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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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{24} A Visitor

31 Days: From Enemy to Heir

A Visitor: Day 24 of 31 Days. 

For Day 1, click on the image above.

The Enchanter slipped in almost without notice.  Jewel, the bride of the prince, the upholder of the standards of the kingdom, had made a fatal mistake: she had forgotten to close the gate.

In her righteous busyness, in the rush of skewed priorities, she had neglected to do the simple and inglorious things that needed doing in the kingdom.  More important to her in the moment were the jobs that would be noticed when they were completed and rewarded with praise.

No one noticed a door slightly ajar.  No one, that is, except the one who had been waiting for just such an opportunity.

“My, how beautiful you have become,” he said to Jewel when he found her standing vulnerable in her chamber.

She spun around.  “What are you doing here?  Get out!” she demanded.

In the corner, her Advocate’s face seized with pain.  Only one man belonged in the bride’s chamber, and the Enchanter was not that man.  She should never have even spoken to the intruder.  Jewel should have screamed!  She should have run to her Advocate and hidden, appalled by the intrusion of this uninvited guest, and her Advocate would have doled out an appropriate punishment, sure and swift.

But Jewel did not.  So taken was she with her own beauty that she mistook it for strength and power, and she decided, in that moment, to protect and defend herself.

A visitor

A visitor

“I underestimated you, Obscurity—but that is not your name anymore, is it?” the Enchanter asked with silken words that slipped around Jewel so seamlessly, she hardly knew what was happening.

“I am Jewel,” she said, raising her chin and looking down at him as best she could, though he was taller than she.

“How fitting,” he smiled, easy and relaxed.  Jewel could not help notice how perfect he looked, and not at all terrifying like she remembered.

“I do not know another woman who could have adapted so easily to being the queen of her own kingdom.”

She was not the queen, and it was not her kingdom, but she did not correct him.  Even though she stood ridged and wary, she was pleased by the words.

“You don’t need to worry,” he continued, sprawling himself across her couch and looking at her with a grin.  “I’m not here to bring you back.  I can see that you belong here, and I came to congratulate you.  You’ve done well, Jewel.  Very, very well.”

She was suspicious, but it was kind of him to notice.  No one understood her prior life quite as well as the Enchanter, so no one would appreciate the transformation as much as he.

“In fact, I am astonished by how well you resemble the prince.”

Jewel’s ears pricked up. “Do you think so?  Do you really?”

“It’s uncanny.”  He let the words roll off his lips slowly, like honey.

“It’s nice of you to say.  I’ve worked hard at it.”  She didn’t mind taking the credit for the effort because it had been slow and agonizing and she deserved to be noticed for it.

“I can tell.  It’s a good thing your people have you as such a fine example to look to.  Your prince has been away for quite some time now, hasn’t he?”

“Yes, he has.”  In some ways, it felt like the prince had just left.  In other ways, it felt like an eternity.

“Are you planning anything special for him when he returns?”

“Well, you see, I don’t really know when he’ll be coming back.”

“Oh?”  The Enchanter looked surprised.  “I wonder how he could leave such a beautiful bride with no plans to return?”

“He’ll be back,” she said, but Jewel suddenly felt very foolish, like a child who doesn’t yet realize she’s been abandoned.

“I’m sure he will.  I certainly would not leave you alone for long.”  His smile was easy and charming.

Jewel stood awkwardly in the middle of the floor, listening to the Enchanter’s words and feeling very, very alone. “You should go,” she said hoarsely.

“Yes.  But thank you, Jewel.  I don’t think I’ve ever seen the prince as clearly as when I look at you.  Why, if I had seen what the prince saw in you, I would have taken you for a queen myself.  Keep this up, and the prince won’t recognize you when he gets home!”

“You are very kind,” Jewel mumbled, but her mind was confused.  The words seemed disingenuous, but she could not work out why.

“In fact, perhaps we can have of truce,” he continued.  “It’s a bother to be at war all the time.”  The Enchanter yawned a slow yawn.  “Of course, I will give you all the credit.  The prince will be so pleased to find that because of you, we are now friends.”    

Just like that, her unexpected visitor left, quietly as he came.  Jewel was left standing in her room, back to the mirror, alone.

In the mirror

In the mirror

31 Days, Faith, From Enemy to Heir 1 Comment

{16} Rich Like a River

31 Days: From Enemy to Heir

Day 16 of 31 Days.  For Day 1, click on the image above.

“I want you to share in my inheritance,” the prince said to his bride as they stood in the midst of his vast treasury.  “I want you to be rich like me.”

“I want to be,” Jewel answered.  “It’s just incomprehensible to me that you would care to make me rich after all you’ve done for me.”

“Oh, Jewel!” he shouted, filling up the cavern with his voice.  “Nothing brings me greater joy!  I long to lavish you with my love and adorn you with my riches because that is who I am, and more than anything, I want you to reflect who I am.” 

She wanted to be like him.  The more she knew him, the more that desire grew.  But she felt so indebted to him already.  “I could never repay you for any of this,” Jewel said sadly.

“Jewel!” he exclaimed, throwing his hands into the air.  “Have you now started keeping score?  Because if you have, tell me, how are you doing?”

Jewel knew the answer but didn’t say anything.

“Look at all that I have,” he said, spreading his arms wide.  “I own everything.  I do not need you to earn it, nor do I want you to repay anything I give you.  You could not add anything to my riches if you made it your life’s ambition, nor could you take away anything from it.”

Jewel knew that was true as well.  She could not even see to the far corner of the room, and every inch of it was piled high with treasure.  Even if she filled her pockets, it would be like stealing sand from the sea.

“You’re so used to thinking that there’s only so much, and no more, because you come from a kingdom that is small and limited.  Everything must be earned or repaid, and you all lived in terrible fear that you might not get your share before it all runs out.”

Jewel remembered that feeling far too well.  It churned in her stomach even then and filled her with suspicion and fear even though she was surrounded by good things.

The prince cut into her thoughts.  “But Jewel, what if my kingdom was limitless—infinite—and what if there was always more?  And what if ‘getting your share’ had nothing to do with you and everything to do with me?”

Rich like a river

Rich like a river

As soon as he said it, she saw that it was so.

“Any one of my people can come into this room at any time and take all they want.  The door is not locked, remember?  In fact, I delight to see them use my gifts because I am not like the ruler you once served.  He is like a small cup of water.  But I am the river.”   

Jewel blinked in the light of the gems and tried to comprehend what the prince was trying to say.  “How can that be?”

“Because I am not like any other, Jewel, and my riches are not like the riches of any other kingdom.  They are far, far better.  You can drink all you want, and there will always be more.  My riches won’t run out.  You don’t need to earn or repay them—what need does a river have for you to repay it for a drink?  There will always be enough.”

Jewel could see that, just by looking.  “It’s the most amazing thing I’ve ever heard,” she said, as understanding began to flow into her mind.  “I have never known anything so amazing.”

“Jewel, let me make you lovely with my riches.”

She smiled at him.  “Yes.  But how?  I’m afraid I would not know where to begin.  I do not know anything about being rich.”

“Well,” the prince said, taking her hand in his once more, “it just so happens, I am an excellent teacher.” 

*Join us tomorrow for Day 17.

 

31 Days, Faith, From Enemy to Heir 1 Comment

I believe you can find grace for the mother you are and help to become the mother you long to be—a mom who has the freedom to choose the better things and enjoy her kids right now.

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