Dennis McKiernan - Once upon a Summer Day

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Into the passageway went Borel, and he came into a great banquet hall, and therein gracefully danced men and women of exotic beauty, their faces long and narrow, their ears tipped, their eyes aslant, their forms lithe and lissome.

And as Borel entered the chamber, some turned to see this human who had come uninvited into the hall, while others simply continued their elegant dance and paid him little or no heed.

Yet from the throne on which he sat, one looked up and smiled in welcome. “Prince Borel of the Forests of the Seasons, hail and well met.”

A corridor opened up among the dancers, and Borel walked through and to the foot of the dais, where he bowed low and said, “Your Highness.”

Beside the redheaded, green-eyed king sat a woman of incredible loveliness, her hair raven-black, her eyes sapphire blue, her flawless skin tinged with just a hint of gold, a tint held by all the Folk within the hall but Borel.

Again Borel bowed and said, “My lady.”

Both the King Under the Hill and his queen tilted their heads in acknowledgement, and the High Lord signalled for silence, and the music stopped, as did the dancers. When quiet fell, he smiled and said, “Won’t you join us in banquet and ball? Let me get you a glass of wine.”

As the king turned to signal a page, Borel said, “I must decline, my lord, for I am on an urgent mission, and I beg a boon.”

The High Lord frowned. “A mission? A boon? Then tell me, what mission, what boon brings the Prince of the Winterwood unto my demesne?”

“My lord, I would find the Endless Sands.”

“Ah, then, and you think I would know where these Endless Sands lie?”

“I have it on good authority that you do,” said Borel.

The king frowned again and looked first at his queen and then among the dancers. Yet none volunteered that he or she had given the prince any guidance. “And who might that be?” he asked Borel.

“A Pooka,” replied the prince.

“A Pooka? And just how did you get a Pooka to tell you that?”

“I rode him to submission,” said Borel.

A gasp went up among the gathered Fey, for, even though they were Fairies all, none there had the courage to do the same.

“Ah, then, you must be quite a sportsman,” said the Fairy King.

“Not really, for he almost did me in,” said Borel.

“Yet in the end you triumphed?” asked the queen, her voice melodious and entrancing.

“Barely,” replied Borel, grinning ruefully.

She turned to the king and said, “You must help this brave prince, my lord.”

“But he has asked for a boon, and you know what that entails.”

The queen nodded. She turned to Borel and said, “You must best my husband at a game ere he can aid you. Yet heed: he will try his utmost to get the better of you, for otherwise ’tis but a sham.”

“A game?” said Borel.

“Yes,” said the king. “A contest. And should you lose, you must dine with me and my queen. Do you agree?”

But if I dine with them, then I might suffer a fate similar to that of others who have paused to make merry with the Fairies, and a millennium might pass, and Chelle will be lost forever. And that is the terrible penalty if I lose.

Yet with her words Verdandi indicated I must play, and if I win..

“Lord, might I name the stakes if I win?”

“Indeed,” said the King of the Fairies.

“Then this is what I would have: that you not only tell me where lie the Endless Sands, but you also loan me your very own favorite horse to get there.”

“My favorite horse?”

“Oui.”

The Fairy King looked at his queen and then said, “Very well, I agree.”

“As do I,” said Borel. “What is the game?”

“I offer you five,” said the king, “for since I name the weapons, you will choose the play.”

Borel canted his head in assent.

“These are the five,” said the Fairy King. “Taroc, echecs, quoits, archery, dames.”

Ah, just as Verdandi had said: “The king will offer five different games,

Play the one you played with your dame.

Remember true and remember well

The guiding words of your love Michelle.”

Two of these games I played with Chelle: archery and echecs. Which to choose? Oh, but wait, ‘Remember true and remember well/ The guiding words of your love Michelle.’ Did she give me guiding words? Borel frowned in thought. I remember none whatsoever. Guiding words… guiding words… What guiding words?

Borel unslung his bow and drew an arrow, and as he looked at the shaft, the Fairy King smiled and said, “It is archery, then?” He turned to signal an Elfin page.

“I-” Borel started to say, but of a sudden he seemed to hear Chelle’s voice: “My, do you have Fairy arrows, Borel? ’Tis not fair if so… They are magique, my love, and only miss should a greater spell come along to deflect them.”

Borel looked up and said, “Non, my lord,” and he placed the arrow back into his quiver and reslung his bow. “ ’Tis echecs I choose.”

“As you will, Prince Borel,” said the Fairy King, and he signalled for an echiquier to be brought forth.

A table and two chairs were set in the very center of the chamber, and Fairies gathered ’round as the Fairy Queen held out two enclosed hands to Borel. “You are the guest within these halls, Prince Borel, and so you have first choice.”

Borel drew the white, and therefore had first move.

“White king’s spearman two paces forward,” said Borel, moving the piece.

“Black king’s spearman two paces forward as well,” said the Fairy King, smiling in anticipation.

And the game began, with Fairies crowding about and murmuring after every move, sometimes Ooh ing, sometimes Ahh ing, sometimes gasping at a bold move by either player.

Borel and the Fairy King both seemed engaged in reckless play, yet it was anything but. Swiftly were moves made and countered, with pieces captured, chevaliers falling, and towers brought to crashing ruin. Hierophants fell in diagonal flight. Kings fled, and queens were slain in spite of the valiant efforts of the spearmen. A great slaughter took place on that grid-marked board, but at last the Fairy King said, “Although the material is fairly balanced, I have the advantage, and it is certain that I will win, for you cannot stop at least one of my black spearmen from reaching the final row and transforming into a black queen.”

Borel studied the board. He had a king and a spearman and one tower left, whereas the High Lord had a king at one edge of the board with six spearmen at hand, all of them threatening Borel’s king and his spearman.

At last, Borel said, “Tower to white king’s tower’s three. Check.”

The High Lord said, “My prince, are you certain you want to make that move?”

“Indeed,” said Borel.

“Very well,” said the Fairy King. “Spearman takes tower. Check. And now you have nought but a king and a single spearman left, whereas I yet have all my pieces. Surely you must concede.”

“Nay, my lord,” said Borel, “I do not concede. White king to white king’s hierophant’s three.”

“Hmm…” said the Fairy King. “Black spearman to black king’s chevalier’s five. Check.”

Borel nodded and said, “I avoid the check thus: white king to white king’s hierophant’s four, taking a blocking black spearman.”

Now the Fairy King studied the board long. “I have but one move,” he said. “Black spearman to black king’s chevalier’s six.”

Borel laughed and said, “And my lone remaining white spearman takes that black spearman. Check.”

The Fairy King said, “Ah, Borel, I must make a move and yet cannot, for I am completely thwarted; my black king cannot move to the open space nor capture your single spearman, for to do either would bring him adjacent to your white king, and, of course, that cannot be. Ah, me, I must concede.” And he lay his black king on its side.

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