"But he's dying."
That stopped Aahz for a moment.
"My brother? Nonsense. He's too tough to kill. He could even beat me in an unfair fight."
"He got into a fight with Mom."
A look of concern crossed Aahz's face. I could see he was wavering.
"That serious, huh? I don't know, though. If he's really dying, I don't see what I can do to help."
"It shouldn't take long," Rupert urged. "He said something about his will."
I groaned inwardly. Trust a Pervect to know a Pervect's weaknesses.
"Well, I guess my business here can keep for a few days," Aahz declared with false reluctance. "Stay out of trouble, kid. I'll be back as soon as I can."
"Let's get going," Rupert suggested, hiding his triumphant grin. "The sooner we get to Perv, the sooner you can be back."
"But Aahz...."
"Yeah, kid?"
I saw Rupert's brow darken.
"I ... I just wanted to say 'goodbye.' "
"Hey, don't make a big thing of this, kid. It's not like I was going forever."
Before I could respond, Rupert clapped an arm around Aahz's shoulder and they both faded from view.
Gone.
Somehow I couldn't make myself believe it had happened. My mentor had been spirited away... permanently. Whatever I had learned from Aahz would have to do, because now I was totally on my own.
Then I heard a knock at my door.
Chapter Two:
"When things are blackest, I just tell myself 'cheer up, things could be worse!' And sure enough, they get worse!"
-SKEEVE
I DECIDED that as Court Magician of Possiltum, my response should be gracious.
"Go away!"
That was gracious. If you knew what my actual thoughts were. you'd realize that. Very few people ever visited me in my chambers, and I didn't want to see any of them just then.
"Do you know who you're talking to?" came a muffled voice from the other side of the door.
"No! And I don't care! Go away!"
"This is Rodrick the Fifth. Your King!"
That stopped me. Upset or not, that title belonged to the man who set and paid my wages. As I said earlier, I have learned a few things from Aahz.
"Do you know who you're talking to?" I called back, and hoped.
There was a moment's pause.
"I assume I'm talking to Skeeve the Magnificent, Court Magician of Possiltum. At best, he'll be the one to bear the brunt of my wrath if I'm kept waiting outside his chambers much longer."
So much for hoping. These things never work in real life the way they do in jokes.
Moving with undignified haste, I pounced on the door handle and wrenched it open.
"Good afternoon. Lord Magician. May I come in?"
"Certainly, Your Majesty," I said, standing aside. "I never refuse a fifth."
The King frowned.
"Is that a joke? If so, I don't get the point."
"Neither do I," I admitted calmly. "It's something Aahz my apprentice says."
"Ah, yes. Your apprentice. Is he about?"
Rodrick swept majestically into the room, peering curiously into the comers as if he expected Aahz to spring forth from the walls.
"No. He's... out."
"Good. I had hoped to speak with you alone. Hmmm... these are really quite spacious quarters. I don't recall having been here before."
That was an understatement. Not only had the King never visited my room in his palace, I couldn't recall having seen him when he wasn't either on the throne or in its near vicinity.
"Your Majesty has never graced me with his presence since I accepted position in his court," I said.
"Oh. Then, that's probably why I don't recall being here," Rodrick responded lamely.
That in itself was strange. Usually the King was quite glib and never at a loss for words. In fact, the more I thought about it, the stranger this royal visit to my private chambers became. Despite my distress at Aahz's unplanned and apparently permanent departure, I felt my curiosity beginning to grow.
"May I ask the reason for this pleasant, though unexpected audience?"
"Well..." the King began, then shot one more look about the room. "Are you sure your apprentice isn't about?"
"Positive. He's ... I sent him on a vacation." "A vacation?"
"Yes. He's been studying awfully hard lately."
The King frowned slightly.
"I don't remember approving a vacation."
For a moment, I thought I was going to get caught in my own deception. Then I remembered that in addition to the various interdimensional languages, Aahz had also been teaching me to speak ' 'bureaucrat.''
"I didn't really feel your authorization was necessary," I said loftily. "Technically, my apprentice is not on your Majesty's payroll. I am paying him out of my wages, which makes him my employee, subject to my rules including vacations ... or dismissal. While he is subject to your laws, as is any subject of Possiltum, I don't feel he actually is governed by Subparagraph G concerning palace staff!''
My brief oration had the desired effect: it both confused and bored my audience. Aahz would have been proud of me. I was particularly pleased that I had managed to sneak in that part about dismissals. It meant that when Aahz didn't return, I could claim that I had dismissed him without changing the wage paid me by the crown.
Of course, this got me brooding again about Aahz not coming back.
"Well, whatever. I'm glad to see your philosophy regarding vacations mirrors my own. Lord Magician. Everyone should have a vacation. In fact, that's why I
That opened my eyes. Figuratively and literally. "You, your Majesty? But Kings don't take vacations."
"That's the whole point." Rodrick began pacing the floor nervously as he spoke.
"The pressures of being a King mount up like they do on any other job. The difference is that as a King you never get a break. No time to rest and collect your thoughts, or even just sleep late. From the coronation when the crown hits your head until it's removed by voluntary or forcible retirement, you are the King."
"Gee, that's tough. Your Majesty. I wish there was something I could do to help."
The King stopped pacing and beamed at me again.
"But you can! That's why I'm here!"
"Me? I can't approve a vacation for you! Even if it were in my power, and it isn't, the kingdom needs a king on the throne all the time. It can't spare you, even for one day!"
"Exactly! That's why I can't leave the throne unattended. If I wanted a vacation, I'd need a stand-in."
An alarm bell went off in my mind.
Now, however much Aahz may have nagged me about being a slow student, I'm not stupid. Even before I met Aahz... heck, before I learned my letters ... I knew how to add two and two to get four. In this case, one two was the king's need for a stand-in; the second two was his presence in my quarters, and the four was....
"Surely your Majesty can't mean me!"
"Of course I mean you," Rodrick confirmed. "The fact is, Lord Magician, I had this in mind when I hired you to your current position." "You did?"
I could feel the jaws of the trap closing. If this was indeed why the King had hired me, I would be ill-advised to refuse the assignment. Rodrick might decide my services were no longer needed, and the last thing I needed with Aahz gone was to get cut off from my source of income. I wasn't sure what the job market was like for excourt magicians, but I was sure I didn't want to find out first hand.
"As you said earlier, the powers of the Court Magician are at my disposal, and one of the powers you demonstrated when we first met was the ability to change your own shape, or the shape of others, at will."
The disguise spell! It was one of the first spells Aahz had taught me and one of the ones most frequently used over our last several adventures. After all the times it's bailed me out of tight spots, who would have guessed it would be the spell to get me into trouble? Well, there was the time it had gotten me hung....