'Frankly I think we have it in hand,' the King said. 'Will you not relinquish with grace, Murphy?'
'There remains yet one aspect of the curse,' Murphy said. 'Should it fail, then I am done, and will retire. But I must hold on until it manifests.'
'Fair enough,' Roogna said. 'I hung on when it seemed your curse had prevailed. Indeed, had not young Dor arrived with his friend-'
'Surely nothing I did really affected the outcome,' Dor said uneasily. For there, ultimately, could be Murphy's victory.
'You still feel that what you do is invalid?' the King inquired. 'We can readily have the verification of that. I have a magic mirror somewhere-'
'No, I-' But the King in his gratitude was already on his way to locate the mirror.
'Perhaps it is time we verified this,' Murphy said. 'Your involvement, Dor, has become so pervasive and intricate that it becomes difficult to see how it can be undone. I may have been mistaken in my conjecture. Was my curse opposing you also?'
'I believe it was,' Dor said. 'Things kept going wrong-'
'Then you must have validity, for otherwise my curse would not care. In fact, if your efforts lacked validity, my curse might even have promoted them, so that they played a larger part in the false success. If the King depended on you instead of on his own-'
'But how can I change my own-' Dor glanced at Vadne, then shrugged. He could not remember whether she knew about him now or did not. What did it matter, so long as Millie remained innocent? 'My own past?'
'I do not know,' Murphy said. 'I had thought that would be a paradox, therefore invalid. Yet there are aspects of magic no man can fathom. I may have made a grievous error, and thereby cost myself the victory. Is the Gap forgotten in your day?'
'Yes.'
They mulled that over for a while, chewing on waffles from the royal waffle tree. Then Murphy said: 'It could be that spots of history can be rechanneled, so long as the end result is the same. If King Roogna is fated to win, it may not matter how he does it, or what agencies assist. So your own involvement may be valid, yet changes nothing. You are merely filling a role that some other party filled in your absence.'
'Could be,' Dor agreed. He glanced about. The others seemed interested in the discussion, except for Vadne, who was withdrawn. Something about that bothered him, but he couldn't place it.
'At any rate, we shall soon know. My power has been stretched to its limit,' Murphy continued. 'If I do not achieve the victory this day, I shall be helpless. I do not know exactly what form my curse will take, but it is in operation now, and I think will prove devastating. The issue remains in doubt.'
The King returned with his mirror. 'Let me see-how shall I phrase this?' he said to himself. 'Mirror queries have to rhyme. That was built into them by the Magician who made this type of glass. Ah.' He set it on the floor. 'Mirror, mirror, on the floor-can we trust ourselves to Dor?'
'Corny,' Murphy muttered.
The forepart of a handsome centaur appeared in the mirror. 'That signifies affirmative,' Roogna said. 'The hind part is the negative.'
'But many centaurs are far handsomer in the hind part,' Dor pointed out.
'Why not simply ask it which side will prevail?' Murphy suggested wryly.
'I doubt that will work,' the King said. 'Because if its answer affects our actions, that would be paradox. And since we have been dealing with very strong magic, it could be beyond the mirror's limited power of resolution.'
'Oh, let's discover the answer for ourselves,' Murphy said. 'We have fought it through this far, we might as well finish it properly.'
'Agreed,' Roogna said.
They ate more waffles, pouring on maple syrup from a rare maple tree. Unlike other magic beverage trees, the maple issued its syrup only a drop at a time, and it was dilute, so that a lot of the water had to be boiled off to make it thick enough for use. This made the syrup a special delicacy. In fact, maple trees no longer existed in Xanth in Dor's day. Maybe they had been overlapped, and thus this most magical species had ironically gone the way of most mundane trees.
The Zombie Master came in. Vadne perked up. 'Come sit by me,' she invited.
But he was not being sociable. 'Where is Millie the maid, my fiancee?'
The others exchanged perplexed glances. 'I assumed she was with you,' Dor said.
'No. I worked late last night, and it would not be meet for such as she to keep my company unchaperoned. I sent her to bed.'
'You didn't do that at your own castle,' Dor pointed out.
'We were not then engaged. After the betrothal, we kept company only in company.'
Dor thought of asking about the journey from the zombie castle to Castle Roogna, which had had at least one night on the road. But he refrained; it seemed the Zombie Master had conservative notions about propriety, and honored them rigidly.
'She has not been to breakfast,' the King said. 'She must be sleeping late.'
'I called at her door, but she did not answer,' the Zombie Master said.
'Maybe she's sick,' Dor suggested, and immediately regretted his directness, for the Zombie Master