And sure enough, by midafternoon the bear was beginning to tire. Shambling along on all fours, it was going slower and slower, and never stopped now to growl at him. Its head hung lower, too. It was unflagging in the relentlessness of its pursuit, but it was running out of stamina. It was not an omnipotent bear. Ivan smiled. So far so good. Except for the part about knowing what to do next.
On every circuit he had passed the tree that had been struck by the bear’s first stone. He long since stopped noticing the round shape of it, stuck like a diadem about nine feet up. But now he remembered it, slowed to look at it when it came around again. Not deeply embedded. Probably easy enough to dislodge.
On the next pass, Ivan put on a burst of speed, left the edge of the moat, and ran straight for the tree. Planting a foot low on the trunk, he let his momentum carry him up until the stone was in reach. It dislodged far more easily than he had expected, hitting him on the chin and chest as it fell. It was heavy and it hurt, but it was nothing like the injury to his back. His hand came away a little bloody when he touched his chin, but he could feel that it was just a scrape, not a cut, and he’d just have to live with it until he could get some disinfectant. He winced to remember the painful disinfectants of his childhood. None of that babyish American anesthetized stuff for tough
Russian
children!
As if he could count on even getting back to Cousin Marek’s house, not with the foolish trick he planned to try.
He bent over and picked up the stone, then jogged to the lip of the chasm.
As he expected, the bear had caught up, was already getting a large rock between its paws. No sense in waiting, Ivan decided. He balanced the nine-pound stone on his right hand in best shot-putting style. This wasn’t the standard competitive shot put, unfortunately. In track meets, the goal was to put the shot as far as you could, not to hit a target with it. Especially not a target that moved back and forth like the bear’s head.
He’d just have to give it a try and see what happened. If he missed with this stone, the bear had thrown others; he’d just have to find those and try again.
He turned, spun, launched the stone. It sailed out over the chasm. He could see at once that he had overshot—it was going to hit the smooth stone wall behind the bear.
But at that moment, the bear rose to its feet, clutching a stone between its paws. It rose so quickly that it placed its own head directly in the trajectory of the stone Ivan had hurled at exactly the moment for it to catch the bear on its left eye, knocking it backward so its head struck forcefully against the stone of the pedestal.
With a whimper the bear slid down to sit like a curbside drunk, canted to one side, blood pouring from the empty socket of its left eye. The eye itself was smeared down its bloody cheek.
What have I done? thought Ivan, his heart immediately filled with pity for the injured animal.
What am I thinking! he demanded of himself, remembering his own injuries, the stones launched at his own head.
But I’m the intruder here, he thought, his sense of justice insisting on being heard.
But the woman is held captive here because of that bear, he reminded himself.
The woman. How long till the bear woke up, angrier than ever? How long did he have to figure out a way to get to the pedestal?
If he couldn’t climb up the smooth stone wall, there was no point in climbing down into the chasm where even a one-eyed bear could make short work of him.
Many of the trees around the moat were tall enough that, if he had any way of felling them, they would easily span the chasm—indeed, some of them could have spanned the whole meadow. The trouble was that some limb of the tree would almost certainly strike the woman. He could easily imagine that between magical sleep and being crushed to death by a huge tree limb, the woman would undoubtedly vote for the coma.
How far was it across the moat to the pedestal? Twenty feet? He had long-jumped as much as twenty-four feet, not world’s-record jumping but enough to win some meets. But he hadn’t done any long-jumping since his undergraduate days. And what if it wasn’t twenty feet? What if it was twenty-six feet? Or why not twenty-nine feet eleven inches? Just far enough to be a new world’s record if he made it. Still, it wouldn’t have to be a neat landing—there were no judges to disqualify the jump if a hand dangled or his butt swung in too low. On the other hand, if he missed and dropped into the chasm, the bear would kill him even if the fall didn’t. And he wasn’t going to do any world’s-record jumping, not with his back injured as it was.
With his toe he drew a line representing the outside edge of the moat, then another line representing the distance of the pedestal. Had he made a good estimate of the distance? He paced it off. Twenty-two feet. But what did that prove? He had no way of knowing if he had been accurate at all in the way he drew the lines. Nor was pacing a distance all that accurate, either. He never got precisely the same count twice.
The bear gurgled and stirred.
No time for practice jumps. If he was going to get to the middle and waken the princess, he had to go now.
He walked back into the woods, pacing off a clear, straight path, making sure there were no obstructions. He gave himself one practice run-up—his life depended on his getting a good launch. He could hear the bear moaning in the pit as he began the real run, faster, faster. He planted his foot and pushed off, soaring over the chasm, remembering only in that moment that there was no room on the pedestal for any kind of run-up to make the jump back. Even if he made it to the pedestal, that’s where he was going to be staying, unless there was some kind of instruction manual.
There were more immediate worries, however, because in midjump it also became clear to him that either it was a longer jump than twenty-two feet or his injury had weakened his jump, because his feet weren’t going to land on top of the pedestal. He had time enough only to tuck his legs a little so he didn’t rebound; then he sprawled onto the grass of the pedestal’s crown, his trunk mostly on the pedestal, his legs dangling.
He began to slip downward, just as he heard the bear growl angrily. Gripping the grass with one hand, clawing for purchase with the other, he ignored the shooting pain in his left arm as he struggled to draw himself farther up out of the pit. He tried to swing his heels up, out of reach, as a searing pain in his left leg notified him that the bear was on its feet and quite able with only one eye to aim a raking blow at him. His fingers found purchase on the leg of the low wooden bed the woman was lying on. He dragged himself up, out of the bear’s reach, his legs now safely up on the cool grass.
Grass. The leaves were gone now even from the pedestal.
He looked down at his leg. His left trouser leg was in tatters. The bear’s claws had made two gaping tears in the side of his calf. They were bleeding copiously, but neither injury was pumping blood. No arteries had been torn. He pulled his pants off, tore the damaged leg into strips, and wrapped them around his calf to close the wound and keep it from bleeding so profusely. Now there was no hope at all of jumping back, or climbing either, or outrunning the bear, or any other foolish plan he might have thought of. He had reached the woman, but what good would that do if he woke her only for them to die here together?
The bear was still roaring down in the chasm. Ivan stood to look down at him, but the pain and loss of blood made him dizzy. He staggered; for a moment he thought he would fall down onto the waiting bear; he leaned the other way, stumbled back, fell against the bed, and found himself sprawled beside her, his hand on the cool but living flesh of her bare arm.
Now, at last, he could look at her. Dressed in the imported Oriental silk of a wealthy woman of the Rus’, she had the high-cheeked features of a Slav; but he was not so American that this looked alien to him. Indeed, he could see that by any standard of beauty she was a lovely woman, young and smooth-skinned, her hair a lustrous brown with many lighter hairs that caught the waning sun of afternoon and shone like fine gold wires. Love poems had been written with less provocation.
But Ivan didn’t love her. Ivan didn’t even know her. Or rather, he didn’t know her as a person, or even as a woman; he knew her as an icon, as the princess of the fairy tales. She was asleep because of some evil charm placed upon her by a jealous rival, a powerful witch who hated her. Had her finger been pricked by the sharp point of a spindle? Who knew which details of the old stories might be true? The only thing wrong with this was that apparently all the princes and knights had missed their chance. Maybe, upon examination, there’d be an array of rusted armor and old gnawed man-bones down in the bear’s lair, but the fact was that the age of chivalry hadn’t brought this woman back to life, and now here it was the 1990s, and far from being a prince or knight, her rescuer was a kid who liked to run and jump and throw things but who wasn’t going to be much of a champion when it came time to fight the bear, which was how this tale must surely end. He would have to fight the bear, or distract it, anyway, long enough for Rapunzel here or whatever her name was to drop down to the bottom of the pit, preferably without breaking her legs, and then climb laboriously up the other side—for which task that lovely silk gown would be particularly slick, voluminous, and unhelpful.
I don’t know you, ma’am, and apparently I’m expected to die for you.
He toyed with the idea of leaving her asleep and trying to figure out how to save himself.
Then the loss of blood and the exhaustion of running all day claimed him. He lay back on the grass beside her bed, closed his eyes, and as the sun dipped toward the horizon, he fell asleep.
He woke in the darkness to find something cold and dry on his face. A leaf. Leaves. He brushed them away. The faintest light of predawn was glowing in the east, beyond the trees. He remembered at once where he was. Had he slept the whole night here? Cousin Marek would be worried. Would be searching for him—he hadn’t thought of that. Marek might find his trail, might find him.
Ivan sat up. The meadow was again smooth and covered with leaves. If Marek showed up now, he might fall into the chasm. At this moment he might be running through the trees, searching, shining a flashlight to left and right, never seeing until it was too late how the leaves swirled away from his feet and the pit yawned before him—
“Go back! Stop!”
Ivan’s own voice shocked him, coming in the silence of morning. Of course Marek wasn’t coming. If he were, Ivan would see the lights, would hear the footsteps.
Almost at his left hand there came a violent rustling in the leaves, which whirled away, revealing the bear clinging to the side of the pedestal, its paws clawing at the grass, its mouth silently open. Now that it was revealed, though, the silence ended. It roared, slavered, gnashed its teeth at Ivan. He sprang backward, tripping on the woman’s bed. The bear reached farther up onto the grass. Those great arms were going to make it. The bear was going to join him here. And it would be no good jumping down into the chasm, for he’d never get out of there again. He had no choice but to prevent the bear from climbing up.
Don’t kick at its head, he told himself. Those jaws are quick and they won’t let go.
Instead he clambered up onto the bed and jumped with all his strength down onto the bear’s arm.
It accomplished nothing except to send pain shooting up from his left leg as the wound reopened and blood seeped out onto his crusted ankle. He groaned in pain. The bear roared again, and got the other paw farther up onto the grass.
Ivan rolled down and knelt beside the bear’s claw—was it this one that had torn open his leg?—and pulled to try to get the bear to fall backward into the pit. Instead, the bear lunged upward, snapping at his hand with its great teeth. He recoiled, bounded away, over the body of the woman.
What will the bear do to
her
? he wondered, filled with a new dread. But then he realized that if the bear were going to harm her, it would have made this climb long ago. She was safe enough. Only he was in danger.
Well, if he was going to die, she was going to watch him do it. There would have to be one witness, at least, to how much he gave for this woman who meant absolutely nothing to him except that she had haunted his dreams since he was a boy.
As the bear heaved its chest up onto the pedestal, Ivan knelt beside the bed, leaned down, and kissed the woman’s lips.
They were soft and alive. She kissed him back.
Her eyes opened. Her lips parted. She gave a soft cry, drew her head away from him.
He knelt up to look at the bear. Its hind legs were now scrabbling for purchase on the pedestal.
She stammered something in some language. A Slavic language, but very oddly pronounced. He knew he should understand it.
After a moment, it registered on his brain. Though the accent was unfamiliar, she had to be speaking a dialect of proto-Slavonic, closely related to the Old Church Slavonic that he and his father had spoken together so often.
“What did you say?” he demanded in that language.
“What?” she asked back.
Speaking slowly, trying to emphasize the nasals and bend his pronunciation toward the accent he had heard from her, he repeated his question. “What did you say?”
“Prosi mene posagnõti za tebe,” she said slowly, each word separated. He understood now—easily, in fact: Ask me to marry you.
This was hardly the time for romance, he thought.
But her gaze was fixed on the bear. It towered over them, its arms spread wide, its mouth open as it brayed out its triumphal cry. Ivan realized that she wasn’t proposing a romantic relationship, she was telling him how to vanquish the bear.
“Proshõ tebe posagnõti za mene!” he shouted in Old Church Slavonic. Will you marry me!
For a moment she hesitated, her face a mask of anguish.
“Ei, posagnõ!” she answered.
The bear was gone, even as the last echo of its roar rang in the air.
Ivan rose to his feet, walked to the edge of the chasm. No sign of the animal. No sound of it, either, snuffling along the bottom. Nor were the leaves returning. They were gone, all the leaves that had filled the moat only moments before.