Short Fiction Fritz Leiber (free e books to read .txt) đ
- Author: Fritz Leiber
Book online «Short Fiction Fritz Leiber (free e books to read .txt) đ». Author Fritz Leiber
Yes, the costumeryâs a great place to quiet your nerves or improve your mind or even dream your life away. But this time I couldnât have been there eight minutes when Miss Neferâs Elizabeth-angry voice came skirling, âGirl! Girl! Greta, where is my ruff with silver trim?â I laid my hands on it in a flash and loped it to her, because Old Queen Liz was known to slap even her Maids of Honor around a bit now and then and Miss Nefer is a bear on getting into characterâ âa real Paul Muni.
She was all made up now, I was happy to note, at least as far as her face wentâ âI hate to see that spooky eight-spoked faint tattoo on her forehead (Iâve sometimes wondered if she got it acting in India or Egypt maybe).
Yes, she was already all made up. This time sheâd been going extra heavy on the burrowing-into-character bit, I could tell right away, even if it was only for a hacked-out anachronistic prologue. She signed to me to help her dress without even looking at me, but as I got busy I looked at her eyes. They were so cold and sad and lonely (maybe because they were so far away from her eyebrows and temples and small tight mouth, and so shut away from each other by that ridge of nose) that I got the creeps. Then she began to murmur and sigh, very softly at first, then loudly enough so I got the sense of it.
âCold, so cold,â she said, still seeing things far away though her hands were working smoothly with mine. âEven a gallop hardly fires my blood. Never was such a Januarius, though thereâs no snow. Snow will not come, or tears. Yet my brain burns with the thought of Maryâs death-warrant unsigned. Thereâs my particular hell!â âto doom, perchance, all future queens, or leave a hole for the Spaniard and the Pope to creep like old worms back into the sweet apple of England. Philipâs tall black crooked ships massing like seagoing fortresses south-awayâ âcragged castles set to march into the waves. Parma in the Lowlands! And all the while my bright young idiot gentlemen spurting out my treasure as if it were so much water, as if gold pieces were a glut of summer posies. Oh, alackanight!â
And I thought, Cry Iced!â âthatâs sure going to be one tyrannosaur of a prologue. And how youâll ever shift back to being Lady Mack beats me. Greta, if this is what it takes to do just a bit part, youâd better give up your secret ambition of playing walk-ons some day when your nerves heal.
She was really getting to me, you see, with that characterization. It was as if Iâd managed to go out and take a walk and sat down in the park outside and heard the President talking to himself about the chances of war with Russia and realized heâd sat down on a bench with its back to mine and only a bush between. You see, here we were, two females undignifiedly twisted together, at the moment getting her into that crazy crouch-deep bodice thatâs like a big icecream cone, and yet here at the same time was Queen Elizabeth the First of England, three hundred and umpty-ump years dead, coming back to life in a Central Park dressing room. It shook me.
She looked so much the part, you seeâ âeven without the red wig yet, just powdered pale makeup going back to a quarter of an inch from her own short dark bang combed and netted back tight. The age too. Miss Nefer canât be a day over fortyâ âwell, forty-two at mostâ âbut now she looked and talked and felt to my hands dressing her, well, at least a dozen years older. I guess when Miss Nefer gets into character she does it with each molecule.
That age point fascinated me so much that I risked asking her a question. Probably I was figuring that she couldnât do me much damage because of the positions we happened to be in at the moment. You see, Iâd started to lace her up and to do it right I had my knee against the tail of her spine.
âHow old, I mean how young might your majesty be?â I asked her, innocently wonderingly like some dumb serving wench.
For a wonder she didnât somehow swing around and clout me, but only settled into character a little more deeply.
âFifty-four winters,â she replied dismally. âââTiz Januarius of Our Lordâs year One Thousand and Five Hundred and Eighty and Seven. I sit cold in Greenwich, staring at the table where Maryâs death warrant waits only my sign manual. If I send her to the block, I open the doors to future, less official regicides. But if I doom her not, Philipâs armada will come inching up the Channel in a season, puffing smoke and shot, and my English Catholics, thinking only of Mary Regina, will rise and iâ the end the Spaniard will have all. All history would alter. That must not be, even if Iâm damned for it! And yetâ ââ ⊠and yetâ ââ âŠâ
A bright blue fly came buzzing along (the dressing room has some insect life) and slowly circled her head rather close, but she didnât even flicker her eyelids.
âI sit cold in Greenwich, going mad. Each afternoon I ride, praying for some mischance, some prodigy, to wash from my mind away the bloody question for some little space. It skills not what: a fire, a tree a-failing, Davison or eâen Eyes Leicester tumbled with his horse, an assassinâs ball clipping the cold twigs by my ear, a maid crying rape, a wild boar charging with dipping tusks, news of the Spaniard at Thamesâ mouth or, more happily, a band of strolling actors setting forth some new
Comments (0)