Mighty Mikko - BestLightNovel.com
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"It is on account of the dreadful fate that is hanging over the King's three daughters," she said. "Those three evil Monsters are demanding them one by one. To-night when the Three-Headed Serpent comes back from the Ocean he expects to devour the eldest. If the King refuses to give her up, then Suyettar's evil son will devour half the kingdom, half of the castle itself, and half the s.h.i.+ning stones. O that some hero would kill the monster and save the princess and at the same time release the Dawn that it might again steal over the world!"
Log and his fellows conferred together and the one they called Three Bottles, because his strength was equal to three bottles of the strong waters, declared that it was his task to fight and conquer the Three-Headed Serpent.
In the castle meanwhile preparations for the sacrifice of the oldest princess were going forward. As the King sewed the poor girl into a great leather sack, his tears fell so fast that he could scarcely see what he was doing.
"My dear child," he said, "it should comfort you greatly to think that the Monster is going to eat you instead of half the kingdom! Not many princesses are considered as important as half the kingdom!"
The princess knew that what her father said must be true and she did her best to look cheerful as they slipped the sack over her head. Once inside, however, she allowed herself to cry for she knew that no one could see her.
The sack with the princess inside was carried down to the beach and put on a high rock near the place where Suyettar's sons were wont to come up out of the water.
"Don't be frightened, my daughter!" the King called out as he and all the Court started back to the castle. "You won't have long to wait, for it will soon be evening."
Log and his companions watched the King's party disappear and then Three Bottles solemnly drank down the three bottles of strong waters with which his own King had equipped him. As he was ready to mount his horse, he handed Log the leash to which his dog was attached.
"If I need help," he said, "I'll throw back my shoe and do you then release my dog."
With that he rode boldly down to the beach, dismounted, and climbed up the rock where the unfortunate princess lay in a sack. With one slash of the sword he ripped open the sack and dragged the princess out. She supposed of course that he was the Three-Headed Serpent and at first was so frightened that she kept her eyes tightly shut not daring to look at him. She expected every minute to have him take a first bite and, when minutes and more minutes and more minutes still went by and he didn't, she opened her eyes a little crack to see what was the matter.
"Oh!" the princess said.
She was so surprised that for a long time she didn't dare to take another peep.
"You thought I was the Three-Headed Serpent, didn't you?" a pleasant voice asked. "But I'm not. I'm only a young man who has come to rescue you."
The princess murmured, "Oh!" again, but this time the "Oh!" expressed happy relief.
"Yes," repeated the young man, "I am the hero who has come to rescue you. My comrades call me Three Bottles and you, too, may call me that.
And while we are waiting for the Serpent to come in from the Ocean I wish you would scratch my head."
The princess wasn't in the least surprised at this request. Heroes and monsters and fathers alike seemed always to want their heads scratched.
So Three Bottles stretched himself at the princess' feet and put his head in her lap. He settled himself comfortably and she scratched his head while he gazed out over the dark Ocean waiting for the Serpent to appear.
At first there was nothing to break the gla.s.sy surface of the water.
They waited and at last far out they saw three swirling ma.s.ses rolling landward.
"Quick, my princess!" Three Bottles cried. "There comes the Monster now! Get you down behind the rock and hide there while I go meet the creature and chop off his ugly heads!"
The princess, quivering with fright, crouched down behind the rock and Three Bottles, mounting his horse, rode boldly down to the water's edge awaiting the Serpent's coming.
It came nearer and nearer in long easy swirls, slowly lifting its three scaly heads one after another.
As it approached sh.o.r.e it sniffed the air hungrily.
"Fee, fi, fo, fum!" it muttered in a deep voice, repeating the magic rime it had learned from its evil mother, Suyettar:
"Fee, fi, fo, fum!
I smell a Finn! Yum! Yum!
I'll fall upon him with a thud!
I'll pick his bones and drink his blood!
Fee, fi, fo, fum!
Yum! Yum!"
"Stop boasting, son of Suyettar!" Three Bottles cried. "You'll have time enough to boast after you fight!"
"Fight?" repeated the Serpent as if in surprise. "Shall we fight, pretty boy, you and I? Very well! Blow then with your sweet breath, blow out a long level platform of red copper whereon we can meet and try our strength each with the other!"
"Nay," answered Three Bottles. "Do you blow with your evil breath and instead of red copper we shall have a platform of black iron."
So the Serpent blew and on the iron platform that came of his breath Three Bottles met him in combat. Back and forth they raged, Three Bottles striking right and left with his mighty sword, the Serpent hitting at Three Bottles with all his scaly heads and belching forth fire and smoke from all his mouths. Three Bottles whacked off one scaly head and at last a second one, but he was unable to touch the third.
"I shall have to have help," he acknowledged to himself finally, and reaching down he took one of his shoes and threw it over his shoulder back to his comrades who were awaiting the outcome of the struggle.
Instantly they loosed the dog which bounded forward to its master's a.s.sistance and soon with the dog's help Three Bottles was able to dispatch the last head.
He was faint now with weariness and his comrades had to help him back to the old woman's hut where he soon fell asleep.
Night pa.s.sed and Dawn appeared. A great cry of relief and thanksgiving went up from all the earth.
"The Dawn! The Dawn!" people cried. "G.o.d bless the man who has released the Dawn!"
Only at the castle was there sorrow still.
"My poor oldest daughter!" the King cried with tears in his eyes. "It was my sacrifice of her that has released the Dawn!"
Then he called his slaves and gave them orders to gather up his daughter's bones and to bring back the leather sack.
"We shall need it again to-night," he said. He wiped his eyes and for a moment could say no more. "Yes, to-night we shall have to sew up my second daughter and offer her to the Six-Headed Serpent, him that holds captive the Moon. Otherwise the monster will devour half my kingdom, half the castle, and half the s.h.i.+ning stones. Ai! Ai! Ai!"
But the slaves when they went to the high rock on the seash.o.r.e found, not the princess' bones, but the princess herself, sitting there with her chin in her hand, gazing down on the beach which was strewn with the fragments of the Three-Headed Serpent.
They led her back to her father and reported the marvel they had seen.
"There, O King, lies the monster on the sand with all his heads severed! So huge are the heads that it would need three men with derricks to move one of them!"
"Some unknown hero has rescued my oldest daughter!" the King cried.
"Would that another might come to-night to rescue my second child likewise! But, alas! what hero is strong enough to destroy the Six-Headed Monster!"
So when evening came they sewed the second princess in the sack and carried her out to the rock.
Log and his companions saw the procession move down from the castle and they saw that the castle was again disturbed, one half of it laughing and one half weeping.
"It's the second princess to-night," the old woman told them. "Unless her father, the King, gives her to the Six-Headed Serpent, the Monster will come and devour half the kingdom, half the castle, and half the s.h.i.+ning stones. He it is that holds the Moon captive and the hero that slays him will release the Moon."
Then he whom his comrades called Six Bottles cried out:
"Here is work for me!"