
All mirrors are magic, of course. Some are more magic than others, that’s all, so we call them magic mirrors. This distinguishes them from the mirrors we look at so often that we forget about their magic.
Several mirrors were made which would show any scene requested, or answer questions about things far away. The most famous of these is undoubtedly that owned by Snow White’s great enemy, the Wicked Queen. What is not widely known is that that villainous woman’s sister owned a similar mirror.
The Princess LaDoro, as she was known, was very, very beauitful. So as soon as she could, she moved very, very far away from her sister. She knew what kind of person was her sister, and understood it was not healthy to be so beautiful.
In a distant land, then, LaDoro settled in a high castle. People flocked to see the beautiful noblewoman who had come to live among them: a tall woman with black hair, brilliant round eyes, and a form and figure as near to perfect as any human being had a right to expect. She was widely believed to be the fairest woman in all the land. LaDoro herself knew this to be true, as she could go to her bedroom, throw back the curtain that hung in front of the mirror, and inquire, “Mirror, Mirror, close at hand: Who’s the fairest in the land?”
The mirror would always reply, “In all this land, as I can see, lives none more beautiful than thee.”
LaDoro was thus able to live happily for several years, which was rather surprising. For she was, deep down, very nearly as wicked as her older sister, and knew a great deal of unpleasant magic. This combination will eventually get anyone into trouble.
What happened was that Princess LaDoro grew ambitious. “Mirror, Mirror, tell me true about my neighbor countries too,” she asked one day. She learned that she was the most beautiful in her land and all the lands that touched it as well. On the following day, it turned out that she was also the most beautiful person in all the countries that touched the countries that touched her country. Eventually, though, the mirror had to confess.
“In a land four lands from me lives a woman lovelier than thee.”
“What?” she shrieked. “Show her to me! At once!”
The mirror showed her, at once, a woman named Rose O’Pink, who had red hair and bright eyes and a figure that was, though not all that much like LaDoro’s, as nearly perfect in its own way as the princess’s was in its fashion. What’s more, this woman had a smile that glowed, as she was obviously dressing for her wedding.
Princess LaDoro had to admit that Rose O’Pink was very beautiful indeed. “In fact,” she said, “If you happen to be one of those people who like red hair, I can see where someone might say she is the better looking of the two of us. It hardly matters, though. Once she’s burdened with a husband and a dozen or so children, her beauty will fade.”
“Nay, princess, she is one of those who with the years more lovely grows,” the mirror said.
This used up the princess’s fairly small store of good nature. “Then I will call upon evil spirits to descend and tear away her beauty! They will pull her hair out by the….”
“You cannot” said the mirror, “For her parents’ house has sayings that….”
“Silence!” ordered the princess. “Just show me, without more poetry and…oh, weasels!”
It was the custom in Rose O’Pink’s part of the world to paste quotations from the Holy Book over the doors and windows of every house. The people who lived there were then free from danger from any but the very worst of evil spirits.
“But she is to be married,” growled the princess. “She won’t be part of her parents’ household then.”
Knowing how easily glass can be broken, the mirror aid nothing, but showed the princess a picture of the wedding guests, bringing pieces of paper with the sayings on them, and pasting these to the walls of the house in which Rose O’Pink and her new husband were to live.
LaDoro just stood there, rubbing her perfect chin. “I could do it,” she murmured. “I know I could. If, at the very second her parents give her away, but she is not yet wed…. But no. I shall simply attend the wedding, and congratulate her on her great beauty.”
With that, she donned her finest gown and, speaking a spell, stepped into the mirror. Seconds later, she rose from a pillow of pink smoke at the little village wedding. She chose pink smoke as this would neither smudge nor clash with her dress.
The crowd at the wedding guessed at once who she was. A woman with so much beauty and so much magic could hardly be a secret even four lands away. Her arrival worried them, since magical beauties did not have good reputations.
“Welcome!” called the groom, moving so as to keep the wedding cake between himself and the uninvited guest. “What can we do for you, My Lady?”
LaDoro ignored him, and strolled over to face Rose O’Pink. The soft brown eyes of the most beautiful woman for miles in every direction met the cold black ones of the second most beautiful woman.
The princess spoke with gentle words. “I spend long hours at my magic mirror,” she told the bride, “Seeking out the most beautiful people in the world and doing what I can to make their lives easier. Allow me to add my blessing on this occasion.”
Rose O’Pink could really see no way to stop her. “Please do, My Lady.”
LaDoro raised her hands to the sky. The wedding guests stepped back, seeing the clouds gather above the bride. But the princess simply called out, “Sun, shine warmly on this little house and those who live in it. Blow softly, wind: let there be no hurricanes, but ever a gentle breeze to soothe their spirits. Rain, mind your business, and see that they have water when they need it. But keep your floods to yourself.”
This was so obviously a matter of good will that the guests cheered. They enjoyed a perfectly splendid wedding, with food and drink for all. Princess LaDoro had never tasted rhubarb wine before. She didn’t really taste it this time, because all the while she ate and drank, she was smiling at Rose O’Pink, and hating every hair in the fair bride’s eyelashes.
After the wedding, she went home. The people in her own land thought she was the same as she was before the trip. She was certainly just as beautiful, and grew more so with each passing day. They knew she still had magic, and came every day to ask for favors. As long as they remembered to tell the princess she was not only beautiful but that it was impossible to believe anyone anywhere in the world could be more lovely, LaDoro would do little magical things for them, and send them on her way.
What they did not know was that whenever the princess was alone, she would go to her magic mirror, and ask to be shown a particular cottage in a village four lands away. LaDoro did this so often, in fact, that she hardly ever remembered to look at herself.
She looked at the rosy-cheeked children as the family grew, studied the friends of the family as they visited. Everyone who came into view was warmed not only by the gentle sunshine but by the no less gentle warmth of Rose’s smile, soothed not just by the gentle breeze but by the gentle manner of the lady of the house. Rose’s eyes were bright as they looked around at the tidy, happy home.
The princess’s eyes were cold. As she watched, though, a cold beautiful smile would creep up her perfect cheeks. For the same sun that warmed the roses in the cheeks of the children was drying out the paste which held the holy sayings to the house. The gentle breeze that ruffled the hair of Rose and her husband was tugging at the edges of the bits of paper, loosening them just a little each day.
Rose O’Pink and her husband might have noticed these things: this was the one possibility LaDoro feared. But if they noticed, they never put more paste on the guardian mottos. In a house full of children, it is possible to look at something every day and not see it, or, seeing it, not think about it.
The children grew taller, and Rose’s face grew more dazzling. The princess’s eyes grew keener, watching those bits of paper above the doors and windows. One day, LaDoro’s servants heard her cry out. They did not come to her to ask what had happened; she had given orders that they were never to enter the room where she kept her magic mirror.
“Ah!” was what the princess had cried. “Ah! Ah!”
The motto over one window had come loose entirely, and dropped to the ground. The gentle breezes LaDoro had blessed the house with blew it out onto the street, where a passing cart crushed it into the mud.
“Ah!” the princess cried again, rubbing her palms together.
She did not leave the mirror all that day, fearing that someone might perhaps notice the fallen motto. But night fell too, and the window remained unprotected. As the moon rose, she hurried to cabinets around the room and assembled her mightiest charms and tokens. A little black cauldron went on the floor. Behind it she set up a tall yellow pole with a little dish at the top. LaDoro cast some curious red sticks into this dish, and set them alight.
The light from this little fire touched the magic mirror and bounced down into the center of the black cauldron. In this there was nothing but a little blood from a snake, dirt from a grave, and twisted slips of paper on which she had written quite different sayings from those which had been pasted on the home of Rose O’Pink.
So little paper was there that the fire the reflected light started should have burned out at once. Yet the flame grew and grew until, but for the power of Princess LaDoro, they might have consumed the whole castle.
LaDoro whispered certain words. From the cauldron rose a ball of unlight, so dark that the great fire was dimmed, and the princess felt as if the eyes were being sucked from her head. The magic mirror reflected this unlight, making the darkness even deeper. From the darkness was born a deep grey egg, which rose to the ceiling and then cracked open in a shower of ash and cinder. Then an evil spirit, burning with a fire that gave no light, stood before her. Each of its fingers had a hand, and each of its eyes held a face.
LaDro was quite exhausted by now: these things had taken most of her power to accomplish. But she was strong enough to rise and point to the mirror, where the little house now appeared.
“Go,” she ordered. “Take this house as your own. But first find the woman who lives there. Rip away her beauty. Take away her joy. Blast her comfort. But do not kill her. Let her live long years yet, as many as my hatred will bestow, in which every second stretches to an eternity of pain, of horror, and of ugliness.”
The demon’s voice was like the sharpest thunder. “I can attack no such house. They have the sayings pasted over the doors and windows.”
“But see!” LaDoro pointed again. “There is no paper over the window at the left side of the house. The motto fell this morning and was lost in the mud. Go now, and do my bidding.”
The demon looked onto LaDoro’s eyes and she knew, with what was almost a stab of pain, that her beauty meant nothing to him. “If it is as you say,” the evil spirit thundered again, “I shall do as you command. But if I cannot enter, you know the law. I will not be denied, and will return here to do to you what you have ordered for this woman.”
LaDoro used her remaining strength to stand as tall as she could, and flung a hand toward the mirror. “Go!”
The evil spirit went. LaDoro sank into a chair, her eyes upon the scene in the mirror.
The village four lands away was struck by the worst storm it had felt since that golden day when the magical princess turned up unexpectedly at Rose O’Pink’s wedding. Years had passed since the thunder had been so loud or the rain so harsh. The evil spirit flew around and around the village, glorying in the fear brought on by the storm. Then he spotted the little cottage.
He swept across the cottage and its garden, his wind tearing down bits of the garden wall and bending trees to the ground. To the little window on the left side of the house he came and, as he had been told, no paper waited above it. The evil spirit laughed, reaching out to tear the window away. Then he howled.
Inside the house, the family heard no more than the howl of a mighty wind, hut outside, in the storm, a pair of rats tipped over from sheer terror and wiggled their toes in the air. The evil spirit howled again. The rain stopped and the thunder was silenced as he fell back into the muddy garden, shaking his smoking fingers.
Rain, breeze, and sun had done their work so long on the little college so long at LaDoro’s command that the ink had seeped through the cheap paper of the blessings posted by the wedding guests. Though paper and paste were gone, and the ink had washed away at last, the sun had bleached the boards until the blessings were printed on the house itself, and the demon could by no means enter.
Screaming with pain, the demon flew from the village, taking the storm along, back through the mirror to the princess who had done him this damage. And the howling that echoed through her high, cold, beautiful castle that night frightened more than rats.
The magic mirror is still there, free to anyone who will enter the castle and take it. But no one in that land ventures near the castle. The echoes of howling inside have not subsided even to this day.


















































