Authors: Piers Anthony
Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #General, #Fantasy fiction, #Xanth (Imaginary place), #Xanth (Imaginary place) - Fiction
"Yes.
The chests and nuts drop from the horse trees, and we collect the
chests and the nut droppings too."
"And the cook makes stew from them," Imbri said.
"How nice."
Then, as they ate, Forrest got down to business.
"We need to find a
service we can render Org)/, in return for information about the
location of the dear horn.
Do either Of you have any ideas'?"
"Not at the moment," Cathryn said.
"But perhaps if we knew more about
Orgy and this castle, we would get an idea."
"That is too simple to be interesting," the ogre said.
"Even the most stupid thing becomes interesting, when there is a need,"
Forrest said.
He had uttered a magic word.
"Stupid," Orgy said.
"I am as stupid as
any ogre.
Very well, I will tell you about me and this castle.
Two
years ago I was "just another ogre, happily bashing rocks, tying trees
in knots, and teaching young dragons the meaning of fear.
I mean, it's
what ogres do.
Then I happened across an odd looking horn that someone
had left lying around.
Dimly curious, I picked it up and iffed it, but
it had no particular sme I b't 't, but it didn't taste sn particularly
edible.
In short, it didn't seem to be very useful.
The scorn this
horn," I said, or words to that effect; after all, there might be
someone listening.
Then I put it to my mouth and blew."
He paused.
"Are you sure you want to hear more?
This is so stupid that
even I am being bored."
"I don't want to be a spoilsport," Forrest said, "but I find it
fascinating.
Please do go on."
"Oh," Orgy said.
"Well, it gets duller.
When I blew the horn, it made
a noise like none other I had heard.
It was, if you can imagine this,
the sound of utter longing.
When I heard that, I wanted something so
badly that I could think of nothing else.
I didn't even know what it
was, just that I had to have it.
So I blew the horn again, and this
time I heard an echo from afar, and my longing focused on that distant
response.
So I trudged toward it, and when I began to lose my way, I
blew it again, and got another echo.
Gradually I realized that I was
the only one who heard either the horn or the echo; other creatures I
passed paid no attention, apart from getting hastily out of my way. They
did not realize that I was on a mission; they thought I had come to
maraud as usual.
"I continued in this manner for some time, until at last I hove into
view of this castle.
The echo came from it.
It seemed to be
unoccupied, so I entered.
Naturally I bashed down a wall or two, and
found it very bashable, so I continued.
It was a real thrill, once
again destroying something solid.
Eventually, pleasantly exercised, I
dropped to the floor and snored valiantly for a 1ew hours.
When I woke,
there was a table loaded with victuals.
So I got up and gobbled them
down, then resuect- ny bashing of the walls.
"So it continued for several days, before I realized that the walls did
not stay bashed.
They- estoi-ed themselves overnight, oi- even sooner.
This pleased me iensely, I'oi- it meant that I could bash them down
again.
And indeed, so it has been ever since.
Bash, eat, sleep, bash,
in a perpetual routine.
I love it; it is an ogre's heaven.
Since I had
no more use for the liorn, I threw it out a window.
After a t-time-
several months-I realized that this was the purpose of the horn: to lead
me to my heart's delight.
A perpetually bashable castle.
So this is
surely the dear horn you seek, and I know exactly where I threw
it-memory being inversely proportional to intelligence-and will be glad
to tell you, if you can find any equivalent service to trade for the
information.
But I doubt that you can, as I am completely happy as I
am."
"It does seem as if this castle was designed with an ogre in mind,"
Cathryn- earked.
"Perpetual bashing."
"With I-easting in between," Imbri agreed.
"There doesn't seem to be
anything missing."
"Yet I, too, thought I had everything I wanted," the centaur said. "Now
I realize that I simply had not thought of my missing desire."
Orgy looked at her.
"You have a missing desire?"
"Yes.
That's why I seek the dear horn."
"To find your True Love?"
"Yes.
A companion to be with, to love and cherish and breed with-" She
paused.
"Oh, that's it for you!"
Orgy was taken aback.
"I don't think I would be a good companion for
you."
She laughed.
"Surely not.
I favor intelligence and wings.
I mean that
maybe you could use a companion of your own kind.
An ogress."
"I'm not sure.
She might be uglier than I am.
Then the castle might
like her better than me."
"Maybe a merely moderately ugly ogress?" Imbri inquired.
"Who would want a merely moderately ugly ogress?"
Forrest saw that this wasn't getting anywhere.
But it did suggest a
line of investigation.
"What about one who is distinctly inferior to
you in strength, ugliness, and stupidity, but who really appreciates
your ogrish qualities?"
Orgy pondered, and the teas began 'Limping.
"There is something
appealing there."
It fell into place.
They had sought to applaud the ogi-e, letting him
win an ugly contest.
That had worked, in a manner.
An ogress could
surely do it much better.
"Someone to admire your achievement in
continuously bashing down the walls.
Where's the fun of a job well
done, if nobody notices?"
The fleas jumped higher, as if their feet were getting burned.
"Yes, I
hadn't thought of that."
"Naturally not," Forrest said triumphantly.
"You are too stupid. But we
who can't compare to you in that respect were able to think of it, and
this must be what we can do for you.
We can find you such an ogress."
Orgy nodded, and the few remaining fleas hung on.
"For that I would
tell you where the dear horn is.
Find me that ogress."
ell, if you tell us where the dear horn is, we can use it to find her.
Orgy shook his head, and the fleas were hurled into the nearest unbroken
wall.
"I am too stupid to understand why you wouldn't simply use the
dear horn for your own quest, once you had it.
So I'll wait for you to
bring the ogress."
The three of them exchanged a somewhat stretched glance.
Naturally it
would not be expedient to question the stupidity of their host. "We'll
search for her without the dear horn," Forrest agreed.
"Do you have any notion who would know where such an ogress might be?"
Cathryn asked with something less than full stupidity. "Ogle Ogre might
know.
He sees everything."
"How can we find Ogle?"
Orgy put his last remaining fleas to flight.
"He especially likes to
look at esthetic females.
Maybe if you stood on a mountain and looked
esthetic, he would spy you and come to ogle you."
This time Cathryn and Imbri shared a female type glance, excluding
Forrest.
Then they shrugged.
"Maybe so," one of them agreed.
Thus, in due course, they departed the ogre's castle on a new mission:
to discover a suitable ogress.
They headed for the nearest barren peak.
"I hope we are able to compliment Ogle Ogre before he crunches us,"
Cathryn muttered.
"If he comes to ogle you, he shouldn't crunch you," Forrest pointed out.
"And that's another thing," Imbri said.
"Do you suppose all females
exist just to be ogled?"
"Why no, of course not," Forrest said, taken aback.
"A number of them
exist to be chased and celebrated."
For some obscure impenetrable reason she turned a dark glare on him. "He
is a faun," Cathryn reminded her, for some similarly unfathomable
motive.
Since they had nothing important on their minds, Forrest shared a
concern of his: "If I am the size I am because of the solidified mass of
my soul, and Imbri is the size she is because of the mass of her half
soul, how is it that creatures like Cathryn and Orgy have so much more
mass?
Are their souls so much larger?"
"Now that's an intelligent question," Cathryn said.
"Just when we
thought you had used up your supply of intelligence.
No, souls don't
vary in size like that.
In fact, we of Ptero really don't have souls.
They come only when we assume reality.
We have inferior substitute
filler material that assumes the semblance but not the essence of souls.
Thus we are limited to our life spans, and have no existence beyond
them.
It is one reason each of us hopes to come into genuine existence.
So we amass as much material as we require to fill out our standard
forms, and that's it."
"You mean I could assume larger size, by adding some of that filler
substance?" Imbri asked.
"You could.
But why would you want to?
You are pure soul now; what
higher aspiration can there be?"