Authors: Piers Anthony
Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #General, #Fantasy fiction, #Xanth (Imaginary place), #Xanth (Imaginary place) - Fiction
nymph.
They were all colors, scintillating like gems: topaz, ruby,
opal, and lapis lazuli.
Suddenly Forrest recognized the figures.
They were himself and Imbri in
her nymph form.
But what were they doing in a picture in the foliage of
the tree?
He tried to make sense of it.
Imbr'l had gone to stand close to the
tree, and then the scene had formed.
With the two of them in it. Loving
each other.
As if the tree had somehow picked up Imbri's secret
thoughts and animated them.
The dreams of a night mare.
A glorious suspicion washed through him.
He reached over his shoulder
and plunged his hand into his knapsack.
He found the dear horn and
hauled it out.
As he did so, a fragment of paper fluttered down.
It
must have been caught in the horn.
He reached down to pick it up. Could
it be the lost notes of the Good Magician?
No, it was a different piece, royally embossed.
A single word was
written on it, in a princessly script: Imbri.
Suddenly he remembered when Dawn had touched them, on Torus, and learned
something she wouldn't tell.
She had talked with Ida, and then hugged
and kissed Forrest, her special favor done.
But she had 'd what 't was.
She must have slipped this note into his knapnever sal sack, under the
cover of her embrace.
Her answer about the identity of the creature he
was looking for.
But why hadn't she just told him?
Now that came clear too.
If she had,
his quest would have ended right there-and his mission with Dawn & Eve
wasn't yet complete.
It might have been out of his control; he and
Imbri might have dissolved into soul substance and gone back to Xanth,
unable to stop themselves.
Leaving the human section of Ptero to its
fate of marginalization.
So Dawn couldn't tell him, until after that
was done.
But she wanted to tell him immediately, so that her love for
him would be equal to Eve's.
So she had done so, in her fashion, giving
him a note that he would be sure to see eventually.
He lifted the dear horn and blew.
The delightful sound went out, and
echoed from Imbri, though she had no substance.
She was indeed the one.
She had turned and was looking at him, not understanding.
"Imbri-I saw
your dream.
Of you and me, together.
The tree animated it."
"Oh!" she said, blushing.
"Are you willing to become the spirit of the tree, to share its fate
until the end?"
"But I can't.
I have no substance."
"Yes you can.
And if you do, the tree will lend you enough substance to
make a solid body.
A nymph-or a mare, so you can gallop in new
pastures.
Spirits help trees; trees help spirits.
They are bound
together.
And you and I can be to either physically.
As in your
dream."
"But I never thought-"
"Why did you do so much more for me than was required by your Service to
the Good Magician?"
"I wanted to be sure you succeeded."
"What about when the twin princesses were seducing me?
You never
interfered."
"I wanted you to be happy."
"But don't you see-that's true love!
You were doing everything for me,
with no thought for yourself."
She blushed again, unable to deny it.
"And why didn't you return to the Good Magician for your Answer, when
your Service was done?
Because it was done, even if my part of it
seemed unsuccessful."
"I just-didn't want to leave you," she said.
"And you thought there was no way that the two of us could be together
in Xanth.
You didn't know about what trees offer."
"I didn't know," she agreed.
"But the tree knew.
As soon as you came near, it knew.
Its spirit
interacted with yours.
It was that interaction I saw."
She nodded.
"But the Good Magician surely knew.
Why didn't he tell
me?"
"Because I wasn't ready.
I thought that all I wanted was a faun for the
tree.
But in the course of the adventure I learned some of the human
breadth and depth of mind and emotion.
That left me forever unsatisfied
with less.
The Good Magician wouldn't take my Question because he knew
it was the wrong one.
He knew that I was your Answer-for you didn't
know your real desire either.
It wasn't for a new pasture, it was for
true love.
And I could be that love-once I learned how.
And now I know
that neither nymph nor human woman is what is right for me.
What I need
is a companion who has a similar length of life to my own.
Who truly
understands.
Who I can love and be loved by.
And that is you, Imbri.
It was always you.
It just wasn't always me."
"This is so hard to believe."
"Just adopt the clog tree.
Then we will play out your dream scene.
While you learn to believe, I will learn to love you.
I am already
failing." For he saw the little hearts forming, orbiting his head like
tiny moons.
They were shaping into gem-like hummingbirds.
She was
perfect for him, and not only because they had shared an experience like
no other.
"Oh, you mustn't fall and crash," she said.
She turned to the tree,
stretching out her arms.
As she did so, the foliage became brilliant,
and her body became solid, in the form of a lovely nymph: small but
perfect.
Then she turned back to Forrest, to catch him before he fell too far.
When I wrote this novel, I was reminded of the fifth novel, Ogre, Ogre,
because that one introduced a wild new setting of Xanth: the world of
dreams, inside the gourd.
This twenty-first Xanth novel, Faun & Games,
introduces the wild new settings of Ida's moons.
I love them, and I
hope that my readers do too.
Whether there will be more adventures
there I don't know; not 'immediately, as the next novel will relate to
zombies.
When I started on this one in Jamboree 1996 I checked my list of reader
sent notions, and discovered there were 300-and more were piling in.
It
wasn't possible to use them all.
There are limits, even to Xanth, and
the story comes first.
Readers seem to be unable to stifle their urge
to emit puns.
But not all readers like puns.
So I try to maintain a
healthy, or at least tolerable, balance.
The problem can be shown by
this example, which occurred while I was writing Faun: a reader wrote to
suggest that too many puns were degrading Xanth, so I should slow them
down.
Then he concluded his letter with a page and a half of more puns.
Any questions?
Some readers send me multi-page notions for future Xanth stories. I
consider these, but often they just don't fit in the framework I have.
It's much easier to invent my own story than to work from notions
suggested by others.
The idea most often suggested is the talent of
borrowing talents from others.
I finally have reference to it in this
novel, and do give a credit, but at the risk of alienating hundreds of
readers who suggested it before and haven't been credited.
This time I used reader notions dating from 1993-96, trying to give
preference to older ones, and managed to catch up on most of them
through FeBlueberry 1995, and scattered ones thereafter.
So there are
over 100 waiting for the next novel.
I'm still making notes of good
ones, but this seems to be a losing race; each novel I am further
behind.
So for those of you who hoped to see your notions here, and
didn't: maybe next time.
I'm really in the business of writing novels,
not publishing lists of names.
It's not that your notions are bad, just
that there are too many of them.
Meanwhile, my dull mundane life continued as I wrote this novel. I am
not entirely sure why readers want to know about my personal existence,
but they complain when I don't mention it, and on occasion I'll get a
letter inquiring whether I have died.
No, not that I know of. I gave a
talk for the "Last Lecture" series at the University of South Florida,
the theme of this series being that if you knew it was to be your last
lecture ever, what would you say?
I thought about it, and concluded
that I would want to let others know what I had learned, in the course
of my researches for my serious writing-the GEODYSSEY historical fiction
series-about the nature of mankind.
So I told of the evolution of our
species from Australopithecus to the present, of the complications
entailed by learning to walk two-footed, of the "triple ploy" women use
to capture and hold men, and the true nature of dreams, which are
actually the brain's "downtime" processing of the experiences of the day
for cross-referencing and long-term memory.
The following month I
talked at the American Humanist convention in Florida, telling a love
story adapted from the third GEODYSSEY novel, relating to the global
crisis we face and the manner in which two communities, survivalist and
pacifist, manage to work together to survive it, despite their opposite
philosophies. No, not many laughs in these talks; both were deadly
serious.
For laughs, come to Xanth.
This was the first novel I wrote completely on Windows 95 and Word 7 on
my new Pentium system.
These are powerful programs, and slowly I am