Authors: Gail Carson Levine
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Media Tie-In, #Fairy Tales & Folklore, #General, #Humorous Stories
My stepfamily was not invited to the wedding and had to celebrate, if they wished, in the streets with the rest of Frell. Father was invited, but he was traveling and didn’t receive the invitation until it was too late.
Areida did attend. We renewed our friendship and swore to visit each other often, an oath we’ve kept faithfully.
All the exotic peoples, except ogres, were represented at the ceremony. Slannen gave us a new pottery piece by Agulen, an elf child embracing a tree. zhatapH and zhulpH were there, zhulpH still a toddler, since gnomes grow more slowly than humans. Uaaxee came too and was responsible for keeping our animal guest, Apple, from galloping the length of the palace hall.
Although we didn’t invite Lucinda, she arrived anyway — with a gift.
“No need,” Char and I chimed together.
“Remember when you were a squirrel,” Mandy said.
But the gift was what Father would have called a fairy trifle. It was a box, no larger than my thumbnail, which grew or shrank to accommodate whatever it was called upon to hold. Wonderfully useful and not harmful at all. We thanked Lucinda enthusiastically until she glowed with pleasure.
In time Hattie became reconciled to our marriage and used her connection to us to her best advantage. She never married, but Olive did. A garrulous widower fell in love with her unwavering attention. When she’d demand that he talk to her, he’d tell her about his triumphs, his enemies, his opinions on everything. She wasn’t anxious to wed; in exchange for her consent, he paid her twenty KJs every day and served a white cake with every meal.
Father and Mum Olga continued to love at a distance. After my marriage, he became successful again, trading on the respect commanded by the royal family. Char watched over him and intervened when necessary to save him or his victims from the consequences of his chicanery.
Mandy lived with us as cook and godmother of our children — and secret performer of small magic to protect us from colds, broken crockery, and the sundry inconveniences of a royal household. Nancy lived at the palace too, and commanded a legion of servants, several of whom were in charge of polishing stair rails for their sliding monarchs.
I refused to become a princess but adopted the titles of Court Linguist and Cook’s Helper. I also refused to stay at home when Char traveled, and learned every language and dialect that came our way. When we left the children behind, my magic book kept us informed of their doings.
Decisions were a delight after the curse. I loved having the power to say yes or no, and refusing anything was a special pleasure. My contrariness kept Char laughing, and his goodness kept me in love.
And so, with laughter and love, we lived happily ever after.
The End
Gail Carson Levine’s
ELLA ENCHANTED
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Copyright Page
Harper Trophy is a registered trademark of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc
Ella Enchanted
Copyright Š1997 by Gail Levine
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced
in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied
in critical articles and reviews. Printed in the United States of America. For information address
HarperCollins Children’s Books, a division of HarperCollins Publishers, 10 East 53rd Street,
New York, NY 10022
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Levine, Gail Carson
Ella enchanted / Gail Carson Levine
p. cm.
Summary: In this novel based on the story of Cinderella, Ella struggles against the childhood curse
that forces her to obey any orders given to her.
ISBN 0-06-027510-3. - ISBN 0-06-027511-1 (lib. bdg.) - ISBN 0-06-440705-5 (pbk.)
[1. Fantasy] I. Title.
PZ7.L578345El 1997 96-30734
[Fic]-dc20 CIP
AC
Typography by Al Cetta
First Harper Trophy edition, 1998
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Author’s New Book
Coming in October 1999
Get ready to be enchanted by another stunning new novel
by Gail Carson Levine
Dave at Night
The year is 1926. Dave’s father is dead and his stepmother doesn’t want him. Only the HHB will take him — the Hebrew Home for Boys. But Dave soon finds out that it was the last place anyone should have called a Home, the last place for kids to live.
This incredible novel takes Dave from the poverty of the Lower East Side of New York City to the misery of the HHB on the Upper West Side, to the hope and magic of Harlem at the height of the Harlem Renaissance. It’s about terrible losses and hard-won gains, cruel relations and kind strangers, great poverty and great wealth. Most of all, though, it’s about the power of friendship.