Part 35 (1/2)
Lysander turned to Oche. ”I always knew you were both,” he said. ”I knew the harpy watched everything. I knew she way the brain in your machine, just as you knew a living Hectare was the brain in my laboratory-generated body. What ha? changed is only a detail. I love the whole of you. If you love me-”
”Aye,” she said. Then she stepped into him, and they embraced. ”But I think thy body be human now too, Lysan.”
”All the way human? But that would mean-”
”That we can have a family,” she finished.
He realized that his future was likely to be even more busy than his past. But there was no time now to ponder the implications; they had to organize for the reorganization of the frames.
Epilog They gathered beside the wooden castle of the Brown Demesnes. Tsetse looked out a window and spied them. ”Brown-there's an army outside! But a moment ago it was just open fields!”
”Mayhap it be Franken returning,” Brown said. ”His step can shake the ground. He were on errand, returning the Book o' Magic to the Red Adept.”
”No, I mean there really are people out there,” Tsetse insisted. ”And animals, and everything.”
”Methought I felt a conjuration,” Brown said. Because her selves were the same, and Tsetse had only one self, the two of them had not been affected by the exchange of ident.i.ties. It had taken a while to get used to the quarter turn the compa.s.s had taken, making the sun now rise and set at the North and South Poles instead of the East and West ones, but the climate of her region had changed only slightly. She considered herself well off in most respects, now that the alien conquest had been reversed.
But whatever could have caused this sudden gathering? She gazed out, and spied wolves, unicorns, elves, demons, animal heads, BEMs, and of course human folk. It seemed to be some kind of celebration, for the folk were brightly garbed and there appeared to be picnic sheets spread out.
”Needs must we go out and see,” Brown decided, speaking positively though she was perplexed and a bit nervous.
”Maybe I should stay in,” Tsetse said.
Brown came to a decision. ”Nay, friend. I love thee and will deny thee not. An thou lovest me, come face the world with me.”
”If you're sure-”
”I know only that I will live a lie no longer, come what may.” She took the woman by the hand, kissed her, and led her to the front portal.
Outside, the gathering was organized almost like an army, with contingents spread in a large semicircle, and a small group centered, facing the castle entrance. As Brown walked out, the visitors came to attention, silently.
At the head of the a.s.sembly was Purple, whether Citizen or Adept she would not know until he spoke-and then she would remain in doubt, because of the reversals. This was another surprise; she had thought him imprisoned again. Just behind him stood the woman Alyc, the one who had dated Lysander but then worked for the enemy. Evidently she had found another companion. Brown stopped before Purple, Tsetse beside her.
Purple spoke. ”Thou knowest my life be forfeit, for that I twice betrayed my culture. Thou must believe I bespeak thee truth now. I yield naught to none, except to thee, for that thou didst treat me kindly. Know, Adept, that the specter I held o'er thee were but a phantom; others differ but judge thee not for it, as thou dost not judge them. An thou accept it not from thy friends, accept it from thine enemy: it be no barrier for thee.”
She stared at him. There was only one subject he could be addressing. Had he come to shame her openly, before them all?
Purple stepped forward. He caught Tsetse's timid hand. ”My purpose in sending thee to the Brown Demesnes were malevolent,” he told her. ”I sought to blackmail her, that she would serve the Hectare. But it were a lie. None begrudge Brown her way or thee thine. I now renounce any power I had o'er thee, Tsetse, and wish thee well.” He turned to Brown. ”Deep do I regret repaying thy kindness with malice, and using a lie to savage thee. Thou didst deserve it not.”
He turned in place and walked away. Alyc followed.
”Wait!” Brown cried. ”What did they promise thee, to make thee speak so?”
He paused. ”That need concern thee not. Be a.s.sured I bespoke thee the truth.”
”It does concern me!” she insisted. ”I know thou dost do naught for naught. What-?”
”A clean and painless death,” he said, and resumed his walk- ”Nay!” she cried, hurrying after him. ”I wished this not on thee! We made a deal, and I agreed nor to seek harm to thee neither to be silent an I learned o' harm coming.”
”This be not o' thy making,” he said gruffly, still walking. ”In any event, the deal be off; it were in power only while the Hectare governed. Concern thyself not farther on this matter.”
But she could not let it go. ”An they brought thee here for a public execution, I tolerate it not! I forgive thee aught thou intended, and thank thee for bringing me a companion. Thou must not die!”
”I ask this not o' thee,” Purple said, pausing again. ”I came only to spare myself a life confined, under geis. An the truth purchase me that, I be satisfied.”
Brown looked to the side. There was the Blue Adept and the Lady Blue. ”Stile! I beg thee, an our friends.h.i.+p mean aught, let not this horror be!”
Stile lifted his hands. ”Thou be pardoned, Purple, at Brown's behest. An thou do no further evil, we spare thee death and confinement, and thy paramour too. Get thee gone from our sight.” He was evidently somewhat disgusted-but only somewhat. He had never been a vengeful man, when there were reasonable alternatives. He turned to the Hectare standing behind him. ”Do thou input it to thy net: he to be watched but not molested.”
The BEM extended one small tentacle, its tip tilted up.
Slowly Purple turned. ”Lady, thou be more generous to me than I were to thee. I thank thee for what I expected not.” Then he turned again and walked away, and no one challenged him.
No one except Alyc, who tackled him and embraced him. He put an arm around her. He had always had an eye for young women, and she was reputed lo be a most pa.s.sionate one.
Now Brown saw the Tan Adept, with the vampire Jod'e beside him. Tan had used his power to fascinate the lovely bat woman, who was blameless. Brown opened her mouth.
”And Tan, pardoned,” Blue said before Brown could speak.
The BEM made another note.
”I thank thee, O my lady!” Jod'e exclaimed.
Tan walked away, with Jod'e. Brown had to admit that they did make a decent couple. With a bat wife, Tan would not again betray the interests of Phaze.
Another couple came forward. It was Lysander, who had turned out to be another enemy spy, but who had in the end chosen to help save Phaze, and his companion Echo or Oche. ”When you took Tsetse to Hardom to help Purple play his game with the Hectare, I was the one you took, in the guise of Tsetse. I apologize for deceiving you in this manner.”
Brown was amazed. ”Thou? A man?” But she realized that it was possible. She had known that the person was larger than Tsetse, and of course she hadn't verified for gender.
”Yes. The prophecy indicated that my cooperation was required if the planet sh.e.l.l was to be saved. Thus I was integral to Phaze Doubt, and Nepe brought me to help her fetch the key element of the counterploy.”
Phaze Doubt. She realized that that would have been their name for the project to save Phaze. ”The key element?”
An attractive young woman of about seventeen stepped up. ”I was the one he fetched, in the form of a BEM seed,” she said. ”I am known currently as Weva, though with the reversal this is approximate. I want to thank you, Adept, for enabling me to come into existence, and to help save Phaze.”