path of the terrible fire. Every movable form cleared out-except the wiggles, which proceeded as mindlessly as ever.

       The flames spread hungrily up the great trees, consuming them with awesome rapidity. A tangle tree writhed in agony as it was incinerated, and the smell of burning beer and jelly spread. Already a swath of scorched earth was developing, sand and ashes marking the path they had traveled. Glorious!

       Zzapp! Bink dropped to the ground. A wiggle, striking with the luck of the mindless, had holed Herman's right hand. Good. Now Bink could get out of the net and really go to work, setting the most magnificent blaze in all salamander history.

       But the centaur looped about and grabbed the net with his left hand. The flames touched his fingers momentarily, and the tips shivered into ash, but he hung on with the stubs. Damn the courage of the Hermit! 'On!' Herman cried, resuming forward speed. 'To the left.'

       Bink had to obey. Angrily he shot forth an especially intense flame, hoping the Hermit would drop him again, but it didn't work. The centaur galloped on, widening the circle a bit, since the wiggle radius had evidently expanded further. It was useless to burn where the wiggles had been, or where they would be; the flame had to be where they were now. Any that zapped past the sheet of flame and paused in an already burned spot would survive. That made it a tricky calculation. But it was their only chance.

       The circle was almost complete; the centaur could really move. They raced up to the broadening swath of their starting point, pausing to let a few trapped monsters get out before being doomed. The last to go was the great land serpent, a hundred feet of slithering torso.

       Trent was there, organizing the remaining animals into a cleanup detail to intercept any few wiggles already outside the circle of fire. Now that the great majority of wiggles were being eliminated, it was feasible to go after those few individually. Every last one had to be squished.

       The fire closed in on the original wiggle hive. There was a deafening groan. 'AAOOGAAH!' Something stirred invisibly.

       'Bigfoot!' Trent exclaimed. 'He's still alive in there.'

       'I thought he was dead,' Herman said, horrified. 'We've already closed the circle; we can't let him out.'

       'He was riddled through the legs, so he fell-but he wasn't dead,' Trent said. 'The fall must have knocked him out for a while.' He stared into the leaping flames, now outlining the form of a gargantuan man lying prone, stirring at the peripheries. The odor was of roasting garbage. 'Too late now.'

       The doomed giant thrashed about. Flaming branches flew wide. Some landed in the jungle beyond the circle. 'Catch those flames!' the centaur cried. 'They can start a forest fire.'

       But no one could quench or move or even contain the flames. No one except Herman himself, with his weed net. He dumped Bink out and galloped toward the nearest, which was dangerously close to an oilbarrel tree.

       Trent gestured hastily, and Bink was his human self again. He leaped out of the smoldering ground where his salamander self had touched. What power the Evil Magician had; he could destroy Xanth any time just by making a dozen salamanders.

       Bink blinked-and saw Chameleon chasing a wiggle between the prongs of magic fire formed by thrown brands. She was too intent or too stupid to realize the danger!

       He ran after her. 'Chameleon! Turn back!' She paid no heed, faithful to her chore. He caught up and spun her about. 'The fire's getting the wiggles. We have to get out of here.'

       'Oh,' she said faintly. Her once-fancy dress was ragged, and dirt smudged her face, but she was excruciatingly lovely.

       'Come on.' He took her by the hand and drew her along.

       But a determined tongue of fire had crossed behind them. They were trapped in a closing island.

       The omen! Now at last it struck-at both Chameleon and him.

       Herman leaped over the tongue, a splendid figure of a centaur. 'Up on my back,' he cried.

       Bink wrapped his arms about Chameleon and heaved her up onto the Hermit's back. She was wondrously supple, slender of waist and expansive of thigh. Not that he had any business noticing such things at the moment. But his position behind her as she slid on her belly onto the centaur made the thoughts inevitable. He gave her graceful posterior one last ungraceful shove, getting her balanced, then scrambled up himself.

       Herman started walking, then running, ready to hurdle the fire with his double burden.

       Zzapp! A wiggle, close by.

       The centaur staggered. 'I'm hit!' he cried. Then he righted himself, made a convulsion of effort, and leaped.

       He fell short. His front legs buckled, and the rear ones were in the flame. Bink and Chameleon were thrown forward, landing on either side of the human torso. Herman grabbed each by an arm, and with a surge of centaur strength shoved both on beyond the danger zone.

       Trent charged up. 'Hermit, you're burning!' he cried. 'I will transform you-'

       'No,' Herman said. 'I am holed through the liver. I am done for. Let the clean fire take me.' He grimaced. 'Only, to abate the agony quickly-your sword, sir.' And he pointed at his neck.

       Bink would have temporized, pretending misunderstanding, trying to delay the inevitable. The Evil Magician was more decisive. 'As you require,' Trent said. Suddenly his blade was in his hand, flashing in an arc- and the centaur's noble head flew off the body, to land upright on the ground just beyond the flame.

       Bink stared, aghast. He had never before witnessed such a cold-blooded killing.

       'I thank you,' the head said. 'You abated the agony most efficiently. Your secret dies with me.' The centaur's eyes closed.

Вы читаете A Spell for Chameleon
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