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Authors: Orson Scott Card

Gatefather (38 page)

BOOK: Gatefather
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“What Gerd and I are doing,” said Hermia.

“Well, you
are
a fine example of the Families at their worst.”

Her response surprised him. She looked stricken. Tears came into her eyes. Wad had thought she was heartless, calculating. But apparently
this
, out of all the rude things he'd said to her, was the one that hurt her feelings.

Or else she was faking the emotional response in order to trick him.

“I don't want to make things worse for the drowthers,” said Hermia. “I don't want to make things worse for anybody.”

“Then take your helicopters back to Mittlegard,” said Wad.

“No,” said Hermia.

“Why not?”

“You want to keep Set and the Sutahites out of Westil,” said Hermia. “I want to get the really dangerous mages out of Mittlegard.”

And with those words she disappeared. Because there was no gate, Wad couldn't tell where she had gone. But wherever it was, she'd be causing more and more trouble, for him and everyone else.

So if he couldn't steal her gates, Wad had to try to think of a way to kill a gatemage.

 

17

Danny wasn't surprised when it turned out that Wheeler hadn't even asked his parents for a little money. “I couldn't tell them I was going to Busch Gardens,” he said. “They would have had so many questions!”

“Like what?” asked Hal, disgusted.

“Like how am I going to get there!”

“‘I'm going with my friends,'” suggested Laurette. “‘Danny North's aunt is taking him and he invited all of us to go along.'”

Hal joined in. “‘Danny North is a gatemage and he's going to magically transport us to Williamsburg.'”

“‘But he won't take us through the damn gates,'” said Wheeler. “Sure, I could have told them that.”

“I told you from the start that I wasn't going to get us in illegally,” said Danny.

“There's no law against
magically
entering an amusement park. Why do they call it the Magic Kingdom?”

“That's Disneyland,” Sin said with disgust. “And there
are
laws against it.”

“If we don't break anything,” said Wheeler, “then it isn't breaking and entering.”

“Still trespassing,” said Hal. “And in your case, the added charge of ‘trespassing while stupid.'”

“I'm not stupid!” said Wheeler. “Danny refusing to get us inside is stupid!”

“You have to show your ticket
everywhere
,” said Laurette. “Being inside is useless if you don't have a ticket.”

“And Danny told us,” said Xena, “anybody who can't come up with the seventy-five bucks, tell him and he'll help.”

“I thought I
could
,” said Wheeler.

“No, you mean you thought you could force him to gate you in,” said Hal, “and you were wrong.”

“The whole point of going to Busch Gardens instead of Disney or Harry Potter or anything else was that Williamsburg is in Virginia,” said Laurette. “So our parents would actually
believe
we could make a quick trip here and back. As I recall, we made that switch because
your
parents were the ones who wouldn't let you go to Florida.”

“So my parents are worse than I thought,” said Wheeler. He turned to Danny. “I need help after all. Can't you get the money now?”

“So I should go to Veevee,” said Danny, “and then we go to an ATM and she withdraws the money, and then I come back here, all because…” The truth was that Danny could do this all quite easily. It wouldn't take five minutes, and Veevee would think it was hilarious. Why was he so annoyed?

“I think Danny's getting pretty fed up with you, Wheeler,” said Laurette. “I know
I
am.”

“Fine, I'll wait out here while you all go in and have fun,” said Wheeler. “But I'll tell you, if
I
were a gatemage, there wouldn't be an ATM in Williamsburg with any money left in it.”

“Such a genius,” said Hal. “So you stand in front of each ATM,
on camera
, make a little gate and reach inside the machinery, fumble around till you find all the twenties, and then wait for them to identify you and come to your house and find stacks of stolen twenties, and
then
you get to explain how you got the money out of the machines.”

“They couldn't hold me in prison cause I'd be a gatemage,” said Wheeler.

“A one-man crime wave,” said Hal. “The anti-Batman.”

“I can't even reach inside ATMs anymore, Wheeler,” said Danny. “That was something that was only possible when I had gates. I can go places, I can take people with me, but I can't make little gates and reach into things, or listen to something without being there myself.” Well, that wasn't strictly true, Danny thought. I can make a clant, which I never could before. But the
clant
would be there, so it's pretty much the same thing.

“Why didn't Pat come?” asked Xena.

“She doesn't like rides,” said Laurette.

“She doesn't like
Wheeler
,” said Sin.

“None of us like Wheeler,” said Xena, “but we all came.”

“She's coming,” said Danny. “When she finishes her chores.”

“Her parents treat her like a
child
,” said Xena.

“Her parents treat her like an adult who has to do her share of the work,” said Danny. “It's the whining that turns it into something only children do.”

“That means you've got the money for Pat's ticket,” said Wheeler. “Pay for me to get in, and then you and Pat can go get more money from your aunt.”

“You're so clever when you're spending other people's money,” said Laurette.

“No he's not,” said Hal.

“Come on,” said Wheeler.

Danny counted out the cash.

“Why didn't your aunt just give you a credit card?” asked Wheeler.

Danny handed the money to Hal. “Spend it all in one place,” he said.

“Hal gets to carry the cash because, like, he's our
daddy
now?” said Sin.

Hal handed the money to Laurette.

“What does this make me, the mommy?” asked Laurette.

“How can you stand being with these repulsive drowthers?”

Danny had felt Hermia arrive, but the others were visibly startled.

“Oh, the traitor bitch expects to come with us now?” said Sin.

“Why aren't you
dead
?” asked Laurette.

Hermia ignored them. “Danny, we need to talk.”

“Talk,” said Danny.

“Without the children,” said Hermia.

Danny wasn't going to play along. It was dangerous to be alone with Hermia.

“I could send them away,” said Hermia.

“No, you could only
take
them away and come back without them,” said Danny, “and they'd have to hold your hands, which I doubt they'd do.”

“How do you know I haven't learned to send people without touching them?” asked Hermia.

“Have you?” asked Danny.

“No,” said Hermia. “But it's stupid of you to underestimate me the way you always do.”

“I never underestimated you,” said Danny. “I trusted you.”

“See?” said Wheeler. “I'm not the only stupid one.”

“I always acted in your best interests,” said Hermia, “even if you were too ignorant to know what your best interest actually was.”

“Which is more dangerous,” Danny asked his friends, “the man who swears to kill me, or the friend who knows better than me?”

“The most dangerous is Set, the one who made your own hands kill your lady love,” said Hermia.

In the moment, Pat appeared. But she said nothing.

“Of course your lady love knew the moment I showed up,” said Hermia. “What took you so long, O thou omniscient lover?”

“I knew you'd have to talk for a while before you did anything,” said Pat mildly. “So I had time to wash my hands before I came.”

“Outnumbering a gatemage is pointless,” said Hermia.

Pat said nothing. Danny said nothing. Danny's silence came from his fear of what Hermia intended to do next. He had heard her claim to serve his interests, and her assertion that Set was his most dangerous enemy. She could not possibly be so stupid as to try to take on Set directly … could she? Danny had been able to sense prets for long enough now that he not only knew where and how many they were, but also the nature of individual prets. They weren't complicated. Either they were weak or strong. The strong ones were able to become human beings, because they could rein in the instinctive behaviors of the beast, and the most powerful also carried with them an entourage of lesser prets, which formed their outself.

The outself prets were not weak. Only strong prets could bind themselves to a human, either as inself or outself. And strength was not the only attribute that Danny could sense in them. He also knew which ones were bold, and which were fearful. That was what he always sensed in the Sutahites—fearfulness. At first this had struck him as odd. The Sutahites had nothing, so they had nothing to lose. What would they be putting at risk?

But then he had realized that their timidity was not situational, it was inherent, it was part of who they were. They were not timid because they had anything to lose; they had followed Set because they were timid, and he had promised to take care of them, tell them what to do, keep them safe.

Were they safe? Or were they nothing? They were not part of anything except Set himself, and
he
was nothing, except whatever human he could dominate. And now he wasn't even dominating the human that he occupied. Danny had taken such firm control of his body that there was nothing now for Set to play with in order to manipulate him. What did the Sutahites think of that?

And there was another attribute of prets: the will to power. They all had some of it, or at least all of them that composed a part of a human being, ka or ba. But Set had a will to power that was insatiable. Perhaps it was this bright flame of ambition and pride that the Sutahites attached to.

Not for the first time, Danny wished he could sense his own pret, and see himself truly. But that was beyond his power, and Pat had told him that it was beyond hers as well. This meant that Hermia, too, could not see her own attributes. But Danny and Pat could. Hermia was very ambitious, and so bold as to have no inhibitions at all. Strength, though—she had little. Not enough to control her impulses, not enough strength to wait before acting.

This was not a promising combination: vast ambition, utter fearlessness, and a nearly complete lack of self-control. Pat and Danny had discussed this more than once. Danny refused to believe that human character could really be reduced to these three attributes, and Pat was inclined to agree—“too reductionist,” she said—and yet neither of them could detect any other attributes in the pret of any person's inself or outself. “Just because we can't see more doesn't mean they aren't there,” said Danny.

“And surely the experiences we have in life can shape our character and change it,” said Pat.

“Or maybe not,” said Danny. “People think that heredity is everything, but we see people overcome both heredity and environment all the time, while others with every advantage collapse into a puddle of ruin at the first challenge. We haven't been able to see and judge prets for long enough to know if
they
can change.”

“Maybe when we have children,” said Pat.

But Danny didn't know if they even
should
have children. They couldn't pretend not to know what they would know about their children's prets. About their deep inner character. About the part of them that quite possibly could not change.

Hermia, however, was not their child. She was an erstwhile friend who had proven herself utterly unreliable. Not for the first time Danny wished that he could have discussed Hermia with the Gate Thief, especially now that they had conversed together for a while. But Danny could not go to Westil to talk to Wad without bringing Set there, or exhausting himself by making another clant. And Wad could not come to Mittlegard without making a Great Gate, which he
would
not do—especially because Hermia would know he had done it, and then could not be stopped from taking people to the Great Gate and passing them through it.

The Greek girl has us both stymied. So I have to deal with her on my own. I just don't know how I
can
deal with her, or what “dealing with her” would even look like.

“You're not going to forestall me?” asked Hermia. “Gate me somewhere?”

“You'd just come back,” said Danny.

“You're learning,” said Hermia.

“No,” said Pat. “
You
learned this from
us
.”

“It's not as if you invented it,” said Hermia. “I'm not violating some patent. You died and came back knowing stuff, and I learned it because I'm a gatemage and I could tell more about what was and wasn't happening. Give me credit here, Pa-
tree
-cee-ah. I
took
this from you, you didn't give it.”

Danny didn't even bother looking at Pat, and his peripheral vision told him that Pat didn't look away from Hermia, either.

“Whatever you're going to do,” said Danny, “just do it.”

“No,
don't
!” cried Xena. “I mean, for pete's sake, how inconsiderate
are
you! We don't want any wizard war while we're
right here
.”


I
do,” said Wheeler.

“No you don't,” said Hal.

“Buy the tickets for all of you,” said Danny, “and hang on to the change or use it to buy food. Pat and I will be in when we can.”

BOOK: Gatefather
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