+I hope you don't mind, we've already gotten things started.+
[Is Paul all right?]
~He didn't keep. Ow, don't! I'm kidding! There he is, he's fine.~
[He's not fine. Where is he going?]
+Trace a line up to the top right corner and you'll see.+
[What's that strong magical focus?]
+That, Shag most feathery, is called the Kansael. Here's the printout
on it, if you're interested.+
[Three pages?]
~It can do a few things.~
+And it's not attached to anyone. It's Paul's for the taking.+
[I can't believe something this powerful isn't being used.]
~We couldn't either. The people who have it are idiots, they don't
know what it is. But that's good, it'll be easy to make them lose it.~
***
Of late Ringo had developed a taste for spending the day in bed while
his mind soared round the countryside. Every day he extended the boundaries
of his mental map, first visualizing the edge of an area he'd become familiar
with, then panning beyond it, memorizing trees and boulders, ponds and
houses. After who knew how much practice, he was now adept at radical shifts
of vision; he could fill his mind with a bee, flit with it from flower
to flower, examine a single hair on its leg, then pull back and watch it
as a tiny golden thing in a huge meadow. Sometimes he would reach a hand
to touch his surroundings, to pluck a four-leafed clover or pluck a blade
of grass, and he would touch his leg instead; it was a delicious shock
to remember that his body lay in a bedroom miles away.
The only thing he found disappointing about his magic was that he had
a pretty feeble range on his sense of touch and telekinesis. He'd long
established that they stopped dead after about fifty feet; his mental arm
was only so long, apparently. At least within that range he could look
at something with his mindsight and touch it or pick it up. He knew he
had no business being dissatisfied with something so miraculous. Still,
he nursed a vague annoyance that he could see for miles and miles without
being able to do a damn thing about it.
One lovely morning, tired of trees, he decided to see if the others
were doing anything interesting. Flash to Paul, trudging down a dusty road-he
was never fun to watch. Ringo didn't care to look at George; his supposedly
instantaneous changes were disgustingly detailed when viewed by mindsight.
Ringo had never seen anything so creepy in his life, and it was no mere
lack of opportunity that the two hadn't spoken since That Day.
But then there was John! Elegant, graceful, and always so happy; watching
John fly was like watching his own thoughts dance in the air. Flash, there
was John in Ringo's head, blissfully riding the winds. Oh, he was nice.
Ringo settled back on the pillows and sighed happily, noting offhand that
John was farther up the coast than usual, perhaps three miles north of
the house. The land there was extremely uninhabited, all dark green forest
and rocky beach, and there was something very appropriate about John against
this lonely wild backdrop, brushing the treetops with his bare toes and
then curving out to soar over the shining sea -
Oops, not so lonely backdrop. At the edge of Ringo's perception appeared
a small figure, standing at the edge of the woods and looking up at John.
Curious to see who would be wandering around such a remote area, Ringo
zoomed in on his-no, her face. She was so flat-chested as to look male
from a distance, especially in her brown shirt and pants.
She had the narrow face characteristic of elves, though she looked slightly
different from the usual Baravadan elf-too short, for one thing (she was
perhaps no more than 5' 4"), and a bit too light-skinned, especially
since the round top of one ear indicated that she had a measure of human
blood in her veins. Another anomaly: her long brown hair, bound behind
a silver headband, bespoke a tirin, but she bore a shortsword with a red
hilt.
As she watched John, she licked her lips. Then she tugged out the sword.
The blade was hot pink.
For the first time in weeks Ringo found himself not happy-he was actually
worried. He peered into John's face to see if he'd noticed the woman, but
John was as blissed-out as ever. I hope he doesn't land, Ringo thought.
Not that there was much chance of that, but still...
John blazed pink! His half-lidded eyes snapped open, the pink faded,
and Ringo flashed frantically back to the woman, who was lowering the outstretched
sword. "You bitch, what did you do to him?" Ringo demanded out
loud, zooming back to John, whose eyes were very wide as he continued to
dip and soar like nothing had happened: much too oblivious to suit Ringo.
The woman sheathed her sword, cupped her hands around her mouth, and
called to John.
His face twisted into a foolish smile, and he dropped out of the sky
and landed next to her!
She pointed at a fallen branch; Ringo saw her say Get that for me.
John leaped to the branch, picked it up, and presented it to her eagerly,
a dog fetching a stick for its master. Letting the branch fall, she said
something else. Ringo's small skill at lip reading was inadequate to follow
this command, but John nodded vigorously, gathered her in his arms as if
she had a broken leg, and trotted off into the forest.
Ringo made a desperate mental grab for John, but he was way, way, way
out of range; nothing happened. With a cry he dissolved the scene, fell
out of bed, scrambled to his feet, and ran downstairs yelling "John's
in trouble! Someone just cast a spell on him! Where is everyone, we've
gotta help him!"
***
[What's he talking about? Quick, zoom in on John.]
~Okay-uh, something very weird has happened.~
+Hey, she's the one with the Kansael! What's she doing with John?
She's supposed to meet Paul. What a great coincidence. I love it!+
~It's not a coincidence. Our script for her was wiped. Somebody else
is running her!~
***
No one else was in the house, not even As'taris. "Shit, shit, shit,"
Ringo moaned, looking wildly around -
Wait. Calm down. I can find them. All I have to do is - He closed
his eyes and Paul bloomed in his head, but far away, useless anyway. George:
no picture, something else, unfindable, useless. Much bloody good this
is doing me! As'taris: coming up the walk! Ringo ran outside, grabbed
the startled elf, babbled what he'd seen.
"Release me," said As'taris, prying Ringo's hands off. He
stepped back, looking interested. "The sword was - "
*ping* "What's this about John?" said George, stepping from
behind the house. "What happened?"
Suddenly thinking of protoplasm and distorted body parts, Ringo quickly
looked away from George and mumbled what happened.
"How'd you see-oh," George murmured. He became very interested
in kicking at a stone in the grass.
"The sword," As'taris prompted eagerly. "It was pink
and red?" Ringo nodded, and the elf startled him by crying "Brox's
Kiss! Why does that female have it? Where is sar? Tell me where sar is!"
I like your priorities, Ringo thought, closing his eyes. He saw
John in a camp in the forest, being displayed to a crowd of men by the
woman. He pulled back from the scene until he looked down at a large area
of land and sea. "They're up the coast in a clearing in the forest.
There's a big round rock on the beach near them."
"Jesus," George said softly. "You can just see all that
stuff, then? Just like that?"
"Stop talking!" As'taris commanded. "We are going now!"
To George: "Tirin, do you know what a pegasus is?"
George replied automatically "Isn't that a horse with wings-oh!"
He caught his breath as he realized what the elf wanted. He'd not thought
of becoming fantasy animals; simply being an animal was fantasy enough.
Ringo's stomach did a little lurch. He opened his eyes and looked at
the elf pleadingly. "Can't we use the boat?"
"I want to impress them!" As'taris fluttered his hand at George
impatiently. "Why do you wait? Change!"
George threw an apologetic-eager glance at Ringo, who turned his head
as
*Ping*
and looked up to see a magnificent white stallion with huge feathered
wings that sprang from its shoulders. Bloody hell, thought Ringo,
swallowing, that's George, that's George! He'd never seen George
change in the flesh, so to speak. The transformations in his head were
surreal silent movies, not reality. George wasn't really the animals.
***
+Whoa! Did you see that power spike?+
~Hey, he shouldn't have been able to do that! That ring's supposed
to only be good for ordinary animals.~
+You sure?+
~Sure I'm sure. You saw the ring's rating! What's going on here?~
***
With a graceful leap As'taris mounted George; George snorted in surprise,
preoccupied as he was with furling and unfurling his wings. "Mount!"
the elf snapped at Ringo.
"Uh-uh," Ringo said, backing away. "Oh, no! I'm not,
I won't do that, no way!"
"Why? Have you decided not to rescue John?"
"Not this way," Ringo pleaded. "It's just too bloody
weird."
"I don't know what 'wiehd' means, nor am I interested-mount now,
or I won't even attempt to rescue John!"
If Ringo had even been stuck between a grayer rock and a harder place,
he couldn't remember when as he crept forward until he was looking at George
and breathing through his mouth, avoiding the horsy odor that took George
even further from humanity. It didn't help that he had no idea how to mount
a horse without stirrups and a saddle (and wasn't much of a rider even
with those articles). He raised an arm feebly-and As'taris grabbed it with
both hands, hauled him onto George's back with unexpected strength.
"Ow!" Ringo protested, scrambling around behind the elf until
he fell into a sitting position. For a moment all he knew was the pain
in his arm. Then As'taris said "Go!" George galloped off and
Ringo lurched backwards. Terrified, he threw his arms around the elf's
waist. He looked down at the broad white back he sat on, felt George's
short stiff hairs and body heat, warmer than a human's. This is George
under me, he marveled as they thudded along the yard, picking up speed.
Jesus, I'm sitting on George, I'm bloody riding him. Riding him
in more ways than one; George surged between his legs, and embarrassing
and unwanted sensations shot up his crotch. Ringo buried his flushed face
in As'taris's back and thought hard about cold showers and ice.
All at once George LEAPED! and they dropped sickeningly as they plunged
over the cliff. Ringo almost lost his grip and tumbled off, but held on
literally by the thickness of the elf's shirt. George's huge wings thrashed,
unsteadily at first, then with greater confidence as he caught the breeze
and rose.
As'taris, ignoring the life-or-death struggle that had nearly lost him
a shirt, flattened himself across George's neck, forcing Ringo to do the
same or get blasted by the wind. He heard the elf shout directions to George,
but they didn't register; he was too busy clamping his arms around As'taris's
body.
As George made a wide, frightening left turn that had his riders almost
horizontal, Ringo caught a glimpse of the coastline hundreds of feet below.
He clamped his eyes shut and buried his face in the elf's back again. Finally
George leveled off, stretching his neck out, and they arrowed forward,
bouncing up and down with each beat of the wings. George pitched and yawed,
always having to correct for a tilt somewhere, so that on top of everything
else Ringo wanted to throw up. He gritted his teeth and visualized the
nice unmoving house, wishing he'd never looked at John or become magical
or gone to this world or even been born at all.
Then As'taris squirmed; and Ringo found his hands slipping down to clutch
legs as the elf rose, gripping George with his calves alone. The wind hit
As'taris full on, and George whinnied in surprise and broke cadence for
a moment as they abruptly slowed. A jarring shock ran through him and his
riders. Ringo held on for dear life, and opened his eyes to stare between
the elf's legs at George's outstretched neck and mane and perky little
ears flat against his skull. With a surge of horror Ringo realized that
if he lurched backwards or slipped sideways As'taris was off to kiss the
beach, to be followed shortly thereafter by... He visualized the elf's
face: suffused with a wild joy, As'taris laughed and spread his arms, embracing
the sky. His right hand shimmered and a sword appeared, a silver shaft
of light against the golden sunshine. "AAAAAAAAH!" the elf screamed,
brandishing his sword overhead. "I am the Farbound! The Farbound!"
"Sit down, you maniac!" yelled Ringo. "We'll
fall off!"
"I will never be killed! Never defeated! I am the Farbound,
and I am coming!"
Ringo grabbed As'taris's legs with his mind and yanked.
The elf lost his leg-grip on George, plopped back down, teetered, and
slipped to the right. Ringo wailed, clawing half at As'taris and half at
the hairs on George's back, ripping out clumps of the useless stuff. George
screamed and involuntarily bucked a little, and the two riders slid further.
As'taris scissored his legs hard around George's back, simultaneously
grabbing George's mane. They stopped falling! and Ringo welded himself
to As'taris as the elf slowly worked them back to vertical.
Ringo laughed weakly when they were stable again. Thank you thank
you thank you God! He braced himself for some abuse from the elf, but
As'taris said nothing. A quick glance at his face showed it to be grimly
satisfied; he got his jollies from danger, after all.
They had made good time despite their aerobatics; already they were
over the beach where John had been taken, and the tent-filled clearing
was visible ahead. As'taris shouted "Land there!" and with a
snort George began his spiral down. Ringo was nauseated afresh, and in
his efforts to stave off vomiting did not notice men on the ground scurrying
out of the way as George backwinged (blowing hair and light litter about)
and made a jarring four-point landing amid the tents.
Before George could fold his wings he was neck-deep in short-haired
skahs men, tall and small, thin and fat, elvish and human and mixed, all
wide-eyed and somehow identical. John was nowhere among them. No one said
a word or did anything, just breathed at the two riders as As'taris slipped
and Ringo sprawled to the ground. "Don't change back," As'taris
muttered to George, then bellowed "I am As'taris Farbound! Who wields
the Kiss? Is Brox here?"
Ringo just stood where he was as his stomach put itself to rights, so
happy to be down that he gladly endured one man's fly-killing halitosis.
He knew one thing: he wasn't going home that way. I'll crawl all the
way back, hop on one foot-well, no I won't, but I'm not -
"I be Aurion Ba'arabec. Who be you men, why be you here, and where
got you that winged horse?" a husky contralto demanded, and every
skahs's face lit up with a goofy smile as they flowed from the path of
the woman who had kidnapped John. She sized up As'taris, curled her lip
as she glanced at Ringo, but turned such a proprietary gaze on George that
he grew annoyed and lightly stepped on her foot.
She yelped. Thirty swords sprang out of their sheaths, thirty men frowned
terribly at George-but Aurion, extricating her foot, made an irritated
noise and waved the swords back. "This animal has not harmed me, do
not kill it."
The men put their weapons away like so many wind-up toys.
As'taris leaned against George, arms folded. (George was tempted to
walk away, but forbade.) "Where did you get Brox's Kiss?"
She drew back in alarm. "Touch this sword and my skahs will cut
you to pieces!" The thirty swords and glowers reappeared.
As'taris grinned like a wolf and remained unfazed, as if he was invulnerable
to all she threatened. "I don't want the Kiss. I don't need it. But
I will know why you have it. Did you kill Brox? Did you steal the
Kiss from sar? I'll trade you the horse for the information."
A snort of surprise and indignation came from George, and Ringo said
angrily "You can't do that! That's not-"
"Cease, tirin!" As'taris turned on him a look of such fury
that Ringo fell silent, grumbling to himself that the elf was being way
too close-mouthed about his plan, if indeed he had one. (And did he even
care about John?)
"That be all you want?" Aurion said cautiously. When As'taris
reassured her, she waved away the swords and smiled. "I do like that
offer. Come to my tent and I'll tell you all you would know. My skahs will
continue their usual activities," she called to the men, who promptly
dispersed and resumed their chores, chopping wood and so forth. Then the
woman spared Ringo another cool glance. "Why be you here? Be you also
seeking my sword?"
Unable to say "No, I'm the friend of the guy you just kidnapped,
come to rescue him," Ringo fumbled for a plausible answer. As'taris
rescued him: "This tirin owns the pegasus and owes me money,"
the elf explained. "Sar will pay sar's debt by surrendering the pegasus
to you and teaching you how to ride it. Sar will tend the pegasus while
we talk."
Ringo didn't like this much better than the elf's previous statement,
but it was better than nothing. "Yeah," he agreed, trying to
look like a combination of Charles Lindburgh and Willie Shoemaker. He didn't
mind being left with George; something about Aurion bothered him, though
he couldn't pinpoint what, and he didn't want to be around her, especially
if his attention was elsewhere as he searched for John. If George was still
deeply disturbing, he could at least be relied upon not to enchant or kill
Ringo, and he offered an escape route (albeit an awkward one) if things
got ugly, or if they were able to find and grab John.
Aurion seemed satisfied with the explanation, but then, pondering George,
she frowned. "Sar did seem reluctant to give me the horse. What if
sar does fly away while we talk? I want sar with us in my tent so this
cannot happen."
"Oh, I wouldn't do that," said Ringo, but maybe it was in
his face or something, because she insisted he accompany her to the tent
along with As'taris, who was observing the interchange with considerable
sardonic humor. With considerable misgivings he mooched after the others.
George almost walked right in to the tent, at the last second remembering
that he shouldn't. He retreated and managed to look sullen. Aurion stroked
his nose and then beckoned to a couple of eager men. "Hobble and tether
it."
"Oh, you don't have to, he's tame," Ringo said hastily, but
the men were already advancing on George. George wasn't having any of that;
he beat his wings at the men and led them a merry chase round the clearing
until As'taris snapped "George! Stand!"
With a whinny that was nearly a wail, George stopped and let scratchy
ropes be tied around his forelegs and neck. As a skahs tugged on the rope
to get him to walk to where the other horses were tethered, he turned his
head and gave Ringo a long look that said quite plainly This better
get John back or Ass is grass.
*
Aurion's tent was grass green in color and circular, about fifteen feet
in diameter; a single pole in the center supported its ceiling. It was
furnished mostly with large silk pillows. Ringo gratefully sank into one
as far away from Aurion and As'taris as possible. The two settled themselves
so that they faced one another, and Aurion snapped her fingers three times.
A well-muscled, well-scarred, thick-necked man, this one not smiling, and
much too light-skinned to be a Baravadan, came in with mugs of wine on
a silver tray. Aurion introduced him as Sarekyl. He nodded at As'taris
and Ringo, handed them mugs, and asked Aurion, "Should I stay?"
"No. They will do me no harm, and you must see to the comfort of
the winged horse," said the woman, taking the final mug for herself.
Clearly not pleased with this command, Sarekyl nevertheless grunted and
left the tent.
As soon as the man was gone, Ringo took a huge swig of the wine. It
was one of the many excellent vintages available in Baravada-the natives
could profitably have competed with Europe's finest-but he put the mug
down thereafter, wanting to maintain a clear head for his task. (It occurred
to him then that he hadn't been drunk, or even had any alcohol at all,
since discovering his magic. Hmm. A subject to ponder later.) As As'taris
and Aurion started talking, he closed his eyes and visualized...
John, standing next to a tree in an anonymous bit of forest, looking
grim and responsible, wielding a five-foot sword in one hand. He seemed
to be guarding something, though Ringo saw nothing that deserved guarding,
not even a path to the clearing; just trees.
"... you get Brox's Kiss?" As'taris's voice drifted in.
"Zagesevregar..."
Well, whatever, John's okay, that's what's important. Ringo pulled
straight up and out of the forest, trying to relate John's tree to the
tent-and went too far, found himself staring down at a solid mass of trees,
with no idea which one was John's.
"... from Brox?"
"No, I bought it from sar. Sar didn't want it any longer..."
Ringo tried again, envisioning John and backing slowly away from him,
trying to memorize an ever-widening circle of land that he hoped would
intersect with an area he already knew. But-dammit! He went too far again,
zooming past the treetops practically into orbit. Cursing quietly, he moved
back in, and zip! found himself inspecting the pores on John's nose.
"... is Brox doing?"
"I don't know..."
Jesus, what the hell is the matter with me? Ringo thought in
frustration. Even on his first day of magic his control hadn't been one-tenth
this crappy.
"Nah!"
The shout startled Ringo; his eyes shot open, and John's nose changed
into the tent so abruptly that Ringo reeled a bit and did not immediately
comprehend As'taris rolling sideways across the pillows, wine from his
mug splashing onto them; the fading pink smear on the wall of the tent;
Aurion rising gracefully from her seat with Brox's Kiss out and ready.
As'taris leaped to his feet, stumbled, recovered, and flung his mug
at the woman, who dodged it. "Why-why-why do you drug me?" he
said, sounding wounded rather than angry. His own sword appeared in his
hand. "I don' wan' th'Kiss, an' I've no in'rest in your figh'ers.
I only wanna know abou' Brox. An' I'd skif teb with you willingly,
but I don't wanna figh' while stew-brained!"
"I know," she said softly. "I hoped the drug would sleep
you." For a moment her face got all hungry. "Drop your sword,
As'taris Farbound. Don't fight me, fight for me. We will-"
but she broke off when As'taris's sharp answer sliced at her face. She
parried the wobbly blow just in time. Sparks flew as the two swords clanged
together, and the two had at it in earnest, leaping over pillows and dancing
round the center pole.
Outside the tent there was a yell of concern, and the tent flap was
drawn back to reveal
hurriedly massing angry skahs.
The action in the tent paused for a moment. "Are you such a coward
tha' you need drugs an a group t'defea' me?" As'taris said
mockingly.
Aurion only smiled. "I be Ketafan. I fight any way I must, to win.
But I won't have my skahs come in here; there isn't enough room. So will
you have your skif teb. Skif teb!" she sang to the charmed
men. "If I be defeated, capture As'taris." And the fight resumed.
The word penetrated Ringo's drug- and startlement-fogged consciousness.
Ketafan! That's what had nagged at him! Irrelevant now, though. Panic filled
him as he realized that if As'taris lost the fight, guess who was next
on the pink sword list? I gotta get outta here! He scrambled to
his feet and, weaving a bit, pressed against the back of the tent, but
the tent flap was miles away through endless flashing blades, opened onto
acres of hostile baddies-"Christ!" he cried as As'taris's foot
slipped on a pillow and the blond elf fell backwards. A pink bolt sizzled
just over his head; Aurion cursed her overeager aim and readied for a second
zap. Ringo had to do something-the center pole! He wrapped a shaky
mental hand around it and pulled.
He lost his grip almost immediately, but that one jerk had been enough.
The pole shot out, Aurion made a startled noise, and the tent collapsed
in slow motion around them.
Ringo found himself standing in a tiny closet of fabric, heavy layers
of material pressing uncomfortably on his head. He dropped to his knees
and groped for the edge of the tent, found it, crawled through into the
sunlight. He blinked up at a couple of Aurion's skahs standing over him,
but their mindless attention was riveted on the center of the tent, which
boiled as the woman and As'taris jabbed at the fabric. Still on hands and
knees, Ringo crawled past them and into the forest.
***
[What do they want? Are they hostile? Did they increase the power
of George's ring? Do you know where they're monitoring from?]
~I dunno, I dunno, I dunno, and no. Gimme time, Shag!~
***
George had just been about to nibble at some grain left him by Sarekyl
when the tent erupted in chaos. As every skahs within earshot ran past
him, he strained at his rope until he choked, knocking the bucket of grain
over in the process. Bugger this! he decided, and *ping* became a cat standing
in the now-huge hobbles with the tether hanging around his little furry
body. He spent a moment adjusting to blurry vision and the sudden largeness
of things, then leaped out of the rope just as the tent subsided to the
ground with a great sigh of air. Two people inside jabbed at the cloth
with swords. Where's Ringo? George thought in alarm. He streaked to the
tent, weaving between a forest of still legs, and squirmed into the folds.
His vision improved immediately in the silky green darkness. In the
vast cavern where As'taris and Aurion stood and hacked at the tent, he
ran right between them; they never noticed. With no idea where Ringo had
been sitting, he rooted around with all his senses. Momentarily distracted
by the ripping of cloth as the two freed themselves, he finally sniffed
out the pillow that Ringo had been on. A little more sniffing led him to
the edge of the tent where Ringo had been, and George stuck his head out
under the side to sniff-confirm that Ringo had indeed gone that way. Good,
so he's safe at least.
The clanging of swords began again. George swished his tail, wondering
whether to go after Ringo or watch the fight. His curiosity got the best
of him; he hurried to the front of the tent and wriggled out. The sunlight
blinded him at first, but when things simmered down to their normal feline
blur he cautiously moved nearer the fight, until he was standing between
a couple of quivering skahs who were perspiring heavily in their efforts
not to disobey Aurion and join the attack. Although everything was big
and lacking in some colors, he followed the action without much trouble;
it was a curious fact of cat vision that the motionless skahs were harder
to look at than the lively combatants. To his inexpert eye Aurion seemed
to be the better fighter; her parries of As'taris's thrusts were easy and
casual, while As'taris seemed to be pushed to the very limit of his abilities.
Not that George wanted the blond elf to lose, but he couldn't help hoping
that As'taris might be humiliated.
Suddenly As'taris swung, overbalanced, and stumbled forward. Aurion
whirled around as his back passed her and pointed the Kiss at him. As'taris
tried to turn and knock the sword aside, but before he could it glowed
bright pink and spat the glow at him. He gasped as the light engulfed him;
as it faded, his eyes widened and his face twisted into a ghastly smile.
His sword dropped from his hand and vanished.
Grinning, Aurion put her arm around As'taris's shoulders. "You've
been chosen, As'taris Farbound, to aid me in my liberation of Ketafa. Together
shall we drive the Idri'en Tagen into the sea, turn the palace of the kapse
into flaming ruin, and destroy their cursed fake Vasyn! When touch our
feet the shore, all who hate the Idris will join us! All who love them
will be killed!" She raised the pink sword and laughed. The watching
men, including As'taris, cheered. "And I will personally smite each
Idri into the dung from which they sprang! The Raleka will prevail!"
Good God, thought George, his tail lashing back and forth like a
reed in a tornado. He'd practically forgotten about Ketafa and the Idris,
but now everything came rushing back. I thought we were well out of that
madness. And she's a Raleka-I thought they didn't really exist. I wonder
if they all came over here to escape the Idris. Oh, hell, it doesn't matter
right now. If she didn't have John I'd say good luck to you, here's a few
thousand to buy more swords, but I've got to rescue him first. That probably
means getting the pink sword. I bet if she loses it, the spell wears off
people. Which meant freeing As'taris too, but oh well. I wish Ringo were
here to make it fly out of her hand, but he's not, so it's up to me. George
crouched to spring.
Just as Aurion said, "Where's my pegasus?" George *ping*
swelled into a lion (knocking over the two sweating skahs he stood between),
sprang across the clearing (I love this! he exulted, soaring through the
air) and thud, knocked Aurion on her back, arms akimbo. He expected the
sword to go flying out of her hand, but she kept ahold of it. Making sure
his claws were sheathed, George sat on her legs, put his front paws on
her chest, and growled at her. Come on, drop it.
Aurion hacked awkwardly at his front leg. He roared with pain, then
pressed down on her stomach and showed her his teeth.
Her charmed skahs watched in agony, quivering to protect her but
ordered not to engage in any fighting unless she so requested... which
she couldn't do, straining for breath as she was. And George found himself
in a very peculiar position. His whole plan had revolved around shaking
the sword off the woman, and that had failed. So what exactly was he going
to do next? He wasn't about to chew Aurion's face off; he couldn't risk
grabbing the sword in his mouth, the way she was waving it around; she
was suffocating, but if he got up she'd sic thirty fighters on him; and
he was too excited to think of something more useful to become.
Before he could get to work on the problem, however, a familiar and
unexpectedly welcome voice laughed, and As'taris bent down and twitched
the Kiss out of Aurion's hand. There was nothing charmed about him any
more, though he was still a bit glassy-eyed. "Get up, George"
he ordered, and George, glad for some direction, backed off.
"Huh - huh - huh," Aurion gasped. "How?" she
finally managed, looking at the blond elf with frightened eyes-which, George
noted sourly, she hadn't done to the lion staring in her face. "Why
weren't you enchanted?"
As'taris twirled the pink sword like a baton. "Deadbrain. Didn'
you wonder why I knew of Brox's Kiss? I helped Brox make't. Its magic doesn'
burn me. I thought it was funny to preten' it did." He transferred
the pink sword to his left hand, and his old sword appeared in his right.
This he handed down to Aurion. "Let's finish our skif teb. Attack
me, because I can' figh' til you attack me. Jus' don' attack me with drugs
again." He switched the pink sword back to his right hand and offered
the woman his left.
She stared at him resentfully but allowed him to help her up. Limping
as she backed away from him, she took a couple of deep breaths and inspected
the sword he'd given her. Suddenly she lunged at the elf, grabbing for
the pink sword, but he sidestepped her and she stumbled past, then broke
into a run for the horses. "Kill As'taris!" she cried, slashing
a horse's hobble and tether and leaping onto its bare back. She kicked
it in the side and thundered off as best she could through the trees.
There was a great shout of anger as thirty men flooded down on As'taris,
who sensibly cut and ran for it, right past George.
Again George found himself completely ignored, as the last command
neglected to include him. As the men streamed around and even jumped over
him, he reflected that being in command of such an army left something
to be desired. Also that As'taris was not a bad actor, though his sense
of humor was questionable. George was also disappointed that the charming
effects of the pink sword hadn't vanished with its transference to a new
owner, and he worried that John might be irrevocably enslaved to Aurion.
Soon he was alone except for the remaining horses. They had noticed
him, all right, and were straining at their ropes, trying to escape him.
Should he chase Aurion? Nah; since separating her from the sword hadn't
broken the spell, there seemed little point in running her down. Besides,
his paw stung where she'd cut it. He lay down and licked the wound, wondering
whether they'd be able to break the spell on John, and where was he anyway,
and where was Ringo, and Why am I staying like this?
*ping* George was himself again, lying on his stomach on the grass.
He felt naked without fur, and shivered though the sun was warm and bright.
Better go find the others. Since he had a vague idea where Ringo was, as
opposed to no idea where John might be, he *
Nothing happened.
He'd intended to become a dog, and nothing happened!
Shaken, he tried again.
*ping*
George wagged his tail. Didn't feel like it hard enough, I guess.
Incident thus dismissed, he loped over to the forest behind the tent
and put his nose to the ground. He was always amazed at the huge number
of scents that seemed to come out of nowhere when he was a dog. Yup, Ringo
had gone that way -
- but so had someone else.
*
With increasing firmness of step as the drug wore off (thank God
he'd only had a little), Ringo ran through the forest. When he judged himself
safely far away, he sat down on a fallen mossy tree to catch his breath
and rub his head. His thoughts were back to normal, but the weight of the
tent pressing on his skull had left a sore spot up there. Nothing a healing
potion wouldn't -
A twig snapped.
Ringo looked up. Twenty paces away stood Aurion's friend Sarekyl,
longsword in one hand, a coil of rope in the other. "Promised you
to teach Aurion how to care for and ride that flying horse." His smile
was quite humorless, and he didn't look tired at all, though he must have
run to keep up with Ringo.
"Uh," said Ringo, eyeing the sword. Possibly the man had
it out for him to autograph, but he doubted it. He got to his feet.
"Save yourself some pain and return with me," Sarekyl said
conversationally. "I won't hit you and I'll leave your legs free when
I tie you up so you can walk back. But if you run, I'll catch you and hit
you on the head and drag you back." He advanced toward his quarry.
"We don't usually use tirin, but you be useful to care for that horse."
Ringo stepped backwards over the log, knowing he couldn't outrun
the extremely fit man, defenseless -
Not!
He stopped and laughed as a barrier dissolved, even as the flat of
the man's sword tapped him lightly on the side of the head as a warning.
Giddy, grinning, Ringo waved at the man. "Bye-bye."
Sarekyl gave him an amused look as, lowering his sword, he began
to shake the coil of rope, unlooping it for his seemingly acquiescent prey.
"Be you trying to sell me some-ay!" he bellowed as his feet left
the ground. He kicked and twisted, but he was nothing, nothing! in Ringo's
mental hand, as helpless as a kitten in its mother's mouth. The sword and
the rope slipped from his fingers, and he snatched at the air as the rope
snaked down to splash in a pile while the sword plunged point down into
the turf. Up he flew, white-faced, until finally Ringo dropped him on a
branch of a huge oak, thirty or forty feet up. The man squealed and wrapped
his arms and legs around the branch. "Skahs liar!" he screamed,
shaking his fist and almost losing his balance. "I'll kill you when
I get down!"
"Fuck you!" Ringo shouted back joyfully, giving him the
finger. He wanted to dance from excitement. How easy it had been-just a
sustained thought, effortless, invisible; just a thought, and he'd incapacitated
the man, rendered him harmless.
Just a thought!
Oh, he'd known he could move things even heavier than people. But
he'd only used his TK for frivolous reasons-to see if he could do it, to
show off, to fool around. Thing goes up, thing goes down. Thing goes up,
thing goes down. Cool, but... big deal. Even yanking As'taris down and
collapsing the tent had been nothing; he could have done those things manually.
Now his toy sky hook was a bit more than a charming novelty.
And damned if he didn't feel a little powerful.
The sword caught his eye; it leaned at a crazy angle, slowly falling
over in the moist turf. A flick of his mind and he was King Arthur at a
distance, thinking the sword out of the loam and into his hand (though
he had to quickly grab the hilt with his other hand as well because it
was heavy). It's a great souvenir, he thought, waving the weapon around
two-handed. I'll get another one and cross them and put them over my head,
I mean bed.
*ping* George popped up from behind a bush. "Hi."
Ringo was so startled he dropped the sword. "Don't do that!"
"Sorry." George's gaze strayed up to Sarekyl, who was complaining
at the top of his lungs. "Not bad," he offered, looking back
just in time to see the sword jump into Ringo's hands. He winced.
"Yeah," Ringo said uncomfortably, sitting on the log and
dropping the sword. He'd only picked it up again because he knew it would
disturb George; he was more than a little annoyed at George for spoiling
his mood. He waved in the general direction of Aurion's camp. "Aren't
you supposed to be, uh, back there doin' the horse thing, then?"
"Ass didn't need me any more," George said, and he gave
a short synopsis of what had happened in the camp. "Maybe they'll
chase him all the way to Ketafa," he concluded hopefully.
Ringo nodded. "I hope John didn't join in the chase. I'd better
find him." He closed his eyes and saw...
John racing through the forest, dodging between trees, calling to
someone ahead and chasing that person with all his might. Someone was behind
him, dirty, stumbling, gasping, falling behind-
"Paul?" Ringo said in disbelief. "Where'd you come
from?" And then, horrified: "What happened to you?"
For he had at last become aware of Paul's wretched condition, straw-thin,
filthy as mud, face red and contorted as he staggered after John, blinded
by tears-Paul crying? That was like England being conquered, barely conceivable,
and Ringo was struck with the odd sense of watching another universe. He
couldn't assimilate this strange, ruined Paul.
"What's happened to Paul?" George demanded. But Ringo,
caught up in the vision, wasn't in the neighborhood and didn't reply.
If John had not been ignoring his feet and tripping at every other
step, he would have put miles between himself and Paul. But only for Paul
was it a race, because John was clearly oblivious to the man behind screaming
in frustration as he fell farther and farther back.
With a painful lurch of sympathy and guilt, Ringo said "Oh Jesus,
Paul, you've been runnin' like that for weeks."
"Like what?" George asked. Again his query went unnoticed.
The forest abruptly thinned out, and John emerged onto a grassy plain.
Ringo expanded the picture, and far ahead of them he saw a horse and rider
going hell-for-leather: Aurion, scratched and torn and bitterly angry,
carrying As'taris's sword. "So that's who John's after! She's really
got him, hasn't she."
If John was superior while stumbling through the woods, he was positively
superhuman on clear ground, pulling away from Paul so fast that Ringo wondered
absurdly if they could enter him in the Olympics. But he was doing more
than running; his wings bloomed and he leaped into the air, flapping like
mad. He fell and landed awkwardly, but righted himself and sped off to
jump again and again, each jump a bit higher and longer, each burst of
wing-beats harder. Ringo had never seen John successfully launch himself
from the ground, but he'd also never seen John one-tenth so desperate to
do it. Was it possible that a transcendent effort could carry him into
the air?
"He can't do that!" Ringo cried. "If he makes it up
we'll never see him again! C'mon, Paul, c'mon!" He pumped his fist,
feeling absolutely impotent. Just like the first time Aurion took John!
"Catch up to him, grab him, do something! You're our only hope!"
But Paul, doggedly following, might as well have been on Earth for
all the good he could do.
In helpless desperation, Ringo made a useless mental grab for John's
legs, knowing he was much too far away -
and he yelped as his imaginary hand closed around legs and John pitched
forward like a tackled quarterback.
*
+Whoa! Power spike!+
~At least this one is understandable.~
*
Ringo almost fell over too. He couldn't stop looking at John, who
just lay where he'd fallen, crying. Tentatively, Ringo touched John again,
his skin and feathers, the grass around him, his glasses, the soil. He
started to babble softly, "How-how did I-I just-I mean, I wasn't-I
couldn't-he's too far! God, he's miles away! It never worked that far before!
But I felt him! I can feel him!" One more test: he plucked a handful
of grass in his imaginary fist and let the blades sprinkle down to be wafted
away by the breeze.
Ringo was trembling now, and after a final glance at John, he broke
off the vision and returned to himself and George. He felt-he didn't know
how he felt. Something magnificent yet profoundly frightening was touching
him... did he want it? Was it a good thing? What if it wasn't? Oh, too
much! Too much! With a noise that was half sigh, half groan, he put his
head in his hands.
George, meanwhile, had settled on the fallen tree next to Ringo,
dying to know what had affected Ringo so profoundly, but too tactful (and
a little too nervous) to ply him with questions just then. Instead, he
thought of Paul, and discovered no specific recent memory of him, except
for that one day when... "He has no magic," George suddenly said.
"Paul didn't get any magic."
Ringo looked up. It was good to have something else to think about.
"No, he's... powerless." The word came from nowhere, and both
men were surprised at how much it said about Paul and about themselves.
"We'll have to get him some." George hoped no one suggested
he share his ring with Paul, and quietly slipped his hand into his pocket.
Ringo stood up, and an odd, sad, vaguely frightened look passed across
his face. "Come on, let's go meet up with them. They're a little more
than a mile to the northwest."
***
)'Scuse me, are you three monitoring some place called Chow?(
+That's Cuh-how. Yeah, we are-how did you know about C'hou?+
)A letter came over the server modem for the Chow Monitors. Here's
a printout.(
~Darn! Mystery Being beat me to it. I wanted to find him first.~
[Read it out loud, Varx.]
+'Greetings. We have noticed your presence and manipulation of various
C'hovites, as well as the four outworlders who we hope are in communication
with you.' Why do they hope that? 'We have business to discuss concerning
these outworlders. Our UE-mail address is SANFAR 466%%-009CHSTR-39773529.
Please contact us immediately.' It's signed-gods!+
[Who is it? Is it someone we know?]
+No, like I said-gods. The gods of C'hou.+
[The C'hovite gods want to do business with us?]
~I bet they pay well.~
***
When they got to the clearing they found everything gone except Aurion's
deflated tent. As'taris sat on a stump polishing Brox's Kiss. He was in
a very good mood and held the pink sword up for them to see. "Isn't
it ugly? Brox used it to sex with males who didn't want to sex with sar."
"Nice guy," said George.
"John's still under its spell," said Ringo, but the elf
shook his head. "The enchantment canceled a short time after Aurion
lost it."
Ringo was just about to close his eyes and find John and Paul when
he was interrupted by crashing through the brush. A few moments later,
John staggered into the clearing, lugging a crystal statue that blazed
with rainbows as the sun hit it. But where was Paul?
A dreadful thought leapfrogged between George and Ringo as John eased
the statue to a standing position in a shadow and straightened up, panting.
"Lads," he said, his voice light and hysterical as he brushed
an invisible speck of dust off the crystallized Paul, "we've got a
bit of a problem."
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