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Jim Baen’s Universe

Page 34

by Edited by Eric Flint


  She saw the brid­ge to her win­dow, that Wol­f­b­ri­ar had sung in­to exis­ten­ce so long ago. He re­ac­hed for her hand.

  "Let's go," he sa­id, tug­ging at her hand. If they wal­ked down that brid­ge to­get­her, it wo­uld com­p­le­te what had be­en be­gun; she wo­uld be off to Wyo­ming with him, li­ke Ami on her pe­ga­son.

  "You're in a hurry," she sa­id.

  "You wo­uld be too, if you'd be­en not-out of a trunk for thir­te­en ye­ars," he sa­id, and they both be­gan to la­ugh.

  "My fri­end is as­le­ep in the ot­her ro­om," Amy sa­id. "But if we're qu­i­et, we can go down to the kit­c­hen and talk-"

  "Food, yes, and wa­ter, and… um-"

  "Next do­or down the hall," Amy sa­id. "Then just co­me dow­n­s­ta­irs. You ha­ve be­en in a trunk for thir­te­en ye­ars, ha­ven't you?"

  When Wol­f­b­ri­ar ca­me down to the kit­c­hen the­re was anot­her bo­ut of fi­gu­ring things out, be­ca­use he co­uldn't to­uch iron and all of the tab­le­wa­re was sta­in­less ste­el, but even­tu­al­ly she ma­de a pi­le of san­d­wic­hes for him. "I so­ught," Wol­f­b­ri­ar sa­id, "to carry off a Sin­ger-of-the-True's da­ug­h­ter. That wo­uld ha­ve be­en a not-small not-fa­ilu­re for me to cla­im, in El­f­land, whe­re I ha­ve long be­en tho­ught not-ugly but not-im­p­res­si­ve. The de­ed wo­uld ha­ve be­en not-small eno­ugh to ma­ke not-com­mo­ners of us both."

  Amy shrug­ged. "At the ti­me you ca­me, I was very car­ryof­fab­le. But now I've li­ved on this si­de for anot­her thir­te­en ye­ars, and I'm hu­man down to the bo­ne, and, well, it's just dif­fe­rent."

  "I know," Wol­f­b­ri­ar sa­id sadly. "The ce­ra­nin is go­ne from yo­ur so­ul. I tho­ught the only chan­ce was to le­ad you over the brid­ge, right then, and off to El­f­land, be­ca­use I knew yo­ur so­ul wo­uld hold you back."

  The ce­ra­nin?

  That ga­udy pat­tern, Amy re­ali­zed. That pic­tu­re of all the ma­gic her he­art was ca­pab­le of and of what it might be on the ot­her si­de-

  She ran up the sta­irs to lo­ok. The bed­s­p­re­ad was now all gray mus­lin, but on it was the most ama­zing la­yo­ut; in the blue chalk, the sa­me per­fect li­nes de­pic­ted every or­gan of the hu­man body with pho­tog­rap­hic pre­ci­si­on but the cla­rity that only a li­ne dra­wing can ha­ve. It wasn't ga­udy at all; this spo­ke of pre­ci­si­on and of things as they we­re. She lo­ved it at on­ce.

  The brid­ge­he­ad was at the win­dow, and the long brid­ge des­cen­ded ac­ross the po­ol, Lit­tle Amy's po­ol, com­po­sed as a mir­ror in the light of the ri­sing mo­on; the­re was the falls, and the­re the flat rock whe­re the Ute ghosts dan­ced, and the­re…

  She let her­self see with her ot­her eyes, and the­re was the fro­zen spill from the cul­vert, and the old bor­row pit gra­du­al­ly sil­ting up to be­co­me the me­adow it had be­en be­fo­re, and it was just anot­her red­neck ho­mes­te­ad in the Roc­ki­es. Ba­rely per­cep­tib­le with her hu­man eyes, the brid­ge glin­ted as if out­li­ned in fa­intly glo­wing spi­der­webs.

  The gra­vel along the sho­re wo­uld crunch and the­re wo­uld be no di­amonds in it. The bor­row pit had so­me carp and the oc­ca­si­onal whi­te­fish, just gar­ba­ge fish re­al­ly, and wo­uld be de­ep gre­en in the sum­mer be­ca­use of the mud that ran in­to it and be­ca­use it was warm and shal­low. Amy had smo­ked her first (and last ever, it was nasty) ci­ga­ret­te over the­re, sit­ting with Den­nis; she had ca­ught so­me big gross carp and fed them to Rags, her old buddy of a tom­cat; she had thrown rocks at the wa­ter out of she­er bo­re­dom, and gat­he­red jars of pond wa­ter and sat for ho­urs at the mic­ros­co­pe, one eye on the eye­pi­ece and the ot­her ga­zing at her dra­wing.

  She had spent one who­le sum­mer of her sci­en­ce pro­j­ect, out the­re with her snor­kel, col­lec­ting wa­ter at one fo­ot in­ter­vals to see how the mic­ro­bi­al li­fe chan­ged from top to bot­tom.

  The first hu­man boy she had kis­sed had be­en the one that she shot flo­ating bot­tles with. Dad wo­uld sa­ve her a ca­se of be­er bot­tles and they'd toss them out in the wa­ter and plink un­til the bot­tle erup­ted in a sho­wer of glass shards and went to the bot­tom, and one day when they'd sunk a bot­tle af­ter far too many tri­es, he had ca­re­ful­ly set down his pis­tol, and then hers, muz­zles po­in­ted away (they had both had the NRA class), and put his mo­uth on hers.

  "The la­kes of El­f­land," Wol­f­b­ri­ar sa­id, "do not ne­ed gla­mo­ur to be be­a­uti­ful. The­re are no bor­row pits in El­f­land any mo­re."

  She had be­en to El­f­land; as a Sin­ger-of-the-True Dad had be­en in­vi­ted, and had ta­ken her. Every pond the­re spar­k­led li­ke a jewel, but it had no hydras, no pa­ra­me­cia, just sap­phi­re-cle­ar wa­ter. Af­ter sne­aking out at night, she had sat in the mo­on­light with Wol­f­b­ri­ar and the gla­mo­ur had craw­led up aro­und them till it was as be­a­uti­ful-and as un­to­uc­hab­le-as a mo­vie of a smi­ling fa­ce pro­j­ec­ted on­to a clo­ud. She had wal­ked along the walls of the re­con­s­t­ruc­ted town of Cas­per, and mar­ve­led at the smo­oth per­fec­ti­on of ivory and mot­her of pe­arl that went on for mi­les, and ne­ver on­ce se­en graf­fi­ti, or a wa­ter sta­in.

  "Do you know what hap­pe­ned at the end of every one of Dad's bo­oks?"

  "No," Wol­f­b­ri­ar sa­id. He was stan­ding very clo­se.

  She pus­hed him away. "Lit­tle Amy ca­me back to the re­al world, happy to ha­ve be­en away, but glad to be ho­me."

  "Oh," a lit­tle vo­ice sa­id.

  Amy tur­ned. Sa­man­t­ha was sta­ring at them. "I he­ard vo­ices and, um-"

  "It's all right. Turn on the light, will you? Wol­f­b­ri­ar's gla­mo­ur is get­ting to you be­ca­use of the mo­on­light."

  Samantha re­ac­hed for the switch and flip­ped it.

  "You're even mo­re be­a­uti­ful wit­ho­ut the gla­mo­ur," she told Wol­f­b­ri­ar. "I've ne­ver met one of yo­ur kind be­fo­re."

  Amy sud­denly who­oped, the re­ac­ti­on and the tho­ught hit­ting so fast that she wasn't awa­re that she was re­ac­ting un­til she al­re­ady had. "Oh, my. Oh, my. Well, it's a petty nasty me­an ple­asu­re, but I'm not skip­ping it for an­y­t­hing. I get to qu­ote Tol­ki­en in Dad's ho­use! 'Yes, Sam, that's an elf!'"

  Wolfbriar was sta­ring back at Sam. "You are a Sin­ger-of-the-True."

  "Unpublished."

  "It do­es not mat­ter who lis­tens, only who sings. You are a Sin­ger-of-the-True."

  "Well, I gu­ess I li­ke to think so."

  Amy lo­oked at the clock. Three in the mor­ning. She lo­oked back and from the way Sa­man­t­ha and Wol­f­b­ri­ar we­re wal­king to­ward each ot­her, she re­ali­zed that the ma­gic that gat­he­red aro­und The Ca­bin-oh, she'd al­ways known Dad was wri­ting abo­ut a re­ality-had ma­na­ged ever­y­t­hing per­fectly. "Why don't you two he­ad down the hall," she sa­id, "and in the mor­ning we'll all catch up. I think you'll find you ha­ve a lot to talk abo­ut, but I'm all tal­ked out and re­al­ly sle­epy."

  They went out hol­ding hands, and she clim­bed the sta­irs and slip­ped in­to bed, yet aga­in. As she fell as­le­ep, she co­uld see the stars very cle­arly, and the brid­ge just ba­rely, and the blue chalk glo­wed on her bed­s­p­re­ad and she re­ali­zed she might work all her li­fe to be ab­le to draw, just on­ce, as well as what was al­re­ady on her so­ul. To­mor­row, per­haps, she wo­uld put it in a chest to ke­ep it ni­ce, and then think abo­ut how best to ta­ke it along ho­me with her, but for to­night, just on­ce mo­re, she wan­ted to be war­med un­der it.

  As she had fi­gu­red wo­uld hap­pen, just be­fo­re dawn, they ca­me tip­to­e­ing thro­ugh, hol­ding hands, as if they had be­en hol­ding hands for three ho­urs. "Don't go wit­ho­ut sa­ying go­od­b­ye," she sa­id, rol­ling out of bed.

>   Samantha and Wol­f­b­ri­ar per­mit­ted her to hug them both, and Sa­man­t­ha sa­id, "I left you a no­te. Three CDs of fi­nis­hed work and a short let­ter to ma­il to my agent. And a box of my per­so­nal stuff to send UPS to Co­e­ur d'Ale­ne; ac­ross the bor­der it usu­al­ly ta­kes a co­up­le of we­eks but Wol­f­b­ri­ar pro­mi­ses me they'll ha­ve ever­y­t­hing I ne­ed. I left most of my mo­ney to co­ver yo­ur tro­ub­le and the pos­ta­ge and all. I'll try to wri­te to you but you know how it usu­al­ly go­es."

  She wat­c­hed them walk ac­ross the brid­ge, or flo­at on air abo­ve the bor­row pit, and even­tu­al­ly they re­ac­hed the ot­her si­de. They step­ped off the brid­ge and tur­ned and wa­ved. A big sturdy pe­ga­son des­cen­ded from the swarm of mor­ning stars, and they we­re off. She wa­ved un­til the bright whi­te pe­ga­son was just anot­her star, mo­ving slowly as a sa­tel­li­te. Then she went back to bed and slept till no­on.

  After get­ting a bur­ger at the grill dow­n­town, she put her now-com­p­le­te so­ul in­to her duf­fel; she re­ali­zed she co­uld le­ave be­hind the elf-clot­hes, which we­re floppy and baggy and uni­formly gray-ugly. The­re was a Vic­to­ria's Sec­ret in Bo­ul­der, or may­be she'd just go a bit fur­t­her, down to Fla­ti­rons Cros­sing Mall, hit the ma­j­or de­par­t­ment sto­res and the tren­dy-girly sto­res and so on, spend so­me of that big pi­le of Dad's mo­ney that had be­en bu­il­ding up for so long. She'd ne­ed ma­ke­up, and per­haps to find a ha­ir­d­res­ser who wo­uldn't snic­ker, and… well, to­day was go­ing to be ex­pen­si­ve but fun.

  She lo­oked at the clock. Even if he had de­ci­ded to sle­ep in, Der­rick wo­uld su­rely be up by now.

  He so­un­ded very ple­ased to he­ar from her.

  "Just me," she sa­id. "Pla­in old god­dam Amy. You know my Dad used to call me that? He had a pet na­me for me, the ab­bre­vi­ati­on for pla­in old god­dam Amy, Po­ga. No, ac­tu­al­ly, it so­unds ter­rib­le, but I'd kind of li­ke it if you'd call me that. We can talk abo­ut it when you get he­re. Now pack a bag, and get up he­re this eve­ning, but don't be too ear­ly-shall we say eig­h­tish?" She ga­ve him di­rec­ti­ons and ma­de him re­ad them back.

  "Plan to stay to­night and Sun­day night, okay?"

  "All right," he sa­id.

  "You so­und funny."

  "Stunned. Very happy, but I'm stun­ned, Amy."

  "Amy?"

  "Okay, I'm stun­ned, Po­ga."

  "I li­ke the way you say 'Po­ga,' Der­rick, it's swe­et." She stret­c­hed lu­xu­ri­o­usly, crad­ling the pho­ne aga­inst her ear and neck, rub­bing whe­re she plan­ned to ha­ve Der­rick do a lot of kis­sing. The­re was no one the­re to ap­pre­ci­ate it but she tum­b­led her ha­ir aro­und with her hand in a way she knew ma­de her lo­ok cu­te, ex­po­sing one po­in­ted ear. Ditch the brown con­tacts and show the gold eyes, hu­man guys li­ked that. Ha­ir­cut, new clot­hes, girly sho­es, co­me'n'get it un­di­es, the who­le fro­ufy ni­ne yards. Li­ke she hadn't do­ne sin­ce high scho­ol. "And do not show up early. It ta­kes me a whi­le to turn in­to pla­in old god­dam Amy. But we're both gon­na li­ke her."

  ****

  Build-a-Bear

  Gene Wol­fe

  Sighing, Vi­ola pic­ked up the yel­low sche­du­le of ship­bo­ard ac­ti­vi­ti­es and glan­ced at her watch. It was three thirty, still two and half ho­urs till din­ner.

  “Bermuda and the Ber­mu­da Tri­an­g­le” 2 Ex­p­lo­rers Lo­un­ge. She had go­ne to that one yes­ter­day, and they we­re in­to it al­re­ady. Not­hing had hap­pe­ned.

  “Line dan­cing for be­gin­ners” 10 Gym. She co­uld li­ne dan­ce ni­cely al­re­ady, thank you very much, and did not enj­oy be­ing la­ug­hed at. Su­rely the­re had to be so­met­hing mo­re in­te­res­ting than lo­oking at the At­lan­tic.

  “Talent Abo­ard - pas­sen­gers dis­p­lay the­ir mu­si­cal skills.” 4 Se­avi­ew ro­om. She shud­de­red.

  “Make yo­ur pet.” 9 Cap­ta­in’s Club. What in the world…?

  ****

  “I’m sorry I’m la­te,” Vi­ola told the smi­ling yo­ung wo­man with the lap­top. “I didn’t even know the­re was a Cap­ta­in’s Club, and the ste­ward I got to help me find it only ma­de things wor­se.”

  “No fret. I’m just glad so­me­body ca­me. Bel­lat­rix.” Ri­sing, Bel­lat­rix held out her hand. “I’m in the show. Did you see me last night?”

  “Oh, yes!” Vi­ola li­ed wo­man­ful­ly. “That was you! I tho­ught you we­re won­der­ful.” She ac­cep­ted the hand, lar­ger and har­der than her own.

  “Thanks. But I do this, too, and I get pa­id by the he­ad. I’ll ha­ve to scan yo­ur key­card.”

  Viola he­si­ta­ted.

  “You won’t be char­ged. It’s in­c­lu­ded in the cru­ise. It’s just way I get pa­id.” Bel­lat­rix smi­led aga­in. “We show folks al­ways ne­ed mo­re mo­ney.”

  “Thank you.” She glan­ced at the card. “Vi­ola. Sit down, Vi­ola. First we ne­ed to talk. Why did you co­me?”

  Wondering when her card wo­uld be scan­ned but happy to sit, Vi­ola sa­id, “It so­un­ded li­ke fun, that’s all. A fri­end of mi­ne went to so­met­hing li­ke this cal­led Bu­ild-a-Be­ar, whe­re they ma­de teddy be­ars. She ma­de her own be­ar. It’s al­ways in the li­ving ro­om, and she tells ever­y­body who’ll lis­ten all abo­ut it. Oh, God! I’m just ter­rib­le!”

  “That’s go­od, Vi­ola.” Bel­lat­rix re­tur­ned the key card. “I li­ke ter­rib­le pe­op­le. What’s yo­ur spe­ci­alty?”

  “So I tho­ught I might bu­ild a big­ger be­ar than Ma­ri­an. A pret­ti­er one. It’ll kill her.”

  “Great.” Bel­lat­rix pun­c­hed keys on her lap­top. “It’s got to be a be­ar? You don’t want to bu­ild a cat or a hor­se or an­y­t­hing?”

  Viola sho­ok her he­ad. “A be­ar. Ma­ri­an’s is brown, so I tho­ught may­be pink.”

  “Got it. You sa­id big. How big?”

  “About li­ke this.” Vi­ola held her hands apart. “This long. That sho­uld be twi­ce the si­ze of hers.”

  “Ninety cen­ti­me­ters.” Bel­lat­rix pun­c­hed mo­re keys. “You want it to talk, don’t you?”

  “With one of tho­se strings in back you pull? Yes, I’d li­ke that.”

  “That will ta­ke a bit of do­ing. Wa­it a mi­nu­te.”

  “I tho­ught I’d ha­ve to sew, and-oh, I don’t know. Pick out the eyes. Ma­ke it.”

  Still pun­c­hing keys, Bel­lat­rix sa­id, “You will pick out the eyes. We can do that next. What kind wo­uld you li­ke?”

  “What co­lor, you me­an?”

  “Right. Mo­re pink?”

  Viola sho­ok her he­ad. “You wo­uldn’t be ab­le to see them.”

  “Oh, you wo­uld if you lo­oked clo­sely. And she’d be ab­le to see you, of co­ur­se.”

  “A girl be­ar?”

  Bellatrix nod­ded. “That’s what I tho­ught. Be­ca­use of the pink.”

  “With a ha­ir rib­bon.”

  “If you want. That wo­uld be no tro­ub­le.”

  “I- I don’t.” Vi­ola felt her che­eks grow hot. “I-I… ”

  “You don’t ha­ve to ex­p­la­in,” Bel­lat­rix told her.

  “I want to. I want to get it off my-my sho­ul­ders. I went on this cru­ise to me­et so­me­one.”

  “They ha­ve sin­g­les cru­ises, too. That might be bet­ter.”

  “I tho­ught this was one.” For a mo­ment, Vi­ola was puz­zled. “Anyway, he­re I am with you in­s­te­ad of li­ne dan­cing, and Be­verly and Ma­ri­an both say that’s typi­cal of me. I don’t me­et men be­ca­use I’m too fe­mi­ni­ne. I ha­te sin­g­les bars.”

  “So do I.”

  “And I went with Lu­cas for al­most three ye­ars, but he pla­yed golf. I co­uldn’t le­arn, and to tell you the truth I didn’t want to. I didn’t think that wo­uld bre
­ak us up, but it did. He met a girl with a three han­di­cap and I was - was his­tory. Am I go­ing to cry?”

  Bellatrix stu­di­ed her. “I don’t think so.”

  “That’s go­od. I… I’ve cri­ed too much abo­ut Lu­cas al­re­ady.”

  “How abo­ut a pink boy be­ar?”

  Mutely, Vi­ola nod­ded.

  “Nice dark eyes, with just at to­uch of fi­re in them?” Bel­lat­rix pun­c­hed mo­re keys. “We can put a lit­tle vest on him.”

  “A black vest,” Vi­ola mut­te­red, trying to get in­to the spi­rit of the thing.

  “Right, to go with his eyes. Now we get in­to the hard part. Cha­rac­ter, and all that. You want him to ne­ed you, don’t you?”

  “Absolutely.” Vi­ola al­most smi­led. “I want a warm be­ar who wants to be cud­dled, not just one who sits in the li­ving ro­om and sta­res at pe­op­le.”

  “Good. I’m with you on that. Bra­ve?”

  “Very. He’s a be­ar af­ter all.”

  “Right you are. Smart, too, I’ll bet.”

  “Very smart. Qu­i­et, too, and tho­ug­h­t­ful. A be­ar of few words.”

  “Strong?”

  “Very strong, too.” Vi­ola was smi­ling now. “A re­gu­lar grizzly.”

  More keys we­re pun­c­hed. “Got it. If he’s go­ing to be strong, he sho­uldn’t be too thin. But you want him cuddly, from what you sa­id. We ne­ed a ba­lan­ce of cha­rac­te­ris­tics. I’m go­od at that.”

  “His ex­p­res­si­on…?”

  “Exactly. Strong but vul­ne­rab­le. Al­so you’ll want him to be soft when you hold him, wit­ho­ut be­ing too soft. Sup­po­se so­me­body bro­ke in? You’d want a pet who co­uld pro­tect you.”

  “You know,” Vi­ola sa­id, “you’re de­eper in­to this than I am.”

  “Of co­ur­se. You sho­uld see so­me of mi­ne.” Bel­lat­rix pun­c­hed mo­re keys. “The­re! That sho­uld do it. He’s pretty clo­se to stan­dard, re­al­ly. So­me de­vi­ati­ons, but we can you use a lot of the re­gu­lar sub­ro­uti­nes. What’s his na­me, by the way?”

 

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