Authors: Piers Anthony
Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #General, #Fantasy fiction, #Xanth (Imaginary place), #Xanth (Imaginary place) - Fiction
"Our agreement is up to, but not including, the stork.
We must be
together for that.
So I'll give her the chance to do you an equivalent
favor before then, so we'll be even again.
And we'll both give you
opportunity to do us favors, on other days, so your interest will match
ours.
We will keep you quite busy, for a while."
"You girls are almost frightening in your cooperation."
"Never trust a Sorceress," she agreed.
"Let alone two of us."
Forrest resigned himself.
These girls had his number, and knew it. He,
eally didn't need to do them any favors, to find them dangerously
appealing.
"Tell me all about this lake."
She started talking, punctuating her sentences with kisses on his ears.
It took some time.
At last they emerged from the water.
Forrest was shaky, not from the
information, but from Eve's kisses.
There might not be magic in them,
but they nevertheless had extraordinary force.
She was right: he would
be dreaming of her during whatever off moments were available, and when
the time came, he would not make any excuses. She had captured his
desire.
The irony was that his weakness of the moment gave her the
pretext to put her arm around him and help support him.
She hadn't
bothered to form clothing, and her touch remained electric.
"If you had been a nymph, all this would have been abated in seconds,"
he muttered.
"With no emotional complications.
Instead you have
chained me."
"I know," she said smugly.
"You're not used to dealing with women with
minds.
We're dangerous.
We are aware of consequences, and we know how
to make a temporary interest permanent." She nudged him without using an
elbow.
"But somehow this session hasn't changed my feeling for you."
"It couldn't increase what was already complete," he said glumly.
"Maybe." I He decided not to inquire what she meant.
She surely
understood further aspects that would only alarm him worse.
He had
anticipated problems with terrain, monsters, magic, and people, but
never with emotions.
He had hardly known what emotions were, before all
this began.
Now he knew that they were the most formidable of the lot.
They returned to the central plateau.
Along the way Forrest recovered
his steadiness, and his fur dried, and Eve shifted to dry clothing.
Their immersion in the water was not obvious.
She released his hand, so
that even that aspect disappeared.
He was struggling to keep his face
and manner straight, and was privately amazed at how readily Eve made
herself look cool, as if nothing of any kind had even been thought
oLviously girls were better at this than men.
Or fauns, at least.
"That was one close call," Imbri said in a dreamlet.
"If she had kissed
you on the mouth instead of the ears-"
Dawn also looked knowingly at them, without comment.
Forrest approached Ida.
"The name of the lake is the Sarah Sea," he
began.
He went on to describe its depths in meticulous detail.
As he
spoke, he found himself becoming increasingly interested in Ida. She was
an attractive woman, with a remarkable talent, and now he was in a
position to know how special her moon was.
Eve had tempted him
wickedly, but he knew it was desire rather than love. Ida did not tempt
him in that manner, but his feeling for her was becoming encompassing.
He wanted to stay with her forever, and bask in the delight of her mere
presence.
This, he realized, was love, an emotion he had never before
experienced.
It was different from desire, though there were
connections between the two.
Should Ida express any interest at all in
desire, he realized it would spring fully formed from the broad base of
the larger emotion.
Fortunately she gave no such indication, though her
moon angled to observe him better.
"Now it is my turn," Ida said when he finished.
"You have delivered in
full measure, and satisfied my lifelong curiosity.
Do not be concerned
about your present emotion; it will shortly pass.
Here is the
information you need.
You have to talk to the margins, and explain to
them that they have been deceived.
That they are not giving favors,
they are stealing them, and will be diminished thereby."
"Margins?" Forrest asked.
"The lines?"
"The creatures who generate the lines," Ida said.
"They are kept in the
cellars, and not told much of anything that is true."
A bulb flashed over Forrest's head.
"So if they learn the truth,
they'll stop generating the lines, and the power of the Wizards will
collapse!
Ida smiled.
"I'm glad that this information is useful to you."
"It certainly is!"
"But how can we get into the castles, to tell the margins?" Imbri asked.
Forrest relayed the question.
"You have merely to locate Ghina, whose talent is to put people to
sleep," Ida said.
"She is somewhere on Pyramid's red face, and will
help if you ask her.
Also Jfraya, whose talent is to draw a door that
opens.
"But how do we find Gina and Jeffrey?"
"Ghina, the daughter of Graeboe Giant and Gloha Goblin-Harpy, I believe.
A large invisible winged goblin girl.
And Jfraya, of uncertain origin,
on Pyramid's green face.
I fear you will have to accept some favors
there, and be accordingly diminished."
"I can do that," Imbri said.
"So we have it," Forrest said.
"Thank you so much."
"No thanks necessary; it is a fair exchange."
Then he realized something.
"My emotion-it has faded.
I don't love you
any more.
Not that you are unworthy.
It's just that-"
"Yes.
It abated when I returned the favor.
But I trust you can
appreciate why I demurred, before."
"Yes!
It's a great emotion, but it must be invoked suitably."
"That is correct.
I am glad we were able to arrange our exchange of
information, for we both profit handsomely thereby."
"So am l." he said, much relieved.
If only Eve could be similarly
turned off.
But he knew of no favor he could do her at the moment.
"Now we must return to Pyramid.
Do you have any objection if we go
directly from here?"
"None.
I have not before observed travel between worlds.
It should be
interesting."
"Maybe so." He looked at the others.
"Are we ready?"
"No," Dawn said.
"I haven't had the chance to do you a favor to match
Eve's."
"Better yet," Forrest suggested, "why don't I do Eve an equivalent
favor, so that her emotion abates?
I can't think of one, but maybe you
can."
"Maybe I can," Dawn said.
.
"Nuh-uh!" Eve protested.
"I like it this way."
"But we have to be even," Dawn said.
"How long has it been since Eve did her favor for Forrest?" Ida asked.
"An hour," Dawn said.
"Then it's too late.
Favors have to be exchanged soon, before the
emotion sets in place."
"Then I'll just have to do Forrest some favor," Dawn said.
"Forrest,
what do you really, truly, most want to know about some living thing?"
"Where to find a faun for my neighboring tree.
That's my whole mission
here."
"But I have to touch a living thing to know about it.
I can't find your
faun from a distance, unless I can touch someone who knows where he is."
"I wish you could do me that favor," Forrest said.
"But it is evident
that you can't."
"Maybe one of us knows," Dawn said.
"Without knowing she knows, I mean.
So I could find out."
"I do not," Ida said.
"I would have to query Cone again, and that would
mean-"
"Don't do that!" Forrest said.
"It's Dawn's favor I must have."
Ida smiled.
"I understand."
"Let's hold hands," Dawn said desperately.
"If the information is among
us, I can get it."
"I can't hold hands," Imbri said in a dreamlet.
"But you can touch us," Eve pointed out.
So they formed another circle, with the two girls holding Forrest's
hands, and touching Imbri on the other side.
There was a pause.
"There is something," Dawn said.
"Not the faun.
Somethingsomething
better, I think.
Oh!" She let go.
"What happened?" Eve asked.
"Is something wrong?"
Dawn looked awed.
"H don't think so.
But I don't know what to do. It's
all-all mixed up."
Forrest was getting impatient.
"Do you have the answer or don't you?"
Dawn turned to Ida.
"Aunt Ida-where I come from, that's what you
are-you always had good advice for us.
I really need it now.
Is there
any way-without complicating things-"
Ida nodded.
"There may be, dear.
If you care to tell me what is on