Title : Rapunzoycite
Author : Zoycite
Rating : G
Hello! I am a writer of Sailor Moon fiction that focuses on the
villains. All my stories are based on the English dubbed Sailor Moon.
Some characters and places in the story were created by me – Zoycite's
mother "Zoey" for example. This is a Sailor Moon - Negaverse fairy tale
that I have made up, based on the classic fairy tale of Rapunzel, with
Zoycite as the heroine. I wrote this one on request. Thank you to
everyone who enjoys my stories! Feel free to email me with any comments
or story requests at princess_zoycite@hotmail.com
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A long time ago, a husband and wife lived happily in a little
cottage at the edge of a wood. Azurite and his wife, Zoey were very
content except for one thing – they lacked a child. One night, upon
seeing a bright blue star twinkling above, Zoey wished for a little
daughter to raise. Her wish came true and she became pregnant. The
couple was overjoyed and set to work preparing for a child. However,
soon after Zoey began to feel very sick and weak. Gradually she became
more and more ill, and she could eat none of the foods that her husband
brought to her. Azurite worried for his wife's health. If she did not
get better, she would die. He searched for a cure in his sorcery
volumes, and tried various healing spells on her. Zoey believed that
the only thing that could cure her was a special herb. Its potent magic
could take her sickness away and make her stronger. Azurite found the
herb illustrated in a book. It had deep rose colored leaves shaped
like hearts. He knew he had seen it somewhere before.
"Then I can be cured!" said Zoey, relieved that her suffering
could be ended.
"Yes, my dear, it does exist. But unfortunately, this magical
herb grows only in the garden of the witch Beryl." Azurite felt a cold
shudder thinking of her. Beryl was the crankiest, nastiest witch in the
land. She delighted in making people suffer, and hated love most of
all. She kept a garden to grow herbs for her evil enchantments. The
garden sprawled out behind the cottage, surrounded by a thick wall of
thorns. Zoey and Azurite seldom ventured back there, preferring to
avoid her as much as possible.
Zoey begged her husband to find a way into the garden to get the
herb. Azurite could not refuse her, of course, and so that night, he
crept through the shadows to find the strange herb among Beryl's weeds
and plants.
But Beryl saw all that went on through her crystal ball. She saw
someone sneaking into her garden, and she stole soundlessly outside to
catch him.
"What are you doing here?" Beryl hissed at the man searching
through her garden.
Azurite turned to see whom the voice belonged to. In the
moonlight stood a tall woman, with long blood red hair, fangs, and claws
for hands. Her eyes glittered menacingly. Brave as he was, the sight
of her still sent a chill up his spine.
"I came here because of my wife. She is dying, and she needs the
special herb called Rapunzoycite. It grows only here, in this garden.
I ask you to let me take some for her."
"Oh, yes, that weed," said Beryl. "It is of no use to me. Take
it."
"Thank you," said Azurite.
"But – for sneaking into my garden, I demand your child as soon
as she is born," said Beryl with a cruel smile.
"No," said Azurite. "Not our child! Have you no heart?"
"Suit yourself then," said Beryl indifferently. She waved her
hand and the herb began to wither, shrinking back into the ground.
"No!" cried Azurite, knowing that Zoey would die without it.
"My wife can not live much longer. She must have that herb."
"Then promise the child to me," hissed Beryl. "Or these weeds
will live no more, and neither will your wife."
"I – promise," said Azurite, gritting his teeth. He dared not
challenge Beryl, not with his wife so desperately ill. Perhaps there
was some way to outdo this witch, but for now, he must get the herb to
save his wife.
"Then go," said Beryl. "And remember that you have promised
your daughter to me. If you do not honor your promise when the time
comes, your wife will die."
Azurite nodded stiffly. "I give my word." He gathered a
generous amount of rapunzoycite and disappeared into the night shadows.
He brought the herb back to Zoey, who was lying motionlessly in
her bed. She smiled weakly when she saw her husband.
"You have it?" she asked, trying to push herself up into a
sitting position.
"Yes, my darling," said Azurite, helping Zoey to sit up.
"Here."
"Did you have any trouble getting it?"
"No, none at all," replied Azurite, not wanting to worry his wife
with the witch's threats. She would need all of her strength to
recover. Praying that the herb would do the trick, he held it out to
Zoey.
Zoey ate the rapunzoycite and immediately she began to feel
better. Azurite made her some food, since she had not eaten a decent
meal in days, and tried not to think about Beryl. It was still many
long weeks before Zoey was due to give birth. Perhaps in that time the
witch would forget about their baby.
The child was born seven months later – a fair little girl with
copper hair and green eyes, just like her mother. The couple named her
Rapunzoycite, - Zoycite for short, after the mysterious herb that had
saved Zoey's life.
Zoey loved her baby girl very much, but her joy at being a mother
did not last long. Beryl did come to take the child away. Zoey
protested with tears streaming down her face. Her daughter was so dear
to her.
"Don't take my baby," she said. "I waited so long for her."
"She was promised to me," said Beryl. "By your husband."
"Yes, Zoey, I made a promise in order to save you," said Azurite
sadly. "In exchange for your life, we must give up Zoycite."
"I wish I had died then," said Zoey, and began to sob, collapsing
against her husband. Azurite held her tightly in his arms.
Beryl took the baby and told the couple that they would be able to
see their daughter in the garden behind their house. Zoey and Azurite
were very sad to have their daughter taken from them, but they could do
nothing but watch as Zoycite grew, year by year, into a pretty girl.
She possessed the special magic of her mother, and by instinct she knew
certain little spells. One of them was a tiny fire light she could
conjure for herself in the darkness, when Beryl left her alone every
night in the little spare bedroom. But Zoycite knew no spell big enough
to free herself. Without her mother, or someone to nurture her ability,
Zoycite could not spellcast as well as her parents could.
Beryl mostly kept Zoycite in her dark cottage, and never allowed
her to visit her parents. She allowed Zoycite outside only to tend the
garden, and made her do chores like sorting and hanging herbs to dry.
Zoycite grew up to be a beautiful woman, just like her mother. Zoycite
caught glimpses of her parents through the wall of thorns, and asked
Beryl who the woman was that looked so much like herself.
Beryl told her that she was her mother, who didn't care about her.
But Zoycite could see how kind the woman was. She looked into her eyes
once over the fence that separated them. How sad the woman looked. A
woman like that could not simply abandon her daughter. She must love
her.
Zoycite made inquires to Beryl about her true mother and father,
but Beryl grew angry and irritated when Zoycite asked too many
questions. So Zoycite learned to keep quiet if she wished to avoid her
keeper's wrath. But she always wondered about the handsome couple that
lived over the thorny fence of Beryl's garden.
One afternoon Beryl came upon Zoycite as she was casting a little
spell to cheer herself. She was making heart shaped pink petals flutter
about the garden in a gentle wind.
"What are you doing?" demanded Beryl.
Zoycite turned, startled, and her petals flittered to the ground.
"Oh! I was just –
"You were doing magic!" fumed Beryl. "I forbid you to cast any
spells, do you understand!"
"Y-yes, Beryl, I'm sorry." Zoycite was terrified at the witch's
foul temper.
"Get in the house and go to your room!" ordered Beryl.
Zoycite hurried inside, not daring to look back. She knew how
angry Beryl would look if she turned around to see her.
Crestfallen, Zoycite sunk into her mattress. She had only been
trying to make herself happy. What was wrong with that?
Resentful of Zoycite's beauty and magical abilites, and worried
that she might find some way to escape as she got older, Beryl locked
her away in a high tower, with only one small window. Zoycite
protested, for if she was locked away up there, she would not see her
parents at all, not even a momentary view of them over the garden fence.
Beryl told her that the price of her freedom was her mother's life, so
Zoycite silently bore her suffering.
Each day, Beryl would come to see her, bringing fresh food and
water. She stood at the bottom of the tower and called out,
"Rapunzoycite, Rapunzoycite, let down your long hair."
Rapunzoycite, whose long copper hair was bound into a single
ponytail, would drop it down out of the window, and Beryl would climb up
it to the window. Zoycite groaned a little as Beryl made her way up.
She was heavy, and the weight pulled hard on her ponytail.
When Beryl left, Zoycite would once again drop down her hair, and
the witch would slide down to the ground. During the long days, Zoycite
kept herself happy by singing. She had a high singing voice and could
reach many notes. Sometimes she tried to imitate the songs of birds
that perched on the tower or on her window ledge.
One day, the king's son Malachite was riding through the forest
when he heard Rapunzoycite singing. It was the most beautiful sound.
Mystified, he rode to the tower, but he could find no door, so he could
not understand how someone could live there. But he had never heard a
voice so pretty, so he stayed and listened to the sweet singing from a
short distance. After a while Beryl came along and stood beneath the
tower. Malachite watched her carefully, as she called out,
"Rapunzoycite, Rapunzoycite, let down your long hair," and a long
ponytail of golden hair fell almost to the ground. Malachite saw the
witch climb up the hair and disappear through the window, and he made up
his mind he would wait until she had gone and see if he could do the
same.
So after Beryl left, he stood where she had been and called,
"Rapunzoycite, Rapunzoycite, let down your long hair."
When the copper ponytail came tumbling down, Malachite climbed up
as Beryl had done and found to his astonishment the most beautiful girl
he had ever seen. She had deep green eyes framed by long lashes, fair
skin, and a delicate figure framed by her long, glorious hair.
Malachite was instantly enchanted by her.
"Who are you?" asked Zoycite. "Do you know Beryl?"
"Only from the stories I've heard," he replied. "I am the
king's son, Malachite."
"The king?" asked Zoycite.
"Yes, my dear. I am a prince. Surely you know of the royal
family?"
Zoycite flushed. This Malachite was very handsome, and she felt a
strange reaction to him. He seemed like someone she could trust. "I
do not know much about the outside world. I have lived most of my life
in confinement, forbidden to talk to strangers or to wander free," she
admitted softly.
How sad, thought Malachite. Such a lovely girl, kept in
captivity. Well, talking to her would certainly be a pleasure. "Do
you mind if I stay for awhile, sweet one?" he asked.
Zoycite shook her head, and indicated that he could sit.
"We won't be caught, will we?" asked Malachite. He hated the
thought of that witch taking her anger out on such a pretty creature.
"No," said Zoycite. "We have plenty of time. Beryl only comes
by once a day to bring me a meal. Then she is gone until the next
afternoon."
Malachite sat down beside Zoycite on a bench in the little tower
room. They talked for a long time and then the prince left, promising
to come again. Zoycite waved as Malachite faded into the sunset -
streaked horizon. She looked forward to Malachite's visits, for she had
been feeling lonely. Malachite told her all about the world outside the
tower.
"Do you know of a little cottage at the edge of the woods?"
Zoycite asked him one afternoon.
Malachite wasn't sure. "There are many little cottages, my
dear."
"It's right near the witches' garden," she added.
He thought for a moment. "Yes, I think I do," said Malachite.
"Though I tend to stay away from there. Beryl is certainly not known
for her hospitality. Why do you ask?"
"I used to be kept within Beryl's wall of thorns, and in that
cottage nearby there is a handsome man and a woman who looks like me. I
think they are my father and mother."
"Why do you not live with them?" asked Malachite.
"Beryl told me that they did not want me," replied Zoycite.
"But I can't believe it's true."
"I will visit this cottage and find out," said Malachite.
Malachite found that the couple was indeed Zoycite's family, and
they did love her very much. When he told this to Zoycite, she was very
happy. Malachite often visited Zoycite's parents to let them know she
was all right and exchanged messages back and forth between them.
Zoycite learned all about the loving parents she was forbidden to live
with, and Malachite gave her a companionship that she never knew she
could have.
Days went by, and they fell in love.
One day Zoycite asked Beryl, "Why is it that you are so unkind
compared to other people? The handsome prince who comes is much nicer
than you."
At this, Beryl flew into a rage. She took Zoycite deep into the
forest to a lonely spot, and told her that she must stay there without
food or shelter. Beryl cut Zoycite's long ponytail to her waist, and
hurried back to the tower with a long mass of hair in her claws,
determined to put an end to the prince.
Late that afternoon, when Malachite came by, he called out as
usual,
"Rapunzoycite, Rapunzoycite let down your long hair."
Beryl, who had secured the ponytail inside the window, threw it
down. Malachite climbed up eagerly, only to be confronted with the ugly
wicked Beryl.
"Aha," she cackled, "so you are the visitor who has been coming
to see my little Rapunzoycite. I will make sure you don't see her
again." Beryl hissed and tried to scratch out his eyes.
Malachite leaped out of the high window, but he was not killed,
for he landed in a clump of thorny bushes. He was badly scratched,
however, and his eyes hurt so he could not see. He walked blindly into
the forest, feeling his way with his hands.
After several days of wandering and suffering he heard a voice
just like the one he had heard from the tower. Recognizing the sound,
he followed it and came upon Zoycite who was singing as she picked
berries to eat in the forest. He ran towards her, calling her name, and
she came and kissed him. As she did so, he was healed and he could see
again.
"Zoycite, I've found you again," he said, hugging her close. He
looked into her deep green eyes, which were sparkling happily. "We
will never be apart now."
Malachite guided Zoycite back to her parent's cottage, where he
told his story of what happened at the tower. A happy reunion and then
a grand wedding took place. Zoycite went to Malachite's castle and
lived with him for many years. The purity and strength of their love
destroyed the evil witch Beryl, who could not stand against its power.
No more would she separate Zoycite and the ones she loved.