Part 18 (1/2)
The Princess ran to her window and, when she saw the shepherd alive and well, she put her hand to her heart and said:
”Oh!”
Even the Tsar was pleased.
”I'm not a bit surprised that he's back!” he said. ”There's something about this youth that I like!”
The next day the Tsar sent two of his trusted servants to the lake to see what was happening there. They hid themselves behind some bushes on a little hill that commanded the lake. They were there when the shepherd arrived and they watched him as he waded out into the water and challenged the dragon as on the day before.
They heard the shepherd call out in a loud voice:
”Ho, dragon, come out and we'll try a wrestling match! That is, if you're not afraid!”
And from the water they heard an awful voice bellow back:
”Afraid? Who's afraid?”
Then they saw the water of the lake churn this way and that and a horrible scaly monster come to the surface. They saw him crawl out on sh.o.r.e and clutch the shepherd around the waist. And they saw the shepherd clutch him in a grip just as strong. And they watched the two as they swayed back and forth and rolled over and wrestled together without either getting the better of the other. By midafternoon when the sun grew hot they saw the dragon grow faint and they heard him cry out:
”Oh, if I could only dip my burning head in the cool water, then I could toss you as high as the sky!”
And they heard the shepherd reply:
”Don't talk nonsense! If the Tsar's daughter would kiss my forehead, then I could toss you twice as high!”
Then they saw the dragon slip out of the shepherd's grasp, plunge into the water, and disappear. They waited but he didn't show his scaly head again that day.
So the Tsar's servants hurried home before the shepherd and told the Tsar all they had seen and heard. The Tsar was mightily impressed with the bravery of the shepherd and he declared that if he killed that horrid dragon he should have the Princess herself for wife!
He sent for his daughter and told her all that his servants had reported and he said to her:
”My daughter, you, too, can help rid your country of this monster if you go out with the shepherd to-morrow and when the time comes kiss him on the forehead. You will do this, will you not, for your country's sake?”
The Princess blushed and trembled and the Tsar, looking at her in surprise, said:
”What! Shall a humble shepherd face a dragon unafraid and the daughter of the Tsar tremble!”
”Father,” the Princess cried, ”it isn't the dragon that I'm afraid of!”
”What then?” the Tsar asked.
But what it was she was afraid of the Princess would not confess.
Instead she said:
”If the welfare of my country require that I kiss the shepherd on the forehead, I shall do so.”
So the next morning when the shepherd started out with his sheep, the falcon on his shoulder, the dogs at his heels, the bagpipes under his arm, the Princess walked beside him.
Her eyes were downcast and he saw that she was trembling.