The Wizard's Dilemma, New Millennium Edition (18 page)

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Authors: Diane Duane

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BOOK: The Wizard's Dilemma, New Millennium Edition
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“Blame the Speech,” Tom said. “It’s the basis on which every wizardry is predicated … but here, it’s also our weak spot, if this
is
a weakness. Everything that lives knows the Speech and can use it to tell you how life feels for it, how its universe makes it behave…”

Nita stared at the table, her heart sinking. Tom was right. It was hard to be angry at something—a rock, a tree—that you could hear saying to you,
This is how I’m made; it’s not my fault; you see how the world is, the way things are for me; what
else
can I do?
And for the simplest things—and single cells are about as simple as things get—it would be hard to explain to them why they shouldn’t be doing this, why they should all just stop reproducing themselves and essentially commit suicide so that your mother didn’t have to die. Their world was such a simple one, it wouldn’t allow for much in the way of—

Nita’s eyes went wide.

She slowly looked up from the table at Tom. “What about—Tom, is it possible to change a tumor cell’s perception of the world—change the way the universe seems for them,
is
for them—so that they’re
more
sentient? So that a wizard
could
deal with them to best effect? Talk them out of being there… or talk them out of killing?”

Tom and Carl looked at each other. Tom’s look was dubious. But Carl’s expression was strangely intrigued. He nodded slowly.

“You know the rules,” he said. “‘If they’re old enough to ask…’”

“‘…they’re old enough to be told.’” Tom folded his hands and looked at them. “Nita,” he said, “I couldn’t ask about this before. Who are you thinking of doing this wizardry for? Your mother or you?”

Nita sat silent, then she opened her mouth. “Don’t,” Carl said. “You’re still in shock; you can’t possibly have a clear answer to the question yet. You’re going to have to find out as you do your work. But the question matters. Wizardry, finally, is about service to other beings. Our own needs come second. If you start fooling yourself about that, the deception is going to go straight to the heart of any spell you write, and ruin it. And maybe you as well.”

“Okay,” Tom said. “Let that rest for the moment.” To Nita he said, “Are you clear about what you’re suggesting you want to do?”

“I guess it would mean changing the way things behave in the universe, locally,” Nita said. “Inside my mom.” And she gulped. When she put it that way, it suddenly became clear how many, many ways there were to screw it up.

“Changing the structure of the universe itself,” Tom said. “Yes. You get to play God on a local level.”

“You’re going to tell me that it’s seriously dangerous,” Nita said, “and the price is awful.”

“Anything worth having demands a commensurate price,” Carl said. “What is your mother’s life worth to you? …And yes, this option has dangers. But I see that’s not likely to stop you in the present situation.”

He leaned back a little in his chair, folding his arms, looking at Nita. “We have to warn you clearly,” Carl said. “You think you’ve been through a lot in your career so far. I have news for you. You haven’t yet played with
anything
like this. When you start altering the natural laws of universes, it’s like throwing a rock into a pond. Ripples spread, and the first thing in the local system to be affected, the first thing the ripples hit, is
you.
You’re going to need practice handling that, keeping yourself as you are in the face of
everything
changing, before trying it for real. And unfortunately, in this universe, everything
is
for real.”

“I don’t care,” Nita said. “If there’s a chance I might be able to save my mom, I have to try. What do I need to do?”

“Go somewhere it’s
not
for real,” Carl said. “One of the universes where you can practice.”

Nita stared at him, confused. “Like learning to fly a plane in a simulator?”

“It wouldn’t be a simulation,” Tom said. “It’ll be real enough. As Carl said, figures of speech aside, it’s
always
for real. But if you have to make mistakes while you’re learning how to manipulate local changes in universal structure, there are places set aside where you can make them and not kill anybody in the process.”

“Or where, if you kill yourself making one of those mistakes, you won’t take anyone else with you,” said Carl.

There was a moment’s silence at that.

“Where?” Nita said. “I want to go.”

“Of course you do, right this minute,” Carl said, rubbing his face. “It’s going to take time to set up.”

“There may not
be
a lot of time, Carl! My mom—”

“Is not going to die today, or tomorrow,” Tom said, “as far as the doctors can tell. Isn’t that so?”

“Yes, but—” Nita stopped. For a moment she had been ready to shout that they weren’t being very considerate of her. But that would have been untrue. As her Senior wizards, their job was to be tough with her when she needed it. Anything else would have been
really
inconsiderate.

“Good,” Carl said. “Get a grip. You’ll need it where you’re going. The aschetic continua, the ‘practice’ universes, are flexible places—at least the early ones in the sequence—but if you indulge yourself in sloppy thinking while you’re in one, it can be fatal.”

“Where are they?” Nita said. “How do I get there?”

“It’s a worldgating,” Tom said. “Nonstandard, but you’d be using existing gates.” He glanced at Carl. “Penn Station?”

“Penn’s down right now. It’d have to be Grand Central.”

Nita nodded; she had a fair amount of experience with the worldgates there. “What do I do when I get there?”

“Your manual will have most of the details,” Carl said. “You’ll practice changing the natures and rules of the nonpopulated spaces that the course makes available to you. You’ll start with easy ones, then move up to universes that more strenuously resist your efforts to change them, then ones that will be almost impossible to change.”

“It’s like weight lifting,” Nita said. “Light stuff first, then heavier.”

“In a way.”

“When you finish the course,” Tom said, “if you’ve done it correctly, you’ll be in a position to come back and recast your mother’s physical situation as an alternate universe, and change its rules. If you still want to.”

If?
Nita decided not to press the point. She’d noticed over time that sometimes Tom and Carl spent a lot of effort warning you about things that weren’t going to happen. “Yes. I want to do it.”

Tom and Carl looked at each other. “All right,” Tom said. “You’re going to have to construct a carrying matrix for the spells you’ll take with you—sort of a wizardly backpack. Normally you’d read the manual and construct the spells you need, on the spot, but that won’t work where you’re going. In the practice universes, time runs at different speeds, so the manual can be unpredictable about updating—and you can’t wait for it when you’re in the middle of some wizardry where speed of execution is crucial. Your manual will have details on what the matrix needs to do. What it looks like is up to you.”

“And one last thing,” Carl said. He looked sad but also stern. “If you go forward on this course, there’s going to come a time when you’re going to have to ask your mother whether this is a price
she
wants you to pay.”

“I know that,” Nita said. “I’m used to asking my mom for permission for stuff. I don’t think this’ll be a problem.” She looked up at them. “But what
is
the price?”

Tom shook his head. “You’ll find out as you go along.”

“Yeah,” Nita said. “Okay. I’ll get started as soon as I get home.”

And then, to Nita’s complete shock, she broke down and began to cry.

Tom and Carl sat quietly and let her, while Dairine sat there looking stricken. After a moment Tom got up and got Nita a tissue, and Nita blew her nose and wiped her eyes. “I’m sorry,” she said, “that keeps happening all of a sudden.”

“Don’t be sorry,” Tom said. “It’s normal. And so is not giving up.”

She sniffed once or twice more and then nodded.

“Go do what you have to,” Tom said.

She and Dairine got up. “And Nita,” Carl said.

On her way to the front door, she looked back at him.

“Be careful,” Carl said. “There are occupational hazards to being a god.”

9: Sunday Afternoon and Evening

Nita and Dairine walked home, and Nita went up to her room and settled in to work. The moment she sat down at her desk, she saw that her manual already had several new sections in it, subsequent to the usual one that dealt with worldgatings and other spatial and temporal dislocations.

The first new section had general information about the practice universes: their history, their locations relative to the hundreds of thousands of known alternate universes, their qualities.
They’re playpens,
Nita thought as she read.
Places where the structure that holds science to matter, and wizardry to both of them, has some squish to it; where the hard corners on things aren’t so hard, so you can stretch your muscles and find out how to exploit the squish that exists elsewhere.
There was no concrete data about how the practice universes had been established, but they were very old, having apparently been sealed off to prevent settlement at a time almost too ancient to be conceived.
One of the Powers That Be, or Someone higher up, foresaw the need.

While it was useful that no one lived in those universes to get hurt by wizards twisting natural laws around, there seemed to be a downside as well. You couldn’t stay in them for long. The manual got emphatic about the need not to exceed the assigned duration of scheduled sessions—

Universes not permanently inhabited by intelligent life have only a limited toleration for the presence of sentients. The behavior of local physics within these universes can become skewed or deranged when overloaded by too many sentient-hours of use in a given period. In extreme cases such over-inhabition can cause an aschetic continuum to implode….

Boy,
there’s
a welcome I won’t overstay,
Nita thought, though not without a moment’s curiosity about what it was like inside a universe when it imploded.
Something to get Dairine to investigate, maybe.
Nita managed just a flicker of a grim smile at the thought.

Access scheduling is arranged through manual functions from the originating universe. Payment for the gating is determined by duration spent in the aschesocontinuum and deducted from the practitioner at the end of each session. Access is through local main-line gating facilities of complexity level XI or better; the gating type is a diazo-Riemannian timeslide, which, regardless of duration spent in the aschetic continuum, returns practitioners to the originating universe an average of +.10 planetary rotations along duration axis, variation +/- .005 rotation.

Nita did the conversion from the decimal timings, raised her eyebrows.
So you go in, then come out more
or less two hours after you went … no matter how much time you spend there.

Could get tiring.

Ask me if I care!

There were many other details. Nita spent the rest of an hour or so absorbing them, then passed on to what seemed the most important part of the work in front of her: constructing the matrix to hold the spells she’d be using in the practice universes. The matrix would hold a selection of wizardries ready for use until she could get back to where the manual could be depended on for fast use.

The thought of a place where you couldn’t depend on the manual made Nita twitch a little. But that was where she had to go to do her mother any good, so she got over it and started considering the structure of the matrix. It was complex; it had to be in order to hold whole ready-to-run spells apart from one another, essentially in stasis, so that they couldn’t get tangled. The matrix structure that the manual suggested was straightforward enough to build, but fiddly—like putting chain mail together, ring by ring and rivet by rivet, each ring going through three others.

Nita cleared her desk and laid the manual out where she could keep her eye on the guide diagram it provided. Then she put out her hands and pronounced in the Speech the eighty-one syllables of a single basic matrix structure.

Once complete, the sentence took physical form, drifting like a glowing thread into her hands. She said the sentence again, and again, until she had nine of the strands. Then Nita wound them together and knotted the ends of the ninefold strand together with a wizard’s knot, creating a single sealed loop, which she scaled down in size. The next loop of nine strands was laced through that one, as were the next two. When it was finished, there would be three-to-the-sixth links in the matrix: seven hundred twenty-nine of them….

Nita didn’t allow the numbers to freak her out. She kept at it, making each set of nine strands, winding them together, looping them, linking them through the other available links, and fastening them closed. The work was as hypnotic in its way as crocheting—a hobby that Nita had taken up a couple of years ago at her mother’s instigation, then promptly dumped because the constant repetition of motions made her hands cramp. But this was not about making a scarf. This was about saving her mother’s life… so Nita found it a lot easier to ignore the cramps.

Gradually the delicate structure began to grow. Several times Nita missed hooking one of the substructures into all the others it had to be connected to, and the diagram in the manual flashed insistently until she went back and fixed it. Slowly, though, she started to get the rhythm down pat, and the eighty-one syllables, repeated again and again, came out perfectly every time, though they started becoming meaningless with the repetition.
I’m going to be saying these things in my sleep
, Nita thought, finishing one more unit and moving on to the next.

About an hour into this work, Nita heard her dad come home. The back door shut, and she heard him moving around downstairs in the kitchen, but she kept doing what she was doing. A few minutes later there was a knock at her door, and he came in.

Nita looked up at him, grateful for the interruption, and flexed her hands to get rid of the latest bout of cramps. The steady energy drain that came with doing a repetitive wizardry like this was really tiring her out, but that couldn’t be helped. “How’s Mom?” she said.

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