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- .Title, "Quest for the Unicorn"
- Katy knew a unicorn lived near the field where she played. She had
- seen it several times, though she had never managed to get close to it.
- Once she saw it standing with its head bent gracefully, drinking from the
- lake. Once she saw it polishing its bright horn on a maple tree. And once,
- best of all, she saw it leap into the air and prance in happy circles.
- That was in the spring.
- Katy played with most of the other animals that lived in the
- field. The rabbits hopped about and sometimes landed in her lap as she sat
- on the grass. One of the squirrels took sunflower seeds from her fingers.
- The ducks at the edge of the lake quacked softly to her.
- She always wanted to get close to the unicorn, but it was so
- beautiful that whenever she saw it, she could only stand and stare. One
- day, she thought, she would touch its soft white nose and stroke its
- feathery mane.
- Instead, one day while Katy was lying on her back watching the
- birds, a wizard came to the field. She knew he was a wizard, because he
- was dressed in a long robe with stars all over it, and he had a pointy
- hat.
- "Have you seen the unicorn today?" he asked her.
- Katy thought that was interesting. Most of the grown-ups did not
- believe her when she told them about the unicorn. She sat up, brushing
- leaves out of her hair, and answered, politely,
- "No, not today. Not for quite a few days."
- "I was afraid of that." The wizard looked very sad. "Another piece
- of magic has gone out of the world."
- "Gone?" Katy was worried. "Are you sure? Where has she gone?"
- "I don't know yet," said the wizard. "Will you help me find her?"
- "Of course," said Katy. "What must I do?"
- "Only children can see the unicorn," said the wizard. "I can use
- my magic to find her, but only with your help."
- The wizard began to pace out a circle in the grass, and to chant
- magic words. Then he produced a silver dish, from out of the air or
- perhaps from a pocket in his robe, and asked Katy to fill it with water
- from the lake. When Katy came back with the water, he asked her to sit in
- the middle of the circle and look into the dish.
- "Think about the unicorn," he said. "Think hard. Concentrate."
- Katy did, while the wizard continued with his complicated spell.
- After a time, Katy could see a picture of the unicorn in the clear water
- in the dish.
- "I see her!" she cried. "Look!"
- The wizard shook his head. "I will not be able to see her. You
- must watch, and tell me everything you see."
- So Katy watched, and she described everything she saw to the
- wizard. And this is what Katy saw.
- It was night. The unicorn stood, bathed in moonlight, in the reeds
- on the edge of the lake. Suddenly a great shadow darkened the moon, and a
- dragon came flying out of the night, flapping overhead on vast dark wings.
- The unicorn reared in panic. She fled into the water, and began to
- swim, hard and long. Her wake spread out behind her like silver in the
- moonlight. The unicorn kept swimming, long and hard, until she reached the
- other side of the lake.
- On the other side of the lake was a forest. The unicorn climbed
- onto the bank and water droplets flew from her coat. She seemed to relax,
- and Katy was just about to tell the wizard that the unicorn was in the
- forest, when the dragon appeared again. This time it swooped lower, with
- heavy flaps of its great wings, and landed near the unicorn.
- The unicorn reared, and fled again, deep into the forest. Her
- hooves pounded on the soft dirt and pine needles. Branches whipped past
- her. After a long time, she came to a castle, with four shining towers
- taller than the trees. She slowed down and stopped.
- But the dragon was still pursuing. This time it landed almost
- close enough to touch the unicorn. Instead, the unicorn disappeared! The
- picture in the water changed, and showed Katy a hallway, all of stone,
- with a high shadowed roof. The unicorn was pacing the hallway. Her horn
- shed light around her. She was safe, and all alone. There were no doors
- and no windows. The dragon could not reach her.
- Katy looked up, and was surprised to see that it was still bright
- daylight. She told the wizard what she had seen.
- "But how did the unicorn get into the castle?" she asked.
- "She is a magical creature," said the wizard. "She wished herself
- inside the castle, and there she was. But the dragon cannot follow her,
- for the castle has been sealed for many years."
- "Then the unicorn is safe now," said Katy.
- "Yes, but not happy." The wizard looked sad again. "She needs to
- be able to see the sky, and roll in the grass, and play in the fields. If
- she is too afraid of the dragon to come out, maybe she will be trapped
- forever."
- Now Katy was sad as well.
- "Is there a way to get her to come back?" she asked.
- "If a child touches the horn of the unicorn, the unicorn must do
- what the child tells her to do."
- Katy sighed.
- "I would go after her if I could. But the lake is too wide to
- swim, and I would get lost in the forest, and I have no way to get into
- the castle."
- "If you truly promise to find the unicorn and bring her back, I
- will lend you this." The wizard took off an amulet he wore around his
- neck. "When you come to an obstacle, you must whisper the magic word,
- Metamorphosis, and you will be given a way to the other side."
- Katy took the amulet. It had a gold chain, and a blue stone that
- glowed faintly. She put the amulet around her neck, and walked to the edge
- of the lake.
- "Shall I try it?" she asked.
- The wizard did not answer. When Katy turned around, he was gone.
- Katy touched the amulet, and whispered the word, "Metamorphosis."
- There was a puff of purple smoke. When Katy could see again, she thought
- at first that the world had grown much larger. Then she realized that she
- had grown smaller.
- The amulet had turned her into a fish!
- Katy tried to move, and found that she could only flop from side
- to side. She flopped off the edge of the bank, and slipped beneath the
- water of the lake. For a moment, as she sank, she was on the surface of
- the water, teeming with insects and small creatures. Their huge eyes and
- fierce mouths were on a level with her own. Then, with relief, she sank
- deeper into the welcoming water and left the surface creatures behind.
- As a fish, Katy could swim easily and quickly. She soon discovered
- how to steer with little flicks of her tail. When she looked up, the
- surface was a strange shimmer far above her. When she looked back along
- her own body, she saw that her smooth sides were as bright as a rainbow.
- The lake was still and Katy saw only a few other fish. They stared
- at her with curious eyes. She could not speak, or smile. Once she saw a
- worm wiggling in the water, suspended on a hook. Someone above her was
- fishing in the lake. With a flick of her tail, she swam around the hook.
- When she reached the other side of the lake, Katy wondered how she
- would get out of the water. She could not touch the amulet, since she had
- no hands, and she could not say the magic word. She struggled up toward
- the surface and tried to fling herself onto the bank. There was a puff of
- yellow smoke, and she felt herself bursting out of the water. She was
- standing in the reeds at the edge of the lake. Her shoes were getting wet.
- She was on the edge of the forest.
- Katy walked a little way into the forest. Then she could not see
- the way out again, and she was worried. She knew that the forest was wide.
- She could wander through the trees for hours. She was not sure how to find
- her way to the other side.
- Katy touched the amulet again, and whispered, "Metamorphosis."
- Again there was a puff of purple smoke, and again the world grew
- larger. This time she stood on the ground on four sturdy feet.
- The amulet had turned her into a fox!
- Katy looked at her new red body with delight. On dancing fox-feet,
- she entered the forest. With her newly sensitive nose, she could smell the
- scent of the unicorn that had been here before her. It smelled of mint and
- lilac and sunlight. She could follow easily in its tracks.
- Then her sensitive fox-nose caught something else, a heavy scent of
- night. The dragon! She could tell it was not here now, but she began to
- move more carefully. She had forgotten the dragon until then.
- Katy followed long dark alleys between the tree trunks, and
- sometimes crossed bright clearings where the sun streamed down. Twice she
- saw rabbits, which hopped away in frantic haste. They were afraid the fox
- would want to eat them. Once she saw raspberry canes, dripping with fruit.
- She tried to eat some, but the fox's mouth was not suited for picking
- berries. The thorns pricked her, and she kept having to lick juice off her
- nose.
- Running was sheer delight. Katy could run for hours without tiring.
- Her feet were swift, sure, and almost silent. Her long red tail streamed
- out behind her as she loped through the trees.
- At last, as the shadows were growing long, she came into an open
- grassy place, and saw the castle. It had four tall towers. There was a
- sudden puff of yellow smoke as she left the forest, and Katy was herself
- again.
- She wandered all the way around the castle, looking for a way in.
- She could not see a single window or door.
- "Now what?" Katy said to herself.
- She wondered if the amulet could help her again. She touched it
- and whispered, "Metamorphosis."
- When the purple smoke had cleared, Katy was almost as small as she
- had been as a fish. She looked back at herself and saw a long tail.
- The amulet had turned her into a mouse!
- Katy skittered toward the castle and almost at once found a tiny
- crack in the wall. She crept inside, and found herself in a maze of twisty
- little passages. She wandered up one passageway and down the next. After a
- long time, she came out into an open area and realized she must be inside
- the castle. There was a puff of yellow smoke, and she was herself again.
- She was standing at the end of a long dark hallway. There were
- carved stones beneath her feet, and the ceiling arched high overhead. A
- clear white light poured from the far end of the hall. Katy started to
- walk toward it. As she came closer, she could see that the light was shed
- from the silver horn of the unicorn.
- The unicorn was so beautiful that Katy could hardly bear to look
- at her. But as she came closer, she thought that the unicorn looked sad,
- as well.
- "Are you lonely here? Do you need a friend?" she asked.
- The unicorn bent her head, and Katy did what she had always wanted
- to do. She reached out shyly and touched the soft white nose. She stroked
- the delicate mane.
- "You can't stay here," said Katy. "Please, come back with me."
- The unicorn did not speak, but only looked at her with great sad
- eyes.
- "Please," said Katy. "It is dark outside. I have to go home. My
- parents will be worried."
- Then she remembered that the wizard had said she must touch the
- unicorn's horn. She reached up and grasped the horn in her hand. For a
- moment she felt the tingle of magic, and a strange shiver went down her
- back.
- The unicorn lowered her head and looked gravely into Katy's face.
- Then she lay down on the stone floor. She kept looking at Katy, and Katy
- understood that she was being offered a ride. She could hardly believe it.
- She climbed on to the unicorn's back, and buried her hands in the soft
- mane.
- The unicorn stood up, slowly and carefully. Katy clasped her
- around the neck. Suddenly they were outside the castle, under the night
- sky.
- The ride through the forest was wonderful. Katy felt as if she
- were flying. The wind blew through her hair, and the unicorn's hooves were
- almost silent on the soft ground under the trees. The night was dark but
- not cold, and the forest smelled of flowers.
- Then, just as they came in sight of the lake, there was a rush of
- wind and the beat of heavy wings overhead. The dragon swooped down upon
- the unicorn.
- The unicorn jumped sideways, and Katy grabbed her mane to keep
- from falling. The dragon missed the unicorn, and soared upward again.
- Before Katy had time to catch her breath, he returned. He lunged down at
- them again. The unicorn snorted in terror.
- Again the dragon did not quite touch the unicorn. Again he soared
- upward. This time Katy saw him make a loop in the sky. He was a black
- shadow against the stars.
- "Wait," she said, to the unicorn. "I think he wants to play!"
- The dragon swoooped down again. The unicorn jumped and shivered,
- and Katy thought she was going to make a magical jump, perhaps back to the
- castle.
- "No!" she said. "Don't go back! Please!"
- The dragon swooped toward the water of the lake. He soared up
- again, just brushing the water so that it splashed up. Katy wondered if he
- were a baby dragon. He moved over the surface of the water as if he were
- dancing. But the unicorn snorted and trembled. She was still afraid.
- Katy stroked her mane and whispered to her.
- "I don't think he is here to hurt you. Look at him. I think he is
- just playing."
- The dragon soared upward until he was lost in the dark. Then he
- dropped like a stone toward the lake, his great wings folded. At the last
- second, he opened his wings and soared upward.
- "You see?" said Katy.
- She stroked the unicorn's neck. She stroked the soft mane.
- Gradually the unicorn stopped trembling. Katy and the unicorn watched the
- dragon as he played.
- At last Katy sighed.
- "I have to get home. My parents will be worried."
- The unicorn stepped into the water. Katy took a good hard grip on
- the mane. With graceful movements, the unicorn began to swim.
- A few seconds later, the dragon came splashing noisily down into
- the lake. He circled the unicorn, but did not come too close. He ducked
- his head in and out of the water. He made ripples with his tail. Katy
- laughed as she watched.
- Before Katy was ready for the ride to end, the unicorn reached the
- far side of the lake. She sprang out onto the grass. She shook herself,
- and shook Katy right off her back. Silver droplets sprayed from her coat.
- Katy hugged the unicorn, and stroked her one last time. Then she watched
- as the unicorn waded back into the lake. She seemed to have lost all fear
- of the dragon.
- The wizard came hurrying across the grass.
- "Did you do it?" he asked, eagerly.
- Katy pointed to where the unicorn and the dragon played in the
- water. The wizard shook his head and smiled.
- "I cannot see her, remember? Only children can see the unicorn."
- Katy felt a little sad for the wizard.
- "I did it," she said. "I brought her out of the castle. She gave
- me a ride on her back. Look how wet I am!"
- "Maybe I should help you explain to your parents," said the wizard.
- Katy thought that was a good idea.
- "There is a dragon, too," she told the wizard.
- "I'm very glad to hear that," said the wizard, as they began to
- walk back toward Katy's house. "We need more magic in the world."
-