Authors: Piers Anthony
Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #General, #Fantasy fiction, #Xanth (Imaginary place), #Xanth (Imaginary place) - Fiction
The girls scrambled back onto his hand.
Then they rode way out across
the green terrain, until the giant's reach reached its farthest reaches,
and he lowered them to the greensward.
"Thank you, Uncle!" Ghina called, flashing another gladebrightening
invisible smile as they slid to the ground.
"Welcome, Niece," he called back, as he started back toward his chess
game, his voice sounding lower because of the special magic of Doppler.
It occurred to Forrest that Doppler must have been an interesting
Magician, though it wasn't clear why he wanted to fool with sounds.
Now they had to struggle with the terrain.
It was possible for them to
walk erect, if they clung to trees and other features of the greenscape,
but not easy.
There seemed to be no lings in the vicinity.
So they
were stuck in the greenery, being both red and grounded.
"Maybe we can brace each other," Dawn gasped.
"So we can walk more or
less upright."
"Or tie ourselves together," Eve added.
"So we can be braced without
using our hands."
They found some greenbriar vines, but they were too thorny to use. Then
they saw a green rope leaping around.
Forrest managed to snag it as it
jumped over him.
The rope struggled, wanting to be free to leap some
more, but the girls grabbed hold of its ends and subdued it.
"It's a
jump rope," Eve gasped.
They wound it around, and tied themselves into
a clumsy mass.
It worked, not well, but better than nothing, and the
rope's natural inclination to jump helped.
Imbri was the center, and
the other four clustered around her, their feet bracing outward.
It was
uncomfortable, but feasible, for now.
Forrest was wedged against Ghina, because there needed to be two people
to a side and the twins couldn't agree which one of them would get to
press against the faun.
Ghina was invisible within her cloak and cowl,
and quickly shed those so as to be entirely invisible and less
noticeable.
But her body was solid.
Forrest felt her wings brushing
him every so often, and he was aware of other parts of her. He realized
that he was in close contact with yet another healthy young woman.
How
did he keep getting into these situations?
"She's that way," Eve said, after touching the ground for information.
"Not far."
So they trundled along in that direction.
Forrest had no idea what they
would do if something unfriendly spied them.
They weren't in any
condition to fend anything off.
Maybe another storm package would drive
it away, but maybe not.
"Say, I never realized that fauns were so interesting," Ghina murmured.
"Do you suppose we could-?"
"Unfeasible," he said.
Was there any point trying to explain about the
effect faunish contact had on females?
"Oh," she said regretfully.
They half dragged, half jumped onward until they came to the greenhouse
residence that Eve indicated was the one.
Rather than knock on the
glass door, and possibly freak someone out, they decided to let Imbri
contact the woman with a dreamlet.
"Jfraya!" Imbri's joint dreamlet called, showing Imbri's human form in a
green dress, properly upright.
"May we speak with you?"
A woman appeared in the dreamlet.
She was of course green, especially
her thumbs, and carried a green watering can.
"Who are You?"
"I am Mare Imbri, from another world.
My friends and I need your help
to stop the Wizards."
"But the Wizards haven't done us any harm," Jfraya protested.
"But they are doing others harm, by stealing from another world," Imbri
responded.
"We have in our group two people from that world, whose
people are sorely suffering."
"What makes you think I can help?"
"Ida of the world of Torus said you could."
"Ida?
But she's confined to an island on the blue face."
"Yes.
She's Ida of Pyramid.
The Ida I mean is on the world of Torus,
which orbits her head." Imbri made an image of blue Ida and her doughnut
shaped moon.
"This is too complicated to argue," Jfraya said.
"So I suppose I'd
better help you."
"Very good.
I think your world will be better off without raiding other
worlds.
After all, you wouldn't want other worlds raiding yours.
"I suppose."
Then Imbri introduced the others of their party, in the dreamlet.
"But why are they all tied together?
Are they prisoners?"
Imbri explained about the difficulty of walking on this face.
"Oh, I can fix that," Jfraya said.
"Where do you want to go?"
"To the Green Wizard's castle, first."
Jfraya stepped outside her greenhouse.
"Open this door," she said. She
brought out a large pen and drew a crude door on the ground, with hinges
on one side and a handle on the other.
Then she went back into her
house to finish watering her plants.
The group trundled up.
For-rest reached down for the drawn handle. To
his half surprise, he caught hold of it.
He hauled on it, and the door
opened, folding out of the ground.
Below was a passage slanting down.
It had a floor, a ceiling, and two sides.
There was a faint green glow,
so that it did not become dark deeper in.
"You know, we could walk on
one of the walls," Forrest said.
They untied themselves, one by one, and climbed down into the passage.
Dawn went first, and stood on the slanting wall, which was about right
for her orientation.
Then Eve joined her.
Their upper bodies were
pointing slightly downward, so the wall was close to right angles to
them.
Their four dainty feet were aimed almost directly at Forrest.
"Say, we'd look good in skirts," Dawn said.
"Yes, considering the angle," Eve agreed.
Their red jeans fuzzed and became flaring red skirts.
Forrest quickly
clapped a hand to his eyes before he saw very far beyond their four nice
knees.
"Stop it!" he cried.
"Aw," they said together, laughing.
"I wish I could do that," Ghina murmured.
That intrigued him, though he knew it shouldn't.
"Couldn't you, if you
put on stockings and panties?"
" No.
They're too close to my body.
They turn invisible.
Only the
thicker material can retain its opacity."
"I'm sure it's for the best," he said insincerely.
"Their jeans are back," she informed him.
He ventured a look.
Sure enough, it was safe.
And probably the
mischievous girls had not really let anything show.
They knew that the
mission wouldn't get far if they freaked him out in the middle of it.
Now he and Ghina climbed down into the hole and stood on the wall.
Finally Imbri rolled over and in, and they were all there. Fortunately
it was a large passage, with room, though there wasn't much clearance
for their heads.
Then Jfraya emerged.
"I think my greens have enough water for a few
days," she said.
She entered the passage, standing in its floor. This
was awkward, because she was about at right angles to them, and their
upper bodies were at cross purposes.
But they would just have to give
her space and make do.
They walked along the passage, giving each other sufficient room. "This
goes to the Wizard's castle?" Forrest asked.
"It should.
But I should warn you that one never can be quite certain
what one will find along the way."
"But if you made this passage, there shouldn't be anything else along
it, should there?"
"I made the door, not the passage.
I made a door into a passage that
goes to the Wizard's castle."
"Oh." That meant that they might not be safe, after all.
"Are there
likely to be dangers?"
"There could be.
But I could make another door, to escape the passage."
Eve touched the floor, which was her wall.
"This is a goblin tunnel!"
she exclaimed.
"Why yes, so it is," Ghina said.
"I should have recognized it, from my
goblin heritage."
"But it is deserted," Dawn said.
"Good," Jfraya said.
"I tried to pick an empty one."
They proceeded onward with greater confidence.
In due course the
passage opened into a series of galleries.
In one some metallic green
plants grew, with fierce straight spikes.
"A steel plant!" Eve
exclaimed.
"They make swords from these." She touched one of the
spikes.
"Too bad we delicate girls don't know how to use swords."
They knew how to use whatever else they had, though, Forrest thought
darkly.
The next chamber was encrusted with green gems.
"Now these we might
use," Eve said, touching one.
"They are strata-gems, from the
stratosphere.
They help folk devise plans."
Forrest agreed.
"Let's harvest some and keep them for use when we need
them."
So they pried several of the gems free, and each person put one in purse
or pack.