CHILDREN, IT IS ONLY FITTING THAT YOU SHOULD know the stories of your ancestors. Here is the legend of Ctesiphon, who sought the unicorn’s horn of immortality for his beloved, Calixitea.
Ctesiphon lived in the ancient days of our civilization, in the great city of Aldebra. One day while listening to speeches in the forum he met the fair Calixitea, daughter of Agathocles and Hexica. The attraction between them was immediate and imperative. Love struck them as unexpectedly and powerfully as lightning. From that first day they were inseparable. Within a month Ctesiphon had approached Calixitea’s parents to ask her hand in marriage, asking for himself since his own parents had died in the great plague of ’08. Since the young man was wellborn and had a reasonable income, the parents consented. A date was set. And then Calixitea fell ill.
The finest doctors were consulted, as well as specialists from Asmara and Ptolomnaeus, where men are skilled in such filings. Their diagnosis was immediate and conclusive: Calixitea had contracted the rare disease known as galloping anisthemia. There was no cure. The victim would be dead within a week.
Ctesiphon was beside himself with grief and rage. When no reputable doctor would offer any hope, he went to the wizards, whose controversial practices were a frequent topic of discussion in the forum. And here he did not begin at the bottom, or even mid-list, but went straight to Heldonicles, reputed to be the greatest mage of his generation.
Heldonicles answered the door himself, since his latest apprentice had just recently left him after winning a million talents in the Aldebran Lottery. Not even wizardry is entirely proof against good fortune, though if Heldonicles had anticipated it, he might have done something about it: Agatus had been a good lad, and might have made a decent wizard himself. But it was always difficult to keep a good apprentice.
“What can I do for you?” Heldonicles asked, ushering Ctesiphon into his sitting room and gesturing at one of the low blocks of marble that served for seating.
“It is my sweetheart, Calixitea,” Ctesiphon said. “She is suffering from galloping anisthemia and the doctors say there is no cure.”
“They are correct,” Heldonicles said.
“Then how am I to save her?”
“It will be difficult,” Heldonicles said, “but by no means impossible.”
“Then there is a cure!”
“There is not,” Heldonicles said. “Not in the generally accepted meaning of the word, anyhow. To cure her, you must go to the root of the matter. Mortality is the real problem here.”
“And how am I to do anything about that?” Heldonicles settled back and stroked his long white beard. “To preserve one from mortality, a state of immortality must exist.”
“That’s impossible,” Ctesiphon said.
“Not at all,” Heldonicles replied. “You’ve heard of the unicorn, no doubt?”
“Of course. But I always thought it was a myth.”
“In the realm of magic,” Heldonicles said, “myth is the merest statement of fact. Ctesiphon, there exists a country where the unicorn dwells. The unicorn’s horn is an infallible conferrer of immortality. If you go to that country and bring back a horn, or even so much as a sliver of horn the size of your fingernail, that will suffice to save her.”
“If this is possible, why is it not done more generally?”
“There are several answers to that,” Heldonicles said. “Some men are simply too lazy, and would not stretch out their hands if heaven itself were within their grasp. Others might make the effort, but would not know that the opportunity exists. Because opportunity, young man, is a darting and an uncertain thing in the domain of magic. What was never possible may be done today, and not be possible again tomorrow.”
“Is that the only explanation?”
“There are others,” Heldonicles said. “Perhaps you’d care to study them someday. I have quite an interesting book on the subject. For now, there is a clear and immediate choice. Either you bring your beloved some unicorn horn or she is doomed.”
“And how do I go about that?” Ctesiphon asked.
“Ah, now we’re getting to it,” Heldonicles said. “Follow me to my laboratory.”
In the familiar surroundings of his laboratory, with its creaky wooden tables loaded with alembics, retorts, furnaces, and the bodies of small animals, Heldonicles explained that unicorns had once existed in this world, but had become extinct due to uncontrolled hunting of them. This had been a long time ago, and people had known a brief golden age when unicorn horn was plentiful, so the stories ran. Mankind had been extremely long-lived back then. What had happened to the Immortals? Heldonicles did not know. He had heard that ordinary people had resented them, for there was never enough unicorn horn for everybody. They had tortured many of them, and if they could not kill them, had contrived to make their lives so unpleasant that death itself seemed a tolerable alternative. Until at last the remaining Immortals had contrived a way to leave their home planet, to get themselves elsewhere, together with their herds of unicorns, to another world in another realm of reality, where unicorns could thrive in abundance and everyone shared in the benefits they brought.
“What is this place?” Ctesiphon asked.
“It is sometimes referred to as the country behind the East Wind.”
“And how does one get there?”
“Not easily,” Heldonicles said.
“I understand that. I suppose there’s no regular service between this place and that one.”
“Oh, there’s regular service, but only spirits can avail themselves of it. This place exists in another region of space and time entirely, and has no regular connections with our own. Not even traveling on the back of a dragon could get you there. However, there is a way for a person of much determination who is wilting to risk everything for his beloved.”
“I am that person!” Ctesiphon cried. “Tell me what I must do.”
“The first requirement for this, as for most other enterprises, is money. I will need all you have, all you can beg, borrow, or steal.”
“Why is so much wealth needed?” Ctesiphon wanted to know.
“To buy the materials that will be used when I cast the spell that will send you where you want to go. I ask nothing for myself. Not at this point.”
“Are you sure this magic will work?” Ctesiphon asked. “I have heard bad reports on magic.”
“Most of it is plain humbug and tomfoolery,” Heldonicles admitted. “But there is some, the very oldest, that works. To go that route is expensive, however, since the dearest ingredients are needed in conditions of utmost purity, and such does not come cheaply in this day and age.”
Heldonicles had to find money to buy oil of hyperautochthon, and two tail feathers from the Bird of Ill Omen, and seven crystalline drops of anciento, wrought at great expense from the inner bark of the hinglio tree, itself rare, and stored in little flagons of amber, themselves worth a king’s ransom. And there were more ingredients, the least of them too dear by half.
Ctesiphon procured these articles over a frantic two days, taking out a crippling loan at usurious rates to secure the final money he needed. At last, by the morning of the third day, he brought them all to the wizard, who declared himself satisfied and led Ctesiphon into his laboratory.
There he asked Ctesiphon if he was ready for this journey. Ctesiphon said he was but asked what price Heldonicles wanted for himself.
“I’ll let you know when I’m ready to name it,” the wizard said.
“But you won’t tell me what it’ll be?”
Heldonicles shook his head. “Magic is spur-of-the-moment, and so are the practitioners of it.” And with that Ctesiphon had to be content. He had often heard that when you dealt in magical matters, you had to beware the double whammy. But he saw no way of avoiding that, whatever it might be.
“If you help me save Calixitea’s life, you can have what you want of me. Even my life. Even my soul.”
“Perhaps it won’t go quite that far,” Heldonicles said. “But you
’re thinking along the right lines.”
The actual ceremony was elaborate and tedious and more than a little painful at times. But the wizard assured Ctesiphon that it was a one-shot; to return, Ctesiphon would need only click his heels together four times (reports of three heel clicks being all that was required are false; such reports have corrupted the ancient formula for the sake of a false simplicity) and say aloud, “Home again!”
Ctesiphon thought he could remember that. And then he was no longer able to think of anything, because the multicolored smoke of the wizard’s fires, burning in tall braziers, curled around him and he had to squeeze his eyes tight shut and sneeze violently. When he opened them again, he was in a different place.
Ctesiphon found himself standing on a high mountain pass in a place unknown to him. Behind him were deep mists. Ahead, there were sloping meadows dotted with clumps of ancient oaks and cut through here and there with bright streams of water. Scattered across that plain in their thousands he saw herds of unicorn.
Like a man in a daze, Ctesiphon picked his way through the mild-eyed creatures, and the wonder of diem was still on him when, further down the plain, he came across and entered the low stone city of the immortals.
The people had noted his progress and were waiting for him. “A visitor!” they cried, for even in the Land of the Immortals a tourist was a welcome sight. And this place was somewhat off the beaten track that leads to the twelve most famous sights of the Universe of Invention, and whose names cannot be spoken here.
In this land everyone looked about thirty years old and in the prime of life. There were no old people, and no children, either, for this race had lived so long that they had given up procreation as boring and old-fashioned, and even perversion had at last turned banal. But they were always ready for novelty, and the idea of giving some unicorn’s horn to Ctesiphon was clearly the most novel idea that had come along in a long time.
Everyone knows that unicorns shed their horns from time to time, or lose them in battle with the griffins; and everyone remembered that the immortals picked up these horns whenever they came across them, and put then in a special place. But what place was that? Hadn’t they buried them in a bronze casket under the northernmost point of the city wall? Or was that what they had done a century ago? No one could remember.
“But haven’t you written it down somewhere?” Ctesiphon asked.
“I’m afraid not,” said Ammon, a citizen who had appointed himself as spokesman.
Ammon hastened to reassure Ctesiphon, lest he think the less of them, that they all had excellent natural memories, nor had age robbed them of a scintilla of their intelligence. But the sheer accumulation of fact and detail, year after year, for uncounted centuries, left a mass of material in their brains too dense to navigate with the simple tool of natural recall. So they had all learned the art of forgetting old nonessential things so they could recall newer things, perhaps equally nonessential but at least current. One of the losses had been the location of all the shed unicorn horn.
Then someone remembered that they had devised a system to help them remember facts that weren’t of immediate importance but might be wanted someday. But what was the system? No one could remember, and their voices rose in the air, arguing, disagreeing.
Then a man stuck his head out an upper story window and said, “Excuse me, I was asleep. Did someone ask something about remembering something?”
“We need to know where the unicorn horns are kept!” they called back to him. “We devised a system to help us find facts like that.”
The man in the window nodded. “Yes, you devised a system, and you asked me to remember the system for you. That was my job and I am happy to say I did it well.”
“Then tell us where the unicorn horns are!”
“I do not know anything about that,” the man said. “I was only supposed to remember the system that would tell you who remembered that information.”
“Out with his name, then.”
“Do you want me to tell you the system?”
“No, you obtuse idiot, we only want the name of the man who remembers it for us and to hell with the system!” “Don’t get so excited,” the man said. “What you need is safely stored in the head of Miltiades.”
“Which Miltiades? Miltiades what?”
“The Miltiades you want is where you put him, in the Temple of Memory.”
“Never heard of it. Temple of what?”
“Memory. You see, I remembered that for you as well, and it wasn’t even required. It’s straight down the street, first left, second right, can’t miss it.”
To many in the crowd it didn’t seem the right way to go, but they followed the man’s directions, and, bringing Ctesiphon with them, went to the indicated place.
It was an abandoned building. They entered it and went through to an inner courtyard. Here there was nothing except a largish box.
Ammon opened the box. Within was the head of a man, in his thirties like the rest of them, and apparently in the prime of life despite the loss of most of his customary parts.
“You’ve come for me at last!” the head cried. “But what took you so long?”
“Sorry, Miltiades,” Ammon said, “I’m afraid we forgot you were here until that other fellow, I didn’t catch his name, the one who remembered you, told us to come here.” “You mean Leonidas,” Miltiades said. “Bless his incredible memory! But why did you come now?”
“This fellow here,” Ammon said, indicating Ctesiphon, “needs a unicorn’s horn, and we’ve got plenty of them somewhere, and by a natural chain of association we came to you to find out where they are kept.” “Unicom horns?” Miltiades said.
“Yes, we always used to save the unicorn horns, don’t you remember?”
“Of course I remember,” Miltiades said.
“Didn’t forget about the unicorn horns, did you, lying there in the dark?”
“Not a chance. What else was there to do but think about unicorns’ horns?”
“Specialization has its merits,” Ammon said, in an aside to Ctesiphon. “He would never have remembered otherwise.”
He turned to Miltiades. “Now be a good fellow, Miltiades, and tell us where they are.”
“Ah,” Miltiades said.
“What do you mean, ‘Ah’ ?”
“I mean, let me out and I’ll tell you.”
“Out of the box?” Ammon said.
“That’s right, out of the box.”
Ammon thought for a moment. “I don’t know. I haven’t thought about it.”
“Well, think about it now.”
“I can’t. I’m thinking about this fellow and the unicorn horn he wants. And anyhow, what would you do outside your box? You haven’t got a body, you know.”
“I know. You fellows cut it off, back when you were fooling around. But it’ll grow back once I’m free of the box.”
“I still don’t see how you lost your body in the first place.”
“I’m telling you, you fellows cut it off when you wanted to get me to remember where the unicorn horns were kept. I didn’t want to, you see. It was also an experiment to see how far you could push immortality.”
“This far, anyhow, without trouble,” Ammon said.
“That’s right. But now I’ve done my turn. Now experiment on somebody else. Let somebody else remember for a while.”
They decided that was only fair and so they set Miltiades free, and Miltiades told them what they needed to know and then closed his eyes, waiting for his body to grow back. So the rest of them left and followed his directions to a cellar door at the end of a tiny cul-de-sac deep within the city.
The place was empty. Half-concealed in the trash on the cellar floor there was a large bronze box.
They pushed back the heavy lid, and revealed by flickering torch light a veritable treasure trove of unicorn horns.
Ammon selected one horn and handed it to Ctesiphon. “Do you know how to use this?”
Ctesiphon sai
d, “I think so, but please tell me anyhow.”
“You shave off an amount equivalent to your thumbnail, powder it, and dissolve it in a glass of wine.”
“Thank you,” Ctesiphon said. “I’ll be on my way now.”
“It’s been nice meeting you,” Ammon said. “After you and your bride take the stuff, why don’t you come back? It’s always nice to live among your own kind.”
Ctesiphon said he’d think about it. But the city of the immortals seemed to him like an old people’s home. Although they looked young, there was a mixture of vagueness and querulousness about them that was more than a little off-putting.
Ctesiphon tucked the unicorn horn securely into his belt, clicked his heels four times, said the magic words, and so appeared again in his native city of Aldebra.
There was genial rejoicing when Ctesiphon returned with the unicorn’s horn. The local savants declared that a new age had begun, one which would bestow the blessings of infinitely extended life on all citizens. Enthusiasm abated suddenly when it was realized that one unicorn’s horn would only serve a limited number of people. Ctesiphon was criticized for not bringing back a sufficient quantity for everyone—though no one explained how he might have accomplished this.
Ctesiphon ignored this groundswell of popular opinion and went to his beloved’s bedside. There he shaved scraps of unicorn horn into a glass of the famous black wine of the Eastern Provinces, itself said to have salubrious qualities. His beloved drank, and Ctesiphon waited anxiously for signs of its efficacy.
He did not have to stay long in doubt. Within minutes, Calixitea was ready to get out of bed and take up her normal life again.
Her parents, noticing the change, asked for unicorn horn for themselves. Ctesiphon couldn’t refuse them, nor did he want to. He supplied them with the necessary shavings, and made more available for Calixitea’s aunts and uncles and cousins and nephews and nieces, finally drawing the line at a third cousin twice removed.
Ctesiphon had planned to reserve some of the horn for the immortalizing of great geniuses and public benefactors of the sort that turn up only once or twice in a generation. But before he could carry out that scheme, a city official arrived at his door, demanding and receiving the municipality’s due share, which was promptly ingested by the mayor, his wife and family and nearest relatives, and the foremost members of the town council, all of whom felt they deserved immortality due to their important positions and good intentions toward the public at large. Ctesiphon gave without stint, and was more than a little surprised to see how quickly the horn was dwindling.
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