She took a deep breath, inflating herself against him. “I’ll scream,” she breathed in his ear, taunting him.
But Dor knew how to handle her. “I’ll tickle,” he breathed back.
“That’s not fair!” For she could not scream realistically while giggling, and she was hyper-ticklish, perhaps because she thought it was fashionable for young ladies to be so. She had heard somewhere that ticklishness made girls more appealing.
Irene’s hand moved swiftly, trying to tuck the paper into her bosom, where she knew he wouldn’t dare go for it. But Dor had encountered this ploy before, too, and he caught her wrist en route. He finally got his fingers on the essay-paper, for he was stronger than she, and she also deemed it unladylike to fight too hard. Image was almost as important to her as mischief. She let the paper go, but tried yet another ploy. She put her arms around him. “I’ll kiss.”
But he was ready even for that. Her kisses could change to bites without notice, depending on her mercurial mood. She was not to be trusted, though in truth the close struggle had whetted his appetite for some such diversion. She was scoring on him better than she knew. “Your mother’s watching.”
Irene turned him loose instantly. She was a constant tease; but in her mother’s presence she always behaved angelically. Dor wasn’t sure why this was so, but suspected that the Queen’s desire to see Irene become Queen after her had something to do with it. Irene didn’t want to oblige her mother any more than she wanted to oblige anyone else, and expressing overt interest in Dor would constitute a compromising attitude. The Queen resented Dor because he was a full Magician while her daughter was not, but she was not about to let him make anyone else’s daughter Queen. Irene, ironically, did want to be Queen, but also wanted to spite her mother, so she always tried to make it seem that Dor was chasing her while she resisted.
The various facets of this cynical game became complex on occasion.
Dor himself wasn’t sure how he felt about it all. Four years ago, when he was twelve, he had gone on an extraordinary adventure into Xanth’s past and had occupied the body of a grown, muscular, and highly coordinated barbarian. He had learned something about the ways of men and women. Since he had had an opportunity to play with adult equipment before getting there himself, he had an inkling that the little games Irene played were more chancy than she knew.
So he stayed somewhat clear, rejecting her teasing advances, though this was not always easy. Sometimes he had strange, wicked dreams, wherein he called one of her bluffs, and it wasn’t exactly a bluff, and then the hand of an anonymous censor blotted out a scene of impending fascination.
“Dumbo!” Irene exclaimed irately, staring at the still picture on the wall. “My mother isn’t watching us!”
“Got you off my case, though, didn’t it?” Dor said smugly. “You want to make like Millie the Ghost, and you don’t have the stuff.”
That was a double-barreled insult, for Millie-who had stopped being a ghost before Dor was born, but retained the identification-was gifted with magical sex appeal, which she had used to snare one of the few Magicians of Xanth, the somber Zombie Master. Dor himself had helped bring that Magician back to life for her, and now they had three-year-old twins. So Dor was suggesting to Irene that she lacked sex appeal and womanliness, the very things she was so assiduously striving for. But it was a hard charge to make stick, because Irene was really not far off the mark. If he ever forgot she was the palace brat, he would be in trouble, for what hidden censor would blot out a dream-turned-real? Irene could be awfully nice when she tried. Or maybe it was when she stopped trying; he wasn’t sure.
“Well, you better get that dumb essay done, or Cherie Centaur will step on you,” Irene said, putting on a new mood. “I’ll help you spell the words if you want.”
Dor didn’t trust that either. “I’d better struggle through on my own.”
“You’ll flunk. Cherie doesn’t put up with your kind of ignorance.”
“I know,” he agreed glumly. The centaur was a harsh taskmistress -which was of course why she had been given the job. Had her mate Chester done the tutoring, Dor would have learned much about archery, swordplay, and bare-knuckle boxing, but his spelling would have sunk to amazing new depths. King Trent had a sure hand in delegating authority.
“I know what!” Irene exclaimed. “You need a spelling bee!”
“A what?”
“I’ll fetch one,” she said eagerly. Now she was in her helpful guise, and this was especially hard to resist, since he did need help.
“They are attracted by letter plants. Let me get one from my collection.” She was off in a swirl of sweet scent; it seemed she had started wearing perfume.
Dor, by dint of phenomenal effort, squeezed out another sentence.
“Everyone in Xanth has his one magic talent; no two are the same,” he said as he wrote. Thirteen more words. What a deadly chore!
“That’s not true,” the table said. “My talent is talking. Lots of things talk.”
“You’re not a person, you’re a thing,” Dor informed it brusquely. “Talking isn’t your talent, it’s mine. I make inanimate things talk.”
“Aw . . .” the table said sullenly.
Irene breezed back in with a seed from her collection and an earth-filled flowerpot. “Here it is.” In a moment she had the seed planted-it was in the shape of the letter Land had given it the magic command: “Grow.” It sprouted and grew at a rate nature could not duplicate. For that was her talent-the green thumb. She could grow a giant acorn tree from a tiny seed in minutes, when she concentrated, or cause an existing plant to swell into monstrous proportions. Because she could not transform a plant into a totally different creature, as could her father, or give animation to lifeless things, as Dor and the Zombie Master could, she was deemed to be less than a Sorceress, and this had been her lifelong annoyance. But what she could do, she could do well, and that was to grow plants.
The letter plant sent its main stalk up the breadth of a hand. Then it branched and flowered, each blossom in the form of a letter of the alphabet, all the letters haphazardly represented. The flowers emitted a faint, odd odor a bit like ink and a bit like musty old tomes.
Sure enough, a big bee in a checkered furry jacket arrived to service the plant. It buzzed from letter to letter, harvesting each and tucking it into little baskets on its six legs. In a few minutes it had collected them all and was ready to fly away.
But Irene had closed the door and all the windows. “That was my letter plant,” she informed the bee. “You’ll have to pay for those letters.”
“BBBBBB,” the bee buzzed angrily, but acceded. It knew the rules. Soon she had it spelling for Dor. All he had to do was say a word, and the bee would lay down its flower-letters to spell it out.
There was nothing a spelling bee couldn’t spell.
“All right, I’ve done my good deed for the day,” Irene said. “I’m going out and swim with Zilch. Don’t let the bee out until you’ve finished your essay, and don’t tell my mother I stopped bugging you, and check with me when you’re done.”
“Why should I check with you?” he demanded. “You’re not my tutor!”
“Because I have to be able to say I nagged you until you got your stupid homework done, idiot,” she said sensibly. “Once you clear with me, we’re both safe for the day. Got it straight now, knothead?”