Prince Phillip
always loved the sound of the trumpet that signaled his arrival to those in the
courtyard of the castle. But today he barely heard them. He only had a few
precious moments until he changed the fate of the entire kingdom, and more
importantly, his own fate.
Letting his horse,
Samson, guide the way toward the stables, Phillip closed his eyes and allowed
the images of her to flood his already overloaded mind. She was the most
beautiful creature he’d ever laid eyes on. In fact, he was quite certain he
would never behold anyone or anything else that came even close to her beauty.
With hair the
shade of gold and lips as red as the rose, she was absolutely striking. And he
was certain he’d imagined the sound of her voice when he heard it earlier in
the forest, because nothing could sound that angelic and be real. But when he
found her dancing barefoot in the forest and singing that hauntingly beautiful
song, he was immediately enraptured.
Clearly a peasant
girl, Philip knew he should leave and forget about her. He was already engaged
to the Princess Aurora and their wedding day was just around the corner. But
the need to know this incredible young woman was overwhelming and he found
himself stepping from the cover of the trees to join in her daydream of finding
her true love. Except it wasn’t a daydream for him; he knew he was in love.
Phillip had always been like that. He knew what he wanted and he went for it.
All thoughts of
his betrothal and disappointing his father to the point of disownment
disappeared when he took her hand and placed his other one on her waist. She was so caught up in her own mind
that it took her several moments to realize that he was truly there and not a
figment of her imagination.
“Oh,” she murmured
surprised. “Oh!” She stepped out of his arms but he immediately took her hand
in his.
“I’m awfully sorry,
I didn’t mean to frighten you,” he told her as she pulled her hand away once
more. Philip knew he should take a hint, but the loss of contact was already
too much for him and he once again snatched it in his own.
“It’s not that,
it’s just that...that—”
“That I’m a
stranger?” he supplied for her.
She nodded her
head. “Mmmhmm.”
“But don’t you
remember? We’ve met before.” She had started to pull her hand away again, but
stopped at his words and looked up at him.
“We have?” Heavens, that voice. Looking deep into
her eyes, confusion plain on her face, Philip knew he was lost forever.
“You said so
yourself. Once upon a dream,” he replied coyly. She gave him half a smile
before slipping her hand free and backing away. Philip couldn’t help himself
though and he followed her through the woods, undeterred by her continued
rejection.
Suddenly an idea
came to him and he began to sing the same song she had been singing before he
interrupted her fantasy.
“I know you, I’ve
walked with you once upon a dream,” he sang. The girl had ducked behind a tree
and was peering around the side, but Philip surprised her when he took her hand
on the other side of the tree.
This time she
didn’t pull away and Philip decided to push his luck when he once again put his
arms around her and led her in a dance that only two people, truly in love,
could share.
After a while
Philip worried she would get dizzy so he stopped dancing and pulled her close
to his side, leaning against a tree and looking out over the forest valley. He
could have stayed in that blissful peace until the earth ended and everything
around them turned to ash.
“What’s your
name?” he asked her softly. Unable to resist, he pressed a light kiss to the
top of her head and was pleased when she sighed deeply. Perhaps she was just as
taken with him as he was with her.
“Hmm? My name?” she
murmured absently. Philip chuckled and was about to inquire again when she
spoke. “Oh, it’s…it’s…oh no, no, no. I can’t!” She pulled out of his arms so
quickly that he had to catch his balance before he fell.
“I’m sorry,
goodbye!” She called over her shoulder as she scurried through the trees.
Desperate, Philip ran after her, heart pounding loudly in his ears.
“Wait, when will I
see you again?”
“Oh never, never!”
“Never?” Philip
chocked on the word. She must have recognized the plea in his voice because she
paused in her flight and thought for a moment.
“Well, maybe
someday.” She threw over her shoulder before she started her escape once more.
But Philip was not
satisfied with that answer. He picked up his pace, but she was navigating the
woods as if she were a part of them. He couldn’t help but picture a small girl
chasing animals around the giant redwoods on a summer day.
“When?” he called
out.
“Tonight! At the
cottage. In the glen.” Her voice came floating through the trees as her form
disappeared completely.
Philip would have
continued after her had she not promised a time and location he could see her
again. He almost followed her anyway but decided that tonight would be soon
enough. He turned back in search of his horse, grinning like a fool the entire
way.
“Philip! Oh,
Philip!” His father’s voice brought him back to the present and he slowed his
horse before turning around and heading back the way he’d come. Still feeling
as though he were floating on air he jumped lightly to his feet and greeted his
father.
“Hurry, boy! You
must change into something presentable to meet your future wife!” Philip smiled
at his father like only a man in love could.
“But I have met
her!”
“What? When?
Where?” his father sputtered in shock.
“Once upon a dream,”
he sighed happily as he began to sing once more. Caught up in the moment he
picked his father, who was quite a bit smaller than Philip, up and began dancing
around. The King was so shocked, it took him a moment to form his next words.
“Princess Aurora!
Quick, we must tell King Stephan!” The King was already rushing away when
Philips next words froze him in place.
“I never said it
was Princess Aurora.” His father spun around, face pale as death as he searched
Philips eyes.
“You most
certainly did, you said—”
“I said I had met
the girl I was going to marry.”
“But…but…” he
sputtered. “Who is she?” This was the moment Philip thought he would dread the
most, but to his surprise he felt no shame at relaying his beloved’s
upbringing. What did it really matter where she was born when he knew he was in
love?
“I don’t know,
some peasant girl I suppose.” Now instead of a white color his father’s face
turned an alarming shade of red.
“P-p-peasant girl?
You must be joking!” The King searched his face for any signs that he was
joking, but Philip simply shook his head. “Isn’t he?” his father asked his
horse as if he would have the answers.
“But, but, you
can’t do this! You have to marry a princess!”
“Come now, father,
it’s the 16th century!”
“I order you to
come to your senses!”
“And marry the
woman I love.” Philip stated adamantly.
“Yes, and marry
the woman you love.” Philip laughed and his father quickly recanted. “Wait,
no!”
But it was too
late. Philip had already wasted too much time and he was desperate to see her
again. Mounting his horse again Philip said, “Goodbye Father.”
Philip heard his
father call after him, but he was already racing away toward a new future. He
understood why his father was so desperate for him to change his mind. Philip
knew what he was giving up for this woman he’d barely met, and yet he’d never
felt more right about a decision in all his life. And there was something else,
a sort of freedom that came with knowing he was taking charge of his own
destiny.
His entire life
he’d been told what to do, where to go, how to dress and act. He’d even been
told whom he was going to marry and where they would live as King and Queen.
But with one dance all that changed. He would no longer be King, no longer rule
a kingdom and marry a princess.
The weight of that decision should be heavier than it felt, but it was lighter than air when he saw her face in his mind’s eye. She had changed everything. She had changed his fate.
The weight of that decision should be heavier than it felt, but it was lighter than air when he saw her face in his mind’s eye. She had changed everything. She had changed his fate.
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