Calling on Dragons - Wrede Patricia Collins (книги онлайн читать бесплатно TXT) 📗
9
In Which the Expedition Leaves the Enchanted Forest at Last
The rest of the cats, even Jasmine, followed Morwen and Scorn through the house and out onto the front porch. Kazul was standing in the center of the yard, along with Telemain and Killer. The donkey was still floating a good six inches above the ground, and he looked extremely uncomfortable.
Standing beside him was Mendanbar, who was frowning ferociously, and Cimorene, who seemed to be trying to suppress a satisfied smile. With some dismay, Morwen noted that Cimorene now had a small pack slung over one shoulder and a slim sword belted to her waist.
The cats flowed across the yard and converged on Kazul. Making little noises of satisfaction, all nine of the cats scrambled up the dragon's sides.
Their claws rasped against Kazul's scales, making Cimorene wince, but neither they nor the dragon seemed to notice.
Morwen looked at Telemain while the cats draped themselves contentedly all over Kazul. "I thought you were going to explain to him why he couldn't come along," she said, nodding sideways at Mendanbar.
"I did," Telemain said grumpily.
"Then what is he doing here?"
"Making trouble?" Scorn suggested from a comfortable perch on Kazul's left shoulder.
"He'd better not be," Trouble said. "That's my job." He stretched himself full length along the lower part of Kazul's neck, beside her spinal ridges, his tail and one front paw dangling lazily.
"I'm taking you to the edge of the Enchanted Forest," Mendanbar said.
"I can do that much, at least, even if I can't come with you. My magic will get you there faster than anything else, and you'll be safe from most of the things that live in the forest if you're with me."
"I see." That explained Telemain's bad mood: he hated having to admit that anyone's magic was better than his, even the King's. Morwen looked at Cimorene. "What about you?"
"I'm coming with you," Cimorene said. Mendanbar scowled fiercely as if he wanted to object, but before he could, Cimorene hurried on, "I have to.
Otherwise you'll have as much difficulty with the sword as I hope those blasted wizards are having right now."
Kazul snorted angrily, sending out a large ball of smoke, which made everyone in front of her cough. "If they aren't having trouble now, they will soon."
Morwen gave Kazul a stern look over the tops of her glasses. "We are going on this expedition to recover Mendanbar's sword, Kazul. We aren't trying to destroy the entire Society of Wizards."
"Yet," said Trouble.
"You be quiet, or I'll leave you at home," Morwen said. "Now, would someone explain to me just why Cimorene has to come along?"
"Resonance and half-hard deflection mechanisms," Telemain said.
"Which are-" "-as clear as mud," Kazul put in.
Telemain looked annoyed. "I wasn't talking to you. Morwen understands what I mean."
"Most of the time," Morwen said.
"I think he means that Mendanbar's sword is painful to touch, unless you happen to belong to the King's family," Cimorene said. "And the longer it stays outside the forest, the harder it is to handle."
"The deflection increases exponentially," Telemain said. "Rather like the magic leakage we discussed earlier, only the defense spells won't slow down the deflection. By this time, it is undoubtedly past the transfer-resonance point."
"So the Society of Wizards can't use the sword against us." Morwen smiled grimly. "Good. I'd been wondering about that."
"Unfortunately, you can't use it, either," Cimorene said. "If Telemain is right about the timing-" "And I am."
"-then in a day or two nobody but a member of the Royal Family will be able to pick up the sword at all, much less carry it back to the Enchanted Forest. So since Mendanbar and I are the only members of the Royal Family right now, and since Mendanbar has to stay in the forest-" "-you have to come with us to retrieve the sword," Morwen finished, raising an eyebrow. "I see."
Cimorene grinned. "Telemain explained it at least three times at the castle, and by the time he and Mendanbar finished arguing, I had a pretty good idea what he meant, even if he never did say it straight out."
"I did, too!" Telemain said indignantly. "Several times."
"Not so I understood."
"That is unfortunately not very surprising," Morwen said.
"Mendanbar, your sword is very inconveniently designed."
"Don't blame me, "Mendanbar said. "The blasted thing came with the kingdom."
"Hmph." Morwen glanced around. "What about Killer? Why is he here?"
Killer's ears twitched anxiously forward. "They told me I was supposed to come. Is it all right?"
"Once we're away from the interference patterns of the Enchanted Forest, we should be able to trace the residual energy in the morphological field trap," Telemain said. "At that point, a standard locus delimiter should-" "Telemain," Kazul said in a warning tone.
Morwen rolled her eyes. "He thinks we can use what's left of the size-changing spell on Killer to find the wizards. But are you sure there's enough, Telemain?"
"I can't tell until we're out of the forest," Telemain said. "The interference-" He glanced at Kazul and stopped.
"I understand," Morwen said. "But remember: bringing him along was your idea, so you're responsible for keeping him out of trouble."
"And he'd better do a good job," Trouble said. "If that overgrown blue idiot steps on my tail, he'll wish he'd never left his rabbit hole."
"I already wish I'd never left my hole," Killer said. "Rabbits aren't supposed to have adventures. Our temperaments aren't suited to them."
"Are you people going to stand around talking all day?" Kazul asked pointedly. "Or are we going wizard hunting?"
"Sword hunting, Kazul, if you please," Morwen said. "And I am ready to leave as soon as we decide which way we're heading."
There was a pause while Cimorene, Telemain, and Mendanbar looked at each other. Scorn snickered. "Look at them! They didn't even think of that."
"The central office of the Society of Wizards is in the Brown Forest," Telemain said at last. "We should probably start there."
"Why waste time?" Kazul said. "The wizards wouldn't be stupid enough to take Mendanbar's sword to their main office."
"Antorell would," Cimorene said.
"Where is the Brown Forest?" Killer asked timidly. "It doesn't sound very... appetizing."
"It's worse than it sounds," Telemain told him. "The Brown Forest is actually a corner of the Great Southern Desert."
Frowning, Cimorene looked at Telemain. "I always thought the Brown Forest was a dead woods. Are you sure it's really a desert?"
Telemain nodded. "I've been there."
"You have?" Kazul said. "Why?"
"I wanted to learn wizardry, and the school the Society of Wizards runs is the only-" "You wanted to be a wizard?"Kazul said, outraged.
"No," Telemain said in the too-patient tone of someone who has had to give the same explanation far too many times. "I didn't want to be a wizard.
I wanted to study them. Their magical methods are unique, and magicians have been attempting to figure them out for a long, long time."
"And you thought they would tell you if you asked politely?"
Cimorene said.
Telemain shrugged. "It was worth a try. Anyway, I've been to the Brown Forest in the Great Southern Desert. I can probably even find the area where the central office of the Society of Wizards was when I was "The area where it was?" Kazul said.
"They move the building every couple of months," Telemain explained.
"I don't know whether they do it to stay hard to find or whether they take turns practicing the relocation spell."
"No wonder they keep trying to steal other people's magic," Kazul muttered. "They waste what they've got moving buildings around."