Chapter V: A Fairy Friend
Link’s reasons for beginning to
believe that the hour of his revelation was soon approaching came on the night
when he trudged into an inn from the pouring rain and decided to stay and wait
until the weather cleared. He had boarded at this particular
establishment on a previous occasion and found that its patrons were not always
of the best sorts: gamblers, thieves, prostitutes, most of them worked out of or
could be found hanging about the halls and stairs of the Gilded Goblet.
He put a few coins on the
counter and shouldered past the smirking faces and tawdry inquiries of the women
who haunted the stairwell.
“It’s been a long while since I
seen you here, handsome.”
“Just staying the night,” he
replied with a smile and a nod.
“Alone? That’s too bad.”
“Shame for such a good-looking
man like you to spend the night all by your lonesome.”
“Yeah. In that big, cold bed.”
“We could warm it up for you.”
“Special two-for-one deal we’re
having tonight!”
“We’d certainly keep your hands
full.”
“And your mouth!”
There was a burst of raucous
giggles, and Link tried to conceal his eagerness to be rid of them
until he reached his room. “This is where I get off, ladies,” he said upon
arriving.
“Really? You haven’t even paid
yet.”
“Oh, shut up, Rucia,” one of the
other girls snapped.
“I was jesting.”
“Good-night, ladies,” Link said,
stepping into his room.
“Sleep tight.”
“Be sure to let us know if you
get lonely!”
“I’ll do just that.”
The door closed. The girls
moped and made their way back downstairs, complaining to one another. “So much for that one. If he were the
last man on earth the entire race would be doomed.”
“I told you you’d never
make it with him.”
“Snog off.”
“He don’t sleep with anybody.”
“You suppose he’s queer?”
“No, just . . . different.”
“Sounds queer to me.”
“He seems sad.”
“Must be sad to be wanderin’
round all the time.”
“Aye, at least even us strollers
got a place to call home.”
“I don’t think he’s sad.”
“Why not? He’s got every reason
to be.”
“Maybe he’s already got a girl.”
“Or maybe he’s lost one.”
“Ohhhhhhhhh,” they all said in
unison, followed by a brief silence.
“Well, if I had a rupee for
every man I’ve lost I’d be the queen of this whole land.”
“I hear you, sister.”
“Aye, let’s hit the bar. There’s
always fair game there.”
“Ugh. You may call it
fair. They’re mostly fat and ugly.”
“Now, girls, remember: ‘fair’ is all in the
eye of a well-paid beholder.”

Link waited until he could no
longer hear voices before tossing his knapsack upon the small wooden bed and
lighting the lantern by his bedside. He removed his threadbare green cloak—soaked but otherwise intact—and hung it on a peg by the fireplace.
Taking up the lantern, he crouched before the hearth and kindled a fire to warm
the chill in the dreary room. Once the fire was steadily burning, he stripped down to the skin and hung his clothes to dry. He shook his head, wringing out the excess rainwater from his touseled blond hair. Then he wrapped himself in the rough blanket from the bed and sat before the fire, rubbing his hands over the chilled, moist flesh
of his arms to warm himself faster.
He turned his head and gazed out
of the poorly-molded glass window panes at the unpleasant night outside,
grateful for the fire and dry bed no matter how unsavory the reputation of this
inn.
For a long while he sat before
the hearth, gazing into the hypnotic orange flames and reflecting pensively upon
his travels, on this day of days particularly, for it marked the anniversary of
his departure from the Lost Wood, two long years ago. It felt much longer to
Link, more like three or four. Time was beginning to blur to him, and if he had
not left upon his sixteenth year he would have surely forgotten how old he was.
Of course, he never knew his actual date of birth; the Kokiri had decided upon
the day that he was first brought to the Lost Wood to suffice for this, and for
all Link knew they might be a year or two off, give or take.
I could be eighteen, sixteen,
twenty . . . I might never know for certain. I suppose it doesn’t really matter. After all, age is only a number,
isn’t it? All I know is that I am caught in between, too old to be a child and
yet too young to be a man . . .
His thoughts returned to Saria,
and he went to his knapsack and produced a leather pouch. Within it lay his most
precious and priceless possession: the ocarina that she had given him. Reseating
himself before the fire, he placed the ocarina to his lips and began to softly
play a beautiful yet sorrowful song, a song from Kokiri Village, full of fond
memories and unforgotten friendships. He poured out his heart and all of his
sorrow into the wistful melody, for he had long ago decided that he was too old
to weep. And so the ocarina cried his tears for him.
He was startled from his melodic
eulogy by a door slamming down the hall and footsteps thumping down the stairs. Raised voices greeted his ears. All the activity made Link curious. He slipped his ocarina back
into its pouch and took a dry pair of leggings out of his knapsack, hastily pulling them on
and stepping outside his room. He descended the stairs with growing interest to find a
small mob crowded about a table.
“Now, now!” an old man’s voice
exclaimed. “Don’t go pokin’ it like that! Give it some air, you chowder heads!”
“Looks like it’s dead to me,”
someone said.
“I’ve never seen a live one
before . . .”
“They don’t usually live round
these parts.”
“Poor thing. Did it drown?”
“Must’ve just washed down from
the rain gutters.”
“I’ll give you 200 rupees for
it!”
“You’re mad! It’s as dead as
your brain, Rosco!”
“Not as dead as you’re about to
be-!”
“Oh, shut yer yap. I’ll give ya 125,
best offer.”
Link elbowed his way through the
throng and found the old man who had spoken earlier sitting down, dabbing at a
small, rain-drenched something lying upon a towel. It took a few seconds for
Link to realize that he was looking at a half-drowned fairy.
His hair abruptly stood on end.
He had seen them all the time
during his living with the Kokiri, but this was the first he had ever seen with
its halo of light almost nearly extinguished. The body of the small being
could actually be seen, such a tiny and delicate-looking thing with pale, almost pure
white skin and pale yellow hair, probably as long as his thumb. It was laid out
on the towel, its wings limp as wet paper, barely glowing, a sign that it was
desperately clinging to life. Upon closer inspection, Link saw that it was a
female fairy.
“Excuse me,” he said, suddenly
compelled for an unknown reason to save the poor creature or take down everyone
who stood in his way, “I’ve lived around fairies my whole life. I think I can
help.”
“You?” the old man asked,
raising bushy gray eyebrows. “Well, all right. But I don’t think it will do much
good. I believe she’s already beyond our help.” He surrendered his position
at the table and Link sat down in his place.
He very gently picked the
weightless body from the towel and held her in his hands. People stopped talking
and stared. Link, who by some odd impulse felt the urge to narrate, explained to
them, “The ties between humans and
fairies are deeper than you think. There is an old legend that tells of how when
the Goddesses were creating people to populate the new world, they started by
making the fairies, which were perfect in every way. But there was a curious
fairy by the name of Ket, and he often disobeyed the rules set by the Great
Fairies to satisfy his curiosity. Eventually the Great Fairies were forced to
take his wings from him, but they were merciful in their punishment; they made
Ket larger than the rest of the fairies so that he would not be impaired by his
small size.
“So he lived, and he walked the
earth and was still great friends with his fairy brothers and sisters. But Ket
grew lonely after hundreds of years, and he went to the Goddesses and implored
them for a companion. The Goddesses agreed, but in turn he would have to trade
his divine gift of eternal life. Ket was uncertain, but the Goddesses showed to
him the image of his companion, whose name became Lan, and she was so beautiful
that he immediately fell in love with her and gave up immortality to live with
her on the earth.
“And so the legend goes that
when the Goddesses saw the children of Ket and Lan they were filled with love
for them, and moulded the bodies of humans in their image. Some people believe
that the children of Ket and Lan mixed blood with that of divine-born humans,
thus making certain people especially sensitive to fairies and fairy-kind. It is
believed than anyone who carries a drop of Ket’s blood has the power to heal
fairies, for he was a great lover of his kind.”
Rosco scratched his head. “I’ve
never heard that one before.”
“So I guess you think you’ve got
a bit of fairy blood in ya, eh lad?”
“Yeah, where’d you hear that,
anyway?”
“Old Kokiri legend,” said Link.
“Everyone knows it where I come from.”
“Kokiri?”
“Never heard of the place.”
“Do you mean Kakariko, the
Sheikah village?”
“Will you shut up with your
blathering, Ros? You’re irritating the shit out’ve everyone.”
“No I’m not!”
While the crowd bickered, Link
returned his attention to the fairy in his hands. Her glow had grown stronger,
probably more from the warmth of his hands than from any amount of fairy blood
in his veins. Then to his surprise, the fairy stirred and sputtered, heaving out
a great amount of water (at least a thimble’s worth). She held onto Link’s thumb
as she crawled to her knees, still coughing and flitting her wings weakly. Once
she had gotten the water out of her system, she slid herself across Link’s palm
and blithely took up the cuff of his shirt sleeve, drying off with it like a towel.
Link was transfixed by the
fairy, and he felt lost in one of those moments of his again, those eerie déjà
vu flashes that made it seem as if the whole world had stopped but he was still
in motion. The fairy was drying her short white-blonde hair and gazing absently
at Link’s palm when she suddenly stopped and said in a high, familiar
voice, “I know these hands. They have held me many times before . . .”
She looked up at the young man
with her pale blue fairy-eyes. “Link!” she said with happiness in her voice.
Link’s head was suddenly
swimming. He felt dizzy. The room was still but he was moving.
The fairy stood upon his open
palm and cried, “Link! Do you remember? It’s me, Navi!”
He opened his mouth to answer,
but no sound came out. The world before his eyes went black, and the last thing
he was aware of was the sound of his own body as it hit the floor.
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