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He tried again, and was balked again. There was nothing to fear except fear itself! He couldn't enter that chamber.
He pondered. The chamber itself must be imbued with fear, so that anyone who entered it was terrified. But then why wasn't the lost angel afraid too? Was there some secret way to nullify the fear? No, probably there was a special anti-fear spell on LA, so that he was immune. It wouldn't make sense to have the folk helping the Good Magician be afraid to do their duties.
In each case before there had been a barrier or threat of some kind, and a person of some type, and the person had been the key to the solution.
Could this be the case again? He thought it would make more sense to have something entirely different, but he wasn't the Good Magician, and didn't know how the old man thought. So maybe there was a pattern, and the person would have the answer. But not anything obvious.
What would a lost angel have to do with fear? Maybe angels were beyond fear, so that was how he was able to be in that dread chamber. But Forrest was no angel, so he needed something else. Still, maybe he could talk to LA and learn something, as he had with the other two.
He looked in. LA was just sitting there, completely at ease. "I gather that there is a way for me to eliminate my fear, and that you know of it, but won't tell me," he said.
LA nodded. "You seem reasonably smart, for a faun."
"Not everyone considers me so," Forrest said. "I met a damsel and a dragon, and I think the damsel liked me, but thought I was a bit dull."
"Beauty is often in the eye of the beholder."
"She was extremely beautiful, so I must have been dull in contrast."
Forrest considered how to proceed. "Do you have a magic talent?"
"Why yes. I can change one kind of wood to another kind of wood.
Unfortunately there is no wood here, so I can't show you."
Something nagged at Forrest's mind, but he couldn't place it. So he talked some more, hoping to learn something useful. "You came to ask the Good Magician a Question, and he gave you his Answer, and now you are serving your years Service for him?"
"Exactly."
"If it is not too personal, what was your Question?"
"It's not personal at all. It wasn't a Question, it was a request. I asked that a significant village be named after me. He told me that one already was, but that it was in Mundania. I suppose that's better than nothing."
"And for this you are glad to serve for a year?"
"It does seem inadequate. But that's what I get for wanting something stupid. I am learning a whole lot during this Service, and will depart here a much wiser creature. If I had known how it would be, I would have dispensed with the Question, and simply come for the Service."
That surprised Forrest. "Is it the same with Dot, and the psychologist?"
"Certainly. And for the mer-dragon too. And maybe for you, if you manage to get through."
"The damsel said he would not require a Service of me."
Now LA was surprised. "I find that hard to believe. He always requires a Service. It's his way of discouraging folk who aren't serious, just as is this business of three Challenges. Why should you be an exception?"
"I have no idea. Maybe it's not true."
"Who was this damsel?"
"She called herself Chlorine. She said her talent was poisoning water.
She rode a funny looking dragon."
"Ah, the dragon a.s.s. I have heard of him. They are an odd couple.
Well, maybe they know what they are doing. I have heard that good things tend to happen when they are around, as if they somehow reverse the normal perversity of fate."
Reverse perversity? Then, for no reason, Forrest got a notion. Reverse wood! Could that reverse the fright spell on the chamber? Of course he didn't have any reverse wood, but if LA cared to cooperate, he could get some.
"Will you do me a favor?" he asked the lost angel.
"Within reason. What do you want?"
"I would like you to change some wood for me."
"I'd be glad to. But I don't have any wood."
"But I do." Forrest removed one of his sandals. "Will you change this sandalwood to reverse wood?"
LA smiled. "You are a clever one! Very well: bring it here."
Forrest started to walk into the chamber-and was immediately beaten back by utter fear. Oh, no-he couldn't do what he wanted, because of the thing he wanted to eliminate.
But then he found a way. "I will toss it to you."
He threw the sandal. LA caught it and held it. "Are you sure you want me to do this? There may be consequences."
"I'll risk them. Change it to reverse wood."
"Very well. Done."
The sandal looked the same, but when Forrest tried to enter the room, he had no trouble. In fact he was drawn into it, delighting in its ambiance. Not only did he feel no fear, he felt absolutely fearless.
"Thank you," he said to the lost angel. "That worked perfectly."
"Did it?"
"Sure. My fear is gone. I'm having absolutely no trouble with this chamber. In fact I could stay here forever."
"That's nice." But LA seemed oddly subdued.
"Well, I must move on into the castle proper. But I'll need my sandal.
Please change it back to sandalwood now."
"I can't do that."
"But you changed it before. Why can't you do it again?"
"Because the reverse wood reverses my talent. Now I can't change anything."
Forrest paused. The angel had warned him that there might be consequences. He hadn't paid enough attention.
"Maybe I can use it anyway," he said. "Let me put it on."
"Are you sure you want to do that?"
"I don't have any magical talent. I'm a faun. So it can't reverse it.
If I take it away from you, your own talent should revert to normal, so you'll be okay. And who knows-maybe I'll find some future use for reverse wood. So, yes, this seems the best way."
LA gave him the sandal, and he put it on. But he felt suddenly quite odd. His hair seemed longer than usual, and his body felt different.
His feet felt oddest of all. What was the matter?
He looked down, and saw his legs and feet. He stared. They were human!
They had five toes, and were fleshy, with solid heels.
Then he traced the lines of his legs upward. They were human, with far more flesh than his goat legs ever had had, and got really fleshy near the tops. And above that "Oh, my," he breathed, appalled. "I'm a nymph!"
"It seems that the reverse wood reversed your nature," LA said.
"You are now a fine looking female."
"But I don't want to be a nymph!" he (she) protested.
"Then take off the sandal."
That made sense. He tore off the sandal, threw it across the room, and felt his body reverting to normal. He was himself again.
"I guess I'll have to do without the sandal," he said. "I'll use my spare pair." He removed the other sandal, put it in his knapsack, drew out the other pair, and put them on.
"You may still have a problem," LA remarked.
"Not if I stay well clear of that reverse wood. I'll just step on into the main castle, leaving it behind." He paused. "Unless it makes things too difficult for you."
"Have no concern about me. I'm here for the duration, regardless. My job is here; I'm a prisoner of this chamber. Your visit has helped relieve the boredom."
"Okay. Then I guess it's farewell, and thank you." Forrest walked to the doorway into the rest of the castle.
But as he pa.s.sed through it, sudden terror gripped him. He reeled back into the chamber, and the fear faded.
Then he realized what had happened. "The spell is reversed. Now the chamber is fine, but I'm afraid to leave it."
"I know the feeling," LA said.
"But how can I see the Good Magician, if I can't leave the room, and you can't change the reverse wood""
"It is a question."
A question he had to answer for himself. So he walked around the chamber, pondering hard.
"What, stuck again'?" D. Sire inquired mockingly from the doorway leading out to the tracks and moat.
He had had enough. He ran to the reverse wood sandal, picked it up, and hurled it at her. In the course of that action he felt himself changing, and changing back.
The wood pa.s.sed right through her. "oooh, that smarts," she cried, flapping her hands to bow the smoke away from a sandal-shaped hole in her- mid-section.
The sandal splashed into the water of the moat beyond her. The water shuddered and turned to fire. There was a scream of outrage from the moat monster, who must have had to scramble to land. A little reverse wood in the wrong place could be a lot of mischief.
But Forrest's problem had been solved. The chamber was now normal, and so were his emotions. "Thanks for your help, demoness," he called out one doorway, then walked out the other, into the main castle.
A young woman greeted him in the ball. "h.e.l.lo, Forrest Faun," she said.
"I am Wira, the Good Magician's A daughter-in-law. He is ready to see you now."
"Just like that?" He was surprised to have such ready acceptance, after the complications of the Challenges.
"He has been most interested in your progress. This way, please."
Magician Humfrey had been following his case? The Challenges had seemed designed to confuse or discourage him.
Forrest followed the woman through dull pa.s.sages and up a dark stairway.
He wondered how she could be so sure-footed, in such poor lighting.
Soon they were at a study so gloomy that "dingy" would be inadequate to describe it. Within it a gnome sat hunched over a huge tome. "Forrest Faun is here, Good Magician," Wira said.
The gnome looked up. "Thank you, dear." It was probably illusion, but there almost seemed to be a nuance of affection when he spoke to her.
"Send him in."
Wira turned to Forrest. "Go on in," she said. There was something odd about her gaze, which did not quite meet his own.
Then he realized what it was: she was blind. That was why she was indifferent to darkness.
Embarra.s.sed for no reason he could settle on, he walked on into the Magician's crowded study. "My Question is-"
"Yes, yes, of course," the Magician said impatiently. "Imbri will be here in a moment."
"But how can you Answer, if you don't hear my Question?"
"I am not going to Answer, because I won't charge you a Service. Now stop wasting my time."
Forrest experienced an unusual emotion. After half a pause he recognized it: anger. "You mean I took all this trouble to come here, and to brave your Challenges, for nothing?"
"Not for nothing. For the Solution to your problem. That requires neither Question nor Answer. The mare will clarify it in due course."