“No,” Cerene said. “You don’t understand. The moon
Helpless yet mesmerized, Shew followed Cerene.
“Hey!” Cerene shouted at the moon as she ran farther in a direction leading to a lake. Her voice echoed in this empty part of the forest. “Can you come down for a moment?” Cerene actually asked the moon.
Shew couldn’t believe herself actually checking if the moon was a girl. The way Cerene insisted on it was inescapable. She talked passionately about crazy things in a way that could turn a blasphemer into a believer.
“Is she waving back at you?” Shew wondered if she’d missed something. All she saw was a round and white plate hanging from the sky. Maybe only Cerene could see the moon in girl form.
“No,” Cerene said disappointedly. “She seems sad today. You know she is a busy girl.”
“How busy could the moon be? It just hangs up there, brooding all night,” Shew knew she was harsh, but she needed to talk reason.
“No, she is very busy,” Cerene insisted, stopping by the lake, which was more of a swamp. “She keeps an eye on the good hearted people who walk the forest at night, watching them from above. If they get attacked by one of the creatures of the night, she descends and fights to protect them.”
The idea of the moon being a girl who descended to protect people at night was insane but also beautiful, Shew thought.
“So why are we here by this swamp?” Shew asked, remembering that she thought the moon smiled at her. “What does the moon have to do with the Rapunzel plant?”
“To turn the Rapunzel plant into ashes we have to wash it with a certain type of water that only the moon can provide,” Cerene said.
“I thought burning something turned it to ashes, not washing it.”
“Not when it comes to my Art,” Cerene said. “If I burn the plant with plain fire, the ashes will not work for creating my magic. It has to be cleaned with Mermaid Milk.”
“Now this is getting odd,” Shew speculated.
“It’s not really Mermaid Milk. It’s just a fancy name,” Cerene winked at her again. “The moon has a spiritual connection with mermaids. I guess it’s because one is up there in the highest sky and the other lives down there in the deepest of the sea. I read about it in some book. The moon is capable of producing a white liquid, the color of
Suddenly, Cerene stopped talking while gazing over Shew’s shoulder. It wasn’t a look of fear in her eyes, but utter fascination.
“Don’t turn around,” Cerene said, gripping Shew’s arm.
Shew could hear something splashing behind her in the swamp.
“Why?” Shew was dying to look back.
“She told me so,” Cerene said, still smiling.
“Who told you so?” Shew didn’t know what to think. Should she be scared, happy, or worried about Cerene’s sanity?
“Why don’t you want her to turn around?” Cerene asked the being in the swamp, but Shew heard no reply.
“She says she doesn’t want to show herself to you,” Cerene explained to Shew.
“She who?”
“One of the mermaids,” Cerene said. “She says you’re a…”
“I’m a what?” Shew pursed her lips.
“No, she isn’t,” Cerene talked to the mermaid—which Shew assumed was imaginary. “Joy is my friend,” she said squeezing Shew’s arm.
“What did she say about me?” Shew demanded and turned around.
With the darkness looming in the Black Forest, and the heavy layer of fog, it was hard to confirm that what she’d seen splashing into the water was a mermaid. Shew saw something flip its tail, but it could have been a big fish in the swamp. Whatever Cerene had been talking to, disappeared underneath the thick layers of the swamp.
“What did she say about me?” Shew turned back to Cerene, demanding an answer.
“Don’t worry about her,” Cerene said. “She said you were part evil and part good, and that you were still indecisive about which side to choose. She rather considers you and enemy to her. That’s why she feared you.”
“How could she think that of me?” Shew said, wondering if all this was Cerene’s imagination, and that Cerene herself was the one who thought that Shew hadn’t chosen a side yet.
Cerene didn’t reply. She had already knelt down with a glass urn filled with white liquid in her hand, pouring it on the Rapunzel plant.
“Where did you get that urn?” Shew was starting to lose her temper.
“From the mermaid, of course,” Cerene said. “Look,” she pointed at the Rapunzel plant turning into ashes in the urn. The ashes looked a bit fiery like Cerene’s aura.
Shew said nothing. She was sure she hadn’t seen that urn with Cerene before.
“Great,” Cerene said, holding her urn with care as if she had just caught the most precious butterfly in it. “Now we’ve got the ashes. Do you remember what the next ingredient is?”
“Oh,” Shew was speechless, “I forgot.”
“That’s fine,” Cerene said. “Remember I told you the first element of the Art is the Heart, which are the ingredients to make magic. The Heart is three parts; ashes and we’ve taken care of that already. Now we need sand and lime.”
“How are we going to get those?” Shew asked.
“Limestone is easy. Follow me,” Cerene ran into the dark of the forest again.
Shew had never seen anyone so comfortable with the forest before. Usually, people were careful walking in the Black Forest for it was a place full of evil creatures, but not Cerene. She could meet the Boogeyman and shake hands with him then walk on, or possibly convince him to fetch her limestone for her Art.
This time, Shew followed Cerene to the School of Sorrow where she worked, cleaning after the teachers and students had gone home. Cerene told her to wait while she went inside. A moment later, she came back with chalk in her hands.
“See?” Cerene showed her the chalk, happily.
“See what? The chalk?”
“Chalk is basically limestone,” Cerene explained. “With a drop from the Mermaid Milk, we got ourselves the second piece of the puzzle. Now we have ashes and lime.”
“That was easy,” Shew mumbled.
“All of it is easy, even the ashes,” Cerene said.
“As long as we’re playing, it’s always easy,” Cerene said as if she had read Shew’s mind.
Cerene poured two drops of Mermaid’s Milk on the chalk. She bit the chalk into small pieces, not worrying about the limestone staining her lips and teeth. She put the chalk, now powder, in the urn and mixed it with the ashes.
“You got chalk on your teeth,” Shew remarked.
“Don’t worry,” Cerene said and started rubbing her teeth with powder chalk left on her lips. “Limestone is good for teeth.”
Shew saw that Cerene was right. After rubbing it a couple of times over her teeth, her teeth whitened and shined.
“Let me see that,” Shew took some of the lime on her forefinger. “This is amazing,” she let out a forced laugh. She remembered collecting a book from one of the victims she’d fed on in the Schloss, and reading that toothpaste was originally made of chalk or lime.
