sharpen the way they did when the thieves had come so I wouldn’t have to worry about tripping over tree roots and rocks, but all my senses remained normal. Apparently it only worked when I was in danger.

I gripped the sword in one hand, nearly using it as a walking stick. My feet made scuffing sounds against the dirt and fallen leaves. I could make out the opening to one cave in front of me and another farther off. Should I go inside and search them?

I heard a sound slithering through the trees to my side. I turned, searching the forest. It grew louder. What at first seemed like a strange wind was actually a voice.

“Mmmaaaiiidddeeennn. I smell mai . . . den . . .” I held the sword up and looked over its tip into the shadowy darkness. Any moment the world would grow slow. My eyes darted between the trees looking for movement.

Nothing. Nothing. And then a large shape, slinking toward me, hunched over as though he were about to pounce.

“Perfumey,” he said in a nasally voice. “Stinking perfume filling my forest.”

The cyclops came closer. I could make out his misshapen head. His greasy black hair looked human, but the similarities ended there. The top half of his face was a gigantic bulging eyeball that stared, unblinking, at me.

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The bottom half was a mouth so filled with teeth that it didn’t look like he could close it. His lumpish brown nose wiggled up and down like a rabbit’s.

He swayed his head as he walked toward me, and I realized why his stare was so intense. He had no eyelid over his eye. I clasped the sword harder, waiting for my senses to sharpen.

The cyclops circled around me. “Methinks she isn’t lost. A maiden with a sword. Why does she come, the tasty maiden?”

I held out my sword more as a shield than as a weapon. “I’ve come to kill you. Sorry, but it has to be done.”

The cyclops tilted his head back and laughed. Then he snorted. Then he laughed again. His bulging eyeball jiggled in his head.

I held the sword steady. “I know I don’t look dangerous, but that doesn’t matter. I’m enchanted and no weapon will hurt me, nor any man defeat me in battle.” Apparently he didn’t believe in enchantments, because this made him laugh even harder.

“I’m sorry to have to kill you,” I said, trying to dampen his humor. “Perhaps you could just surrender and beg for the king’s mercy . . .” 274/431

Where his fingers should have been he had claws, which he tapped together menacingly. “The maiden can’t kill me.”

“I will.”

“Foolish, foolish maiden,” he snickered. “Your magic is nothing. I have no weapons and I’m not a man.” I took a step back from him. My heart knocked against my ribs. Could he be right? Is that why my senses hadn’t sharpened yet? Why hadn’t that occurred to me before?

The cyclops ran toward me. I screamed and held the sword out, hoping that the cyclops would impale himself as he jumped on me. Instead, he batted away my sword with one hand and knocked me aside with the other. I flew through the air and smacked into something hard, probably a tree. The breath went from my lungs, and everything went black.

Chapter 19

My ribs hurt when I awoke, which didn’t make sense until I realized the cyclops was carrying me under one arm.

His grip was painfully tight around my torso. I pushed against his arm, trying to get free, but he held me fast.

“Stupid two eyes,” he hissed. “Squinty little two eyes never pay attention to magic. Only see the part they want to see. Bad vision, they have. Very bad vision.”

“Let me go!” I yelled. I tried to scratch his arm, but his skin was like plastic. I didn’t even leave a mark.

“Shall I eat her, the stinky maiden?” He shook his head and grunted. “She’ll likely taste perfumey bad.”

“Very bad,” I said. “You should let me go.”

“Maybe I should just break her pesky bones and save her for later. I might get very hungry later.” I gave up trying to loosen his grip on me and just tried to twist so that my ribs weren’t quite as compressed.

“I’m sure something better will come along. A pig or a deer . . .”

“Unicorn would be tasty,” he said, and he dropped me on the ground.

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I tried to crawl away but he stomped a foot onto my dress, pinning me in position.

“Maiden will sing,” he hissed.

“Sing?” Then I remembered the legend that maidens could tame unicorns by singing to them.

“Sing now!” he yelled so loudly that he probably scared away any animal within a mile radius.

I couldn’t think of a single song. The words all fled my mind. I couldn’t even think of a tune to hum while he was leaning over me, clicking his claws together.

He sniffed at my face. “Perhaps if I rub her with leaves she will taste better.”

“Happy birthday to you,” I sang with a trembling voice. “Happy birthday to you. Happy birthday, awful cyclops monster thing. Happy birthday to you.”

“Louder,” he said.

So I sang louder. My voice wavered and cracked and mostly went off-key, but I yelled out the birthday song, then moved on to “La Cucaracha” and the alphabet song. When I’d reached LMNOP, the Cyclops straightened and sniffed the air.

“Something is coming,” he said. “It smells horsey.” I stopped singing and looked, but as soon as the tune died in my mouth, the cyclops turned and growled at me. “Sing more!”

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I sang again. The moment he took his foot off my dress I planned on bolting through the forest. Hopefully he would be more interested in catching the unicorn than pursuing me. And hopefully the unicorn would stab him with its horn and then run away.

“TUV,” I sang, but then I stopped. A bright light pierced through the darkness, a beam from a flashlight.

It went directly into the cyclops’s large eye, blinding him. Unable to shut his eye, he turned away in pain, moaning, stumbling with both arms flung in front of his face.

“Run here!” Tristan yelled, but I was already on my feet, heading in his direction. When I reached him, he barely looked at me, just thrust the flashlight into my hand and said, “Try to keep this trained on his eye.” I had expected the cyclops to flee from the light into the darkness of the forest, but he didn’t. He stayed where he was, roaring in anger. I shone the flashlight beam directly at his head, but he’d turned his face backward and tried to walk toward us while keeping his eye away from the light. One of his arms swung out in our direction as though trying to scratch us.

The cyclops, I realized, was not used to running away from people and didn’t plan on doing it now.

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Tristan walked toward him, a spear in one hand and an object I couldn’t discern in the other. Some sort of cylinder.

“Don’t get so close, don’t get so close,” I repeated, even though I knew Tristan couldn’t hear me over the roars of the cyclops. Tristan walked around to the cyclops so that he faced the monster. I was afraid the cyclops would lunge at Tristan since he no longer stood in the protection of the flashlight beam. But before the cyclops could take a swipe at Tristan, Tristan held the object up and squeezed it. A stream of liquid shot out from the object and went directly into the cyclops’s eye.

The monster screamed again, louder and fiercer this time. So loud that the forest seemed to shake. He clutched at his eye with his clawed hands and stumbled backward, out of the beam of my flashlight.

The cyclops’s screams suddenly stopped. I searched for him with the flashlight, and when I found him, I understood why. He lay motionless on the ground.

Tristan’s spear stuck out of his chest.

It was only then, after I knew the danger had passed, that I began to shake. My hands trembled so much that the flashlight beam jumped up and down. Tristan walked toward me, appraising me. “Are you all right?”


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