Tuesday, February 18, 2014

The Porcelain Salamander by Orson Scott Card

THE PORCELAIN SALAMANDER
  By Orson Scott Card

(* Please forgive me if I have broken any Copyright Rules.)

They called their country the Beautiful Land, and they were right. It perched on the
edge of the continent. Before the Beautiful Land stretched the broad ocean, which few
dared to cross; behind it stood the steep Rising, a cliff so high and sheer that few dared
to climb. And in such isolation the people, who called themselves, of course, the
Beautiful People, lived splendid lives.

Not all were rich, of course. And not all were happy. But there was such a majesty to
living in the Beautiful Land that the poverty could easily be missed by the undiscerning
eye, and misery seemed so very fleeting. Except to Kiren.

To Kiren, misery was the way of life. For though she lived in a rich house with servants
and had, it seemed, anything she could possibly want, she was deeply miserable most of
the time. For this was a land where cursing and blessing and magic worked— not
always, and not always in the way the person doing it might have planned—but
sometimes the cursing worked, and in her case it had.

Not that she had done anything to deserve it; she had been as innocent as any other
child in her cradle. But her mother had been a weak woman, and the pain and terror of
giving birth had killed her. And Kiren's father loved his wife so much that when he
learned of the news, and saw the baby that had been born even as her mother died, he
cried out, “You killed her! You killed her! May you never move a muscle in your life,
until you lose someone you love as much as I loved her!” It was a terrible curse, and the
nurse wept when she heard it, and the doctors stopped Kiren's father's mouth so that he
could say no more in his madness.

But his curse took hold, and though he regretted it a million times during Kiren's
infancy and childhood, there was nothing he could do. Oh, the curse was not all that
strong. Kiren did learn to walk, after a fashion. And she could stand for as much as two
minutes at a time. But most of the times she sat or lay down, because she grew so
weary, and her muscles only weakly did what she told them to. She could lift a spoon to
her mouth, but soon became tired, and had to be fed. She scarcely had the energy to
chew.

And every time her father saw her, he wanted to weep, and often did weep. And
sometimes he even thought of killing himself to finally wipe away his guilt. But he
knew that this would only injure poor Kiren even more, and she had done nothing to
deserve injury.

When his guilt grew too much for him to bear, however, he did escape. He put a bag of
fine fruits and clever handwork from the Beautiful Land on his back, and set out for the
Rising. He would be gone for months, and no one knew when he would return, or
whether the Rising would this time prove too much for him and send him plunging to
his death. But when he returned, he always brought something for Kiren. And for a
while she would smile, and she would say, “Father, thank you.” And things would go
well, for a time, until she again became despondent and her father again suffered from
watching the results of his ill-thought curse.

It was late spring in the year Kiren turned eleven when her father came home even
happier than he usually was after a trip up the Rising. He rushed to his daughter where
she lay wanly on the porch listening to the birds.

“Kiren!” he cried. “Kiren! I've brought you a gift!”

And she smiled, though even the muscles for smiling were weak, which made her smile
sad. Her father reached into his bag (which was full of all kinds of wonders, which he
would, being a careful man, sell to those with money to pay, not just for goods, but for
rarity) and he pulled out his gift and handed it to Kiren.

It was a box, and the box lurched violently this way and that.

“There's something alive in there,” Kiren said.

“No, my dear Kiren, there is not. But there's something moving, and it's yours. And
before I help you open it, I'll tell you the story. I came one day in my wanderings to a
town I had never visited before, and in the town were many merchants. And I asked a
man, 'Who has the rarest and best merchandise in town?' He told me that I had to see
Irvass. So I found the man in a humble and poor-looking shop. But inside were wonders
such as you've never seen. I tell you, the man understands the bright magic from over
the sky. And he asked, 'What do you want most in the world?' and of course I said to
him, 'I want my daughter to be healed.' ”

“Oh, Father,” said Kiren. “You don't mean—”

“I do mean. I mean it very much. I told him exactly how you are and exactly how you
got that way, and he said, 'Here is the cure,' and now let's open the box so you can see.”

So Kiren opened the box, with more than a little help from her father, but she dared not
reach inside. “You get it out, Father,” she suggested, and he reached inside and pulled
out a porcelain salamander. It was shiny yet deep with fine enameling, and though it
was white—not at all the normal color for salamanders—the shape was unmistakable.

It was, in fact, a perfect model of a salamander. And it moved.

The legs raced madly in the air; the tongue darted in and out of the lips; the head
turned; the eyes rolled. And Kiren cried out and laughed and said, “Oh, Father, what
did he do to make it move so wonderfully!”

“Well,” said her father, “he told me that he had given it the gift of movement— but not
the gift of life. And if it ever stops moving, it will immediately become like any other
porcelain. Stiff and hard and cold.”

“How it races,” she said, and it became the delight of her life.

When she awoke in the morning the salamander danced on her bed. At mealtimes it
raced around the table. Wherever she lay or sat, the salamander was forever chasing
after something or exploring something or trying to get away from something. She
watched him constantly, and he in turn never got out of sight. And then at night, while
she slept, he raced around and around in her room, the porcelain feet hitting the carpet
silently, only occasionally making a slight tinkling sound as it ran lightly across the
brick of the hearth.

Her father watched for a cure, and slowly but surely it began to come. For one thing,
Kiren was no longer miserable. The salamander was too funny not to laugh at. It never
went away. And so she felt better. Feeling better was not all of it, though. She began to
walk a bit more often, and stay standing more, and sit when ordinarily she would have
lain. She began to go from one room to another by her own choice.

By the end of the summer she even took walks into the woods. Though she often had to
stop and rest, she enjoyed the journey, and grew a little stronger.

What she never told anyone (partly because she was afraid that it might be her
imagination) was that the salamander could also speak.

“You can speak,” she said in surprise one day, when the salamander ran across her foot
and said, “Excuse me.”

“Of course,” he said. “To you.”

“Why not anyone else?”

“Because I'm here for you,” he answered, as he ran along the top of the garden wall,
then leaped down near her. “It's the way I am. Movement and speech. Best I can do,
you know. Can't have life. Doesn't work that way.”

And so on their long walks in the forest they also talked, and Kiren fancied that the
salamander had grown as fond of her as she had grown of him. In fact, she told the
salamander one day, “I love you.”

“Love love love love love love love,” he answered, scampering up and down a tree.

“Yes,” Kiren said. “More than life. More than anything at all.”

“More than your father?” asked the salamander.

It was hard. Kiren was not a disloyal child, and really had forgiven her father for the
curse years before. Yet she had to be honest to her salamander. “Yes,” she said. “More
than Father. More than—more than my dream of my mother. For you love me and can
play with me and talk to me all the time.”

“Love love love,” said the salamander. “Unfortunately, I'm porcelain. Love love love
love love. It's a word. Two consonants and a vowel. Like sap sap sap sap sap. Lovely
sound.” And he leaped across a small brook in the way.

“Don't—don't you love me?”

“I can't. It's an emotion, you know. I'm porcelain. Beg your pardon,” and he clambered
down her back as she leaned her shoulder on a tree. “Can't love. So sorry.”

She was terribly, terribly hurt. “Don't you feel anything toward me at all?”

“Feel? Feel? Don't confuse things. Emotions come and go. Who can trust them? Isn't it
enough that I spend every moment with you? Isn't it enough that I talk only to you? Isn't
it enough that I would—that I would—”

“Would what?”

“I was about to start making foolish predictions. I was about to say, isn't it enough that I
would die for you? But of course that's nonsense, because I'm not I'm not alive. Just
porcelain. Watch out for the spider.”

She stepped out of the path of a little green hunting spider that could fell a horse with
one bite. “Thank you,” she said. “And thank you.” The first was for saving her life, but
that was his job. The second was for telling her that, in his own way, he loved her after
all. “So I'm not foolish for loving you, am I?”

“Foolish you are. Foolish indeed. Foolish as the moons are foolish, to dance endlessly
in the sky and never never never go home together.”

“I love you,” said Kiren, “better than I love the hope of being whole.”

And, you see, it was because she said that that the odd man came to the door of her
father's house the very next day.

“I'm sorry,” said the servant. “You haven't an appointment.”

“Just tell him,” said the odd man, “that Irvass has come.”

Kiren's father came running down the stairs. “Oh, you can't take the salamander back!” 
he cried. “The cure has only begun!”

“Which I know much better than you do,” said Irvass. “The girl is in the woods?”

“With the salamander. What marvelous changes—but why are you here?”

“To finish the cure,” said Irvass.

“What?” asked Kiren's father. “Isn't the salamander itself the cure?”

“What were the words of your curse?” Irvass asked, instead of answering.

Kiren's father's face grew dour, but he forced himself to quietly say the very words.

“May you never move a muscle in your life, until you lose someone you love as much
as I loved her.”

“Well then,” said Irvass. “She now loves the salamander exactly as much as you loved
your wife.”

It took only a moment for Kiren's father to realize. “No!” he cried out. “I can't let her
suffer what I suffered!”

“It's the only cure. Isn't it better with a little piece of porcelain than if she had come to
love you that much?”

And Kiren's father shuddered, and then wept, for he alone knew exactly how much pain
she would suffer.

Irvass said nothing more, though the look he gave to Kiren's father might have been a
pitying one. All he did was draw a rectangle in the soil of the garden, and place two
stones within it, and mumble a few words.

And at that moment, out in the wood, the salamander said, “Very odd. Wasn't a wall
here ever before. Never before. Here's a wall.” And it was a wall. It was just high
enough that when Kiren reached as high as she could, her fingers were one inch short of
touching the top.

The salamander tried to climb it, but found it slippery—though he had always been able
to climb every other wall he found. “Magic. Must be magic,” The porcelain salamander
mumbled.

So they circled the wall, hunting for a gate. There was none. It was all around them,
though they had never entered it. And at no point did a tree limb cross the wall. They
were trapped.

“I'm afraid,” said Kiren. “There's good magic and bad magic, but how could such a
thing as this be a blessing? It must be a curse.” And the thought of a curse caused too
much of the old misery to return, and she fought back the tears.

Fought back the tears until night, and then in the darkness, as the salamander scampered
here and there, she could fight no longer.

“No,” wailed the salamander.

“I can't help crying,” she answered.

“I can't bear it,” he said. “It makes me cold.”

“I'll try to stop,” she said, and she tried, and she pretty much stopped except for a few
whimpers and sniffles until morning brought the light, and she saw that the wall was
exactly where it had been.

No, not exactly. For behind her the wall had crept up in the night, and was only a few
feet away. Her prison was now not even a quarter the size it had been the day before.

“Not good,” said the salamander. “Oh, it could be dangerous.”

“I know,” she answered.

“You must get out,” said the salamander.

“And you,” she answered. “But how?”

And throughout the morning the wall played vicious taunting games with them, for
whichever way neither of them was looking, the wall would creep up a foot or two.

Since the salamander was faster, and moved constantly, he watched three sides. “And
you hold the other in place.” But Kiren couldn't help blinking, and anytime the
salamander looked away the wall twitched, and by noon their prison was only ten feet
square.

“Getting pretty tight here,” said the salamander.

“Oh, salamander, can't I throw you over the wall?”

“We could try that, and I could run and get help—”

And so they tried. But though she used every ounce of strength she had, the wall
seemed to leap up and catch him and send him sliding back down to the ground. Inside.

Soon she was exhausted, and the salamander said, “No more.” Even as they had been
trying, the walls had shrunk, and now the space was only five feet square. “Getting
cramped,” said the salamander as he raced around the tiny space remaining. “But I
know the only solution.”

“Tell me!” Kiren cried.

“I think,” said the salamander, “that if you had something you could stand on, you
could climb out.”

“How could I?” she asked. “The wall won't let anything out!”

“I think,” said the salamander, “that the wall only won't let me out. Because the birds
are flying back and forth, and the wall doesn't catch them.” It was true. A bird was
singing in a nearby tree; it flew across just afterward, as if to prove the salamander's
point. “I'm not alive, you see,” said the salamander. “I'm moving only by magic. So you
could get out.”

“But what would I stand on?”

“Me,” said the salamander.

“You?” she asked. “But you move so quickly—”

“For you,” he said, “I'll hold still.”

“No!” she cried. “No, no!” she screamed.

But the salamander stood at the edge of the wall, and he was only a statue in porcelain,
hard and stiff and cold.

Kiren only wept for a moment, for then the wall behind her began to push at her, and
her prison was only three feet square. The salamander had given his life so she could
climb out. She ought at least to try.

So she tried. Standing on the salamander, she could reach the top of the wall. By
standing tiptoe, she could get a grip on the top. And by using every bit of strength she
had in her, she was able to force her body to the top and gradually heave herself over.

She fell in a heap on the ground. And in that moment, that very moment, two things
happened. The walls shrank quickly until they were only a pillar, and then they
disappeared completely, taking the salamander with them. And all the normal, natural
strength of an eleven-year-old child came to Kiren, and she was able to run. She was
able to leap. She was able to swing from the tree branches.

The strength was in her as suddenly as strong wine, and she could not lie on the ground.
She jumped to her feet, and the movement was so strong she nearly fell over. She ran,
leaped over brooks, clambered up into the trees as high as she could climb. The curse
had ended. She was free.

But even normal children grow tired. And as she slowed down, she was no longer
caught up in her own strength. And she remembered the porcelain salamander, and
what he had done for her.

They found her that afternoon, weeping miserably into a pile of last year's leaves.

“You see,” said Irvass, who had insisted on leading the way in the search—which is
why they found her immediately—“You see, she has her strength, and the curse is
ended.”

“But her heart is broken,” said her father as he gathered his little girl into his arms.

“Broken?” asked Irvass. “It should not be. For the porcelain salamander was never
alive.”

“Yes he was!” she shouted. “He spoke to me! He gave his life for me!”

“He did all that,” said Irvass. “But think. For all the time the magic was on him, he
could never, never rest. Do you think he never got tired?”

“Of course he didn't.”

“Yes he did,” said Irvass. “Now he can rest. But more than rest. For when he stopped
moving and froze forever in one position, what was going through his mind?”

Irvass stood up and turned to leave. But only a few steps away, he turned back. “Kiren,”
he said.

“I want my salamander,” she answered, her voice an agony of sobs.

“Oh, he would have become boring by and by,” said Irvass. “He would have ceased to
amuse you, and you would have avoided him. But now he is a memory. And, speaking
of memory, remember that he also has memory, frozen as he is.”

It was scant comfort then, for eleven-year-olds are not very philosophical. But when
she grew older, Kiren remembered. And she knew that wherever the porcelain
salamander was, he lived in one frozen, perfect moment—the moment when his heart
was so full of love—

No, not love. The moment when he decided, without love, that it would be better for his
life, such as it was, to end than to have to watch Kiren's life end.

It is a moment that can be lived with for eternity. And as Kiren grew older, she knew
that such moments come rarely to people, and last only a moment, while the porcelain
salamander would never lose it.

And as for Kiren—she became known, though she never sought fame, as the most
Beautiful of the Beautiful People, and more than one of the rare wanderers from across
the sea or from beyond Rising came only to see her, and talk to her, and draw her face
in their minds to keep it with them forever.

And when she talked, her hands always moved, always danced in the air. Never stopped
moving at all, it seemed, and they were white and lustrous as deep-enameled porcelain,
and her smile was as bright as the moons, and came back to her face as constantly as
the sea, and those who knew her well could almost see her gaze keep flickering about
the room or about the garden, as if she watched a bright, quick animal scamper by.

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