“I don’t need—” Stile started to protest. But he was cut off by a glance from the serf.
“Thank you,” Sheen said. “I’ll pick them up at the nearest delivery tube when we leave the capsule.” She gave him Merle’s code, and the connection broke.
“Do I look that haggard?” Stile asked plaintively. “I had a good night’s rest.”
“Mellon is not concerned about your appearance. Obviously something is afoot. Maybe the Lady Citizen has placed an order for an intoxicating or sexually compelling drug, and this is the counteragent.”
“Maybe,” Stile agreed morosely. “Sheen, Merle is pretty enough in her rejuvenated state, and I’m sure she has a good mind and lots of experience. But I’m simply not interested in the sort of liaison she desires. How do I get out of this one without imperiling my Citizenship?”
“What you are interested in is not very important,” she said. “Merle does not want any romance; she merely wants an act of sex to add to her collection. The practical thing is for you to give it to her.”
“And lose my bet,” Stile said.
Sheen looked startled. “Oh, my—I’m starting to think like a person! I forgot all about that! Of course you can’t oblige her.” She seemed relieved.
“If I oblige anyone in that way, it will be you.”
“Any time.”
“After we’re decently married.”
“It’s not a decent marriage.”
The capsule arrived, sparing him further comment. They got out at a small private terminal. From here there was access to three small domes, one of which was Merle’s.
Sheen went to the delivery chute and punched the coding for Mellon’s package. A small vial fell into her hand. Her brow furrowed as she brought the item back. “This is no cosmetic, sir. It’s—” She broke off. “Let’s move quickly, sir.”
Suddenly gas hissed into the room from barred vents. Sheen launched herself at the entrance to Merle’s dome. It was locked closed.
“I don’t have the facility to analyze this gas,” she cried. “But I’ll bet it’s not cleaning fog. Breathe this, sir.” She opened the vial, holding it under his nose.
Vapor puffed out. Stile took the vial, sniffing it as the first waft of the other gas reached him. The vial’s vapor was sweet and pleasant; the other gas was sour and stinging.
Sheen returned to the locked door. She opened her front cabinet, the left breast swinging out on hinges to reveal an array of small tools. Even in this crisis, Stile marveled at the completely womanish texture of that breast, when in fact it was a mere facade. Robotry was quite sophisticated.
In a moment Sheen had burned through the lock with a tiny laser unit and had the passage open. Stile hurried through. Sheen shut the door behind them, blocking off the gas, and closed up her breast cabinet. She was whole and normal and soft again.
Stile felt woozy and sick. The antidote in the vial had helped, but that poison gas was nasty stuff. Someone had tried to exterminate him!
Merle appeared. She was wearing a translucent negligee that did wonders for a body that hardly needed them. Stile noticed but hardly cared. He suffered himself to be led inside the Citizen’s dome.
“I knew they were going to try something,” Merle said. “I thought it would be at the Game Annex. I tried to get you here to safety, but they were too quick. I couldn’t say anything on the holo; even a private line is only as private as the technology behind it.”
“Our staff forwarded the antidote, sir,” Sheen told her.
Stile sat in the comfortable chair where they had placed him, lacking initiative to do more than listen.
“My staff has found a better neutralizer,” Merle said. She brought a breathing mask. “Use this, Stile.” She fitted it over his face.
Immediately his head began to clear and his stricken body recovered.
“The official indication is a malfunction in the cleaning apparatus,” Merle continued. “It’s not supposed to fog when anyone is there, and this time the wrong chemicals were used. We won’t be able to trace it, but I know the cause. There are activist Citizens who want you out of the way, Stile; I fear this is but the first attempt. You should be safe here, however.”
Stile removed the breathing mask and smiled weakly. “I thought you had another notion, Merle.”
“Oh, I do, I do. We have been through this before. But I do like you personally, Stile, and wish you well. You’re the most refreshing thing to appear on the scene in some time. Fortunately the two notions are not incompatible.”
“I fear they are, Merle. You have helped me get into a difficult situation.” Stile’s head had cleared, but his body remained weak; it was easier to talk than to act. He believed he could trust this woman.
“Do tell me!” she urged. “I love challenges.”
“Are we private here?”
“Of course. I am neither as young nor as naïve as I try to appear.”
“Will you keep my confidence?”
“About the liaison? Of course not! That must be known, or it doesn’t count.”
“About whatever I may tell you of my situation.”
“I can’t guarantee that, Stile. I know something about your situation already.”
“Maybe you should tell me what you know, then.”
“You are known as the Blue Adept in the other frame. Oh, yes, I have been to Phaze; my other self lacked rejuvenation and modern medicine and died a few years back of natural complications, freeing me. But magic is not for me; I remained there only a few hours and retreated to the safety of my dome here. The germs there are something fierce! I do, however, have a fold of the curtain passing through my property. I pay a harpy well to update me periodically on Phaze developments. This is how I learned more of you, once my interest in you was roused. You have been honeymooning with your lovely Phaze wife, but Adepts have been laying snares for you, until recently you disappeared into the demesnes of the goblins. My informant thought you dead, though she reports a dragon and a hawk emerged safely and flew rapidly southeast, eluding pursuit by Adept sendings. Evidently you survived by crossing the curtain. You seem to be a figure of some importance in Phaze—and perhaps in Proton too, judging by this assassination attempt.”
“What could you pay a harpy to serve you?” Stile asked, intrigued by this detail.
“She loves blood-soaked raw meat, but is too old and frail to catch it herself.”
“The others of her flock would provide,” Stile said, thinking of the harpy attack Clef had weathered upon his entry into Phaze. How important that entry had turned out to be!
“This one is a loner. No flock helps her.”
“Is she by chance your other self?”
Merle stiffened, then relaxed. “Oh, you have a sharp tongue, Stile! No, it doesn’t work that way, or I couldn’t cross. My other self was exactly like me, only she seemed older. She did befriend the harpy, and when she died I assumed the burden of that friendship. It is not easy to get along with a harpy! Now will you tell me what I do not know about yourself?”
“Will you accept that information in lieu of the sexual liaison?”
“No, of course not, Stile. I accept it in exchange for the protection I am offering you here, and for the information I am giving you about the Citizen plot against you.”
She would not be swayed from her objective! She wanted another notch for her garter. He would have to give her the full story and hope it would persuade her to help him without insisting on the liaison. She might be displeased to learn about his bet in that connection, but at least it was no affront to her pride.
There was a chime and glimmer of light in the air. “That’s my holo,” Merle said. “Call for you, Stile, blocked by my privacy intercept.”
“Better let it through,” he said. “The enemy Citizens know I’m here anyway.”
The picture formed. It was the Brown Adept. “The creatures don’t believe me, Blue,” she said tearfully. “They think I’m with the bad Adepts, trying to fool
them. They are attacking my golems.”
Stile sighed. He should have known. “What would it take to convince them?”
“Only thee thyself, Blue. Or maybe one of thy close friends, or the Lady Blue—”
“No! The Lady Blue must remain guarded by the unicorns. The Adepts will be watching her.”
“Maybe Neysa. She’s friends with everybody.”
“The Herd Stallion won’t let her go.” Stile hardly objected to the care provided for Neysa in her gravid state. Then he had an idea. “Thy demesnes are near to the range of the werewolves, are they not? Kurrelgyre’s Pack?”
She brightened. “Sure, Blue. They come here all the time, hunting. But they don’t believe me either.”
“But if Kurrelgyre believed, his Pack would help. The other animals would believe him.”
“I guess so,” she agreed dubiously. “But thou wouldst have to tell him thyself.”
“I will,” Stile said. “Give me half an hour.”
Brown’s smile was like moonlight. “Oh, thank thee, Blue!”
“Nay, thank thee, Brown. It is an important service thou dost here.”
“Gee.” The happy image faded.
“So that’s the Brown Adept,” Sheen said. “A child. A cute child.”
“She’s a full sorceress, though,” Stile said. “Her golems are tough creatures.” He remembered his encounter with the golem shaped in his own image. He was glad to have those wooden men on his side, this time! He turned to Merle. “Now I have to explain to you my reason for not wishing to have this liaison, then hurry across your section of the curtain to straighten things out in Phaze.”
“No need to explain,” Merle said. “I can see you are busy, with people depending on you. I’ll chalk this one up to experience.”
“I do need your help,” Stile said. “So I want you to understand—”
“You shall have my help, Stile. If that sweet child believes in you, so must I. I’m sure she is not asking any quid pro quo.”
“Well, she may want a ride on a unicorn,” Stile said, wondering whether he could believe this abrupt change of heart on her part. “But you still deserve to know—”
“About your secret bet,” Merle said. “That’s what made it such a challenge, Stile. But if you lose your fortune and can’t do what you need to, that brown-eyed child will suffer, and I don’t want that on my withered conscience. I’ll show you to my corner of the curtain; that will get you neatly past the ambush awaiting you outside.”
Stile stood, taking her hand. “I really appreciate this, Merle.”
She drew him in for a kiss. “I think it was that child’s thee’s and thy’s. You did it too, when you answered her. Somehow that melts me. I haven’t been this foolish in decades.”
They were before the curtain. It scintillated across Merle’s huge round bouncy bed. No coincidence, that; she probably had a demon lover in the other frame. Beyond, Stile could discern the slope of a wooded hillside.
“How will I rejoin you?” Sheen asked.
“You’ll come with me,” Stile decided. “By now the enemy Citizens know how useful you are; they’ll be trying to take you out too.” He picked her up, strode across the bed, and willed himself through the curtain.
He stood on the forest slope, the inert robot in his arms. In Phaze, she was defunct. “Take this form of Sheen’s to the wolves’ demesnes,” he sang. This was simplified; what he intended was for them both to travel there.
They arrived in good order. The wolves were snoozing in the vicinity of a recent kill, while several of the cubs growled at a golem they had treed. Half a dozen roused and charged Stile, converting to men and women as they drew near.
“Greetings, Blue Adept,” Kurrelgyre exclaimed, recognizing him. “I see thou hast found a defective golem.”
Stile glanced down at Sheen, startled. “I suppose I have, friend. In the other frame she is my fiancée.”
“Ah, a bitch in every frame! Dost thou bring her here for animation by the Brown Adept?”
Again Stile was startled. Would such magic work? He would have to inquire. “I came to advise thee that I am at odds with the other Adepts, who seek to slay me. Thus I can not stay here long, lest they discover me and strike. Only the Brown Adept is with me, and I have asked her to spread warning to the tribes of the creatures of Phaze, whose help I may be needing soon.”
“Ooooww!” Kurrelgyre howled, glancing at the tree. “I turned her down—”
“I know,” Stile cut in. “I should have prepared better. Things have been very rushed. Now must I beg thee to help me by helping her. If thy wolves will go with her golems, to give them credence—”
“Aye, immediately,” Kurrelgyre agreed. He made a signal at the tree, and the cubs quickly retreated, allowing the golem to come down. “Had I but realized before—”
Stile clapped him on the shoulder. “I thank thee. Now must I flee.”
There was a wrenching. Oops—he had made an inadvertent rhyme, with Sheen leaning against him. Quickly he took better hold of her and willed himself to the Brown Demesnes. It worked; he landed neatly in the foyer of the wooden castle. The giant golem on guard did a double take, but managed to recognize him before clubbing him, and in a moment the Brown Adept was there.
“That’s not one of mine!” she exclaimed, seeing the inert Sheen in his arms.
“This is Sheen, my Proton fiancée. She was with me when thou didst call a little while ago. She’ll be all right when we cross the curtain. I just talked to Kurrelgyre, and the wolves will cooperate. Instruct thy golems; a wolf will go with each.”
“Oh, goody!” But her attention was focused on Sheen. “I don’t usually animate metal, but I can when I try. Of course her personality might not be the same—”
Stile had not intended to get into this now, but again he was intrigued. “Sheen always wanted to come to Phaze, but she’s scientific. Thy golems are magic, and won’t operate in Proton. I don’t think it could work.”
“Let me try, Blue. If I animate her, thou wilt not have to carry her.”
“I’m in a hurry, Brown. The hostile Adepts could spot me at any moment. There isn’t time—”
“Why dost thou not want to animate her here?” she asked with the direct naïveté of a child.
That stopped Stile. The Lady Blue, his wife, was in Phaze, yet she could cross to Proton, where she had met Sheen. There really was no conflict. “How fast canst thou do it?”
“She is full-formed.” Brown squinted at Sheen’s torso critically. “Very full-formed. I have only to lay on my hands and concentrate. Most of the time I spend fashioning a golem is carving it to shape before animation.”
“Try it, then. But if she is not herself—I mean, the golems can be—”
“Then will I deanimate her.” Brown leaned over Sheen, where Stile placed her on the ground, and ran her hands over the body. Then she pressed her fingers across the face.
Sheen stirred. Her eyes opened.
Stile stood back, abruptly nervous. Golems were non-living things, soulless ones animated only by magic Brown’s ability to make them function was phenomenal—but what monster in Sheen’s image might rouse here?
Sheen sat up, shaking her head. She saw Stile. “Oh, we’re back,” she said. “I must have been set back by the deactivation. I feel funny.”
She was herself! “Thou dost know me?” Stile asked, hardly daring to believe. A new golem would not have knowledge of him.
“Of course I know you, Stile! I’m not that forgetful, unless my memory banks get erased. And this child is the one who called you on holo. She—” Sheen broke off, surprised. “What is she doing here?”
“This is Phaze,” Stile said. “The Brown Demesnes.”
Sheen blinked. “I don’t believe that is possible. I can’t function across the curtain; you know that.”
“I animated thee,” the child said. “Thou art now a golem.”
Sheen looked around, taking in the scene. She saw the wooden walls of
the castle, and the golems standing near. “May I inspect this region?”
Stile was becoming nervous about the time. “Do it quickly, Sheen. Thou wilt be inert again if the enemy Adepts discover our presence here and attack.” He was almost fidgeting.
“I think they are distracted by other events,” Brown said. “They know not what my golems are doing.”
Sheen completed her survey extremely quickly. “There is no dome. The air is natural. This is the other world. Will I remain animate? I feel no different.”
“Yes,” the Brown Adept said. “My golems never die, unless they are destroyed.” Tactfully, she did not mention her ability to turn them off.
“Yet I am not alive,” Sheen concluded sadly.
“That is beyond the power of magic,” Brown agreed.
“And of science,” Stile added. “Now must we go.” He took Sheen’s hand and sang a spell to take them to a private section of the curtain. One thing he had done during his honeymoon was survey likely crossing places.
They landed in a secluded glade in the Purple Mountain foothills. “Now that’s an experience!” Sheen exclaimed. “It really is a magic land.”
“It really is,” Stile agreed. “Art thou able to cross the curtain by thyself now?”
Sheen tried, but could not. “I am not alive,” she repeated. “I have no power to do what living creatures do.”
Stile took her hand again and willed them across. They stood in a vehicle storage garage. “Do you remember?” he asked.
“I remember Phaze,” she said. “I have not changed. Only your language has changed.”
“So there is no loss of continuity as you shift from magic to science.”
“None at all. I am the same. I wish I were not.”
“Now let’s get that book of magic before we are diverted again. We’re close to a Game Annex terminal, by no coincidence. I can contact the Game Computer privately there.”
“Let me do it,” Sheen said. “There may be another ambush.”
“You’re my fiancée. I shouldn’t let you take all the risks.”
“Without you, I am nothing. Without me, you are a leading Citizen and Adept, capable of saving Phaze and helping my friends. Stand back, sir.”