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For centuries, scholars who would deny the
existence of the unicorn pointed out that if the animal had actually ever lived, it
would have been listed as one that was taken aboard
Noah's ark before the great Flood. Therefore, they concluded, because the unicorn was not so named,
obviously no such animal had ever existed. This fantasy story finds a way
around these scholarly conclusions. |
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he
rain was still falling by the time he reached the little wooden shack that stood
in the center of the green, fertile valley. He opened his cloak for an instant
to knock at the door, not really expecting a reply. |
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But it opened, pulled over the roughness of the
rock floor by great hairy hands. "Come in," a voice commanded him. "Hurry! Before
this rain floods me out." |
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"Thank you," the traveler said, removing the soggy
garment that had covered him and squeezing out some of the water. "It's good to
find a dry place. I've come a long way." |
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"Not many people are about in this weather," the
man told him, pulling at his beard with a quick, nervous gesture. |
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"I came looking for you." |
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"For me? What is your name?" |
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"You can call me Shem. I come from beyond the mountains." |
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The bearded man grunted. "I don't know the name. What do you seek?" |
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Shem sat down to rest himself on a pale stone seat. "I hear talk that you have
two fine unicorns here, recently brought from Africa." |
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The man smiled proudly. "That is correct. The only such creatures in this part
of the world. I intend to breed them and sell them to the farmers as beasts of
burden." |
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"Oh?" |
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"They can do the work of strong horses and at the same time use their horn to
defend themselves against attack." |
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"True," Shem agreed. "Very true. I... I don't suppose you'd want to part with
them...?" |
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"Part with them! Are you mad, man? It cost me money to bring them all the way
from Africa!" |
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"How much would you take for them?" |
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The bearded man rose from his seat. "No amount, ever! Come back in two years
when I've bred some. Until then, be gone with you!" |
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"I must have them, sir." |
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"You must have nothing! Be gone from here now before I take a club to you!"
And
with those words he took a menacing step forward. |
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Shem retreated out the door, back into the rain, skipping lightly over a rushing
stream of water from the higher ground. The door closed on him, and he was
alone. But he looked out into the fields, where a small, barn-like structure
stood glistening in the downpour. |
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They would be in there, he knew. |
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He made his way across the field, sometimes sinking to his ankles in puddles of
muddy water. But finally he reached the outbuilding and went in through a worn,
rotten door. |
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Yes, they were there . . . Two tall and handsome beasts, very much like horses, but
with longer tails and with that gleaming, twisted horn shooting straight up from
the center of their foreheads. Unicorns—one of the rarest of God's creatures. |
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He moved a bit closer, trying now to lure them out of the building without
startling them. But there was a noise, and he turned suddenly to see the bearded
man standing there, a long staff upraised in his hands. |
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"You try to steal them," he shouted, lunging forward. |
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The staff thudded against the wall, inches from Shem's head. "Listen, old
man..." |
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"Die! Die, you robber!" |
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But Shem leaped to one side; around the bearded figure of wrath, and through the
open doorway. Behind him, the unicorns gave a fearful snort and trampled the
earthen floor with their hoofs. |
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Shem kept running, away from the shack, away from the man with the staff, away
from the fertile valley. |
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After several hours of plodding over the rain-swept hills, he came at last upon
his father's village, and he went down among the houses to the place where the
handful of people had gathered. |
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And he saw his father standing near the base of the great wooden vessel, and he
went up to him sadly. |
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"Yes, my son?" the old man questioned, unrolling a long damp scroll of
parchment. |
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"No unicorns, Father." |
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"No unicorns," Noah repeated sadly, scratching out the name on
his list. "It is
too bad. They were handsome beasts . . ." |
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From
"The Last Unicorns" by Edward D. Hoch;
100 Great Fantasy Short
Stories, 1984
Copyright 1958 by Columbia Publications, Inc.; Renewed by the
author
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