Arendelle's public library wasn't as nice as Corona's. But Rapunzel didn't expect them to. She had visited whole kingdoms who didn't know what a library was. And some villages that hadn't even seen a book.
Nonetheless, its non-fiction section provided enough for a few hours of research. Like every other investigation thus far, they had accumulated nothing. A page of notes sat in front of them, in-between the towers of volumes. Half of it was possibly useful and the other half was doodles.
Rapunzel wrapped her finger around her hair. Her fantastic braid had unraveled with all the movement she had undergone. Yet she shunned the idea of having the royal hairdresser redo it. Pascal sat on one of the volumes, his bulbous eyes scanning pages at speed.
Anna leaned back in her chair, head up against the ceiling. "Uuuugggghhh, this is so boring. And we're not getting any closer."
"You're right," Rapunzel said. She closed her book and stacked it on the pile, now as tall as her. They were the only ones inside library, giving an eerie feeling of quiet and haunting. In her tower, the one window was always unblocked, so she witnessed every sunrise and sunset.
Above them, the grinding of ice started again. Kristoff's company of men had come back from their break. Inside it sounded like they were obliterating the roof with giant threshing blades.
Rapunzel grabbed an armful of books to take back to the shelves. "Is there another room with archives? Like rare or delicate items?"
Anna covered her eyes with her twin braids. "I dunno."
"What about a rare collection? For delicate items?"
"I have no idea." She yawned. "Maybe this was a bad idea. By the time we get this figured out, Kristoff will have got rid of all the ice."
"It's a big town, it could take a while. Besides, if we don't know what caused it, it could happen again. Remember, we're doing this for Elsa."
"Right, right." At the mention of her sister, she lowered her head and got back to researching.
Rapunzel took the books back to their individual shelves. Her unraveled hair now trailed after her like a blond wedding train. Once finished, she looked for another door, maybe one that would lead to the archives or a private collection. A kingdom as old as this had to have something. And if it wasn't in the castle, it would be here.
She found one unlabeled door against the gray brick walls. No "keep out" signs, so she went in. It looked like a closet, but without light, she couldn't be certain. She entered and riffled through the assorted boxes. Lots of books, but nothing rare. Mostly editions with broken bindings or torn pages.
The door shut behind her. Darkness swallowed her up. Rapunzel didn't panic. Until she turned the knob. It didn't give. She was locked in. The handle would do nothing but jiggle. She pulled on it like a lever. The brittle brass snapped off in her hand.
"Help!" She pounded on the door. "Help, help! Let me out-"
The scraping sounded. That screeching, air-cracking grind. Thunder encompassing on all sides. The booming, quaking. Someone was hammering the walls and roof shut.
Her breathing shortened. Her lungs and chest began to ache, as if being squeezed. She backed away and toppled onto a pile of boxes. When she reached up, all she felt was walls. Walls on all sides.
She screamed as tears came. She screamed and screamed and screamed.
"No, no, no..." she whispered. She repeated it to herself like a mantra. "No, no, no..." Images of Flynn, her mother and father, Pascal. She'd never see them again. Not a single person. Just herself. Trapped in her mind.
The gray brick walls. The single room. Every rafter, every floorboard. A metal collar around her neck, weighing down her neck.
The door opened. "Rapunzel?"
Rapunzel shied away from the bright light spiking her dilated pupils.
"I..." Rapunzel said between gasps. "I got... locked in."
"Your hair got caught in the door." Anna kicked away the blond hair under the door. Rapunzel's body lay draped against the boxes, hands contorted and clutching. Her petite chest heaved up and down, mouth wide to take in air. "Geez, are you okay?"
"Yeah," Rapunzel swallowed. "I just... for a minute it felt like I was... back... never mind." She wiped the hair from her eyes, moist from sweat. Without another word, she stood straight up and walked out of the closet.
"What did they do to you in that tower?" Anna whispered.
"Nothing. I mean... I just... I don't know. I guess it got overwhelming with the darkness and the noise and the closed space."
Anna looked up and bit her lip. "I think we need a break. Let's go back to the castle," she said as they returned to the table.
Rapunzel picked up Pascal, who had fallen asleep. "I think that's a good idea."
A coach took them back across the fjord to the castle. The rhythmic clomping of the hooves and gentle vibration of the carriage helped calm Rapunzel. Anna told a story about the time a squirrel snuck into her castle.
"So then I started chasing it, thinking I'd show it to Elsa. And it could be our little pet. But then it ran behind the dresser. So I got this little pillow for a bed, and a bowl of sunflower seeds. I made this little collar while I was sitting there and saying 'and we can go see the concerts and you can live on my head and be my hat and when its dinner time you can brush your fuzzy tail against the ladies' legs and make them scream..."
Rapunzel was smiling when they passed through the castle gates and exited the coach.
"So what do you want to do? We have some games in the parlor," Anna said.
"Do you have chess?"
Anna made a face. "I don't like chess. Elsa does though. I'm sure she'd play you when she gets back."
"What about puzzles?"
"Mm, puzzles are boring. You just put together a picture that someone else broke? But there's cards, knucklebones, Fox & Geese, Hazard, if you like gambling."
Rapunzel didn't like any of those games, but she could make allowances for her cousin.
Kai met them at the castle entrance, holding a yellowed envelope. "Princess Anna, this letter just came for you. It says it's urgent, but the address only says 'the ruling monarch of the kingdom of Arendelle'. It may be referring to Queen Elsa. But since you are the current ruling monarch, perhaps you should look at it. You've been gone all day."
"Right. Sorry about that. Kingdom still in one piece, right? Nothing bad happened?"
"Yes, madam. Anything that came up, I took care of it."
Rapunzel detected a hint of resentment in his tone. Resentment that flew over Anna's head. She ripped open the envelope and pulled out a single sheet of paper. Her eyebrows squelched.
"It's just a blank piece of paper," Anna said. She showed it.
"Would Elsa understand it?" Rapunzel asked.
"Who knows." She stuffed it back in the envelope and handed it back to Kai. "Put it in Elsa's room. Maybe she can figure it out when she gets back. If it was that urgent, you'd think they would have used words. Come on, Rapunzel." They left Kai behind while Anna led Rapunzel further into the castle.
They played Tric-Trac and other games which excited Anna, but left Rapunzel disinterested. Gambling and games of chance weren't as fun with two people. But it did help get their mind off their failures.
During lulls, Rapunzel plucked out the hairpins and barrettes from her braid. As well done as it was, the royal hairdresser's work had essentially disintegrated.
Near the end of the night, they heard a strange booming outside their door. Like a giant walking down the hall.
"What's that?" Anna asked.
"I don't know. It's your castle."
The door to the parlor burst open. Rapunzel shirked back. A frost-giant stood in the doorway, covered in black fur with flecks of snow. A hand-axe gleamed in its giant ebony paw.
"...carrots," it said.
"Kristoff!" Anna ran up to him and hugged him. "Ooh, you're so cold... and wet."
He pulled the fur down from his face. "Where are the carrots? Sven needs them."
"Aren't there any in the kitchen?"
Kristoff started the process of peeling off his gear--thick coat, hat, gloves, sweater. "I looked. The staff said they'd been moved to help feed the town."
"Ooh, I bet Kai did that. Good man. I'll see if Gerda can help out. Are there any other vegetables Sven likes? Onions? Leeks? Turnips? Rutabagas?"
Kristoff raised an eyebrow as he pried off his last boot. "Are you being generous or just trying to get rid of foods you don't like?"
"You'll never know. On an unrelated note, he can't have any chocolate."
Kristoff chucked his last boot into the pile. Now clad in nothing but long underwear, he stretched his legs. "Oh, that feels good. My fingers feel worn down to nubs."
"Uh, Kristoff..." Anna gestured to Rapunzel behind her. She had remained so still and quiet he didn't know she was there.
"Oh, uh, hi..." Kristoff backed away and covered his sensitive regions with his hands.
Pascal peeked out from Rapunzel's hair. His eyes grew wider. Rapunzel gently shoved him back into her mane.
"Why didn't you stop me?" Kristoff asked.
"Because this was funnier." She patted his shoulder. "I'll be right back." Anna picked up her skirt and went to find Gerda.
Kristoff looked down at the pile, weighing whether or not to put his clothes back on. "Soooo..." he rubbed the back of his head. "How have you been liking it hair- I mean, here?"
Rapunzel stifled a laugh. "It's good. Anna's been showing me everything. It's much different than Corona."
"Yeah, that's kinda funny. Two kingdoms ruled by cousins, but they're so different. Is this your first time in Hairendelle- I mean, Arendelle."
Now Rapunzel couldn't help but laugh. "I've been here before once, for Elsa's coronation."
"I don't remember meeting you."
"I had a different look at the time. But so much was happening, I'm not surprised. The funny thing is, you know what I remember most? I couldn't go barefoot at all."
"Anna loves going barefoot too. Must run in the family."
Rapunzel looked down at her toes. "Yeah. It took everyone in the castle a while to get used to me walking around without shoes."
Anna came back at that moment and jumped on Kristoff's back. "Saves on socks!" She wrapped her arms around his neck and nuzzled into his shoulder.
"You couldn't do that where I grew up. You'd end up with broken toes," Kristoff said.
"Your family must have heavy feet," Rapunzel said.
"You don't know the half of it," Kristoff said.
"Your family... Of course." Anna turned toward him. "They might have an idea of what's going on. We need to go see them."
"I don't think they'd know much more than us," Kristoff said. "But it's worth a shot. Wait, you don't mean now?"
Anna raised her eyebrows roguishly. She grabbed Rapunzel's hand and dragged her out of the parlor. From the hallway she said, "Go get Sven ready. Hitch up the sled. We'll get dressed."
Kristoff looked down at his clothes and said, "Does this mean I have to put all this back on?"
Maybe because they were tired, night seemed to never end on this island. Puffy sick clouds crossed the moon, dimming and brightening the water. Torger heaved back and forth, rowing the two of them to the opposite side of the island. Craggy cliffs and moors made most of the coastline unusable, making it a perfect location for a hermit.
Elsa sat across from him, staring.
"How much further?"
"Have a heart, lass. It's the middle of the night, I didn't have a good dinner. Look at my arms. Skin and bones," Torger said between breaths.
"Keep rowing." Elsa flexed her bare fingers on the trident. She had to hide her smile when Torger's eyes went wide. "Ariel?"
"Still here. Coast is clear," Ariel said from behind the boat. She kept one hand on the aft edge, offering a gentle push when she wasn't keeping an eye out.
Torger grumbled to himself. "Hope you choke on whatever she gives you for her."
"I'm not 'selling' the mermaid," Elsa said. "She's my friend. You're taking us to Naidra for answers."
"She'll pluck out your eyes just as soon as part with any spell, I guarantee. And you best address her by title if you aim to keep your tongue too."
"Have you ever seen her before?" Elsa asked.
"Not once. And the sun will grow cold before I do. When I was a boy, me and the lads dared each other into the cave. Stig went the furthest, but then we heard a scream. He had the coughing fits for three days. Doctor said it was mountain flu, but we all knew it was the witch. I felt the rancid mist of the spell."
Elsa didn't lend much credence to this. Rumors and reputation could provide a convenient smokescreen for people who wanted to be left alone.
When they saw the entrance, they knew only a witch could live there. Ocean water flowed into a stony cave entrance. Onyx stalactites surrounded the ceiling and water's surface, like a dragon's mouth. The only way in was by boat.
"Take us inside," Elsa said.
"I'm not going in there," Torger said, shaking his head.
"Do it." She tightened her grip on the trident.
Torger rowed as if afraid of the cave's jaws shutting on him. Inside, a narrow stone walkway led along one edge of the cave wall.
Elsa, never letting go of the trident, placed one foot on the stern, peering as far as she could. Darkness placed a pitch black curtain at a certain point within, separating outside light from whatever was inside.
Torger dropped an oar and pushed her forward. Elsa and landed head first in the water.
"Elsa!" Ariel dove toward her. Elsa thrashed. Pockets of incarnate chill popped around her as Ariel pushed her to the surface. She rolled Elsa onto the walkway adjacent to the cave wall.
Elsa hacked up water in a sticky puddle under her chin. Ariel clutched the trident she'd recovered.
"I'm all right," she coughed out. "Where's Torger?" She wiped the wet hair from her eyes and stood.
The dinghy floated beyond the cave entrance, with Torger rowing as fast as he could.
"You said you'd let me go if I took you here. Didn't say nothing 'bout taking you back," he shouted.
"That dirty sea slug," Ariel said. She held the point of the trident forward and fiercely. The enchanted hum sounded. But instead of lightning, a tall upsurge of water undulated out toward the ocean. It swelled into Torger's boat, carrying him further out to sea.
"I didn't mean to do that," Ariel said. "I can still get him."
"No," Elsa said. "There's no point. We can get back ourselves. Besides, his arms will fall off by the time he's back at shore."
Ariel swam beside Elsa, head above water like a sea lion, moving further in. The two of them walked slow, in case of traps or witchy curses.
"You know, if I could make a wave like that, maybe I can make more than lightning. I just wish I knew how. I never thought I'd have to use this thing. My six older sisters would have become queen before me. And I never had any interest in ruling the kingdom anyway."
"Maybe it's not your lineage or anything that's the problem. Maybe it's something else," Elsa said.
"Like what?"
"Well, when I was little, I thought keeping my power suppressed was the way to control it. But every time I got too afraid or upset, it came out. I was so afraid of hurting anyone, I shut myself away from the world, suppressed my emotions. But when I went away from everyone and could use my power, I made wondrous things."
Ariel twirled the tines before her. "The first time I used it, I don't think I was upset. I was focused. I was calm."
"For me, the answer was love. Love of my family, love of the fun and joy winter brings. Without it, all I could do was make ice. I couldn't take it back."
"I have that. I have love from my husband. My friends. It feels like I have what you were missing, and missing what you always had. When you want to use it, what do you do?"
"I'm not sure how to explain it. Willpower? Focus? It's so natural I don't even think too hard about it."
The conversation dropped as they realized they couldn't see. They looked at each other, questioning whether to go further.
Ariel sighed and swam on. Elsa took cautious steps forward, one hand on the wall, making sure there was ground before taking a step. It smelled of sour candy, old pickles, like the dank corner of an unused kitchen.
Further on, light returned like a gentle blue sunrise, illuminating a curve in the path. Small blue grubs, stuck to the riffled wall, glowed bioluminescently. The waterway ended at a chamber. An old woman sat in a rocking chair in the middle of the room, her back toward them.
It stank of mud and birds' droppings. A large iron cauldron hung from the ceiling, squeaking as it swung from the iron talons. Against the wall stood a large apothecary table--small drawers with scrawled labels arranged in a grid--along with other cabinets, alchemy beakers, candles, and a straw bed.
But the most horrifying things were the shelves. The top had rows of different birds, all alive and twitching, perching restfully. Below and beyond were glass tanks of lizards, frogs, mudskippers, turtles, skinny snakes, and other scaled, slimy animals. Their bulbous, viscous eyes tracked their movement. The covered every inch of wall space as far as they could see.
"So you made it past the veil of darkness..." said a cracked voice. "Not many people do. They see the black abyss before them and run the other way. Me?"
She turned in her chair. Milky white pupils stared at them.
"I don't see anything but!" she cackled.
Purplish skin sagged from her eyes, pocked with liver spots and warts. Long gray bangs sprang from her forehead and earholes.
The old hag chortled like a wheezing fireplace poker. "One of you is smells like ice. That crisp tang of frosted iron. And other's still in the water." She sniffed. "A sea maiden? Well, this is an interesting combination. Frozen fish." She chuckled with high-pitched glee. "But you don't reek of evil. Not yet at least. So come in and know me better."
"Are you Dame Naidra?" Elsa asked.
"Eh? Speak up. I have a hard time hearing these days. As you can tell." She brushed her gray hair past a puckered hole where her ear should have been.
Ariel gasped. A light gray cockatoo with purple wings flew down from the shelf. It perched on the edge of the cauldron. Elsa raised her arm to protect herself.
"Some call me the fabled dame. For now. My identity's as ancient as the wind and untamable as the sea."
"Were your ears really bitten off by a harpy?" Elsa asked.
"I have lost all my senses, child," Naidra said. "I cannot see, nor touch, nor hear, nor taste, nor smell. All lost in the pursuit of erudite lore. A given sacrifice for power over wonder and privilege of spirit." She stood and hobbled to one of the glass tanks. A small yellow snake wrapped around her hands.
"Then how are you hearing us?" Elsa asked.
"These pets as my eyes and ears."
They looked up. On every shelf, each rat, each toad, each raven, was focused on them, watching like a judge's council.
"What they taste, I taste. What they smell, I smell. The price of agelessness is utter dependence. You know how I stay alive? When Death comes, I ask him for the time. When he gives me his pocket watch, I set it back." She erupted in a fit of hysterical cackling laughter.
She approached Elsa and offered her the snake. Elsa held up her hands, palms up in refusal. But that didn't matter--the white serpent wound its way up her bare arm. She tensed, eyes bulging.
"A snake's entire body is a sensing instrument. Heat, vibration, hermetics in the air," Naidra said.
The snake stopped and relaxed, curled around her forearm like morbid jewelry.
She laughed again. "You've had your bravery tested before. So whatever you want must be important."
"It is. Do you know anything about magic?" Elsa asked.
"I am all kinds of magic, child. The natural, the supernatural. Magic of blood and bone. Powers divine and demonic. Arcane and runic. I can pull a soul from a shadow and twist logic into chaos. Say your heart's desire, and it becomes."
"We actually don't want anything," Elsa said.
"Eh?" Naidra said. She looked disappointed.
"Well, except for an explanation. You see..." Elsa did her best to explain what had happened. Ariel's side of the story helped it make sense, but out loud, the coincidences seemed paper thin.
Naidra sniffed deep. "Ah, there it is. The stench of time gone bad. Yes, someone's undone your accomplishments. That's what's happened. More's the pity, isn't it? You worked so hard to shed these hardships." She gestured to Elsa. "You, your bondage to your power." To Ariel, "You, your limitations as a maiden of the sea. Everything you worked so hard for has been undone."
"Is there a way to put it back?" Ariel asked.
"I made a vow never to test mettle against the sands of time. Too much can go wrong. Too much potential to unravel existence itself. But some fools are always trying to swim upstream."
"Someone else did this." Elsa finished. "Is there a way to find who? Or what?"
"My wager, it's a who." She turned her pearl-colored eyes to Ariel. "You, I think I can help. It's too much a misfortune for you to be sea-locked through all this. I could mix something up to help you, little princess."
Ariel whispered to Elsa, "If she tries to take my voice, you know what to do." Elsa nodded.
"Eh? What was that? Speak up child. We mustn't keep secrets between guests. It's rude."
Ariel leaned in. "I said I've dealt with a sea witch or two. So we're prepared for anything."
"Sea witch? No, I'm no enchanter or charmer. Though I've known a few in my time."
Ariel tightened her grip on her trident. "A sea witch tried to cheat me out of my voice so she could take over the kingdom."
"Was her name Ursula?"
Ariel's jaw dropped. "You know her?"
"Know her? I trained her."
Ariel nearly dropped her trident.
"Yes. That surprises you, doesn't it? She apprenticed under me. Learned what I had to teach. A cecaelian, if I recall."
"She was a monster," Ariel said. "My father banished her."
Naidra sniffled. "I'm not surprised. Had more ambition than the seven seas have water. What happened to her afterwards?"
"She sold magic to merpeople who were desperate. Except no one could ever fulfill their end of the bargain, so she captured them in her grotto. Transformed them into polyps. She nearly did it to me. But that was the last contract she ever made."
Naidra nodded. "It would take a strong heart to work around her half-truths and deceits. I knew her young and fierce. Natural talent. Enthused with power. She had a devilish appetite for watching others squirm beneath her. Treating them like dolls or game pieces. Moving them around. It satiated her. Sounds like it undid her as well." She chuckled. "Don't worry, child. I ask no price for this. You have gone through enough."
"How are you going to help?" Ariel asked.
"I know a potion that should alleviate this curse. I can brew it up this night."
"Will it turn me into a human?"
Naidra cackled. "Let me guess. Your sea witch offered you something similar, but its power lasted only three days?"
"That's right," Ariel said with astonishment.
Naidra smirked. "Amateur. Either incompetence or by design. My command over these forces outshines any. Though I admit certain limits can't be overcome. You will be human by daylight. But when the sun sets, its power subsides and your seamaiden form returns."
Ariel shook her head. "Why is it always sunset?"
"You should consider yourself lucky this offer can be made at all. But your question has merit. It is not so much the lack of sun as the presence of moon that makes the difference. The duality of man drives everything man accomplishes. Harness its energy and that's where miracles come from."
"Is there anything for me? Anything that can dissolve ice? Or melt it?" Elsa asked.
"No, little queen. Your problem has no solution I can provide."
"What about pyramite?" Elsa exclaimed. "I was on my way to Corona to see if they had some. I know it wouldn't fix what happened now, but some kind of defense..."
"You seek to nullify your greatest strength?" Naidra laughed to herself. She hobbled to another side of the cavern and pulled something out of a drawer. "You're right, child. There is such a thing. But what do you expect to do? Cover your kingdom in it?" She tossed something at Elsa.
Elsa caught it. It was a metal shard, gleaming dull gray like liquid metal. "This is pyramite?"
"Among the rarest of the rare metals. The entire world's supply could fit into a barrel. Good luck finding it anywhere else. Consider it good fortune the earth contains so little potential to how back yours."
Elsa couldn't help herself. She tried freezing the shard, but nothing happened. The air formed a light coating of frost, but it disappeared. "It's still warm," she said to Ariel, with a strange delight.
"So do you know how this happened in the first place? You said it had something to do with time," Ariel asked.
Dame Naidra took two bottles from a shelf, one blue and one red, and set them by her cauldron. "There's only one devilry I know capable of addling time such has been done. And its master is long dead." She poured the blue liquid in. It vaporized in a puff of violet smoke.
"Who was that?"
"Temeris. A sorcerer who lived when the world was young. In those days, you could deal with dark spirits courteously. They say he played games with death himself. His followers became a cult, claimed he was part god. Maybe they were right. When he died, his followers preserved his flesh, brain, and heart. Put them in canopic jars and kept worshipping him. Called them the 'three faults of Temeris', because they were the trappings of his mortal form."
The red elixir cascaded in. As soon as it hit bottom, a foul smell of mud and egg yolks wafted up. Ariel and Elsa cringed.
"Is Temeris's cult still around?" Ariel asked.
"No. It dwindled into history. A strong leader can keep any group together. But only a great one can make it last beyond death." She wafted the pungent fumes away from the cauldron. "Now, stand back." She raised her wrinkled arms over her head.
"Venis earth, venis air, venis mare mulier
Take heed to the writ that I call
Summon fire, summon water, take ocean's fair daughter
Muta hominem luna et sol"
The cauldron shivered. Naidra dipped in a ladle, bringing out a viscous, pale-purple goop as thick as oatmeal. She spooned it into a square vial and corked it.
"Drink this, and it will be done," Naidra said as she handed it to Ariel.
"Thank you," Ariel said.
"I've given you all I can. And given it without recompense. I suppose you've caught me on a generous day." Naidra grinned, revealing a gummy mouth speckled with black, cancerous marks. "Now, I suggest you leave as fast as you can."
"Wait, we still need more help. Where can we go-" Elsa started.
"It's a full moon tonight. And you don't want to see me when the moon is full."
Ariel asked, "What do you mean? What happens when the moon is full?"
"Is there any way to get rid of the ice if-"
"I said, go. GOOOOOOOOOO..."
An shrill banshee scream exploded out of her puckered mouth. The stone reverberating against the sound. Each squirrel and lizard in their cage rattled and shook.
Ariel backflipped and swam away. Elsa picked up her dress and sped back into the tunnel as fast as she could. The old witch's cackles echoed in the cave, leaving them to wonder whether it had all been a joke.
Anna and Kristoff led Rapunzel through the rough valleys and craggy hills, up into a mountain plateau. Rapunzel had to fight sleep, but the rocky terrain kept her bouncing back and forth, keeping her awake.
"All right, here we are," Kristoff said.
He stopped Sven at a highland. Rounded boulders and moss dotted the flat rock. Rapunzel bounded out of the sled and approached one.
"Wow. Look at these rocks. So smooth and round. It's like someone rolled them here." She knelt and rubbed one of them.
"What?" Kristoff said.
"I had a book on geology in my tower that I read... several times. This was the site of a glacier cold flow, I bet. The glacier quarried them and basal sliding rounded them down and left them here." She draped herself over one. "Mmm... so nice and cool. Is this basalt?"
"Uh... I don't know." Kristoff scratched his head.
"It feels like basalt."
"It's so nice to meet someone who knows their minerals."
The rock popped up, turning into a small dwarf with a bulbous nose and endearing eyes. She did what anyone would in such a situation. She screamed.
"Gnomes!"
"Trolls, actually. Rock trolls. Emphasis on the rock," the troll said. "Kristoff's never appreciated how smooth this granite is. And check out these deposits of quartz." The dwarf turned its backside and pointed to his posterior.
"Yes... they're very nice." Rapunzel crab-crawled away and bumped into another rock.
"Hey, careful, dear. Don't bump your head."
Rapunzel stumbled over her hair. Kristoff and Anna tried to catch her, but weren't in time. She tripped and rolled herself up. Suddenly a group of trolls were standing over her, peering down. Their bodies were covered in moss instead of clothes and they wore necklaces with glowing crystals woven in. Sprigs of grass topped their heads.
"Wow, look at her hair," said a child. "She must be overwatering it."
"Don't step on it, dear. You'll get arrested for tress-passing."
"It's so long. How does she get it that long?"
"I need to trim mine back every four weeks or it starts flowering. Then the pollen gets into my eyes."
"Why is it that color? She must use a honey comb."
"Guys, guys, back up. She's new, okay?" Kristoff pushed himself into the crowd. "Sorry about that. They mean well, but they don't get to see new people too often."
Anna and Kristoff helped Rapunzel up and unweaved her from her self-inflicted prison. "Family?" Rapunzel asked.
"Well, they raised me since I was eight." He addressed the group. "Everyone, this is Anna's cousin, Rapunzel."
One of the trolls waddled up to her--a female judging by the long blades of grass drooping from her head.
"Ooh, this is a good one. Come here darling, let me take a look at you."
"Bulda..." Kristoff warned.
Bulda squeezed Rapunzel's cheeks with her stony palms.
"How... how is this..." Rapunzel stammered. Bulda turned her head this way and that.
"Why, cutie, you don't need no love advice. I can see it in your eyes. You've already got a good man. Bit of a scamp, but who doesn't like a dip of danger every now and then?" She elbowed Rapunzel. It felt like a brick jabbed in her ribs.
"She doesn't need love advice," Kristoff said. "We're here to see Pabbie. Something's happened down in Arendelle."
The trolls wandered around Rapunzel, picking up her hair and examining it. One of the little ones took a lick, made a disgusted face, then said something about how it was "not gold"
Pascal dug his way out and hunkered into a defensive position. He watched the trolls with shifting eyes as he splayed his arms and legs.
A child with a red and white toadstool on his head pointed. "Hey, she's got a mushroom too."
"Could we please stay focused?" Kristoff shouted out. "We have a real problem here."
The trolls hushed. Something was coming through their ranks, making a group of gray heads stand aside. A larger, older troll with thinner grass hair walked toward her. The ruff of green reeds around his neck looked like a lion's mane.
Kristoff let out his breath. "Grand Pabbie, you're here."
"There is trouble, isn't there?" he said in a raspy voice.
Anna knelt before him. "Arendelle's been hit by a terrible ice storm, like last year. Only it's not Elsa. We don't know what to do or what caused it."
"I don't mean the kingdom. I mean her." He pointed at Rapunzel.
She looked around, as if he was referring to something behind her.
He waddled forward. "I can sense the magic. Magic that's not supposed to be there. It's powerful."
"It was supposed to be gone forever, but it came back. Stronger than before," Rapunzel said.
"Like the ice storm," Pabbie replied.
Anna and Kristoff looked at each other. "So the ice storm and Rapunzel's hair have something to do with each other?"
Pabbie picked up a stream of hair and held it up to his eye, rubbed it between his fingers. "This hair. It gathers no leaves, no insects, no dirt. Stronger than diamond. This is the root of your magic."
"When my mother was giving birth to me, there were... problems. So everyone searched for a magical golden flower that could heal people."
"A drop of sunlight. It fell to Earth and became that flower. Very potent."
"My mother and I would have died if she hadn't gotten that flower," Rapunzel said.
Pabbie raised his hand. "I do not blame you, child. Rest assured, it is not the first of its kind. Ages ago, when I was just a neolith, a similar miracle happened. This time from the winter night. But this had the unfortunate luck to land on a nobleman. We could heal his wound but the magic power still flowed within his blood. And forever cursed his lineage. One day, his descendant would be born with the same power. I believe you know her. She's your cousin." He turned to Anna. "And your sister."
"Elsa?" Anna cringed. "You mean this has all happened before?"
"This, yes," Pabbie said, gesturing to her hair, "But what's happening now? No. It's too illusive for me to read. All I can tell is that it's no accident. There is intent behind this."
"So someone's responsible," Kristoff said. "But who? And what do they want? To take over Arendelle?"
Pabbie sighed. "I doubt whoever conjured this wants your kingdom. This magic is bigger than that. Ancient. Full of peril and deceit. Someone is tapping into the heart of the world. Using power that was hidden many eras before yours. Power that strong would corrupt one's soul to the core. Few would survive such a saturation."
"Then maybe we don't have anything to worry about," Anna said. "Maybe whoever did it is already dead?"
"Perhaps," Pabbie said. "But foolish hope extends little minds."
"What?" Anna said.
"He means we shouldn't stop looking." Kristoff took a deep breath. "Man, I am out of ideas."
"Me too," Anna said. "Rapunzel, what do you think?"
Rapunzel glanced between the two of them. "Um, I guess... we just keep doing what we're doing. Keep clearing the ice as best we can. Keep looking for causes. Maybe Elsa will have a better idea when she gets back." She stood up and shivered. The night had brought the cold mountain air billowing in, and she had underdressed for this hike.
"Let's go back home, get some sleep. I think we've earned it," Kristoff said. He started back down the path with Anna following.
Once they were out of earshot, Pabbie touched his stone-cold hand to Rapunzel's warm arm. "Young one, wait."
"Yes?"
Pabbie gestured for her to bend down. He whispered, "You have a great power within you too. Like your cousin."
Rapunzel nodded.
"But you don't wish to show it."
Rapunzel shook her head.
"You fear it a danger. But yours is a mending magic."
"I know. But it threatened me. It threatened my husband, my family, my friends. I came here to escape that. If word got out..."
"I understand," Pabbie said. "But all secrets unlock in the end. Know that, child."
"I do," she said.
Pabbie let her go. She ran off to rejoin Kristoff and Anna. Around a bend in the rocks, Kristoff was discussing the issue with Anna's arm in the crook of his.
"So, if I understood right, Pabbie thinks that Rapunzel's hair and this ice are connected? But Rapunzel wasn't even here when the storm came. And what does hair have to do with it? And... and... and... I think my brain's broke."
Kristoff unraveled Sven's reins from around the sleigh's front piece. Anna yawned. "I have literally never been so tired. Why didn't Elsa get you a sled with pillows? Whose idea was it to come out here this late?"
"Yours," Kristoff said.
"Oh. Right. I guess I forgot we had to head back."
Anna sat in the middle, between Kristoff and Rapunzel.
"Okay, maybe we should do what we do when approaching a large piece of ice."
"Lick it until it's smaller? Slide it around?" Anna asked.
"Break it down, piece by piece. First 'who'. Who is doing this? What does he want?"
"Or she..." Rapunzel added, thinking of her mother.
Kristoff nodded. "Where can we locate them? When did they do this? How did they do this? Why?"
"Maybe they wanted some ice for their drink and went too far?" Rapunzel asked.
"But we have Elsa for that. And I'm the Royal Ice Master and Deliverer." Kristoff said.
"You're the royal ice master?" Rapunzel asked. "Why? When Elsa can make ice out of thin air?"
Kristoff paused. "Hey, that's a good question. Anna? Why did-" Kristoff ribbed Anna...
...who promptly snored. Her head flopped onto Kristoff's shoulder.
"Dead asleep. She really did have a long day."
They hit a bump and Anna's head lolled onto Rapunzel's lap. Rapunzel nudged her back up, where she flopped back onto Kristoff's chest. A thin line of drool hung off her bottom lip.
"Naw, this is how she sleeps. She's impossible to get up in the morning. Uh, so I'm told. She told me. I don't have firsthand knowledge or anything."
Kristoff let that hang in the air. Then coughed. Rapunzel rolled her eyes and smiled. "What did Pabbie mean about 'power so strong it would corrupt one's soul'?" she said.
"I'm not sure. Once, when I was ten, Grand Pabbie showed me a dead tree. He told me it was the last to shed its leaves for winter, as if it wanted more time to grow. It tried to take water from the cold snow, sun from the dim light, all to be the tallest. Its bark was split and gnarled and bumpy. All kinds of moss and fungus. Its leaves were spotty and blue. Not a pretty sight. All because it tried to take more than it deserved."
"Creepy," Rapunzel said, hugging her knees. Whoever did this was someone that knew about her "gift" Someone willing to exploit it. To the point of extremes to get at it, no matter who got hurt. "I think I know the exact kind of person who would do this."
"You do?"
"Well, not personally. I mean, the person I'm talking about... died. We're looking for someone vain, manipulative, obsessive, elegant..." Her voice drifted off. This was getting too scary. Too many thoughts she didn't want to think about.
"Well, we still got to find a way to fix it," Kristoff said. "The ice isn't melting, but at least we can cart it away. But the clouds haven't moved off. If we don't get some sun, Arendelle's going to be in trouble."
He looked to the west, with the frigid fjord below them. On the wharf, dockworkers had assembled on a single pier in bunches.
"That's odd. Wonder what's going on down there?" Kristoff said.
"Let's check it out," Rapunzel said.
Kristoff whipped the reins. Sven veered down to the shoreline huts and kiosks. Two men wearing dockworker uniforms approached the sled at the entrance to the wharf. Sven skidded to a stop, no easy feat on the icy roads.
"Princess Anna. Princess Anna!"
Anna rolled over. "Na ga ma. Take the bilberries out of my hair..."
Kristoff wiped the drool off his shoulder. "Anna, they look serious."
Anna rubbed her eyes. "What? What's going on?"
"Princess Anna, you'd better come and see this."
The three of them followed the dockworkers down to the water. One man knelt near the end of the dock.
Olaf's head lay in the water, looking up at the sky. The other spheres of his body bobbed near other docks, where workers waited for them to float close enough to catch.
"Oh, hi, Anna. I didn't expect to see you here," he gloated.
"But you're in Arendelle," Anna exclaimed.
"I am? Wow, I'm back already. I don't even remember what Corona was like."
"Olaf, where is the boat?"
"Oh, well, we hit a little snag when we ran into a giant storm and the boat was destroyed."
Anna looked up. Waves carried several rowboats brimming with sailors toward land, along with chunks of wood and debris.
"The boat was destroyed?" Anna swallowed.
"Princess Anna..."
The dock worker held up a dripping piece of wood. On it was the letter "A" from the embossed emblem of the ship. Anna held her hands to her mouth and gasped.
Ariel pushed the small ice floe across the coast. Elsa sat cross-legged and cross-armed, like Ali Baba on a magic carpet. Her face remained grim.
The witch's words had given no comfort. She didn't expect to like it, but the vague words and ideas were little better than storybook fables. And they gave no resolution. She glanced back at Ariel, who had a similar grim smile.
Ariel flicked her tail and changed direction to a grassy knoll on a sandbar, allowing privacy.
"Phew." Ariel released the iceberg and shook her hands. "So cold."
"Ice usually is," Elsa said.
Ariel stuck her fingers in her armpits and shivered. "Do you still have the bottle?"
Elsa pulled out the stoppered bottle of red sludge. "You want to drink it now?"
Ariel turned towards the horizon, where the barest kindle of sun lightened the dark sea. "Let's wait until sunrise. I want to make sure it works."
Elsa smoothed her dress and sat on the sand. Ariel pulled up onto the sand next to her.
"So, this Ursula was a bad one?" Elsa asked, making conversation.
Ariel nodded. "I only went to her because I was desperate. I had this grotto where I kept all my human knick-knacks and thingamabobs from sunken ships. One day my father found out about it and destroyed them all." She held up the trident in her hands. "He was so... angry. He said 'So help me, Ariel, I am going to get through to you. And if this is the only way, so be it.'"
Elsa shuddered.
Ariel continued, "He just left me there, crying on a rock. I guess, when I went to her lair, I was trying to get back at him as much as achieve my own dream."
"Go to your father's enemy. Yeah, that would do it." Elsa mused. "My father was protective, but he was right to be. I almost killed my sister with my powers. She was able to get better, but it meant erasing her memory. From then on, he thought it was best just to not ever use my powers. That meant keeping my emotions under control." She heaved a deep sigh. "Conceal, don't feel."
Elsa dug her hand into the wet, cool sand, remembering the gloves she always used to wear. Grains like tiny fingers massaged her skin. With a quick flash, the water within froze. Elsa held up her hand. A craggy chunk of sand coated her upper arm. Ariel giggled.
"Are all kings like that? Stubborn and strict and over-protective? Or is it just fathers?"
"I don't know. Maybe it's both. I'm lucky to have known my father as long as I did. He died when I was eighteen. I know others who don't know their fathers or didn't grow up with them. My cousin didn't even know she had a father until she was eighteen." Elsa sat back on her elbows in the sand. "All part of being royalty, I guess. All the families and betrothals to form alliances or combine treasuries."
"I haven't met that many human kings. Eric isn't a king yet, but does most of the king stuff--meeting with people, doing treaties--that kind of thing."
"You haven't met that many kings? And you're a princess? What do you do all day?"
"Um..." Ariel scratched the back of her head. "You know, I just thought of something. I'm going to need some clothes after I drink this."
Elsa looked for any clothes on the beach, as if they would magically appear. "I guess I can go into town and find something. It's a little early though, I don't know if there'll be any shops open." She started up the sand hill. "Don't go anywhere."
"I won't," Ariel said. She slipped back in the water to keep her tail moisturized.
The walk to the marketplace wasn't long. Merchants busied themselves setting up their stands for the day--pulling out signs, arranging baskets of fruit, hanging goods. Elsa found one pulling out clothing from a wooden crate and asked if she were willing to make exchange this early. The clothier produced an elegant peasant gown with yellow fabric. It split at the waist, revealing the white skirt underneath and Elsa especially liked the taffeta below the neckline. She purchased it, along with some undergarments.
On the way back, she spied the town's wharf and realized they also needed a way back home. The harbormaster--a gruff, barrel-bodied man with a black mustache and striped shirt--stood near the marina's entrance, pointing and yelling at sailors not watching the rules. A stink-fog of salty sea garbage and dying fish surrounded them.
"Excuse me," Elsa said. "Are any of these ships heading to Arendelle today?"
"Arendelle?" He plucked his ledger out from his waistband. "Aye, there's a fishing vessel down the way. Ask for Captain Gunhild." He pointed down to a ship at the end of the dock. Elsa recognized its blue-green flag as one she'd seen in Arendelle's port.
Elsa thanked the man and walked toward the ship as gracefully as she could. It took all her concentration to keep her skinny legs on the warped wooden boards.
Various workers scampered around the ship like prairie dogs, knotting ropes and hauling crates. Elsa called to the man standing on the ramp.
"Is this boat going to Arendelle?"
"Eventually," he said. "Once we make a catch. Then we'll deliver it, sure as you're born. Why?"
"I need passage there."
Gunhild laughed. "This ain't no galleon, m'lady. It's a fishing vessel."
"I need to leave as soon as possible. Please. I can pay for passage."
Gunhild began coiling a rope. "I don't know. They say it's bad luck to have a woman on board. Pretty as you are."
"What does it say about two?" Elsa asked.
The supervisor stopped coiling. "Ummm..."
"I have another passenger coming with. And believe me, you will have no smoother waves than with her on board." Elsa smiled.
"Rather presumptuous for someone who hasn't even given me her name yet."
"Lady... Idun," Elsa said, thinking of her mother's name. She curtsied.
Gunhild stood straight. "A noblewoman? Please forgive me. I misjudged you by your clothes. My name is Gunhild, and my ship is yours. We'll be ready to undock within the hour. Can you be here by then?"
Elsa sighed. "That's fine. I'll go get my friend, and we'll arrive shortly."
They said their goodbyes and Elsa headed back to the beach. If she had given her real name, the captain would have accepted out of intimidation. People fawned or groveled in her presence. But behind her back, they feared, even when she'd hurt no one. And in numbers, they had mob strength behind them. Being a noblewoman was enough.
When Elsa set foot on the sand, Ariel poked her head out of the water. "Here you go." She handed the dress to Ariel. "There's ship going back to Arendelle within the hour."
"And from there, I can find passage back to my kingdom," Ariel said.
Elsa nodded. "But I think you should stay--at least for a little while--to help us figure out why this happened to us at the same time. I was originally going to Corona to find pyramite, but now..." Elsa looked into the distance. "I'm not sure there's a point anymore."
Ariel nodded. "Looks like the sun's risen." A visible gap lay between the ocean and the orange-red circle.
"Have you taken the potion yet?"
"I was waiting for you, just in case anything happened." She plucked off the stopper off and took a sniff. "Ugh. Well, down the hatch." Ariel tipped back the bottle and drained it as fast as she could. Her eyes squinched at the taste of lard, lemon, wax, acid, and sour candy. But still she glugged to the last.
She wiped her mouth and set the bottle back in the sand. They waited a long moment.
"Feel anything?" Elsa asked.
"... not yet. If that woman sc- HURRRK..."
Ariel doubled over, holding her stomach. Her insides felt like a bruised apple. Pain spread down her spine into her tail. It felt like a hot sword slicing her from groin to tail, separating each ligament and disc in her backbone. Hot fire spread from her midriff to her fluke, lighting every nerve hot.
But the pain in her abdomen began to fade. And then her hips. The sensation of agony ebbed to a stop. When she felt good enough to open her eyes, there were two bare legs where her mermaid tail had been.
"Phew," Ariel sighed. "That felt like giving birth. Not that I know what that feels like."
Elsa took off a decorative sash around her waist and handed it to her.
"Thanks." Ariel hoisted herself up. "I-" Her weight fell down her shins onto her thin feet. "Ow, I- whoa."
She tipped and fell into Elsa's arms. "You okay?"
"Feels like knives stabbing into my feet. It's okay, it's normal. There's no callus built up."
"Like your foot falling asleep," Elsa said. "Did this happen the first time."
Ariel nodded. "But I was having so much fun I didn't notice. The hard part was getting used to being vertical. I used to spend so much time horizontal."
Elsa smiled. She helped Ariel get her dress situated.
Rapunzel felt guilty for not crying as much as Anna.
It was a weird feeling. But the fact was she hadn't known her family for long. She didn't know her real mother and father until four years ago, let alone any extended relatives. She sympathized with Anna, but she had cried all the tears her body would permit.
Anna lay spread out on her bed, crying. All Rapunzel could do was sit next to her and rub her back. She'd hadn't stopped since the news. Her stomach muscles must have been sore. The pain of crying was a strange reflection of the pain inside.
"It sure looks nice outside," Olaf said, staring out the window. "The sun is shining. The ice on the leaves looks nice. Ha. The ice looks nice. I rhymed. See? Anna?"
Anna sniffled, head buried in her pillow. Rapunzel gave Olaf a look.
Between crying jags, Anna had been able to explain why a talking snowman lived in the palace. Now that Rapunzel was used to him, she found him a little annoying. His naïve and dreamy optimism never turned off.
A knock at the door interrupted.
"I'll get it," Olaf declared. He waddled around the bed to the door. "Maybe it's cookies. Cookies always cheer me up."
Olaf wrapped his twig around the doorknob. Prime assistant Kai stood at the door. His gray face looked like it had aged ten years.
"Oh. He has no cookies." Olaf's face dropped and he walked away.
Rapunzel stepped up to be inside the doorframe, shielding Anna from the conversation.
"A thousand excuses, my lady. But it is time for the royal appointment of ministers," Kai said.
"Does it have to be now?"
"With regrets, this is a rather timely need. The administrators of agriculture and medicine need to have their decrees signed into law. The positions have been vacant for some time. Queen Elsa made her decision some weeks ago. But it needs to be witnessed by a quorum of councilmen and judges. And we couldn't gather enough until now."
"This isn't the best time. Isn't there a sabbatical from all royal business for a period of mourning?"
"Yes, but right now, the queen's considered lost at sea. No one confirmed seeing her body, and all the crew returned. So many consider it too early to declare her dead. She may yet send word of her survival."
"I wish someone would tell Anna that," Rapunzel muttered.
"After a certain amount of time, the regent may declare her death in absentia. Until then, the government is continuing as before. Which means, if we don't make the appointment, we won't be able to pass certain charters we promised to have drafted by now. Land allocations and agriculture implements will be delayed. And I can't imagine the citizens would be happy hearing that. All that needs to happen is to make it official."
Rapunzel bit her lip. Anna's back shakily rose and fell with each breath.
"I guess I can do it. For now."
She followed Kai through the hall and into the throne room. A set of nine old men and women were milling around, talking in groups of two or three. They turned their heads to the opening door.
"Councilors. Acting queen regent, Princess Rapunzel of Corona."
Rapunzel leaned out from behind him. She waved.
"Hi. I hope no one minds. Anna's not here, but she and I are cousins, so I think I can still authorize important documents. It just needs to be signed, right?"
One of the judges nodded. "I heard you were helping the princess while the queen's away. And..." His eyes locked on the trail of hair leading into the hallway.
Rapunzel shook hands with everyone. "Yes, I didn't know about the disaster until I got here, but I'm trying to help where I can."
"If you have time, do you think you could formalize some of the other decrees that have been waiting?"
"I think I'd rather let Anna do that. She's the rightful ruler of the kingdom now."
"I'm not asking you to blindly sign them, of course. But some of have been sitting for months."
"I'm really just here for this one thing. Kai told me it couldn't wait."
She found the ministers of agriculture and medicine that she was about to appoint and shook their hands. The minister of agriculture was a kind woman with puffy, gray hair and thick glasses. The minister of medicine had a lean and hungry look, with small eyes and a thin goatee.
"Pleasure to meet you," he said. "Your hair is amazing. I didn't even know hair could get that long. How do you get it like that?"
"Oh, time and care," Rapunzel said.
"Is this a fashion in your kingdom? Does everyone wear their hair like that in Corona?"
"No, just me." She coughed. "Is there something I'm supposed to sign?"
Kai handed her the document, stating the date and name of the appointees with a long passage of legal boilerplate.
"It's already been looked over and approved by the judges." He pointed to the wax emblem in the lower left corner.
Rapunzel took the quill from Kai. "By the power invested in me by the queen regent, I, Rapunzel, princess of Corona, ordain this law binding to the people and state of Arendelle."
Rapunzel searched for where to make her mark and chewed her lip. Each signature was labeled with the signer's role--judge, councilman. If it said "queen" she didn't know what to do. But the label said "royal administrator" She guessed she could be that.
The people in the chamber politely clapped when she lifted her pen. While Kai rolled up the scroll, the new minister of medicine said, "To tell the truth, I'm not terribly sad to see you here."
Rapunzel raised her eyebrows. "Why?"
His eyes listed away. "Anna's never been seen as a great leader. Taking responsibilities from her would prove well for us all."
Kai interjected. "Her parents focused on grooming Queen Elsa, since she would be the one to take the crown. She took her lessons in Latin, history, mathematics. Meanwhile, Anna would be getting into some mischief or riding her pony or taking picnic near the coast."
Rapunzel guessed that since they had Elsa doing the work, they didn't put up much of a fuss to get Anna to study.
A judge said, "Last year, Elsa got the flu, so Anna had to take the throne for a few days. She even said 'how hard could it be'?" The judge chuckled to himself.
Seems like something Anna would say, Rapunzel thought. "What happened?"
"Not much. She declared war on all dandelions, for one."
The group burst into laughter.
"That afternoon," said another councilor, "was the knighting the captain of the guard. In the dubbing, she cut his ear."
"Her assistants had to 'school' her in proper terminology on the spot. She accidentally impeached the bed sheets. Then she appointed her pony as minister of finance. She had to excuse herself to the bathroom before it ended."
"I don't think there was one thing she didn't bungle one way or another," said a third councilor. "We started calling her 'her accidency' behind her back."
Rapunzel laughed along with the others, mostly to be polite. Were they treating her as a joke, or laughing in good humor? Did other citizens feel this way? As funny as it was to imagine, what would happen when Anna did come to the throne? "Maybe I will have a look at some of those documents."
Since the councilors had all gathered together, examining proposals didn't take long. In fact, it was kind of fun. The legalese didn't bother her, since she'd read all those law books. In fact, it was kind of fun finding where holes needed to be plugged in the constitutionality.
But then she remembered Anna and excused herself when a fair chunk of the work was done. At least she had saved the poor girl from some tedious labor.
Back in the Anna's room, Olaf was trying to tell a joke. "Okay, here's one I just came up with. Why do snowmen have such cold feet? Because they're brrrr-footed. Get it? I thought of that after seeing you and Rapunzel walking around. You two are like sisters... oh."
Anna's cries reached a new level of intensity.
"Maybe we should try giving Anna some time alone," Rapunzel whispered. She needed a break from mourning and Olaf needed a break from trying to cheer Anna up.
"Oh, sure," Olaf said. "I love walks. You get to see the sun, and all the flowers. Oh, well, not now. But the ice is nice too. Hey, that rhymed."
Rapunzel put on some cleated boots. Olaf's little feet fluttered while the other globes of his body remained still.
"It's a beautiful kingdom," Rapunzel said. "I wish I could have seen it when it was green."
"Pfft, Rapunzel, kingdom's aren't green. The grass is green. And leaves. And trees. And that thing on your shoulder."
Rapunzel noticed Pascal coming out of the warmth of her hair. He shivered. She patted his head. "Sorry, Pascal. This isn't the kind of weather you're used to."
Pascal croaked and gave a firm nod.
Olaf gasped. "Oh, look at him. He's so cute, he's like a tiny, green reindeer."
Guards opened the large double doors to the village proper. The aroma of smoke accompanied the crisp frost in the air. They followed their noses to the town square.
Townspeople stood around a campfire. They patted their sides and stayed close together.
"Ooh, fire's not so good for me. Even with my personal flurry," Olaf said.
But Rapunzel wasn't listening. She approached cautiously, figuring out what was going on.
"My fishes are fine, but everything else is almost gone. My berries, the sweet cream. I won't have any yeast for bread," said a townsperson in a baker's outfit.
"It's an insidious cold," his partner said. "Not enough to freeze, but not warm enough for comfort."
"Doesn't help that others are pinching their pennies. They know what happened last year."
Rapunzel interjected. "If there's food going bad, maybe we can get others to come. There's a warm fire here, and we can make it... sort of a party."
The two looked at each other and shrugged. "Might as well," one citizen said. "Going to waste in the larder anyway."
Olaf and Rapunzel split up and went door-to-door asking people to join them. Many declined, but Rapunzel mentioned how important it was to keep spirits high when everything looked drab and gray. Each citizen took what wood and food they had and contributed at the town's square.
Soon the bonfire was two persons high, and an assortment of strange but diverse food had been laid out. Pascal sat on a barrel, changing colors while boys and girls watched and laughed. He didn't mind, as they kept dropping chunks of bread and cream. The darting of his tongue delighted the children even more.
Olaf walked around the outskirts of the crowd, waving his twig at everyone. "Hi, hi there, how you doing? Liking the fire? Don't get too close. Very hot. First-hand experience."
Many wanted to talk to Rapunzel. They had seen her with Princess Anna and had questions for the girl with seventy feet of hair. And it gave Rapunzel a chance to listen to their sentiments.
"As far as I know, the treasury's got enough for a while. There aren't any big debts. The ground isn't frozen."
"There's no point to soft ground if there's no sun." The crowd grumbled affirmative.
"I'm sure we can find a way to get back in business. Maybe there's an advantage we haven't figured out. Mushrooms don't need sun to grow," Rapunzel grinned.
"Hmm, that's a good point," someone said.
"It's depressing though. Who wants to live in a world where it's always cloudy?"
"Further north, it's often night for months at a time," Rapunzel said, "And people live up there just fine. But I believe we'll think of a solution. These clouds are still lower than the mountains."
"What? Are you suggesting we climb to the mountain and kick the clouds away?"
"Maybe. Nothing's impossible," Rapunzel said. "We just need to think about it. With some hard work and enough people looking at the problem, I'm sure we'll come up with a solution."
"Maybe giant mirrors can reflect the sunlight," someone said.
"There you go. If we can't get past the clouds, we'll find a way to around them."
That got the pleasant, optimistic laugh she'd been hoping for. She left out that the kingdom's smartest people couldn't figure anything out.
Olaf turned his head backwards to the noise. Not looking where he was going, he collided with the barrel. It teetered back and forth until Pascal landed in Olaf's torso.
Pascal burrowed in his body, trying to find a way out, as Olaf squiggled around. "Ooh, that's an interesting sensation. Ah, ooh, ah, hey. Oh, that feels weird." The snowman held his torso, as if having stomach pains. Pascal burst out his head through his chest. Olaf pressed his hands to his temples and screamed. "Aaaaaah... oh, there you are."
Confident Pascal was okay, Rapunzel moved through the crowd, spreading her new attitude. First she talked to the bakers.
"No, really, I've done it before," she said. "It's six teaspoons of cornmeal, two of flour, a cup of scalded milk and a quarter teaspoon of baking soda."
"But there's no yeast. How does it rise?"
"It's the bacteria in the cornmeal and flour. It's denser and more crumb-y than regular bread. And it takes longer. But once you get the starter going..."
"Amazing," the baker said. "If it sells, we could double our production once the sun comes back!"
"Wow. A queen who bakes," an old lady said. Some of the elders who whiled away the hours had also joined in.
"Oh, I'm not a queen. Not yet. And not here," Rapunzel said.
"Maybe you should apply for an apprenticeship," the old lady joked.
Rapunzel shirked away, smiling. But the people around her expected a response. She didn't know what to say. They wanted to hear something she wasn't ready to deliver.
She didn't have to. At that moment, the whinny of a horse sounded streets away, followed by a blood-curdling crash of splintered wood.
The crowd ran toward the sound in a mass, filtering between alleyways until they came to the accident. A cart had overturned. Two horses rushed down the street, their reins flapping behind them. Behind them lay a broken cart, with a man pinned under.
"Cursed beasts," he shouted. "A tiny slip startles you?! You- ERGH!"
Rapunzel slipped through the mob. She gasped. "Are you hurt?"
"I've got a cart laying on me!" He coughed, sputtering something in his mouth. Rapunzel hoped it wasn't what she thought it was.
"Roll it off him," someone shouted.
"You fool, that will break his ribs for sure. A wrong shake might kill him."
"They're already broken. Someone find a jack."
"That'll take forever."
"Do something!" The man coughed again. "Feels like I'm drowning."
Rapunzel's eyes darted around the environment. She pulled her hair into a pile at her feet. One end, she handed it to a bystander. "Tie this around the shafts. Make it tight!"
Before he could say "wha?", Rapunzel ran off and shimmied up a lamppost.
"What is she doing?" someone murmured.
Bounding like a cat across the roof, she found two chimneys in adjacent houses. She tied a swath of hair around each, creating a pulley. With the remaining slack, she leaned over the roof. "Ready?"
The man tying the hair around the cart's axle gave a firm yank. "Ready!" He turned and saluted.
Rapunzel rappelled off the roof to the gasps of her audience. Her clean, smooth hair traveled with her. The cart trembled, but its front lifted only slightly. The man underneath groaned.
Rapunzel the hair as taut as it could get. "Little help!"
Townspeople rushed over and grabbed a handful, pulling like a tug-of-war. The cart's nose lifted into the sky, the front wheels spinning. Those who remained dragged the pinned man from underneath.
Rapunzel sighed. Someone untied the hair from around the cart. With a few whips, she unsnarled the rest from the roof, where it dropped into a neat coil beside her.
"He's not breathing," someone said.
Rapunzel's heart beat like a drum. The crowd rushed closer. "Is there a doctor anywhere? Can anyone heal him?"
A little boy in the crowd pointed at Rapunzel. "She can."
Rapunzel swallowed.
"I've seen it. It's her hair. It's magic."
The townspeople stopped. She could almost read their minds--"Is that true?" "Can she do that?" "If she can, she better do it quick, before he dies."
Rapunzel knelt down and wrapped her hair once around the man's chest. She took a breath and closed her eyes.
"Flower, gleam and glow. Let your power shine. Make the clock reverse. Bring back what once was mine."
Behind her eyelids, the bright amber glow began. The hair under her hands grew warm like the sun.
"Heal what has been hurt. Change the fates' design. Save what has been lost. Bring back what once was mine..."
The man's throat rattled. He took a huge gulp of air.
Rapunzel opened her eyes to see the townspeople gaping at her. Olaf's jaw was practically on the ground. Rapunzel's body tensed as she remembered how the townspeople treated Elsa when they learned about her powers. A long moment past as she waited for their reaction.
One man clapped. Others followed, until it sounded like the whole town was applauding. Rapunzel stood up, while those around her clapped her on the back, hugged her, shook her hand.
No going back now, she thought.