by
Severino Reyes
A long time ago there lived a weakling king named
Kretaus. After his wife died he married
another woman named Sidira.
Sidira was a strong-willed woman with a heart of ice, and it
wasn't long before she had the timid king in the palm of her hand. It was no secret throughout the kingdom that
King Kretaus spent his days scurrying here and there, granting the selfish
queen her every whim.
Now Kretaus had a daughter by his first marriage named Ogarta. Ogarta was good and kind, and so lovely that
ardent suitors--many of them princes from other lands--waited in line outside
the palace gates just for a glimpse of her.
The queen delighted in meddling in the princess'
affairs. Everywhere Ogarta turned,
Sidira loomed like a monstrous shadow.
Nothing pleased the queen more than to thwart her stepdaughter's every
desire.
The young princess suffered all this in silence. Even if Sidira was terribly abusive or cruel,
Ogarta did not run to her father for help.
She knew that her father was too weak to stand up to his overbearing
wife.
One morning, while Ogarta was rearranging the plants on the
balcony outside her parents' royal chamber, she happened to overhear her father
and stepmother talking. As usual Sidira
was complaining to Kretaus: "That daughter of yours is stubborn and
ungrateful. She has never done a thing
to please me."
"Come now, dear," replied the king. "Ogarta has been nothing but good and
kind to everyone. No one in the palace
has ever spoken a bad word against her."
"There you go, defending her again," Sidira
snorted.
"I'm not taking sides, my love," said the king.
"But I know my daughter has a good heart."
"To you she's all sweetness and light," Sidira
said. "But she has never shown me
any real respect, perhaps because I am not her real mother."
"I asked her to love and obey you from the very
start," said the gentle king. "But if what you say is true, then
please be patient and I will talk to her."
Sidira laughed a malicious laugh.
"What a foolish king you are. Can't you see that your daughter and I are
like oil and water? We will never get along. No, my King, this kingdom isn't big enough
for Ogarta and me. The best thing is for
us to live in separate kingdoms."
"What do you mean?"
"I won't ask you to punish your daughter but I think
it's time that Ogarta be on her own. I
feel that among her many suitors Prince Orlok is the best candidate. He's madly in love with her! It would be wise
to marry the two as soon as possible.
This way Ogarta won't have to feel that I'm interfering with her
life."
A wrinkle grew on King Kretaus's brow as he considered his
wife's proposal. This was not the first
time that Sidira had expressed an interest in marrying off the young princess.
"I just don't know," the king hesitated. "Prince Orlok is a fine young man. But
does Ogarta love him?"
"Kretaus, what an incurable romantic you are! It's not
your concerns whether she loves him or not.
It's up to us to choose a suitable husband for Ogarta. Besides, we owe Orlok's father a great
deal. Why, this gold crown that I'm
wearing is from him. And the vast lands
west of here where we ride and hunt are gifts from Orlok's grandfather. Have you forgotten your debt of gratitude to
Orlok's family? Orlok is crazy for
Ogarta. It will be a terrible disgrace if he does not have her as his
bride."
Again the king hesitated.
Finally the queen spoke, this time in a voice cold as
steel. "All right, I've tried to
reason with you, but somehow you can't manage to get it through that pea-brain
of yours. The real reason why I'd like
to get Ogarta married to the prince is because...she's fallen in love with
someone else."
King Kretaus looked up in surprise.
"She has? With whom?"
"A commoner, my King."
"A commoner? Impossible! I will never allow my daughter
to marry a nobody. Who is this
man?"
"I'm not sure. One of my huntsmen saw Ogarta in the
company of a good-looking young man about five miles from the palace. He didn't appear to be a person of high stature.
In fact he was dressed rather shabbily."
This upset the king terribly.
"I will speak to Ogarta about this at once," he
said.
Queen Sidira smiled.
Surely now her malicious plot to marry off the young princess would
succeed.
II.
The ground shuddered as Ogarta's beautiful brown horse
galloped past the palace gates. As was
her habit, the princess was taking her daily afternoon ride.
Ogarta dug in her spurs and steered her horse toward the
foot of the mountain where her loved lived.
For what the queen had said was true.
Ogarta and a young farmer named Limpo had been sweethearts for a long
time.
Although Limpo was poor and unschoold, he had a fine
character. He was handsome and strong,
and loved the princess more than everything in the world put together.
That day Limpo watched the princess from afar. He had never seen her riding that fast
before! The princess dismounted before
her hrose even came to a halt.. The
farmer and princess embraced.
Limpo tied the horse to a tree. They walked to their
favorite spot near a running brook surrounded by flowering trees. They sat down on the soft, thick grass.
"Tell me why you are troubled, my love," asked
Limpo.
Ogarta took his hand in hers and nodded.
"This morning I overheard my stepmother talking to my
father. She wants me to marry Prince Orlok, whom she's long been trying to
force on me."
"And what did your father say?"
"He said it was not for him to decide who I am to
marry."
Limpo felt relieved. "Well, thank heavens for
that."
"But, my darling," Ogarta said gravely. "My
stepmother knows about the two of us. She told my father."
The young farmer was frightened. He knew that if King Kretaus found out about
them, he would surely lose Ogarta. Wrose, he could also lose his own life.
"Who could have told her?" asked Limpo.
"You know the queen/ She has spies everywhere."
"What will we do now?" Limpo asked helplessly.
"No matter what happens I'll never give you up,"
Ogarta replied. "You are the only man I'll ever love. I swear to love you forever."
"But your father will not have it..."
"I have a right to decide things for myself."
"He will punish you...."
"It doesn't mat--"
Ogarta stopped in mid-sentence. For there, standing right behind them, was
King Kretaus! He had instructed one of his guards to trail the princess as she
rode out of the palace gates. The guard
had led the king to the foot of the mountain.
Now the king loomed behind the lovers, his face knotted in
fury. Without warning he raised his
riding whip and struck the young farmer.
"If you ever see my daughter again, you will be shot!" he
shouted.
Tears streamed down Princess Ogarta's face as she was led
away. Limpo thought his world would
collapse. For him the thought of never seeing his sweetheart again was worse
than a death sentence.
Ogarta returned to the palace with her father. The king immediately ordered the princess
locked up in a room in the palace, with a guard posted outside at all
times. "From now on," said the
king harshly, "you will be a prisoner here. You will not be set free unless you agree to
the queen's wish that you marry Prince Orlok."
"Then you may as well have a coffin built for me,"
the princess declared. "For I will never marry Prince Orlok!"
"Now you can see for yourself how hard-headed she
is," scoffed the queen.
From that day forth the beautiful Ogarta became a prisoner
in her own castle. She lived in solitude
in a room behind a locked door. All her
needs--her food and clothing--were left at the door.
No one knew it, but the princess was pregnant. After several months she secretly gave birth
to a healthy son. She would not let her baby cry out for fear that the king and
queen would take him away from her.
As soon as Ogarta was strong enough to get up, she wrapped
her child in a warm blanket. Then she
went to the door and called for the guard.
Now this guard had been assigned to palace since Ogarta was a
child. She knew he would have helped her
escape a long time ago if she only asked him.
But the princess was too considerate to put him at risk. She knew that were she to escape, the guard
would pay with his life.
The princess looked around to make sure no one else could
hear them.
"Do you wish to help me?" she asked the guard.
"Have no doubt, beloved Princess," he answered.
"If only for the dear memory of your late mother, I would gladly give up
my life to serve you."
"I am deeply grateful," Ogarta answered. "I want to confide in you. Last night I gave birth to a baby boy. His
father is the farmer Limpo, the only man I ever loved."
The guard was touched by the princess' words. He was also stunned that a baby boy had been
born in the room without his knowledge.
"You must not tell a soul," warned Ogarta.
"If you want to help me, then take the child to his father. He lives at the foot of the mountain. I'm scared to death that if the baby stays
one more day in this room my stepmother will find out."
"You can trust me," said the guard. "I will
leave at nightfall. The child will be in his father's arms before
daybreak."
That night the princess breastfed her baby for the last
time. Then she gently wrapped him in a blanket and handed him over to the
guard. Holding the infant tightly
against his bosom, the faithful guard began his perilous journey toward Limpo's
mountain.
III
Years passed. The princess was growing old. Her world
remained bound by the iron-grilled windows and the cold floor of her prison
cell.
She refused to marry Prince Orlok, who was even more
determined to marry her. Each time she
was asked, her answer was the same--she would never love him.
Meantime Ogarta's child grew up in Limpo's care. The famer
named him Oskar.
Oskar was gifted with unusual strength and daring. He was an
expert with the tabak (a large, slightly curved blade). Oskar could chop a tree into firewood faster
than anyone. No one was a more skilled
marksman than Oskar. He was a perfect
shot. Together, father an son earned a
decent living from hunting game in the mountains.
Limpo had told Oskar tha his mother had died when he was
very young. Yet the young man never stopped asking about her. One day Limpo
decided to tell him the truth.
"Now that you're old enough," said Limpo with
great sorrow, "I will tell you the whole story. Your mother is not dead. She is a princess. Because of her love for
me, a commoner, she's been imprisoned in a room in the palace for sixteen
years. If her stepmother, the queen, had
her way, your mother would never leave her prison cell alive."
"My mother-- a princess?" said Oskar in wonder.
"And she livess in the palace? Imprisoned in a room?"
"Yes," his father answered. "Princess Ogarta is the most beautiful
person I have ever known. But she remains a prisoner to this day. You were born
and sent to me in secret because she didn't want you to fall into the hands of
the king and his cruel wife."
Oskar sighed deeply. "Are you sure, Father, that my
mother is still being held prisoner?"
"Yes, the guard who watches over your mother's cell is
a faithful and loyal servant. He keeps me informed of everything that happens
to her."
Stricken with grief, Oskar left his father and went deep
into the forest to reflect on what he had just learned.
IV
One day, as Limpo was walking home, he was surprised to see
his son and a group of men waiting for him in front of his hut. Oskar had brought with him the strongest,
most able young men of the mountains.
All of them were carrying tabaks.
"Take us to the palace and show me where my mother is
being held," Oskar demanded.
"I swear I wills set her free and punish her tormentors!"
Limpo marveled at his son's courage. He had long wanted to put together a fearless
army that could storm the castle and free his beloved Ogarta. Now father and son led the way.
Word of their mission spread. Oskar's army grew with every village they
passed. More and more men joined them to avenge Princess Ogarta.
By th time they entered the capital, Oskar had thousands of
followers. All of them were fed up with
the evil queen and her powerful hold over the weakling king.
Before King Kretaus had time to react, the palace was
besieged by knife-wielding invaders.
Oskar's men poured like ants into the palace, easily overwhelming the
palace guards.
It didn't take long before Oskar and his men broke into
Kretaus royal chamber and found the king.
"Who are you and what do you want?" demanded King
Kretaus.
"I have come to free my mother," said the young
man.
"What are you talking about? Who is your mother?"
"The Princess Ogarta."
"And who is your father?"
"Here he is," said Oskar, motioning toward his
father.
Oskar said, "Do you remember the man you lashed with a
riding whip many years ago? The man who
was your daughter's sweetheart? Don't you recognize Limpo, the poor mountain
farmer who loved Princess Ogarta with all his heart?"
The king felt faint.
"Bring my mother to me now!" Oskar ordered his
grandfather. "How dare you imprison
her all these years for not obeying your hateful wife?"
The king considered the many knives pointed at him. Fearfully he ordered that Princess Ogarta be
brought to them. In a short while she
arrived, walking slowly behind the guards.
Limpo let out a short gasp as he took in the sight of his
long-lost sweetheart. After years in
prison the once young and beautiful Ogarta now looked old and thin and had dark
circles under her eyes. But how he loved
her still! "Oh my beloved," he sobbed.
"This can't be happening...." Ogarta murmured, not
quite sure whether she was dreaming.
"Limpo, have you come at last?"
"Yes, I have.
Your brave son Oskar has come to set you free."
Mother and son gazed at each other for a long time. Pride
and love surged through the princess' veins as she embraced the son she had
last seen so many years before.
"Mother, my poor, poor mother," said Oskar,
kissing her tear-stained cheeks. Ogarta
opened her arms to include Limpo, the only man she had ever loved and suffered
so much for.
"My business here isn't finished. Where is the cruel
Queen Sidira?" Oskar demanded.
Though the king was afraid to reveal the queen's hiding
place, he was even more afraid of what might befall him if he did not.
"She's hiding under the dining table," he said.
Swiftly, Oskar strode to the heavy table and shoved it
aside. Beneath it, quivering in mortal
fear, was the queen.
"Stand up or I'll spear you like the animal that you
are," said Oskar.
Sidira got to her feet.
"Both of you will rot in prison forever," said
Oskar to the king and queen. "I
will lock you up in the same cell where you kept my mother so that you will
suffer the way she did."
The king knelt before Ogarta and begged for mercy.
Sidira's pitiful cries echoed throughout the palace. She crawled across the floor and kissed
Oskar's feet.
Oskar was moved with pity and said, "I will forgive my
grandfather for he is old and weak. But
I can't forgive a queen who hates all and who all hate. She will remain a prisoner for as many years
as my mother."
"Have pity on me!" begged the heartless queen.
"No mercy for those who have none," said Oskar.
"Now go!" The soldiers, who
were only too glad to oblige, grabbed the detestable queen and dragged her
away.
From that day forth Oskar lived in the palace with his parents
and grandfather. Ogarta soon regained
her strength and the beauty of a woman still in her prime. It was not too late for the princess and her
long-lost sweetheart to lvie happily ever after.
In time the king passed his crown to Oskar, who turned out
to be a strong and just ruler, loved and admired by all.
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