Craig
Shaw Gardner
A
Malady of Magicks
ONE
"
'A wizard is only as good as his spells,' people will often say. It is telling,
however, that this statement is only made by people who have never been wizards
themselves.
Those
of us who have chosen to pursue a sorcerous career know that a knowledge of
spells is only one small facet of the successful magician. Equally vital are a
quick wit, a soothing tongue, and, perhaps most important, a thorough knowledge
of back alleys, underground passageways, and particularly dense patches of
forest, for those times when the spell you knew so well doesn 't quite work
after all."
--THE
TEACHINGS OF EBENEZUM, Volume I
The day
was quietly beautiful, perhaps too much so. For the first time in a week, 1
allowed myself to forget my problems and think only of Alea. Alea! My afternoon
beauty. 1 had only learned her name on the last day we were together, before
she went on
1
2
to, as
she called them, "better things." But as surely as she had left me, 1
knew that we might be reunited. In Vushta, anything might happen.
The
wizard sneezed.
I woke
from my reverie, instantly alert. My master, the wizard Ebenezum, greatest mage
in all the Western Kingdoms, had sneezed. It could only mean one thing.
There
was sorcery in the air!
Ebenezum
waved for me to follow him, his stately and ornate wizard's robes flapping as
he ran. We headed immediately for a nearby copse of trees.
A
hoarse scream erupted from the bushes across the clearing.
"Death
to the wizard!"
The
spear embedded itself in the tree some three feet above my head. Half a dozen
warriors ran screaming from the undergrowth, blood cries on their lips. They
had painted themselves with dark pigments for a particularly fierce appearance,
and they carried great swords as long as their arms.
The
spear seemed to have a few primitive charms painted on it. Oh, so that was all
it was. Just another assassination attempt. In a way, I was disappointed. For a
moment, I had thought it might be something serious.
So it
began again. By this time, I must admit these assassination things had grown
quite tiresome. All thoughts of my afternoon beauty had fled from my mind. As
boringly regular as these attacks had become, it would still not do to become
too lax in our response.
I
looked to my master. The wizard Ebenezum, one of the most learned men upon this
huge continent we now traversed, nodded briskly and held his nose.
3
I
placed my hands in the basic third conjuring position. Taking a deep breath, I
stepped from concealment.
"Halt,
villains!" I cried.
The
warriors did nothing to acknowledge my warning, instead bounding across the
field toward me with redoubled fury. Their leader's tangled blond hair bounced
as he ran, a mobile bird's nest above his brow. He hurled another spear, almost
tripping with the effort. His aim was not very good.
I
quickly wove a magic pattern with my hands. During the last few days of our
headlong flight, Ebenezum had taken what few rest periods we could manage to
teach me some basic sign magic. It was all quite simple, really. After you had
mastered a few easy gestures, earth, air, fire, and water were yours to
command.
Still,
I didn't want to try anything too difficult for my first solo endeavor. Another
spear whistled through the air, almost impaling the leader of the warrior band
from the rear. The leader yelped and stopped his headlong charge. He was close
enough that I could see the anger in his pale blue eyes.
Infuriated,
he spun to lecture his men on appropriate spear-throwing technique. Ebenezum
waved from the trees for me to get on with it. It would be a simple spell,
then. I decided I would move the earth with my magic and create a yawning pit
in which our pursuers would be trapped. I began making the proper movements
with my elbows and left leg, at the same time whistling the first four bars of
"The Happy Woodcutter's Song."
The
warriors screamed as one and ran toward me with even greater speed. I hurried
my spell as well, hopping once, skipping twice, scratching my head,
4
and
whistling those four bars again.
The sky
suddenly grew dark. My magic was working! I pulled my left ear repeatedly,
blowing my nose in rhythmic bursts.
A great
mass of orange dropped from the heavens.
I
paused in my gyrations. What had I done? A layer of orange and yellow covered
the field and the warriors. And the layer was moving.
It took
me a moment to discern the layer's true nature. Butterflies! Somehow, I had
conjured millions of them. They flew wildly about the field, doing their best
to get away from the warriors. The warriors, in turn, sputtered and choked and
waved their arms feverishly about, doing their best to get away from the
butterflies.
I had
made a mistake somewhere in my spell; that much was obvious. Luckily, the
resulting butterfly multitude was enough of a diversion to give me time to
correct my error. I reviewed my movements. I had spent hours perfecting my
elbow flaps. The hop, the skips, the scratch, everything seemed in its place.
Unless I was supposed to lift my right leg rather than my left?
Of
course! How stupid of me! 1 immediately set out to repeat the spell and correct
my mistake.
The
warriors seemed to have won free of the butterflies at last. Breathing heavily,
some leaning on their swords, they gave a ragged yell and staggered forward. I
finished my humming and started to blow my nose.
The sky
grew dark again. The warriors paused in their hesitant charge and looked aloft
with some trepidation.
This
time it rained fish. Dead fish.
The
warriors left with what speed they could
5
muster,
slipping and sliding through a field now covered with crushed butterflies and
thousands of dead haddock. I decided it was time for us to leave as well. From
the smell now rising from the field, the haddock had been dead for quite some
time.
"Excellent,
apprentice!" My master emerged from his place of concealment among the
trees. He still held his nose. "And I had not yet taught you the raining
creatures spell. You show a real talent for improvisation. Though how you
managed a rain of butterflies and dead fish is beyond me." He shook his
head and chuckled to himself. "One could almost imagine you were whistling
'The Happy Woodcutter's Song.'"
We both
laughed at the foolishness of that thought and rapidly left the area. I decided
I needed to hone my sorcerous skills just a bit before our next encounter,
which probably wouldn't be all that long from now. King Urfoo simply wouldn't
give up.
A
bloodcurdling scream came from far overhead. I looked up in the trees to see a
figure, dressed all in green, plummeting in our general direction. The wizard
and 1 watched the man fall some ten feet in front of us, knocking himself
unconscious in the process.
Ebenezum
and I stepped gingerly around the fallen assassin. Surely another of King
Urfoo's minions, incredibly bloodthirsty, and incredibly inept. Urfoo, it
seemed, had offered a reward for our death or capture. That alone was enough to
attract certain mercenaries. But Urfoo was the cheapest of cheap tyrants,
keeping his purse strings tied in a double knot and giving a whole new meaning
to the phrase "tight-fisted." The reward for our demise was not all
that large, and none of it was payable in advance.
6
Certain
mercenaries, by and large, lost interest when they became familiar with the
terms. This left only the foolish, the desperate, and the desperately foolish
to pursue us. Which they did. In droves.
I
looked down at my worn shoes and torn tunic, aware of every noise in the forest
around me, careful of every movement I might see out of the corner of my eye.
Who would have thought that I, a poor farm boy from the Western Kingdoms, would
find himself in circumstances such as these? What would I have done, on that
day when I was first apprenticed to Ebenezum, had 1 known I would leave the
peace and security of a small, rural village, destined to wander through
strange kingdoms and stranger adventures? Who would think that I might one day
even be forced to visit Vushta, the city of a thousand forbidden delights, and
somehow have the courage to face every single one?
I
looked to my master, the great wizard Ebenezum, boldly marching by my side, his
fine tunic, tastefully inlaid with silver moons and stars, now slightly soiled;
his long white hair and beard a tad matted about the edges; his aristocratic
nose the merest bit stuffed from his affliction. Who would have thought, on
that summer's day a few months ago, that we would come to this?
"Wuntvor!"
my master called.
I
considered making a hasty retreat.
"No,
no, Wuntvor. Come here, please!" Ebenezum smiled and waved. It must be
worse than I thought.
I had
only been apprenticed to the wizard for a few weeks then and, frankly, didn't
care much for the
7
job. My
new master hardly spoke to me at all and certainly made no attempt to explain
all the strange things going on around me. That is, until he became angry with
me for something I'd done. Then there seemed to be no end to his wizardly rage.
And now
the gruff wizard was smiling. And waving. And calling my name. I didn't like
this situation at all. Why had I become a wizard's apprentice in the first
place?
Then I
remembered that 1 had a reason now. A very special reason. Just that morning I
had been in the forest, some distance from the house, collecting firewood for
use in the magician's never-ending assortment of spells. I had looked up from
my gathering, and she had been standing there!
"You
seem to have lost your firewood." Her voice was lower than I expected from
so slender a girl, and huskier as well. She formed each word with a pair of
perfect lips. I looked down to the pile of wood at my feet. One look at her
long-haired splendor, and my arms had gone limp.
"Yes,
I have," was all I could think to say.
"Whom
do you gather it for?" she asked.
1
nodded toward the cabin, just visible through the trees. "The
wizard."
"The
wizard?" Her lips parted to show a smile that would make the angels sing.
"You work for a wizard?"
I nodded.
"I am his apprentice."
Her
finely etched brows rose in pleased surprise. "An apprentice? I must say,
that's much more interesting than most of what goes on hereabouts." She
flashed me a final smile.
"We
will have to see each other again," she whispered, and was gone.
8
I
thought on that at the door to the master's study. She wanted to see me again.
And simply because I was a magician's apprentice!
Ebenezum
called my name once more.
My
afternoon beauty! It was a good thing to be magician's apprentice, after all! I
took a deep breath and entered the magician's study.
"Over
here, Wuntvor." My master pulled forward a stool for me. "I will show
you how to construct a spell." That smile showed again, curling through
the space between his mustache and his long white beard. "A very special
spell."
The
wizard's robes swirled as he turned. The stars and the moons embroidered on the
cloth danced in the candlelight. Ebenezum pushed his cap to a jaunty angle and
walked over to an immense oak table that was almost entirely covered by a huge,
open book.
"Most
spells," the wizard began, "are quite mundane. Plying one's trade in
a rural clime such as this, any wizard, even one as experienced as myself,
finds most of his or her time occupied with increased crop yield spells, and
removing curses from sheep and the like. Now, why anyone would want to curse a
sheep is beyond my comprehension"--the wizard paused to glance in his
book--"but a job is a job and a fee is a fee. And that, Wuntvor, is the first
law of wizardry."
Ebenezum
picked up one of two long white candles that sat at either side of the table.
He placed it in the only clear spot on the study's floor. The candlelight
illuminated a star, sketched in the dirt.
"The
second law is to always stay one step ahead of the competition," he
continued. "As I was saying, you'll soon tire of crop and curse spells. As
far as I'm
9
concerned,
you're not a full-fledged wizard until they really bore you. But in your spare
time--ah, Wuntvor, that's when you'll find the opportunity for your wizardry to
shine!"
I
watched my master with mute fascination. He moved quickly about his study,
turning here, kneeling there, fetching a book or a gnarled root or some
strange, sorcerous device. I could half imagine his wanderings set to music,
like some mysterious dance to herald the coming magic. The whole thing was
something of a revelation; like cracking open a piece of slate to find the
speckled blue of a robin's egg.
"And
now we begin." My master's eyes seemed to sparkle in the reflected candle
flame. "When this spell is finished, I shall know the exact position,
disposition, and probably future direction of every tax collector in the
realm!"
So this
is what my master did in his spare time. I imagined there was some greater
scheme to the spell that he had just described that I did not yet see, but I
judged it a bad time to ask for explanations.
My
master pulled back his sleeves with a flourish. "Now we begin!"
He
hesitated at the edge of the markings. "But my enthusiasm carries me away.
Wuntvor, something seems to be on your mind. Did you have a question?"
So I
told him about the bucket.
I mean
well, but my hands do not always do exactly what my mind intends. Growing
pains, my mother always called them. On perhaps in this case, the thought of
the girl I had encountered in the woods. At any rate, 1 dropped the bucket,
without the rope, into the well.
10
What
could I do? I stared dumbly at the length of rope I had wanted to tie around
the handle. I should never have set the bucket on the well's edge. I looked
down into the well but couldn't see a thing in the gloom. I kicked the side of
the well. If only, somehow, the rope could magically tie itself to the bucket,
everything would be fine.
And
then I realized that the rope could magically tie itself to the bucket. So 1
ran to the wizard's study to ask for help. That is, if he wasn't too busy.
"Oh,
1 think I can fit it in," the wizard replied. "You do sometimes have
a problem with your hands, Wuntvor. Not to mention your feet, your height, and
a few other things. Still, with luck, you should grow out of it."
Ebenezum
pulled at his beard. "There's a lesson to be learned here, Wuntvor. If you
intend to be a wizard, you must consider your every action carefully. Every
action, from the smallest to the largest, might somehow affect your performance
of magic, and thus your fortunes and possibly your life. Now let's fetch the
bucket and get on with things."
I stood
to lead my master to the well. But instead of walking to the door, the wizard
took a half step back and raised his arms. His low voice murmured a dozen
syllables. Something bumped against my knee. It was the bucket.
"Now--"
the wizard began just before he yelled in surprise. "What the--" He
leapt forward and turned to face whatever had upset him.
It was
smoke, or so it seemed at first; a particularly vile-smelling cloud of bluish
gray that hung over the star drawn in the dirt. It swirled about furiously,
growing until it almost looked like a human shape.
11
The
wizard pointed to the ground. There was a smudge across the markings on the
floor where the mystically propelled bucket had passed.
"The
pentagram!" Ebenezum cried. "I've broken the pentagram!"
He
grabbed a small knife from the table and knelt by the side of the star. He
placed the knife against what remained of the line and used it to redraw the
markings up to the point where he was stopped by a huge blue foot. The foot was
attached to an even larger body; a body made of almost nothing but spikes,
talons, and horns.
"A
demon! "I cried.
The
thing opened its mouth. Its voice was as deep as an earthquake. "Sound the
charge and ring the bells," it said. "You have freed me from the
Nether-hells!"
Ebenezum's
lips curled behind his mustache. "Even worse, Wuntvor. 'Tis a rhyming
demon!"
The
giant blue thing took a step toward the candlelight. As it approached the
illumination, I could make out what in charity might be described as facial
features: a knife slash for a mouth, above that a pair of hairy nostrils, and a
couple of eyes too small and evil to even be called beady.
The
thing spoke again:
"Alas,
you humans are out of luck, For now you face the demon Guxx!"
"Luck
and Guxx?" Ebenezum's face became even more distraught. "That's not
even a proper rhyme!"
Guxx
the demon displayed its dark and pointed claws. "I'm somewhat new at the
poetry game. But
12
you'll
soon be dead all the same!"
Ebenezum
glanced at me. "See what I mean? The meter's all wrong." The wizard
pulled at his beard. "Or maybe it's the creature's delivery."
"You
try to confuse me with your words!" the demon cried. "But Guxx will
shorten you by a third!"
The
demon's claws shot out with lightning speed, straight for the wizard's neck.
But Ebenezum was every bit as fast as the creature, and the claws only grazed
his magician's cap.
"You're
getting too complex," the wizard remarked as he pulled back his sleeves.
Ebenezum liked both arms free to the elbows for maximum conjuring. "You'd
be better to stick to simpler rhymes."
The
demon paused in its attack, a deep rumble in its throat. "Perhaps,"
it said, and coughed into one of its enormous palms.
"Guxx
Unfufadoo is my name, And killing wizards is my game!"
Ebenezum's
hands made a complex series of movements in the air as he spoke half a dozen
syllables that I didn't understand. The demon roared. It was surrounded by a
silver cage.
"You
think to stop me with your silver!" Guxx screamed. "But I'll break
free and eat your--" It paused. "No. That doesn't work. What rhymes
with silver?"
"Orange,"
the wizard suggested.
"I'll
teach you this demon to mock! A few more rhymes, and I'll break this
lock!" The creature stared at its cage. The bars shook without it even
touching them.
13
"This
demon could be a bit of a problem," Ebenezum said. "Come, Wuntvor. I
will teach you a quick lesson in banishment."
"Guxx
will win, this demon knows! For with every rhyme my power grows!"
"Yes,
yes. Bear with us for a moment, won't you? That's a good demon." Ebenezum
glanced over one of the dozens of bookshelves that cluttered the room.
"Ah. The very tome."
He
extracted a thin brown volume from the upper shelf. 312 More Easy Banishment
Spells was stamped in gold on the cover.
"Now,
as I remember it..." Ebenezum paused as he leafed through the book.
"In a case such as this, Wuntvor, it is important that you find just the
right spell. Saves messy cleanup afterward. Ah, here's the very one!"
"Don't
talk of spells, don't talk of mess, for seconds from now Guxx will bring your
death!" the hideous creature cried.
"If
your power grows with that rhyme," Ebenezum remarked, "there is no
justice in the cosmos." The wizard cleared his throat. "At least no poetic
justice."
"You
make awful jokes at my expense, But
from Guxx's claws
you'll have no
defense!"
With
that, the demon's arms burst through the sides of the silver cage.
"Back,
Wuntvor!" the wizard cried.
The
demon was on top of Ebenezum. It had moved
14
faster
than my eyes could follow it. Razor claws whistled as they descended on the
wizard.
My
master was in dire peril. I had to do something!
I
jumped for the thing's back. Guxx shrugged, and I was tossed aside.
Ebenezum
shouted something, and the demon was thrown across the room. The wizard
staggered to his feet. His right sleeve was torn. The arm beneath was bright
with blood.
"
'Twill soon be finished, come now, make
haste!
A wizard's blood is to my taste!"
The
demon smiled.
Ebenezum
grabbed a box from the shelf behind him. He tossed the contents at the
approaching Guxx. Yellow powder filled the air. And the world slowed down.
Guxx
was no longer a blur. You could see the demon's every movement now as its
heavily muscled form strained against whatever the yellow powder had done. I
could feel the effects as well. Sitting on the edge of the conflict, it took an
eternity to turn my head or blink my eyes.
Ebenezum
still seemed to be moving at normal speed. His voice cried a tuneless song, and
his hands wove swirling patterns upward, ever upward, like two birds seeking
the sun.
The
demon was moving faster. Its slow progress had become a walk.
Small
points of light appeared above the wizard's hands; dancing light that described
fantastic shapes as it circled the upper reaches of the room.
The
demon flicked aside the great oak table. Its
15
movement
was as fast as any man's.
The
wizard snapped his fingers, and light flew at the demon's head. The demon cried
in pain, its claws splayed out at the open air.
"Death
is coming, wizard!" it screamed. Then, a moment later, as if an
afterthought: "I'll cut out your gizzard!"
"Gizzard?"
The wizard reached for something in his sleeve. "Well, I suppose it's more
appropriate than blizzard."
The
demon leapt for the mage. And Ebenezum had pulled a short sword from the folds
of his cloak.
So it
would come to hand-to-hand combat. But the demon was clearly stronger than the
wizard. There had to be some way I could help! I stood and almost tripped over
the bucket. If only I had a sword as well!
Dagger
met claws. And the claws were sheared in half.
Guxx
screamed with a rage that shook the floor beneath me. The creature darted away
from the wizard and swatted the air with its blunted talons. Holding the dagger
before him, Ebenezum stepped toward the demon.
What
was my master doing? He had virtually walked into the demon's arms. Guxx's
still-taloned hand was behind the wizard now, aimed for the back of Ebenezum's
head.
1 had
to do something. So I threw the bucket.
Bucket
met talons, and the claws sliced through the wood as if it were paper. But
Ebenezum whirled about as the bucket split. Dagger met claws again, and Guxx
had lost all its weapons. Or so I thought before the demon opened its mouth.
There were two rows of sharpened spikes where the creature's teeth should be.
16
It was
a frightening sight. The mage backed away from the fiend's gaping maw, but Guxx
was faster. The demon's deadly incisors caught Ebenezum's beard.
The
wizard tried to call out a spell, but his words dribbled away as he choked in
the demon's foul breath, so close to his own. Although the demon's mouth was
largely occupied by beard, the corners of the fiend's lips appeared to smile.
But only for an instant, for Guxx, too, must have realized the flaw in its
demonic plan.
By
capturing the wizard's beard, and contaminating the mage's air with its own
exhalations, Guxx had put an end to Ebenezum's magicks. But since the demon's
own mouth was filled with wizard hair, Guxx could not utter that final,
devastating poem that would make it a victor of this sorcerous contest. The
demon furrowed its immense brow, causing its incredibly tiny eyes to appear even
tinier.
The
combatants had reached a stalemate. But Ebenezum could not hold his own for
long. Guxx's demon breath prevented not only the wizard's speech, but cut off
the mage's supply of wholesome air. Ebenezum was rapidly turning a color not
unlike a robin's egg, or certain pebbles I have found at river bottom. It was
not a hue that particularly suited him.
If I
did not act quickly, Guxx would win by default.
I
looked about for a weapon, but all I could see were the broken bucket and a
half dozen sheared claws. The claws! What better way to defeat a demon?
I
grabbed a pair of the deadly daggers, one for each hand. The claws were the
length of my longest finger.
17
"Take
that, fiend!" I cried, plunging them toward the demon's rib cage.
The
claws bounced from Guxx's stonelike skin. The demon made a deep sound, like
rocks dropped down a well. After a second's hesitation, I realized it was
laughter.
So it
would be harder than I thought. But I must save my master! I struck again, with
redoubled force. The claws made a scratching sound this time as they slid
across the demon's hide. Guxx laughed even louder. He couldn't control the
laughter; tears ran out of his pinpoint eyes. Ebenezum pulled back at the
fiend's mirth and managed to free a small portion of his beard.
I threw
myself at the demon, both claws running up and down its fearsome rib cage. Guxx
reared back its head and roared helplessly. Ebenezum was free!
The
mage shouted something, and the demon seemed to grow smaller. It grabbed at the
wizard's robes with the remains of its claws. Ebenezum made a series of passes
in the air, and Guxx once again turned to blue smoke, which was sucked in turn
back into the pentacle from which it came.
The
wizard half sat, half fell into the dirt. His beard was matted and ragged. The
demon had torn fully half of it away.
"Open
the windows, Wuntvor," he managed after a minute. "We need to clean
the air."
I did
as 1 was told, and the last bits of the blue cloud vanished with the breeze. That's
when the wizard began to sneeze.
It was
a sneezing fit, really. My master couldn't stop. He lay on the ground, sneezing
over and over again. I remembered his remarks about clearing the
18
air.
Even with the windows open, the atmosphere in the study was far from wholesome.
1 thought I should get him outside, in the open. Which, with some difficulty, I
managed to do.
His fit
ended almost as soon as we were out in daylight, but it took him a moment to
catch his breath.
"Never
have I had such a fight," he whispered. "I was worried there for a
time, Wuntvor." He shook his head. "No matter. It is over now."
Unfortunately,
Ebenezum was wrong. It was only just beginning.
TWO
"Reasoned
decision is important, and there comes a time in every wizard's life when he
must decide what goal he should pursue to give true meaning to his life. Should
it be money, or travel, or fame? And what of leisure and the love of women? I
myself have studied many of these goals for a number of years, examining their
every facet in some detail, so that, when the time comes to make that fateful
decision of which I spoke, it will be reasoned in the extreme. "
--THE
TEACHINGS OF EBENEZUM, Volume XXXI
I could
no longer bring myself to gather firewood. My world had ended. She hadn't come.
I sat
for far too long in the sunlit glade where we always met. Perhaps she didn't
realize it was noon, she had somehow been delayed, her cool blue eyes and fair
blond hair, the way her slim young body moved, the way she laughed, how it felt
when she
19
20
touched
me. Surely she was on her way.
Oh,
there had been other women: Aneath, the farmer's daughter; what a child I had
been then! And Grisla, daughter of the village tinsmith; nothing more than a
passing infatuation. Only now did I know the true meaning of love!
But I
didn't even know her name! Only her interest in me--a magician's apprentice.
She once called magicians the closest thing to play actors she knew in this
backwater place. She said she had always admired the stage. And then she
laughed, and we kissed, and--
A cold
breeze sprang up behind me. A reminder of winter, due all too soon. I gathered
what logs and branches I could find and trudged back to my master's cottage.
In the
distance I heard a sneeze. So my master was studying his tomes again. Or
attempting to study them. Spring had turned to summer, and summer threatened to
give way to autumn any day, and still his malady lingered. Ebenezum studied his
every waking hour, searching for a cure, but all things magical still brought
an immediate nasal reaction. In the meantime, he had handled a handful of
commissions, working more with his wits than his spells, so that we might
continue to eat. And just this morning, he had mentioned something about a new
discovery he had made; a magic spell so quick and powerful that his nose would
not have time to react.
Yet
still he sneezed. Had his latest experiment failed as well? Why else would he
sneeze?
Unless
there was something sorcerous in the air.
Perhaps
there was another reason besides my mood that the world was so dark around me,
another reason that she hadn't met me as we'd planned. The
21
bushes
moved on my right. Something very large flew across the sun.
1
managed the front door with the firewood still in my arms. I heard the wizard
sneeze. Repeatedly. My master stood in the main room, one of his great books
spread on the table before him. Smaller books and papers were scattered
everywhere, victims of his nasal storm. I hurried to his aid, forgetting, in my
haste, the firewood that scattered across the table as I reached for the book.
A few miscellaneous pieces fell among the sneezing Ebenezum's robes.
I
closed the book and glanced apprehensively at the mage. To my surprise,
Ebenezum blew his nose on a gold-inlaid, dark blue sleeve and spoke to me in
the calmest of tones.
"Thank
you, 'prentice." He delicately removed a branch from his lap and laid it
on the table. "If you would dispose of this in a more appropriate place?"
He
sighed deep in his throat. "I'm afraid that my affliction is far worse
than I imagined. I may even have to call on outside assistance for my
cure."
I
hastened to retrieve the firewood. "Outside assistance?" I inquired
discreetly.
"We
must seek out another magician as great as I," Ebenezum said, his every
word heavy with import. "Though to do that, we might have to travel as far
as the great city of Vushta."
"Vushta?"
I replied. "With its pleasure gardens and forbidden palaces? The city of unknown
sins that could doom a man for life? That Vushta?" All at once, I felt the
lethargy lift from my shoulders. I quickly deposited the wood by the fireplace.
"That
Vushta." Ebenezum nodded. "With one problem. We have not the funds
for traveling, and no prospects for gaining same."
22
As if
responding to our plight, a great gust of wind blew against the side of the
cottage. The door burst open with a swirl of dirt and leaves, and a short man
wearing tattered clothes, face besmirched with grime, staggered in and slammed
the door behind him.
"Flee!
Flee!" the newcomer cried in a quavering voice. "Dragons!
Dragons!" With that, his eyes rolled up in his head and he collapsed on
the floor.
"1
have found, however," Ebenezum said as he stroked his long white beard,
"in my long career as a magician, Wuntvor, if you wait around long enough,
something is bound to turn up."
With
some water on the head and some wine down the gullet, we managed to revive the
newcomer.
"Flee!"
he sputtered as he caught his breath. He glanced about wildly, his pale eyes
darting from my master to me to floor to ceiling. He seemed close to my master
in age, but there the similarity ceased. Rather than my master's mane of fine
white hair, the newcomer was balding, his hair matted and stringy. Instead of
the wizard's masterful face, which could convey calm serenity or cosmic anger
with the flick of an eyebrow, the other's face was evasive; small nose and
chin, a very wrinkled brow, and those eyes, darting blue in his dark,
mud-spattered face.
"Now,
now, good sir," Ebenezum replied in his most reasonable voice, often used
to charm young ladies and calm bill collectors. "Why the hurry? You
mentioned dragons?"
"Dragons!"
The man stood somewhat shakily. "Well, at least dragon! One of them has
captured GurnishKeep!"
"Gurnish
Keep?" I queried.
23
"You've
seen it," Ebenezum murmured, his cold gray eyes still on our guest. "
Tis a small castle on yonder hill at the far side of the woods." Ebenezum
snorted in his beard. "Castle? 'Tis really more of a stone hut, but it's
the home of our neighbor, the Duke of Gurnish. It's a very small dukedom. For
that matter, he's a very small duke."
Our
visitor was, if anything, even more agitated than before. "I didn't run
all the way through Gurnish Forest to hear a discussion of the neighborhood. We
must flee!"
"Gurnish
Forest?" I inquired.
"The
trees right behind the hut," my master replied. "Surely the duke's
idea. Everyone else knows the area as Wizard's Woods."
"What
do you mean, Wizard's Woods?" the newcomer snapped. "This area is
Gurnish Forest. Officially. As Gurnish Keep is an official castle!"
"'Tis
only a matter of opinion," Ebenezum replied, a smile that could charm both
barbadians and maiden aunts once again upon his face. "Haven't we met
somewhere before?"
"Possibly."
The newcomer, who was somewhat shorter than my master's imposing frame, shifted
uneasily under the wizard's gaze. "But shouldn't we flee? Dragons, you
know."
"Come
now, man. I wouldn't be a full-fledged wizard if I hadn't dealt with a dragon
or two." Ebenezum looked even more closely at the newcomer than he had
before. "Say, aren't you the Duke of Gurnish?"
"Me?"
the smaller man said. His eyes shifted from my master to me and back again.
"Well--uh ..." He coughed. "I suppose 1 am."
"Well,
why didn't you say so? I haven't seen you
24
since
you stopped trying to tax me." Ebenezum's smile went to its broadest as he
signaled me to get our guest a chair. The duke obviously had money.
"Well,
this whole situation's a bit awkward," our honored guest said as he stared
at the floor. "I'm afraid I feel rather undukish."
"Nonsense.
A run-in with a dragon can unnerve anyone. Would you like some more wine? A
nice fire to warm you?"
"No,
thank you." The duke lowered his voice even more than before. "Don't
you think it would be better if we fled? I mean, dragons. And I've seen other
things in the forest. Perhaps if your powers were--" The duke coughed
again. "You see, I've heard of your accident."
Ebenezum
bristled a bit at the last reference, but the smile more or less remained on
his face. "Gossip, good duke. Totally blown out of proportion. We'll deal
with your dragon in no time."
"But
the dragon's taken over Gurnish Keep! He's immense, with bright blue and violet
scales, twenty-five feet from head to tail. His wings scrape the ceiling of my
great hall! And he's invincible. He's captured my castle and beautiful
daughter, and defeated my retainer!"
Beautiful
daughter? My thoughts returned to the girl of my dreams. Where had she gone?
What had kept her away?
"Only
a child!" the duke cried. "No more than seventeen. Fine blond hair,
gorgeous blue eyes, a lovely, girlish figure. And the dragon will burn her to a
crisp if we don't do his bidding!"
Blond?
Blue? Figure?
I had a
revelation.
"Come
now, man," Ebenezum remarked. "Calm
25
down.
It's common knowledge that dragons tend to be overdramatic. All the beast's
really done so far is to overwhelm one retainer. I assume you still had only
one retainer?"
She
hadn't deserted me! She was only held prisoner! All the time she and 1 had
spent together, all those long, warm afternoons. That's why she would tell me
nothing of herself! A duke's daughter!
The
duke glared at my master. "It wouldn't be like that if my subjects paid
their taxes!"
A
duke's daughter. And I would rescue her! There'd be no need for secrecy then.
How magnificent our lives would be!
A fire
lit in Ebenezum's eyes. "Perhaps if certain local royalty were not so
concerned with extending the borders of their tiny dukedom ..." The wizard
waved his hands and the fire disappeared. "But that's not important. We
have a dragon to evict. As 1 see it, the elements here are quite ordinary.
Dragon captures castle and maiden. Very little originality. We should be able
to handle it tidily."
The
duke began to object again, but Ebenezum would have none of it. Only one thing
affected his nose more than sorcery--money, and the smell of it was obvious in
the cottage. My master sent the duke aside while we gathered the paraphernalia
together for dragon fighting.
When I
had packed everything according to my master's instructions, Ebenezum beckoned
me into his library. Once in the room, the wizard climbed a small stepladder
and, carefully holding his nose, pulled a slim volume from the uppermost shelf.
"We
may have need of this." His voice sounded strangely hollow, most likely
the result of thumb and forefinger pressed into his nose. "In my present
con-
26
dition,
I can't risk using it. But it should be easy enough for you to master."
He
descended the ladder and placed the thin, dark volume in my hands. Embossed in
gold on the cover were the words How to Speak Dragon.
"But
we must be off!" Ebenezum exclaimed, clapping my shoulder. "Mustn't
keep a client waiting. You may study that book on our rest stops along the
way."
1
stuffed the book hurriedly into the paraphernalia-filled pack and shouldered
the whole thing, grabbed my walking staff, and followed my master out the door.
With my afternoon beauty at the end of my journey, I could manage anything.
My
master had already grabbed the duke by the collar and propelled him in the
proper direction. I followed at Ebenezum's heels as fast as the heavy pack
would allow. The wizard, as usual, carried nothing. As he often explained, it
kept his hands free for quick conjuring and his mind free for sorcerous
conjecture.
I
noticed a bush move, then another. Rustling like the wind pushed through the leaves,
except there was no wind. The forest was as still as when I had waited for my
secret love. Still, the bushes moved.
Just my
imagination, I thought. Like the darkness of the forest. I glanced nervously at
the sky, half expecting the sun to disappear again. What was so big that it
blotted out the sun?
A
dragon?
But my
musings were cut short by a man dressed in bright orange who stood in our path.
He peered through an odd instrument on the end of a pole.
I
glanced at the duke, walking now at my side. He had begun to shiver.
27
The man
in orange looked up as we approached. "Good afternoon," he said, the
half frown on his face belying his words. "Could you move a little faster?
You're blocking the emperor's highway, you know."
The duke
shook violently.
"Highway?"
Ebenezum asked, stopping midpath rather than hurrying by the man in orange.
"Yes,
the new road that the great and good Emperor Flostock the Third has
decreed--"
"Flee!"
the duke cried. "Dragons! Dragons! Flee!" He leapt about, waving his
hands before the emperor's representative.
"See
here!" the orange man snapped. "I'll have none of this. I'm traveling
to see the Duke of Gurnish on important business."
The
duke stopped hopping. "Duke?" he said, pulling his soiled clothing
back into place. "Why, I'm the Duke of Gurnish. What can I help you with,
my good man?"
The man
in orange frowned even more deeply. "It's about the upkeep of the
road...."
"Certainly."
The duke glanced back at us. "Perhaps we should go somewhere that we can
talk undisturbed."
The
duke led the man in orange into the underbrush.
"They
deserve each other," Ebenezum muttered. "But to business." He
looked at me solemnly. "A bit about dragons. Dragons are one of the
magical subspecies. They exist largely between worlds, partly on Earth and
partly in the Netherhells, and never truly belong to either. There are other
magical subspecies--"
Ebenezum's
lecture was interrupted by a commo-
28
tion in
the underbrush. Large arms with a thick growth of grayish-brown hair rose and
fell above the bushes, accompanied by human screams.
"Another
subspecies is the troll," Ebenezum remarked.
I let
my pack slide from my back and firmly grasped my staff. They would eat my true
love's father! I had never encountered trolls before, but this was as good a
time as any to learn.
"Slobber!
Slobber!" came from the bushes before us. A rough voice, the sound of a
saw biting into hardwood. I assumed it was a troll.
"Wait!"
another voice screamed. "You can't do this! I'm a representative of the
emperor!"
"Slobber!
Slobber!" answered a chorus of rough voices.
"Let's
get this over with!" Another voice, high and shaky. The duke?
Although
the voices were quite close now, it was getting difficult to distinguish
individual words. It just sounded like a large amount of screaming, punctuated
by cries of "Slobber!" I lifted my staff over my head and ran forward
with a scream of my own.
I broke
into a small clearing, which contained four occupants. One was the duke. The
other three were among the ugliest creatures I'd seen in my short life. They
were squat and covered with irregular tufts of gray-brown fur, that did nothing
to hide the rippling muscles of their barrellike arms and legs. Three pairs of
very small red eyes turned to regard me. One of them swallowed something that
looked a good deal like an orange-clad foot.
The
sight of the three hideous creatures completely stopped my forward motion. They
studied me in silence.
29
"Oh,
hello," I said, breaking into the sinister quiet. "I must have
wandered off the path. Excuse me."
One of
the trolls lumbered toward me on its immensely powerful legs. It was time to
leave. I turned and bumped into my master, who was in the midst of making a mystic
gesture.
"No
slobber! No slobber!" the trolls cried, and ran back into the heart of the
woods.
I
picked myself up and helped the wizard regain his feet as well. Ebenezum
sneezed for a full three minutes, the result of his actually employing magic.
When he caught his breath at last, he wiped his nose on his robe and regarded
me evenly.
"Wuntvor,"
he said, all too quietly, "what do you mean by dropping all our valuable
equipment and running off, just so you can be swallowed by--"
The
duke ran between the two of us. "Flee! Flee! Dragons! Trolls! Flee!"
"And
you!" my master said, his voice rising at last. "I've had enough of
your jumping about, screaming hysterical warnings! Why do you worry? You were
surrounded by trolls and they didn't touch you. You lead a charmed life!"
He grabbed the duke's shoulder with one hand and mine with the other and
propelled us back to the trail.
"Come,"
he continued. "We will reach Gurnish Keep before nightfall. There, my
assistant and I will deal with this dragon, and you, good duke, will pay us
handsomely for our efforts." The wizard deposited us on the trail and
walked briskly toward the castle before the duke could reply.
"Look!"
The duke pulled at my sleeve. There was a break in the trees ahead, affording a
clear view of the hill on the wood's far side. There, atop the hill,
30
was
Gurnish Keep, a stone building not much larger than Ebenezum's cottage. Smoke
poured from the keep's lower windows, and once or twice I thought I saw the
yellow-orange flicker of flame.
"Dragon,"
the duke whispered. 1 hurriedly reached into my satchel and pulled out How to
Speak Dragon. The time to start learning was now.
I
opened the book at random and scanned the page. Phrases in common speech filled
one side. Opposite these were the same phrases in dragon. I started reading
from the top:
"Pardon
me, but could you please turn your snout?"
"Sniz
mir heeba-heeba szzz."
"Pardon
me, but your claw is in my leg."
"Sm'z
mu sazza grack szzz."
"Pardon
me, but your barbed tail is waving perilously close..."
The
whole page was filled with similar phrases. I paused in my reading. It had done
nothing to reassure me.
Ebenezum
shouted at us from far up the trail. 1 slammed the book shut and,ran to follow,
dragging the Duke of Gurnish with me.
We
walked through the remaining forest without further difficulty. The woods ended
at the edge of a large hill, called Wizard's Knoll or Mount Gurnish, depending
upon whom you spoke with. From there, we could get a clear view of the castle.
And the smoke. And the flames.
The
duke began to jabber again about the dangers ahead but was silenced by a single
glance from my master. The wizard's cool gray eyes stared up toward the castle,
but somehow beyond it. After a moment,
31
he
shook his head and flexed his shoulders beneath his robes. He turned to me.
"Wunt,"
he said. "More occurs here than meets the eye." He glanced again at
the duke, who was nervously dancing on a pile of leaves. "Not just a
dragon, but three trolls. That's a great deal of supernatural activity for a
place as quiet as Wizard's Woods."
I
expected the duke to object to the wizard's choice of names, but he was
strangely quiet. I turned to the pile of leaves.
The
duke was gone.
"Methinks,"
Ebenezum continued, "some contact has been made with the Netherhells of
late. There is a certain instrument in your pack ..."
My
master went on to describe the instrument and its function. If we set it up at
the base of the hill, it would tell us the exact number and variety of
creatures from the Netherhells lurking about the district.
1 held
up the instrument. My master rubbed his nose. "Keep it at a distance. The
device carries substantial residual magic."
I put
the thing together according to the wizard's instructions and, at his signal,
spun the gyroscope that topped it off.
"Now,
small points of light will appear." Ebenezum sniffled loudly. "You
can tell by the color of-"
He
sneezed mightily, again and again. 1 looked to the device. Should 1 stop it?
Ebenezum
sneezed to end all sneezes, directly at the instrument. The device fell apart.
"By
the Netherhells!" Ebenezum exclaimed. "Can
32
I not
perform the simplest of spells?" He looked at me, and his face seemed very
old. "Put away the apparatus, Wunt. We must use the direct approach.
Duke?"
I
explained that the duke had vanished.
"What
now?" Ebenezum looked back toward the forest. His cold gray eyes went
wide. He blew his nose hastily.
"Wunt!
Empty the pack!"
"What?"
I asked, startled by the urgency of my master's voice. Then I looked back to
the woods and saw it coming. A wall of black, like some impenetrable cloud,
roiling across the forest. But this cloud extended from the sky to the forest
floor and left complete blackness behind. It sped across the woods like a
living curtain that drew its darkness ever closer.
"Someone
plays with great forces," Ebenezum said. "Forces he doesn't
understand. The pack, Wunt!"
1
dumped the pack's contents on the ground. Ebenezum rifled through them, tossing
various arcane tomes and irreplaceable devices out of his way, until he grasped
a small box painted a shiny robin's-egg blue.
the
magician sneezed in triumph. He tossed me the box.
"Quick,
Wunt!" he called, blowing his nose. "Take the dust within that box
and spread it in a line along the hill!" He waved at a rocky ridge on the
forest edge as he jogged up the hill and began to sneeze again.
I did
as my master bid, laying an irregular line of blue powder across the long
granite slab. I looked back to the woods. The darkness was very close,
33
engulfing
all but the forest's edge,
"Run,
Wunt!"
1
sprinted up the hill. The wizard cried a few ragged syllables and followed. He
tripped as he reached the hilltop and fell into an uncontrollable sneezing fit.
I
turned back to look at the approaching blackness. The darkly tumbling wall
covered all the forest now, and tendrils of the stuff reached out toward the
hill like so many grasping hands. But the fog's forward motion had stopped just
short of the ragged blue line.
There
was a breeze at my back. I turned to see Ebenezum, still sneezing but somehow
standing. One arm covered his nose, the other reached for the sky. His free
hand moved, and the breeze grew to a wind and then a gale, rushing down the
hill and pushing the dark back to wherever it had come.
After a
minute the wind died, but what wisps of fog remained in the forest below soon
evaporated beneath the bright afternoon sun. My master sat heavily and gasped
for breath, as if all the air had escaped from his lungs.
"Lucky,"
he said after a minute. "Whoever raised the demon fog had a weak will.
Otherwise . . ." The magician blew his nose, allowing the rest of the
sentence to go unsaid.
A figure
moved through the woods beneath us. It was the duke.
"Too
exhausted to fight dragon," Ebenezum continued, still breathing far too
hard. "You'll have to doit, Wunt."
I
swallowed and picked up How to Speak Dragon from the hillside where it lay. I
turned to look at Gur-nish Keep, a scant hundred yards across the hilltop.
34
Billows
of smoke poured from the windows, occasionally accompanied by licks of flame.
And now that we stood close, I could hear a low rumble, underlying all the
other sounds in the field in which we stood. A rumble that occasionally grew
into a roar.
The
dragon was going to be everything that I expected.
The
duke grabbed at my coat sleeve. "Dragon!" he said. "Last chance
to get out!"
"Time
to go in there," Ebenezum said. "Look in the book, Wunt. Perhaps we
can talk the dragon out of the castle." He shook the quivering duke from
his arm. "And if you, good sir, would be quiet for a moment, we could go
about saving your home and daughter. Quite honestly, I feel you have no cause
for complaint with the luck you've been having. Most people would not have
survived the evil spell that recently took over the woods. How you managed to
bumble through the powerful forces at work here is beyond ..." Ebenezum's
voice trailed off. He cocked an eyebrow at the duke and stroked his beard in
thought.
The
rumble from the castle grew louder again. I opened the thin volume I held in my
sweating palms; I had to save my secret love.
1
flipped frantically from page to page, finally finding a phrase I thought
appropriate:
"Pardon
me, but might we speak to you?"
In the
loudest voice 1 could manage, I spat out the dragon syllables.
"Snzz
grah! Subba Ubba Szzz!"
A
great, deep voice reverberated from within the castle. "Speak the common
tongue, would you?" it said. "Besides, I'm afraid I don't have a
commode."
35
1
closed the book with a sigh of relief. The dragon spoke human!
"Don't
trust him!" the duke cried. "Dragons are deceitful!"
Ebenezum
nodded his head. "Proceed with caution, Wunt. Someone is being
deceitful." He turned to the duke. "You!"
"Me?"
the Gurnish nobleman replied as he backed in my direction. Ebenezum stalked
after him.
They
were squabbling again. But I had no time for petty quarrels. I firmly grasped
my staff, ready to confront the dragon and my afternoon beauty.
The
duke was right behind me now, his courage seemingly returned. "Go forward,
wizard!" he cried in a loud voice. "Defeat the dragon! Banish him
forever!"
"Oh,
not a wizard, too!" cried the voice from within the castle. "First I
get cooped up in Gurnish Keep, then I have to capture your beautiful daughter,
and now a wizard! How dull! Doesn't anyone have any imagination around
here?"
I came
to a great oak door. I nudged it with my foot. It opened easily, and I stepped
inside to confront the dragon.
It
stood on its haunches, regarding me in turn. It was everything the duke had
mentioned, and more. Blue and violet scales, twenty-five feet in length, wings
that brushed the ceiling. The one oversight in the duke's description appeared
to be the large green top hat on the dragon's head.
I saw
her a second later.
She
stood in front and slightly to one side of the giant reptile. She was as lovely
as I'd ever seen her.
"Why,
Wuntvor," she said. "What are you doing here?"
36
I
cleared my throat and pounded my staff on the worn stone pavement. "I've
come to rescue you."
"Rescue?"
She looked up at the dragon. The dragon rumbled. "So Father's gotten to
you, too?"
The
duke's voice screamed behind me. "I warned you! Now the dragon will burn
you all to cinders!"
The
dragon snorted good-naturedly and turned to regard the ceiling.
"The
game is up, Duke!" Ebenezum called from the doorway, far enough away so
that the dragon's magical odor would not provoke another attack. "Your
sorcerous schemes are at an end!"
"Yes,
Father," my afternoon beauty said. "Don't you think you've gone far
enough?" She looked at my master. "Father so much wanted control of
the new Trans-Empire Highway, to put toll stations throughout the woods below,
that he traded in his best retainer for the services of certain creatures from
the Netherhells, which he'd use to frighten off anyone who stood in the way of
his plans."
She
turned and looked at the dragon. "Luckily, one of those creatures was
Hubert."
"Alea!
How could you? Betrayed!" The duke clutched at his heart. "My own
daughter!"
"Come,
Father. What you're doing is dangerous and wrong. Your greed will make a
monster of you. I've been worrying what my future was with you and the castle.
But now I know." She glanced happily back to the dragon. "Hubert and
I have decided to goon the stage."
The
duke was taken aback.
"What?"
"Yes,
good sir," Hubert the dragon remarked. "I have some small experience
in the field and on talk-
37
ing
with your daughter, have found that she is just the partner I have been looking
for."
"Yes,
Father. A life on the stage. How much better than sitting around a tiny castle,
waiting to be rescued by a clumsy young man."
Clumsy?
My world reeled around me. Not wishing to be rescued was one thing, considering
the situation. But to call me clumsy? 1 lowered my staff and walked toward the
door.
"Wait!"
my secret love cried. I turned quickly. Perhaps she had reconsidered her harsh
words. Our long afternoons together still meant something!
"You
haven't seen our act!" she exclaimed. "Hit it, dragon!"
She
danced back and forth across the castle floor, the dragon beating time with its
tail. They sang together:
'
'Let's raise a flagon For damsel and dragon, The best song and dance team in
the whole, wide world.
Our
audience is clapping, A nd their toes are tapping, For a handsome reptile and a
pretty girll''
The
dragon blew smoke rings at the end of a line and breathed a bit of fire at the
end of a verse. Six more verses followed, more or less the same. Then they
stopped singing and began to shuffle back and forth.
They
talked in rhythm.
"Hey,
dragon. It's good to have an audience again."
38
"I'll
say, damsel. I'm all fired up!"
They
paused.
"How
beautiful it is in Gurnish Keep! What more could you ask for, damsel, than this
kind of sunny day?"
"I
don't know, dragon. I could do with a shining knight!"
They
paused again.
"Romance
among reptiles can be a weighty problem!"
"Why's
that, dragon?"
"When
1 see a pretty dragoness, it tips my scales!"
They
launched into song immediately.
"Let's
raise a flagon
For
damsel and dragon--''
"I
can't stand it anymore!" the Duke of Gurnish cried. "Slabyach!
Grimace! Trolls, get them all!"
A
trapdoor opened in the corner of the castle floor. The trolh> popped out.
"Quick,
Wunt!" Ebenezum cried. "Out of the way!" But before he could
even begin to gesture, he was caught in a sneezing fit.
The
trolls sauntered toward us. I bopped one on the head with my staff. The staff
broke.
"Slobber!"
exclaimed the troll.
"Roohhaarrr!"
came from across the room. The dragon stood as well as it was able in the confines
of the castle's great hall. It carefully directed a thin lance of flame toward
each troll's posterior.
"No
slobber! No slobber!" the trolls exclaimed, escaping back through the
trapdoor.
"Thank
you," Ebenezum said after blowing his nose. "That was quite nice of
you."
39
"Think
nothing of it," the dragon replied. "I never sacrifice an
audience."
"I
finally got our good Lord of Gurnish to listen to reason," my master said
when we returned to our cottage. "When I mentioned how close to the palace
I might be soon, and that I might find myself discussing the region, the duke
saw his way to hire me as a consultant." Ebenezum pulled a jangling pouch
from his belt. "The duke will now most likely receive clearance to build
his tollbooths. Pity he no longer has the money for their construction."
"And
what of his daughter and the dragon?" 1 asked.
"Hubert
is flying the two of them to Vushta this very instant. I gave them a letter of
introduction to certain acquaintances I have there, and they should find a
ready audience."
"So
you think they're that good?"
Ebenezum
shook his head vigorously. "They're terrible. But the stage is a funny
thing. 1 expect Vushta will love them."
"But
enough of this." The wizard drew another, smaller pouch from his bag.
"Hubert was kind enough to lend me some ground dragon's egg. Seems it's a
folk remedy among his species; gives quick, temporary relief. I've never found
this particular use for it in any of my tomes, but I've tried everything else.
What do I have to lose?"
He
ground the contents of the pouch into a powder and dropped it in a flagon of
wine.
"This
might even save us a trip to Vushta." He held his nose and lifted the
concoction to his lips. My hopes sank as he drank it down. With Alea gone, a
40
trip to
Vushta was the only thing I had to look forward to.
The
wizard opened a magical tome and breathed deeply. He smiled.
"It
works! No more sneezing!"
His
stomach growled.
"It
couldn't be." A strange look stole over the wizard's face. He burped.
"It
is! No wonder I couldn't find this in any of the tomes! I should have checked
the Netherhell Indexl It's fine for dragons, but for humans.. ." He paused
to pull a book from the shelf and leaf rapidly through it. He burped again. His
face looked very strained as he turned to me.
"Neebekenezer's
Syndrome of Universal Flatulence!" he whispered. A high, whining sound
emerged from his robes.
"Quick,
Wunt!" he cried. "Remove yourself, if you value your sanity!"
I did
as 1 was told. Even from my bed beneath the trees, I could hear the whistles,
groans, and muffled explosions all night long.
THREE
"Every
sorcerer should explore as much of the world as he can, for travel is
enlightening. There are certain circumstances, such as a major spell gone awry,
or an influential customer enraged at the size of your fee, where travel
becomes more enlightening still."
--THE
TEACHINGS OF EBENEZUM, Volume V
Thus we
were forced, at last, to leave our cottage and seek outside assistance. My
master realized he could not cure his own affliction--the first time, I think,
that the wizard had to face up to such a circumstance. So we traveled to find
another mage of sufficient skill and cunning, though we might have to travel to
far Vushta, the city of a thousand forbidden delights, before we found another
as great as Ebene-zum.
The
wizard walked before me along the closest thing to a path we could find in
these overgrown woods. Every few paces he would pause, so that I,
41
42
burdened
with a pack stuffed with arcane and heavy paraphernalia, could catch up with
his wizardly strides. He, of course, carried nothing.
Still,
all was not right with my master. I saw it in his walk--the same long strides
he always took, but something was missing: the calm placing of one foot in
front of the other, knowing whatever lay in one's path, a wizard could handle
it. He walked too swiftly now, anxious to be done with what I imagined he
thought the most unsavory of tasks: asking another wizard for aid. It
threatened to affect his whole bearing. For the first time in my
apprenticeship, 1 worried for my master.
The
wizard stopped midpath to gaze at the thick growth about us. "I will admit
I'm worried, Wunt." He scratched at the thick white hair beneath his
sorcerer's cap. "My maps and guidebooks indicated this was a lively area,
with much commerce and no dearth of farms and friendly inns. That is the prime
reason ! took this route, for though we have cash from our recent exploits, a
little more wouldn't hurt in the least."
The
wizard stared out into the dark wood, his bushy eyebrows knitted in concern.
"Frankly, I wonder now about the effectiveness of certain other
preparations I made for our journey. You never know what you'll encounter when
traveling."
There
was a great crashing of underbrush to one side of the trail. Branches were rent
asunder; leaves rustled and tore away; small forest creatures cried in fright.
"Doom!"
cried someone from within the thicket. Something large fell between my master
and myself. Ebenezum sneezed. There was sorcery in the air!
"Doom!"
the voice cried again, and the dark
43
brown
object that had fallen between us rose again. It was a tremendous club, 1
realized, for attached to the end nearest the thicket was a large hand, in turn
attached to an arm that disappeared into the heavy greenery. Ebenezum fell back
a few paces along the path and blew his nose on a wizardly sleeve, ready to
conjure despite his affliction.
The
club rose and fell repeatedly to crush the underbrush. A man appeared in the
cleared space. He was enormous--well over six feet in height, with a great
bronze helmet on his head, topped by ornamental wings that made him look even
taller. And he was almost as wide as he was tall, his stomach covered by armor
of the same dull bronze.
He
stepped out to block our path. "Doom!" his deep voice intoned once
more. Ebenezum sneezed.
There
was no helping it. I dropped my pack and grabbed my stout oak staff in both
hands. The armored man took a step toward the helplessly sneezing wizard.
"Back,
villain!" 1 cried in a voice rather higher than I would have liked. Waving
the staff above my head, I rushed the fiend.
"Doom!"
the warrior intoned again. His barbed club met my staff in midair, shearing the
sturdy oak in two.
"Doom!"
The fiend swung once more. 1 ducked to avoid the blow and slipped on a pile of
crushed leaves and vines littered beneath my feet. My left foot shot from under
me, then my right. I fell into a bronze-plated belly.
"Doo--oof!"
the warrior cried as he fell. His helmet struck the base of a tree, and he
cried no more.
"Quick,
Wunt!" Ebenezum gasped. "The club!"
He
tossed a sack at my shoulder. I pushed myself
44
off the
armored belly and managed to fit the cloth around the heavy weapon. The wizard
let out a sigh and blew his nose.
"Enchanted."
So it
was the club, and not the warrior, that had caused my master's sneezing attack.
Ebenezum, once the greatest magician in all the forest country, now brought to
this by his sorcerous affliction! The wizard leaned against a nearby tree, his
breathing deep and ragged, as if his sneezes had robbed his lungs of air. I
looked away until he might recover his breath, idly studying the pile of leaves
into which I had fallen.
The
warrior groaned where he lay.
"Quick,
Wunt!" Ebenezum called. "Quit dawdling and tie the fellow up. I have
a feeling we have much to learn from our rotund assailant."
The big
man opened his eyes as 1 tightened the final knot on his wrists. "What?
I'm still alive? Why haven't you killed and eaten me, the way demons usually
do?"
"Indeed?"
Ebenezum stared down at our captive, his eyes filled with wizardly rage.
"And do we look like demons?"
The
huge man paused. "Now that you mention it, not all that much. But you must
be demons! It is my doom to always confront demons, my fate to fight them
everywhere I turn, lest I be drawn into the Netherhells myself!" A strange
light seemed to come into the large man's eyes, or perhaps it was only the
quivering of his massive cheeks. "You could be demons in disguise! Perhaps
you wish to torture me--slowly, exquisitely--with a cruelty known only to the
Netherhells! Well, let's get it over with!"
Ebenezum
stared at the quivering warrior for a
45
long
moment, pushing his fingers through his great white beard. "I think the
best torture would be to leave you talking to yourself. Wunt, if you'll
shoulder your pack again?"
"Wait!"
the stout man cried. "Perhaps I was hasty. You don't act like demons,
either. And the way you felled me. A lucky blow to the stomach! You must be
human! No demon could be that clumsy.
"Come,
good fellows, I shall make amends!" He tugged at his hands, bound behind
him. "But someone's tied me up!"
I assured
him it was only a precaution. We thought he might be dangerous.
"Dangerous?"
That look came into his eyes again, or perhaps it was the way his helmet fell
to his eyebrows. "Of course I'm dangerous! I am the dread
HendrekofMelifox!"
He
paused expectantly.
"You
haven't heard of me?" he asked after neither one of us responded.
"Hendrek, who wrested the enchanted warclub Headbasher from the demon
Brax, with the promise it would be mine forever? The cursed Headbasher, which
drinks the memories of men? It has given me such power, it has become a part of
me! I need the club, despite its dread secret!"
His
sunken eyes turned to the sack that held his weapon. "The demon did not
inform me of the terms!" The warrior began to shake again. "No man
can truly own Headbasher! They can only rent it! Twice a week, sometimes more,
I am confronted by demons making demands. I must slay them, or do their
fearsome bidding! For Brax did not tell me that when I won the club, I won it
on the installment plan!" By now Hendrek shook uncontrollably, his
46
armor
clanking against his corpulent form.
"Installment
plan?" mused Ebenezum, his interest suddenly aroused. "I had not
thought the accountants of the Netherhells so clever."
"Aye,
clever and more than that! Poor warrior that I am, I despaired of ever finding
someone to save me from this curse, 'til I heard a song from a passing minstrel
about the deeds of a great magician, Ebenezer!"
"Ebenezum,"
my master corrected.
"You've
heard of him?" A cloud seemed to pass from before Hendrek's eyes.
"Where can I find him? I am penniless, on the edge of madness! He's my
last hope!"
I
glanced at the wizard. Didn't the warrior realize?
"But
he's--"
Ebenezum
silenced me with a finger across his lips. "Penniless, did you say? You
realize a wizard of his stature must charge dearly for his services. Of course,
there is always barter--"
"But
of course!" Hendrek cried. "You're a magician, too! Perhaps you can
help me find him. I ask not only for myself, but for a noble cause--a curse
that threatens the entire kingdom, emanating from the treasury of
Melifox!"
"Treasury?"
Ebenezum stood silent for a long moment, then smiled broadly for the first time
since we began our journey. "Look no farther, good Hendrek. I am Ebenezum,
the wizard of whom you speak. Come, we will free your treasury of whatever
curse may have befallen it."
"And
my doom?"
My
master waved a hand of sorcerous dismissal. "Of course, of course. Wunt,
untie the gentleman."
47
I did
as I was told. Hendrek pushed himself erect and lumbered over to his club.
"Just
leave that in the sack, would you?" Eben-ezum called. "Just a
sorcerous precaution."
Hendrek
nodded and tied the sack to his belt.
I
reshouldered my pack and walked over to my master. He seemed to have the
situation well in hand. Perhaps my concern had been misplaced.
"What
need have you to worry?" I asked in a low voice. "Minstrels still
sing your praises."
"Aye,"
Ebenezum whispered back. "Minstrels will sing anyone's praises for the
right fee."
The
warrior Hendrek led us through the thick underbrush, which, if anything, became
more impassable with every step. The late afternoon sun threw long shadows
across our paths, making it difficult to see exactly where you placed your
feet, which made the going slower still.
As we
stumbled through the darkening wood, Hendrek related the story of the curse of
Krenk, capital city of the kingdom of Melifox, and how demons roamed the city,
making it unsafe for human habitation, and how all the land around the capital
grew wild and frightening, like the woods we passed through now. How Krenk had
two resident wizards, neither of whom had been able to lift the curse, so that,
as a last resort, Hendrek had struck a bargain for an enchanted weapon but had
failed to read the infernally small print. But then their ruler, the wise and
kind King Urfoo the Brave, heard a song from a passing minstrel about a great
wizard from the forest country. Hendrek had been sent to find that wizard, at
any cost!
"Any
cost?" Ebenezum echoed. His step had
48
regained
the calm dignity I was more familiar with, not even faltering in the bramble
patch we were now traversing.
"Well,"
Hendrek replied, "Urfoo has been known to exaggerate slightly on occasion.
I'm sure, though, that as you're the last hope of the kingdom, he'll--"
Hendrek
stopped talking and stared before him. We had reached a solid wall of
vegetation, stretching as far as the eye could see and a dozen feet above our
heads.
"This
wasn't here before," Hendrek muttered. He reached out a hand to touch the
dense, green wall. A vine snaked out and encircled his wrist.
Ebenezum
sneezed.
"Doom!"
Hendrek screamed, and pulled his great club Headbasher from the sack at his
belt.
Ebenezum
sneezed uncontrollably.
Hendrek's
club slashed at the vine, but the greenery bent with the blow. The whole wall
was alive now, a dozen vines and creepers waving in the air. They reached for
Hendrek's massive form. His swinging club pushed them back. Ebenezum hid his
head in his voluminous robes. Muffled sneezing emerged from within the folds.
Something
grabbed my ankle: a brown vine, even thicker than those that threatened
Hendrek, winding up my leg toward my thigh. 1 panicked and tried to leap away,
but I only succeeded in losing my footing. The vine dragged me toward the
unnatural wall.
Hendrek
was there before me, slashing in the midst of the gathered green. His strokes
were weaker than before, and he no longer cried out. Vines encircled his form,
and it was only the matter of a moment before he was lost to the leafage.
I
yanked again at the creeper that held me captive.
49
It
still held fast, but I caught a glimpse of my master behind me as I was dragged
the last few feet to the wall.
The
vines were all about the wizard, but only pushed at his sorcerous robes, as if
the animate vegetation somehow sensed that Ebenezum was a greater threat than
either Hendrek or myself. A gnarled tendril crept toward the wizard's sleeve, groping
for his exposed hand.
Ebenezum
flung the robes away from his face and made three complex passes in the air,
uttering a dozen syllables before he sneezed again. The tendril at his sleeve
grew brown and withered, dissolving into dust.
My leg
was free! I kicked the dead vine away and stood. Ebenezum blew his nose
heartily on his sleeve. Hendrek had collapsed in what had been the vegetable
wall. Leaves crackled beneath him as he gasped for air.
"Doom!"
Hendrek groaned as I helped him to his feet. '"Tis the work of demons, set
on exacting vengeance upon me for nonpayment!"
Ebenezum
shook his head. "Nonsense. 'Twas nothing more than sorcery. A simple
vegetable aggression spell, emanating from Krenk, I imagine." He started
down the newly cleared path. "Time to be off, lads. Someone, it appears,
is expecting us."
!
gathered up my gear as quickly as possible and trotted after Ebenezum. Hendrek
took up the rear, muttering even more darkly than before. I saw what looked
like a city before us on a distant hill, its high walls etched against the
sunset sky.
We
reached the walls sometime after nightfall. Hendrek pounded on the great oak
gate. There was no response.
50
"They
fear demons," Hendrek said in a low voice. Rather more loudly, he called:
"Ho! Let us in! Visitors of importance to the township of Krenk!"
"Says
who?" A head, clad in an ornate silver helmet, appeared at the top of the
wall.
"Hendrek!"
intoned the warrior.
"Who?
"the head replied.
"The
dread Hendrek, famed in song and story!"
"The
dread who?"
The
warrior's hand clutched convulsively at the sack that held the club.
"Hendrek, famed in song and story, who wrested the doomed club
Head-basher--"
"Oh,
Hendrek!" the head exclaimed. "That large fellow that King Urfoo the
Brave sent off on a mission the other day!"
"Aye!
So open the gates! Don't you recognize me?"
"You
do bear a passing resemblance. But one can't be too careful these days. You
look like Hendrek, but you might be two or three demons, huddled close
together."
"Doom!"
Hendrek cried. "1 must get through the gate, to bring the wizard Ebenezum
and his assistant before the king!"
"Ebenedum?"
The head's voice rose in excitement. "The one the minstrels sing
about?"
"Ebenezum,"
my master corrected.
"Yes!"
Hendrek roared back. "So let us in. There are demons about!"
"My
problem exactly," the head replied. "The two others could be demons,
too. With the three huddled together to masquerade as Hendrek, that would make
five demons I'd be letting through the gate. One can't be too careful these
days, you know."
51
Hendrek
threw his great winged helmet to the ground. "Do you expect us to stand
around here all night?"
"Not
necessarily. You could come back first thing in the mornin--" The head's
suggestion was cut short when it was swallowed whole by some large green thing
that glowed in the darkness.
"Demons!"
Hendrek cried. "Doom!" He pulled his warclub from the sack. Ebenezum
sneezed violently. Meanwhile,, up on the parapet, a second thing had joined the
first. This one glowed bright pink.
What
appeared to be an eye floating above the circular green glow turned to regard
the pink thing, while the eye above the pink turned to look at the green.
Something dropped from the middle of <he green mass and writhed its way
toward us down the wall. A similar tentacle came from the pink creature to grab
the green appendage and pull it back up the wall. Both orbs grew brighter with
a whistling sound that rose and rose, then both vanished with a flash and a
sound like thunder.
The
door to the city opened silently before us.
The
wizard turned away from Hendrek and blew his nose.
"Interesting
city you have here," Ebenezum said as he led the way.
There
was something waiting for us inside. Something about four and a half feet high,
its skin a sickly yellow. It wore a strange suit of alternate blue and green
squares, as if someone had painted a chessboard across the material. A piece of
red cloth was tied in a bow around its neck. There were horns on its head and a
smile on its lips.
"Hendrek!"
the thing cried. "Good to see you again!"
52
"Doom!"
the warrior replied as he freed his club from his sack. Ebenezum stepped away
and held his robes to his nose.
"Just
checking on my investment, Henny. How do you like your new warclub?"
"Spawn
of the Netherhells! Headbasher will never be yours again!"
"Who
said we wanted it? Headbasher is yours-- for a dozen easy payments! And nothing
that costly. A few souls of second-rate princes, the downfall of a minor
kingdom, a barely enchanted jewel or two. Then the wondrous weapon is truly
yours!"
The
creature deftly dodged the swinging warclub. Cobblestones flew where the club
hit the street.
"And
what a weapon it is!" the demon continued. "The finest warclub to
ever grace our showroom! Did I say used? Let's call it previously owned. This
creampuff of a weapon sat in the arsenal of an aged king, who only used it on
Sunday to bash in the heads of convicted felons. Thus its colorful name, and
its beautiful condition. Take it from me, Smilin' Brax" --the demon fell
to the pavement as Headbasher whizzed overhead--"there isn't a finer used
club on the market today. As I was saying just the other day to my
lovely--urk--"
The
demon stopped talking when I hit it on the head. 1 had managed to sneak up
behind the creature as it babbled and knocked it with a rather large
cobblestone. The creature's blue-and-green-checked knees buckled under the
blow.
"Easy
terms!" it gasped.
Hendrek
quickly followed with a blow from Headbasher. The demon ducked, but it was
still groggy from the first blow. The club caught its shoulder.
"Easy
payments!" the thing groaned.
53
Hendrek's
club came down squarely on the sickly yellow head. The demon's smile faltered.
"This may be--the last time--we make this special offer!" The
creature groaned again and vanished.
Hendrek
wiped the yellow ichor off Headbasher with a shabby sleeve. "This is my
doom," he whispered hoarsely, "to be forever pursued by Smilin' Brax,
with his demands for Headbasher, which no man can own, but can only rent!"
That strange light seemed to come into his eyes again, though perhaps it was
only the reflection of the moon on the cobblestones.
Ebenezum
stepped from the shadows. "It doesn't seem as bad as all that. . . . Uh,
put that club back in the sack, would you? That's a good mercenary, mustn't
take any chances." He blew his nose. "The two of you defeated the
demon tidily."
My
master pulled his beard reflectively. "As I see it, the effectiveness of
any curse depends on how the cursed looks at it. Watching the proceedings very
carefully, with a wizard's trained eye, mind you, I can state categorically
that once we disenchant the treasury, you'll have nothing to worry about."
A
weight seemed to lift from Hendrek's brow. "Really?"
"You
may depend on it." Ebenezum brushed at his robes. "Incidentally, does
good King Urfoo really consider us the last hope for rescuing his gold?"
Hendrek
assured us once again of the importance of our quest, then proceeded to lead us
through the winding streets of Krenk to Urfoo's castle. I'd grown up in the
duchy of Gurnish, in and around Wizard's Woods, and Krenk was the largest town
I had ever seen, with walls and a gate, as many as five hundred buildings, even
paved streets! But I saw nothing else
54
as we
walked. Where were the taverns, where we could stop and exchange pleasantries
with the natives? Where were the town's attractive young women? How could I be
prepared when we finally arrived in Vushta, the city of a thousand forbidden
delights, if every town was as dead as this?
There
was a scream in the distance. Hendrek froze, but the scream was followed by a
woman's laughter. At least some were enjoying themselves, 1 supposed. Was the
whole town so afraid of demons?
We came
to an open space, in the middle of which was a building twice as grand and five
times as large as anything around it. There was a guard standing in front of
the palace's huge door, the first human we'd seen since entering Krenk.
"Halt!"
the guard cried as we walked into the courtyard before him. "And be
recognized!"
Hendrek
kept on moving. "Important business with King Urfoo!"
The
guard unsheathed his sword. "Identify yourself, under penalty of
death!"
"Doom!"
the immense warrior moaned. "Don't you recognize Hendrek, back from an
important mission for the king?"
The
guard squinted in the darkness. "Don't I recognize who? I didn't quite
catch the name."
"The
dread Hendrelc, here with the wizard Ebenezum!"
"Ebenezus?
The one they all sing about?" The guard bowed in my master's direction.
"I'm honored, sir, to meet a wizard of your stature."
The
guard turned back to Hendrek, who was quite close to the door by now.
"Now, what did you say your name was again? I can't let just anybody
55
through
this door. You can't be too careful these days, you know."
"Doom!"
Hendrek cried, and with a speed amazing in one so large, he pulled his club
from its restraining sack and bashed the guard atop the head.
"Urk,"
the guard replied. "Who are you? Who am I? Who cares?" The guard fell
on his face.
"Headbasher,
the club that drinks the memories of men. He will recover anon, but will
remember none of this, or anything else, for that matter." Hendrek
resheathed his club. "Come. We have business with Urfoo." He kicked
the door aside and stormed into the castle.
I
glanced at my master. He stroked his mustache for a moment, then nodded and
said: "The treasury." We followed Hendrek inside.
We
walked down a long hall. Sputtering torchlight made our shadows dance against
huge tapestries that covered the walls. A breeze from somewhere blew against my
coat to make me feel far colder than I had outside. This, I realized, was the
castle with the curse.
Two
guards waited before a door hung with curtains at the far end of the hall.
Hendrek bashed them both before either could say a word.
Hendrek
kicked this door open as well.
"Who?"
a voice screamed from the shadow of a very large chair on a raised platform in
the room's center.
"Hendrek,"
the warrior replied.
"Who's
that?" A head sporting a crown peered over the arm of the great chair.
"Oh, yes, that portly fellow we sent off last week. What news, what?"
"I've
brought Ebenezum."
56
There
was a great rustling as people rose from their hiding places around the room.
"Nenebeezum?" someone said from behind a chair. "Ebenezix?"
came a voice from behind a pillar.
"Ebenezum,"
replied my master.
"Ebenezum!"
a chorus of voices responded as a good two dozen people stepped from behind
marble columns, tapestries, and suits of armor to stare at my master.
"The
Ebenezum? The one they sing about?" King Urfoo sat up straight in his
throne and smiled. "Hendrek, you shall be justly rewarded!" The smile
fell. "Once we take the curse off the treasury, of course."
"Doom,"
Hendrek replied.
King
Urfoo directed us to sit on cushioned chairs before him, then paused to look
cautiously at the room's shadow-hung corners. Nothing stirred. The ruler
coughed and spoke. "Best get down to business, what? One can't be too
careful these days."
"My
thoughts exactly, good king." Ebenezum rose from his seat and approached
the throne. "I understand there is a cursed treasury involved? There's no
time to waste."
"Exactly!"
Urfoo glanced nervously at the rafters overhead. "My money involved too.
Lovely money. No time to waste, what? I'd best introduce you now to my two
sorcerous advisers."
Ebenezum
stopped his forward momentum. "Advisers?"
"Yes,
yes, the two court wizards. They can fill you in on the details of the
curse." Urfoo tugged a chord by his side.
"I
generally work alone." My master pulled at his
57
beard.
"But when there's a cursed treasury involved, I suppose one can adjust."
A door
opened behind the king and two robed figures emerged, one male, one female.
"No time to waste!" the king exclaimed. "May I introduce you to
your colleagues, Granach and Vizolea?"
The
newcomers stood on either side of Urfoo's throne, and for an instant, the three
wizards regarded each other in silence. Then Vizolea smiled and bowed to my
master. She was a tall, handsome woman of middle years, almost my height, red
hair spiced with gray, strong green eyes, white teeth showing in an attractive
smile.
Ebenezum
returned the gesture with a flourish.
Granach,
an older man dressed in gray, nodded to my master in turn, something on his
face half smile, half grimace.
"The
problem," King Urfoo said, "is demons, of course." He cringed on
the word "demons," as if he expected one of them to strike him down
for mentioning their existence. "We're beset with them. They're
everywhere! But mostly"--he pointed a quivering hand toward the ceiling,
"they're in the tower that holds the treasury!"
He
lowered his hand and took a deep breath.
"Doom,"
Hendrek interjected.
"But
perhaps," the king continued, "my court wizards can give you a better
idea of the sorcerous fine points." He glanced quickly to either side.
"Certainly,
my lord," Granach said quickly behind his half grimace. "Although
none of this would have been necessary if we used the Spell of the Golden
Star."
Urfoo
sat bolt upright. "No! That spell would cost
58
me half
my funds! There has to be a better way. Doesn't there?"
Ebenezum
stroked his mustache. "Most assuredly. If the other wizards are willing to
discuss the situation with me, I'm sure we can find some solution."
"Nothing's
better than the Golden Star!" Granach snapped.
"Half
my gold!" the king cried. He added in a whisper: "Perhaps you should
all--uh . . . inspect the tower?"
Granach
and Vizolea exchanged glances.
"Very
good, my lord," Vizolea replied. "Do you wish to accompany us
now?"
"Accompany
you?" Urfoo's complexion grew paler still. "Is that completely
necessary?"
Vizolea
nodded, a sad smile on her face. "For the hundredth time, yes. It states
directly in the sorcerer's charter that a member of the royal family must
accompany all magicians on visits to the treasury."
"Signed
right there," Granach added. "At the bottom of the page. In
blood."
Urfoo
pushed his crown back to mop his brow. "Oh, dear. How could that have
happened?"
"If
you'll excuse me for mentioning it, my lord," Vizolea said with downturned
eyes, "'twas you who stipulated the terms of the pact."
The
king swallowed. "There is no time to waste. I must accompany you?"
Granach
and Vizolea nodded. "There's no helping it, without the Golden Star,"
Granach added.
"And
so you shall!" My master's voice broke through the tension around the
throne. "We shall inspect the treasury, first thing in the morning!"
59
Urfoo,
who had been slowly sinking in his throne, sat up again and smiled.
"Morning?"
Ebenezum
nodded. "My 'prentice and I have just completed a long journey. How much
better to confront a curse during the light of day with a clear head!"
"Morning!"
Urfoo the Brave shouted. He smiled at the court-appointed wizards. "You
are dismissed until breakfast, what? Ebenezum, I can tell you are a wizard of
rare perception. I shall have my serving girls make your beds and bring you
dinner. And in the morning, you will end the curse!"
I sat
up straight myself. Serving girls? Perhaps there was something of interest in
the township of Krenk after all.
"We
must plan, Wunt," my master said when we were at last alone. "We only
have 'til morning."
I
turned from arranging the pile of cushions and skins that I was to sleep on. My
master sat on a large bed they had provided him, head in hands, one on either
side of his beard.
"I
did not expect wizards." He threw his cap on the bed then and stood.
"But the accomplished mage must be prepared for every eventuality. It is
of utmost importance, especially concerning the size of our fee, that no one
should learn of my unfortunate malady."
The
sorcerer paced across the room. "I shall instruct you on certain items
that have been stored in your pack. We must keep up appearances. And the
business with that warrior's enchanted club has given me an idea. We'll best my
affliction yet."
60
There
was a knock on the door.
"I
was expecting that," Ebenezum said. "See which one it is."
I
opened the door to find Granach. He shuffled into the room, still wearing his
grimace smile.
"Excuse
me for interrupting at so late an hour," the gray-clad wizard began,
"but I did not feel earlier that I had an opportunity to welcome you
properly."
"Indeed,"
Ebenezum replied, raising one bushy eyebrow.
"And
1 thought there were certain things that you should be informed of. Before we
actually visit the tower, that is."
"Indeed?"
Both eyebrows rose this time.
"Yes.
First, a quick word about our patron, King Urfoo the Brave. It is fortunate for
him that the Krenkites prefer epithets added early during a ruler's reign, for
since he gave up chasm-jumping at the age of sixteen, Urfoo has spent all his
time in the treasury tower, counting his gold. Note that 1 didn't mention
spending. Just counting. If you were anticipating a large return on your
services, you might as well leave now. Our ruler should rather be called King
Urfoo the Stingy. The payment won't be worth the risk!"
"Indeed."
Ebenezum stroked his beard.
Granach
coughed. "Now that you know, I expect you'll be on your way."
My
master tugged the creases of his sleeves into place. "Indeed, no. A
traveling magician, unfortunately, cannot pick and choose his clients in the
same way a town mage might. He has to accept what tasks come his way, and hope
that what small payment he might receive will be enough to take him farther on
his journey."
The
toothy grimace disappeared completely from
61
Granach's
face. "You have been warned," he snarled from between tight lips.
"The payment you will receive will in no way compensate for the danger you
will face!"
Ebenezum
smiled and walked to the door. "Indeed," he said as he opened it.
"See you at breakfast?"
The
other magician slithered out. Ebenezum closed the door behind him. "Now
I'm sure there's money to be made here," he remarked. "But to
business. I shall instruct you as to the proper volume and page number for
three simple exorcism spells. I wonder, frankly, if we'll even need them."
He
pulled one of the notebooks he was constantly writing in from his pocket and
began to tear out pages. "In the meantime, I will begin to prepare my
temporary remedy.
"The
idea came from Hendrek's enchanted club." He tore the pages into strips.
"When Hendrek's club is in the open air, I sneeze. However, when the club
is in the sack, my nose is unaffected. It can no longer sense the club's
sorcerous aroma. Therefore, if I stop my nasal sensitivity to things sorcerous,
I should stop my sneezing!" He rolled the first of the strips into a tight
cylinder. "But how to accomplish this, short of standing in the rain 'til
I catch cold?"
He held
the cylinder aloft so I could get a good look at it, then stuffed it up his
nose.
There
was another knock at the door.
"High
time," Ebenezum said, pulling the cylinder back out. "See who it is
this time, Wunt."
It was
Vizolea. She had changed from her stiff wizard's robes into a flowing black
gown with a low neckline. Her deep green eyes looked into mine, and she smiled.
62
"Wuntvor,
isn't it?"
"Yes,"
I whispered.
"I
would like to talk to your master, Ebenezum."
I
stepped back to let her enter the room.
"I've
always wanted to meet a wizard of your skill."
"Indeed?"
my master replied.
She
turned back to me, touched my shoulder with one long-fingered hand.
"Wuntvor? Do you think you can leave your master and me alone for a
while?"
I
glanced at the mage. He nodded rapidly.
"Let
me tell you about the Golden Star," Vizolea said as I closed the door
behind me.
I stood
in the hallway outside the room for a moment, stunned. 1 had a feeling from
Vizolea's manner that she wanted to do more than talk. With my master? I had
been known, in recent months, to keep company with a number of young ladies in
my home district, but somehow Ebenezum had always seemed above that sort of
thing.
But I
was still only an apprentice, unaware of the nuances of a true sorcerer's life.
I sat heavily, wondering how I could get to sleep on the hallway's cold stone
floor, and wishing, for just a moment, that a serving maid of my very own might
wander by and make my situation more comfortable.
She
wanted to leave.
Wait! I
cried. I'm a sorcerer's apprentice. When will you get another chance to dally
with anyone half as interesting?
She
wouldn't listen. She drifted farther and farther away. I ran after her, trying
to shorten the distance.
63
It was
no use. She was oblivious to me. I grabbed at her lowcut serving gown, pushed
the tray from her hands, begged her to give me a single word.
"Doom,"
she said in far too low a voice.
1 awoke
to see Hendrek's face, lit by torchlight.
"Beware,
Wuntvor! Tis not safe to sleep in these halls! Demons roam them in the wee
hours!" He leaned close to me, his overstuffed cheeks aquiver, and
whispered: "You moaned so in your sleep, at first I thought you were a
demon, too!"
I saw
then he held Headbasher in his free hand. "Some nights I cannot sleep, I
fear the demons so. 'Tis strange, though. Tonight I've seen nary a one. Grab on
to my club!" He helped me to my feet. "What brings you to moans in
the hallway?"
I
explained my dreams of serving maids.
"Aye!"
Hendrek replied. "This place is full of haunted dreams. This cursed palace
was built by Urfoo's doomed grandfather--some called him Vor-terk the Cunning,
others called him Mingo the Mad. Still others called him Eldrag the Offensive,
not to mention those few who referred to him as Greeshbar the Dancer. But those
are other stories. I speak now of the haunted corridors Vorterk built. Sound
will sometimes carry along them for vast distances, seemingly from a direction
opposite to where it actually originates. Hush, now!"
I
didn't mention that it was he who did all the talking, for there was indeed a
voice in the distance, screaming something over and over. I strained to hear.
It
sounded like "Kill Ebenezum! Kill Ebenezum! KillEbenezum!"
"Doom!"
Hendrek rumbled. I took a step in the direction of the screams. Hendrek grabbed
my coat
64
in his
enormous fist and dragged me the other way through the maze of corridors. He
paused at each intersection for a fraction of a moment, waiting for the screams
to tell him which way to turn. Sometimes it seemed we turned toward the sounds,
other times away. I became lost in no time at all.
But the
voices were clearer now. There were two of them, and the one no longer shouted.
Both were agitated, though.
"I
don't think so."
"But
we ha veto!"
"You
want to move too fast!"
"You
don't want to move at all! We'll have to wait for years before we get the
treasury!"
"If
I let you handle it, it will slip through our fingers! We should enlist
Ebenezum!"
"No!
How could we trust him? Ebenezum must die!"
"Perhaps
I should join Ebenezum and do away with you!"
Hendrek
stopped suddenly and I walked into him. His armor banged against my knee.
"There's
someone out there!"
A door
was flung open just before us. I froze, waiting for the owners o.f the voices
to emerge.
Something
else came out instead.
"Doom,"
Hendrek muttered when he saw it crawl our way. It looked like a spider, except
that it was as large as me and had a dozen legs rather than eight. It was also
bright red.
Hendrek
swung the club above his head. Head-basher looked far smaller than it had
before.
The
creature hissed and jumped across the hall. Something else followed it out of
the room. Large and green, the newcomer looked something like a
65
huge,
bloated toad with fangs. It jumped next to the spider-thing and growled in our
direction.
"Doom,
doom," Hendrek wheezed. 1 considered running, but Hendrek's bulk blocked
my only escape route.
The
bloated toad leapt in front of the almost spider. Its fangs seemed to smile.
Then the red, many-legged thing scuttled over it in our direction. The toad
growled and pushed past the dozen legs, but four legs wrapped around the toad
and flipped it over. The almost spider moved in front.
Then
the toad-thing jumped straight on top of the many-legged red thing. The almost
spider hissed, the toad-thing growled. Legs interlocked, they rolled. Soon we
could see nothing but flashing feet and dripping fangs.
Both
disappeared in a cloud of brown, foul-smelling smoke.
"Doom,"
Hendrek muttered.
Another
door opened behind us.
"Don't
you think it was time you were in bed?"
It was
Ebenezum.
I
started to explain what had happened, but he motioned me to silence. "You
need your sleep. We've a big day tomorrow." He nodded at Hendrek.
"We'll see you in the morning."
The
warrior looked once more at the spot where the creatures had disappeared.
"Doom," he replied, and walked down the hall.
"Not
if I can help it," Ebenezum said as he closed the door.
FOUR
"
'Never trust another sorcerer' is a saying unfortunately all too common among
magical practitioners. Actually, there are many instances where one can easily
trust a fellow magician, such as cases where no money is involved, or when the
other mage is operating at such a distance that his spells can't possibly
affect you."
--THE
TEACHINGS OF EBENEZUM, Volume XIV
No one
ate when we met for breakfast. I sat quietly, running the three short spells 1
had memorized over and over in my head. My master was quieter than usual, too,
being careful not to dislodge the thin rolls of paper that packed his nose.
Vizolea and Granach glared at each other from opposite sides of the table,
while Hendrek muttered and the king quivered.
Ebenezum
cleared his throat and spoke with the lower half of his face. "We must
inspect the tower." His voice sounded strangely hollow.
67
68
"The
tower?" Urfoo whispered. "Well, yes, there's no time to lose."
He swallowed. "The tower."
Ebenezum
stood. The rest followed. "Hendrek," my master instructed, "lead
the way."
The
mage strode over to the king. "As we go on our inspection, Your Majesty, I
should like to discuss the matter of our fee."
"Fee?"
Urfoo quivered. "But there's no time to lose! The treasury is
cursed!"
Vizolea
was by my master's side. "Are you sure you really wish to inspect the
tower? There may be things there you do not want to see." Her hand brushed
his shoulder. "You do remember our conversation last night?"
"Indeed."
Ebenezum tugged his mustache meaningfully. "I have a feeling there are
things about this treasury that will surprise us all."
"Doom!"
came from the front of the line as the procession moved from the throne room.
"Do
I really have to come along?" came from the end.
"The
charter," Granach replied.
"Perhaps
we are being a bit hasty, what?" The king wiped his brow with an ornate
lace sleeve. "What say we postpone this, to better consider our
options?"
"Postpone?"
Granach and Vizolea looked at each other. "Well, if we must."
They
turned and started back for the great hall.
"If
you postpone this," Ebenezum said as he caught the eye of the king,
"King Urfoo may never see his money again."
"Never?"
The king positively shook. "Money?
69
Never?
Money? Nevermoney?" He took a deep breath. "No time to lose, what? To
the tower!"
We
climbed a narrow flight of stairs to a large landing and another thick oak
door.
"The
treasury," Hendrek intoned.
"Your
Majesty. The incantation, if you would," Granach remarked.
Urfoo
huddled in the rear corner of the landing, eyes shut tight, and screamed:
"Give
me an O! O! GivemeaPJP! Give me an E! E! GivemeanNIN! What's that spell? Open!
Open! Open!"
The
door made a popping noise and did as it was bidden. No sound came from within.
"Go
ahead," Urfoo called. "I'll just wait out here."
Ebenezum
strode into the treasury.
The
room was not large, but it was not particularly small, either. And it was
filled with ornate boxes and stacks of gold, fantastic jewelry, and quite a few
unmarked sacks, piled waist high at least, shoulder height near the walls.
We
waded into the midst of it.
"Doom,"
Hendrek murmured. "So where are the demons?"
An
unearthly scream came from the landing. Urfoo entered, pursued by the spider.
"The
Spider of Spudora!" my master cried. He held his nose.
70
"Granach!"
Vizolea exclaimed. "We didn't talk about this!"
"Your
Majesty!" Granach shouted. "There is only one hope! The Golden Star,
performed by me!"
"No,
you don't!" Vizolea recited a few quick words beneath her breath. "If
anyone recites the Golden Star, it will be me!"
The
toad-thing hopped into the room.
"The
Toad of Togoth!" my master said.
"Quick,
Urfoo!" cried Granach. "Give me leave to perform the spell before
it's too late!"
A red
claw snapped out of a pile of jewels.
"The
Crab of Crunz!" my master informed me.
"Not
the crab!" Vizolea shrieked. "This time, Granach, you've gone too
far! Bring on the Lice of Liftiana!"
Granach
stepped aside to avoid the panting Urfoo, now pursued by the almost spider, the
bloated toad, and a grinning crustacean.
"Oh,
no, you don't!" the dour wizard cried. "Bring forth the dread Cows of
Cuddotha!"
My
master flung his hands in the air. "Stop this now! You'll cause a
sorcerous overload!"
The air
shimmered as the room was filled with a chorus of spectral moos. A sickly
yellow form solidified before us.
"Ah,
good Hendrek!" Smilin' Brax exclaimed. "How good to see you again. We
of the demon persuasion like to check out areas of extreme sorcerous activity;
see if we can do a little business, as it were. And boy, is there business
here! Perhaps some of you folks would like to purchase an enchanted blade or
two, before some of my folks arrive?"
"Doom,"
Hendrek muttered.
71
Urfoo
ran past. "AH right! AH right! I'll think about the Golden Star!" A
blue cow with bloodshot eyes galloped after him.
"The
Lion of Lygthorpedia!"
"The
Grouse of Grimola!"
"Stop
it! Stop it! It's too much!" Ebenezum pulled back his sleeves, ready to
conjure.
"How
about you, lad?" Brax said to me. "I've got this nifty enchanted
dagger, always goes straight for the heart. Makes a dandy letter opener, too.
I'm practically giving it away. Just sign on this line down here."
"The
Tiger of Tabatta!"
"The
Trout of Tamboul!"
"Too
much!" Ebenezum shouted, and sneezed the most profound sneeze I have ever
seen. Paper showered over the newly materialized devil trout, while the force
of the blow knocked Ebenezum back against a pile of jewels.
He
didn't move. He had been knocked unconscious.
"Doom,"
Hendrek intoned.
"Then
again," Brax said, looking around the room, "maybe I'd better sell
you an axe."
"The
Antelope of Arasaporta!"
Someone
had to stop this! It was up to me. I had to use the exorcism spells!
"Sneebly
Gravich Etoa Shrudu--" I began.
"The
Elephant of Erasia!"
Wait a
second. Was it "Sneebly Gravich Etoa" or "Etoa Gravich
Sneebly"? I decided to try it the other way, too.
"All
right! You force my hand! The Whale of Wakkanor!"
72
There
was an explosion in the center of the room. Instead of a materialized whale,
there was a lightless hole.
Ebenezum
stirred on his bed of jewels.
Brax
looked over his shoulder as the black void grew. "Drat. This would have to
happen now, right on the edge of a sale. Oh, well, see you in the
Nether-hells!" The demon disappeared.
It was
suddenly quiet in the room. The two other magicians had stopped conjuring, and
all the demon creatures, crabs and cows, tigers and trout, had turned to watch
the expanding hole.
Ebenezum
opened his eyes. "A vortex!" he cried. "Quick! We can still
close it if we work together!"
A wind
rose, sucked into the hole. The creatures of the Netherhells, bats and rats,
mice and lice, were drawn into the dark.
Granach
and Vizolea both gestured wildly into the void.
"Together!"
Ebenezum cried. "We must work together!" Then he began to sneeze. He
pulled his robes to his nose, stepped back from the vortex. It was no use. He
doubled over, lost to his malady.
The
darkness was taking the jewels now, and the sacks of gold. And I could feel the
wind pulling me. Granach screamed at it, and he was drawn in. Vizolea cried
against it, then she was gone. The blackness reached out for Hendrek and the
king, my master and me.
Ebenezum
flung his robes away to shout a few words into the increasing gale. A bar of
gold skidded by me and was swallowed. Ebenezum made a pass, and the vortex
shrank. He gestured again, and the vortex grew smaller still, about the size of
a man.
73
Then
Ebenezum sneezed again.
"Doom!"
Hendrek cried. King Urfoo, wide-eyed, was skidding across the floor to the
void.
The
warrior and 1 pushed against the wind to his aid. Jewels scattered beneath our
feet and were lost. I shoved a chest toward the gaping maw, hoping to cover a
part of it, but it was sucked straight through.
"My
gold!" Urfoo cried as he rolled for the hole. 1 snagged a foot, Hendrek
grasped the other. I struggled for footing on the loose jewels that rolled
across the floor to the void. I slipped and fell into the warrior.
"Doo--oof!"
he cried as he lost his balance. He fell back into the hole.
The
wind stopped. Hendrek stood, half here and half somewhere else. His girth had
plugged the vortex.
Ebenezum
blew his nose. "That's better." He recited a few incantations,
sneezed once more, and the hole sealed up as we pulled Hendrek free.
My
master then gave a brief explanation to the king, who sat glassy-eyed on the
now bare floor of the treasury. How his wizards had tried to cheat him of half
the treasury by inventing a curse when they couldn't get the money any other
way, thanks to the sorcerous charter that called for a member of the royal
family to open the door. How Ebenezum had discovered this plot, and how he
should be amply rewarded for saving the king's money.
"Money?"
King Urfoo the Brave whispered as he looked around. Perhaps a dozen jewels and
gold pieces were left where once there had been a room of plenty. "Money!
You've taken my money! Guards! Kill them! They've taken my money! Urk!"
74
Hendrek
hit him on top of the head.
"They've--what?
Where am I? Oh, hello." The king lost consciousness.
"Doom,"
Hendrek murmured. "Headbasher does its hellish job again."
My
master suggested it might be a good time to travel.
We had
to wait some hours in the pouring rain before we could get a ride away from
Krenk. Ebenezum had thought it best, in case of pursuit, to cover his wizardly
robes with a more neutral cloth of brown, and passing wagons were reticent to
pick up characters as motley-looking as the three of us, especially with one
the size of Hendrek.
"Perhaps,"
Ebenezum suggested with a pull on his beard, "we would have better luck if
we separated."
"Doom!"
Hendrek shivered and clutched at the bag that held Headbasher. "But what
of my curse?"
"Hendrek."
The wizard put a comradely hand on the large warrior's shoulder. "I can guarantee
you'll see nothing of Brax for quite some time. The severity of that vortex was
such that it shook through at least three levels of the Netherhells. Take it
from an expert; their transportation lines won't be cleared for months!"
"Then,"
rumbled Hendrek, "I'm freed of Brax and his kind?"
"For
the time being. Only a temporary remedy, I'm afraid. I have a certain
affliction . . ." He paused, looking Hendrek straight in the eye.
"Also temporary, I assure you, that keeps me from affecting a more permanent
cure. However, I shall give you the names of certain sorcerous specialists in
Vushta,
75
who
should be able to help you immediately." My master wrote three names on a
page of his notebook and gave them to the warrior.
Hendrek
thrust the piece of parchment in Head-basher's bag, then bowed low to my
master. "Thank you, great wizard. To Vushta, then." His head seemed
to quake with emotion, but perhaps it was only the rain pouring on his helmet.
"We're
bound for Vushta ourselves, eventually," I added. "Perhaps we'll meet
again."
"Who
knows what the fates will?" said Hendrek as he turned away.
"Doom."
He was
soon lost in the heavy downpour.
Once
the warrior was gone, I looked again to my master. He stood tall in the soaking
rain, every inch a wizard despite his disguise. If any doubts had assailed
Ebenezum on our arrival in Krenk, his actions in the subsequent events seemed
to have erased them from his mind. He was Ebenezum, the finest wizard in all
the forest country. And in Krenk as well!
Finally,
I could bear it no longer. I asked my master what he knew about the plot
against King Urfoo.
"
'Tis simple enough," Ebenezum replied. "Urfoo had the wealth that the
wizards wanted, but couldn't get to, because of the charm on the door. So they
devised the Spell of the Golden Star, through which, by their definition, Urfoo
would have to release half the gold from the charmed tower in order for the
spell to work. I don't blame them, in a way. Act cording to Vizolea, the king
hadn't gotten around to paying them in all the years they were in his service.
Unfortunately, they got greedy, and didn't work in unison, and you saw what
happened. They even considered working the Golden Star spell three ways; at
76
least
Vizolea suggested as much, although"--my master coughed--"I usually
don't engage in such activities."
He
looked up and down the deserted road, then reached in his damp coat to pull out
a bar of gold. "Good. I was afraid I'd lost it in our flight. I have so
many layers of clothing on, I could no longer feel it."
1 gaped
as he hid the gold again. "How did you get that? The floor of the treasury
was stripped."
"The
floor was." The wizard nodded. "The in-sides of my robes were not. A
wizard has to plan ahead, Wunt. Sorcerers are expected to maintain a certain
standard of living."
I shook
my head. I should never have doubted my master for a moment.
Ebenezum
gazed off into the never-ending rain. "Things are afoot, Wuntvor," he
said after a moment's pause. "I had not thought we would find this much
sorcerous activity this soon."
"We've
been lucky, then?" I asked.
"Perhaps.
We were lucky, too, in the last few months at our cottage. A half dozen
high-paying commissions, all somehow the result of the Nether-hells. It has
sent us on the road'to Vushta far sooner than I had imagined."
The
wizard glared up at the sky. The water splashed from his cheekbones and ran in
rivulets through his beard. "Oh, if 1 could risk a weather spell! But I
have sneezed far too much today. One more sniff of magic tonight, and I fear my
nose would jump from my face."
My
master made light of his malady, but still I could tell it troubled him. I did
my best to change the subject.
"Tell
me about Vushta," I said.
77
"Ah,
Vushta, city of a thousand forbidden delights!" The wizard's mood seemed
to lighten with every word. "If a man is not careful, the city might
change him completely in the blink of an eye."
It was
all I had been hoping for. I begged my master to go on.
"Let's
hear no more of magic or fabled cities tonight," was all he would say.
"Our luck holds with us. Methinks some sturdy tradesman has come to our
rescue."
Indeed,
a covered cart had pulled to the side of the road. Perhaps we would spend a dry
and quiet night after all.
"Need
a ride?" the driver called. We clambered in the back.
"Tis
a dismal night," the driver continued. "I'll sing you a song to lift
your spirits. That's what I am--a traveling minstrel!"
Ebenezum
looked out from his hood in alarm, then averted his face so that it was lost in
shadow.
"Let's
see what would be appropriate?" The minstrel tugged the reins of his mule.
"Ah! Just the thing for a night straight from the Netherhells. I'll sing
you a song about the bravest wizard around; fellow from the forest country up
Gurnish way. Um . . . Neebednuzum, 1 think he's called. Now, this ditty's a
little long, but I think you'll be struck by the fellow's bravery."
Ebenezum
had fallen asleep by the third verse.
FIVE
"Your
average ghost is a much more complex and interesting individual than is
generally imagined. Just because someone is dragging chains or has one's head
perpetually in flames does not necessarily make them of a lesser class. Some
ghosts, especially those with heads attached and mouths to speak through, are
actually quite good conversationalists, with other-worldly stories by the
score. In addition, ghosts generally subscribe to the happy custom of
disappearing completely at dawn, a habit many living associates and relatives
might do well to cultivate."
--THE
TEACHINGS OF EBENEZUM, Volume VI
(Appendix
B)
After
our harrowing experience with King Urfoo in Krenk, I think both Ebenezum and
myself expected our luck to change. Perhaps we would at last find a wizard great
enough to cure my master without having to travel to far Vushta.
79
80
But the
city of a thousand forbidden delights began to seem more of a possibility with
every passing day. What with being chased out of one kingdom and not being
particularly welcome in the next two, we hadn't a chance to meet any wizards at
all. Then there'd been the mercenaries Urfoo had sent to kill us, and the seven
straight days of rain, and the incident with the giant swamp rats. I didn't
even want to think of those.
But
still my master walked on, proud and tall, toward far, forbidden Vushta. And I
would follow him there, and anywhere. Even with his affliction, Ebenezum was
the greatest wizard I had ever seen!
I
touched my walking stick to my forehead in a silent salute to the man before
me. Our luck was bound to change!
It was
then that I lost my footing and slid down the hill, colliding with my master.
Our
fall ended in a cluster of bushes at the valley bottom. Not looking at me, the
wizard stood with a groan that was like the rumble of an approaching storm. He
turned much too slowly to face me. I watched the eyes beneath bushy brows and
waited for the inevitable.
"Wuntvor,"
the mage said, his voice like an earthquake splitting a mountainside. "If
you can't watch where you put your--"
My
master stopped midsentence and stared over my head. I began to stammer an
apology, but the wizard waved me to silence.
"What
do you hear, 'prentice?" he asked.
I
listened but heard nothing. I told him so.
"Exactly,"
he replied. "Nothing at all. Tis the end of summer, deep in the wood, yet
I do not see a single bird nor hear an insect. Though I must admit,
81
the
absence of the latter does not upset me overmuch." The mage scratched at a
pink welt beneath his long white beard. We had had a great deal of experience,
ever since the seven days of rain, with clouds of mosquitoes and biting gnats.
"Methinks,
Wunt, something is amiss."
I
listened for a moment more. My master was right. The forest was silent, the
only sounds the breathing of the wizard and myself. I had never heard quiet
like this, except perhaps on the coldest days of winter. A chill went up my
back, surprising in the (ate summer's heat.
My
master dusted off his robes. "We seem to have landed near a
clearing." He nodded down what remained of the hill. "Perhaps we
shall find some habitation, even someone who can explain the nature of this
place. Until then, we will bask in the absence of mosquitoes." He
scratched his neck absently as he started down the hill. "Always look on
the bright side, Wunt."
I
hurriedly gathered up the foodstuffs, books, and magical paraphernalia that had
fallen from my pack and followed my master's wizardly strides. I scrambled
after him over the uneven ground, avoiding what underbrush there was. But the
brush thinned rapidly as we walked, and we found ourselves facing a large
clearing of bare earth, broken only by a ring of seven large boulders in its
center.
"Now
we've even lost the grasses," Ebenezum rumbled. "Come, Wunt, we'll
find the cause of this." He took great strides across the bare ground,
clouds of dust rising with every step. I followed close behind, doing my best
not to cough.
When we
reached the first boulder, something jumped.
82
"Boo!"
the something said. I dropped my pack, but Ebenezum simply stood there and
watched the apparition.
"Indeed,"
he said after a moment.
"Boo!
Boo! Boo! Boo!" the creature confronting us shrieked. On closer
inspection, 1 could see that it was definitely human, with long gray hair
covering the face and brown rags concealing the body. The person raised frail
hands and rushed us on unsteady legs.
Neither
of us moved. Our attacker stopped, out of breath. "Not going to work, is
it?" she wheezed at last. It was an old woman; her speaking voice was
cracked and high.
Ebenezum
stroked his mustache. "Is what not going to work?"
"Can't
scare you away, huh?" She parted the long hair that covered her face and
peered at the sky. "Probably too late for you to get away, anyhow. Might
as well sit down and wait." She looked around for a likely rock and sat.
"Indeed,"
Ebenezum repeated. "Wait for what?"
"You
don't know?" The woman's eyes widened in wonder. "Sir, you are in the
dreaded Valley of Vrunge!"
"Indeed,"
Ebenezum said when it became apparent the woman planned to say no more.
"Now
don't tell me you've never heard of it. What, do you come from the ignorant
Western Kingdoms?" The woman laughed derisively. "Everyone knows of
the Valley of Vrunge, and the dread curse that falls upon it once every one
hundred and thirty-seven years. Not that this place is all that friendly at any
time"--she spat on the parched earth--"but there is one night, every
one hundred thirty-seven
83
years,
when all hell breaks loose. One night when no one then in the valley will get
out alive!"
I
didn't like the direction the woman's speech was taking. I swallowed hard and
cleared my throat. "Ma'am, would you mind telling us just when that night
is?"
"Haven't
I made it clear?" The crone laughed again. "This is the cursed night
of the Valley of Vrunge. It begins when the sun passes yonder hills." She
pointed behind me.
I
followed her arm and looked to the sun, already touching the top of the western
hills, then turned to Ebenezum. He stared above me, lost in thought. It
appeared our luck was running true to course.
"If
we are all due to die," Ebenezum said at last, "what are you doing
here?"
The old
woman looked away from us. "I have my reasons, which I'm sure would be of
little interest to anyone but me. Let us just say that once this land was green
and fair, and it was ruled over by a princess as lovely as the land itself. But
a dark time came upon the earth, and the sky rained toads, and the princess became
afraid. But her suitor, the handsome--"
"You
are quite right," Ebenezum interrupted. "No one would be interested
in that at all. You've decided to die because the sky rained toads?"
The
woman sighed and watched the sun disappear behind the hilltop. "Not
exactly. I've worn this body out. I'm due to die. I just thought I'd see old
Maggie out in style."
"Maggie?"
Ebenezum scratched his insect bite thoughtfully. "That would be short for
Magredel?" He peered into her ancient face.
"Oh,
I haven't used that name in years. Not since I got away from those dull Western
Kingdoms. Used
84
to
practice witchery thereabouts for a time, that's probably where you heard of
me. Didn't specialize much, though. More of a general practitioner."
"Maggie?"
Ebenezum repeated. "As in old Aunt Maggie?"
Maggie
squinted her eyes in turn. "Say, do I know you from someplace?"
There
was an explosion directly behind me. All three of us spun to see a tall, pale
apparition atop the tallest of the seven stones.
"Greetings,
ladies and gentlemen!" the apparition cried with a swirl of its robe.
"And welcome to curse night!"
"Greetings
to you, too, Death," Maggie replied. "I hope tonight will be up to
your usual standards?"
Death
laughed, a high, echoey sound that came near to scaring the life out of me.
When I mentioned it later to Ebenezum, he said that was no doubt the desired
reaction.
The
apparition atop the stone disappeared.
"That
was our introduction," Maggie remarked. "Soon the fun begins."
I was
appalled. "F-fun?" 1 stammered. "How do you know what happens
next?"
"Simple."
The crone flashed a toothless smile. "I've been through this night once
before."
Now
that Death had vanished, the silence was again complete. My master cleared his
throat.
"Ebenezum!"
the old woman cried. "Of course! I'd recognize that nervous cough
anywhere. Poor little Ebby, always coughing or scratching or tugging or doing
something. He never could sit still." She winked in my direction.
"You know, in the whole first year he studied under me, he didn't get one
spell straight? You should have seen the things that
85
showed
up in our kitchen!" She laughed.
My
master cast a worried glance at the rock where Death had stood. "Please,
Aunt Maggie. I don't think this is the proper time to discuss--"
"Oh,
keep your cap on!" The woman clapped Ebenezum on the shoulder. "We
have a little time. It always takes them a while to get organized. When you
only have one performance every one hundred thirty-seven years, you tend to get
a bit rusty."
"But
what's going to happen?" I asked. I noticed my hand hurt from my tight
grip on my walking stick.
"Ghosts,
ghosts, and more ghosts." The old woman spat on the ground. "Death is
fond of games. He plays a game with every living thing, one in which he's
always the victor. Some games he likes more than others, and those great
conflicts he brings here, to play over and over again in the Valley of
Vrunge!"
"The
spirits just play games?" I asked. That didn't sound so bad.
"All
of life is a game, remember. Death brings along the best of all his games,
ranging from a nation at war to two people in love."
She
jumped and screamed.
"Tickle,
tickle, tickle," said a high voice from nowhere.
"Poltergeists!
Boo! Boo! Boo! Away from here!" Maggie waved her hands about wildly.
"More and more ghosts will appear throughout the night. And Death will try
to snare you in his games. Beware, he always wins!" She screamed and
jumped again.
"Boo,
boo, boo?" the voice from nowhere asked. "That's passe, lady. These
days, long, sensitive moans are much more the thing in ghostly circles."
"So
it begins. I'm sorry, Ebby, you had to stumble
86
into
this!" She ran and screamed as "tickle, tickle tickle!" chased
her around the circle of boulders.
Ebenezum
sneezed once and blew his nose on a silver-inlaid sleeve. "Just a minor
spirit. Hardly bothers me at all."
1
realized then that this was the first time Ebene-zum's malady had affected him
since we entered the cursed valley. Perhaps the severity of our situation was
effecting a cure. Ebenezum had not sneezed once in the presence of Death!
My
master shook his head when I explained my theory. "Why should I sneeze?
Death is the most natural thing in the world." He pulled at his beard.
"And 1 fear that, should we fail to devise a plan of action, Death will
become all too familiar to both of us."
A great
wind sprang up. My master had to shout to be heard. "Stay close! If we're
separated--"
The
wizard sneezed as three ghosts on a sled grabbed him and whisked him high in
the air. Ghosts, sled, and sneezing Ebenezum disappeared around the stones.
Night
had fallen completely, and 1 was alone.
But
then there was a crowd around me, sitting on long rows of seats, one atop
another, as if they were built on a hillside. The crowd roared, and I saw they
were watching a group of uniformed men on a green lawn, a few of whom were
running, but most of whom were standing still.
A man
carrying a big silver box walked up the steps toward me. "Hot dogs!"
he cried. "Hot dogs!"
He
wasn't real, I told myself. This whole place was beyond my understanding. I
stepped aside to let him pass. He stopped next to me anyway.
"Hot
dog, mister?"
87
It was
only with a mental effort that I kept from shivering. I looked down at my stout
oak staff. My grip was firm. If the apparition tried anything, I'd swing at
him. And then again, from what I'd heard of ghosts, I might swing through him
as well.
With
some trepidation, I asked: "What's a hot dog?"
"Like
I thought"--the spirit nodded sagely-- "you're an outsider. So this
is your first ball game? Well, you picked a good one, buddy."
I
looked out over the field below us. "Ball game," I repeated,
struggling to comprehend.
"Yeah,"
the apparition replied. "The ball game. People had counted the Red Sox
out, but they came around. Now Torrez will blow the Yankees away! Seventy-eight
is going to be our year. It has to be."
I
looked closely at the spirit, hoping that some gesture or facial mannerism
would help me to understand his ravings. All I saw was the haunted look, deep
in his eyes.
"Has
to be? "I asked.
"Well,
yeah." The ghost paused. "1 mean, the Sox have to win. Otherwise
..." He shuddered. "Do you have any idea what it would be like to
have to sell hot dogs throughout eternity?"
He
didn't wait for an answer but walked up the stairs beyond me. I turned to the
"ball game" on the field below. I felt a sudden, near overwhelming
urge to be drawn into that game and find out just what could move the hot dog
spirit to such a frenzy. I'd watch the shifting patterns of men on the bright
green lawn, and sooner or later some great secret would be revealed, a joyous
revelation that would make my whole existence take on new meaning!
Something
in the back of my head told me to turn
88
away. I
remembered Aunt Maggie's warning about Death and games.
The
ball game disappeared. In its place stood Death.
"There
you are," the creature said in his sonorous voice. "I've been looking
all over for you. These curse evenings can be so long and boring, sometimes I
like to indulge in games to help pass the time. Tell me, do you know how to
play Red Light, Green Light?"
Death
stood much closer than he had before. I stared at the thin layer of pale skin
pulled tight over his skull, and at the shadows where there should have been
eyes. Yet his smile was ingratiating. You wanted to believe in what he told
you, rather like a good seller of used pack animals on market day.
"Well?"
Death prompted.
"N-no!"
I stammered. "I-I don't know the rules!"
"Oh,
is that all." Death reached out to touch my arm. "I'll explain
everything. I'm very good with rules."
"No!
I have to find my master!" I pulled away from the creature's hand and ran
blindly.
Suddenly
a pit yawned before me. A pit filled with sharpened spikes and a great, roaring
monster, all' mouth and teeth and claws. I tried to stop, to step backward, but
I was over the edge, falling, falling.
Someone
barked a command behind me; my master's voice. I found myself on solid ground,
standing by Ebenezum. All the ghosts were gone.
Ebenezum
sneezed repeatedly, rocking with the force emitted by his nose.
"Temporary
exorcism spell," he gasped at last. "Best I can manage."
89
I did a
short jig on the parched earth while my master caught his breath. Ebenezum had
freed himself from the sledding spirits! Hope once again rose within my breast.
I asked
him how he'd accomplished his escape.
The
wizard shrugged. "I sneezed my way free. The ghosts were ready for
sorcery, a battle of wits, anything but extreme nasal activity. They simply
evaporated before the onslaught of my nose."
"That's
wonderful!" I cried. "We'll be free of this cursed valley in no
time!"
Ebenezum
shook his head. "Death does not make the same mistake twice. The next set
of apparitions will be ready for my malady."
Aunt
Maggie appeared around one of the seven great boulders. She staggered over to
Ebenezum's feet and collapsed.
She
groaned, then turned to look at my master. "It's gone! The poltergeist is
gone!"
The
wizard nodded solemnly. "Exorcism spell."
Maggie
sighed in relief. "It kept taunting me, begging me to tickle it back. You
can't give in to those things. It would have been all over." She looked at
Ebenezum. "Exorcism? That means you followed your calling and graduated
into wizardry! I did hesitate to ask you. In the early days, you were very
determined, but your aptitude was sometimes less than--"
Ebenezum
cleared his throat. '"Tis only a temporary spell. Death's power is greater
than common magic, and the ghosts will push through presently. We must come up
with a more permanent solution."
Maggie
laughed. "I pulled through this cursed night once, with the aid of magic.
Maybe we can do so again. And gain my kingdom back in the bar-
90
gain!"
She slapped my master's shoulder. "So one of my students made good? Let's
see you do your stuff. Nothing fancy; a bird out of thin air, water into wine,
something to catch an old woman's fancy."
Ebenezum
fixed hei with a wizardly stare. "We are in peril for our lives. I need to
concentrate." He stalked off and disappeared into the circle of stone.
Maggie
shook her head and smiled. "A great wizardly manner. He must be raking in the
business." She sighed. "Wish I could work magic the way I used to.
After a while, the body gives out. Can toss off a spell now and again, when I'm
feeling spry. But the big ones are beyond my reach."
1
hesitated to tell her that due to my master's affliction, just about all the
spells that could save us from our present predicament were beyond his reach as
well. Best not to upset her. 1 was upset enough for both of us.
"But
let me tell you my story, and you'll understand why I'm here," she began. "You've
already learned of the fair kingdom, and the beautiful princess. And then, of
course, there were the raining toads. And did I tell you about the princess's
handsome suitor, Unwin, killed on their wedding day? No? Well, that's a good
place to--"
"Tickle,
tickle, tickle," the disembodied voice chortled. The exorcism spell was
over.
A cool
breeze blew in my ear. "Hey, big boy," a woman whispered.
"What's a fellow like you doing without a date on a night like this?"
I
turned to gaze on the most beautiful apparition I had ever seen. I was
speechless. She was slender and pale, with long silver hair. And she wore no
clothing at all, ghostly or otherwise. At certain angles, you
91
could
see right through her, but at other angles she was more than my eyes could
bear.
"Oh,
the silent type," she said, and took my hand, her fingers intertwining
with mine. Her touch was ice. It sent thrills up my arm and across my
shoulders. She leaned close, and her breath was the breeze of autumn. Her lips
parted, close to mine. I wanted to kiss those lips more than I wanted life
itself.
"I
know a little game we can play," the full, cool lips said. "It's
called Spin the Bottle."
Yes,
yes, whatever it was, yes! AH those girls I'd known in the Western Kingdoms,
even Alea, my afternoon beauty, they were nothing to me now.
But my
beloved was pulled away from me and sent spinning through the air, her
ectoplasm flying in every direction.
"I
can still toss off a spell or two." Maggie smiled. "Got to watch out
for succubi. Not good for your health."
"Crone!"
Death was before us. "What would you know of love? Your body has been old
and withered for a hundred years. An empty shell which can no longer be filled.
Or can it?"
Death
waved his hand and a young man materialized at his side.
"Unwin?"
The old woman's voice was little more than a whisper. "Is that you,
Unwin?"
"Magredel!"
the young man cried. "What's happened to you?"
"It's
not me, Unwin. It's you. You've been away. I haven't seen you in so long!"
The old
woman was crying.
"Consider,
woman," Death said. "Come with me
92
and you
will be together always."
But
Maggie turned on him, anger replacing sorrow. "No! You've stolen my
kingdom for centuries! I'll be with Unwin soon enough! I must free what was
tricked from me!"
"Such
harsh words." Death examined his skeletal hand. "I have need of this
place. My ghosts must have their exercise." He looked at me, and I
shivered where I stood. "Come, Wuntvor. Let's leave these lovers alone
while they talk things over. I'll give you the guided tour."
Without
thinking, I found myself following him. Death smiled. "Simon says put your
hands in the air."
It took
all my willpower to keep my hands at my sides.
"We'll
find one yet." Death's hands were full of small rectangles, which he
fanned out before him. "How about a little Go Fish?"
I found
myself staring at the rectangles. I looked the other way.
"My
kingdom," Death said.
There
were apparitions everywhere. Armies fighting, women laughing, people in
costumes familiar and unfamiliar, crawling across the ground, climbing the
trees, flying through the air in strange machines.
"Amazing,"
I said despite myself.
Death
nodded. "The paperwork alone is staggering. Yet we pull it off, every one
hundred thirty-seven years. It's a shame our audience has to be so small. The
Vrunge Curse is my masterpiece. Here are all the greatest moments of humanity,
past, present, future, played out over and over again, from men at war to men at
play, games of chance to games of love. A
93
pity.
Perhaps I should advertise."
Death
coughed gently. "Tell me, Wuntvor. Who is the greatest magician in all the
Western Kingdom?"
Was he
trying to trick me? I'd stay firm to my beliefs. "Why, Ebenezum, of
course."
"Right!"
Death cried as a gong sounded somewhere nearby. "Wuntvor, you've just won
an additional five years on your life!"
We were
surrounded by bright light. The ghosts all sat in a large amphitheater now,
whistling and cheering. The succubus I had almost kissed stood a little bit to
one side, next to a large board that read "5." She was wearing some
sort of spangled costume that managed to look more revealing than her nudity
had before.
"Okay!"
Death smiled broadly. "Now, Wunt, for ten additional years! Tell us, who
is the ruler of Melifox?"
The
crowd whistled and stamped their feet. Urgent music came from somewhere. The
succubus smiled her magnificent smile.
"Uh--King
Urfoo the Brave!" 1 blurted.
"Right,
for ten more years!"
The
crowd went wild. The spangled beauty flipped a couple of cards over the board
to one that read "15."
"All
right! All right!" Death raised his hands for silence. "Now it's time
for the question we've all been waiting for. Double or nothing!"
The
crowd cheered.
"Now,
Wuntvor, are you ready to double your life span?"
"Yes!
Yes!" The crowd chanted. I nodded my head. Why not? This was easy.
"All
right! The big question, Wuntvor, to double
94
your
life span or erase it altogether! Who was the famous chamberlain of the Eastern
Kingdoms, three centuries ago, who used to mutter to himself, " 'One of
these days, one of these days'?"
"What?"
I asked. How could I know something like that?
"Quick,
Wuntvor! The Quiz Lady has set the clock. You have fifteen seconds to answer,
or pay the penalty, on Forfeit Your Life!"
What?
What could I do? I didn't know anything about the Eastern Kingdoms. The
dramatic music was back, louder than ever. The crowd was roaring. I couldn't
think. Why hadn't I listened to Maggie and kept away from these games?
"Ten!"
the crowd chanted. "Nine! Eight! Seven! Six! Five!"
"Gangway!
Gangway! Boo! Boo! Boo!" The entire crowd turned to look at Aunt Maggie,
riding atop Ebenezum's shoulders as the wizard rushed into our midst. And
Maggie was holding Ebenezum's nose!
"Batwom
Ignatius, Wuntvor!" my master cried. "Batworn Ignatius!"
"Batwom
Ignatius?" I replied.
"Is
right!" Death exclaimed. "You've doubled your life! Barring illness
or accident, of course."
The
crowd started to go wild, but Maggie chanted a few syllables and Ebenezum waved
his hands. The crowd noise receded.
Ebenezum
sneezed once, loudly, as Aunt Maggie climbed down from his back. I asked him
how he knew about Ignatius.
"Had
to learn it for my wizard finals," he replied. "It's amazing the
useless knowledge they make you pack into your skull."
95
"Such
a pitiful spell," Death remarked. "Why did you do it? They'll all be
back in a moment."
"I
wanted to talk to you alone," the wizard replied.
"Your
affliction will come back, too, when they return. Is that what you're afraid
of? Come with me, Ebenezum, and you need never sneeze again."
"Perhaps
I will." Ebenezum tugged at his sleeves. "1 have heard, Death, that
you are fond of games. Will you play one with me?"
Death
sneered. "You toy with me, wizard. No one toys with Death! Quick, what
will it be? Parcheesi? Contract bridge? Fifty-two pickup?"
The
wizard pulled on his beard for a moment, then intoned:
"Arm
wrestling."
Death
shrugged. "If you insist." He snapped his fingers, and a table and
chairs materialized between them.
"Now
the terms." Ebenezum looked Death in the eye socket. "If I win, the
three of us go free, and Maggie regains her kingdom. If I lose, I am
yours."
Death
smiled. "For someone of your eminence, anything. I always enjoy welcoming
someone whom the bards sing about. After you." He indicated a chair.
Ebenezum
sat. I thought that the ghostly crowd noises were somewhat closer. Ebenezum
would have to hurry, or his nose might betray him.
Death
smoothed his snow-white robe and sat opposite my master. His smile, if
anything, was broader than before.
"Shall
we begin, dear wizard?"
Ebenezum
put his elbow to the table. Death did the same. Their hands clasped.
96
The
ghostly crowd was definitely closer. I could see pale flickerings across the
clearing.
"Now!"
Death said, and Ebenezum tensed his whole body. There was no movement beyond
the constant quiver where the two hands met.
And
then the ghosts were back upon us, all talking and screaming and laughing at
once. "I'm hit!" "You're out!" "Got you!"
"Hot dogs!" "Tickle, tickle, tickle!"
"Dishonest
Death!" Maggie screamed. "This was to be an even contest, without your
ghostly consorts!"
Death
laughed. Maggie said something else that I didn't quite catch.
And
Ebenezum sneezed.
And
what a sneeze! Ghosts went flying. Death pulled back in alarm and was caught in
the gale, along with his table and chair.
It was
silent all around. I saw the first light of dawn in the east.
"Will
they be back?" I asked, my voice little more than a whisper.
"Alas,
Wuntvor," the wizard said, "I fear they haven't the ghost of a
chance." Then he blew his nose.
Ebenezum
and Maggie walked over to one of the great stones so recently toppled by the
wizard's sneezing attack, while I surveyed in wonder the devastation a single
great sneeze could bring to this already bleak land. Ebenezum helped Maggie to
sit on the fallen boulder, then seated himself.
"How?"
was my only question.
"Ebby
never could keep a secret from me." Maggie cackled. "But his aversion
to sorcery presented
97
something
of a problem if we were to survive the night."
My
master pulled at his beard. "I freed you from Unwin, remember."
"All
I had to do was choose to talk to you rather than him. Unwin always was
impossibly jealous. Flew off in an ectoplasmic snit. Which made you sneeze
about five times."
Ebenezum
tried to say something, but Maggie kept right on talking. "That's when I
had the idea. If he always sneezed around the supernatural, what if he really
sneezed! We couldn't take away his problem, so the two of us worked up a little
spell that would increase Ebby's nasal power a hundredfold!"
"Indeed,"
Ebenezum said, rubbing his nose, which was red from blowing.
"And
now we're safe. And the kingdom is free. Or is it?" Maggie spat on the
ground. "Death is such a trickster. I was so afraid of him when Unwin
died, I gave in and let him give me five lifetimes for what he termed
'occasional use of my kingdom.' What he didn't tell me was that nothing could
live in the kingdom between the times he used it." She looked around her.
"Has he kept his word? If only there was a sign."
She
slapped Ebenezums shoulder. "But you still haven't heard my story."
Ebenezum
looked out over the hills. "Alas, teacher, we have a long way to travel.
Shoulder your pack, Wunt. We'd best move before the sun gets too high."
"You'll
sit here and listen!" Maggie commanded. "Ebby never did have any
manners. From the beginning. Once there was a beautiful kingdom, and a fair
98
princess.
But all was not well, for one day came the dreaded rain of--"
"Ow!"
I yelled. Something had bitten my arm.
Ebenezum
jumped up. "Biting gnats! They're all over us!"
Maggie
threw her hands up to the heavens. "My kingdom is saved!"
"Drop
us a note when 'tis a little better developed!" the wizard called over his
shoulder.
And we
were once again traveling, somewhat more rapidly than before, with frequent
slapping of arms and legs, in the general direction of Vushta.
SIX
"A
wizard cannot do everything; a fact most magicians are reticent to admit, let
alone discuss with prospective clients. Still, the fact remains that there are
certain objects, and people, that are, for one reason or another, completely
immune to any direct magical spell. It is for this group of beings that the
magician learns the subtleties of using indirect spells. It also does no harm,
in dealing with these matters, to carry a large club near your person at all
times."
--THE
TEACHINGS OF EBENEZUM, Volume VIII
My
master sneezed at last. I had been expecting it for quite some time. Ever since
we had begun our descent into this new valley, three days' distance from our
harrowing experience in the Valley of Vrunge, I had once again noticed a
general deterioration of the surrounding landscape: a tree uprooted here or
there, an occasional house or barn pounded to splinters, whole sections of farmers'
fields gouged from the earth. It
99
100
looked
altogether unhealthy.
I think
that by this time, neither my master nor myself were particularly surprised by
this turn of events. Sorcery seemed to follow us wherever we might go on the
trail to Vushta. Still, as Ebenezum had remarked as we sat by our last
evening's cookfire, we had not fared badly so far in the midst of all this
magic. Indeed, in some cases we had made a fair profit from our sorcerous
dealings. In fact, should certain magical events continue to occur on the
course of our travels, we might arrive in Vushta as truly wealthy men.
"There
is more than one way to look at luck," Ebenezum had concluded as he
settled himself down to sleep. "Never look a gift spell in the runes, Wunt."
But
that had been easy for the wizard to say the night before, while we were still
far away from this present magic. Now, all Ebenezum could do was sneeze.
There
was a tremendous crash in the distance. The wizard's sneezes echoed the chaos.
Someone
was calling to us. It was a young woman, close to my age. Her long dark hair
streamed behind her as she ran in our direction.
"Hide!"
she called. "Quickly, hide before Uxtal finds--"She stopped short a
few paces from us, a look of consternation on her beautiful face. "You're
a wizard!"
Ebenezum
stroked his beard and knitted his bushy brows. "How very observant. How
may we serve you, my dear?" His sneezing fit seemed to have disappeared
behind his veneer of professionalism.
"You
can get those robes off as quickly as possible!" Her deep green eyes
looked from side to side,
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taking
in all of the valley. "Maybe we can find some old rags to disguise you as
a peasant. Does the inlay of silver stars go all the way through to the other
side of the fabric? Maybe, if you wore them inside out, we could pretend you
were a monk!"
"Young
lady!" My master's eyes glowed with sorcerous indignation. "You want
me to hide my wizardry?"
"No,
no," the woman said impatiently. "'Twould be best to hide if you were
just common folk. Being a wizard, 'twould be best if you fled the valley
altogether."
It was
then that I saw the giant.
The
giant roared. He was huge, towering over the tallest trees, his feet spread on
either side of a broad, rushing river. His hair was matted, his beard long and
unkempt, and he showed uneven, yellowed teeth when he growled. Teeth so large
they would have no trouble snapping a person in half.
"Fo
fo fum fee," he rumbled. "I don't like these other three." He
then tossed a rather large boulder he happened to be holding in our direction.
Ebenezum
tried to free his hands from the folds of his robes for a quick conjure, but
the presence of the giant threw him into a prolonged sneezing bout before he
could even straighten his elbows. I moved toward the young lady, hoping to
carry her away from the path of the rapidly descending rock. But she pushed me
away.
And
said a spell herself.
The
boulder flew back toward the giant.
"Fee
fo fum fi!" he shrieked. "Time for me to say good-bye!" The
giant crashed down into the valley and was soon lost from sight.
I
stared at the woman. I realized my mouth was
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open. I
shut it. So beautiful and so talented! I wondered what it would be like to
marry into the profession.
"I
saw that!" A small man scurried from behind a ruined stone wall. Ebenezum
blew his nose mightily.
The
small man hopped across the stony field. He wore some sort of bright-colored
uniform, alternately yellow and green, an outfit complemented by the livid red
of his complexion.
"You
know magic is strictly forbidden!" he shrieked. "Practicing magic
means your death!"
The
woman looked to where the rock had flown. "It would have meant my death if
I had not used magic."
"Technicalities!"
the small man screamed. '"Twill not save you from the hangman's
noose!" His eyes darted to my master. "You. You're wearing wizard's
robes!"
"Indeed.
Everyone in your valley is very observant." My master sniffed.
"Well
. . ." The man paused, tongue poked in cheek. "You've yet to conjure.
With luck, you'll only get twenty years hard labor."
"But
they've just entered the valley!" the woman exclaimed. "How could
they--" " "Ignorance of the law is no excuse!" The man
caught a silver whistle dangling around his neck and blew a mighty blow.
"I've called my minions to take you away."
The
minions appeared from behind the same stone wall that produced the government
official. They were of much the same size as the first man, though of decidedly
different origin; mud brown in color, with barbed tails, long taloned arms, and
small heads
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dominated
by wide, grinning mouths. They hummed, ominously and in unison.
"Take
them to the dungeon in the hill!" The small man managed to shriek and
laugh simultaneously.
The
dozen minions spread out before us. Their humming grew louder and fiercer as
they approached. Ebenezum was lost to us, sneezing somewhere deep within his
voluminous robes.
The
woman stepped valiantly forward, her hands extended to call magical aid. But
would such meager aid as she could summon instantly be enough to defeat a squad
of demon-things? Something had to be done.
I
stepped to her side and raised my stout oak staff.
"Aha!"
the man in uniform cried. "The old man has surrendered, yet you two still
resist. Do not cross me!" He, too, waved his hands in front of him in
standard conjuring position. "I will show you my power! I warn you, I have
been practicing!"
The
hands moved through a complicated pattern as the man chanted beneath his
breath. He laughed. "See how you contend with this!"
He
pointed both his hands at us. For a moment, nothing happened. Then a pair of
white birds emerged from his sleeves.
"Ididn't
want birds!" The man's uniform flapped as he jumped up and down.
"Minions! Take them away!"
The
muddy demons approached. Their humming was all around us. Both the young woman
and I took an involuntary step backward and bumped into each other. I turned to
stammer an apology, and the demons were upon us.
"Yanna!"
she cried. "Nothalatno! Away!"
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I
struck out with my stout oak staff. My master, attempting to recover and come
to our aid, rolled against my foot. From the corner of my eye, I saw a demon
grab the woman's hair.
"Look
out!" I cried, and swung the staff at the demon without thinking. But the
arc of the blow was too great. My feet stumbled against the still sneezing
wizard as the staff bounced from the demon's head with a resounding thwack],
then ricocheted from the woman's shoulder. She yelped in surprise and fell
against me. I completely lost my balance in turn and collapsed atop the
stricken mage. Before I could untangle myself, we were all three rolling down
the hill.
Ebenezum
shouted something as we rolled. When we hit the ground at valley bottom, it
felt like a pillow. My master had managed a spell again. At least, I thought it
was my master.
"Quick
thinking!" the woman said. "My spells were virtually useless. Only
brute action of the type you employed could save the day."
'"Twas
nothing," 1 said, humbly studying the rocky ground on which we had landed.
"Any magician's apprentice would have done the same."
The
young woman mentioned we had not been properly introduced. Her name was Norei.
"Ebenezum,"
my master said before I could speak. He brushed and straightened his robes.
"Mage of the West. My apprentice is Wuntvor."
I bowed
slightly and almost fell over. I was, perhaps, still a bit dizzy from our fall.
I looked up, and Norei was smiling.
"Tis
fortunate you have come," she said. "We have need of two more heads
that are good with spells. My mother, Solima, will be glad for the help. As you
see, terrible things are happening in this
105
valley.
Things that threaten to destroy not only this community"--she paused, and
her voice dropped to a whisper--"but also the very reality in which we
live."
What
could be so awful as to destroy reality? I looked at my master, but he stared
far beyond the hills to either side of us.
"Solima,"
he whispered.
Norei
led us into the woods that seemed to cover much of the valley floor. I followed
close at her heels, while Ebenezum trailed some distance behind. She led us
down a winding path, well marked in places, overgrown with weeds and brambles
in others, until, deep in the forest, we came to a small clearing. A tiny
cottage was nestled in one corner of the open space.
"My
home," Norei said as she led us through the open door.
"Solima!"
my master cried.
A woman
of middle years looked up from the pot she was tending and stared at my master.
She wiped her hands on her gray robe. "Ebenezum? Is that you?"
"Indeed."
My master doffed his wizard's cap. "All the way from the Western Kingdoms.
I had heard you might be practicing in the area, but I had little hope of
meeting you."
Solima
offered my master a sad smile. "It's good to see you, Eb. That white beard
fits you; it makes you look less of a scoundrel. Alas, the rest of what you say
isn't quite true. Situations have arisen in this valley that may prevent me
from ever practicing magic again."
"We
met Tork on the way here, Mother."
"So
you've met the prince!" Solima pulled a pipe
106
out of
her sleeve and knocked it against the long table that filled the center of the
room. "Was he hospitable to the newcomers?"
"He
tried to arrest us!" Norei replied.
"For
Tork, that's hospitality." She snapped her fingers, and smoke rose from
the pipe bowl. She puffed at the stem. "Did you tell them anything of our
plight, daughter?"
"I
was too worried Tork might find us again."
"Quite
so. Let me tell you about our liege lord."
"Solima."
Ebenezum took a step forward. "Let me tell you about your eyes."
"Ebenezum!
It's been years!" She glared at the wizard with the same green eyes she
had given her daughter. "Besides, you're changing the subject. Prince Tork
is not a matter to be taken lightly."
My
master sighed and shrugged. "Indeed. He was the wizard we met?"
"Well,
he fancies himself a wizard. He's never gotten one spell straight that I know
of. But he's jealous of all those who can conjure rightly, and so has banned
all other wizardry but his throughout the valley."
"He's
got everything backward!" Norei added. "His evil spells come out
good, and his good spells come out evil!"
"Luckily
for us," Solima continued. "Tork's nature is such that he seldom
contemplates a good spell. Still, he has managed to conjure all sorts of
creatures from the Netherhells, including a giant with a rather foul
temper."
Ebenezum
scratched at his beard. "It does sound serious. Yet if he is so inept,
couldn't you cast a spell to neutralize him or banish him somewhere?"
Solima
sighed. "If we had realized in time, it
107
would
have been easy. But Tork is such a buffoon that we ignored him, until suddenly
he came marching to our door with an army of demons to take my two sisters
captive."
"Blackmailed
by an inept wizard . . ." My master's brow furrowed in thought.
"There's no way to overcome his allies from the Netherhells?"
"None
that I can think of. You know the way my family has always made magic,
Ebenezum. Tis a collective process, with every woman joining in. That's when
our witchery is most powerful. With my two sisters gone, that power is greatly
diminished. There's still Norei and Grandmother, of course--"
"Grandmother?"
A certain dread had crept into the wizard's voice. "She's still
alive?"
Solima
nodded. "She lives in the attic."
"Would
she remember me?"
"Grandmother
forgets nothing."
"Perhaps,"
Ebenezum said, "my apprentice and 1 should rest a while. Perhaps in a barn
or some outlying field."
"Don't
worry. She seldom comes downstairs." Solima banged her pipe against the
table again. "Besides, we haven't told you the worst part of Tork's
incantations."
Ebenezum
glanced at the ladder leading above. "Perhaps if we discussed it while we
walked outside? I could stand to stretch my legs."
"Nonsense.
Listen to me now. Every time a spell does not work, Tork gets a little more
frustrated. And with every frustration, he decides he must tackle a somewhat
more complicated spell to prove himself. This disturbing tendency has escalated
to such a point that, probably this very night, Tork will attempt Fisbay's
Grand Forxsnagel."
108
What
little blood remained in Ebenezum's face vanished entirely. "The
Forxsnagel? But should that fail..."
"Exactly.
I should imagine that this valley would become the eighth Netherhell. And who
knows? Perhaps the whole world would follow."
There
was silence for a long moment, then Norei spoke. "Perhaps, Mother, the
wizard's suggestion is best. We should let the two of them rest. Then, when the
Forxsnagel begins, both wizard and apprentice can join us, five strong, to
battle it."
Solima
puffed on her pipe for a moment, then nodded. Norei led us from the tiny
cottage to an even tinier shed in back. Ebenezum followed quietly.
He
spoke the instant Norei had left. "She does have the most beautiful green
eyes, Wunt. We had our moment together, back when I was near your age. But her
grandmother!" He coughed.
1 had
never seen my master quite like this before. For want of something to say, I
asked him about the Forxsnagel.
"Mm?"
The question seemed to bring the wizard back to his senses for a moment.
"Oh, 'tis the Overspell, the one great conjure that will make the whole
world yours for the taking. It's purely theoretical magic, of course, never
been attempted before. Ah, but those green eyes, Wunt! I came this way on our
journey toward Vushta to see if Solima still lived here. She is a great witch,
fully my equal. But when I saw her eyes again, I forgot my malady, the reason,
I thought, I had come. Ah, if only the old woman weren't alive!"
I was
beginning to seriously worry for my master. His usual professionalism seemed to
have vanished with one glance from Solima. He had neglected to tell
109
either
of the witches that his ailment prevented him from even being in the presence
of wizardry, while I was probably the world's only magician's apprentice who
had never been taught any magic. Yet in a matter of hours, we were expected to
rally against the greatest spell ever conjured.
An
earth tremor shook the shack. There was a giant's foot outside the window.
"Fee
fi fo fum! Uxtal for revenge has come!"
The
magician held his nose. "'Tis up to us now! Open my pack and get out the
red book! Page forty-six!"
I
ruffled as rapidly as possible through the jumble of books and arcane
equipment. Finally 1 spied a thin red tome beneath a bundle of dried herbs. 1
pulled the book from the pack and examined it. Sorcery Made Simple was stamped
on the cover in large gold letters. Beneath that, in smaller script, were the
words "E-Z-Spell Library #6." I rapidly turned to page forty-six as
my master finally sneezed.
"THE
BANISHMENT OF GIANTS," bold block letters proclaimed across the top. This
was followed by a brief description of types of giant--from what little I read,
Uxtal seemed to be a Northern Blue•-- and three short spells for their removal.
That's
when Uxtal tore the roof from the shack. Ebenezum's hands flew about his
sneeze-racked body, and I found myself encircled by thick gray smoke.
"Fee
fi fum fo! Where did those two mortals go?"
1 heard
Uxtal somewhere above us. Someone grabbed my sleeve and pulled. I stumbled
after him.
Then
the wizard sneezed again, sending the cloud in all directions.
"Fi
fo fum fee! I'll teach you to hide from me!"
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The
giant reached for us. I still held the red book in my hand but had lost my
place. I leafed through frantically, wishing I could remember the page number.
Then I
heard the singing. It came from the front doorstep of the cottage, where Norei,
Solima, and a wizened old woman I had never seen before stood. It was a strange
song, sometimes sounding like a choir of angels had come to earth, other times
resembling nothing more than certain yodeling ditties I had been fond of at the
age of three. But the song was a spell, and a glowing ball of orange light grew
above the three women, then rapidly sped in the direction of the giant. Uxtal
turned and ran so fast he didn't have time for parting words.
My
master blew his nose.
"You're
safe, then!" Norei called. "Would we could get rid of Tork as easily
as we subdued Uxtal."
"That
the one?" the old woman said as she pointed to Ebenezum. "I remember
him! Looks like he's got a cold. He's spreading disease. Mark my word, it
wouldn't surprise me if he were carrying the plague!"
"Now,
Grandmother," Solima chided.
"He's
probably never worked a day of his life! And look at that beard! Norei, get me
some eye of newt and toe of frog! We'll teach him to come skulking around
here!"
"Grandmother's
a traditionalist." Norei leaned close to me and whispered in my ear. My
heart raced. "She's never liked wizards much, either. She always thinks
they bad-mouth witches."
"Just
a second here, and I'll fry up a couple of lightning bolts!" the old woman
proclaimed. She
111
rubbed
her hands rapidly. "Then I'll zap you back where you came from!"
"Grandmother!"
Solima scolded. "You know we can't use magic unless it's absolutely
necessary. Tork will find us!"
"This
is necessary!" the old woman shouted, her hands still rubbing together. I
heard something crackle between them.
"Grandmother!
Ebenezum is my friend! I will not have you zapping him!"
"Friend?
After what he did to me? I'll show him what 1 think of his chicken-feather
spell!"
"Grandmother!
Up to your room!"
The old
woman glowered for a moment, then scooted up the ladder. Ebenezum blew his
nose.
"You
showed great restraint with Grandmother this time, Eb. I do agree that that
spell with the chickens was a bit much, especially after all those dead fish.
But she was right about your cold, wasn't she?"
Ebenezum
looked at me, then at Solima and Norei. His face was drawn and tired.
"Alas, 'tis worse than that." And he told them the story of his
malady.
"You
poor dear!" Solima said when he was through. "You've managed
valiantly, though. I always knew you were a man of character, Eb." She
walked over to my master and put her hands on his shoulders. "Give me an
hour or so to check my books. I'm sure there are certain herbs that can be used
to ease a condition such as yours, and if I'm not mistaken, certain healing
sprites can be called to visit an area which would remove your condition
completely! Face it, you old codger: you haven't been cured because you have
not visited a good witch!"
112
She
kissed him on the forehead. "Now I want all three of you out of here. I
have to do my research!"
The
wizard took me aside as soon as we had quit the cottage. "Vulnerability,
Wunt. Always good as a last resort. Brings out the mother instinct. You still
have the red book?"
I
showed my master where I had tucked it in my shirt.
"Good."
He twirled his mustache. "Who knows? Soon I may even be able to use
it."
Norei
stepped from the door we had just left. "Wuntvor? May I speak to you for a
minute?"
I
looked to my master. He pulled his beard reflectively.
"Indeed,"
he said after a moment. "There are matters I must attend to as well."
He walked to the remains of the shack, more bounce in his wizardly stride than
I had ever seen before.
Then I
turned to Norei. My world was Norei--her oval face, framed by long dark hair.
And those large green eyes. Eyes to get lost in.
"Wuntvor?
What's the matter?" she said with some concern. "Do I have a bug on
my nose? You just got the strangest look."
I
cleared my throat and stared at the forest floor, assuring her it was only
fatigue from my journey.
"Tired
you may be, but you have to put that behind you!" She grabbed my arm above
the elbow. I looked up. Her face was close to mine. "Your master is ill,
my mother close to collapse, Grandmother unwilling to help because of something
your master did long ago involving fish and chickens! It's up to the two of us
to be strong. We have to be the center around which the magic grows to defeat
Tork'sForxsnagel!"
113
I
nodded. Yes, everything she said was true. I would do anything for her. So what
if I'd only tried three spells in my life and none of them ever quite worked
out? With Norei as my guide, our magic would be strong.
She
kissed me lightly. I could hear my brain hum. When she screamed, 1 realized it
wasn't my brain, but the demons. They surrounded us, and their humming was
fierce.
"So!"
Tork called from the rear of the demon brigade. "Playing with magic this
afternoon, were you? I can deal with you now!"
Ebenezum
came running from the cottage, followed by Solima. Grandmother hopped quickly
behind.
"The
only dealing you'll do, fiend," Ebenezum exclaimed, "is with
me!"
"Careful,
Eb!" Solima cautioned. "I'm not sure of the potency of the herbs.
Perhaps we should work our collective magic before they wear off."
"He'll
never listen," Grandmother shouted from the rear. "Let the scoundrel
go! Give me some fox-root and duckwort, and I'll show them all!"
In the
midst of this, Tork tried to conjure. Frogs fell from his sleeves.
"No!
No!" he screamed. "Very well! You've sealed your doom! The Overspell!
Forxsnagel!"
The
earth shook.
"Fee
fi fo fum! I will stamp on everyone!"
Uxtal
was above us. Norei ran to her family. The three of them began a chant.
Glancing back, Ebenezum joined in as Prince Tork screamed incantations and
jumped through a series of extremely acrobatic positions.
"Fi
fo fum fee! No one's even watching me!" The
114
giant
growled and lifted his great foot into the air.
I
looked back and forth at the two groups of combatants: leaping Tork surrounded
by demons, the three witches and Ebenezum weaving a vocal tapestry. Uxtal, I
reasoned, would stomp the singers first, but the four were so involved in their
song they would never see the descending foot.
'Twas
then I remembered the book. I pulled it all too rapidly from my shirt. It spun
from my hands and landed on the ground. When I picked it up, I noticed it had
opened to the proper page!
I knew
then that I was fated to best the giant. I glanced rapidly over the three
spells printed across the bottom of the page. I chose what appeared to be the
simplest: "Shrinking the Giant Down to Size." A six-foot-tall giant
would be no problem at all!
But 1
had forgotten the demons! They were all upon me, ripping and tearing at my
clothes, their awful hum close against my ears. I shouted out the spell, the
book ripped from my hands as the final syllables escaped my lips.
The
demons fell away from me. I looked up to the giant. He was getting smaller!
But my
exhilaration was short-lived. For some reason, everything else was getting
smaller, too.
I
realized my mistake. In my haste, I must have jumbled the syllables of the
spell. Instead of Uxtal shrinking, I was growing!
I
looked about me as I grew to Uxtal's size and more. It gave me a whole new view
of the countryside; the ruined half of the valley where we had descended, and
the area around me, which, besides a few spots like the demolished shack,
seemed still to be the rolling forest and picturesque farmland this
115
whole
valley must have been before the coming of Uxtal.
I
noticed then that my stout oak staff had grown with me. Far below, I could hear
Prince Tork's screams, counterpointed by four voices weaving in and out,
punctuated by shrill whistles and wild whoops. None of them seemed in the least
aware of the giant's foot hovering over them.
"Fee
fum fofi! I will crush you by and by!"
I hit
his foot with my staff. Uxtal looked up in alarm.
"Hey!"
he said in a low voice. "You trying to spoil my act?"
"Away,
fiend!" I bellowed. 1 was surprised at how loud my voice was.
"Away,
fiend? What kind of line is that? It doesn't even rhyme! I was only trying to
scare the folks. It's part of the contract!"
"A
contract with demons!" I cried. 1 walked toward Uxtal. Things crunched and
crashed beneath my feet. I looked down to see my gigantic boots had left a
trail of decimation through the forest.
"Say,"
Uxtal said, his eyes narrowed to slits, "are you nonunion?"
He was
trying to confound me with Netherhell double-talk! I decided, rather than risk
destroying more of the valley bottom, I would stand my ground and thrash the
villain soundly with my staff. I swung the stick with a cry.
And
Uxtal jumped out of its path. He was awfully limber for a giant. The staff
swept empty air, and I lost my balance. I found myself falling, straight toward
Ebenezum and the witches.
Frantically,
I tried to twist away. I crashed, scant
116
yards
away from the whooping and whistling assembly, demolishing the witches',
cottage instead.
I
rolled away from the witches' clearing, flattening another couple of acres of
forest, and struggled to my feet. Now I was mad! I growled at Uxtal.
"You
had better get out of here!"
Uxtal
was looking down at the others. A great ball of light had formed above the witches,
while Tork had created a large area of total dark above himself. Light and dark
moved together. .
"I
think you're right." Uxtal waved and in four strides had disappeared over
the rim of the valley.
Dark
and light met.
It
turned very cold, and all the color seemed to drain from the world. There was
no sound; only gray shapes in silence. I could see the four still singing, and
Tork dancing among his demons.
But
something was wrong with Ebenezum! He was down on his knees. Even though there was
no sound, I knew he was sneezing.
The
world was going a deeper gray. Ebenezum tried to rise but fell, quivering in
his robes. I tried to move, to help my master, but was somehow glued to the
spot.
The
world went dark.
In an
instant, there was light. The three witches lay on the ground, unconscious.
Ebenezum had somehow managed to stand, and now faced Tork and his demon
minions, who all hummed triumphantly.
"The
Forxsnagel is mine!" Tork cried. "I can have anything I want! Already
I have defeated the power of these three witches. You ceased your spells just
before the blow and were spared. But that, dear wizard, is a temporary
condition! By the power of the Forxsnagel, I claim your wizard's skills!"
117
Dark
lightning flashed from Tork's fingers. Ebenezum threw out his hands to conjure
himself, but the lightning threw him back.
Tork
laughed, raising his balled fist to the heavens. "Power! All of magic is
mine!"
Then he
began to sneeze.
Norei
and I kissed. A young witch and a magician's apprentice, in a world made new
again.
The
witches had managed to return the valley to normal in a surprisingly short
time. Solima's sisters were rescued from their prison, the demons exorcised
from the land, and rebuilding had begun. My master and I should have left a
week before to continue our journey to Vushta, city of a thousand forbidden
delights and a cure for my master. But here we stayed. Which was fine with me.
I
kissed Norei. Her lips were very sweet.
It was
a shame about Ebenezum's cure, though. When Tork had achieved Forxsnagel, he
had tried to drain off my master's abilities and received Ebenezum's malady in
the bargain. Now Solima was afraid to summon such sprites as might cure my
master, in case they cured Prince Tork as well. There were still the herbs, of
course, though Solima warned against using them too frequently. They had taken
their toll on Ebenezum already; he had slept for most of a day after his battle
with Tork. And Solima told us that after two or three ingestions, the body
built up immunities to the medicine, and the malady would return, as bad as or
worse than ever. We would have to go to Vushta after all.
Norei's
cool hand brushed the hair from my eyes. "What are you thinking of,
Wunt?"
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"Fate,"
I replied. "How we met, and suffered, and triumphed. How we both have our
whole lives ahead of us, and how my future has changed, knowing you."
Norei's
green eyes looked heavenward. "You do talk funny sometimes, Wuntvor. We've
just met. Don't go planning our lives yet. Who knows what will happen to
us?" She kissed my cheek.
"Who
knows?" I agreed. "For now, my master seems content to stay
here." 1 looked back at the rebuilt cottage, half-hidden by what trees
still remained standing in this part of the wood.
There
was a rumbling crash.
"Ha,
ha, ha! I knew the duckwort would work!" It was Grandmother's voice.
"I'll teach you to lay about the house sweet-talking my daughter!"
Ebenezum
came running full speed from the cottage. Solima held her grandmother back from
following. Fire sprouted from the old woman's fingertips.
"The
spells may take a little while, but the old ways are the best!" the old
woman called. "Stand your ground and let me boil your blood!"
My
master tossed me my pack. "Quick, Wunt! It's off to Vushta!" He
sneezed and looked back at Solima. "I'll be back when I've found the
cure!"
"I
look forward to it!" Solima replied, still grasping the struggling
oldster.
"We'll
all be waiting for you!" Grandmother waved her flaming hands.
I
stood, pack in one hand, staff in the other. "I guess I'm off to Vushta,
then."
"Oh,"
Norei replied. "Well, good-bye."
Is that
all she had to say? After all the time we
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spent
together? "Norei," I whispered, "come to Vushta."
She
looked at me and smiled.
"They
call it the city of a thousand forbidden delights."
"Well,
maybe I will, someday." She stood and kissed me lightly.
"Now
I'll zap you, scoundrel!" Grandmother had broken free from Solima and was
coming toward us rapidly. Her fire fingers singed the shrubbery as she ran.
"I'll teach you to sully the name of good, honest witches! Fish and
chickens, indeed!"
I was
off down the road, after my master.
"No
matter how ideal the circumstances of one's present location," he remarked
as I caught up with him, "there is always something to be said for a
change of scene."
SEVEN
"There
are those who claim that magic is like the tide; that it swells and fades over
the surface of the earth, collecting in concentrated pools here and there,
almost disappearing from other spots, leaving them parched for wonder. There
are also those who believe that if you stick your fingers up your nose and
blow, it will increase your intelligence."
--THE
TEACHINGS OF EBENEZUM, Volume VII
After
that, of course, our luck got worse. It wasn't just the assassins, although
Urfoo's paid minions kept appearing with greater and greater frequency. It was
probably all those minstrels that made us so easy to, find. When one's fame is
being sung in every village in the kingdom, it is difficult for one to travel
incognito. Before our present arrangement, we seemed to be always on the run.
Then
the earthquakes began.
At
first, they were only small tremors, a moment's
121
122
shifting
of the earth beneath our feet. But they grew greater day by day. I worried that
Prince Tork had recovered from his inherited malady and would soon visit the
Forxsnagel upon us again. When I told my master of my fears, he dismissed them,
at least as far as so inept as wizard as Tork was concerned. Yet as to the
earthquakes being caused by the Forxsnagel . . . well, there might be some
truth to that. He would speak no more on the subject until we were free of our
present company. Until then, he only scratched the hair beneath his cap.
Our
conversation was cut short by a commotion in the distance.
There
must have been twenty of them, each one attempting to scream louder than his or
her companions, all running full tilt down the dirt path that passed for a road
in this rural clime. On my master's instructions, we stepped to one side of the
lane and watched them pass.
"Indeed,"
Ebenezum intoned as the cloud of dust caused by the commotion settled down
again upon the road. He allowed a hand to stroke his beard and made clicking
sounds deep in his throat, a sure sign of wizardly thought.
"I
do believe they would have run us over!" Old Oame Sniggett quivered, her
pale hands fluttering amongst her black robes. "They can't be from around
here! Not civilized at all!"
"Now,
now, Auntie." The beautiful Ferona took her elder's hands in her own
steady grip. In the two days that the women had been our traveling companions,
I had been repeatedly impressed by the young woman's ability to remain calm in
the face of any crisis.
"I'm
sure there is some logical explanation for
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their
behavior," she continued. "Perhaps they are some sort of religious
order, making a hasty pilgrimage to their holy shrine. Whatever their purpose,
it is not for us to worry about. Not when we are so close to the safety of our
home."
The
wizard turned to regard the two women. "We are almost there?"
Ferona
smiled, an expression so brilliant on her freckled face, surrounded by her red
hair, that if you watched her long enough, you might forget the sun. "Aye,
good sir. We are nearly in shouting distance. Tis only a couple more hills down
the road. Come on, Nanny. Let's all of us walk so we can get home and rest
properly."
It was
then my master sneezed. I hoped, for a foolish instant, that it was only a
reaction to the dust on the road. But I knew, somewhat closer to my soul, that
my master's sneeze boded far more ill than that.
The
wizard sneezed again. A lone man ran toward us this time, his shadow flung far
across the road by the late afternoon sun.
"The
sun is setting!" the newcomer cried, his voice cracking from the weight of
emotion. "The sun is setting!"
"We
thank you for that information," my master replied when it became apparent
the man had finished his speech. "Is there anything else you'd like to
add?"
"But--"
The man came closer still. I could now see the horror in his eyes. "Tis
the first night of the full moon!"
The
wizard scratched at the snow-white hair beneath his cap. "This is also
true." He glanced at the ladies. "If you have no more information to
impart, I think we should be on our way."
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"Bork,
you are talking nonsense!" Dame Sniggett stepped forward. "Pardon the
intrusion, oh learned sir, but I know this man. He's one of my farm hands. I
almost didn't recognize him, acting so." She sniffed. "He's usually
so civilized."
"Oh,
my lady!" Bork fell to his knees. "I'm so afraid of the beast, I
didn't see you. So much has happened at the farm since the change came over
Greta."
The
elder pulled herself erect, her once watery eyes afire with outrage.
"Something has happened to Greta?"
"No,
nothing," Bork whimpered. "That is, nothing beyond ..." He
glanced at my master and myself, and his voice trailed off to nothing.
Ferona
looked to Ebenezum, an apologetic smile lighting her face. If only she would
smile that way at me! "Greta is my mistress's prize pullet."
My
master pulled at his beard. "There is an illness among the chickens,
then?"
"Chickens?"
Dame Sniggett's voice reached a volume and timbre that I previously would have
thought impossible in a woman so frail. "Greta is no--" Her mouth
refused to form the word. "Greta is an East Kingdom dandy!"
"Mistress!"
Ferona urged. "Your nerves!"
Dame
Sniggett glanced, startled, at her young charge. The air seeped from her body
in a rush, and she returned to being bent and frail. "Forgive me, good
sir," she whispered to my master. "When I hear my Greta is in
trouble, all sense leaves me."
"No
need for alarm, dear woman," Ebenezum said with the same warm smile and
soothing voice that had won a thousand paying clients. "We all have those
things that are very dear to us."
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The
woman glanced at him and quickly looked away. She giggled, a most unexpected
sound. "We are fortunate," she said softly, "to be traveling
with a man who knows the proper manner in which to view things."
"It's
a wizard's duty to place things in perspective. My lady, if you and your ward
will accompany me, we will escort you to the safety of your home." With
that, Ebenezum led the way down the road once again. I took up the rear as
usual, the paraphernalia-filled pack on my back somewhat hindering my
movements. Bork struggled to his feet as I passed.
"But
the beast--" he cried.
Somewhere
in the distance, a wolf howled.
The
pounding started sometime after they deposited my master and myself in the
massive front hall of the estate. Occasionally, the pounding would be
accompanied by screaming.
Dame
Sniggett would flutter through the hall from time to time, fragments of
explanation trailing her rapid movements. "The rooms aren't quite proper
yet. ... I like everything just so. ... It was so much more civilized."
Ferona would glide after her every now and then, and spare a smile for my master.
I tried to get her to smile at me but once again couldn't quite catch her eye.
No one
mentioned the pounding and the screams.
Both
seemed to come from just the other side of the great oak door that formed the
entrance way to the massive estate that housed Dame Sniggett and Ferona. In a
quiet moment, I asked the wizard what he thought all the commotion might be. My
master thought for a bit, then replied in a low tone: "The
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rich do
have their quirks. Most likely 'tis a deranged uncle they keep locked in the
tower. Pretend not to notice, at least until they've given us dinner."
At last
a young woman appeared to tell us we could now enter the main hall and all
would be explained. She introduced herself as Borka, sister to the mistress's
other servant. My master turned from his study of the elaborate carvings that
lined the walls, especially those inlaid with gold, and pulled at his robes to
properly straighten the lines. I gathered up my pack and stout oak walking
staff, and followed the wizard into the Great Hall.
Our
eyes immediately fixed upon the dozen golden chicken coops that lined one wall
of the huge room.
"Welcome
to my little nest," Dame Sniggett cooed.
She
stood at the end of a long table made of dark wood, Ferona at her side. They
had changed from their simple but elegant traveling clothes to somewhat more
resplendent finery, the mistress of the house dressed all in black lace, her
lovely charge dressed in a gown that showed all the colors of spring. This time
I thought Ferona smiled at both of us. I wished again I could get her to smile
just for me.
My life
had changed in the two days since we had chanced to meet the two women in a
roadside inn. Praise the assassins that Urfoo sent against us, for they made it
necessary for us to find traveling companions! And thus far, it had worked. The
last two days had passed assassin free. But far more than that had happened to
me. Before, I had been merely Wuntvor, a magician's apprentice content with
following my master on his quest for a cure. But on that day when Dame Sniggett
had requested the wizard's aid, my life had grown to include Ferona. There had
127
been a
few other women, surely, but their memories were like wisps of smoke, burned
away by Ferona's fiery beauty. Well . . . there were some times, late at night,
when I thought of Norei, and the way she kissed. But she had her own life to
lead. That was something she had made very clear. After that, I shouldn't have
thought about her as much as I did. But then there was Ferona!
Ferona!
How had I existed before I had known that name? I hadn't yet been able to get
her to talk to me, but that was a small matter, now that we had met. Now, my
life had purpose.
A
chicken clucked. It was probably in response to the immense quantity of
pounding and screaming still going on outside, so loud now we could hear it
clearly in this inner room.
"Now,
now, Greta," Dame Sniggett soothed. "I want you to meet a very
important man." Her watery eyes blinked at my master. "Tall,
handsome, and a wizard besides!"
"Indeed,"
Ebenezum rumbled. He glanced briefly at me before returning to examine the hen.
I could tell immediately that he was not pleased at being introduced to a
chicken. Even with all her money, Dame Sniggett might go too far.
"Borka.
Take Greta from her cage."
The
wizard grimaced. He expected the worst. He might even have to hold it.
"Yes,
ma'am." The serving woman curtsied and grabbed the chicken by the throat.
"Gently,
gently," the dame chided. "She is very special to me." I could
see the idea of being chased by assassins appealed more to Ebenezum with every
passing moment.
"You
see, Greta is a very special chicken." Dame
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Sniggett's
voice fell to a whisper. "She has the ability to produce gold."
The
smile reappeared on Ebenezum's lips, unfolding like a flower as it catches the
warm rays of the sun.
"It's
always been possible in theory," the wizard remarked, "though I've
never seen a spell that made it happen. She actually produces golden
eggs?"
There
was an embarrassed silence. Finally, Borka cleared her throat. "Well, you
see, the gold really comes out of another part of the chicken entirely."
"How
improper!" Fire blazed in the mistress's eyes again, but the look softened
as she gazed at her hen. "Yet poor Greta can't help it. All the creatures
of the world must perform such functions, even humans. Cursed with such a fate,
we should be thankful when it comes out gold!"
Borka
looked up from where she held the chicken. Her face grew suddenly pale.
"'Tis getting dark. I must go close the shutters!"
She
thrust the chicken back into its cage and ran from the room. The pounding
outside seemed to redouble with the approaching darkness, although by now the
screams had gotten quite hoarse.
"Now
that you know about our Greta," Dame Sniggett said, "I can tell you
the real reason I've asked you to come to the estate. When I saw you were a
wizard, new hope rose within my bosom. Tell me, dear, dear Ebenezum, might
there be a spell by which you could change the orifice through which Greta's
gold appears?"
"An
interesting point." Ebenezum sniffed. Being in the same room as an
enchanted chicken did not seem to be enough to make my master sneeze, although
it did make his nose run. I imagined that if
129
Greta
decided to make gold any time in the wizard's presence, his malady would return
full force. "Many magicians have proposed spells for the laying of golden
eggs," he continued, "but no matter what the process proposed, the
results always proved to be economically unfeasible. That is, more magic went
in one end than gold came out the other." Ebenezum blew his nose.
"But
it might be done?"
"Certainly
possible, with the head start your hen has. It's just a matter of fathoming the
proper spell of transference."
"Then
I must insist you remain here as my guests!" Dame Sniggett's watery eyes
shone like pools beneath the moon. "Ferona will show you to your room,
civilized in every respect! It belonged to the master of the house, Ferona's
late uncle. Oh, and your apprentice can sleep in the barn."
A
sudden commotion seemed to have replaced the pounding and screaming that went
on in the hallway. Bork staggered into the room.
"Why
didn't you answer the door? The beast would have gotten me!"
Dame
Sniggett stared at him in silent indignation.
"How
were we to know you would return?" Ferona replied. "We thought the
knocking was yet another pilgrim, looking for a handout for his holy
cause." She glanced at Ebenezum and myself. "All the pilgrims around
here know that Auntie has money."
A
sudden chill wind blew into the room. Bork, Ferona, and Dame Snigget looked at
one another, an expression of terror on their faces.
"The
door!" Bork whispered.
Something
leapt into the room with a horrible,
130
shrieking
growl. Dame Sniggett cried out, Ferona and Bork leapt away.
Ebenezum
was sneezing now. The creature was sorcerous! Although one look at the thing's
near human height, its face full of fangs and coarse gray hair, should have
been enough to tell me that. The things would kill us all, unless someone acted
quickly. I leapt forward, swinging my stout oak staff.
The
creature grabbed the swinging wood and wrenched it from my grasp as if the
force behind my blow had been nothing. Talons bit into the skin of my right
hand. With a cry 1 pulled myself free, but the creature was on top of me. It
forced me to the floor, its breath hot on my neck. I caught a glimpse of razor
teeth. Behind us, the chickens shrieked in dismay.
The
beast paused and looked up, sniffing the air. As fast as it had floored me, it
leapt away to grab the nearest chicken. Hen in mouth, it ran from the room.
As I
stared dumbly at my bleeding hand, I heard Ebenezum blow his nose. Dame
Sniggett tossed a napkin in my direction so that I might mop up the blood, her
face a mask of distaste. Ferona sighed and shook her head.
"It
happens aH the time."
EIGHT
"Even
for a wizard there will often come times when someone close to you, perhaps
even your spouse, criticizes your habits by comparing them to those of animals.
This is distinctly unfair to the animals, who have far better habits than we in
many areas. When, for example, have you seen a frog collecting taxes or a
squirrel running for electoral office? Present arguments like these to those
people who criticize you. If they still do not see the wisdom of your ways, you
may then feel free to bite them."
--THE
TEACHINGS OF EBENEZUM, Volume IX
"There
are certain problems with this estate," Dame Sniggett admitted after we
had eaten and she had sufficiently calmed.
"Indeed.
Like werewolves." Ebenezum stroked his beard. So that was what it was! I
had heard of such strange creatures--humans that turn to animals
131
132
under
the full moon. My hand ached in remembrance.
"No,"
Ferona interjected. "What Auntie is trying to say is that magic collects
here, producing all manner of strange and wonderful things. Only in such a
place could Greta produce gold. Unfortunately, there are negative sides to the
magic as well."
"Yes,
yes, but that's why we've brought a wizard here!" The aunt smiled at my
master. "Good Eben-ezum, surely you can try to dispel the negative magicks
that lurk about this farm."
"I
can but try," the wizard replied. Apparently, no one had noticed my
master's total helplessness' during the werewolf's attack, and the mage,
sensing a fee, was not eager to bring the matter up. "Now, we have had a
long and trying day. Perhaps you would be good enough to show us to our rooms?"
"Certainly.
Ferona, take Ebenezum up to the master's suite. After that, Bork can point out
the way for Wuntvor to walk to the barn." Dame Sniggett studied her black
lace sleeve for an instant. "Oh, incidentally, good wizard, just so there are
no more surprises, I should tell you to totally ignore the ghost. He's quite
harmless, really."
"Ghost?"
I saw my master's eyes cloud with wizardly rage. Dame Sniggett had gone too far
at last. His right hand shot out to pave the way for a major denunciation. His
fingers banged into the golden chicken cage.
The
wizard hesitated, the touch of precious metal bringing him back to his senses.
"Beg
pardon, madam, but 1 cannot sleep with a ghost present. My magical senses are
too finely tuned; I would get no rest at all. Give my apprentice the master's
quarters. I shall sleep in the barn."
133
Dame
Sniggett frowned. "That's hardly proper! Still, who am 1 to criticize the
methods of a practicing wizard? I'm sure, in time, we'll all be able to make
the necessary adjustments." She waved her hand. "Bork, show the young
man the way upstairs."
Somewhat
dejectedly, I followed the servant. I had hoped that Ferona would escort me. I
stumbled into the huge bedroom Bork led me to and fell upon the massive bed. My
recent fight had exhausted me. Bork departed, closing the door after him. The
room was left in darkness.
"Hey,"
a voice whispered in my ear. "Hey, buddy."
My mind
floundered on the edge of sleep. "Wha?"
Encouraged,
the voice got louder. "Hey, buddy, ever hear the one about the farmer's
daughter and the traveling tinsmith?"
"What?"
I was wide awake now. "What are you talking about?"
"All
right, all right, so you've heard that one," the voice said, suddenly
defensive. "How about this: How many monks does it take to empty a
cistern?"
"I
was trying to sleep!" I cried. It then occurred to me that I had no idea
who or what I was talking to. Ice rolled down my spine. A valley full of ghosts
came to mind, a valley where I had almost become a ghost myself.
"Who
are you?" I whispered.
"Oh,
I'm a ghost. Peelo's the name. Formerly jester to the court of King Zingwarfel,
some four hundred years back now. I had the misfortune to make a joke about the
king's name, and was put instantly to death. Now I'm forced to wander these
halls endlessly, trying to make people laugh. But hey,
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you
don't want to hear about this. It's showtime!"
I had
no idea what this creature was talking about. It didn't seem dangerous, but
with ghosts you could never tell. "Why can't I see you?" I asked.
"What,
you want me to manifest myself? I usually save that for the big boffo
conclusion. But hey. Tell me this. Why did the hippogriff cross the road?"
"I
don't care!" I pounded the bed with my fists. The right one throbbed
painfully. "Ghosts, werewolves, magic chickens. What's going on
here?"
"Hey,
buddy, calm down. It's all just part of the package. You know, standard
Netherhell grab bag: one gold-producing spell, a werestone, a giant
Grak--although heaven knows where it's gone--one slightly used ghost. I'm sort
of the M.C. of this troupe, forced to walk these halls until I can make someone
really laugh. If only somebody would give me some new jokes! Do you know how
difficult it is to milk laughs out of four-hundred-year-old material?"
"I'm
sure it's hard," I said. I was too tired to care. I lay back on the bed.
"But
hey, no more boring stories! On with the show! Did you hear the one about the
unicorn and the tavern keeper? Well, this unicorn goes into this tavern, see,
and orders a mug of ale from the tavern keeper. The tavern keeper brings the
ale, and says, 'That'll be a hundred gold crowns.' Then he adds, 'You know, we
don't get many...' "
It was
all too much for me. I fell asleep.
I found
my way to the barn and told Ebenezum my ghost story early the next morning.
"Indeed,"
he said when I was finished. "There's
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more
here than meets either the eye or nose. I have a feeling that Dame Sniggett is
attempting to extract a great deal of work from us for a very low fee." He
cleared his throat. "I imagine she would think that sort of thing
proper."
"Either
that," I added, "or she's afraid a spell that took away the bad might
take her beloved chicken, too."
"A
good point." Ebenezum fingered his long white mustache. "Perhaps
there's hope for you, yet, Wuntvor. Whatever happens, we'll have to charge for
the spells as piecework. Expensive that way, but they can afford it."
"But--"
A sudden awkwardness kept me from finishing the sentence. Who was going to cast
the spells? My master's malady left him in no condition to conjure. He had
tried innumerable methods of blocking up his nose or somehow diverting the
sor-cerous smells during the course of our travels. The only common element in
all these methods was that none of them worked. None of them, that is, except
one. Solima's cure!
My eyes
wandered to the vial of herbs Ebenezum had kept by his side this past week. The
wizard shook his head. "No, Wunt. This job is nowhere near important
enough for me to use my only remedy. It will have to wait for a more serious
occasion."
Ebenezum
pulled at his beard and stared off into the hayloft. "There are a number
of supernatural factors at work here. Yet each one, taken separately, is manageable
with a fairly simple spell. A werestone must be destroyed, a ghost banished,
perhaps another thing or two exorcised. After that, we'll repair Dame
Sniggett's chicken. And you, Wuntvor, will be the one to perform the
magic."
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I
stared at my master for a long moment. "Close your mouth, lad. A good
wizard always has his mouth firmly closed."
I
complied.
"In
the past," my master continued, "you have learned to use some simple
spells to extricate us from difficult circumstances. Perhaps they haven't
always worked exactly as planned, but we are still alive and on the road to
Vushta, which is all that really matters. In the next few hours, you will learn
a group of spells so simple as to be child's play. After that, all that will be
required is the proper timing."
1 was
overwhelmed. Never had my master placed such faith in me!
"I
hope I will be worthy."
Ebenezum
raised one eyebrow. "So do I. There's a large fee involved."
When
Ferona came to the door of the barn, I hardly looked at her. My head was filled
with General Banishment Spell #3, Ork's Rule of Universal Exorcism, and The
Great Foudou's Chant for the Realignment of Bodily Parts.
"Excuse
me," she said. "Is Ebenezum about?"
She had
spoken to me! All the spells flew from my head. At last, what I had dreamed of
for so long had come to pass. I searched my thoughts to come up with a reply
worthy of her beauty.
But
there was no reply that magnificent. I told her, therefore, that Ebenezum had
gone out for a walk about the estate.
"A
pity," she replied. "Tell me, Wuntvor, what do you think of
marriage?"
What
was she saying? I had known, deep in my
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heart,
that once Ferona and I spoke, everything would change. But this quickly?
"It
can be a good thing," 1 prompted.
Ferona
nodded absently. "Do you think Eben-ezum would consider marrying a woman
as young as I?"
I found
myself at a loss for words.
"Please
close your mouth, Wuntvor," Ferona said. "There are flies in the
barn. It could be unhealthy." One of her magnificently formed feet scuffed
at a small pile of hay. "You're surprised I want to marry a wizard. It's
just that there's such a concentration of magic around here that we'd all feel
more secure with a magician about."
I
couldn't help myself then. My emotions had risen above reason. "What about
me?" I blurted. "I'm a magician, too. Much closer to your age."
"And
much less experienced than your master." Ferona frowned. "Let me tell
you, Wuntvor, there is another reason that I need an older wizard. There is a
curse upon me. Any man under the age of thirty that I kiss dies in three
hours!"
I took
a step backward.
"I
used to have a dozen suitors knocking on my door day and night. It was only
after the third one expired that I realized the true horror of my
affliction."
"What
happened to the other nine?" I asked weakly.
"Oh,
they all became pilgrims. I'm afraid there aren't many job opportunities for
young men in the Eastern Kingdoms these days. Fortunately, there always seem to
be some openings in being holy." She sighed wistfully. "If only one
of them were kissing me now!"
138
I
thought for one wild moment about taking their place, but then I remembered the
curse. I'd have to learn a spell to lift that as well.
"A
curse, too?" Ebenezum had come to stand in the door as we spoke.
"Young woman, I think you need to explain the entire situation."
And
Ferona told the story of how her uncle thought himself a clever businessman and
made a deal with the Netherhells for what seemed to be a limitless supply of
gold. But, as is almost always the case in such dealings, he had missed the
small print (it is usually so small that people mistake it for a dust mote in
the lower left corner of the contract) and, besides a gold-producing chicken,
received a ghost, a curse upon his niece, a stone that regularly turned one
member of the household into a werewolf, and a large, dark bird that
immediately carried Uncle away.
"As
you can imagine, we were a little upset over this turn of events," Ferona
continued. "However, Auntie insisted that there was a proper way out of
this dilemma. All we had to do was bring in an expert in the field, and until
then, leave things pretty much the way they were at Uncle's hasty departure, in
case he should suddenly return."
"Indeed,"
Ebenezum replied. "That way you might be able to keep the magic elements
from unsettling even further. And do you have a copy of this contract?"
"Alas,
no. It was carried away with Uncle when the creature got him."
"A
typical Netherhell ploy!" Ebenezum strode back and forth between the
haystacks. "Well, we can't face the ghost until nightfall, nor will we see
the werewolf. The werestone is another matter entirely.
139
We must
find where the demons put it!"
"Oh!"
Ferona said brightly. "The demons put it on a mantelpiece in the Great
Hall."
The
wizard stared at the young woman. "And you've done nothing with it?"
"Well,
Auntie's afraid to move anything in case Uncle won't recognize the place when
he returns. Besides which, if you don't bother the werewolf when it bursts into
the room, all it does is steal a chicken and runaway again."
"Don't
you fear for Greta?"
"A
little, but so far the werewolf grabs one of the chickens at either end. As
long as we keep the prize hen toward the middle, she seems to be fine."
Ebenezum
frowned at the fading light outside the barn. My instruction in magic had taken
most of the day.
"If
we don't hurry," the mage said, "we will be face to face with the
werewolf all over again. We'll destroy the werestone now. My assistant,
incidentally, will do the actual work while I supervise. Wunt-vor needs the
practice."
"All
right." Ferona looked doubtful. "But we should hurry. The last person
the werewolf caught playing with the werestone got his throat torn out."
I
swallowed hard and followed my master toward the house. I repeated the three
spells, a word for every step I took. There could be no mistakes this time. I
had to remember every one, or 1 would be minus a throat.
"You're
sure nothing will happen to Greta?" Dame Sniggett cooed in the direction
of her prize hen. The chicken, for its part, ignored the people in the room
140
entirely,
pecking away at a pile of dried corn.
"Reasonably
sure," the wizard replied. "It depends on the degree of
interconnection between the different spells from the Netherhells. Rest assured
we will take every precaution."
Ebenezum
held his nose. "Wuntvor, open the box."
I did
as I was told. A small green stone lay in the middle of the box's plush purple
interior. It looked harmless enough. One could hardly imagine it was capable of
doing the things Ebenezum had described earlier in the day.
"The
werestone," my master explained, "is a particularly fiendish
invention of the Netherhells. It causes people who touch it to be driven out
into the wilds in the full moon, and the first lower animal they contact, they
become like that animal every time the full moon returns. One imagines this
particular stone had an additional curse on it, so that the first person to
come in contact with it would be forced to seek out a wolf. Otherwise, the
person would just have likely turned into a wererabbit."
Ebenezum
sneezed behind me. "The spell!" he called. "The spell,
Wuntvor!"
I began
to recite the neutralizing spell. Somebody screamed when I was halfway through.
"Hey,
folks!" an all-too-familiar voice cried out behind me. "It's
showtime! Tell me, how many Vushtans does it take to do something
forbidden?" I could see a pale jester's scepter out of the corner of my
eye. Peelo seemed to have manifested himself for the occasion.
I tried
to push the ghost's bad jokes out of my mind. I had to finish the spell!
Ebenezum was sneezing with a vengeance now. His nasal whoops
141
threatened
to drown out an interminable story on the ghost's part concerning two hairy
dogs and a large quantity of mulled wine.
"They're
interconnected!" my master managed between sneezes. "Try
the"--sneeze--"strongest"-- sneeze-- "Banish! Banish!"
So I
was to go all out! The banishment spell it would be, then. I carefully phrased
the first line, making sure I hit all the guttural stops.
That's
when I heard the growl behind me.
I leapt
to one side as the werewolf lunged and heard cloth tear as the claws grazed my
leggings. The creature would kill me now. 1 needed a weapon.
My
stout oak staff was still across the room, near the spot where I had jumped
away. The wolf circled the room, running perilously close to the golden chicken
coops and the huddled forms of Dame Snig-gett and Ferona. Would the beast
devour Greta as well? If only there was something to stab, to hit, to throw.
Ebenezum could be of no help now. The appearance of the wolf had made his
condition even worse. He lay on the floor, a pitiful mass of sneezing flesh.
I had
to get my staff! I took a step across the room, but the wolf was in front of
me, its fangs bared in a half-human smile. It was stalking me now.
I would
have to use my hands. There was nothing else to defend myself with. Then my eye
caught the werestone.
In a
single motion, I grabbed the thing and flung it at the wolf. It bounced off the
creature's head, throwing it off-balance. Stone and wolf both fell against the
huddled women.
I
hadn't meant to do that. I started across the room in an attempt to rescue
someone, when I saw
142
the
stone take its effect on the other two. Both Ferona and Dame Sniggett had grown
dark, coarse hair all over their bodies. Where once there was one werewolf, now
there were three.
Still,
I would continue to fight! Though the odds were great against me, I would give
my last ounce of blood to protect my master. Let the werewolves do their worst!
It
occurred to me then that I had also touched the werestone. Should a werewolf
touch me now, I would also turn into a hairy beast. There'd be no hope for
Ebenezum then. The wolves, myself included, would tear him apart.
The
creatures were on Ebenezum! The wizard flailed at them with his fists, but he
could barely control his movements. A small vial fell from among his robes. The
herbal remedy!
I dove
beneath a clawed hand and tossed the vial back to my master. My momentum
carried me on headfirst into the golden chicken cages.
I felt
the change come over me then. My nose and mouth grew together and became hard.
I felt my arms sprout feathers. I knew then the horrible truth. I was turning
into a werechicken!
A wolf
sprang at me, and I pecked it savagely with my beak. Startled, the wolf backed
away. It had ob-rroasiy ncrer ofeart mfrf a. srx-rooc cfiicften rferore.
Surprise was on my side for a moment. But once the wolves regrouped, their
teeth and claws would tear me apart in an instant.
My
chicken eyes saw movement. Ebenezum placed the vial to his lips and swallowed.
There
was a crash of breaking glass, and a great, dark bird entered the room.
"Ladies and gentle-
143
men!"
Peelo the ghost cried. "The return of the Grak!"
I saw
then that the Grak was carrying a small, balding gentleman. "Home at
last!" the balding man cried.
The
wolves rushed me. Ebenezum was on his feet, conjuring mightily. As they ran,
the wolves transformed to Borka, Ferona, and Dame Sniggett.
The
bird circled overhead. It was too much for my master, even with the medicine.
He collapsed again, sneezing.
"Feerie!"
cried the man dangling from the dark bird's claws. "Borkie! Sniggie! How
good to see you again! I thought I'd never escape the Netherhells. They have
awful, torturous things there. Traffic jams! Aspirin commercials!"
But
even the uncle's babbling could not deter Peelo. His four hundred-year-old
material just kept on coming.
"Ladies
and gentlemen!" he cried, pointing at me. "A practical demonstration!
Why did the chicken cross the moat?"
Ferona
took one look at me and laughed. I clucked in indignation. Didn't she realize
who helped save her?
We're
free to leave this dulf estateffTaclc to trie excitement of the Netherhells. I
tell you, the old jokes are always the best!"
With
that, the ghost disappeared. As did all other things supernatural.
The
long silence was broken by Greta's frantic clucking. I turned to look at the
chicken and noticed that the feathers had left my arms. Seeing what Greta
144
had
deposited in the bottom of her golden cage, I realized the magic had deserted
her as well.
"It
comes to this," Dame Sniggett wailed.
"Didn't
anybody miss me?" inquired the bald-headed man.
"I
assume, good sir, that you are the uncle," Ebenezum said after a
particularly hearty nose blow.
"And
who might you be, sir?" the bald-headed man replied. "Sniggie, you
haven't been going around hiring any extra servants?" He examined
Ebenezum's silver-embroidered robes. "Unless you aren't-- Sir, just what
are you doing alone in this house with my wife!"
"Indeed,"
Ebenezum rumbled. He stooped to gather up my pack amidst the now scattered
chicken cages, then thrust it in my arms. He turned, his wizardly strides
taking him quickly from the room.
I
risked a final glance at the lovely Ferona, but she was lost to me, crying over
a mound of gray brown where once there had been a pile of gold.
"You'll
pay for this!" Dame Sniggett shrieked at my master's retreating back.
"This is not proper at all!"
"Enough
of that lot," the mage muttered when we were free of the house. "May
all their gold change in turn." He nodded at a man in the robes of a monk
who walked toward us. "Rather we should use our magic to aid the pilgrims
the girl was always going on about."
"I
agree entirely." The monk smiled and pulled back his cowl. Even with the
shaven head, I could tell it was Bork.
"Decided
it was time for a change," he said to our inquiring glances. "A
quieter life, free from the petty pursuits of the material world.
Besides"--he tugged
145
at his
sleeve--"these fine, thick robes come with the job."
Brother
Bork chose to walk with us a ways, and Ebenezum summarized the events that had
transpired after his departure.
"You
are holier than I," Bork said at last. "You banished every last bit
of the curse, and used up the only remedy known to prevent your malady, then
left the estate without any sort of payment whatever?"
"I
didn't say that," Ebenezum replied. He poked the pack I carried with two
fingers. Something clucked.
"A
chicken?" Bork asked.
"Dinner."
Ebenezum nodded. "Would you care to join us?"
I
blanched. Somehow, the thought of a chicken dinner did not appeal to me at all.
Quite understandable, I should think, considering what I had been through, even
though the werespell over me had vanished with the rest of the gifts from the
Netherhells. No, no chicken for me. I would content myself with the bag of
dried corn I had brought with me from the estate. Amazingly enough, before this
afternoon I had never realized how incredibly tasty dried corn could be.
But we
were out in the open, on our way to Vushta again. Quite naturally, it was only
a matter of moments before we were attacked by yet another band of assassins.
NINE
"Wizards,
like all mortals, need their rest. Casting spells, righting wrongs, and putting
a little away for your old age can all be draining occupations. The true wizard
must therefore always insist on a good night's sleep, and a few days' respite
between tasks. After some particularly grueling work, a couple of weeks in the country
are not out of line. In the aftermath of truly major assignments, of course,
nothing less than a seaside vacation will do. And what of those situations in
which a wizard's work affects the very world around him, perhaps the fabric of
the cosmos itself? Well, be advised that prime accommodations in Vushta must be
reserved at least two months in advance."
--THE
TEACHINGS OF EBENEZUM, Volume XX11I
It was
all too much. I could barely support the pack upon my back. Its weight had
surely increased four-
147
148
fold. I
leaned on my stout oak staff with such force that it bent each time I put my
weight against it. I was sure it soon would snap. My feet barely lifted from
the ground as I walked, and I stumbled over hidden rocks and roots as we made
our slow way down what passed for a path. Sometime during our exhausted flight,
we seemed to have wandered entirely away from the main highway and now found
ourselves on a trail so overgrown that even the forest animals seemed to have
given up on it.
As
tired as I was, Ebenezum was more exhausted still. His head was bowed, his back
was bent. His once wizardly strides had shortened to a very unwiz-ardly hobble.
When we
had first departed Dame Sniggett's after the successful resolution of her chicken
problem, all had seemed well with my master. The tiredness that had ensued
after his first use of the remedial herbs seemed to have passed him by entirely
on the second application. The wizard began to talk expansively about the
possibility of a cure, especially after we obtained another quantity of the
healing poultice.
But my
master spoke prematurely. His second reaction to the drug came after we had
been on the road two full days and was fully four times worse than his earlier
reaction. His first response, after our battle with Tork, had been exhaustion.
His response after our chicken incident made exhaustion seem like a highly
active state.
Then,
of course, there were our constant encounters with assassins. And did I mention
the increasing incidence of earthquakes? At first I thought it was my balance
going, following my muscles into the blanket of fatigue. But no, we were
plagued by ever-increasing tremors, as if giants were stomping
149
foothills
into the earth. These left us shaken at the least, and often not standing at
all.
Ebenezum
stumbled forward, managing at last to stand reasonably still. He paused and
turned to me, his eyes once so capable of wizardly rage and sorcer-ous
persuasion now no more than red and tired.
"Rest,"
was all he said.
I
pointed to a likely group of stones on the far side of the path where we might
sit for a while. We made our way over to them as best we could. I removed my
pack with rather less grace than I would have liked. I decided not to look inside
it just yet. I would discover what had broken at some later time.
Ebenezum
didn't even notice the noise. He was too busy sitting down, which, like
everything else just then, occupied a great amount of his time. He groaned and
exhaled at the same instant, as if in the process of sitting he might release
all his problems to the four winds.
We sat
for a long moment in silence. My master's labored breathing softened over time.
At last, he pushed back his cap to look at me.
"I
was afraid of this," he said. "A second use of that potion has
drained all the vitality from my body. Twould kill me to use it again." My
master paused to regain his wind.
"What
are we to do?" I asked before I realized that the wizard had again dozed
where he sat.
I knew
then it was up to me. Ebenezum was exhausted beyond all imagining. I must find
someplace he could rest and recover.
"Pardon?"
said a voice from across the road.
I
looked up quickly. Two heavily cloaked figures stood a scant yard away.
"Did
I say something?" I inquired.
150
"Oh,
no." One of the cloaked figures stepped forward. Only his hands were
visible, but they waved about wildly as he spoke, as if they wished to escape
the cloak that hid the rest of him.
"I
said 'pardon,' " he continued, "for I wish to speak with you. You
must excuse me, for I have not the social graces of conversation. For you see,
1 am but a poor hermit, and seldom speak at all."
The
speaker pulled back his hood, revealing a round, bald head that shone in the afternoon
sun.
"Oh,"
I replied after I deciphered his conversation. "And you wished to say
something to me?"
"Most
assuredly, yes." His hands darted about to indicate his chest. "As 1
have stated, 1 am but a poor hermit and religious seeker, Heemat by name,
pledged for twenty years never to utter a word. Yes, for twenty years these
lips are sealed, never to groan in pain or laugh with joy. But that is of no
consequence, for when 1 saw the two of you by the side of the road, I found
'twas time to break my vow."
Heemat
continued to smile. I looked to my master, but the wizard snored lightly upon
his rock. He had managed to sleep through all of this. It was only then that I
realized how truly fatigued Ebenezum was.
Well,
tired though I was in turn, someone would have to see this situation through.
And I would do it in a way that would make my master proud. I stared at this
bald, smiling fellow. Something about him struck me as peculiar. Now, I
thought, how would Ebenezum handle this?
"Indeed,"
I said, determined to seek this hermit's true nature. "You are a religious
seeker?"
"Yes,"
Heemat replied, lifting his hands to the skies. "I follow the lesser
deity, Plaugg the Fairly Magnificent."
151
"Indeed."
I decided I would leave this particular point for the nonce. "And are you
sworn to silence for twenty years?"
"Well,
yes, more or less. But as we walked down this road to see the two of you in
such obvious need..."
The
hermit's voice trailed away. Such obvious need? I coughed.
"We
were just resting."
"Your
companion looks like he might rest for the next dozen years."
I
looked over at Ebenezum. He had managed, somehow, to curl up on top of his
boulder. His snoring grew louder.
"Just
a short afternoon nap," I replied, trying to keep the anxiety out of my
voice. How was I to wake the wizard up, short of kicking him?
"Well,
perhaps you need a place to stay until his nap is completed?" Heemat waved
to his left. "Our hovel is just down the road a bit."
That's
it. Now I knew what was bothering me. I stroked my chin thoughtfully.
"Indeed," I remarked. "You say you are a hermit, sir."
"That's
correct."
"Well."
I coughed gently. "Since when do hermits have traveling companions?"
I had to keep myself from smiling. What logic! My master would have been proud
of me.
"I
see." Heemat's hands retreated within his robes at the very hint of
impropriety in his conduct. "I believe custom is somewhat different here
than wherever you come from. I can tell you are a traveler."
I was completely
undone. "In this country, hermits travel in pairs?"
"Come,
come. There's no reason to belabor the
152
obvious.
How come you to this place?"
"Well,
we seem to have wandered off the main road somewhere back there," I
admitted before I regained my composure. "A second! Why does your
companion not speak? Has he taken a vow of silence as well?"
"Snarks,
here?" Heemat laughed, the smile fully across his face again. "No,
no, he's never taken a vow in his life. He just doesn't like to talk. Isn't
that right, Snarks?"
The
other figure nodded and said something from deep within his folds of cloak. It
sounded like "Mmrrpphh!"
Somehow,
all these explanations were doing nothing to reassure me. "What did your
friend say?" 1 demanded.
"Sounded
like 'mmrrpphh' to me." Heemat rubbed his belly happily.
There
really was something all wrong here. I cursed my lack of experience. Maybe I
should go over and shake Ebenezum awake.
With
that, the wizard rolled off his boulder bed into a mass of brambles immediately
behind the stone. His sleeping form sank from sight, but his snoring grew
louder still.
"Our
hovel is just down the road." Heemat shrugged. "Of course, he could
sleep in the brambles all night, if that is your preference."
I looked
from the hermit to his cloaked companion. Snarks waved his gloved hands above
his head and shouted something like "Vrrmmpphh!"
Someone
tapped me on the shoulder.
An
attack from the rear! I spun about all too quickly, almost losing my balance in
the process. So, after all this talk, they would finally make their
153
move!
These fiends were everywhere! If only I could discern the true nature of their
hellish schemes. I knew magic now! I would fight them if I must, whether they
numbered two or two hundred!
The
newcomer was a good two feet taller than myself, dressed entirely in black. His
shoulders were incredibly broad as well. You could have fit two normal men side
by side and just matched the width of his frame. His face was pale and without
amusement. He spoke in the deepest voice I had ever heard.
"I
need some assistance."
With
that, a new earthquake hit. If the earlier quakes had been a giant stamping his
foot, this one was the annual giant's dancing social. We were, all but the tall
man, tossed to the ground by the severity of it.
It was
over in a second. I glanced at the boulders. Apparently, Ebenezum was still
asleep.
A
great, trumpeting cry came from the depth of the woods. The large man spun
about with the grace one might expect of a dancer or a professional eel
catcher.
A huge
wild boar broke from the underbrush. The creature was larger than I was tall,
with great, sharp tusks that seemed pointed straight in my direction. It
bellowed again as it raced across the clearing, intent on its frenzied attack.
My stout oak staff suddenly felt very puny in my hands.
The
large man stepped in the wild boar's path. The boar kept coming straight for
him. The man in black grabbed the two tusks as if the huge pig were offering them
rather than attacking. He calmly flipped the creature over as he stepped aside.
Before the boar could recover, the large man had placed his immense hand around
the pig's equally huge neck and lifted
154
the
beast aloft. The boar roared, then made an odd, choking sound as the large man
squeezed its windpipe. When the boar stopped struggling, the large man casually
tossed it back into the woods.
"I
do like strangling wild pigs," he remarked. "It's such a satisfying
feeling." He flexed his muscles absently.
Then
again, perhaps fighting with this fellow wasn't such a good idea. But I
couldn't run away, either, and leave Ebenezum snoring in the shrubbery.
"Indeed,"
I said.
"Well,
no matter," the large man said. "I seem to have wandered off the main
road somehow, and it will interfere with my duties."
"Alas,
another lost traveler!" Heemat exclaimed. "Perhaps we can be of
service."
"Who's
this?" the large man asked softly.
"Only
Heemat, good sir." Heemat spread his hands before him. "A poor hermit
and religious pilgrim, pledged to Plaugg the Moderately Glorious. I have only
recently broken a vow of silence to aid--"
"That's
enough." The large man lifted a very large hand by his large head.
Heemat's
smiling mouth snapped shut.
"Who's
this?" The large man nodded toward the hermit's cloaked companion.
"Wvvxxrrgghh."
Snarks took a rapid step to the rear.
"That
is Snarks, sir," 1 quickly interjected. "Hee-mat's traveling
companion."
"Wait
a second," the large man said. "How can you be a hermit and have a
traveling companion?"
Heemat's
well-clothed form grew rigid. "I will not
155
be
swayed by the narrow-minded dictates of society!" he cried.
"Very
well." The large man shrugged his incredibly broad shoulders. Heemat
smiled apologetically.
"I
am known as"--the large man made a sound like an elderly woman being
bludgeoned to death by an unwilling snake--"although very few people can
pronounce that. I am known, more simply, as the Dealer of Death."
"Indeed,"
I replied, recalling the great speed with which he had dispatched the rampaging
pig. "And what can we do for you, Great Dealer of Death?"
"My
friends call me the Dealer," the Dealer replied. "I am on a sacred
quest, to find and kill the enemy of my employer, King Urfoo the
Vengeful." Casually, the Dealer cracked his massive knuckles.
King
Urfoo? A chill went down my spine as a certain clarity began returning to my
head. My tired feet suddenly felt capable of running once again. King Urfoo?
"Ah,
a sacred quest." Heemat nodded his head knowingly.
"Bzzgllphfll,"
Snarks added.
"Yes,
I must find a certain wizard."
"A
wizard?" I inquired. The chill seemed to have spread across my entire rib
cage. I was, at last, fully and most completely awake.
"Ebenezum
is his name," the Dealer remarked.
"Indeed?"
My voice had suddenly become much higher. I thought it best to cease speaking
altogether.
The
Dealer of Death turned to the hermit and his companion. The muscles in the
Dealer's neck rippled as he spoke.
156
"You
know of no one by that name?"
"Wsspklblgg,"
Snarks mused.
"No,
sir, we are not personally acquainted with the gentleman," Heemat added as
he backed away.
"Alas."
The Dealer sighed. His rib cage danced as the muscles contracted. "My
quest must continue."
A
particularly loud snore came from amidst the brambles.
"What
is that?" The Dealer looked about him, a grim smile playing about his
lips. "Another wild pig that needs to be strangled?"
"No,
sir!" I cried. " 'Twas nothing! Just a forest bird!"
Ebenezum
moaned in his sleep, then snored again.
"You're
sure it's not a pig?" the Dealer asked wistfully. "Sounds too deep
for a bird. 1 do rather enjoy strangling pigs."
We
paused for a moment but heard nothing but birds and the rustling of small
forest animals. Ebenezum was mercifully silent.
"Oh,
well, I must get back to the main road, then." The Dealer snatched a
passing butterfly and ripped it in two. "Not as much fun as killing a
pig," he muttered.
Heemat
gave the large man directions on how to regain the highway. The Dealer waved to
us all and started back the way he came, his stride three times that of a
normal person. My breathing began to return to normal.
"Well,
Snarks." Heemat waved to his companion. "Apparently no one wants our
hospitality."
"A
minute!" I cried, turning away from the rapidly retreating Dealer. "I
have reconsidered. We shall make use of your hospitality after all."
"Ah,
splendid!" Heemat clapped his hands to-
157
gether.
"You realize, of course, that there is a small fee involved."
I
nodded absently. I had made my decision at last, and I would not sway from it.
Ebenezum was in no condition to travel, and though I still could not quite
bring myself to trust the hermit, whatever his hovel offered had to be better
than facing the Dealer of Death.
"I
don't imagine we can wake your friend." Hee-mat nodded in the general
direction of the brambles. "No matter. We'll get him there. Of course,
this entails a slight portage fee."
I
nodded again. With the Dealer of Death gone, I found my weariness was quickly
returning. The three of us walked to the back of the stone.
"Come!
We shall carry him!" Heemat and Snarks proceeded to disengage the wizard
from the surrounding brambles.
There
was a firm tap at my shoulder.
"Excuse
me," the Dealer of Death said, "but I seem to have gotten myself
turned about completely. Oh! Here's someone 1 haven't seen before. Aren't those
wizard's robes?"
Ebenezum
woke up and sneezed.
TEN
"The
common folk have many sayings, all about it being darkest before the dawn and
clouds with silver linings and suchlike. We in the magical trade like to
express our opinions of these matters somewhat differently. A lifetime of
experience will have taught the average sorcerer that no matter how hopeless
the situation seems, no matter how painful and fraught with danger his options
may be, no matter how close he may be to an indescribably hideous death and
perhaps even eternal damnation, still, the good wizard knows, it can always get
far
worse.
--THE
TEACHINGS OF EBENEZUM, Volume XLVI (General Introduction)
"Msstplckt!"
Snarks cried.
"Gesundheit,"
the Dealer added as the hermit's companion ran away.
159
160
"Thank
you." Ebenezum blew his nose on his sleeve. "And whom do I have the
honor of addressing?"
"This
is the Dealer of Death, master," I hastily interjected, "sent on a
mission by one King Urfoo."
"Indeed?"
Ebenezum struggled up to a sitting position, pulling a dozen briers along with
him. "Help me up, would you, Wuntvor?"
I did
as I was asked.
"So
you're the Dealer of Death?" the wizard reiterated.
The
Dealer made the woman-being-pummeled-at-some-length noise again. And Ebenezum
repeated it.
The
Dealer said he was impressed by my master's facility. Ebenezum remarked that he
had some small learning. Wasn't the Dealer an acolyte of the respected
"noise-rather-like-a-group-of-chickens-be-ing-attacked-by-a-dozen-rakes''
sect?
The
Dealer was overjoyed that Ebenezum had heard of his order and began to talk
rapidly about his teachers, all of whom had names that sounded as if someone
were being strangled and torn to shreds simultaneously. The relief I had felt
at my master's sudden recovery was once again turning to anxiety. I had very
pointedly dropped Urfoo's name into the conversation when I had introduced
them. Still, it was quite possible that the wizard did not know the great
degree of danger he was in. How could 1 warn Ebenezum without giving his identity
away to the large killer he now spoke to?
"But
enough of this cheerful gossip!" the Dealer cried. "I do not even
know your name. What knowledgeable man am I now addressing?"
"My
good sir," Ebenezum said. I tugged violently
161
at his
sleeve. "Not now, Wuntvor, I'm talking. As I was saying, I am--"
The
earth shook once again. The giants' social dance had become a once-a-year gala
festival. Even the Dealer fell this time.
There
was a roaring in the woods. Eagerly, the Dealer of Death regained his footing.
A very
large brown bear crashed through the undergrowth. The Dealer smiled. He raised
a hand as if he would wave at the eight-foot-high, fear-crazed beast. The bear,
sensing an easy target, rushed him.
His
hand came down sharply on the bear's skull as the beast approached. There was a
sharp crack. The Dealer stepped back to avoid the bear's still-swinging claws.
The bear, now deceased, fell to the floor of the clearing.
"That's
quite impressive," Ebenezum remarked.
"It
was nothing," replied the Dealer, wiping bear's brains from his hand with
a fallen leaf. "But when we were so rudely interrupted, you were
introducing yourself?"
"Ah,
yes." Ebenezum smiled as he straightened his robes. The end was near. I
held my breath as I waited to hear the wizard's last words before his very
speedy assassination. I wondered absently if his brains would be a different
color from those of the bear.
"As
1 was saying," the wizard continued, "I am unable to divulge that
information at this time. Like you, sir, I am on a mission."
The
Dealer nodded his head. "I knew you were a kindred spirit all along."
"We
are all kindred spirits!" Heemat cried, waving his hands to include the
whole group of us and
162
perhaps
the entire forest beyond. "That is why Snarks and I stumbled upon you, and
began this whole remarkable chain of events."
This
was just too much. With the recent dramatic occurrences, I had almost forgotten
the hermit and his cloaked companion. I began to say so when the wizard waved
me to silence.
"We
are quite assured of your importance," Ebenezum remarked. "Isn't it
time you led us to your hovel?"
Heemat
clapped his hands. "Of course! It's a very nice hovel, you'll see. Quite
worth the pittance I ask for your stay."
I was
astonished that my master would trust these two strangers so completely.
"Wunt,
gather up the packs," my master instructed before I could say another
word. In a lower voice, he remarked: "They are even more important than
they think. And I do need my sleep."
I
glanced up at the Dealer as I reassembled our gear. He, in turn, had furrowed
his muscular brow as he gazed at the late afternoon sky.
"I
think I shall come along as well," he remarked. "I do not care to be
out alone after dark."
"Good!
Good! A full hovel is a happy hovel!" Heemat cried as he turned to lead
the way.
Ebenezum
waved Snarks away as the hooded figure approached. "Keep your distance,
would you? That's a good fellow. I need some space for proper
contemplation." He wiped his nose on his sleeve, then paused for me to
come abreast. "It has been an interesting trip so far," he whispered
to me, "but I fear it will become far more interesting still, before the
day is out."
163
I
nodded and continued to walk down the path after Heemat. I found myself not so
much interested as thoroughly confused. I was glad that Ebenezum was once again
alert and in control.
With
that thought, I felt the earth shift beneath me again.
"Wsstppllkt!"
Snarks cried as a fissure opened at my feet. 1 found my stout oak staff torn
from my trembling hands as the small cloaked figure ran down the length of the
crack in the earth, swiping at things that tried to rise from the dust-filled
fissure. The things cried out as they were struck, inhuman squeals of outrage,
guttural cries of anger and pain.
The
earth shook again and the fissure closed. Snarks walked back over and handed me
my staff.
"Vllmmpp!"
he remarked.
"Anytime,"
I replied, still somewhat shaken.
'Most
interesting," Ebenezum mused behind me. "Just what I thought."
With
that, the procession resumed its march in the fading evening light, winding its
way along the barely existing path to Heemat's.
"All
hail Plaugg, the Reasonably Grandiose!" Heemat intoned. "Welcome to
my humble hovel." He waved as two women dressed in forest garb passed us
in the front hallway, then stopped abruptly as we reached a table, behind which
stood a third man wearing a hermit's cloak. Heemat studied the wall beyond the
third hermit, then turned back to us.
"I'm
afraid the only cells that I have to offer you are way over in the south wing.
'Tis the busy season in the forest, after all. They're quite nice accom-
164
modations,
mind you, just don't get as much sun as those cells in the east and north. I'll
block your rooms all in a group, so you may continue your discussions!"
He
turned back to the third hermit. "Maurice, see what you can do for our
guests, won't you?" He waved to all of us as he walked away. "Maurice
will show you your rooms." He coughed delicately as he passed through one
of the surrounding doorways. "He will, of course, also make arrangements
for payment."
With
that, he was gone. I noticed that Snarks had disappeared somewhere as well, so
that only Eben-ezum, the Dealer, and myself stood before Maurice, a thin man
with a mustache, who proceeded to read us rates from a large red ledger. The
Dealer claimed to be without funds, as was the practice of his sect. Perhaps, 1
hoped wildly, we could be free of him at last. Ebenezum reached into one of the
many folds in his wizardly robes and paid for all three of us.
I did
my best not to show my dismay. The black-clad man followed us down the hall,
idly squashing insects that here and there crawled along the walls. Was my
master trying to kill us all?
"I
am indebted to you," the large man rumbled as Maurice opened the door to
our suite of cells. The mustached hermit hovered behind us as we inspected our
new quarters, as if he expected something more from us. A single, dark look
from the Dealer sent Maurice on his way.
"Again,"
the Dealer addressed Ebenezum, "thank you for your generosity. Most times
my sect has little need for money. Gold, like all worldly things, would
interfere with our art."
165
By way
of emphasis for the last remark, the Dealer leapt in the air, twisted about in
a somersault, and landed facing us on the room's far side.
"Very
impressive." The wizard stroked his beard. "Still, it might be better
if you ceased your demonstrations until you were once again outside. I believe
you have landed on the room's only table."
The
Dealer looked down at the splinters that clustered about his feet. "Once
again, I am in your debt. Most times, my sect has little need for furniture.
Tables, like all wordly things, would interfere with our art."
"Indeed,"
Ebenezum replied. "But you pursue your art now, do you not, on a sacred
mission?"
The
Dealer kicked what remained of the table out of the way. "You are a man of
understanding, sir. For 1 have signed a contract with King Urfoo to kill a
wizard and his two traveling companions." A grim smile lit the fellow's
broad and muscular face. "And when my sect signs a contract, the dividend
is death." He began to move his arm as if he might punch through the wall,
then stopped himself.
"Excuse
me," he remarked. "I become overly enthusiastic when discussing my
art."
"Perfectly
understandable," Ebenezum said as he sat in a rough-hewn chair, the room's
only remaining piece of furniture. "But I am curious. How does one sign a
death pact?"
The
Dealer smiled gleefully. "One negotiates. You must be very clever. It is
the final lesson of my sect."
"Indeed.
It must be difficult to negotiate with royalty."
The
Dealer nodded, still smiling.
"Especially
with someone like Urfoo. I hear he is
166
very
tight with the purse strings."
"He
is a clever bargainer, no doubt about it. But we Dealers of Death are cleverer
still. After I kill the wizard and his two assistants, one very young, the
other very fat, I need only return to Urfoo and pay him ten pieces of
gold!"
Both
Ebenezum and I stared at the large man for a moment. So this was how Urfoo,
stingiest of mon-archs, finally hired a qualified assassin!
"I
was very clever," the Dealer continued. "Originally, Urfoo only had
me pay a single gold piece for each of the three I kill. But the job is worth
far more than that!"
"Indeed,"
Ebenezum said softly. "You are paying Urfoo so he can have you kill three
persons?"
"Why,
yes, those are the terms of the contract." The Dealer's well-muscled mouth
turned downward. "Isn't that the proper method? Do you mean ..."
He
frowned deeply, then stamped his foot in frustration. The room shook.
"Wouldn't you just know it! It was almost graduation. Who would blame
anyone for skimping a little on the final course of study? I did learn all the
definitions, just had a little trouble with addition and subtraction. I pay
him, he pays me, what does it matter? A contract is a contract. Negotiations
interfere with my art!"
The
Dealer punched his fist into the ceiling. His knuckles left indentations in the
rock. "I find this place confining. I will return in time for
dinner."
With
that, the large man was gone.
When I
was sure the Dealer was well away from the room, I asked my master just what he
was doing.
"There
are many kinds of problems, Wuntvor," Ebenezum intoned. "There are
small ones that occur every day, and are easily dealt with. Then, there are
167
the
larger problems, that one must plan in order to conquer. Finally, there are a
few problems so enormous that the only way to deal with them is to ignore them
completely and go about your other business. Our friend the Dealer falls into
this latter category."
How
could my master be so calm? "But shouldn't we run away?"
"The
minute we run, he will realize who we are. We are far safer as his friends. You
see, I know even more about his sect than I discussed with the Dealer. They are
commonly known as the Urracht."
"TheUrracht?"
Ebenezum
nodded. "The sound the victim makes after they see the assassin. The last
sound they make."
"Urracht,"
I repeated. The word felt cold in my throat.
"Very
efficient assassins, trained for years in the arts of death. Every effort is
turned toward murder, so much effort, in fact, that there is little room in
their lives for anything else."
I
pondered my master's words.
"Do
you mean they are somewhat deficient in wit?"
"Much
as a large fern is deficient. Or perhaps a multifaceted piece of quartz. Every
time they look for their feet, their shoes get in the way. In other words, yes.
And as long as we act as a nonsuspicious pair, rather than the fugitive trio
the Dealer is looking for, I imagine we will be quite safe."
The
room shook again.
"Then
again," Ebenezum remarked, "life is not so predictable as our
assassin."
I
braced myself, waiting for the quake to come. But the room shook in a way
different from the
168
tremors
we had felt for the past few days. The shocks came with a regular rhythm, as if
someone were trying to pound through the walls. And there was a voice, crying
something far away, a single word over and over again.
It took
me a long moment to recognize that word, but once I did, I knew the voice as
well.
Deep and
sepulchral, it rang in my ears:
"Doom!
Doom! Doom!"
ELEVEN
"Nothing
is quite so unexpected as the truth. If, for example, you find your spells
inadequate to defeat the local dragon, immediately go to your employers and
apologize profusely. They should be so taken aback by your show of humility
that you will have plenty of time to hastily vacate the area, allowing the
dragon to eat your employers rather than you, and thus halt any ugly rumors
they might have spread about your competence. "
--THE
TEACHINGS OF EBENEZUM, Volume XXXIII
The
wizard and I looked at each other for a long moment, the only sound the
warrior's distant, muffled cries. So Hendrek was lodging here as well! But what
if Hendrek ran into the Dealer of Death? From our former dealings with Hendrek,
we knew he was not a subtle man. And should the Dealer of Death see the three
of us together . . . well, even the large Urracht
169
170
assassin
couldn't be that stupid, could he?
"Doom!"
Ebenezum
sighed, his eyes still half-shut with fatigue.
"Wuntvor,"
he whispered. "See what can be done."
I left
the room as Ebenezum sat heavily on the bed. It was up to me, then, to find the
large warrior and silence his cries.
"Doom!"
The
word echoed down the corridor. I turned left, headed toward the sound.
"Doom!"
I prayed the Dealer had by now found the forest and a brace of pigs to be
strangled. Truly, Hendrek could not make his presence more well known if he had
painted arrows along the corridor. He cried out again, and the sound
reverberated against the walls. What would make the big man shout that way?
Demons,
of course.
1
slowed my headlong rush to meet the warrior. I had run into the midst of
sorcerous dealings before. I did not wish to repeat my error. Perhaps stealth
was called for here rather than haste.
A
small, sickly-colored creature, dressed in a checkered suit, stepped in my
path. It waved a cigar in my direction. It was Smilin' Brax.
"Ah,
we meet again," the demon intoned from behind the broadest smile I had
ever seen. "Never forget a potential customer. Rule number one of demonic
commerce. And believe me, young sir, never have you needed the services of a
charmed weapons dealer as you do now."
The
conviction in the demon's voice chilled me. I temporarily forgot my quest to
stare at the cheerful
171
creature.
What terrible secret could make Brax that happy?
"And
you notice that I call my weapons charmed." Brax took a puff on its cigar.
"Because my previously owned weapons are truly charming. And you, good
sir, are in luck! I'm overstocked! I've just received a huge inventory from a
tribe of nature worshipers. I don't know what came over me! I don't have room
for them in my warehouse. I'm almost giving weapons away!"
Hendrek's
voice echoed again from somewhere in the hermit's massive hovel. Brax's smile
faltered for only an instant. The demon waved the cigar in my direction.
"You
look like a young man of unusual intelligence," the creature remarked.
"And I'm about to make you an unusual offer. You won't be sorry you
listened to me. I see you carry a walking staff. Small stuff, I assure you.
Have you ever thought really big? Why walk around with a puny branch, when you
can own an entire magic tree?"
"Magic
tr--" I began.
"I
see the idea appeals to you! Yes, just think of it, a magic tree, straight from
the nature worshipers of the North. And just barely broken in, I can assure
you, only used for an occasional human sacrifice, and those only on the
solstices! Someday, young man, you will be a sorcerer. Just think of the
amazing tactical advantages if you came to your sorcerous battles accompanied
by a tree!"
"Doom!"
The cry was far closer now.
"Yes,
yes, of course, we also carry more conventional weapons," Brax added hurriedly
as he edged toward the middle of the hall. "Perhaps there is some question
in your mind about obtaining something as
172
large
as a tree for your first mystical weapon. Although, may I assure you, the
surprise value alone of such a weapon--"
Headbasher
came flying down the hall.
"Urk!"
the demon cried as it dodged the club. Hendrek followed his weapon at a run.
"Doom!"
he cried as he spied us both.
"Friend
Hendrek!" the demon replied in a somewhat less friendly voice than before.
"1 must protest your business practices! I have told you before, I will
not accept a return of your enchanted weapon, no matter how
forcefully"--the demon dodged Head-basher, now in Hendrek's
hands--"you attempt to thrust it upon me. A contract is a contract."
Hendrek's
club crashed into the wall quite close to the demon's head. I ducked as stone
shards flew over me. I heard other voices in the distance, then the sound of
running feet. Our little altercation seemed to be attracting some attention.
"Really,
good Hendrek." Brax spoke rapidly, dodging the warrior's blows with even
more dexterity than the last time I had seen them meet. "I am not
unsympathetic to your plight. So you did not read the fine print on your
contract." The demon dashed between the warrior's legs, temporarily
freezing the large man. "A purely human error, nothing you should blame
yourself for. But I, after all, am in the business of human error. And I urge
you to pay your contract."
Hendrek
regained his bearings and spun on the small fiend in checkerboard garb.
"I
have done all I can, yelp!" the demon cried as the weapon grazed his
shoulder. "All I ask is that you depose a minor ruler or assassinate a
fairly ineffectual high priest. That would be payment enough
173
for
now. if you continue to refuse, I'm afraid the matter will be out of my hands.
I'!! be forced to send the Dread Collectors!"
Hendrek
paused in his attack.
"The
Dread Collectors?"
The
demon nodded silently. "My hands are tied. There is nothing else I can
do."
"I
didn't know about the Dread Collectors," Hendrek whispered.
"Doom."
The
running footsteps grew closer. I glanced around to see Heemat and Snarks
speeding toward us, their robes flapping with their haste.
"Yzzzgghhtt!"
Snarks cried.
"You!"
Brax replied, his smile replaced by a look of pure loathing.
"Doom!"
Hendrek replied, once again raising his club above his head.
"Excuse
me," an even more sepulchral voice intoned by my side. I jumped
involuntarily. Suddenly, the Dealer of Death had appeared silently in our
midst. "Somehow, in trying to find the exit, I lost my way in this vast
maze of hallways." He glanced at Hendrek. "Ah! A fellow
warrior!"
Club
still over head, Hendrek regarded the newcomer with some suspicion.
"And
what have we here!" Heemat jumped into our midst. "A large number of
guests at my humble hovel, all engaged in social discourse!" He smiled at
us all, his hands rubbing together fast enough to generate heat. "But I
venture that few of you have yet experienced a number of the humble pleasures
available at our little retreat. Have any of us visited the lower level yet
today? No? Well, let me recommend our fabulous casino tavern, with
entertainment nightly by the Hovellettes. And what of our tern-
174
perature-controlled
swimming pond--"
"Fellow
warrior?" the Dealer of Death mused. "You wouldn't happen to know
someone named Hendrek, would you? About your size, from what I
understand."
With an
unearthly shriek, Brax jumped upon the heavily cloaked Snarks.
"And
have I mentioned our sun roof?" Heemat continued.
"Trrfblggllzz!"
"You
have cost me too many sales, demon!" Brax screamed. "They were too
kind to merely banish you from the Netherhells! Now I shall banish you from
this world as well!"
"Excuse
me," the Dealer of Death murmured to Hendrek. "We should continue our
conversation in a moment. It occurs to me that I haven't strangled a demon in
some months."
Before
I could see him move, his hand was around Brax's throat.
"Urracht!"
Brax cried. "That's a very powerful grip you have there, sir."
The
Dealer smiled. "Prepare to meet your death, demon."
"Have
you considered how much more powerful you'd be with an enchanted weapon in that
hand?"
The
Dealer tightened his grip.
"Urk!
Just asking! Easy credit terms!"
With a
soft pop, the demon disappeared.
The
Dealer grunted as his hand closed into a fist.
"That's
the trouble with demons," he muttered. "You just get a good strangle
started, and they disappear. No manners at all."
"There,
there!" Heemat beamed. "Nasty things, demons, but it's gone now. Why
don't we retire to
175
the
Hovel Lounge, where we can play a quick game ofHovelo?"
. The
Dealer flexed his fingers. "An awful feeling, losing something midstrangle.
Makes you want to grab the nearest free creature and throttle him just so the
effort isn't wasted."
"Hovelo
is a fascinating game," Heemat continued. "And so easy to play! A
bean is placed in one of three identical cups ..."
He
paused as the Dealer placed a hand on his shoulder.
"It
takes a great effort of will not to strangle something," the Dealer
whispered. "I would appreciate some quiet."
"Certainly!"
Heemat's hands flew back within his robes. "Snarks, we should go and
prepare this evening's entertainment."
A voice
even more muffled than before mumbled something from the corner of the hallway.
The small hermit seemed to have become completely entangled in his robes during
his battle with Brax. Head and feet were absolutely indistinguishable within
the mass of torn fabric. Some part of him bumped repeatedly against the wall.
"Llffmm,"
Snarks cried weakly.
"Doom,"Hendrek
replied. "The little fellow may be suffocating! Quick. Help me free him
from his robes."
"No,
no!" Heemat cried. "You don't understand, his sacred vows..."
But his
protests were too late, for the immense warrior and the Dealer of Death had
rushed to either side of the fallen hermit and were pulling the small man's
clothes away in opposite directions.
There
was a long, loud rip. Snarks's head popped
176
out of
what had once been his clothing. His head was green and had a pair of horns,
one above each ear.
"A
demon!" the Dealer cried.
"Doom!"
replied Hendrek.
"This
is not what you think--" Snarks the demon began. Hendrek's club smashed
into the pile of formerly occupied robes. The now naked Snarks was halfway down
the hall.
The
demon cleared this throat politely. "You'd do better, you know, if you
anticipated your opponent's movements before blindly striking."
"Doom!"
Hendrek cried even more loudly. He twirled the enchanted Headbasher above his
head until the warclub sang.
"And
you know," Snarks continued as he ran, "you could stand to lose a
little weight."
"Doom!"
Hendrek bellowed so loudly that I had to cover my ears. His immense bulk rushed
the retreating demon.
"And
do you mind if I ask you when the last time was that you managed to take a
bath?"
Hendrek's
rage went beyond words. The demon disappeared around a bend in the corridor,
the warrior in heavy pursuit.
"Our
shame is known!" Heemat cried, wringing his robes with both hands.
"Snarks is a demon, but he is a different demon. He could not help it!
When he was a small demon-child, his mother was frightened to death by the
promises of a group of politicians. You can imagine the damage done to his
impressionable young mind. He became everything those demon politicians were
not. Yes, friends, now Snarks is ruled by a great compulsion to tell nothing
but the truth! The absolute truth, in great detail, and
177
at
great length, exploring every nuance that might occur to him, but the
truth!"
"
Tis no wonder you keep him heavily cloaked."
I
looked up to see Ebenezum standing at the same bend in the corridor where
Snarks and Hendrek had disappeared. The wizard blew his nose.
"Yes."
Heemat admitted sadly. "Praise Plaugg the Moderately Exhalted, sometimes
Snarks was too much for even a humble hermit such as myself. Why, do you know
that one time he said I should stop moving my hands ... and those things he
inferred about my smile, and my haircut!" The hermit coughed softly.
"Suffice it to say, heavy robes were preferable to a strangled
throat."
"That,"
replied the Dealer of Death, "is a matter of opinion."
Ebenezum
yawned. "Now that the excitement is over, I think I shall return to my
nap." He glanced at Heemat, his great bushy eyebrows knitted in concern.
"It is something of a trial to sleep in this place. I expect this to be
reflected in our bill."
The
hermit waved his shaved head in dismay. "I assure you, this is most
unusual! My hovel is usually the most quiet place imaginable, a combination of
the best the forest has to offer with a few innovative ideas Snarks brought
with him from the Netherhells! Together, they make a truly unique experience.
Just wait for tonight and the entertainment!"
"I
would like some entertainment now," the Dealer whispered. "Could you
show me the way to the forest?"
"Most
assuredly! Follow me." The hermit bustled down the corridor.
"I
will feel better when I have strangled some-
178
thing,"
the Dealer remarked as he silently followed the huffing Heemat.
Ebenezum
turned to me when they were gone. "Quickly, Wunt, you must seek out
Hendrek and calm him before he squashes Snarks. A demon who tells only the
truth could be very useful in the time to come."
"Time
to come?" I asked. "Do you mean Vushta?"
The
wizard shook his head. "No. If we are ever to travel to Vushta, first we
must survive this night." He tugged at his beard. "Wuntvor, I must
get my sleep. While my affliction prevents my practice of sorcery, my wizardly
intuition is still intact. That intuition, as much as anything, has kept us
alive during our travels. And that intuition tells me that we must prepare
today, for tonight none of us here will have time to sleep at all. Now go find
Hendrek!"
I ran
down the corridor, listening for the warrior's low cries and the boom of
Headbasher hitting rock, rather than demons.
TWELVE
"It
is a mistake to think of all demons as being exactly alike. Some are short
while others are tall; some are yellow, others are blue; some are nasty and
others are extremely nasty. Some of the nastiest are quite fast as well. Should
you encounter one of these, it is a mistake to think at all. Much more
appropriate are such responses as running, screaming, and the very rapid
formulation of a last will and testament."
--THE
TEACHINGS OF EBENEZUM, Volume IX
The
noise was deafening. Three quick, thundering crashes, followed by a wild
scream.
"Doo--doo--doo!"
I heard
another voice talking quietly in the midst of all the chaos. As I ran toward
the melee, I could make out phrases between the thuds and shouts.
"Really,
if you just held that club ...""... time you rested, you're getting
rather . . ." "... a really
179
180
good
diet plan, even if it does come from the Netherhells..."
The
crashing and screaming stopped. Again, I ceased my headlong run and peaked
cautiously around the corner.
Hendrek
sat in the hallway, his massive form propped against the far wall. His eyes
stared through me, far beyond the limits of the hall.
"D-d-d-d-da,"
he whispered.
Snarks
frowned and shook his head at the inert warrior.
"Your
friend has become distraught," the demon remarked solemnly. "If he
could have sat still and just heard me out, he might have realized I meant him
no harm. But with these big fellows, it's always attack, attack, attack! Soon
they simply work themselves over the edge. Pity."
Hendrek's
great bulk quivered like pudding. He collapsed upon the floor with a thunderous
crash. I ran to his side. Mercifully, he appeared to have lost consciousness.
The
large warrior began to snore.
"Persistent
fellow, isn't he?" Snarks brushed off his green-scaled arms. "Oh, if
only he could see himself as others see him."
I
approached the small demon warily, my stout oak staff held close to my chest.
"What do you want? "I asked.
The
demon sighed. "What does anyone want? Someone to love, the respect of
one's peers, perhaps to achieve something special in one's brief span. The
first two, 1 fear, are now beyond my grasp. My extreme honor has caused me to
be banished from among my fellows. You know, you don't have to hold that staff
of yours so tightly. I am no threat
181
whatsoever.
You weren't so cautious of me when my face was hidden by hermit's robes, were
you?"
The
demon was right. I relaxed my grip on the wood.
"And
you know," the demon continued, "you could manage to stand up a little
straighter. It would do wonders for your overall appearance."
I felt
my fingers tighten again on my staff.
"Ah,
there I go again, don't I?" Snarks shook its head sadly. "It really
is quite out of my control, you know. Not only am I a demon, I'm a cursed
demon. It all seems rather redundant, doesn't it?"
The
demon turned, shaking its head sadly, and walked away down the hall. I took a
step to follow, but the floor was no longer where I expected it to be.
When
the tremor subsided, I picked myself up from where I had fallen. This new quake
had been sharp and fast, and seemed to have left less damage than the last
couple I had experienced. Still, it took me a moment to fully regain my
balance.
Snarks
waited patiently for me at the next bend in the hallway. The demon yawned.
"Of
course," it said, "I knew this would come as well."
Before
I could ask the demon just what it meant by that remark, it launched into a
long and vivid description of my complexion and the various problems it
perceived therein. Without thinking, my hands went to my face. I couldn't look
that bad, could I? I had a large red blotch where? There were certain remedies,
the demon continued, poultices concocted in the Netherhells for conditions even
as severe as mine. Why, Snarks had used one of the formulas very successfully.
In just a few days it had completely shrunk the pus-filled hillocks that had
182
marred
his countenance, and it had had the unexpected additional benefit of turning
his skin an attractive shade of green.
We had
reached the door to Snarks's cell at last. I wondered absently if there might
be a large sack about somewhere that I might place over my head.
But I
collected my thoughts as the demon clothed itself. There was far more at stake
here than a few unsightly blemishes. I would take this far-too-honest creature
to my master. Ebenezum would know what to do.
I told
Snarks we must go see the wizard.
"Good!"
it replied, "it is best if you are completely honest with me as well. An
eye for an eye, as the old saying goes. But take it from one who knows: it is
just amazing how the truth facilitates communication." The demon adjusted
its robes as it spoke. "Just a moment here, and I shall be rrddrrff
gglmmphggl."
The
hood once again totally covered the demon's face.
I
grabbed a portion of the hooded demon that I took for an arm and pulled him
from the room. The sooner we saw Ebenezum, the sooner I could forget my problem
skin.
"Doooooooom."
A low moan came from the corridor where we had left Hendrek. Placing myself
between him and Snarks, I approached the fallen warrior, who had managed to
regain a sitting position.
"Doooom!"
Hendrek fumbled for his enchanted warclub, but Headbasher was still beyond his
enfeebled grasp. "A demon hermit! They are all around me! They haunt me
wherever I go!"
"Kkssbrffmm!"
Snarks replied.
183
Hendrek
growled in response. I realized Heemat was right. By now, without Snarks's
muffling robes, the immense warrior would once again be in a rage.
"No,
Hendrek," I replied. "This demon is different. It was banished from
the Netherhells. Now, like it or not, it is one of us."
"Trrff,"
added Snarks.
"Doom,"
Hendrek said shortly. He retrieved his club at last and used it to help him
stand. Even that exertion seemed almost too much for him. He swayed perilously
for a moment on regaining his feet, but somehow his large boots remained on the
floor. He made no move to attack but glowered in the demon's direction.
"Doom,"
he added again.
"I'm
taking our friend here to the wizard. He'll know what to do about this." I
grabbed Snarks and once again led the way. Hendrek nodded glumly and followed.
Snarks
removed his hood for a moment. "I expected all this, you know." One
brief glance at Hendrek, and the hood was hastily back in place.
Feet
ran rapidly down a side corridor. I turned to see Heemat approach.
"Praise
Plaugg the Somewhat Omnipotent! The three of you together, walking as
friends!"
"Doom!"
Hendrek whispered to me. "These corridors seem a maze, and yet we
encounter a new person every fifty paces. 'Tis an enchanted place. I would not
be surprised if I were to turn a corner and run into myself!"
Hendrek
was right. I had felt a growing sense of uneasiness, too. For an establishment
of this size, we seemed to be having random encounters impossible within the
laws of chance. But then, Heemat had
184
mentioned
that some of this place had been built according to plans from the Netherhells.
"But
we must plan tonight's entertainment," Heemat continued. "If our
gracious guests could excuse Snarks now, he could give me some much needed
assistance in the preparations."
I was
about to object when I smelted the sulfur.
"Doom!"
Hendrek cried again, his warclub poised unsteadily over his head.
Brax
stood in the hallway before us. The demon flicked a bit of cigar ash on the
floor.
"Last
chance, Hendrek."
"Doom."
The warrior did not move.
"Very
well," Brax replied. "You shall meet the Dread Collectors."
With
that, the chessboard-costumed demon disappeared, and in its place stood
something extremely large and incredibly ugly. It appeared to have at least
nine heads of different shapes and sizes. All the heads, however, had very
sharp looking teeth. Perhaps, it occurred to me, this thing was actually a
"they."
It, or
they, scraped half a dozen feet equipped with razor claws along the floor,
gouging rivulets in the hard-packed earth. The heads spoke as one.
"We
have come to collect you," they said. "Will you come quietly, or do
we have to rend and tear?"
AH nine
heads smiled as they finished the sentence. I had the sudden feeling that
rending and tearing were two of their favorite forms of recreation.
"Doom!"
Hendrek replied. "Before you rend and tear, you will feel the wrath of
Head basher!"
The
nine heads laughed as one. I did not find the sound cheerful in the least.
185
"Shall
we?" one head, vaguely in the center of the monstrous mass, asked.
"After
you," the remaining heads replied. As one, nine demonic mouths opened and
howled.
That
howl was like nothing I had ever heard, the death cries of a hundred birds, or
a thousand rodents screaming as they are crushed underfoot. The sound hit us
like a wave from one of the Great Seas, pushing me back down the hall. I felt
as if the wailing force would tear the flesh from my body and only leave the
bones behind. I realized, in that instant, that the Collectors might have come
for Hendrek, but they would take the rest of us as well.
The
sound filled my head. All I could think of was the wailing. The things were
coming for us, a blur of motion, all claws and teeth and long, sharp, razor
things; tails, perhaps, or maybe something else that had no name.
I
managed to lift my staff. Perhaps I could beat back a head or two before they
overwhelmed me. I was aware of the others around me. Although the fiends rushed
toward us, I felt that time had slowed, allowing me to regard each of my
fellows in turn and ponder some on my life as well.
Hendrek,
grim and silent, held his club at the ready. Snarks had pulled back its hood
and was staring at the approaching demon-thing with a look of contempt. The
evil eye, I thought. Maybe our honest demon would give the Dread Collectors
indigestion. I did not see Heemat until Hendrek moved, revealing the hermit's
hiding place.
The
howling rose in pitch. It would push my eyeballs straight back into their
sockets. The things were almost on us now, their slavering jaws as wide
186
as my
staff was long. I prepared to strike.
Words
carried over the howling, words punctuated by sneezing.
The
shrieks of demon rage became shrieks of fear. The heads turned on each other,
snapping and biting, scratching and clawing. A dark, foul-smelling liquid
sprayed through the air. It was demon blood.
There
was an explosion like thunder, just overhead. The Dread Collectors vanished.
"Doom,"
Hendrek murmured.
The
wizard sat at the far end of the corridor, his eyes closed, his breathing
rapid. Ebenezum was still far from being at his best. But his magic had saved
us again.
It
occurred to me then that I might have been able to use sorcery against the
Dread Collectors as well. I stared blankly at my stout oak staff. I was so used
to confronting demons with brute force that my use of magic in a situation such
as this never entered my head. True, I still only knew a few spells, and I
imagined a rain of dead fish would have done little to slow the Collectors'
attack. Still, there might have been some other bit of magic I might have used,
far more effective than the piece of wood I held in my hands. I would have to
start thinking like a wizard.
Ebenezum
groaned and slid farther onto the floor.
"Hendrek!"
I called to the large warrior, who still stared blankly at the spot where the
Dread Collectors had disappeared. "Help me get my master to his room. I
fear Ebenezum still needs his rest."
"Excuse
me," a voice said by my side.
I spun
before I could think, my body still full of the fear brought by our recent
demonic encounter. My staff held the full force of my weight behind it as it
rammed into the Dealer's shoulder.
187
The
staff shattered as if it were made of glass. Splinters littered the floor. The
Dealer of Death seemed not to notice.
"Excuse
me," he repeated. "I believe the time for proper introductions is in
order. If our companions here"--he smiled graciously at the large warrior
and the fallen wizard--"are Hendrek and Ebenezum, you, I imagine, must be
named Wuntvor?"
I did
not reply. My tongue felt like ice within my mouth.
"Come
come, now," the Dealer chided. "If we have to conduct business here,
the least we can do is remain on friendly terms. You'll find me a very
reasonable man. I'll give you a much more colorful death than you ever
imagined. You'd be amazed at the large number of options available."
Somehow,
I didn't find the Dealer's reassurances at all comforting.
"There
are, of course, the popular standards: strangulation, beheading, impalement,
suffocation . . . You know, the classic deaths. But my cult features a large
number of novelty murders as well. Take 'The Troll and the Shepherdess,' for
instance. That's a very popular number, let me tell you."
Hendrek
could take no more. His face, normally flushed, was now crimson with anger, in
stark contrast to the paleness of his knuckles where they gripped the doomed
warclub, Headbasher.
He
rushed the Dealer in silence. Headbasher sought the assassin's skull, but the
Dealer deflected the club with a skiilful fist. There was a crash when club met
fist, like stone against stone.
The
Dealer winced and smiled as he blew on his hand. "Ah. A worthy opponent. I
shall have my entertainment at last."
186
"Doom,"
was Hendrek's sole reply as his club once again flew through the air. The Dealer
deflected the new blow with an open palm, the sound of a small boulder falling
on paving stone. The Dealer of Death lashed out with a foot aimed at Hendrek's
great armored stomach. The foot met Headbasher instead, which Hendrek had
somehow twisted to protect his vitals. I heard the sound of a tree crashing in
the forest.
The
Dealer tried to distract the warrior with his fists, but wherever the assassin
mounted an attack, Headbasher was there first. The club seemed almost a part of
the large warrior's arms, an extra joint that Hendrek could flex, giving him
twice the power and speed of a normal man.
Or
mayhap, I thought, the dub controlled the man. In my previous experience with
the vast warrior, Hendrek had always had a tendency to lumber. Now, though, his
great club flashing in his hands, parrying constant blows from the Dealer of
Death, the huge man seemed to dance, pirouetting from one impossible defense to
another unlikely attack, then back to defense again. With the club in his
hands, the warrior himself appeared enchanted. The Dealer of Death was an
extremely well trained assassin; but when he faced Hendrek, he faced magic.
The
Dealer of Death seemed to be enjoying himself immensely, however. He would
laugh with every blow of Headbasher, and his face was lit by a smile as
innocent as a child's.
"Urracht
against enchantment!" he cried at last. " Tis a fair game, 'twould
seem, but 1 fear it's time to change the rules!"
He
laughed, jumped to one side, landed on his
189
hands,
then sprang to his feet behind the large warrior. Hendrek spun to defend
himself again, but the Dealer now stood over the unconscious Ebenezum.
"If
1 cannot kill the enchanted warrior," the Dealer remarked, "1 shall
kill the enchanter instead. You have to be flexible in my profession."
Hendrek
raised his club threateningly.
"I
do believe I can fend you off and kill someone else at the same time," the
Dealer continued. "In fact, I consider it a bit of a challenge." He
smiled down at the prone wizard.
Hendrek
approached the Dealer of Death warily as the assassin knelt and placed a very
large hand around my master's neck. Both paused, however, to look my way as I
began to flap my elbows and whistle "The Happy Woodcutter's Song."
Large
quantities of haddock appeared some inches below the hallway's vaulted ceiling.
I had not lost my touch. Haddock, three-day-old dead haddock, rained on the
Dealer, and Hendrek, and Ebenezum, and myself, and everywhere else the eye
could see. Heemat and Snarks seemed to have disappeared. I realized I hadn't
seen them since our battle with the Collectors.
I had
to act quickly, while the others were still surprised, and before the odor of
massive fish death overcame us all. I slipped and slid my way through a
mountain of scales, over to where I had last seen the wizard.
The
Dealer was no longer there. He had apparently fled in a vain search for air.
But I heard the wizard groan from somewhere deep within the odiferous mound. A
warclub rose and fell on the other side of the hallway as Hendrek hacked a
passageway
190
through
the amassed fish flesh.
"Quick,
Hendrek!" I cried. "Help me get Ebene-zum to safety."
Hendrek
erupted from the haddock with volcanic force, his enchanted warclub held high.
"Doom!"
he cried as 1 burrowed my way down through the haddock toward the buried
Ebenezum. But soon he was at my side, and together we pulled the wizard free of
the fish corpses.
"We'll
have to get him back to the room," I grunted, taking his feet.
"Nay!"
Hendrek replied vehemently. "We should quit this hellish place. That dark
assassin is lurking about here somewhere. The sooner we are away from here, the
safer." He lifted up Ebenezum's head and shoulders as I might pick up a
piece of parchment, quickly and without effort. The warrior turned and led the
way through the haddock.
Ebenezum
groaned again and opened his eyes. When he spoke at last, his voice was a
hoarse whisper.
"The
Happy Woodcutter's Song," was all he said.
I
nodded. "It's all I could think to do in the circumstances."
The
wizard glanced at the floor. "Apparently, your efforts were
successful." He snuffled. "It is only at times like this that I am
thankful for my malady."
I had
been doing my best not to think about the odor, bad enough when I first used
the spell in an open field, but quite overpowering in this enclosed space. In
fact, I had been doing my best not to breathe at all. If I did not get fresh
air in a moment, the fish and I would be much closer.
"Look!"
Hendrek cried. "A stairway!" The war-
191
rior
led us to a dark portico in the wall, which indeed led to a staircase that
descended into further darkness.
Ebenezum
insisted upon walking. So we set him down between us, keeping the large bulk of
Hendrek in the lead. The darkness deepened as we went down, stairs worn smooth
by years of use. I was forced to hold on to Ebenezum's robes as he kept a hand
against Hendrek's armor-plated back. When at last we reached a landing, the
darkness was total.
Hendrek
bumped against something wooden and hollow-sounding.
"Doom!
"he said.
A door
was flung open before us. We were blinded by brilliant torchlight.
"At
last!" I heard Heemat's cheerful voice ring in my ears. "Our guests
have arrived! Let the entertainment begin!"
THIRTEEN
"Casual
amusement can be one of a wizard's greatest problems. After all, when one can
conjure virtually anything, what can one do to 'get away from it all'?
"Different
wizards arrive at different solutions for their entertainment. A sorcerer of my
acquaintance decided to increase his physical prowess through a vigorous
program of exercise but found that his new muscles were wont to rip his robes
midconjure. Another mage decided to develop the interplay between tongue and
teeth so that he could exactly reproduce any insect noise imaginable. He became
so successful at this that they discovered his corpse one midsummer's eve,
suffocated by six thousand three hundred and two amorous katydids. And of the
wizard who tried to start personal communications between humans and sheep . .
. well, the less said the better."
--THE
TEACHINGS OF EBENEZUM, Volume XLIV
193
194
One of
Heemat's many assistants led us to a table deep within this new room. The place
seemed very large. Torches had been placed every twenty paces or so around
three sides of the room's perimeter, but little light reached the area we now
traversed. The room seemed full of people, some hermits, others travelers like
ourselves. I had never seen so many people in one place in my entire life. I
found it made me almost as nervous as being surrounded by ghosts. My mind
caught at a fleeting doubt: Would Vushta be like this? What if I were
surrounded by five hundred people upon entering that city of a thousand
forbidden delights? Even worse, what if I were surrounded by five hundred
women, all young and beautiful, with long red hair cascading across their backs
and shoulders, and all of them, every single one, making demands of me?
Well, I
would bear it somehow, if only for my master.
"Your
table, sirs." Our hooded guide indicated three empty chairs to one side of
a small, round table. A chair on the table's far side was occupied. Even in the
almost nonexistent illumination, the seated man's size and stature told me at
once who he was. We had found the Dealer of Death.
"Doom,"
Hendrek rumbled.
Heemat
bustled over in our direction. "My most honored guests!" he cried,
rubbing his stomach happily. "You are among the very privileged few to
witness the full, true, and historically accurate saga of Plaugg the Adequately
Overwhelming, related through an inspired mesh of dramatic reenactment,
dancing, and song! And at the same time and for
195
only a
negligible fee, you'll be able to sample the first sacrament of our order.
Pastry!" Heemat patted his stomach for emphasis as another hermit wheeled
over a cart laden with cakes, pies, and cookies.
Heemat
bowed, then shuffled away. "Make your choices quickly. Soon, you will be
entertained!"
My eyes
were becoming accustomed to the light, so dim after our confrontation with the
torches at the entrance. I could see the Dealer smile. He nodded in my
direction.
"I
shall be entertained," he said.
But
before he could speak further, there was a crash of cymbals, and a pair of
heavy drapes parted before our table. Seven figures stood before us, all
covered completely by monastic robes. Jaunty music began somewhere. The seven
figures formed a line and started to kick. From the shapes of their legs 1
guessed the seven were female. Their singing voices confirmed my supposition:
"Seven
happy hermits are we, A nd we hope you all will see, You 've been brought here
by the hand of fate To hear about Plaugg the Moderately Great!"
Ebenezum
leaned over and tapped the Dealer on the shoulder. "Might we discuss the
terms of your contract for a moment?"
The
assassin's smile disappeared. "I would rather not. I've become a bit
sensitive about the matter. I only neglected one course of study, after
all!"
"Indeed,"
the wizard hastily interjected. "I by no means wish to criticize.
Actually, should you think on it, a talk might be to your benefit as well. Your
vocation is artful death. Consider how much more
1%
satisfying
a murder might be if it followed a truly satisfying discussion."
The
Dealer nodded his head slowly. " Tis true a good discussion might help to
round my character. I have neglected things for my art."
Ebenezum
stroked his beard and smiled. "Indeed. I knew you were a man of reason. 1
might humbly add that I am a man of some learning, and a discussion with me
might help bring out some nuances of thought to aid you in your work."
The
Dealer leaned toward the wizard, his gaze intent upon the mage. Ebenezum, for
his part, stroked his beard absently, as if lost in deep and sorcerous
conjecture. I turned back to the stage. The dancers and singers had vanished,
replaced by an old monk who read from a great book:
"And
lo, the masses turned unto Plaugg and entreated him to help them in their hour
of need. And Plaugg heard them, for his throne was not so great or not so high
as to escape the voice of the masses, and was made of second-rate materials
besides, studded with elaborate baubles made of adequate cut glass. And Plaugg
looked down upon the throng, and speaketh. And lo, he sayeth unto them: 'Not
today. I do not feel up to it.' "
"Pray
tell," Ebenezum said to the Dealer, "in your current contract, is
there a time limit on the delivery of our deaths?"
The
Dealer's eyes narrowed. "That is private information. A contract is a
sacred ..." He paused. "Well, perhaps not this contract. No such
limit was stipulated."
"Good!"
Ebenezum beamed. "We will have time for a really detailed
discussion."
The
Dealer relaxed. "Yes, perhaps we shall. I have
197
slighted
myself in some areas of study. A few hours of discussion could do no
harm."
"Indeed!"
Ebenezum removed his cap and placed it on the table. "Then 'tis time to
get down to business. We are very lucky we met, you and I. I am quite skilled
in the art of discussion; ask either of my compatriots. We can cover many of
the areas neglected in your education. If you'll just give me a day or two to
prepare, I'm sure I can devise a truly rewarding course of study. Then, in a
few months, only weeks, really, you shall become a fully rounded
individual!"
The
Dealer stared long and hard at the wizard. A new group of singers and dancers
had moved on the platform before us. They were doing a strange dance that
seemed to consist of jumping wildly about for a few seconds, then sitting
absolutely motionless for minutes at a time. One of the singers, off to the
side, exhorted the others to "do the Plaugg." The crowd around us
seemed quite taken with the performance.
"Your
suggestion has a certain merit," the Dealer murmured, so low as to be
almost lost in the crowd noise. "I shall think."
"But
you haven't had any pastry!" Heemat had once again appeared tableside,
rolling a cart laden with frosted edibles. "You do not want to offend
Plaugg, praise his somewhat exalted name!" The hermit heaped pastries
before Ebenezum, then moved on to do the same for the glowering Hendrek.
"For it has been spoken that Plaugg has a moderately hideous wrath."
He quickly ate something small and gooey, then moved on to fill the space
before the Dealer. "Of course, no one has ever actually witnessed Plaugg's
wrath, praise his fairly magnificent name. But there have been some very
198
strong
rumors about what might happen if we were to finally get him mad."
Heemat
moved on to me. "It has been written that in a time of moderate crisis,
Plaugg shall return. But what am I saying? You've been watching our dramatic
presentation. You probably know more about Plaugg now, praise his reasonable
significance, than I do!"
He
chuckled to himself about his little joke. I, for one, had absolutely no idea
what he was talking about. The performers before us had jumped about and sung a
great deal, but there seemed to be no dramatic unity at all to what I'd seen.
Of course, my mind had not been entirely on the players. I was somewhat more
concerned with the drama that transpired at our small table: the Dealer still
lost in thought over my master's proposal; Hendrek munching sullenly at some
long, narrow sugar-thing; my master smiling and convivial, casually watching
the not-yet-paid assassin's every move.
The
Dealer's eyes bored into the layer cake before him. "I have thought,"
he said after a moment's pause, "and I have decided to accept your
offer."
Ebenezum
nodded solemnly, no hint on his features that he had just been granted a
reprieve from death. I couldn't believe it! The Dealer of Death had accepted
the wizard's offer! If my master could talk the Dealer into delaying
assassination now, he could surely talk the Dealer out of killing us altogether
in a few short days. I vowed never to distrust my master again. I wanted to
jump up and down and shout. Still, that would not be businesslike. I filled my
mouth with a frosted cupcake instead.
"You
are a man of learning, and subtle powers of
199
speech,"
the Dealer continued to my master. "You are correct. I must become
flexible if 1 am to improve myself, both within and without my craft."
"Bravo!"
my master intoned. "We will immediately begin--"
The
Dealer held up his hand for silence. "Unfortunately, you are the only
person included in this bargain. Your apprentice and the warrior will, of
course, be killed immediately."
My
half-eaten cupcake jumped in my throat. I tried to cough and swallow at the
same time. Hen-drek rose to his feet in a rush, the doomed Head-basher
scattering delicacies before it as it skidded across the table. The Dealer
yelped in surprise as he was assaulted by a sugar-filled deluge. He managed to
dodge all but a single cherry pie.
The
assassin wiped sticky red from his eyes. "Two can play at this,
warrior," he whispered.
"Doom,"
Hendrek replied.
"Hendrek,
wait!" I cried as I saw the immense man once again raise his warclub. I
had had a revelation as the pie hit the Dealer's face. Hendrek could do no
better than hold the assassin at bay with his enchanted warclub. But if we were
to work together, using the wizard's wits and my beginning spells, we could
break through the Dealer's defenses, as the pie, aided by a rain of pastry, had
found its mark.
But my
master was lost within his robes, hiding from the effects of the enchanted
warclub, and Hendrek was full of battle lust and was beyond listening. The
warrior dodged a chocolate cake lobbed easily across the table. But the Dealer
had only thrown the cake as a decoy, for his right hand held three large,
cream-filled eclairs, which shot across the table with
200
deadly
force. Yet club was faster than pastry, and 1 found a targe, sodden chocolate
mass deflected into my face.
"Gack!"
1 cried, quite beside myself. Bits of cupcake still lined my throat, and now
icing obscured my vision. I expected the hands of the Dealer to descend on me
at any moment and tear me into a dozen frosted pieces.
"Blasphemy!"
Heemat's voice cut through my panic like a knife dividing a pie intersections.
What could happen next? Expectant, I licked the remains of a missile from about
my mouth, then wiped away enough cream filling to see.
Heemat
stood before a huge crowd, all wearing the same monastic robes. There must have
been a hundred hermits gathered there, all staring at the Dealer and myself.
Maybe our commotion had interrupted the play.
1 was
relieved that whatever had occurred, the Dealer had temporarily ceased his
attack. However, looking at the grim jaws and cold eyes of the assembled
hermits, 1 had the feeling that what happened next might not be a marked
improvement over recent events-
"Blasphemers!"
Heemat repeated, his eyes darting back and forth between the Dealer and myself.
"In your folly, you have sinned. You have taken what must be eaten, and
used it for false purposes. Heathen interlopers, you have profaned the
pastry!"
"Profaned
the pastry," chanted the crowd of monks behind Heemat.
Heemat
shook his head sadly, his eyes looking to the ceiling. "Sometimes I
forget." His voice was a hoarse whisper, choked with emotion.
"Sometimes
201
my
expansive nature gets the better of me. I ask people to be my guests, and share
my custom!"
"Share
our custom!" the chorus replied.
"And
what do you do to thank me for all this?" Heemat waved his arms wildly
above his head. "I, who have taken a twenty-year vow of silence, but feel
such a compulsion to be friendly to the likes of you that I have managed to
fulfill only six weeks of my pledge? Yes, yes, you! We invite you into our
homes, give you the very best our humble order has to offer, and you--you--you
stamp on the very name of Plaugg the Conservatively Overwhelming!"
"Conservatively
Overwhelming," repeated the others.
"Indeed,"
Ebenezum said, stepping between me and the hermit horde. "I am sure we are
all very sorry for departing from established custom among your sect. But we
are new here, and perhaps a bit shaky as to the finer points of local
tradition. I myself am recovering from a long, severe illness, and must spend
much of my time sleeping. The large warrior at my side is possessed by a cursed
warclub, and cannot be held responsible for his actions. And what of my
apprentice? He is but a youth, and has not yet reached his majority. Surely you
cannot blame him for a childish prank or two? We are, all three, quite innocent
of malice." He coughed gently into his palm. "As to the gentleman in
black ... well, he will have to speak for himself."
The
Dealer's eyes blazed at Ebenezum. "You would so lightly end our agreement,
then? Well, my answer is this!" He reached behind him to grab an immense
kuchen that covered the entire pastry cart.
The
crowd of hermits gasped as one. Apricot fill-
202
ing
oozed through the Dealer's fingers.
"No!"
Heemat cried. "I will have no more of this! Take them!"
In an
instant, a dozen monks swarmed over the Dealer. Another instant and the crowd
had broken past Ebenezum. Monks surrounded me. I found my arms pinioned behind
me, the Dealer similarly trussed at my side. Heemat stood before us both.
"Now
listen, blasphemers, and I shall tell you of Plaugg's judgment, praise his
reasonably enormous name!"
"Reasonably
enormous name," the crowd replied.
"We
are a strict sect, but we are fair," Heemat continued. "Before you
are put to death, we will give you a trial, and it is possible that through
this trial you may be redeemed. We have three trials within our sect. The first
is trial by water."
"Trial
by water," they all chimed in.
"Unfortunately,
being in the middle of the woods, we are rather lacking in moats, lakes, and
other bodies of water suitable for the task."
"Suitable
for the task," the others said.
Heemat
rubbed his hands together. "And then, of course, there's that traditional
favorite, trial by fire."
"Trial
by fire," the hermits echoed.
"Unfortunately,
we have discovered a side effect of this trial. Often, the fire gets a bit out
of hand, and we find our hovel burning down as well."
"Burning
down as well," the hundred chanted.
"How
much better, then, our third form of judgment. And how much truer to the
central spirit of the minor deity that we worship: Plaugg, bless his
insubstantial glory!"
"Insubstantial
glory!" they parroted.
203
Heemat
leaned so close to me that I could smell his sugar-tainted breath. "Now,
interlopers, you shall see the truth. Now, you shall have to face--trial by
custard!"
"Trial
by custard!" everyone cried.
I was
grabbed by two dozen hands and bustled through the curtains onto the stage. My
last sight of the room was Ebenezum waving to me. They had not taken him or
Hendrek; perhaps, I guessed, because neither of them were covered with pastry.
But
Ebenezum was free! That meant he could help me! Didn't it?
I was
carried into darkness.
FOURTEEN
"Religion
is a personal matter, and those of us in the sorcerous profession would do well
to steer clear of it. Still, you will find some situations, say a spell
accidentally demolishing someone's holy temple, where you will be given the
choice of (one) conversion to their belief, or (two) being sacrificed to their
deity. It is only at times like this when one realizes the true depth and
beauty of religions, at least until one can find some way out of town."
--THE
TEACHINGS OF EBENEZUM, Volume XXXI
They
had bound my hands and feet and left me in the dark. After some time had
passed, the door to my cell opened and a lone hermit bearing a candle entered.
He silently closed the thick door behind him, then approached the bed on which
I lay. He placed the candle on the room's only table, then used both hands to
remove his voluminous hood.
205
206
It was
Snarks.
The
hooded demon motioned me to silence. "I should not be here," it
whispered, "but somehow I have taken a liking to you. You seem like one of
those rare mortals who can be trusted. Perhaps it's your awkward manner and
bumbling gait that endears you to me, or the fact that your hair is never
properly combed, or the way you misbutton your shirt, or those complexion
problems we discussed-- but no matter. Whatever it is, you have touched my
demon heart. I have decided to help."
I
studied Snarks in the dim light. I wasn't sure whether to be grateful or scared
out of my mind. Just what came out of a demon heart, anyway?
"Soon,"
Snarks continued, "the performance will be over in the Great Hall, and it
will be time for your trial. Your blasphemy was a lucky break for Heemat, let
me tell you. It gives him a much better climax for his evening's entertainment.
Before that, all he had planned was another of those big musical numbers. You
know: 'Listen to the dancing feet, praising Plaugg the Kind of Neat!' That sort
of thing."
I
nodded somewhat warily. Thus far, Snarks was not improving my outlook. I
wondered if I should call the guards.
"But
trial by custard!" the demon exclaimed. "It can be a terrible ordeal
if you are unprepared. You and the other blasphemer will each be lowered into
one of two vats of custard, each two feet higher than the top of your head.
What happens next . . . well, suffocation by custard is a hideous death!"
The
demon shivered. "There is only one escape. You must lift your head and eat
your way to the surface! I have used my influence to have you dropped
207
into
the lemon-filled vat. It is somewhat lighter and less filling than the
butterscotch. Once you have a hole to the surface, simply untie your hands and
feet, and swim to the doorway at the vat's side. Then you will not only have
survived trial by custard, but--"
There
was a shuffling noise in the hallway, as if some great weight were being
dragged across the cobblestones.
"The
other blasphemer is being taken to the Great Hall. I must go. I cannot be seen
here!" The demon swallowed hard. "I have no appetite for
custard."
Snarks
replaced its hood and moved to the door, opening it a crack. The demon looked
both ways, turned to me, and waved.
"Grrffmmj!"
it called. Then the demon was gone.
Eat my
way to the surface? Untie my hands and feet? Snark's words spun through my
mind. I had had no idea of the true nature of my ordeal until--
The
door to my cell was flung open with such force that it smashed against the
wall.
"Now,
blasphemer!" Heemat's voice cried, high and full of rage.
And the
room began to shake. It was a good quake this time, solid and deep, with a
large amount of booming, crashing, and frightened voices in the background. One
of the best ones we'd had, actually. I gave it eight out of ten. I wondered
absently, tied up on the slab, when I had begun to rate these disturbances.
Heemat
picked himself up from the floor when the quakes had finished. He brushed
perfunctorily at his robes.
"As
I was saying: Now, blasphemer! We will see just what you are made of! Guards,
take him away!"
208
Four
burly hermits rushed into the room and lifted me from my pallet. I imagined, in
a few short minutes, that I should be made largely of custard.
"Let
the trial begin!"
The
curtains opened before us. I stood on a high platform, hands and feet tied, a
burly hermit guard on either side. A few paces away, the Dealer of Death stood
on a similar platform. The ropes around the Dealer appeared somewhat thicker
than mine and covered his body in great loops from his chest to his ankles. A dozen
burly hermits crowded to either side of him. Between the platforms were two
iron vats, each large enough to contain three men. The one closer to me was
filled with a quivering bright yellow. The contents of the other were more of a
light brown.
The roar
of the crowd drew my attention away from the vats. The curtains were open now,
revealing an audience that filled the Great Hall.
Was
this the room that I had sat in mere moments before? It looked different from
my new vantage point, high above the crowd. It was still quite the largest
enclosed space I had ever seen, mind you, but from where I stood now, it was
definitely just a room, bordered by well-defined, torchlit walls, rather than
the limitless vista it had felt like before. And as many people as there were
down there, they seemed very small from my platform vantage. For a brief
moment, I felt above them, removed.
And
then I realized they were all here to see me. Me and the Dealer of Death. We
were the attractions here, hundreds of people studying our faces, looking for
signs of fear or guilt or even holy reassurance. I knew, somehow, far away,
that perhaps I should be
! 209
afraid
1 was, after all, to be dumped into a vat of custard at any moment, and a part
of me, deep inside, was screaming in a very tiny voice.
But
they had me bound and guarded. There was nowhere to run, no place to hide. And
the audience was out there--for me.
They
all applauded. It felt wonderful. No more helpmate to the great Ebenezum. I was
the center of attention now.
Would
it be like this when 1 was a full-fledged wizard?
I bowed
stiffly and lost my balance. Guards grabbed me from the rear, hauling me back
from a premature meeting with the custard.
I
looked up. The audience was silent. My near accident had caused the assembled
masses to gasp as one.
Then,
out of the silence came a lone voice, whistling "The Happy Woodcutter's
Song."
I
looked down to see Ebenezum and Hendrek, seated at the same table the Dealer
and I had been spirited away from such a short time ago. Hendrek glowered at
the crowd around him and played with the pouch that held the doomed club,
Headbasher. Ebenezum shook his head firmly, then pointed to me. I nodded to
him, and he touched his whistling mouth.
Did he
wish me to whistle as well? Then again, what did I have to lose? If I was about
to die in a vat of custard, there were worse ways to go out than whistling.
I began
to whistle "The Happy Woodcutter's Song" as well. Ebenezum nodded
enthusiastically. So he did want me to whistle!
The
wizard had a plan.
Heemat
glared at my master, but Ebenezum had
210
stopped
whistling and now seemed content to flap his elbows.
"O
Plaugg, who may be among the Great Ones above, or may not, please hear our
plea. These two you see before you have blasphemed your name in the midst of
our most relatively holy ceremony. So we have brought them to trial before you
now, and beseech you to aid us in judging them with your adequate wisdom!"
I
noticed that Heemat was staring at me rather fixedly. Perhaps it was because I
had whistled. "The Happy Woodcutter's Song" during the entirety of
his oration.
Heemat
clapped his hands.
"Into
the vats!"
Strong
arms pushed me into the yellow po6l. I barely had time for one quick breath
before the sticky mass engulfed me.
I had
closed my eyes when my feet hit, but my nose told me I had sunk into the mire.
A strong scent of lemon, and then I could no longer breathe at all. I floated
for an instant within the thick custard, my hands and feet tied, totally
helpless. I fought down a rising panic and tried to remember what Snarks had
bade me do. My feet hit the bottom of the vat, and I lifted my head toward the
heavens, knowing I must eat now as I had never eaten before.
I
opened my mouth, and custard poured in, too much, too fast! I forced my teeth
closed, doing my best not to choke, and then, with an effort of will,
swallowed. There. That wasn't too bad. Quite tasty, really.
It was
just that there was so much more to go.
But I
would not panic. I would persevere, for my master, and my future as a wizard,
and for Vushta,
211
the
city of a thousand forbidden delights. So I ate again, quickly, efficiently,
aware that every bite I took might be my last.
For my
master! I thought. Ebenezum would be proud of the way I forcefully ate my
custard.
For my
future! How noble of character a wizard would be if he overcame a challenge
like this in his youth. I swallowed a second mouthful, and then a third.
For
Vushta! Dear, forbidden Vushta. Surviving an ordeal like this would only make
me more prepared for that great city where a single glance might mark a man for
life. I opened my mouth wide and let the custard pour.
My
teeth closed on air. Air! I swallowed quickly and began to breathe. Air!
Sweeter than all the lemon custard in the world! I laughed and began to whistle
"The Happy Woodcutter's Song."
But
something covered my mouth again. Had the custard shifted? My panic returned. 1
opened my eyes to see insect feelers waving above my nose.
It was
a butterfly.
There
was a crash as the vat, burdened with me, hundreds of gallons of custard, and
thousands, perhaps millions, of butterflies, could no longer support the
weight. I found myself floating off the stage on a river of custard.
Snarks
called from the platform overhead:
"He
has survived the trial by custard!"
"But--"
Heemat began, rather flustered. "He can't--" He rubbed his bald head
and smiled. "I suppose he can."
Hendrek
waded into the yellow torrent and grabbed me before 1 could be swept beyond the
wizard's table. He placed me on a seat above the now
212
dwindling
custard tide. Ebenezum, of course, was still sneezing.
When my
master composed himself, I thanked him for not using the haddock spell.
Ebenezum
nodded happily. "Butterflies were all that was needed. And it was better
that I saved you without alienating our hosts. Undo Wuntvor's bonds, would you,
Hendrek?"
The
large warrior did as he was asked. In the meantime, Ebenezum went on to explain
what a great thing it was that we had accomplished--collaborative magic. 1 had
whistled, he had flapped and wriggled, and the magic had still occurred. That
was important, since in flapping and wriggling, he wasn't doing anything
sorcerous. Thus, the magical implications did not affect his malady until the
spell was already successfully completed, whereas if he had tried to accomplish
the entire spell himself, he would have collapsed in a sneezing fit halfway
through the song.
"So
you see what this means?" Ebenezum concluded. "Whole vistas of magic
are open to me again. Together, Wuntvor, we might even find a cure!"
A cure?
This was all too much. First, almost drowning in a vat of custard, and now
this! I pictured myself fated to return to Wizard's Woods without the slightest
chance of seeing Vushta for years to come.
Ebenezum
was much too excited to notice my mood. "And it was never so important as
now to muster our magical resources. While you were preparing for your ordeal,
I have had discussions with Hendrek. His demonic tormentors were able to locate
him much too quickly after our escape from Urfoo."
213
"Doom,"
Hendrek added.
"Which
fits the pattern we began to see on our journey to Vushta. Wuntvor, there are
far too many demons loose in the world. Something new is coming from the
Netherhells. And now, Wuntvor, that certain inconveniences are out of the
way"--he nodded to the stage and the still-upright vat of butterscotch
custard--"we can find out just what that something is."
In my
relief at being alive, I had quite forgotten what was still transpiring on the
stage. By now, the live butterflies had all flown out among the audience, and
they had swept the dead butterflies, custard, and broken bits of vat away.
Heemat
stood, arms outstretched, on one of the platforms. His eyes surveyed the
audience. He cleared his throat.
The
remaining vat tipped over sideways, and the Dealer of Death tumbled out. The
vat rolled about so that its innards faced the audience. There was no custard
left in there at ail. The iron sides had been licked clean.
The
Dealer burped.
"Certain
inconveniences appear to have returned," Ebenezum remarked. He tugged at
his beard thoughtfully. "But perhaps it will take him a few minutes to
digest. We must talk to Snarks, and quickly. He has knowledge of the
Netherhells that is important to our guest and, yes, may be important to our
very lives."
The
Dealer groaned and tried to stand. His stomach appeared somewhat larger than it
had before. Heemat ran back and forth across the upper platform, his hands
rubbing together so fast that I expected to see sparks.
214
"Two
have passed!" he cried. "Two! Two! Never in the history of the
worship of Plaugg, bless his mundane magnificence, have two survived the trial!
We must--we must-- It is time for a conference!"
A
heavily cowled figure scooted past our table. Hendrek grabbed his hood as
Ebenezum held his wizardly nose. The doomed warrior had been correct in his
assumption. It was Snarks.
"Good
Snarks!" Ebenezum managed, doing his best not to sneeze. "We must
speak--we must-- spec--sp--" He quickly grabbed his cap and sneezed
therein. "Pardon. Something is happening with the Nether--with the Ne--
Ne-- N--" Three sneezes this time, in rapid succession. Ebenezum held his
cap at arm's length with some distaste. "Snarks, you mu-- mus-- Drat!
Wuntvor! 'Tis up to you!"
The
wizard fell beneath the table, lost in a sneezing fit.
"Indeed,"
I began. What should I ask this all-too-honest demon? I wanted to make my
master proud! But there wasn't much time. Already the Dealer of Death was
leaping about the stage, involved in a complex series of calisthenics designed,
I was sure, to aid digestion and free custard-stiffened muscles.
"Indeed,"
I said again. "I believe you come from the Netherhells?"
"No,
no, no," Snarks replied. "Actually, you know for a fact that I come
from the Netherhells. You should think more before you speak, you know. Inexact
language, inappropriate questions. Sometimes 1 don't know how you humans make
it from day today."
"Snarks!"
I cried, a bit more loudly than perhaps I should. I would not be upset by his
demon tongue.
215
"We
have reason to believe there's a plot afoot in the Netherhells!"
"And
good reason it is, too," Snarks replied. "There are always plots
afoot in the Netherhells. It's part of the charm of the place. But I imagine,
in your bumbling way, you're asking me if there's one particular plot, a large,
dangerous plot, perhaps, that could threaten all of humankind. Is that what you
want to ask of me?"
I
nodded my head. Perhaps it was best not to speak at all and just let the demon
talk.
"Well,
the answer is yes. Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm late for the conference."
"Doom!"
Hendrek remarked as Snarks leapt up onstage. Ebenezum blew his nose.
Heemat
had already turned away from the huddled monks and once again began to address
the audience.
"Ladies
and gentlemen, fellow believers, and our guests. Never in the history of
Plauggdom has such a modestly blessed event as this occurred. Two in our midst
have been tested, and found reasonably worthy. Even Plaugg himself, bless his
marginal magnificence, must be looking down from his moderate height
and--"
A small
gray storm cloud appeared over Heemat's head, the kind that meant a moment's
rain before it disappeared. Heemat paused midsentence to gape as the cloud took
on the shape of a man, wearing rumpled gray robes and a distracted expression.
The disheveled floating man squinted out into the audience.
"Pardon
me," he muttered in a timorous voice. "I'm not so sure I should be
here."
Heemat,
his fellows on the stage, and all the
216
hermit-monks
in the audience had fallen to their knees. The assemblage looked to the rumpled
man overhead and spoke with one voice. "Plaugg!"
FIFTEEN
"So
you think you know great, nail-biting excitement, you think you know truly
abject fear, you think you know total and complete despair, you think you know
the incredibly degenerate underside of this world we live in, and the
ridiculously despicable lengths that your fellow man can sink to, more rotten,
more putrid than the lowest form of fungus. . . . Oh. You are a sorcerer as
well. Then perhaps you do."
--FURTHER
CONVERSATIONS WITH EBENEZUM,
Volume
III
"Oh,
maybe I'm a little early," Plaugg said, seemingly to himself. "Yes,
of course, that must be it. I'm early!"
Ebenezum
watched the minor deity with some trepidation. Once again, the wizard held his
nose.
"Oh,
come now, come now," Plaugg said, singling the wizard out. "1 won't
let you sneeze around me. It's the least I can do."
217
218
The
wizard looked up at the gray, rumpled deity. He breathed in and out without ill
effect. "Do you mean to say," the wizard said cautiously, "that
you have the power to cure my affliction?"
"Well,
that's a problem, isn't it?" Plaugg clasped his hands together. "Not
exactly, no. We minor deities can only do so much, you know. Unfortunately, I
can only cure your affliction with regard to myself."
"Oh."
Ebenezum frowned. "Pity."
"Yes,
isn't it," Plaugg agreed. "It's one of the problems with being a
minor deity. You only get so much power, and oh, the responsibility that comes
with it! You could hardly imagine. Always having to please the faithful. After
all, what do you imagine I'm doing here now? Although come to think of it, that
hasn't happened yet, has it?"
"O
reasonably beneficent Plaugg!" Heemat cried from the platform.
"Yes,
yes, I'll be with you in a moment," the minor deity remarked. "As
soon as I finish talking with this gentleman here. You wouldn't believe how
long it's been since I've had a good talk. It's one of the problems with my
profession, I'm afraid. You get a lot of worship in my position, but very
little good conversation."
Ebenezum
nodded. "What would you like to talk about? You wouldn't want to tell us
why you're here?"
"Oh,
that." Plaugg sighed. "Duty. I do sometimes get tired of all that.
Being a minor deity is really more trouble than it's worth. Your worshipers
never look you in the eye, and should you even attempt to speak to them, they
start sacrificing things to you. Sacrifices and more sacrifices, at the drop of
a hat.
219
Now I
ask you, what use have I got for a dead goat?"
"Plaugg,
do you demand a sacrifice?" Heemat queried.
"See
what I mean?" The deity frowned. "Oh. Don't get me wrong. Heemat and
his group are a perfectly nice bunch of worshipers. There are just certain
problems with being a minor deity. For one thing, there's very little chance
for promotion. And the hours! I've been thinking seriously about getting into
another line of work."
"What
do you wish from us, Adequate One?" Heemat continued.
"Mostly
that you stop asking questions," the deity replied. "Believe it or not,
I am here for a reason."
There
was silence in the Great Hall. All was still. I noticed that sometime after the
appearance of Plaugg, the Dealer of Death had managed to quit the stage. I
decided to search the room for him, but 1 didn't have to look far. He stood
just behind Ebenezum. He smiled at me.
"Oh,"
Plaugg said as the silence lengthened. "1 suppose you want to know why I'm
here. Well, that's a reasonable request, and you are my worshipers, after all.
Very well. I am here to band us together through the coming crisis."
The
coming crisis? I did not like the sound of that. Hendrek muttered darkly at my
side.
A
hermit directly below the deity pulled back his hood. It was Snarks.
"You
mean the attack from the Netherhells?"
"Why,
yes, didn't I say that?" Plaugg rubbed at his balding pate as he stared in
the distance. "Oh. I suppose I didn't." He looked down at the ground
beneath our feet. "Here it comes now."
It
started more as a feeling than a sound. Deep, far
220 Craig 5nav, Gardner
deeper
than any of the quakes we heard before, as if it started at the center of the
world.
"Now
I want us all to be ready!" Plaugg cried, his voice much stronger than
before. "In a few minutes, we're going to see all kinds of demons! But
they've never dealt with anyone like Plaugg's hermits before!"
The
noise grew beneath our feet.
"Doom,"
Hendrek intoned. He unsheathed the doomed club, Headbasher. Ebenezum backed
away to a safer distance.
"Now
I want every one of you to do your utmost!" the deity encouraged.
"Drive those demons back where they came from. Do it for Plaugg!" _
The
rumbling had become a vibration in the floor. It was difficult to remain
standing. The Dealer walked up to me.
"It
appears I must once again postpone your deaths," he said behind his
childlike smile. "Oh, well. This is the most fun I've ever had,
ever!" He flexed his muscles and stared expectantly at the floor.
I was
glad someone was having a good time. The quake was quite loud by now. Plaugg
had to shout to be heard.
"Okay."
He pointed a quivering finger at the middle of the audience. "I imagine
the Netherhells will break through just about there. And I'm pretty good at
guessing these things, let me tell you. Comes with the job, I suppose. So
everyone should spread out to the corners of the room. And pile those tables up
in front of you, why don't you? It'll protect you from some of the molten
debris."
"What,
are some of you leaving?" Plaugg shook his balding head. "Now, you
don't want to get me
221
angry,
do you? My wrath may not be ir. the big leagues, but it is moderately great,
let me tell you! Oh, weapons? You need weapons? Well, all right, then. 1 do
sometimes get carried away with myself. You'll have to excuse me."
I
looked to my master, and he turned away from the deity, a bemused smile on his
face.
"We
find ourselves in the middle again, Wunt-vor," remarked the mage. He held
his nose as Hen-drek approached.
"Doom,"
the large warrior intoned. "We shall be overwhelmed by those things!"
He shifted the great warclub nervously from hand to hand.
This
whole situation seemed to have gotten totally out of control. "Perhaps we
should relocate," I suggested delicately.
Ebenezum
shook his head. "I fear we should have to relocate to another world
entirely. I think that for the first time in our travels, we have stumbled on
something that is truly serious."
I
swallowed hard. My hands ached for my stout oak staff. This was serious? Then
what were all our battles and narrow escapes of the past few weeks? For a brief
moment, 1 even longed for the utter peace and boredom of our home in the
Western Kingdoms.
"Okay,
now, they're almost here!" Plaugg shrieked at the top of his lungs. The
rumbling had redoubled again. I tried to speak to my master, but I couldn't
even hear myself. "Is everybody ready? I know you can do it! Just do what
you do best!"
The
deity paused to look at Ebenezum and myself. "Now, I will ask you folks
not to do the fish trick. I know it has worked before, but this situation is
different. And I simply refuse to work around large
222
quantities
of dead haddock. I'm sorry, but we all have our limits.
"Here
they come! Here they come!" Plaugg was beginning to sound really excited.
"Let's hear the call and defeat them all! Do it for Plaugg!"
That's
when the earth really began to shake. I was thrown off my feet and bounced
across the room. I tried to follow Plaugg's advice and crawl toward the wall.
And
then the ground was ripped in two. I grabbed onto a table just to hold on to
something solid. The table shifted and dragged me along with it toward the
crack that widened in the floor. I was sliding straight for a pit that dropped
all the way down to the Netherhells! I could hear the death screams of those who
fell before me; screams that started loud and shrill, then faded with distance.
I tried to find something else to grab onto, but everything was slipping away
with me.
And
then it stopped, as suddenly as it had begun. I found myself face to face with
a troll.
"Slobber!"
the troll remarked.
I hit
the troll with the table. The table broke.
"Slobber!"
the troll repeated.
"Oh,
if my teachers could only see me now!" A large hand appeared before me and
plucked the troll off the ground. An incredibly cheerful Dealer of Death stood
at my side.
"This
is the first chance I've had to strangle a troll," the Dealer enthused.
"No
slob--" was all the troll had time to say.
A
great, deep voice spoke somewhere behind me:
"Come
on, my minions! Grab all of them!
A
MAIADY OF MAGICKS 223
And
tear every one of them Limb from limb!"
Dust
filled the air. It was impossible to see more than a few feet. Still, I had a
cold feeling in my stomach about that voice. Ony one poet could be that bad.
"Roar
for the Netherhells Let your colors unfurl, In a matter of hours We will rule
this world!"
Dimly,
I could see a great blue form standing above the rubble. Yes, it was the demon
Guxx.
"We'll
rule this world With pride and pomp, And so for the moment Let's Stomp! Stomp!
Stomp!"
This
was terrible! There were demons everywhere! Every second the dust cleared,
there seemed to be more of them, as if they sprang from the dust itself. If
someone didn't do something quickly, we were all going to die. Worse yet, the
last sounds to assail our ears would be Guxx's doggerel verse.
But
then a higher voice cried out from across the room:
"Give
me a P!"
A few
ragged "P"s were shouted here and there.
"Give
me an L!"
I
cried, "L!" with the others. The response was stronger now.
"Quickly
now!" Guxx screamed back at us.
224
"Don't
let them rally! We need a death count we can tally!"
But the
other voice would not be silenced.
"Give
me an A!"
The
dust had settled enough now so that I could see halfway around the room. A
small red demon jumped for my throat. I still held a table leg, all that
remained of the weapon I had used on the troll. I batted the small demon high
in the air.
"A!"
I cried.
Hendrek
was at my side. His warclub wove a fantastic pattern in the air, knocking the
senses from a dozen demons in as many seconds. Cries of "What?"
"Who am I?" and "What am I doing here?" could be heard from
those demons who were still conscious, evidence of Headbasher's hellish powers.
"U!"
Hendrek cried with the rest of us.
I
looked about for my master.
"Give
me a G!"
The
Dealer of Death stood at my other side, moving so fast that he made Hendrek's
attack look like a Sunday stroll. Demon arms and legs were all around him. Sometimes
they had demons attached.
"G!"
the Dealer cried with the others. He laughed and began to whistle.
I
spotted Heemat and Snarks as part of a circle of about a dozen hermits. Each of
them held a stick a bit thicker and a little shorter than my usual stout oak
walking staff. They were using them quite effectively to hold off a horde of
demons and doing occasional greater damage among the fiends as well.
"Give
me another G!"
"Another
G!" they cried together joyously.
And
then I saw my master. He had backed up
225
against
a pile of rubble, holding his nose with both hands.
A
particularly large and hairy troll advanced upon him.
"Slobber,"
the troll said in its gravel voice.
"And
what does that spell?" came the voice from on high.
Ebenezum's
face had become an odd shade of purplish red. His head reared back
involuntarily. He could no longer hold his malady within.
The
troll felt the full force of the nasal blow. The muscular creature jumped and
screamed, shaking mucus from its legs and arms.
"No
slobber! No slobber!" it cried as it ran back to the pit that led to the
Netherhells.
"Plaugg!"
a hundred voices joined together to shout.
"What's
that spell?" the first voice prompted again.
"Plaugg!"
We all joined in this time, a thousand voices strong.
"One
more time!" The voice sounded delirious with joy.
1 saw
Ebenezum take a deep breath and join in.
"Plaugg!"
The
world froze around us. Or, more specifically, the demons froze, in whatever
position they had assumed when we had let loose with our final cheer. What dust
remained in the air had vanished as well. Our surroundings were as cool and
clear as a spring morning.
Plaugg
hung where we'd left him in the middle of the air.
"There,"
he said. "That's much better, isn't it?"
Guxx
screamed in rage from atop a large pile of
226
dead
hermits. Apparently he was the only demon unaffected by our chanted magic.
"You
think to stop Guxx and his demons, But I will find a way to free them!"
Ebenezum
blew his nose. "Beware!" he called to Plaugg. "His power grows
with every rhyme!"
"Even
that one?" The deity shook his head in disbelief. "But who am I to
judge? I don't make the rules. Or at least not many of them."
The
large blue demon flexed its muscular arms. Its claws had grown back since its
fight with Ebenezum.
"You
try to stop Guxx with your jokes, But I will live to see you choke!"
I saw
the demons nearest me twitch slightly. Guxx's poetry would bring them back to
life!
"My,
you are a serious fellow, aren't you?" Plaugg replied. "Just a
second, now, and I'll nicely send you back where you came from."
Ebenezum
began to sneeze again. The demon's magic was returning!
Guxx
bared its razor fangs.
"You'll
not have a moment! You'll have no time at all, For me and my demons Will cause
your downfall!"
All the
demons nearby definitely quivered.
"Oh,
this fellow can be tiresome, can't he?" Piaugg replied. "Give me a
moment, won't you? I hardly ever do these physical manifestations, and
227
usually
they only allow me to show up as burning moss. I'm not high enough up on the
ladder to do bushes, you know. But do I mind?"
Guxx
leapt up and raked the air with its claws. You could tell the demon was feeling
better with every passing moment.
"You've
had your chance, You heavenly fool, But now 'tis time For demons to rule!"
I saw
the demon closest to me blink repeatedly.
"Name
calling, is it, then?" Plaugg retorted. "It's no longer a gentleman's
game, I see. If I wasn't having so much trouble figuring out just how to make
things work in this form, you wouldn't even have time to carry on this way.
Perhaps I should have shown up as the burning tree moss after all. It's not
very intellectually stimulating, though, let me tell you."
"I've
had enough of your lies and talk! Fellow demons, arise, to work!"
The
frozen demons didn't move. "Ahem," Guxx remarked. "Not good
enough, huh? Well, let's try this:
"Come
on demons, arise, dig in, For we have a world to win!"
A few
of the demons yawned and stretched. "O reasonably mighty Plaugg!"
Heemat cried. "Do something. Please?"
228
"I'm
sorry," the deity replied. "I can't be rushed. Oh, wait a second. Is
this it?" He shook his posterior three times. Nothing happened.
"Arise
demons! Come now, make haste! For we have a world to waste!"
The
demons awoke en masse.
"Quick!
Do something!" Heemat screamed. "Er ... we beseech you! Please!"
"Yes,
yes, I'll have it soon." Plaugg bit his lower lip. "You'll just have
to handle them for a moment or two."
"This
one is mine!" the Dealer of Death called, launching himself toward Guxx.
"I always wanted to strangle a really big demon!"
Guxx
struck out at the approaching assassin, but the Dealer was too fast. Guxx held
nothing but itself in its claws, and the Dealer held the demon in a
stranglehold from behind.
"Demons,
demons, to work, to work! We must overwhelm these pitiful--urracht!"
The
Dealer tightened his hold.
"Wait
a second!" Plaugg cried as the demons once again began to rend and tear.
"I have it!" He shook his posterior three times and snapped his
fingers.
Trumpets
sounded from on high. I heard the flutter of wings above us, too, as if the air
were filled with invisible birds. An even larger hole appeared in the middle of
the room. The denizens of the Netherhells shrieked as one as they were pulled
back to their home.
When
the hole had closed, Heemat and ten other
229
hermits
rose from where they sat on Snarks.
"Can't
risk losing a convert." Heemat smiled.
"Vsspllthmm
Quxx!" Snarks replied.
"There's
one left?" Plaugg frowned. "But I quite specifically remember getting
an exact count."
It was
then that I realized the Dealer was no longer among us.
"Well."
Plaugg said. "It's been nice. Don't call me, I'll call you. I need a
vacation. It's a problem with my position, you know. Do you think they give me
any time off at all?"
And
with that, Plaugg was gone as well.
Ebenezum
blew his nose.
"Now
our real work begins."
SIXTEEN
"Beginnings
and endings are, for the most part, artificial constructs. You say you begin
when you are born, but what of those months spent growing in the womb? Endings
are hazier still, for further things may occur that extend and enlarge the earlier
story. And that is my final sentence on the subject. Or perhaps this one is the
final sentence. No, most assuredly what I write now is the final word on the
matter. But now that I think upon it, perhaps this-- "
--THE
TEACHINGS OF EBENEZUM, Volume LVII
(Abridged)
"What
do you mean, you won't pay?" Ebenezum stared evenly at a scarlet Heemat.
"As you recall, good Heemat, we paid for basic
room
and board on arrival. At that point, you gave
us no
indication of the extent of additional charges
we
might entail." "But surely you must realize that a hovel of our
standing--"
231
232
The
wizard glanced through the three sheets of parchment, each one filled with a
list of charges written in a tiny hand. "Now, I see you list a broken
table among the charges. That, at least, is a reasonable request. I suggest
that you contact the man who broke said table. He is, I believe, currently
residing in the Netherhells." He slapped the bill before him.
"Ninety-six gallons of lemon custard? You would dare charge us--"
Ebenezum became speechless with wizardly rage.
Heemat
shrugged. "Someone has to pay it."
"Indeed."
The wizard spoke all too evenly. I had seen my master like this before. I stood
as far back as I could possibly get.
"I
will say the following only once," the wizard remarked. "Sir, how
would you feel if you were turned into a frog?"
"A
frog," Heemat repeated. He looked down at his feet. Perhaps he imagined
them webbed. He looked back at Ebenezum, in full sorcerous regalia.
"A
frog," he said again. He snatched the bills from Ebenezum's grasp.
"Well, perhaps there are a few mistakes herein. Occasionally, our
accountants do become overzealous. I shall review the account personally."
"Please
do so." The wizard's voice had grown considerably calmer. "We will,
of course, be taking Snarks with us as well."
"You're
taking Snarks?" The color returned to Heemat's face. "You cheat me of
my rightful monies, and then you demand my best assistant? I'll have you
know--"
"I
understand the lily pads are very nice this time of year," Ebenezum
interjected.
"Lily
pads." Heemat went white. "Too long have
233
I
neglected my vow of silence. It is high time I reinstituted my most holy
pledge, this very instant." Heemat clamped his lips together tight.
"I
have always admired holy men," Ebenezum replied as Hendrek joined us. The
large warrior had Snarks in tow.
The
demon hermit removed its cowl. "They are right, friend Heemat," it
said. "I saw what was going on before I was expelled from the Netherhells.
There are certain demons down there who are tired of being constantly under the
earth. They would like to see what it feels like to control the surface as
well. And these factions are finding greater demonic favor everyday."
"Far
too true," Ebenezum agreed from a safe distance. "My 'prentice and I
have seen a massive overabundance of sorcerous activity in our travels to
fabled Vushta, and I have long feared consequences such as these. So the four
of us, Wuntvor, myself, Snarks, and the warrior Hendrek, must continue to
Vushta in all haste. At first, I wished to visit this city for personal
reasons. Now, though, I must make preparations to warn the great Wizard's
University, and help them prepare for the tremendous sorcerous battle that is
to come."
Heemat
nodded silently.
"So
you actually will keep to your vow of silence," Snarks remarked. "It
will make up for all the times you talked too much. And you know, friend
Heemat, you, too, could stand to lose a few pounds. And of course, I would be
remiss if I did not mention grrllp xxzzttff krll."
Hendrek
had replaced the cowl on the demon's head.
"Doom,"
the warrior remarked.
234
Heemat,
who seemed on the edge of saying something, glanced at the wizard and did not.
"We
appreciate your reasonableness in this matter," Ebenezum continued to the
hermit. "And due to the severity of the matter, we have taken the liberty
of borrowing a horse and cart from your stables. Oh, have no fear! They'll only
be gone for a few months at most! That is, so long as we're not attacked by
demons. Still, I want you to know that all four of us appreciate your
sacrifice, so that we may get some much needed rest on our way to Vushta."
He
pointed to the kitchen. "Wuntvor, go and fetch those two sacks of
provisions I had put aside."
I did
as I was told, doing my best to ignore Heemat, who had once again turned the
red of a truly spectacular sunset.
And so
we were on our way once again to Vushta, city of a thousand forbidden delights
that could truly mark a man for life. I couldn't remember the last time I was
in such a good mood. A light rain fell as the cart made its way through the
woods, as refreshing a cold, light rain as I had ever felt. I hummed to myself
as I urged the horse forward. Coming from a farming background, I had as much
experience as anyone with animals.
Ebenezum
sat on the seat next to me on the cart. It was plain that the wizard was still
exhausted. Every minute or two he began to nod, until the bumps of the cart
jarred him awake. Hendrek sat directly behind us, glowering as usual. Snarks
sat even farther back in the cart, under the canvas covering, doing whatever
Snarks did deep within those robes.
A
bloodcurdling scream came from the bushes. A man dressed only in a loincloth
rushed toward the cart, dagger held before him. His bare foot hit a rock
235
as he
ran up the road. He tripped. Somehow, he managed to impale himself on his own
weapon.
"Another
assassin," I remarked absently as we rode by the corpse.
"Indeed,"
Ebenezum replied. "It's all rather comforting, isn't it?"
And
indeed it was. Ebenezum finally fell to sleep in earnest, and I continued to
drive the cart, to Vushta and destiny.
Oh,
what a wonderful world!