The
Tell-Tale Tooth
I have often been accused of a deficiency of imagination. It is for such that I hope you will trust
the veracity of this tale. To begin, my
baptismal name is Hansel. My surname is
unimportant. I had lived with my
father, sister Grethel, and stepmother.
We had lived in a small claustrophobic cottage within a wood, as my
father was a mere woodcutter.
Upon my eighth year, during a great famine in the land, I overheard my
stepmother tell my father that they could not support my sister and I. She suggested that we be taken out into the
woods and left to fend for ourselves. I
related this to my sister, and had already formulated a plan to return us
safely home.
The following morn, under the guise of going woodcutting, my stepmother
gave Grethel and I each a crust of bread -- a generous act, considering her
true intentions -- and led us out into the wood. As we walked, I straggled behind, removed my father's rusty
pliers from a pocket, and proceeded to pull one of my teeth. The pain was excruciating, but I found that
the release was almost euphoric. I
placed my tooth on the ground, and did the same with my other teeth, placing
them intermittently along our route, with the root of each tooth pointing
toward the previous tooth.
Eventually, we reached a dark, dreary, cold clearing where our mother lit
a fire, and then left, saying she would look for wood. We then waited, and we became hungry, so
consumed our crusts, which seemed moldy.
After the Moon rose, we followed my teeth, which gleamed with white
enamel and glistened with red blood, back to our cottage, arriving back just as
the sun rose. Our mother met us at the
door and acted as though she were glad at our return, but I knew from the murderous
gleam in her dark, bloodshot eyes that she would try her scheme again.
A short time passed, uneventfully, but, late one night, a night when the
Moon was full and the wind howled through the decrepit shutters of our abode, I
once again overheard my stepmother conversing with my father. Against my father's pleas, she planned to
desert Grethel and I in the wood again.
I searched long for the pliers, but could not find them or anything to
serve in their place. One may wonder
why I would want the pliers, having plucked all my teeth on our previous
outing. My plan this time was to --
with or without her consent -- use the teeth of my dear sister to show the way
home.
The morning came, and the sun shone dully through the trees as my
stepmother led us deep into the wood, deeper than we had ever been before, and,
as we walked, I dropped crumbs of my crust in place of my sister's teeth.
We arrived at another clearing several hours before dusk. Again, my stepmother lit a fire and left us
for dead.
Knowing that we would have a long journey ahead of us, we decided to save
Grethel's crust for later, and to rest until nightfall and Moonrise.
Just as night fell, a chipmunk seemed to emulate the night, and fell,
dead, from a tree, landing in our fire, leaving only one tiny paw outside the
reach of the flames. I beheld within
this paw a crumb. A crust crumb. My crust crumb. I suddenly noticed a dead quiet within the wood, broken only by
the breaking sound of Grethel's crust.
I quickly snatched the piece of crust from her hand and threw it in the
crackling fire. The crusts had been
poisoned.
It was at this time that I, too, became hungry, so I decided that we
should begin trying to find our way home, despite my crumb-trail having been
eaten by the greedy, and now deceased, woodland creatures. We began walking in the direction whence we
came, and, after a time, came upon a dark, foreboding, gothic castle.
Upon closer inspection, I had noticed that the castle was made of
gingerbread, which explained why the towers leaned, nearly falling over, and
why insects crawled all over the structure.
Being desperately famished by this time, Grethel and I quickly began
gnawing on the portcullis. We soon
began to feel deathly sick because of the putrid gingerbread. I felt my self slowly falling into darkness,
and heard Grethel's seemingly lifeless body collapse to the ground beside me...
* * *
* * *
It was dark -- all dark. I endeavored to sit up, but found that I was
enclosed within a wooden box. A
coffin. Panic overtook me. I had been taken for dead, and buried
alive! I could only hope that my
beloved sister did not share my fate, and that she had been killed by the
gingerbread. I opened my mouth to
shriek, but just then, I glimpsed a beam of light out of the corner of my eye.
I looked up toward the hole that gave my only light, and saw only a
gleaming set of flawless teeth. From
then on, I saw very little but these teeth -- not a speck on their surface; not
a shade on their enamel; not an indenture in their edges -- which brought me
food. It was also these teeth – long,
narrow, and excessively white, with the pale lips writhing about them, as in
the very moment of their first terrible development -- which asked me once a
day to produce a finger, to test my plumpness.
I instead put a finger-sized bone that I had found in my box through the
hole, tricking the apparently near-sighted witch into thinking I had never
gained a pound despite all the sumptuous foods she had fed me.
This continued for several weeks, until one day, the coffin had been
flung open, the sudden exposure to light blinding me momentarily. After helping my atrophied body rise from my
box, Grethel told me that she had been held as a slave by the witch. That day, the witch
had designed to eat Grethel instead of my self, so had fired the oven and asked
Grethel to crawl in the opening to feel if it were hot enough to bake
bread. Grethel had suspected the
witch’s motive, and had said that she could not fit, so the witch had showed
her that she her self could fit, and, at this moment, my sister had pushed the
witch into the oven and closed the oven door.
The echoing screams of the witch had been horrible.
We then separated and searched the house for valuables, filling our pockets
with whatever gems, jewels, and coins we could find.
As we were about to leave, we were interrupted by the forlorn sound of a
deep voice that quoth, "Nevermore… shall I see the light of day now that
my accursed mistress is dead." In
the corner was a large cage, in which a giant raven, standing four feet tall,
stood. I learned from the raven that it
had been captured by the witch and forced to sing for her.
I offered the raven its freedom if only it would fly my
sister and my self safely home, to which it agreed. I opened the cage and released the raven, and we exited the
gingerbread castle. My sister and I
mounted the raven's back, and we flew to a great height, from which Grethel
spotted our cottage. During our flight
home, I related to the raven the details of our adventure.
We landed at the front door of the cottage, and our
stepmother stepped out of the house.
The raven, in retribution for how she had treated us, grabbed our
stepmother by the hair and flew off with her, depositing her deeper within the
forest than she had ever left my sister and I.
She was never seen again.
Our father then greeted us happily. My sister opened her pouch and poured the
gems and other valuables she had taken from the witch onto her hand. We would never again live in penury. I opened my pouch and did the same, but all
that fell from the pouch were thirty-two small, white, and ivory-looking
substances -- the witch's teeth, which I had recovered from the oven.