Read The Girl Who Raced Fairyland All the Way Home Online
Authors: Catherynne M. Valente
“But I have no weapons!” hissed September. She could feel it all closing in on her. The duel, the race, the walls of the Library, everything. She'd thought she left feeling helpless behind long agoâonly we never leave
helpless
behind. It is a country in which we all hold passports.
I am going to lose,
she thought
. I am going to lose quickly. Though at least I'm unlikely to be killed by a verb.
A-Through-L arched his long spine. His eyes twinkled at her. “September, I have known you since the only thing you wanted in the world was a slice of cake and I have never once seen you without weapons. At the very least, you always have me. You don't need to know a lick of Latin! I know plenty!
Latin
begins with
L
! Just say what I say!”
September walked back toward her friends, counting her steps.
Losing only means going home, doesn't it? Back to where I came from. I would see Mother and Father and Aunt Margaret again. I would sleep in my own bed.
But a hot desire not to lose stole through September. It burned out everything else. The Headmistress was a tyrant. She'd said so. You stand up to tyrants. That's what all her father's books said.
Did she know any Latin at all? City Hall had a Latin motto on the front of it. September wracked her memory searching for it. All that she found was that it started with
F
. Saturday and Blunderbuss very much wished they could help, but neither of them had actually heard the word
Latin
before and could not begin to guess what would happen next, except that it would probably be over quickly. Saturday twisted his opal necklace fretfully. He could not even enter the dueling grounds. The air around September and the Headmistress had gone hard as glass.
Hushnow cawed out: “Ten for the crown I'm going to prance around in while you all blubber and moan, see if I don't!”
The Headmistress whirled around, her gray skirts flaring, showing fiery-colored petticoats beneath. Treacle, the butterfly, hovered behind her, and for a moment it looked as though the lady herself had a pair of bubbling wings of every color. She drew a quill pen from her hair and leveled it at September.
“Amo, Amas, Amat!”
the Headmistress thundered.
The air before her quivered, then sizzled, then snapped open. Three knights appeared, slender and short and dreamy-eyed. They wore rose-colored armor with blazing hearts painted on their helmets and their shields, for the words the Headmistress had flung at September were
I love, you love, he or she loves
. One carried a sword, one carried a poleax, and one carried a lance. They each had their names engraved upon their magenta-and-gold breastplates:
AMO, AMAS, AMAT
.
Ell whispered urgentlyâSeptember did not understand a word he said, but she repeated after her Wyverary, beating her voice into shape, hammering it into something strong and bold and fierce. She'd never made a battle cry before, but she did her best.
“Exsarcimus, Exsarcitis, Exsarciunt!”
she cried out. The flying Reference Desks above startled and snapped into formation.
The air before September quivered, then bulged, then parted like a theatre curtain. Three fellows marched out, all very grubby and muscly and ruddy in the cheeks. They wore armor, too, but theirs looked like steel overalls with blazing hammers and needles etched on them, for the words Ell had given September were
We fix, you fix, they all fix
. One carried a pair of screwdrivers, one carried a saw, and one carried a wrench not unlike September's own. They each had their names embroidered on a patch above their hearts:
EXSARCIMUS, EXSARCITIS, EXSARCIUNT
.
The soldiers flew at one another. Amo skewered Exsarcitis with his poleax. Exsarciunt fenced Amas deftly, sword against saw. They ranged all over the Mystery Kitchen while Greenwich Mean Time raged against them, flying helplessly up and down his brass pole. Finally, they managed to break each other's defenses at the same instant, and both fell. Exsarcimus twirled her screwdrivers like six shooters and leapt onto Amat, piercing him through the heart on his pink breastplate. All six of them vanished into smoke where they collapsed, no more alive than the dust on an overdue book.
“Castigo, Castigas, Castigat!”
screamed the Headmistress.
This time there was no quivering of the air. Her army of verbs seemed to fly directly from her fingersâthree soldiers all in black. Their shields showed an awful crest: a child standing in a corner with his hands over his eyes, for the words the Headmistress had parried with were
I punish, you punish, he or she punishes.
One brandished a ruler for the rapping of knuckles, one held a wooden paddle for cruel spankings, and one hoisted a quiverful of forks for the suppers wicked children had to go without. They each had their names pinned to their chests:
CASTIGO, CASTIGAS, CASTIGAT
.
Ell paused for a moment, thinking furiously. Then, suddenly, he laughed, and the laugh of a Wyverary, terribly pleased at his own cleverness, bouncing off the walls of a library is a wonder to hear. He whispered his magic words quickly into September's ear. This time, he only needed two.
“Vincam! Vincemus!”
Twin warriors burst into thin air. They wore crowns, one of gold and emeralds, one of laurel leaves. They had forged their armor from shining trophies and medals. Garlands and sashes hung from their necks and their shields bore the sigil of a prize ribbon with dozens of ruffles, for Ell's fighting words were
I will win. We will win.
Yet their weapons were nothing like swords and maces. One took aim with a tiny glass dart, dancing with blue light. The other took off her gauntlet to reveal a silvery mechanical hand. They each had their names stitched onto glorious long cloaks:
VINCAM
and
VINCEMUS
.
The crowned pair looked pityingly at the Headmistress's punishments. Vincemus did no more than waggle her finger at Castigo and Castigas. Green fire flowed out from her metal knuckles in a thin, sharp jet.
I punish
and
You punish
fell instantly to the ground. Vincam tossed his dart casually, as though he had only dropped it, silly him! But it caught Castigat between the eyes and he vaporized before he could throw a single fork.
A-Through-L had used the future tense. His duelists brought weapons no one would get bored enough to invent for a hundred years. Vincam and Vincemus bowed, first to each other, then to September, shaking her hand, then Saturday's hand, then patting Blunderbuss on the head and punching Ell playfully on the knee. They saluted, clapped each other on the back in a brotherly fashion, and disappeared in a golden fire burst.
The Headmistress had gone both red and black in the face. Tears streamed down her cheeks. “You're a nasty little cheat,” she snarled between the hitching of her tears. “You copied off your classmate there. Everyone saw you. You
fail
. You will be held back for eternity! See me after class!”
“Don't be a bad sport, Olivia,” crooned Hushnow, the Ancient and Demented Raven Lord. “It's not her fault you don't have a second. Nobody makes friends with the strictest sourpuss in school.”
“But I just got here,” the Headmistress whispered, whose name was indeed Olivia. Once, long, long ago, before she ever heard the word
Fairyland,
she taught in a very famous school. If I were to tell you what it was called, you would be shocked out of your shoes, and I should get a very stern talking-to from the administration. “I don't want to go back. It's lonely when you're dead and you've only got Latin to talk to.”
And we might feel sorry for herâSeptember certainly did. She had gone to the underworld herself, after all. But if only Miss Olivia had decided on a sensible retirement in the Autumn Provinces instead of trying to become a terrible tyrant once more, then we would instead be telling the story of the kind lady who does her crosswords every morning by the window and likes mugwort cakes for tea, instead of the woman in the gray bustle crumbling before them like the pieces of a shattered eggshell. Tiny dark shapes ran toward her, hurling tiny growls and roars before them. The book bears dove into the Headmistress, trying to get a bite of her narrative before the Dodo's Egg took her back completely, snatching at her syntax and her orderly punctuation until nothing remained but her quill pen lying on the floor of the Library.
September looked away. She could not help it. Even if the Headmistress had only gone back where she'd come from, the sight of it made her want to cry, and she did not want Hushnow or Greenwich to see her do it.
“You've got to take it,” cawed the Raven Lord. “The pen. It's your proof of victory. They'll want to count up at the end.”
“I don't want it. That's ghastly,” September said evenly, quietly.
Hushnow worried his feathers with his long black beak. “Everything good is also ghastly. Your lovely roast chicken dinner was once a live rooster singing up the dawn. Your toasty woolen jumper was cut off the back of a happy sheep. Even those pretty books I can see behind youâmost of them got written by someone as dead as dust and you spend your afternoons dog-earing ghosts. You can ignore the ghastly, but it doesn't go away. Might as well enjoy the good. Even the demented know that. And it's such a nice pen.”
September knelt and picked it up. Its feather was deep indigo, its nib silver. She wanted to leave it where it lay. She wanted to go find an empty bookshelf to curl up in and forget the sight of the Headmistress fading to nothing. But instead, she put the quill in her pocket and stood up straight.
“Ta, then!” chirped Hushnow, and his image puffed out like a film ending.
Saturday sighed in relief. His breath ruffled, ever so slightly, the pages of
The History of Fairyland: A How-To Guide
.
“Ow!” he yelped, and snatched his thumb to his mouth.
A book bear rose up on its furry hind legs on the edge of the Reference Desk. It licked its chops, hungry for another chomp of Marid.
“What did I tell you?” sighed Greenwich Mean Time. “You've only yourself to blame. No breathing on the books!”
“It's all right,” whispered Saturday. “It's only a little bite. Good luck to that bear if he wants to start chewing through my history. He'll never find his way out again! But, September, we have to go. We can't stay. If the Headmistress got here so quickly, the rest must be far ahead.”
If we win, she will stay,
the Marid thought desperately, and told no one how his thumb throbbed and hurt.
Â
In Which Aunt Margaret Shows Off
Parents never take quite the same path as their children through any country at all. This is good and right and proper, though it does make for heated arguments on holidays.
Aunt Margaret did not take Susan Jane and Owen through the Closet Between the Worlds. Nor did she lead them out into the wheat fields and cause them to trip over a stone wall into the Glass Forest. Nor did she show them the place in Mr. Albert's weathered fence where the world gets thin and you can hop right through. She did as she had always done: twisted the silver rings on her finger into place, counted to three, said
Abracadabra,
and disappeared. Only this time, she was holding her sister's hand when she did it, and her sister was holding her husband's hand, and though they did not notice in the least, a small and amiable dog was chewing nervously on their shoelaces.
Strictly speaking, Margaret didn't
need
to say abracadabra. She didn't need to say anything at all. But she liked a little dash of theatrical flair in everything she did. She'd said it the first time she traveled under her own steam, and the second, and then never given it up. What our Miss Margaret did not know was that she'd been saying abracadabra as a joke for so long that it had become a magical word. It is certainly possible that, after all this time, the magic that took her to Fairyland had gotten so fond of her joke that it would refuse to let her in without its favorite password. For its own part, the word
abracadabra
very much enjoyed being taken seriously for once. It had had nothing to do but make rabbits go into and come out of cheap top hats for ever so long, even though it came from a language called Aramaic, and therefore had an extremely ancient and noble pedigree.
But Margaret had always said abracadabra and she said it this time. All four of themâMargaret, Susan Jane, Owen, and the dogâfaded gently away from the farmhouse outside Omaha, Nebraska, and faded gently into an extraordinary forest throbbing with colors. The trees rose overhead in shades of crimson, tangerine, aquamarine, glittering gold, opal-black. One of the tree trunks was covered with little gloved hands politely offering pots of maple syrup. Bloodred and blood-purple butterflies swarmed over another. Wide, curious green eyes stared from the backs of their wing. Some of the trees burned with a beautiful scarlet fire, and from the flaming trees flaming birds burst up like peacocks startled into fireworks. One even had a Sunday dinner in its branches, porkcones glistening caramelly brown, its cornbread branches oozing butter and honey and mushed peas, its plum pie blossoms dripping crust onto their heads.
“Well, this is new!” exclaimed Aunt Margaret. And it was, for a young girl called Tamburlaine had painted it alive only a little while ago. “This whole forest used to be the very edge of the Tattersall Tundra. I always come out here. How alarming for my poor puppies! They're used to eating nothing but mice and moss. I'll bet they've gotten fat.” She put two fingers in her mouth and whistled.
The small and amiable dog felt personally insulted by this remark, and yelped indignantly. Now, it is far past time for me to tell you the dog's name, so I shall do it now and the poor beastie will not have to spend any more pages feeling desperately unimportant. Fenris is a very ferocious name for a pug with a curly tail. But September had given it to him out of her book of mythology when he was a pup and he was very proud of it. Thereâwe'll have no more sad eyes from you, Fenris!