CHAPTER X. - The Prince and the Remora
If he had been too warm before, the
prince was too cold now. The hill of the Remora
was one solid mass of frozen steel, and the cold rushed
out of it like the breath of some icy beast, which
indeed it was. All around were things
like marble statues of men in armour: they were
the dead bodies of the knights, horses and all, who
had gone out of old to fight the Remora, and who had
been frosted up by him. The prince felt his blood
stand still, and he grew faint; but he took heart,
for there was no time to waste. Yet he could
nowhere see the Remora. “Hi!” shouted
the prince. Then, from a narrow chink at the bottom
of the smooth, black hill, - a chink no deeper
than that under a door, but a mile wide, - stole
out a hideous head!
It was as fiat as the head of a skate-fish,
it was deathly pale, and two chill-blue eyes, dead-coloured
like stones, looked out of it.
Then there came a whisper, like the
breath of the bitter east wind on a wintry day:
“Where are you, and how can I come to you?”
“Here I am!” said the prince from the
top of the hill.
Then the flat, white head set itself
against the edge of the chink from which it had peeped,
and slowly, like the movement of a sheet of ice, it
slipped upwards and curled upwards, and up, and up!
There seemed no end to it at all; and it moved horribly,
without feet, holding on by its own frost to the slippery
side of the frozen hill. Now all the lower part
of the black hill was covered with the horrid white
thing coiled about it in smooth, flat shiny coils;
and still the head was higher than the rest; and still
the icy cold came nearer and nearer, like Death.
The prince almost fainted: everything
seemed to swim; and in one moment more he would have
fallen stiff on the mountain-top, and the white head
would have crawled over him, and the cold coils would
have slipped over him and turned him to stone.
And still the thing slipped up, from the chink under
the mountain.
But the prince made a great effort;
he moved, and in two steps he was far away, down in
the valley where it was not so very cold.
“Hi!” he shouted, as soon
as his tongue could move within his chattering teeth.
There came a clear, hissing answer,
like frozen words dropping round him:
“Wait till I come down. What do you want?”
Then the white folds began to slide,
like melting ice, from the black hill.
Prince Prigio felt the air getting
warmer behind him, and colder in front of him.
He looked round, and there were the
trees beginning to blacken in the heat, and the grass
looking like a sea of fire along the plains; for the
Firedrake was coming!
The prince just took time to shout,
“The Firedrake is going to pay you a visit!”
and then he soared to the top of a neighbouring hill,
and looked on at what followed.