Chapter 4.
A Solution.
Princess Kayla found herself in a small room. In front of her was a young man holding a clipboard. He looked very worried. He did not speak, instead he sighed and wrote something on the piece of paper on the clipboard. Kayla turned slowly round to look at the room. There was no furniture in the room except for a large mirror. To her astonishment the mirror did not show the reflection of the room, or herself or the young man. Instead it showed the room at Miss Jackson's shop. Princess Kayla could see poor Miss Jackson slowly climbing to her feet.
The young man said “Excuse me and touched one corner of the Mirror. The workroom faded and was replaced by the reflection of Princess Kayla. She could not help noticing that the Mirror was rather dirty and streaked. She sniffed at this sign of neglect.
“Er, Mistress.....?” enquired the young man, pencil poised to write on his paper.
“Princess Kayla!” snapped Princess Kayla. “And who may I ask are you?”
“Oh dear,” replied the young man. “You are a Granny aren't you?”
“Not exactly!” said Kayla. “And I asked you a question, young man.”
“Ohm er, sorry. Forgot my manners. I am Prince Farimond of Slobonia. Er, what do you mean by 'Not exactly'? You are dressed like a grandmother and you look like one.”
Kayla remembered that she had removed the veil in the Hat Shop to make the disguise more accurate. She blushed and covered her face.
Kayla ignored that question for a moment. “What have you done with all the grandmothers? They had better not have come to any harm.”
“No, no. They are all perfectly fit and well, “protested Prince Farimond. “They are all in the Great Hall playing Bingo. Listen you can hear them arguing.”
Kayla could indeed hear the sounds of old ladies enjoying a good disagreement.
“If you would just answer my question, you could go and join them,” said Prince Farimond.
“I have no intention of joining them until I find out what is going on here, “said Kayla.
“Then you really aren’t a grandmother at all,” sighed the Prince. “Oh dear, this is not supposed to happen. I am very sorry."
“No,” said Kayla. “I am not even an old woman. I just dressed like this to find out what is going on. Now are you going to tell me what this is all about or what?” She stood tapping her foot on the rather dusty stone floor.
Prince Farimond stared at the tapping foot and swallowed nervously. “It's like this you see. I am under spell and I am trying to find a way to break it.”
“A spell?”
Prince Farimond sighed. “Promise you won't laugh,” he said.
Princess Kayla nodded.
Prince Farimond turned round. From the front he looked to be a perfectly normal, if rather worried, looking young man. However, when he turned it became very obvious that Prince Farimond was far from normal. He had a long bushy tail. Clumsily he dropped his pencil. As soon as it touched the floor, the tail whipped round, picked it up and handed it back to him.
“It does that all the time,” he said, blushing bright red.
It is a good thing that Princess Kayla had been brought up to keep a straight face or she may well have laughed.
“Oh dear,” she said. “That is most unfortunate. How did that happen?”
“Well, “replied the Prince. “I was not born like this I am told. My parents did all the right things for the Christening. They invited the Witch so that she would not just turn up and be nasty. But she was in a bad mood for some reason and when she saw me she said. 'He looks just like a little monkey. I think I shall give him a gift.'. So she did..... this!”
His tail reached up over his shoulder and brushed away the tear which had fallen from Farimond's eye.
“Oh,” cried Kayla. “She is a horrible person. “My parents forgot to ask her at all, but she turned up anyway. She made me look like my grandmother which is why I have the face of a seventy year old when I am only eighteen.”
Prince Farimond nodded. “She does some horrible things. But there is always a way out of her spells. She told my parents that I would lose my tail if I could find various things by the time I was 21.”
“And?” Kayla asked.
“That is today,” added the Prince. “In about an hour to be exact. The closer to the time I was born it gets, the more like a monkey I am getting.”
Kayla realised that even in the few minutes they had been talking the Prince,s face had sprouted hairs and his back had bent over a little.
“Happy birthday,” said Kayla.
“Thank-you, “replied Farimond. “I hope it will be. But how are you supposed to break the spell on you?”
“Oh, she said that I would look like myself when I had seen my reflection from the other side of the mirror. I have spent ages looking at the back of mirrors to see if I could see myself, but all I ever see is a wooden panel. I bet that is all there is on the other side of your mirror.”
“Not really,” said the Prince. “The other side of that Mirror is wherever I tell it to look. That is how I find all those grandmothers. Then when I find something I can bring it here.”
“Useful for kidnapping!” Princess Kayla said.
The Prince blushed.
Then Kayla suddenly laughed. “In a way, I AM looking at my reflection from the other side of a mirror.”
She lifted her veil and turned to look at herself in the glass. She did not look any different. The face staring back at her looked exactly like the portrait of her grandmother. Then the image wavered, as if someone had poured water over the glass.
Princess Kayla put her hands over her face. It did not feel any different. Then she took them away slowly and looked again. She did not recognise the face which looked back at her. She examined it critically.
“I was hoping that when, if, I did get my own face I would be beautiful,” she said. “But I suppose this will have to do. At least I have not got any wrinkles any more.” She turned to Prince Farimond.
He looked at her in astonishment. “But you are beautiful, “he stammered. “At least I think so.”
They both stood silent for a moment.
Princess Kayla was the first to speak. She became all business like “Now, if MY spell can be broken then I am positive we can break yours. What were you supposed to find?”
“There are four things which I must have, a Granny Smith, a Granny Knott, a Granny Flatt and last of all a Granny's bonnet.”
Princess Kayla frowned.
Farimond went on. “I have a whole room of Grannies. Dozens of Smiths, Flatts, Knotts and all of them in bonnets, but it is not working.” He sounded very close to tears.
Princess Kayla thought for a moment then she burst out laughing. “Oh you silly boy. None of those are grandmothers.”
Prince Farimond looked puzzled.
“Look, can you use the Mirror to find anything?”
He nodded. “Yes. The Mirror is our family secret. One of my ancestors took it from the Witch. Not this one of course, but the one who was around a couple of hundred years ago. No one knew how to use it so it was put up here in the Attic and forgotten about. I found it one day and worked out how to use it.”
“The Witch must never get it back, “warned Kayla. “Think of the nasty things she could do with it.”
“I don't think anyone else knows about it except me....oh and you now. I will show you how it works.”
He went to the Mirror and touched all four corners, then pressed his fingers in the centre of the glass.
“That is why the middle is so dirty,” thought Kayla.
Prince Farimond turned to her. “Now all I have to do is tell it what I want it to find. “
“Good, “said Kayla. “Then tell it you want a Fruit shop.”
Farimond looked puzzled, but did as he was asked.
The Mirror showed a picture of a shop full of fruit. By moving the mirror slightly they could look along the counter. Kayla pointed to a large green apple. “That is what we want.”
Farimond reach into the Mirror and took the apple. There was a faint 'crunch' as the fruit came through the glass.
“Oh, “said Kayla.
“It always, makes that noise, “said Farimond. “I do not know why.”
“Now, we need a piece of rope, “said Kayla.
A piece of rope was soon found.
“Next we need a garden full of flowers.”
“I hope you know what you are doing!” Farimond said.
The Mirror showed a lovely garden full of beautiful flowers. Kayla pointed out the ones she wanted and Farimond reached in and picked them.
The crunching noise came again.
“The last thing is a bit more difficult, “said Kayla. “Do you have to have the four things here in the room with you?”
“I don't know,” answered Farimond slowly, “I think the spell said that all I had to do was to show before I reached twenty one. Why?”
Kayla did not answer that question.
“Can you find my Grandmother's apartment in the old Palace?”
Farimond did as he was asked. The Mirror showed a rather pleasant looking sitting room where an old lady sat, reading.
“Can she see us?” Kayla whispered.
Farimond shook his head. “No, and she cannot hear us either so there is no need to whisper.”
“Now we have everything we need, “said Kayla. Let's see if we can break this spell. Then you can send all those Grannies home again.”
Farimond blushed. “I had forgotten about them,” he confessed.
Kayla took the apple and gave it to him. “This is a Granny Smith.” She took the rope and tied a complicated knot in it. “This is a Granny knot.” she took the flowers and said,”These are Grannies Bonnets.” Finally she pointed to the Mirror and her Grandmother's apartment. “And that is a Granny flat.”
They both held their breath. Prince Farimond's tail came up over his shoulder, touched him gently on the cheek, and then disappeared.
Well there is little else to tell really. Prince Farimond did as he was ordered and returned the Grannies (with their Bingo prizes) to their rightful places, much to the relief of a large number of granddads. Finally he put Princess Kayla back in the Castle after promising to come and visit her as soon as he could.
The Mirror was carefully covered up and doorway blocked up, so no-one could ever get in again.
The grannies went back their ordinary lives, scolding their husbands for not being able to look after themselves and leaving their houses in such an awful mess. The Hat making ladies went back to work and the Hat Festival was a huge success.
Best of all Princess Kayla was able to go to the Festival without wearing a veil to cover her old face and the Bonnet she had made was declared the finest in the Parade.