the loss of an eye. A prosthetic eye successfully fitted.
So! I
had
been chosen for my handicap, but still I didn't understand why. It seemed too petty a motive for someone as generous as Gretel, too out of character.
However, when a loved one has just died, it is impossible to sit around wondering, or even to give way to grief. There are too many things to be done: the body to be washed and dressed; the funeral to be arranged; food to be prepared for the reception afterwards.
I set about these tasks with a heavy heart, but also an inner sense of elation. Because here is the curious thing: my sudden clarity of sight â or whatever it was that had happened to me back at the hovel â didn't fade with the passing hours. It persisted. The world at large retained its unnatural vividness. The interior of the cottage, my brush and comb, the utensils I used in the kitchen, all seemed shot through with golden light. And when I woke each morning, the gift remained. It was the one thing that made my sombre duties bearable, and kept at bay my lingering fear of the creatures (whoever they were) who lived at the end of the valley.
The day of the funeral arrived. The graveside ceremony, I need hardly add, was well attended. News of Gretel's death had spread like wildfire through Little Earth, and the local families turned out in force â hardly surprising, given how she had touched their lives. Most came on to the reception, and by midday the cottage was full to overflowing, with people spilling out over the porch and down into the garden.
I was kept busy consoling those who grieved, organising the children, and passing around platters of food. As I bustled to and fro, it never occurred to me that the tinkers might appear. Hadn't their leader stressed how different they were from the people of the valley? How set apart? Hadn't I witnessed for myself what that difference entailed when I'd peered through the crack in the door? No, I felt confident that they'd stay away. They would have been out of place there.
Yet when I carried food and drink out to the garden, I spotted them immediately, down amongst the poplars, their presence signalled by a shimmer of golden light. The leader, as magnificent as when I had last seen him through the door, detached himself from the rest and approached me across the lawn. None of the farming folk made way: to them he was a common tinker. But to me, his savage splendour appeared all the more dazzling amongst so many drab, black-clad figures.
As absurd as it may sound, I dipped my head and dropped him a formal curtsey.
âYou're very welcome,' I said, taking care not to meet his gaze.
He responded with what I took to be a form of reassurance: âWe are here only to honour her.'
âThen let me thank you on her behalf,' I said, relieved, though still with my eyes cast down.
He clicked his tongue softly, in disapproval, that sound alone sending a jolt of fear through me.
âCome, girl,' he whispered, âlook at me when you speak.'
I couldn't help but obey. Slowly, I raised my head, and as our eyes met, I knew instantly that I had given myself away.
âAh,' he sighed. âSo you
did
see past our dimming.'
I nodded.
âAnd now?'
âIt's not just you,' I confessed. âEverything else has changed too.'
He regarded me in silence for some moments. âThis presents us with a problem,' he said finally.
âA problem?' I echoed him, the fear audible in my voice.
But there, on that crowded lawn, he was reluctant to explain. âYou will tell no one about us, you understand,' he said by way of warning. Then, as he turned back towards his people: âWe will meet again later.'
I hated the sound of that word âlater'. It weighed heavily on me through the remainder of the afternoon; and that evening, as a precaution, I barricaded the front and back doors before going to bed. But he didn't come. Not on that night, nor the next, nor in the weeks that followed. I thought to begin with that he was watching to see if I was trustworthy, testing me perhaps; but as the weeks stretched into months I began to relax, even to hope. Until one day I woke without any feelings of dread, and decided:
It's over. He's forgotten.
I was twenty-three years old by then, and had been officially appointed as the resident midwife of Little Earth. Pretty soon, people began looking up to me as they had once looked up to Gretel. Out of sympathy for my single state, they even invited me to their homes, and to services at their church. I knew all along that I could never be one of them â our religious differences were too great â but that didn't stop me envying their close family life. Like everyone else, I had no desire to live alone forever, so I suppose it was inevitable that before too long I again began seeing a young farmer â or âwalking out' with him as they called it in the valley.
Whether it would ever have come to anything I can't say, because we weren't really given a chance. I remember our last evening. We had been out together, walking arm in arm in the starlight as lovers do, and on our return to the cottage I found a message pinned to the door. It was from a neighbouring farm, where a woman had gone into premature labour.
While I collected my bag, he hitched up the old horse. Then we kissed a hasty goodbye, neither of us dreaming we would never meet like that again. As I drove off, my only concern was for the woman who had summoned me.
In fact, it turned out that she was in no danger, and nor was her child, despite being premature. She had had several children already, and with a little help from me she soon produced another healthy babe. Even so, the night was well advanced before I left her.
I reached home at the first hint of dawn. Having un- harnessed and fed the horse, I trudged up the path to the back porch . . . and he was there, waiting by the door, his splendour shrouded in a heavy woollen cloak. In the burgeoning light he looked more inhuman than ever, like some mythical creature risen from the past.
âYou have heeded my warning?' he asked abruptly.
I shrank back. âI've told no one, if that's what you mean.'
âWhat about that young man of yours? Haven't you been tempted to whisper our truth to him? Pillow talk, I believe you people call it. Things confessed in passion.'
âIf that's why you've come,' I said, âthen you have nothing to fear, because I've told him nothing either.'
He moved forward threateningly, his gleaming features looming above me. âYes, but what of the future? When you two have grown closer? Won't you be tempted then?'
âNever!' I exclaimed. âI'll always keep your secret safe, I swear.' I edged nearer to the door. âNow I'm sorry, but I need to sleep. I've been up all night and I'm too tired for more questions.' With a brief nod of apology, I reached for the latch.
Straightaway he grabbed me by the hair and forced me roughly to my knees. His face close to mine, his breath as rank as any animal's, he hissed: âWould you have me tear out your tongue?'
I shook my head, too scared to speak.
âThen answer me this. When you visited us last, how exactly did you come to see past our dimming? And tell me no lies!'
âThere was a . . . a crack in the front door,' I stuttered out. âI peered through it and . . . and . . .'
He didn't wait for me to finish. âWhich eye was it that betrayed us? Which eye stole from us our glory, and enjoys it still?'
It came to me then â in the midst of my terror â the truth about Gretel.
âSo you were the one who blinded Gretel!' I blurted out. âBut why? She'd already seen you! Who you really are! How could taking her eye change that?'
âShe had to learn what we are capable of,' he snarled, tugging at my hair. âYou must too. How else can I guarantee your silence? So I repeat, which eye? Or would you have me take them both?'
I had just enough presence of mind to point to my false eye. The rest â the drawing of the knife, the downward plunge â happened too quickly for me to follow. Yet his reflexes were quicker still. Even as the knife-point clinked against the surface of my eye, he stayed his hand. I felt the faintest jolt, that was all.
He flung me to the porch floor, unable to mask his surprise. âYou lied to me!' he rasped out. âYou have no sight in that thing you call an eye!'
âIt happened when I was a child,' I confessed, beginning to cry.
He nudged at me with his foot. âTears won't help you, woman. The price must still be paid.'
I crawled forward and clutched him around the knees. âPlease!' I sobbed. âDon't blind me completely! Take my hand, my arm . . . anything! Not my other eye!'
He gazed down as you would at an insect scurrying for its life, his face inscrutable. âThe price,' he repeated, âmust be paid. It's the only way of keeping my people safe.'
âDidn't I help one of your women?' I implored him through my tears. âDidn't I come to your house and save her? Surely that counts for something. A life for a life â isn't that fair?'
Ironically, it wasn't my pleading that moved him. It was the tears that seeped from my blind socket. He reached down wonderingly and scooped them from my cheek with one pointed nail, then licked at them, like some mythical beast drinking at the stream of life.
âThere may be another way,' he conceded.
âTake it . . . !' I began.
But the knife had already descended, carving a path down my cheek and paring the flesh to the bone.
I clamped my hand to the wound, felt hot blood spurt between my fingers, saw how it splashed crimson-black upon the planking in the dawn light.
He crouched close beside me. âHear what I tell you and remember,' he murmured. âYou will not stitch that wound. Nor bind it closed. Nor seek help from anyone. You'll let it scar over as it pleases.'
âWhat if it disfigures me?' I moaned, crying from pain now.
He brushed the hair from my face in a sudden gesture of pity. âThat's part of our price,' he went on. âThe other part is this. Even if some man looks past your disfigurement or loves you in spite of it, you'll reject him. You'll live alone for the rest of your days. In exchange, I leave you with the gift of seeing, which you stole from us that night â more than just an eye. Are we agreed?'
âAgreed,' I whispered, and felt for his hand, but he had already gone.
Alone in the cottage I cleaned and staunched the bleeding wound, though that was all. In the clear morning light I could see that he'd done his work well. It was a fearsome cut, as fearsome in its way as his undimmed presence, and I took it as the threat he had intended it to be. Under the guise of suffering from some contagious disorder, I holed up in the cottage for several weeks, allowing the open wound to heal in its own good time.
It left behind a broad, disfiguring scar, as I had guessed it would, a scar that distorted my whole face and more or less ensured that my days of romance were over â soon replaced, in fact, by pitying glances. Strange to say, I didn't overly care. I was alive! What else mattered? And free! Free to relish the gift he had left with me. What had he called it?
The gift of seeing
. Yes, that was it: the ability to view the world as he might view it. Actually to live within the faerie glow I had dreamed of as a child. It is no ordinary gift, believe me. It brought a real joy into my daily life, which more than made up for my damaged face.
As peculiar as it may sound, I felt grateful to him.
I didn't see him again for some time after that, nor any of his people. Months must have passed before our paths crossed again. Fittingly, given our first meeting, it was at the market, where he and his clan were busy trading horses.