A new special edition of Jenny Praterâs Lindworm is available now! This hardcover includes a new epilogue, deleted scenes, essays, and updated formatting.
Also available: a book crate including Lindworm, an original, illustrated translation of the fairy tale it retells, 2 art prints, a hand painted coaster, a notebook, and a candle.
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Join my newsletter for exclusive access to my new short story! Follow an enchanted prince as he navigates a serpent childhood, an awkward family reunion, and a growing bloodlust in this prequel to my debut novel, Lindworm.
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The spell has been broken, and the monster is a man. But the trouble is just beginning.
Chosen as the third bride for a lindworm who had already eaten two wives, armed with nothing but strange advice and a few extra layers, Marit never expected to survive her wedding night. She certainly never thought that she and the lindworm might both survive.
But somehow they have, and they are equally baffled by the strange new world of their married life. Marit doesn't know how to be a princess, but her husband doesn't even know how to be a man. Now, as tensions rise and the threat of war looms, Marit and Davey must learn to depend on each other as they find their places in a royal family.
This special edition hardcover includes a new epilogue, 7 deleted scenes, and 6 essays, as well as a translation of the fairy tale "King Lindorm."
(Be sure to check out the Lindworm Book Box, too!) Order today at waxheartpress.com.
The spell has been broken, and the monster is a man. But the trouble is just beginning.
Â
Chosen as the third bride for a lindworm who had already eaten two wives, armed with nothing but strange advice and a few extra layers, Marit never expected to survive her wedding night. She certainly never thought that she and the lindworm might both survive.
Â
But somehow they have, and they are equally baffled by the strange new world of their married life. Marit doesn't know how to be a princess, but her husband doesn't even know how to be a man. Now, as tensions rise and the threat of war looms, Marit and Davey must learn to depend on each other as they find their places in a royal family.
Â
This special edition hardcover includes a new epilogue, 7 deleted scenes, and 6 essays, as well as a translation of the fairy tale "King Lindorm."
Â
(Be sure to check out the Lindworm Book Box, too!) Order today at waxheartpress.com.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
â Live Streamingâ Interactive Chatâ Private Showsâ HD Qualityâ Free Actions
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
A new special edition of Jenny Praterâs Lindworm is available for preorder now, with a release date of December 2! This hardcover includes a new epilogue, deleted scenes, essays, and updated formatting.
Also available: a book crate including Lindworm, an original, illustrated translation of the fairy tale it retells, 2 art prints, a hand painted coaster, a notebook, and a candle.
(This is a little over half of the first chapter I had planned to share the whole thing, but then I realized it was 7,000 words. You can buy and read the rest of Lindworm here!)
âThank you so much for thinking of me,â Marit said, âbut really I would rather not marry a monster.â
Marit would not have thought herself the sort of person to talk back to kings, had she ever had cause to contemplate such matters. But then she never would have thought the king the sort of person to sacrifice a girl to a lindworm, and yet here she was, the third victim.
She was only seventeen, and this wedding was a death sentence.
Six months ago, Prince Harald had set out to find a bride, and had been stopped by a great serpent in the road. Since then, the serpentâthe lindwormâhad eaten two foreign princesses, both after a sham of a wedding. Both women had thought they were coming to marry Prince Harald.
Here, in the forest outside the capital city, rumors had flown. Rumors that they would shortly be at war with both kingdoms that had lost a princess, and rumors, more interesting to their small family with no members likely to be sent to the battlefield, of the lindworm, of why a man-eating dragon would be welcomed to the palace and fed. Rumors that said the lindworm was Prince Haraldâs brother, that the king humored it instead of killing it because the monster was family.
Marit didnât know how much truth there might be to such rumors. She didnât know how a queen could bear and birth a serpent, but she did know the world was full of strange, incomprehensible things.
The king stared at her, his men standing stiffly by. It had not, of course, been thoughtfulness that led him to her cottage in the woods. Marit knew this, and knew that the marriage was not optional, and that one could not speak to a king in this manner and expect to keep oneâs head. But when one has already been sentenced to death, such things as respect for royalty matter very little.
âIt is not an offer,â the king informed her when he found his voice. âIt is a command, and you may choose to obey or not, but willing or unwilling, you will find yourself before a priest in my great hall one week from now.â
One week, she thought. One week to live the rest of her life. She could runâcould she run?
No, if the king was leaving her a few days to say her goodbyes, it was only because he knew she could not run. There would be guards posted. She would be caught and brought back. She would still end the week dead, and likely her father and sister, too, if the king suspected they had helped her. As they certainly would.
Her familyâthey were away from the house now, deeper into the woods, scavenging. There was little left to eat, their winter stores almost empty by March, and the ground still too frozen to begin the yearâs planting. She had stayed behind to tend to the animals, too likely to slow them down after twisting her ankle yesterday, falling from a tree; it had barely hurt, and would be healed by tomorrow. The king would be long gone before they returned, and it would fall to her to explain her upcoming death.
âThere will be a bride price, of course,â said the king.
Marit wasnât quite sure what a bride price was, thought it may be like a dowryâsheâd sewn items, slowly, over the last several years for her dowry, but doubted the lindworm would demand her linens as well as her life.
The king went on to explain the bride price, the amount of money her father would be given for this farce of a marriageâthe opposite of a dowry, then, and a staggering amount.
It had been a long, brutal winter following a short, dry summer, and for that price Marit may have volunteered herself. Any number of young women may have; it was enough to save not only their own small farm, but those of a few near neighbors. Enough to buy a second goat, a few more chickens, enough to pay all of their debts in the city and have their broken tools repaired.
For such a sum, she would have volunteered. She would have gladly given her life to so dramatically improve the lives of her father and younger sister.
But the king had not asked. The king had demanded, and Marit knew she would resent him for however many days she had left to do so.
He left her, as sheâd expected, with guards posted nearby, and she led the animals back to their shed and let herself back into the cottage, not wanting to look at them, their clean uniforms with shiny brass buttons, their polished boots slowly gathering mud, their faces as they avoided her eyes, because they knew, must know, that this was wrong, and yet they were loyal to their king, and would not let her run.
~
Marit watched through the back window, working idly on her knitting, unable to stay focused on the difficult stitch sheâd meant to master this week, until she saw her sister and her father coming out from the woods. She ran to meet them, and hurried them inside before they could ask about the soldiers scattered about. And then she told them.
âWhy you?â Greta cried. âWhy you?â
She hadnât asked how heâd chosen her, out of all the unwed maids within walking distance of the palace. She didnât think she wanted to know why it was her that must die, and not Annette, who had no father to protect her, or Martine, who was more beautiful, or Signe or Gretchen or any of the other girls she knew.
She didnât want to die. She didnât want to be the kind of person who wished death on her friends, either.
Besides, the lindworm had already eaten two women, and there was no reason to expect he might stop at a third. They may all be dead before this ended, Gretchen and Signe and Annette and Martine, and the younger girls, Greta and her friends, all the forest, all the city, someday all the kingdom sacrificed to satisfy the appetite of a monster that should have been killed the moment it showed itself to Prince Harald.
She could only hope that the fathers of the dead princesses would declare war, that they would kill her king and his lindworm with him before the whole country was devoured.
King Olaf had always been known as a kind and noble king. Heâd lowered taxes and held festivals and been much loved, before these last six months, and Marit didnât understand. She didnât understand how a good king could become a bad one overnight because of one monster.
Maybe it was his son. Marit would throw the whole world over for Greta, she knew, but sheâd been at Gretaâs side since sheâd emerged from their motherâs stomach, been the first to hold the new baby, tiny and wrinkled and red, getting blood all over her vest, as their father had said his goodbyes to Mama, only turning his attention to Marit and the new baby when his wife was gone.
For Greta, for her father, for Mama if sheâd lived, Marit would do anything. But if a boar walked out of the woods and claimed to be her long lost brother, she wouldnât take him at his word, wouldnât escort him into the city to trample the blacksmith just because he asked her.
She didnât think the king could hide a paternal relationship with a lindworm for several years. They must have met only when he stopped the prince on the road. And Marit didnât understand.
She gathered Greta in her arms and listened to the younger girl cry, unable to shed any tears for herself, unsure why. She looked over Gretaâs head at her father, and saw the same desperate sadness in his eyes that she had seen when she was five years old, and her mother was dying in childbirth. Her father loved her, but he could do nothing to save her, and they all knew it. He could not defy the king; to try would only make him angry, would likely risk Gretaâs life too.
He came and wrapped himself around them both, and Marit thought, but was not quite sure, that he wept too. She sat, dry-eyed, between them, for long hours, until it was time for dinner and bed.
They watched out the window as a new group of soldiers marched in, and the first group left. At least they werenât expected to feed and board their prison guards.
In the morning they found that the soldiers would let Marit go where she pleased, but one or two would always follow, from a respectful distance. No one followed her sister or father, so they went in three different directions, to the neighbors and to the city, Marit to make her farewells, and all of them to give warning. The king is feeding maidens to his lindworm. Marit is the first; she will not likely be the last. Send your daughters quietly to family in other cities, if you can. Marry them quickly to boys in the village, if you can. We do not know why the lindworm wants weddings, but he does, so make your daughters unweddable.
Gretchen, when Marit told her, said it probably had to do with a dragonâs fondness for virgins. She then said that if the king came to her, she would rid herself of virginity with the first man she could find before she would go to the lindworm, with the whole town to watch as proof, if necessary.
Gretchenâs older brother, the only other person there save the guards, too far away to overhear, made a sound of disapproval in the back of his throat, but said nothing.
Marit wondered if it was too late to try Gretchenâs plan for herself, and concluded it probably wasâif the lindworm demanded a virgin, then the soldiers would not let her cease to be one. The small chance of success wasnât worth giving herself to a man she didnât want and wouldnât be allowed to keep. And the kind of man who might cooperate with such a plan would likely not make it a happy experience to cherish in her final days. She reminded Gretchen of the soldiers before moving on to the next neighbors.
~
Marit spend her days wandering, mostly. There was work to be done, and she helped, or tried toâher father said not to trouble herself with anything in these last few days, and when she insisted, she often found herself too distracted to finish, or at least to finish well, haunted constantly by imaginings of what the lindworm might be like, how it might feel to be eaten. She remembered breaking a finger in a slamming door as a child, the sharp crack of it, the pain. She imagined the pain and the cracking both amplified as an enormous snake swallowed her whole, as snakes will do, and then, bizarrely, imagined cowering on a banquet table as the lindworm sliced her to pieces with a knife held in its tail, popping each slice into its mouth one at a time, sometimes dipping a slice in a butter-sauce first.
She still had not cried, though she had found herself several times laughing hysterically at humorless jokes she couldnât explain. Greta didnât need to know about the butter sauce.
When there were two days left before the wedding, she went out intending to collect eggs from the chickens, and her feet carried her, instead, deeper into the woods.
The guards followed at a distance.
Marit stopped when she saw an old woman ahead. She was short, with white hair spilling from her cap, bright and cheerful in a blue skirt and red vest, and she smiled like an old friend at Marit, and asked why she was so sad.
Marit wasnât a fool. She knew how it was with mysterious old women in forests, knew they were to be respected. Knew how often they carried magic within themselves. Knew that to cross them was idiocy, and that to be kind and respectful could change the course of oneâs life.
So Marit told the woman her troubles, and the woman smiled again. âIt will be all right,â she said. âIf you obey me, it will be all right. Now, here is what you must do.â
Marit wasnât foolish enough to think she might live through this, but she wasnât foolish enough to ignore the gift of a wise woman in the wood, either, even when that gift was the strangest advice sheâd ever been given. Wear ten shifts beneath your dress, have milk and lye and whips waiting in your bedchamber.
She was already going to die; what did it matter if the kingâs servants thought her a madwoman?
Ten shifts, though, would not be an easy thing to manage. Marit had two shifts, and two night shifts, which were wool instead of linen, with sleeves too wide to be hidden beneath her dress. She would have to rip them off. Greta owned the same, not much smaller as she was tall for her age, but Marit could not deprive her sister of all her undergarments, so only took one day shift and one night shift from her. That brought her to six, and four more yet to find. She couldnât buy them; the kingâs money wouldnât come to her father until the day after the wedding. She had her dowry linens, unneeded now, and could use the fabric to make more shifts. But she had two days left to live, and wasnât willing to spend her last precious moments sewing. With Gretaâs help she converted one white bedsheet into a shift, but would sacrifice no more time when she had so many goodbyes to sayâto friends, to livestock, to trees and streams and every future she had ever imagined for herself.
She begged one more shift from Olga, whose family was wealthier and who had one to spare for an acquaintance going to her death. Eight shifts, eight, two short, and no time to find more. It would have to be enough.
~
The morning she was to be taken away, Maritâs father pulled out her motherâs wedding dress and offered it to her.
Marit shook her head. âIt should go to Greta. To a real wedding.â
âYou shouldnât be alone,â her father said. âTake it, so your mother can be with you, as Greta and I cannot.â
So Marit put on her eight shifts, and she put on the dress. She was a bit smaller than her mother had been when she married, and it still fit despite the extra layers. Greta had wanted to make her a crown of flowers to match, but there were still few flowers in bloom, so she wove the crown from evergreen branches instead, coating her hands in sap, and placed it carefully on her sisterâs head.
The three of them waited, solemnly, for Marit to be taken away. There was nothing left to say. All of the goodbyes were finished, all of the plans made. The next morning someone would come from the palace with the bride price and whatever was left of Marit to be buried. Her father would sell the animals and the house, give them away if he couldnât sell them fast enough, and he would hire a wagon to take them far, far from the capital, to start a new life where the lindworm would never touch Greta. Theyâd gone over the details last night. Greta had cried again.
Marit still hadnât cried, and thought she might be able to, now, but would not let herself; she didnât want her tears seen by whoever took her away. She found she was more angry than sad. She felt a sharpness growing within her. Her life was forfeit, and so too was her sense of obligation to respect, to loyalty. The king, the queen, the prince, the priests whoâd performed the weddings and the soldiers and couriers whoâd stood byâdamn them, she thought, damn them all, and damn the idea she owed them the barest amount of anything.
The king came to fetch her himself, and she refrained from spitting in his face only because of the guards that surrounded him, the fear they might kill her where she stood and cost her father the bride price.
The king was different, not angry and demanding as he had been a week ago, but stiff with an awkwardness that might almost be shame. Marit hugged her father and Greta one last time, and followed him back toward the city, his guards forming a circle around them. She didnât care that he may feel shame; she had enough anger by now for the both of them.
He was quiet, and Marit didnât want quiet. Not quite understanding the compulsion, she found herself goading him.
âWhat will happen after this?â she asked, and the king looked at her, then quickly away again. It was a long walk on foot, and she didnât know why a king wouldnât take a carriage, but she didnât mind the extra time in her forest.
âYou will be prepared for the wedding by ladyâs maids. The wedding will be in the great hall, and after that we will have a banquet.â
âNot tonight,â Marit said, spurred by the thought of Annette being sent hundreds of miles away to an uncle sheâd never met, of Gretchen searching for a man to defile her rather than be eaten. âNot to me. What will happen to your kingdom? After me, youâll kill off every maid in the country, and then I suppose youâll have to go to war, and find slaves to feed his appetite? Discipline is important for growing boys, Your Majesty. Learn to say no to your son.â
He raised a hand as if to slap her, and she tilted her chin forward, daring himâlet him hit her, here surrounded by a small army, let all these soldiers, already uneasy with their roles, go home and report to their friends and families that their king was a man who struck defenseless maidens.
He lowered his hand, leaving Marit oddly disappointed. It would have been another reason to be angry, and her anger was protecting her from her fear.
The king sighed heavily. âWe all do foolish things for our children.â
She wondered if he meant the lindworm, or only Prince Harald, who could not be married until it was satisfied. It didnât matterâthe result was the same for her.
âYes, Your Majesty,â she said, suddenly exhausted. Maybe a king could afford to do foolish things for his children. Her own father had to be sensibleâfoolishness would only have hurt Greta. She felt the anger draining away, the fear rising up again. She didnât want to die.
~
They arrived at the palace from a side gate, not taking the wide, paved road beneath the cherry trees, where any number of people might have seen their arrival. The king and his soldiers handed her off to a large group of women, some more elegant than others, and she asked him, before he left, what time the wedding would be.
âAt eight oâclock,â he said. âWill that give you enough time to prepare?â One of the more elegant women assured him it would, and he told her, âGive the girl whatever she wants. Itâs her wedding day, after all.â He laughed, unamused, more bitter than cruel, and then he was gone.
âIs there anything special we can do for you, miss?â asked one of the plainer women, who was likely a maid.
Marit thought of the old woman in the forest. âThis is going to sound a little strange.â
All of the more plainly dressed women left to carry out her last request, leaving Marit with a flock of beautiful women whose most simple everyday clothes were likely ten times more expensive than her motherâs wedding dress. They tried to have her out of it, into borrowed silks instead, but she refused. It was the last gift from her father, the only familiar thing in this place. She kept her evergreen crown as well, but let them take it away long enough to clean away the sap, rubbing it from the branches and brushing it out of her hair.
They re-braided her hair into a more elaborate style, stringing in gemstones to match her dress, and applied powders and creams to her face, which itched and made her sneeze. She watched them carefully, picking out one who seemed both kind and fancy enough to know little of a peasantâs daily life. She drew her away from the crowd and explained, in a whisper, âI havenât any underthings. I only own the one shift, and I left it for my sister, so she would have one to wear on laundry day. I didnât think it would matter, when Iâm only to die tonight, but IâmâIâm embarrassed to have all these fine people watching me, thinking that if the light hits just so theyâll see Iâm not dressed properly.â
The woman believed, somehow, that a peasant girl might have come to a royal wedding with no undergarments, and offered to find a spare shift.
âCould I have two, please?â The woman raised her eyebrows, and Marit ducked her head. âItâs a traditionâI know it shanât be a real wedding night, but itâs a tradition to make the groom work a little harder the first time.â
The woman believed the tradition sheâd never heard of, as well, and came back shortly with two more shifts, beautiful, silken things, bringing Marit to the required ten.
The next problem came when she realized the women had no intention of leaving her alone while she took off her wedding dress and put on the shifts, which was awkward for more reasons than the eight shifts she already wore. She explained that she was not accustomed to being seen undressed by strangers, and finally they left her, for the first moment of privacy sheâd had in hours, and the last she expected to have in her life.
She took off the dress and put on the shifts. She paused to look in the mirrorâa thing sheâd heard of but never before seenâand wondered if that was what she truly looked like, or only the effect of the powders and creams. She pulled the dress back on, took a few deep breathsâshe had not cried yet, she would not cry nowâand reopened the door so that the women could help re-fasten the dress in the back.
They set the evergreen crown back on her head, and took her to the priest that would read her last rites.
The hall where they held the wedding was gorgeous, with shining wood floors and dark walls covered in rosemÄling, blue and gold and red. All the court was seated when she arrived, dressed in their finest clothes, looking horrified. She recognized the king and the queen and the prince, familiar from a dozen parades, sitting in the front row. The rest were strangers.
And then she saw the lindworm.
It was the height of six or seven men, white like a maggot, or the mold on stale bread. It had dark wings on its back, too small to hold its weight in flight, and shiny white fangs quite visible even when its mouth was shut. It had no legs. There was a crown balanced at the top of its head, the size a man would wear, which might have been funny if it hadnât planned to eat her.
It was staring at her with an expression of mild curiosity, recognizable because its eyes were the eyes of a man, over-large, but still small in its serpent head, the same shade of blue as a dozen young men sheâd seen in the city.
I've talked before about the transforming power of love, and specifically about the transforming power of love in "Prince Lindworm." But that was a 20+ page academic essay, and who wants to read a 20+ page academic essay? (Although, if you do, it's here.) So let's talk about it again, in a more casual setting.
We've gone over the bizarro transformation sequence before, but let's run through it again for anyone who's new here: Girl forced to marry snake monster with history of eating wives. Girl wears 10 shifts under her wedding dress. Lindworm asks girl to take off shift, girl demands lindworm take off skin first. Lindworm complies, repeat 10 times. Girl whips nasty mass of skinless lindworm with whips dipped in lye. Girl dunks nasty mass of skinless, whipped lindworm in tub of milk. Girl embraces nasty mass of sticky, skinless, whipped lindworm. Lindworm turns into hot guy.
Now, the majority of the transformation process is extremely violent. It also sort of matches up with the Catholic sacrament of penance, which is consistent with the whole story being a Christian allegory, which you can read about here. And transformation through violence is certainly an established pattern in folklore, as we see most prominently in The Frog King, but also in more minor forms in a number of stories from throughout Europe. Which I will talk about more in a future blog.
But today we're going to focus on that last step. On that embrace.
There are a few things to keep in mind here. Firstly, hugging a dragon-thing that wants to eat you? Really gross and unpleasant. Secondly, hugging any sort of creature that has, through various abuses, become a quivering mass of exposed muscle and veins, likely bleeding profusely? Really, really gross and unpleasant. Thirdly, is "embrace" a euphemism? Maybe. Let's not dwell on the logistics of that. Fourthly, this girl is the lindworm's third bride, which probably means she's the third shot at transformation. An old woman in the forest told her what to do; there's no reason to believe she didn't give the same instructions to the two brides the lindworm ate, even if the text doesn't spell this out; there's a strong tradition in folklore of three people speaking to a mysterious old woman, and the first two ignoring her and dying.
So, my theory: the first two girls may have ignored the instructions entirely, but even if they didn't, they wouldn't have been able to complete the last step. Because it's the last step that makes our heroine remarkable. The last step is a kindness. To take up in your arms a disgusting, suffering thing, which would have destroyed you given the chance, to provide comfort - that takes a special kind of person.
A lot of weird, creepy things went into making the lindworm a man. But ultimately, the thing that changed him was one moment of kindness.