Page 1 of Frogged




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Dedication

  The Art of Being a Princess: The Foreword

  A Princess Is Always Kind and Helpful

  A Princess Should Be a Good Listener

  A Princess Ought to Be Fearless

  A Princess Should Be Quick-Witted

  A Princess Knows How to Engage in Interesting Conversation

  A Princess Must Be Assertive and Persuasive, Though Never Pushy

  A Princess Should Always Be Open to New Experiences

  A Princess Is as Good as Her Word

  A Princess Is Loyal to Her Friends in Need

  A Princess Should Know How to Dress Properly for Every Occasion

  A Princess Watches Out for Others

  A Princess Is Never at a Loss for Words

  Afterword: All the Best Princess Stories End “And Then They All Lived Happily Ever After”

  Read More from Vivian Vande Velde

  About the Author

  Copyright © 2013 by Vivian Vande Velde

  All rights reserved. For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.

  Harcourt Children’s Books is an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

  www.hmhco.com

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.

  ISBN 978-0-547-94215-5

  eISBN 978-0-547-94217-9

  v2.0214

  To the handbell choir at St. Theodore’s—

  where we always like to announce

  and celebrate good news

  The Art of Being a Princess:

  The Foreword

  (Are you kidding? Nobody reads the foreword)

  “One should always strive,” Princess Imogene read in The Art of Being a Princess (third revised edition), “to be the sort of princess about whom it is said: ‘She was as good as she was beautiful.’”

  “Ugh,” Princess Imogene said. She slammed the book shut—hating it already, based on the first sentence. Hating the book, hating the writer, hating princesses in general, and most of all hating herself.

  She suspected she was not as good as she could be, since parents, teachers, and assorted courtiers liked to point out that she was impatient, that she had a tendency to daydream, and that she was prone to ask “Why?” a bit more often, apparently, than was appropriate. She also knew she was not beautiful. Her own mother frequently assured her that one day she would be beautiful, that one day she would no longer be twelve and gawky, that one day she would fill in, blossom out, and grow into her body.

  “Grow into my body?” Imogene had once made the mistake of echoing. “You make me sound like a tadpole or a caterpillar.”

  “Or a maggot,” her little brother, Will, helpfully suggested with all of a seven-year-old boy’s eagerness and tact.

  Their mother, who was prone to sick headaches, had declared her need to lie down for a bit.

  Imogene wondered if sick headaches were something The Art of Being a Princess encouraged. Or maybe that topic would be covered in The Art of Being a Queen.

  As for future beauty, there was no way to know whether her mother’s assurances about “someday” were based on something real her mother saw in her, or if, in fact, her mother was just being a mother.

  So Imogene was neither as beautiful nor as good as a princess should be, and therefore she found the book infuriating.

  She was, however, good enough that she managed to resist her inclination to fling The Art of Being a Princess across her room. But she did toss it forcibly onto her bed, from which it bounced off, then skittered beneath.

  The book had been a gift from her mother, in anticipation of Imogene’s thirteenth birthday in another two weeks.

  “If you start today and read a chapter a day,” her mother had said this morning, with such bright optimism that Imogene couldn’t help but suspect it had been practiced, “you’ll have it finished the day before your birthday, and you’ll be all ready.”

  Ready.

  Meaning ready to be the sort of princess who didn’t drop things, spill things, or trip over things. The sort of princess who always knew what to say and when not to say anything. The sort of princess who wasn’t an embarrassment to her royal parents.

  Imogene couldn’t imagine why her mother thought two weeks of reading would prepare her to be a proper princess when twelve years, eleven months, two weeks, and half a morning hadn’t.

  But her mother had looked so enthusiastic about the gift, so pleased with herself, so hopeful, that Imogene hadn’t wanted to hurt her feelings. So she’d pretended interest by opening The Art of Being a Princess and looking over the table of contents. “Well,” she’d said, forcing a little laugh, trying to find the humor in the situation, “twelve chapters in thirteen days: at least I get a day off for good behavior.”

  For a moment, her mother looked puzzled. Her expression moved close to the one that often came right before she announced having one of her headaches. Then she’d said, “The foreword, dear. Don’t forget the foreword.”

  Ahh. The foreword. Imogene generally skipped over books’ forewords, which were most often full of stuff too boring to put into the book itself, things like “This is the history of the entire known universe up until now . . .” And “These are the reasons why this book will be Good for You . . .” And “Thank you to my parents and my grandparents and my great-grandparents and my uncles and aunts and cousins and teachers and neighbors and the little girl who sat two rows over from me in the third grade . . .”

  Maybe, Imogene thought, she could skip over the boring bits.

  Mothers are legendary for being able to read the thoughts of their children at just the wrong moment. “You can read the foreword and then each chapter, one a day, in the morning, and then we can meet in the solarium for lunch together, just the two of us, and we can discuss any questions you might have.”

  “Wow,” Imogene said. “That sounds like . . .” She couldn’t come up with any word besides torture, and she knew better than to say that. She pasted a smile onto her face and nodded.

  Apparently her mother’s mind-reading ability had faded out by then. Either that or she, too, knew when not to say anything. In any case, she had leaned forward and given an air kiss in the vicinity of Imogene’s cheek, then motioned one of her ladies in waiting to come over to discuss something-or-other, and Imogene had gone to her room.

  First, Imogene had worked on the picture she’d been drawing for the past week. It was the view out of her window: the castle courtyard, the stables across the way, the wall that surrounded the castle, the moat beyond, the trees forming the edge of the forest, the stream that came down from the hills that showed way off in the distance. The more she fiddled with the picture, the less pleased she was with her results, so she gave it up for fear she’d do something to ruin the whole thing.

  Next she worked a bit on the dragon she was embroidering in the corner of a handkerchief for her brother, Will—embroidery being one of those princessly pursuits everyone seemed to favor and that Imogene actually enjoyed. Besides, Will, despite being a prince, was also a seven-year-old, and he really could use a handkerchief more often than he did. But today the thread seemed inclined to knot and break, and Imogene realized for the first time in a long while that she didn’t so much enjoy doing the stitchery as having finished a project.

  After that she found a chunk of bread in the pocket of the dress she’d been wearing yesterday, bread she’d intended to give to the wainwright’s boy, who looked as though he didn’t get enough to eat. But the bread had gone stale and had bits of l
int stuck on it, so she decided to get another piece at lunch and meanwhile broke this one up and spread the crumbs out on the windowsill for the birds. Apparently the birds weren’t interested today.

  Imogene even considered taking a nap, except she really wasn’t tired.

  Which was how she came to be reading The Art of Being a Princess—the foreword.

  Which started with that stupid line about how a princess should strive to be as good as she was beautiful.

  “A princess can’t help what she is or what she looks like,” Imogene grumbled out loud to the book, as she fetched it back out from under the bed. Her hair, which she believed had more of a tendency to get mussed and tangled than anybody else’s, got mussed and tangled.

  She opened the book once more and thumbed through the pages. Her eye skimmed over paragraphs about girls with beautiful and elegant names, names like Sylvianna and Lilybelle and Esmeralda, and Adorabella.

  Imogene had been named after her grandmothers, both of whom she loved dearly. They were two perfectly lovely ladies—who had perfectly awful names. Grandmother Imogene was her father’s mother, who had been named after her grandmother, so the name had already been almost a hundred years old-fashioned by the time Princess Imogene got it. And her mother’s mother was Eustacia—who admitted she had ­no idea what her own parents were thinking when they named her.

  It was a sad state of affairs, Princess Imogene Eustacia Wellington thought, when Imogene was the better of the two names you had to choose from.

  Still, it was getting close to lunchtime, and it was no good saying this was a dull book told in a preachy, annoying style and that she wouldn’t learn anything from it, but only be made to feel even more inadequate than she already did. So Imogene read the foreword, whose best quality was that it wasn’t really as long as it seemed to be.

  On her way to the solarium, Imogene worked out three things she could say, because she knew how discussions with her mother went. The queen would ask, as though it were a conversation, not a test, “Now, Imogene, tell me something you learned from your reading . . . Umm-hmm, and was there anything else . . . ? Very nice. And was that all?”

  So Imogene would tell her:

  1. A princess should be as good as she is beautiful.

  2. Being a princess is a duty and an honor.

  3.

  Hmm . . .

  3.

  Well . . .

  3. A princess . . .

  No . . .

  3.

  Sigh. It had been such a boring foreword, and the thoughts on the page had already evaporated from her mind.

  Imogene wondered if her mother would be paying enough attention to notice if Imogene reworked number 1. Then it could be

  1. A princess should be as good as she is beautiful.

  2. Being a princess is a duty and an honor.

  3. A princess should be as beautiful as she is good.

  No. No matter how positive Imogene tried to be about her chances, she knew she probably wouldn’t get away with that.

  All right, then. She would divide number 2.

  1. A princess should be as good as she is beautiful.

  2. Being a princess is a duty.

  3. Being a princess is an honor.

  All right, then.

  Imogene marched into the solarium and saw one of the ladies in waiting, not her mother.

  “Oh, Princess Imogene,” the lady said. “Your mother had to settle a dispute between two of the village women. She offers her apologies for disappointing you and said to assure you that she’ll be happy to discuss two chapters with you tomorrow.”

  All that for nothing.

  “Rats,” Imogene said.

  She was fairly certain that The Art of Being a Princess would disapprove.

  Chapter 1:

  A Princess Is Always Kind and Helpful

  (Okay, but that doesn’t mean she needs to let people walk all over her)

  Princess Imogene considered going to her room to write down the three things she had learned from the foreword while she still remembered them.

  That would be what a good princess would do, she told herself.

  Then she told herself: Fortunate thing for me that I’m only as good as I’m beautiful.

  Anyway, truly good and beautiful princesses could no doubt remember such things without having to take notes. They probably knew them without having to read them.

  So, instead, Imogene headed toward the mill pond, which was her favorite relaxing place. She guessed that The Art of Being a Princess (third revised edition) probably had a whole chapter against princesses at mill ponds.

  There were ducks and a pair of swans in the water, but they seemed to have an uncanny ability to know when she did—and when she did not—have bread in her pockets.

  Imogene sat on the grassy bank and watched her fickle feathered friends gliding through the water.

  Nobody has expectations for you, she thought.

  Lucky things.

  The sun was warm enough to make her comfortably drowsy, and she decided to lie down, even though her mother would fuss about grass stains. Imogene herself had low standards when it came to grass stains. Lying on her back made it easier to study the clouds drifting in the sky and to try to find ducks and geese and swans in them to mirror those in the water. But the best she could come up with was a shape that, sort of, looked like the back end of a dog, and another that could be a three-legged cow—if she tipped her head and squinted a bit.

  From somewhere surprisingly close—surprising because she had not heard anyone approach—a small but gruff voice called: “Princess! Hey, Princess!”

  Guiltily, Imogene jumped to her feet, convinced she was about to get reprimanded for lying down on the grass. But by whom? It was a male voice, and experience told her that most males—including her father—didn’t seem as interested as the females of her acquaintance in what was and what was not proper princess-like behavior. Besides, this voice, despite being a bit gravelly, struck her as being somewhere between that of a child and that of an adult, so she expected to see someone close to her own age.

  Except she saw no one.

  “Hey!” the voice repeated. “Hey, Princess!”

  The voice tickled at the edge of her memory, but she couldn’t quite place it. And it struck her as being . . . well . . . a bit rude, even for a princess with low standards.

  “Who are you?” she asked. “Where are you?”

  “Here,” the voice answered, zeroing in on the second question first. “Near your feet.”

  Near her feet was the tall grass and weeds at the water’s edge, but that was indeed where the voice seemed to be coming from. Had someone swum across the pond? Except . . . the water here was too shallow—and too clogged with marsh weeds—to hide a person.

  For a moment, her mind skittered to the ducks and swans, as though one of them had somehow gained the ability to speak—and to inquire why she hadn’t brought food.

  It was this momentary mental openness to a smaller-than-human speaker that made her notice the frog.

  The frog bounced in place on a lily pad to make sure Imogene was looking at him. “Yeah, that’s right,” the frog said. “Me, over here.”

  “Wow,” Princess Imogene said. “I mean . . . wow.”

  “Yeah, tell me about it,” the frog croaked. “Mind coming down closer? It’s hard for me to shout all the way up to you. I’m getting—you’ll pardon the expression—a frog in my throat.” The frog laughed, a mirthless, braying noise that Imogene couldn’t help but think sounded more donkey than frog.

  Still, she stepped forward and stooped down, even though her shoes squished in the mud and the edge of her dress dipped into the water.

  “Whoa!” the frog said, taking a leap back to the next lily pad. “You got big feet there, Princess! Anybody ever tell you that you got big feet?”

  Actually, her mother had bemoaned the fact that Imogene’s feet weren’t as dainty as they should be, but Imogene didn’t think this
was any of the frog’s business. Instead, she said, “You’re really talking? You, the frog?”

  “A little slow on the uptake, aren’t you, Princess? Yeah, sure, it’s me talking. You see anybody else in, like, conversating distance? Sheesh!”

  “Sorry,” Imogene said. “It’s just . . . you know . . . a bit unexpected.”

  “No kidding!” the frog croaked. “A day ago I was a prince, walking around on two legs. In my own kingdom, which is not this one, of course—though every bit as grand, if I do say so myself. So there I was, as happy as a clam—though maybe under the circumstances I shouldn’t mix my whatta-you-call-’ems?—animal metaphones.”

  “Metaphors,” Imogene corrected.

  “Yeah, whatever, Little Princess Know-It-All,” the frog said. “For someone who’s so smart, you never heard of a prince what gets himself in trouble—through no fault of his own, I might add—with a witch what goes and changes him into a frog?”

  “Well, yes,” Imogene admitted, “though I’ve never personally met either a wi—”

  “Ta-dah!” the frog interrupted, holding his little frog arms out expansively.

  “Where did you say you’re from?” Imogene asked.

  “Different kingdom,” the frog said. “Not this one.”

  “Yes, I understand,” she said. “But what’s the name of your kingdom? I’m just wondering if it’s someplace I’ve heard my father mention—if he knows your father.”