“Half?” she said. “You have taken half?”
“Surely I deserve some reward for preserving your place here, and for liberating you.”
Amay’s eyes glittered. “
He cleared his throat. “If you have no messages for me to carry, then I shall leave you to your business.” He bowed, and in haste stepped toward the door.
“Stay!” she called. When he hesitated, she took a firm step toward him.
“It was bad enough,” Amay said, “that I spent six years confined in that wretched globe, deprived of honor and my sorcerous powers. It was bad enough that I was forced to endure the presence of my husband, and watch him consort with those bronze nymphs — and bad enough that I could see him adding to his fortune day by day, counting the coins and gems that he extorted from the bargemen before storing them in his strong rooms.” She glared at him, showing even white teeth. “And is it not bad enough that I am expected to endure a
He bowed again, and put a hand to his chest.
“Bear in mind,” he said, “that I set you free. Do I not deserve anything for this favor?”
“Indeed you do,” Amay said. “I shall kill you now, and quickly, rather than string you by your heels from the Onyx Tower!” With a ferocious gesture, she spoke the words that called forth the Spell of Azure Curtailment.
Nothing occurred. Amay stared into the face of Vespanus, which stared back, an expression of wide-eyed surprise on his face.
“So you have a charm proof against that spell,” Amay said. “But nothing can stand against the Excellent Prismatic Spray!”
Again she spoke the words of a spell, enhancing its affect with ferocious gestures. Again nothing happened, and her companion blinked at her in surprise.
“I think we have learned enough,” said the voice of Vespanus, and Amay glanced about uneasily, for the voice had seemed to come from the air, and not from her companion. Then she started and drew back as the figure of Vespanus shifted and changed into that of a leering figure with rolling eyes, a full beard, and a prominent overbite.
Then there was a scene of frantic motion, as the leering man began to dash around the room with incredible speed. He laid hands upon the very room itself and took it apart piece by piece, the whole disassembly taking place in just a few seconds, after which there was nothing left but the figure of the leering man and walls of transparent crystal.
“Allow me,” said Vespanus, peering into the crystal bottle, “to introduce my madling, Hegadil.”
Hegadil bowed elaborately as Amay stared first at the madling, and then at Vespanus, standing in her husband’s study.
“I thought it best to discover whether you were trustworthy,” Vespanus said. “While you were asleep, I had Hegadil construct a duplicate of your bedchamber inside the bottle. As he has a talent for impersonation, I also ordered him to adopt my form and see whether you would attack me once you found yourself at liberty. Alas, my lady, you failed that test…”
“I am chastened!” Amay said quickly. “I reconsider!”
“I am not so foolish as to trust you again,” Vespanus said. “Come, Hegadil!”
Hegadil stepped through the wall of the crystal bottle, and flew to the ring on Vespanus’ finger.
“Farewell, my lady,” Vespanus said. “I leave you to contemplate your long and doubtless tedious future.”
He left the study before she could speak. In truth, he had not expected any great success with the lady Amay, but he had thought the ploy worth trying. In any case, he would have all summer to puzzle out any traps on the strong room doors — and, of course, he would have the help of Hegadil, which would be considerable.
Pondering thus his own prospects, the Protostrator Vespanus walked to the Onyx Tower, and from its highest room contemplated his new domain.
I seem to be fairly unique in acquiring my taste for Jack Vance’s fiction as an adult.
Most Vance readers seem to have encountered him when they were young. I did, too, but I must have read the wrong stuff, or I read it badly, or maybe I just didn’t get it.
But then I kept hearing from my writer friends about what a terrific writer Jack Vance was, and how much they admired him. And these were writers whose taste I trusted.
So off I went to read
And so I developed a grownup’s appreciation for Vance’s glorious high style, his psychological acuity, and for the breadth of his invention.
In the
Abrizonde, Pex, and Calabrande are countries of my own invention, though I hope I have invented them in the Vance style. They are populated by Vancean creations such as sendestins and twk-men, callow-fields and miniaturized sorcerers, as well as some of my own inventions such as the Halcyon Detonation.
I was delighted to include such Vancean objects as alidades, altazimuths, and dividing engines, which though used in the story by Calabrandene engineers are actual implements used in our actual world by actual surveyors.
Perhaps reality itself pays occasional homage to Jack Vance.
Paula Volsky
THE TRADITIONS OF KARZH
Here’s the story of a lazy and languid lothario who receives the keenest of incentives to apply himself to his studies — the imminent threat of death.
Paula Volsky is the author of the popular
“Nephew Farnol,” Dhruzen observed, “I wish you a happy birthday. Today you attain the age of one-and- twenty. Let us drink to that accomplishment.”
“Gladly, Uncle.” Farnol of Karzh angled a dutiful inclination of the head.
The two kinsmen touched goblets and drank.