The Incompleat Enchanter

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by L. Sprague De Camp


  “By Fafnir and Hydra,

  Apophis and Yang:

  With the length of Nidhöggr,

  Tiámat’s sharp fang,

  The shape of the lizard,

  The strength of the bear,

  Thou, scaled like the serpent.

  Emerge from your lair!

  Steed of Triptolemus.

  Beowulf’s bane.

  Symbol of Uther.

  And bringer of rain —”

  Shea prudently hitched the animals’ reins around a tree. If the dragon turned out to be winged and hungry — He wished that his damned reckless impulsiveness had not made him force Chalmers’ hand. If the Dolon’s counterspell didn’t work — The oyster-coloured smoke of the fire thickened and darkened. Chalmers bit off his chant in mid-stanza and scrambled back. A reptilian head a yard long was poking towards them out of the smoke.

  The head had a scaly neck behind it. Then came a foreleg and another. The dragon seemed to be crawling from nothingness through an orifice somewhere in the smoke, ballooning our as it came. There it was, complete to stinger-tipped tail, gazing at them with yellow cat’s eyes.

  Shea breathed, not daring to attract its attention by a movement: “If it starts for us, Doc, you get on Gustavus and I’ll let go the reins.”

  Dolon’s face was twisting as though he had swallowed too big a mouthful. The dragon lurched a few steps, not towards them but off at right angles, opened its terrible mouth, gave a whistling “beeep!” and began to crop the grass contentedly.

  “God bless my soul!” said Chalmers.

  “He’d better,” replied Shea, “Look!”

  * * *

  A second draconian head was pushed through the smoke. This one was squirted out in a few seconds. It looked at the three men, then wandered over to a clump of bright-coloured flowers, sniffed, and began to eat them. Now a third and a fourth head were already in sight. As fast as the dragons were extruded, more followed them. The field down to the very confines of the trees was crowded with them, new arrivals butting the others to make room or scratching their sides on trees. Shea was counting: “Thirty-three, thirty-four — We better untie the animals and move or we’ll get stepped on. Thirty-six, thirty-seven —”

  “Dear me,” remarked Chalmers, fingering his chin, as they backed among the trees. “I rather feared this. The same thing happened with the mice.”

  “Fifty-two, fifty-three —” Shea continued. “My God, the country will be overrun with them!”

  Dragons had overflowed the field and were lurching through the trees with their ungainly gait, munching everything green in sight, and mooing at each other with the same plaintive beeping sound. “Ninety-eight, ninety-nine, one hundred. Oh, boy!”

  The fire suddenly died, and the cascade of vegetarian dragons ceased. “My God!” said Shea in an awe-struck voice. “One hundred reptilian Ferdinands!”

  Dolon’s voice was that of a man shaken to the core. “Forsooth, you do things not by halves. Though I mind me I once succeeded with a bushel measure full of pearls.” Dolon snapped his fingers. “By Ahriman’s toe nails, are you not those who even now bested the Blatant Beast?”

  “That’s us,” said Shea. “How did you hear about it?”

  “The Beast passed me a few hours ago, and warned me of a prow company. He said he demanded a trifle of poesy, as is his custom, and you gave him a lay full of such — ah — spice that even he durst not repeat it for shame. The like had never before happened to him, and he seemed much downcast thereby. But was there not another of you? The Beast mentioned three.”

  Chalmers cleared his throat, but Shea quickly answered: “No; he’s got us mixed up with another bunch.”

  “’Tis a thing conceivable; the Beast is in sooth of the lower orders, and cannot count beyond two.” Dolon shook a finger and said with a slight leer: “Now about these dragons: Tell me, fellow magicians, was’t not by error you got eaters of grass? Eh? No secrets in the trade!”

  “Ahem. No use taking unnecessary risks,” said Chalmers, still looking a trifle wall-eyed.

  “Doubtless,” remarked Dolon with a glance that Shea just barely saw, “you can exorcise them as rapidly.”

  “We could,” said Shea, before his companion had a chance to answer. “For the dragon-disappearing spell, though, we need an aneroid comptometer, and we lost ours. Do you have one with you?”

  “An . . . ah, certes, an ameroid combompeter. Nay, I fear me not so. Last spring came a black frost that killed all the plants on which ameroid combompeters grow.” He spread his hands regretfully. “However, meseems these dragons will in the long run be a benefit, making rare good sport and food for our friends and servants, the Losels. And now, Sir Magicians whom I have not seen, explain your purpose in Loselwood.”

  Chalmers spoke. “Uh . . . we’re looking for a lady named Florimel, and were advised we might find her here. Do you know the young person?”

  Dolon chuckled. “The real Florimel or the false?”

  “The real or — The one who was at Satyrane’s tournament recently.”

  “That would be the false one, made by the Witch of Riphira. A fair piece of work — though I will say I care nor much for these witches. Duessa is the only one who has any standing in the Chapter — And that brings me to remark, magical sirs, are you members of one of the outland Chapters? My memory is practically infallible, and I do not recall having seen you at our meetings.”

  Chalmers stammered: “We . . . uh . . . that is . . . can you tell me a little more about this Florimel? The . . . uh . . . false one.”

  Dolon waved his hand. “A mere witch’s thing — a creature made of snow, or no special value. You must let me show you the really fine chess player I made sometime, or the imps I conjured up to handle my torture work. Really an achievement. Busyrane, our archmagician, doubtless called this false Florimel in for inspection.” He accented the last word and snickered. “But you haven’t answered my question, magical sirs.”

  Shea spoke up boldly. “The point is, we’d like to join up with you.”

  “You mean you have been working independently and we know it not?” Dolon narrowed his eyes suspiciously. “Aye; Busyrane opened the Chapter but a twelvemonth ago and you may well have slipped his attention. I trust you have not refused his invitation. Our archimage is not soft or slow with unlicensed magicians He has a spell that turns ’em into spiders. Witty, is he not, eh?”

  “Good gracious!” said Chalmers. “But how does one acquire a licence?”

  “That falls somewhat upon the applicant. Our charter calls for a round twenty-one master magicians, the magic number. Naturally, you behold in me one of the leading masters, whether by ability or seniority. There is also a class of journeymen, who handle the ordinary work, and one of apprentices. Perhaps you have talent enough to be elected to mastership. There are three or four places unfilled, I believe. The next meeting comes in five days, and with my backing your election would be certain.”

  Chapter Six

  DOLON, IN THE form of a handsome stallion, trotted in front. Shea leaned back in his saddle, and, watching the stallion’s ears carefully, murmured: “Doing all right, aren’t we, Doc?”

  “I suppose so, but I admit to being somewhat apprehensive as to what will happen if both the Companions and the Chapter of Magicians learn we’ve been cooperating with the other party. This . . . ah . . . playing both ends against the middle may get us in trouble.”

  “Maybe,” said Shea. They rode on in silence.

  Once a tiger glided out from between the trunks ahead. Gustavus and Adolphus, both rapidly approaching nervous breakdowns, tried to bolt from the trail. Dolon turned himself from a stallion into an immense buffalo. The tiger slunk off, snarling.

  The sun was already low when the trail made a right-angled bend and dipped under a bank. A huge oak door was set into the earth. Dolon, again in his natural form, waved a hand, and the door flew open. “Fear not for the safety of your mounts,” he said. “An invisible wall, which n
one may penenate without my warrant, surrounds this place.”

  Shea, dismounting, said: “That ought to be nice for keeping the mosquitoes out.”

  Dolon laughed dutifully, then shook his head. “Ah, good ’prentice, how true! Is it not sad that a man of genius must concern himself with petty moils and worries?”

  The air was stuffy inside. The first thing Shea saw was a huge pile of dirty dishes. Dolon was evidently not the neat type of bachelor. Beyond was an object that made his scalp prickle. It was the life-sized nude statue of a young man, stiff, at one side of the room, emitting a faint bluish glow. It held aloft a torch, which Dolon set alight.

  The enchanter noticed Shea’s glance of inquiry. “A former ’prentice of mine,” he remarked. “I found he was a spy from Queen Gloriana’s court, where a few of those high-born grandees practise a kind of magic they call ‘white’. So there he stands, with all his sensations alive and the rest of him dead. Eh, Roger?” He pinched the statue playfully and laughed. “I’m really the best humorist in the Chapter when I’m in the mood. Let me show you my collection of Mallamies.”

  “What’s a Mallamy?” inquired Chalmers.

  Dolon looked at him hard, then decided it was a kind of joke and laughed. He began taking bottles off a shelf and holding them up to the light. Each contained a human figure about an inch tall. “Homunculi from the hand of great master, Mallamy himself,” he explained. “He specialized in this art, and none other has been able to shrink folk to so small size. Even I, Dolon, cannot equal his art. This is the finest collection of his figures in existence. It wants only a blond Saracen. Busyrane has one, but he will not yield it, though I have offered him a water fay, which his own collection tacks. He insists that water fays arc not permanent, since any accident will bring water in contact with the bottle and they can work a spell of their own and so escape.”

  He sighed. “You see how things fall sort of perfection even for the greatest of us. But come in, good sirs, and seat yourselves in my cabinet. Only ’ware the cockatrice as you go down this passage.”

  “A cockatrice?” said Shea.

  “Aye. A rare, priceless idea of Busyrane’s. All masters of the Chapter are supplied with them. They are just outside our inner cabinets and under an enchantment, so they may not look on any member of the Chapter — or his friends. But should any of Gloriana’s people essay to enter, the cockatrice looks on them and they turn to stone.”

  * * *

  Dolon threw open a door and led the way down a dimly lighted passage. Behind bars at one side the beast stalked to and fro with a clatter of its scaly tail. It turned its head this way and that. The stench made Shea want to vomit. Over his shoulder he saw Chalmers’ lips moving. He hoped it was with a protective counterspell, not prayer. Dolon’s voice floated back: “— had to get them after Cambina, one of those ‘white magic’ practitioners, got into Mallamy’s cabinet and drowned him in a pool of alkahest. Thank Lucifer, she married that oaf, Sir Cambell, and marriage cost her some of her powers —”

  The door banged behind them. Shea gasped for air as though he had swum up from the bottom of the ocean.

  The table was ready and the food — thank Heaven, thought Shea — not too highly spiced. Whittling at a steak, he asked:

  “What’s this meat? It’s good!”

  “Fried Losel,” said the magician calmly.

  Shea saw Chalmers halt a mouthful in midair. He felt himself gag momentarily; it was, after all, on the borderline of cannibalism, and after the cockatrice — He forced himself to go on eating. Squeamishness right now was a luxury.

  Dolon poured out some wine, sat back and, rather to the travellers’ astonishment, produced and lit a clay pipe.

  “Aye,” he pronounced, “competition is the curse of our business. One playing against another, and those curst companions of Gloriana making sad work of us all — that’s how matters stood till Busyrane organized our Chapter. Why, I mind me, I had a very good thing once, very good. Found a man of property who wanted a love philter. I made it for him, and he refused to pay. As he was more ass than human, I promised him his ears should grow an inch a day, with the price doubled for each inch they grew till he got me to take the spell off.” Dolon laughed and puffed. “I told you I was a good deal of a humorist.

  “Well, what does he do but go to Malingo, who gives him a counterspelt at half price! No more of that now.”

  Shea had a question: “Look here! If you magicians all cooperate so well, what went wrong at Satyrane’s tournament? That girdle wouldn’t stay on the false Florimel, or on Duessa either for that matter. I should’ve thought Busyrane would see to that.”

  Dolon chuckled. “Briskly questioned, springald! The trick with the girdle was doubtless Duessa’s doing. It’s in her style. She tried to remove the enchantment already on it, but when she found she couldn’t do that, clapped another atop, so ’twould fit nobody. But Florimel’s case was an error, I fear me much.” He shook his head. “Especially if in good sooth Busyrane has sent for her. Nothing would gall those high knights and ladies of the court half so much as having one of their queens of beauty, approved chaste by the test of the girdle, to live with an enchanter. But now, alack, there’s a doubt.”

  Shea saw Chalmers start and run his tongue around his lips at the mention of the connection between Busyrane and Florimel. He pressed questions about the Chapter to give Chalmers a chance to recover. But now Dolon shut up like a clam, with suspicious glances. Shea had uneasy memories of the cockatrice and the spy in the outer room.

  The magician finally rose. “’Tis time we retired, eh, magical sirs? ’Twere wise to set out for Busyrane’s tomorrow. If we arrive ere the meeting be called, I’m sure that my connections and the skill in intrigue for which I’m known will enable me to secure your election.”

  * * *

  A whisper: “Hey, Doc, you asleep?”

  Another: “Merciful Heavens, no. Not in this place. Is he?”

  “If he isn’t, that’s a damned good magical snore. Say, can’t we do something about that poor guy he made into a statue?”

  “It would be injudicious to attempt it, Harold. Moreover, I’m not certain I know how. It would jeopardize our whole plan of campaign.”

  “Didn’t know we had one. Are we stringing along with him?”

  “I suppose we must if we really intend to help Queen Gloriana and the Companions. I may also mention Florimel. Dolon remarked that she was made of snow — created. I find it difficult to credit and rather awful. I fear we must join this Chapter and . . . uh . . . bore from within, as if it were.”

  “I suppose,” said Shea thoughtfully, “that the Chapter explains why the Land of Faerie is sort of running down.”

  “Yes. The enchanters had just discovered the —”

  “Say, Doc,” Shea’s whisper was almost loud. “If the Chapter was formed a year ago, Faerie Queene time, and it had already been started when Spenser wrote, which was four centuries ago, Earth time — Faerie time must be much slower than ours. If we go back, we’ll land somewhere in the twenty-fifth century — along with Buck Rogers.”

  “If we go back. And also if the curvature of the spacetime vectors is uniform. There might be sine curves in the vectors, you know.”

  “Never thought of it. Say, how come your dragon spell was so extremely successful?”

  Chalmers permitted himself an under-the-breath chuckle. “A property of the mathematics of magic. Since it’s based on the calculus of classes, it is primarily qualitative, not quantitative. Hence the quantitative effects are indeterminate. You can’t — at least, with my present skill I can’t — locate the decimal point. Here the decimal point was too far rightward, and I got a hundred dragons instead of one. It might have been a thousand.”

  Shea lay still a moment digesting that thought. Then: “Can’t you do something about that?”

  “I don’t know. Apparently the professionals learn by experience just how much force to put into their incantations. It’s an art rather t
han a science. If I could solve the quantitative problem I could put magic on a scientific basis. I wish, Harold, that tomorrow you could . . . uh . . . manage to distract Dolon for long enough to allow me to possess myself of one of his testbooks. His place is such a hurrah’s nest that he’s certain not to miss it.”

  * * *

  The three riders — Dolon had conjured up a horse because, he said, taking the form of one for a long journey would be fatiguing — had been going for miles through Loselwood. They saw deer, but no other living creatures. Conversation was scarce till they came out on a road, once wide and well graded, now much overgrown. Shea reasoned that this was one more sign of how the enchanters were getting the best of the Faerie knights.

  He pushed his mount alongside the magician. “With your superlative powers, Dolon, I wonder they didn’t elect you head of the Chapter instead of Busyrane.”

  Dolon shrugged. “I could have had the post at good cheap, ho-ho! But I would not strive and moil for it. I’m really a very good judge of human nature, so I arranged Busyrane’s election, knowing he would do it well.”

  “You must be just about perfect,” said Shea.

  “ ‘Just about’, my ’prentice friend, is a weak phrase. I am perfect. I’ve no doubt that people in ages to come will date the history of true wizardry from my entry into the field.”

  “Modest, too,” remarked Shea, drawing a quick glare from Chalmers.

  Dolon dropped his eyes. “Too modest, I sometimes think. Yet do I guard against such affectation — hola! Here’s an encounter!” An armoured horseman had appeared at the far end of the defile through which they were riding. His lance came down and he trotted towards them.

  Dolon cried: “Ten thousand devils, ’tis Artegall himself! Flee, or we are undone!” Looking a bit undone himself, the magician whirled his horse sharp round on its hind legs.

  A woman’s voice behind them called, “Stand, all of you!” Belphebe was perched on a rock at the side of the defile, covering them with bow bent full.

 

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