Archive for the ‘ Chapter 07 – Closer ’ Category

(159) Hornicopia

If you had asked me yesterday, however, I would have said that unicorns don’t exist.

I took Ed’s silence as an opportunity to ponder the potential of unicorns without grilling him on what it looked like, if he had seen its teeth, those kinds of things. Were they herbivores? Did they solely drink starlight and moonlight? Did it have cloven hooves? Where were the eyes set? Was the horn made of bone, and did it come up from the spine or did it sit further down on the skull? And how could it speak?

The real reason I was able to keep the silence, despite my burning curiousity (and no, there isn’t a cream for that) was that I had recently spoken to an animate pot. Frankly, the existence of a unicorn seemed kind of small potatoes (hashed over or not) compared to the weirdnesses of the last couple of days.

I gave Ed a hearty back-slapping kind of hug and went back into my place, only to find my bed for a few hours. I should have been doing things, like getting the new rental car put together, checking on the status of my previous claim and how much I should be paid for the car Nellie totaled, that sort of responsible adult behaviour. I had already set up automation for the monthly things, as who knew if the thing in Little-land would be something I could handle over night. 

Instead, I slept.  I slept like a baby, should the baby be made of stone while it was sleeping.  Back to the proverbial rock, I guess.  The phrase indicates that I was a nonresponsive thing of stone unaffected by the events near the bed, and, well, I’ve played fun games like that before, but in this case it was pretty apt in a non-kinky fashion.  I was the kind of stone baby that didn’t dream, didn’t move, and was too tired to snore, although I’m just guessing at those.  They say we have just forgotten our dreams when we say we don’t have them, but I think if I dreamt, it was me dreaming of sleeping.

In any case, when I woke up, it was dark again.  I froze for a moment, thinking I had heard something in the kitchen, but there wasn’t any light, and I had been sure to lock my door after I gotten inside.  I had to hit the hardware store for the kind of lock that Rohana had suggested, but I wasn’t expecting her to break in again.  Although as dead to the world as I had been, a Dragon could have come in and I wouldn’t have stirred.  I wonder if I would have woken up before the flames and smoke combined to make that unstirring permanent.  I don’t think “unstirring” is a word.

“Hello?” I said aloud.  I growled at myself mentally for saying it, because if something had responded, I would have been frightened right out of my skin.  Well, as the phrase goes.  I expect the worst frightening I was likely to get would have been more, “Out of my bladder control,” but there wasn’t any, “Hello,” in return or anything.  It was probably my very overactive imagination.

I used the flashlight application on my cellphone to walk the step to my lightswitch, and turned it on, then went back and turned on the lamp next to my bed.  Probably the wrong order to do those things, but I was still feeling pretty muzzy from the disruption in my sleep cycles, and I wanted as much light as possible to banish the suddenly inhospitable darkness.  Well, it was probably still friendly enough to things that liked the dark, but I wasn’t feeling particularly sympathetic to it for the moment.  I’ll rephrase, then: I wanted as much light as possible to banish the darkness to which I was unsympathetic.  It just doesn’t have the same ring to it.

“Darkness doesn’t creep,” I said aloud.  Sound.  Sound was good, too.  I used the remote and turned on the television to some kind of auction show that was playing on my usual network of choice.  I rolled my eyes, but then, I remember when MTV played music videos, so maybe I was just jaded.  “Evil is afoot because evil doesn’t have wings,” I said to the darkness left in the hall.  I turned on the bathroom light, too, just for good measure.  I didn’t feel like playing my usual mental game with the phrase in thinking of what evil things had wings that needed to be rebutted in some fashion to make it fit. 

I went in and started microwaving my dinner.  I was feeling a little more secure in having banished the gloom.   I flipped through channels for a few minutes, and then kept it on the news while they talked weather.  After rolling my eyes (no one in Colorado believes in meteorologists after a while.  The mountains have too much whimsy with weather.  It’s the second most hated profession in the state, the first being coach of a major sports team) at the prediction, I switched the channel to one of the ones at the end of the list that play different music selections and post trivia on the screen, presumably for background at parties or other gatherings.  I was singing along and putting parmesan cheese on top of the glop in my paper tray when everything suddenly popped and I fell back into darkness again.

I didn’t think I had blown a fuse.  I pulled out my cellphone and it beeped, letting me know I needed to charge it, soon.  I swore, and sat the food down on the counter.  I made a bit of a dash to the circuit box thing.  I flipped some things and poked at others, and after a moment, some of the lights came on.  I started re-setting timers on all the things that started blinking noon, and went back to my plate to heat it up again after a moment, ignoring the sweat and fear washing off of me. 

There was a curled-up piece of paper that hadn’t been there when the lights were off.   Of course there was.

(160) The Fiddler

I looked at the curl of paper, and put my hand on it, ready to throw it in the trash, unread. On the other hand, they had gone to an awful lot of trouble to get it to me.

I was ready to look at it when my phone rang. I answered it automatically, as my eyes tried to decipher the spidery letters. (I was always touched by Tolkein’s comparisons of handwriting in the Red Book of Westmarch (as opposed to the Red Book of D&D, because that version of Dungeons & Dragons came in a box set.) It was just a way of giving life to the journal as character.)

“Oh, it’s you.”

“You owe me a favour, dear, sweet, older brother.”

I couldn’t make heads or tails of the note while I fenced with my sister, so I stuffed it in my pocket. “I suppose I do. What will it be? Will I have to wear something pretty and frilly?” I tried to make my voice come out in an enthusiastic simper, like I was mincing across the floor in exaggeratedly insulting, flamboyant joy.

“Oh, would you?” she played it over-the-top. “Not that I’m trying to spoil your plans of picking up a few extra dollars down on Colfax,” she said, voice turning to a more serious tone. “I need you to check in on Mom.”

“I don’t owe you that much,” I grated.

“Pretty please, with pink sparkles and sugar on top?” she said, her voice as syrupy sweet as the description.

“What’s wrong with her now?” I knew I was whining. “No, wait, I don’t want the list. Fine, but all debts paid in full, I spend no more than twenty minutes before my hair catches fire or I get arrested or something real happens to get me off the phone, and if she asks me when you are going to settle down and have children I have carte blanche to answer in any way I so desire.”

“Twenty-five minutes and I can’t have sold my uterus on eBay,” she negotiated. “And your hair can’t catch fire, I think you used that in 2005.”

“No wonder it seemed so familiar. Done, and deal.” I was about to hang up when it occurred to me. “Why not on eBay?”

“Mom’s got this thing about body parts on eBay. I think she got a chain letter from Auntie A.”

“Since when did she unblock Auntie A?” I don’t know if every family has an Auntie A, who sends them only the Most Ridiculous chain e-mails about things that repeat the “Appeal to Emotion” logical fallacy. They certainly didn’t Appeal to Common Sense.

“When she went to a new provider. She sucks at setting up filters. Took me almost two hours on the phone with her last time.”

I grunted. Despite her seeming full-time search for a sugar daddy, my sister works for a small company that has her do tech support over the phone. She takes great pride in her resolution speeds. Privately, I’ve always thought she annoyed the customers and then set them up to keep them from ever being able to dial back.

Of course, it also meant she was flaunting two hours on the phone with Mom, and only asking me for less than half an hour. That was more subtle pressure that I had had from her in a while. She was upping the ante at the Game.

People play games with each other, and they feel out the rules. I don’t know that everyone, if asked to specify the rules, would agree on the actual guidelines and subtleties, but I know couples who score friendly points off of each other for all sorts of things, like saying a particular phrase or, of course, pun wars, or getting the final say (ever) or things like that. For my sister and I, well, I won’t say we ever play fair, but there are lines we don’t cross. That’s the important rule of these games: you know when the line’s been crossed, and you lose when it has.

“No time like the present,” I said. “Besides, I don’t like owing you.”

“Of course not. That’s why I get you to pay in pretty pennies,” she pointed out, cackling and hanging up.

I sometimes wondered if I would ever be able to bring a girl to meet my family. Well, if I liked her enough she’d have to be quick enough to handle them all, from Ed’s ma to my wicked sib.

I dialed from memory. The phone number hadn’t changed for over two decades, and, well, I didn’t want it programmed into my phone. This was probably one of those anti-senility games I played with myself. “If I can’t recognize the number quick enough to send it into voicemail, I deserve what I get.”

I won’t transcribe the ten minutes it took to convince her who it was on the phone, but the additional fifteen minutes went something like this.

“There I am, and I’m shouting because they’re not listening, but that’s fine because they really don’t know the language but I guess it’s their language because when you go down there’s it’s practically another country because all the billboards are in their language so you know you’re in southern Aztecistan where there’s condors on the street corners who will eat your heart out for extra prayer passes. Those are condors in the glyphs, right? So then you’re remembering your basic lessons but you don’t know that shouting, `I just wanted one of your long doughnuts’ isn’t going to come out something terribly naughty so you’re trying not to point because you read somewhere that pointing means different things in different cultures so you don’t want this young man thinking you’re trying to proposition him when all you’re starving and you can’t wave money to let him know you want to pay for his pastry because then they’ll see you’re carrying cash and it all goes bad from there. Oh, and on the pointing, did I tell you about Uncle Sergei? He almost lost a finger. He was poking it into a bird cage…”

I didn’t ask if it was the cage of a condor.

Ah, mom.

(161) Coordinates in Dreams

After fulfilling my filial duties, I searched in my pockets to read the piece of paper that had been left for me. It had been an overly dramatic methodology, so I expected a particularly clever riddle.

It wasn’t a riddle that was on there. Instead, it looked to be a series of numbers. Code? Coordinates? Hexadecimal? URL? Winning lottery ticket options? (I had a sudden worry that I ended up with the wrong slip of paper. Maybe someone had a bunch of messages in their supernatural wallet and I just got the receipt for their lunch with Loki.)

I sat down at my computer and plugged them into Google. ‘Cause, you know.

My eyes watered, as if I were straining them. When I looked back down at the note, I had mistyped. I started to re-enter, but what I was entering and what was on the note was not the same thing. It was like trying to read a book in a dream; the story kept changing, and it was hard to focus.  (I’ve become part of amazing stories in dreams, some of which I wept to read, and few which I could pull more than a synopsis out with me in waking.  Of course, I’ve also dreamed about spiral staircases where each step had a different personality and grudge, so my subconscious has a wormhole to Wonderland as it is.)

I looked away and took a few deep breaths. Well, that certainly left out coordinates (unless it was flashing through a variety of tracked people) and most likely winning lottery ticket numbers. It still could be a receipt for lunch with Loki, I supposed.  (While I have friends who number themselves amongst his worshippers, I have other friends who say that, for a Power he’s a bit of a jerk, but he always brings” the hottest chicks” to parties.)

So, in a way, it was, indeed, a riddle.

I taped it up next to the monitor.  The handwriting remained consistent, which made me think more of fonts than a steady scrawl.  Of course, it could just be an idiosyncratic touch to the magic.  I guess I could go to all my practitioner friends and see if they recognized the style, but that was a little too Cinderella for me.

Then it struck me.  Who do I know who could point me in the right direction?

The Questor, of course.

I was short transportation.  I seemed to remember Matana saying she could get me there, but that offer may have been null and void once we staked her in the sunlight.  Witnessed by Peredur, though, so I could try to pin him down on it.

I never thought I’d be asking myself, “How could I find a Dragon?” especially one who always showed up when he was least wanted.  Following that logic, I’d have to meet him in the bathroom after I’d eaten cheap Chinese food and brought in a graphic novel.  He’d probably be staring out my mirror with his smoke-filled eyes.   The name of the domains in which I’d have to find him probably had more poetry in them than anything ending with “dot com.”  If you know what I mean.

Ouija was out.  It’s never, actually, in, if you must know.  (“Hi!  I’m going to open a portal to something that thinks moving a crystal is great fun and will answer all my trivial questions.”  Frankly, I want there to be a spirit of knowledge that always pushes the little oracle piece to the words, “Use The Internet, Dude.”   Plus, mass-production of something intended to reach out Beyond?  Bad news.)  The only kind of divining I was partial to was randomizers on restaurant picks, and even that needed particular weighting by things like positive reviews.  I did occasionally read my horoscope in the paper, but I was more a free will type.

Instead, I sent an e-mail back to him asking if tomorrow would work, and if he could give me a street address.

Then I set out to buy a car.

This was not a trivial task.  I analyze.  I want the best car for my money, or at least, that’s what my head says.  The rest of me says it has to look fast and attract women.  Not that in any estimation I have ever seen a car in a price range I’ve ever had access to that had women drooling.  Unless it was, you know, coated with chocolate.  (Drool may also be overestimated.  I mean, lubrication is one thing, but random drooling is not a turn-on for me.)  Besides, expensive cars and comfortable seats tend to repel each other in most cases.  Well, seats comfortable enough to take advantage of drooling women, I presume.  No one should have their head bumping against a steering wheel.

I looked at the phone as if hoping Rohana would call, now that my mind was wandering so idly towards sex, but alas, the universe was not so obliging.

While I did check out a few top ten lists for car copulatory comfort (not just cargo space, but in seating) none of them had the reliability ratings I wanted.  Honestly, there ought to be a way to collect lists on the ‘net and compare them for whatever features you want, but apparently this niche was still best handled by personalized spreadsheets.  After manipulating the data, comparing prices and options, I had to find something local that matched.

I glanced up at the note, saw that it was probably an ISBN number now, and ignored it.

I got an address and a map with directions.  I guess the Questor did know where I lived.   It was definitely going to be a drive, and I made some arrangements to overnight in a hotel that didn’t sound like a palace for bedbugs despite its speciously cute name.  I set up some CDs to burn for personal use driving mixes, and watched the time fly by.

I still didn’t want to turn off the lights, so I fell asleep on the living room futon.

(162) In the Cards

With one thing and another, the weirdest moment was knocking on the door.  You wouldn’t have been able to tell his house from any others on the street, really.   They had a dog and some cats, two children, and a ton of books, most of them familiar to me.  

Dinner smelled good.  I’d eaten lunch on the road at some chain restaurant that masqueraded as a truck stop.  After some texting with my sister, of all people, I bought a couple of small gift cards on the way just so I didn’t arrive empty handed.  (It was an etiquette question.  She seemed the most likely to know about such things, plus, I owed her an update from our Mother.)

The Questor and I were in his kitchen where he was putting together a plate for his wife.  “I think the real difference between you and `the heavy hitters,’ as you put it, is a lot more idiosyncratic than you think.”  He and I had been bantering about just what it was I did.

“As in?” I munched on a carrot.  I can’t do the “What’s Up, Doc?” joke because, well, wrong role.

“Dear, explain to E what you were saying about instinct,” he crossed into the living room with the plate, bringing her some dinner.

She put down the book she was writing in, and thanked him.  “Oh, that.  It’s kind of silly, really.  My instincts have been trained in magic.  Rather than react in the traditional fight or flight, I’ve got both of those triggered to the esoteric.  If I hear a noise in the dark, I raise a ward first rather than think about getting out of bed to check it out physically. ”

“I thought they expanded fight or flight,” the Questor noted.

“Abuse of psychological theory aside,” I quickly interrupted, “a wizard is someone who basically eats, drinks, and sleeps magic?”

“Don’t ask about the mystery meat,” the Questor’s wife grinned.

“It’s chicken,” the Questor, who had done the cooking, quickly added.

“Or tastes like it,” his wife raised an eyebrow.

I glanced at my plate.

“That’s half of magic right there.  Psychology.  Do you trust me?  I have raised the possibilities, see, that maybe it isn’t chicken.  Maybe it’s dog.  I have opened up chance, and now that there’s more chance to play with, I can influence it with Will.  You’re going to taste it and try to remember that it’s chicken, pitting your Will against mine, right?”

I said nothing, because she was exactly right.

The Questor grinned.  “You’re the one who came to eat with wizards.”

“It’s fine, it’s chicken,” she said, grinning.  “No, really, as much as we’d like to think instinct is drilled into us so that we can handle sabretooth’d tigers and the like, the truth is we have the intellect to train our reflexes.  One of my mentors does a lot of talking on his blog on how to link the need to do the unpleasant things in our life to the survival instincts.  It means you exercise because your life depends on it, and your brain understands that because your body starts to panic a little.  Your brain wasn’t otherwise convinced it was a good idea because your brain wants to settle and conserve all that lovely potential energy you absorbed in things like fats and sugars for when you need it.  Like for when you’re being chased by that tiger.”  She ate a bite of chicken.  “Which some of my friends could arrange the illusion of if you needed a little adrenaline to start that exercise program, but it violates one of the laws of magic, I’m sure.”

I eyed her askance.  “Laws of magic?  Like sympathy?”

“Hah!” she laughed.  “No, I think every wizard writes up their own idiosyncratic list.  I was thinking the law of showing off always costs more energy than you expected.  It might be just mine.”  She smiled.  “Although there are rules.”

“Different than laws?”  It was good chicken.  Basic, some broccoli with cheese, some macaroni & cheese, a little barbecue sauce, nothing fancy, but a good home-cooked meal.  The Questor was seemingly addicted to a particular cherry-flavoured cola, so I had a cup of that with ice.

“Yeah.  And some of the rules are idiosyncratic, too, but I think all of us have rules.  We wouldn’t be ourselves if we broke them.”  She paused, considering.  “Some of them are awkward, too, like the fellow in Seattle who has to speak Truth if approached with a Question.  Almost as inconvenient as the husband’s little gift.”

“I can imagine,” I decided.

“Yeah, I try never to ask where I left my keys for fear that my destiny is to strike down the Goblin King first.”

We both laughed.  The Questor didn’t seem to find it as funny, but he gave a wry smile anyway.

Her daughter interrupted then, some matter of a disparity in the amount of chocolate milk between her and her brother’s cups that was resolved with a warning and an offer of more milk (but no more chocolate.)

“So, I am guessing you have a question to ask me?” the Questor said, between bites.

“Uh, in your official capacity.  I can wait until tomorrow or something.  You’re off-duty right now, I hope.”

“I try not to take my work home with me,” he agreed with a grin. “It’s actually a lot less automatic than she makes it sound – that whole thing about wizards eating, sleeping, and breathing magic.  She’s a wizard when she gets gas for her car, or when we go grocery shopping, or watching the kids at the park.  She just gets a little more gravitas when she says, `You shall not pass.’  But usually she’s saying that while we’re playing Monopoly and I’m closer to winning than she is.”

We laughed.  It was easy to do here, and they weren’t the kinds of wizards I’d been used to… more working-class wizards in some ways.  They had some art up here and there, but the couches looked used, the carpet had its share of spills, the bookcases were overflowing, but it was nice.

(163) The Burning Question

“You shall not pass.  You shall not collect two-hundred dollars.  The dark fire shall not avail you.  You must pay rent on Mediterranean.”  She said it in an almost dramatic monotone, if that wasn’t some kind of oxymoron. 

“So, your non-Flame of Udun burning question?” the Questor asked.  He put down his plate, but that’s the only kind of preparation he really seemed to take.

“There’s a cream for that, isn’t there?” I muttered.  “Do I only get one?”

“Yep, and that was it.”  He looked sad for a moment, but the minute passed and I could see from the way his eyes crinkled that he had been joking.  “Seriously, I think the reasons people with this particular talent have made it difficult to get to them in the stories is because it can be practically a deus ex machina, or you end up saying, `Oh, you had the ruby slippers all along.'”

“Silver,” his wife corrected.  “In the book.”  She had gone back to writing, but she had that curious look a lot of wizards I’d been around had, suggesting that her attention was in more than one place at once.  Honestly, wizards multitasked in strange fashions.

“If they’d told Dorothy that from the beginning, would she have just said, `I’m going home now, good luck with the witches?’  That’s not the kind of thing that makes a good story.  It’s worse than, `It was all a dream.'”  He shrugged.  “I’m just not the type to find the frugal life on top of a high mountain to be to my liking.  Too cold.”

“Not enough wi-fi,” his wife grinned.  “Maybe we could set up the usual three challenges the asker needs to face, the smarter of which give you clues as to the answer you’ll receive.   I mean, we’re strong believers in narrative causality around here,” his wife interjected, “but you don’t have to find three golden apples.  I prefer Fujis anyway.”

“I wonder,” the Questor mused, “if there are granny nymphs, too.”

“Only polyamorists sow their domesticated oats,” she rolled her eyes at him.

He stuck his tongue out at her, and I know she saw it.  He put his attention to me.    “Do it right, though.  If you want to spend the night figuring it out, and then seeing me at the shop, we can do it that way.  Although…” he trailed off.

“The boss,” his wife explained.

“The boss?” I asked.

“We’re free, here,” she said, implying they were expensive somewhere else. 

At least, that’s how I read it.  I nodded, as if I understood.  I looked around.  Well, we were all wage-slaves to someone, I guess.   I took a breath, composing my thoughts.

He held up his hand as if to stop me from saying.  “I know one of them is about the Dragon,” he said.

“That wasn’t a lucky guess,” his wife winked at me.  “It’s not often we entertain an actual Dragon slayer in the house.”

“Trouble is, you only get them on Sundays,” the Questor said. 

“Lawyers aren’t always nice,” I retorted, recognizing the quote.

“But they can be, for a price,” his wife picked it up.

“Not rules-lawyers, I hope,” the Questor said.  “Let me answer that one for you.” 

I was looking for it, and so I was ready to see it.  A flicker in his dark eyes, like a flame wavering behind them.  Like Peredur?  Was the Questor’s trait related to the Dragons? 

He wasn’t looking at me, or anything in this world, that was for certain.  I could feel something like a brush of the Beyond.  It was like opening a door, but it was done within some kind of other structure.  It was more like pushing a paintbrush heavy with paint, that kind of smooth cool sensation as you put down the first coat.  It didn’t have a sound to it, just the sensation.

“The path to the cave is coated with ash, and her jewels no longer can defy the darkness.  The entrance is blocked by the roots of the forest, and thorns dig deep into her nest.  They remain locked in eternal battle, neither able to breathe or grow.  Fire would free her, but the ones who came before freed fire, instead.”  He shuddered and took a breath, and the flickering of his eyes quieted and was no longer visible.  “I can almost see her,” he said, as he came back.  “She’s hurt, but it’s a Fisher King sort of hurt, an eternal wound.  It’s like…”

I shook my head.  “It’s like she tore out her own heart.  More Davey Jones in that popular pirate flick.”

“She can’t die that way?” he asked.

I saw his wife smile and shake her head, sadly. 

“I’m pretty sure her lover did it in some kind of synchronicity.  No.  I think…”  I put some pieces together.  “Artur’s still alive, then.  Holding her back.  He had some kind of ancient grudge of the forest against her.  I think she broke some sort of cosmic rules.  We had to free the fire, though.  I don’t remember any jewels.”  Thorns.  Doloise.  “Man, I wish I knew if Peredur had set me up on this, or if he’s just an opportunist.”

The Questor’s wife’s eyes narrowed.  “Peredur?” she asked.

“Uh, yeah.  Interfering Dragon with a grudge against a Shadow King.  Know him?”

She closed her book and stood up.  I glanced at the title, but all it was was some kind of travelogue-style journal of some sort.  After kissing her daughter on the forehead as she went by, she passed the doorway into another part of the house.  I looked at the Questor.

He shrugged.  “Maybe she’s looking up his e-mail.  You’d never believe her little black book.”

I shook my head.  “I’ve dealt with wizards.  I’d totally believe it.”

“What’s the second question?” he asked.

“Speaking of little black books,” I said, pulling the slip of paper out of my pocket, “tell me where that leads.”

He stared at it for a few minutes, and then sent it back.  “Who did you annoy?” he asked.

“Oh boy, you want a list?”

He chortled.

(164) Who Do You Love?

I flinched.

“I don’t try and make enemies.  I, um, have a Dragon on my metaphorical tail.  Peredur wants me for something, Naul probably has a legitimate beef with me.  I don’t know if Peredur counts as hostile, though, given I lost him his pretty fairy.  I was paid by some old-fashioned Russian sorcerors, but that doesn’t mean they were happy with my services.  My ex- runs a coven who is in the middle of a witch war and she seems to have some kind of vendetta against me.  I was set up against the Shadow King.   I staked a vampire out in the sun for a while to get some answers.  She might hold a grudge.  Some -cubi have my worst interests at heart.  My could-have-been-an-ex- is officially dead, although her phone called me and I haven’t called it back.  I’ve been told her death was a ruse.  That’s just in the last few months, let alone days,” I sighed.

“You keep busy,” he said, nodding.  He held back the slip of paper to me.

“Oh, you know, it’s important to keep a hand in,” I said, hoping the sardonic tone explained everything.  I took the slip and put it back in my pocket.  “What is it?”

“Minus one handbasket, I’d say it was a pretty sincere threat.”

I took it right back out of my pocket and placed it on the armrest of the couch.  “You mean…”  I put it into context, and then took it back out. “That’s a floating place?”

“Marlowe’s Doctor may have had the right of it.”  He shrugged.

“I say we make our own torments,” his wife said, coming back into the room and the conversation.  She had something in her hand, a strange rock-like thing with an edge, kind of micro-obelisk-ish.  If that’s a word.  (Saying it aloud is hard to do after eating crackers, I bet.)

“I don’t know if it’s a path I could set anyone upon,” the Questor half-smiled.

“Don’t mind him,” his wife said, sitting next to me.  “He’s an atheist.”

I couldn’t help but make a surprised laugh.  “I think you’re looking at a bigger picture than I can,” I said, finally, to the Questor.  “Not that I’ve dealt really with non-manifest Powers.  I just hear stories.”

He grinned.  “I try not to take anything on faith.”

His wife rolled her eyes.  “Here,” she said, putting the rock into my hand.  I considered snatching my hand away at the last minute, but she was quick.

It felt warm, very warm, and almost as if some kind of heartbeat were pulsing through it.  “What is it?”

“A tooth.  I’d say about four warriors worth,” she grinned.  “It’s not a major canine or anything.  Anyway, I’m only letting you borrow it, not bury it.  Next time Peredur comes a-calling, you have some leverage.”  She tilted her head.  “You’ll want to give me something in return so the pendulum swings freely and not at an angle.  I’ll similarly keep it in trust.”  She glanced at her husband.  “It feels really weird to ask for such things.  Why is it always that calling out the rules sounds so ridiculous?”

He chortled, but stayed quiet.

I pulled out the rock the Small Folk had given me and gave it to her without hesitation.  “It’s a wish, I think.”

She held it up to her eyes and I could feel things moving around in the air as it was inspected on several different levels.  It was like a music-box melody, with tiny little “pings” as the cylinder rotated and pushed bits of metal away.  “A fair trade,” she said.  “And both gifts perilous,” she smiled and I saw her teeth.

“We only make the most interesting friends,” the Questor murmured to her.  They clasped hands for a moment, smiling at each other.  I smiled, too.

“What is your next step?” the Questor’s wife asked.

“Uh… I hadn’t thought that far ahead,” I admitted.  I pulled out my phone.  “I’ve been making lists.”

“Things to do, promises to keep, how many miles before you can sleep?” she asked, teasingly.

“Well, yes, and, yes, and, no.”

“Can I make a suggestion?”

“Try and stop her,” the Questor grinned.  She slapped at the air near him.

“Sure,” I said, bemused.

“You are in no danger here.  You will be in no danger, short of a Dragon, sleeping in your hotel room tonight.  Get some rest.”  She seemed quite sure of this, and I suspect it wasn’t just digging up a tooth that took so long in the back.

“Am I allowed to thank you?”

“What, do I look like a fairy?” she asked, with a hint of what I always thought was a New York accent.

I shrugged, grinning.  They look however they want to look.

“Alright, I’ve been accused of being a little fey at times.   Anyway, I understand you don’t want to be a wizard.  I have had those moments, myself.”

“About twice a month, if I recall correctly,” the Questor suggested.

“Shush!” She grinned at him, then turned back to me.  “Once I took on the mantle I owed too many favours to get out of it again,” she said, adding, “Even if I knew how.  You’ve been marked.”  She made sure I knew it.  I nodded.  “Until whatever it is is truly relinquished, the kinds of things that are happening to you, and no, I don’t know or care what all of them are, will keep happening.”

“So I’m stuck being a weirdness magnet until I somehow get rid of the invisible blot of Caine?”

“Well, that’s a way of putting it,” she said, her grin turning wry.  “But you’re not Job or any martyr.”  She looked me straight in the eye, just long enough for me to see that she was serious without it becoming anything else.  “You could pick up the mantle, such as it is.”

I shook my head.

“What if I said wizards are made, not just born?” she asked.  “Why are you so afraid of it?”

(165) Ain’t Afraid o’Nothin’

“I’m not afraid, exactly.” The words seemed to come hard.  “I just wouldn’t be very good at it.  I’m happy being a small fish.”

“Don’t tempt her,” the Questor grinned.

“Bah.  There’s no room in the tank,” she said.  She leaned back and looked at me.  “Really?” she asked, with an eyebrow cocked high.

“Why doesn’t anyone believe me when I say I’m uncomfortable with the power I have?”  I said.  I hadn’t really ever said it that way before, and I was surprised it had come out that way this time.

She nodded slowly.  “You should be.  We usually think of Openers as dangerous.  Incanters, summoners, taking from the Outside, but you, you crippled and nearly destroyed a Dragon.  Not to say there aren’t other Powers, but even the word Dragon summons, if you forgive the term, images of the fears of mankind.  A Dragon makes many enemies and few friends, but those friends are now warned about you.  Your name is spoken in places that speak languages even the wise fear, Gandalf might say.”  She smiled a little.

“So you’re saying I have powerful enemies?  I kind of got that one on my own,” I rolled my eyes.

“Wouldn’t being a wizard tap you into the kind of power to handle them?  Or are you more scared of yourself than you are of anything that might strike at you?”  There was a smile hinting at her lips.

I got the feeling that there was some kind of test in this.  “I don’t even get the choice of fading and leaving for the West.”

“California’s too delicately balanced.  It’s a minefield.”  She shook her head.  “You’re not getting the One Ring, E.  Have you tried to close the door, such as it is, on your mark?”

That was an interesting idea.  I shook my head.  “Could I?”

“You could ask me to wipe it out, or find someone to transfer it to, willing or unwilling.  Play your enemies against themselves.  You could do a lot of things.”  She didn’t answer my question.  “The Questor,” she waved at her husband, “gave you several free answers.  That in itself could worry your foes.”

I hadn’t thought of that.  We were just folks making good conversation, but on one level, she was absolutely right.  “So what’s the advice?”

“Honestly, I’d like to counsel you to become a wizard, but I don’t take apprentices and it’d be irresponsible otherwise.   That leaves me with an old saw.  Be yourself.”

“That’s easy enough to say,” I pointed out.  “After all, I don’t really know how to be anyone else.”

“Bah. You’re a gamer,” she retorted.  “You need to really be yourself.  Learn your talent inside and out.  Don’t let it control you or scare you.  Suffice it to say, I think you’re a force for good or I would never have let you cross the threshhold.”  She seemed really scary for a moment, despite being just an
average looking woman sitting on a worn couch.  I believed her.
“If I’m not up to being a wizard, I’m not sure about being a ‘force for good.'”

“Easy with the scare quotes, mister.  We are human beings and we have a choice.  We can work with, against, or just surrender to the flow of things.  Each of those things are important at the right time, at the right instant, and none of us know what that time is.”

“The whole mythology of free will?” I asked.

“Good choice of words.  If you’d just said myth, I would have kicked you in the knee.” She gestured with her foot.  “I think it might touch on that, but even without the context of soul and the behaviouralism inherent in that system, that’s a lot of what makes us human to each other.  It’s how we act when we get to that crux.  You had to free the fire.  It didn’t do Prometheus or Dog or the Sparrow any good, did it?”  It was a sad smile.  “And what comes from outside our worlds has no reason to play by our rules.  They are outside the system, immune to the flow, not part of our cycles, not with the interests of our world in mind.  Like, um, literally.  So, for me, in defining that good or evil thing, I have the good of my world in mind.  You’re a force for it.  Suck it up.”

I grinned.  “Does that mean I get a superhero emblem and maybe a theme song?”

She mock-glared at me.  “I’m sure I could get the kids to whip something up, if you don’t mind being called something as obvious as Hero Man of the Hero Kingdom of Hero Men in Hero World.  I blame it on their father and his inability to find names for his characters.”  She turned the mock glare over to him.

He shrugged, grinning.

“Yeah, yeah, `Nothing wrong with heroes that Batman or the Green Arrow can’t solve.’  That’s practically a motto.”  She sighed.  “Alright, it’s long past time for dessert.  I’m going to make some ice cream sundaes, and then start the kids on their baths.”  She got up and moved towards the kitchen.

“Um, she is aware that they’ve both been members of the JLA, right?” I asked the Questor.

“She had too early a Frank Miller influence on her superheroes, I think,” the Questor.

“It was the smartest question I had brainpower for, I think.”  I yawned.

“Just don’t bring up Superman,” he warned, still smiling.  “She has opinions.”  He stretched out his legs for a moment, then took the dishes into the kitchen.

“Do you like chocolate syrup?” she asked from the doorway.

“Yes.  What, no `eye of newt’ and `wing of bat’?” I teased.

“Dragon’s-blood orange?” she teased.

“Just like mom used to make,” I retorted.

“I can also burn you a grilled cheese sandwich if you’d like.  I’m good with that.”  She disappeared back into the kitchen, in a purely mundane fashion.  That, at least, was like most of the wizards I knew.  I’ve seen some lairs, and some labs, but you still needed the occasional PB&J.  Even wizards had to eat.  Invisible servitors still had to be taught how to scramble your eggs just right.

(166) The Tower

I stared at the screen at the hotel, and put on the Food Network for background noise.  I had had the strangest run of what I would normally have considered luck, but after a night with the Questor and his family, understood was magic.  Several kinds of magic, really.  Good conversation, good food, all of that was a magic we folk who aren’t wizards share.  Of course, the full set of green lights on the way back, the upgraded suite, the little perks, that was the kind of magic wizards could share and too often didn’t.  I didn’t know what the karmic repercussions were, but the whole, “The aggravations are kept to a minimum,” feel of it seemed like a blessing more than a spell.

I let the comforting buzz of Kitchen Stadium fill the air while I leaned back on the extra pillows I hadn’t needed to ask for from room service.  I think the secret ingredient was spoo or targ heart or something.  I wasn’t really paying attention.   I was thinking of Gideon and the monsters of Midian a la Clive Barker, honestly, having verified the contents of my hotel room’s desk drawer.  (And checked for signs of bedbugs.  Maggie got me into that way of thinking from her day job.   How I long sometimes for the bliss of ignorance.)

The phone on the desk rang.

I ignored it.  It simply couldn’t be for me.  Someone who wanted to call me would have used my cellphone.  I checked to make sure I hadn’t missed anything, idly, and then slid it back onto the table.

It rang again.  Someone was trying to get ahold of someone who had left this room, I decided.   It was too late for any courtesy call.

I let it ring a third time before curiosity got my tongue and killed the cat, or whatever the phrase is.

“You never called me back,” Sylvie said.

“You were supposed to be dead,” I said, feeling very nervous.  The Questor’s wife said I was safe from anything less than a Dragon.  I had believed her.  I was sitting in my boxers half-watching delicious blue bantha ice cream being prepared for the dessert portion of the competition.

Of course, magic can’t fix the human things you messed up.

“Oh, that.  Look, Maggie’s crazy.”

That wasn’t a newsflash.  “I always thought so.  Have you seen the way she drives?”

“No, she’s got some kind of rage-on for you.  I got some help from a… friend,” I knew without even asking that she meant an Other ally I wouldn’t approve of, “and tried to leave the coven.  I guess you got caught in the cross-fire.”

“You had to fake your own death in order to leave?  I think I saw this cult in this movie, once.   And you’re calling to apologize for me taking the fall?”  I was suspicious.  “How in the coldest Peruvian afterlives did you get my number?”

“You’re, um, well, you’re bugged.  In a magical way.  We lost track of you earlier this evening, but the auguries found you again.  I was calling to try to tell you not to come back.”

“What?  Since when am I in a spy novel?”

“You let a witch help you in your convalescence.  Do you know how many bandages you left lying around?  At least you need to skip out of town for a while.  I’m serious.  After the blow-up between Maggie and Matana, and the whole Rohana thing, you’re on her hit list.”

“You make it sound so literal,” I gulped.  “What Rohana thing?”

“Um, your girlfriend, right?  Who lives with Joy, Maggie’s Second?”

I remembered Joy only vaguely.  The Magster didn’t share well, and I got the impression (the few times I had actually listened to coven gossip) that she more had an understudy than any assistance.  Joy wasn’t one of my favourites, and in fact, I remembered her as kind of mean.

Wait.   Rohana lived with Joy?  My girlfriend was some other girl’s girlfriend?  I wanted to say it wasn’t an unpleasant thought, exactly, but I was kind of feeling weird about it.  Really, except for its inevitability in adult video design, I had never really thought of anything like that happening to me.   On the other hand, Rohana didn’t seem the type to like mean girls.  Not that I had any right to determine Rohana’s preferences.  I liked that she seemed to like me, because that gave me license to like her.  So there was probably a whole lot to Joy that I didn’t know, and I was just about to give her a pass on the mean thing I couldn’t remember, except that if she was also part of Mag’s coven she might be trying to kill me.  What if she knew Rohana was cheating on her with a guy?  My ticket to death city was about to be validated.

“Uh, E?”

Oh, I was involved in a conversation.  “Sorry, I was thinking.”

“Well, do it fast, and do it right,” she snapped. “Oh, I’m sorry,” she immediately apologized.  “You have no idea how stressed I am.  There’s so much happening and I’m suddenly in the middle of it.  I thought… I thought it would be different.”  She sounded lonely and sad for a moment.

“Of course they bite.  What did you expect them to do?  Grant wishes?”  I can’t have any of my chivalric tendencies manipulated like that.

“What?”

“It’s a reference to a movie.  Nevermind.”  I sighed.  “All my stuff is back at my place.  It would have to be pretty convincing to have me leave it behind.”

“Fire?  Flood?  Blood?”

“Ah, the terrible trio.  Now we are on to threats,” I said, and an anger took me.  “Look, I don’t care what kind of games you guys are playing.  Stay out of my way, and I’ll stay out of yours.  I’m not a witch, I’m not involved in your war, and I’ll handle the Shadow King my own way.”

“Your own way,” she repeated.  “You can’t have it, you know.”

“Yeah, it’s Shadow King, not Burger King.”

“Don’t say I didn’t warn you.”

“Ditto,” I said, and I hung up on her.  Who did she think she was, anyway?

I stared at the phone for a moment as I realized that was indeed a good part of the question.

(167) Oneiromancy-schmancy

I woke up and stared at the phone on the desk next to the bed. I thought I had caught a flash of the message light, but it was dark. In the background, the battle of Kitchen Stadium was still raging.

I had believed the Questor’s wife when she said I was safe. It was rare for a Dream sending to be dangerous, and honestly it was hard to tell how much was sending and how much was dream. It was considered a chink in the armor of many wizardly beings, though, since so few remembered to put up a guard. (Maggie did. She said it kept her from being able to have more prescient dreams, but it did protect her from a variety of minor curses and banes. Banes were apparently negatively oriented charms, which could be both physical and psychological in nature.)

I’d read enough psychology to know that there was no way I could tell if there was something more or less “real” about the dream. I thought there was, but the dialogue wasn’t quite right. I wasn’t going to call up the Questor at (glancing at my cellphone) dark o’clock and ask if I’d been dream-warded by his wife. We were tentative buds, but not bros.

I thought about calling Sylvia’s cell phone. Had it been on her? Had it gone with the police? I had driven here carefully. Which meant I didn’t care about the speed limit unless the cars around me did, but I kept having this guilty feeling that there ought to be a warrant out for me or something. I didn’t like it when magic and the legal system butted heads. Not just because of that Swamp Thing in Gotham City bit, but because the magic world always felt kind of underground. Clandestine, that was the word. Some have it that people outside the culture would come at it with pitchforks and torches, but I don’t think that’s true.

I have a hammer and everything I see is a nail. I think if people were clued in and closed their darn kitchen cabinets, we’d have less spaces inbetween. I’ve heard a lot that a closed life doesn’t have room for magic to creep in, I guess. It’s a perspective. I think that science is pretty darn magical, and that’s even when I understand it, Mr. Clarke. (Oh, and for the record, when I was in the kitchen of Mr. Questor, I saw his wife close the cabinets behind him.)

I look at the world and I see magic. I see magic that frightens me, but mostly, I see magic that gives me hope. I see the magic that Barrie said create fairies, I see the fabulous colors of the sunsets against the mountains and know the magic there.  I see the magic between a smile and shy bowing of the head.  I see the magic of shadows on the sheets.  Doloise was a creature of magic, and yet there was the shimmer of her laughter when she watched the cavorting of meerkats as edited and made into, well, magic.  I like the magic of a hot fudge sundae when you put one of those plastic red spoons right through the whipped cream, make sure you have the proper number of nut pieces, and then pop it into your mouth, enjoying the alchemy as it hits your pleasure centers.

Man, I was hungry.  Just look at those dishes up on the television.  Ignore the judges because they never have any taste. Ahem.  So to speak.  It was too late for a run to an ice cream shop and too late for room service.  (Which is a joke, if you ask me.  Aren’t hotels like a 24-hour project?  Don’t they have people to handle the bizarre cravings of the penthouse suite?  “Jeeves, I need a sirloin brazed on both sides for 30 seconds and then put in the microwave for 4 minutes, some potatoes mashed with sour cream made from the milk of a recent primigravida, some shallots minced with a silver knife, and a large double scoop of mint chocolate.” “Very good, sir.  Would you be wanting the whipping cream also whipped with mint and a hint of ginger? And the chocolate waffle cone?” “Jeeves, do you even have to ask?” “Of course not, sir.”  Of course, this was a budget motel and I think ‘Jeeves’ anymore is a title, not an actual name.)

I had seen an all-day cafe on my way into town, but I wasn’t really motivated into leaving my bed.  I needed my sleep if I was going to make it back home in the morning.

Why was I in a hurry to get back?  Sylvie’s comments came back to me for a moment.  I’d had houseplants, but no fish, no pets, an unofficial girlfriend who my dream says lives with someone else, and a war.  Memories.  I could get my books packed.  Really, I could probably pay for some movers.  The job search sucked everywhere, but I could float for a while.  I’d be farther away from my sister, and Ed, and my mother, but for two of the three it was really kind of a blessing.  Plus I was pulling Ed too deep into this stuff.  He might be better off without me.

Whoa.  That kind of thinking was not the kind I was used to making.  What was with that?  That, my friends, was a spiral.  I could blame low blood sugar, I guess.  Nothing but to go get some of the trip snacks, which meant leaning over to where I’d put my briefcase.

Sugar bar in hand (it claimed to be a “granola” bar, but we all know better) I watched as my favorite Iron Chef was marked the winner.  I ate it while flipping through the channels for something else to watch.   This time of night there were an awful lot of commercials, as if the late hour weakened the usual resistances against buying things, or maybe because no one creates good movies for the 2am crowd.  (“Jeeves and the Giant Chocolate Sundae.”  It’s a small art film, designed for people hungry for the Queen’s ice cream delicacies.)

Eventually I fell asleep.  And I dreamed.

(168) Hallucination Delite

I dreamed.
I dreamed like I took 5-HTP or a full dose of Nyquil.
“It would be so…”  The words left my mouth and I wasn’t sure what I was saying.  I was on top of the mountain again, looking down at the glassy reflection of the lake and the Water Prince’s domain.
“Then what stops you?” she asked.  She leaned back on a grey fuzzy blanket amongst the strange spiky purple flowers that only grew in a sorceror’s dreams.  Or in that weird sculpture between Buchtel and Colorado Blvd., near the freeway.
I smiled at the Questor’s wife.  “They don’t get me that easy.”
“Run, run, run, as fast as you can,” Magda said.
“I don’t afraid of you,” I said, butchering the language between the dual urge of panic and laughter.  I called the Prince to attention with an extension of will that felt kind of like when you do your first really graceful move in tai chi.  His head broke the waters, and Maggie frowned.
“Yes, but you do afraid of your failures,” she said, ignoring the lake as it eased into placidity.  She gestured, and I turned to see the horrific black, burnt ground where I left them, Artur and Doloise both, to die of smoke inhalation and fire.  The first would probably still kill them, and fire, that was our weapon against the Darkness Beyond.
“Fire purifies,” the Questor’s wife reminded me.  She was wearing shades.
Maggie frowned.  “Fire burns.  Anyone who says it purifies hasn’t felt the cleansing flame.”
“Where are your scars, Magdalene?” I asked, quietly.
“Just because you dig at the wounds women leave in you doesn’t mean I’m as foolish,” she said.
“Who stole your heart?  Because you certainly don’t have one,” I said, and I turned my back on her, slowly.  I tried not to let my shoulderblades twitch in anticipation.
I wandered down the path to the still-burning entrance, and knelt down to where the earth was made black and grey from ash and loam.  It seared my hands, but only the surface, and I suddenly saw a field of dandelion blooms, in full color.  I thrust my hands into the dirt.  It wasn’t that I ignored the pain; I was transmuting it.  I was pushing it through the ground and transforming the heat and the fire into life.  A golden carpet of flowers somewhat like buttercups, peppered with little purple spiky bits.  Saffron flowers, curled in heavy ringlets of petals, like Doloise’s hair.
The heat rushed through me, leaving me weak.
“It would be so…” I started to say, and then the Shadow King sat across from me.
The castle of bone and stone hung over us.  “Who broke the bread?” I asked him.
“Dragons fear few Powers,” he said.
“And wizards?” Ed’s mom asked.  She rapped at the bread with her knuckles.  “Made out of bone and blood.  A trick within a trick.”  She grinned at me.  “You are what you eat.”
“Wizards fear Dragons,” I said, slowly.
“Do they?” Peredur asked.  “Wizards, I find, tend to be more pragmatic.   Begone,” he said to the Shadow King, who wavered in the sun, and then blew away like a puff of smoke.  He sat on the bench across from me.
“Wizards are still crunchy and can be covered in ketchup,” I said.  I pulled away a little from the table.
“That’s not how you cook a wizard, my dear,” Ed’s mom said.
“You cook a vampire in the sun,” Matana agreed.  She stood behind Ed’s mom.
Ed’s mother didn’t blink.  “A bit of garlic, to taste.  Did you know why the martian needed salt?” she asked me.
“Is that a riddle?” I asked.
Peredur chuckled, a deep rumbling sound.  “I do prefer things flame-broiled.”
“You’re a Dragon.  You can have it your way,” I relinquished my seat, giving a mock-bow.
“Would you rather be a King?” Viktor asked, “than a wizard?”  His accent was strong.
“I would rather be independently wealthy and rather handsome, if we’re making lazy wishes,” I said.  “Which rules out royalty, I think, one or the other.  In-breeding and bad economies kind of had it in for the family feudal.”
“We like the breeding part,” the Messenger said, even more beautiful in the sunlight than in the dark, if possible.  I felt it hard to breathe, and to breathe it was… well, you know.  To breed it was… heh.  “Except that you’d deny yourself pleasure and procreation, prohibitively.”
“Oh, I indulge, I just have standards,” I said.  I watched the sun set behind the mountains she stood in front of, leaving everything touched with a magnesium blindness as it went out.  She brought her own brilliance with her.
“And these standards have protected you?  Pleased you?  Promoted you?” she asked.
“Maybe you have a point.  But I don’t stick anything starting with a ‘p’ of mine in inhuman things.  It’s a little rule I’ve got.  Picked it up somewhere, took the rust off it, and now it’s mine.”
“Really?” Rohana pointed to Maggie.  “Humanity is not her strong suit, dear.”
“I could see her in a human suit,” I agreed.
Maggie smiled.  “And yet I don’t dabble with the devils or the divine,” she said, pointing over to Sylvia.  “I, at least, keep out everything but the elements.”
“It’s been a fascinating education,” Sylvie breathed out.  “Death and life, light and dark, black and white, and beyond.”
“Beyond is where we lose sight of the scale,” I said.  “When you can’t define the ends of your spectrum, you’ve lost your connection.  That’s why I can’t become a wizard.”  I turned to the Questor’s wife.  “I’m sorry.  I know you’d be an awesome mentor.  But magic needs people who are anchored in reality.  We’re the pillars that keep you and the wizards who are doing good from drifting away into the Beyond.  Into thinking that it’s OK to bud up with them,” I pointed at Peredur and Matana and the Messenger, and even towards where the Shadow King dissipated.  “They’re not human.  But we are, and I don’t want to lose sight of it.  It’s tempting, just like the Messenger, and just like her, we come up ultimately empty.”
And I dreamed.