“Shall I go get one of the others out of the storage room?” asked a guard.
“No, don't bother. He'll just wreck that one, too.” Alan glared at Randall. “I have to admit, I don't quite believe your story. But I'm a nice guy, and I'm just going to assume that your destruction of my lie detector was an expression of rage toward magical technology and not an attempt to get out of telling the truth. I'll grant you an audience with the king. You may join him for lunch.”
“What're we having?”
“I'm not sure.”
“Can you find out?”
“No. Had you not threatened me with a spike, perhaps I would make the effort, but as things stand you're going to have to go into the meal blind.”
“Well, that's okay.” Randall set down the spike. “Do you think I could get a new set of clothes?”
“Certainly,” said Alan. “Clothes that tacky can always be replaced.”
* * * *
IN ONE OF the more blatant coincidences of the land, almost all of the kings within a sixteen-kingdom area had the first name of Waldo. King Waldo of Mosiman, King Waldo of Lockhart, King Waldo of McNaughton, etc. Even King Herbert of Zulkosky ordered his subjects to call him Waldo because he felt it had great dignity. This use of the name Waldo had led to a terrible tragedy in the War That Happened Ten Years Ago, when all the Waldos went to war over the numbers after their name. Finally, they had reached an agreement to drop the numbers, though a king would still try to refer to himself as Waldo the Thirteenth (widely considered the coolest name) on occasion.
The king of Rainey, however, was named Irving. Irv for short, Irvington for long, Ir for very short. Feeling left out, he had decided to take the stance that Waldo was a rather silly name best reserved for nerds and the mentally ill. To make his point, he'd secretly formed the League of Waldos, a roving gang of thugs consisting of nerds and the mentally ill that went from kingdom to kingdom causing all kinds of trouble. It was his intent that this would give the name Waldo a bad name, which would then make him the most powerful king in the land.
So far, his plan had achieved approximately squat.
Which is why, as he sat at the table in the royal dining room, his thoughts were elsewhere.
“Your Highness?” prodded Alan.
“Huh? What?”
“I believe your thoughts were elsewhere, as shown by your glazed eyes and lolling tongue.”
“Oh, I guess you're right. How unregal of me.” He sat up and turned his attention to Randall. “So, squire, what was it you wished to tell me?”
“Well, as you know, I was accompanying Sir William on his errand to bring Princess Janice here.”
“I'll be darned! I did know that!” King Irving wasn't used to knowing what was going on.
“Anyway, there was a slight problem, and now they're lost in the Forest of Death.”
“Well, that doesn't sound so bad. I'll send ten of my best knights there to rescue them.”
“That won't be necessary,” Randall insisted. “I'm sure Sir William can handle the situation, and would be insulted if you were to send help.”
“Well, then, I'll send help but tell the knights to pretend it was a coincidence.”
“Sir William is not the kind of person who appreciates a good coincidence. You should hear him talk about all the Waldo kings.”
King Irving's eyelid twitched. “We can't just have him wandering around the Forest of Death. I hear that a woman named Scar who hangs around there is in possession of a deadly magic crystal.”
“I heard that was just a rumor.”
“No, no, it's the truth. Apparently the crystal used to be part of the legendary Necklace of Powerfulness.”
As Randall pondered this piece of information, the servers entered from the kitchen, holding bowls of soup, which they placed in front of Randall, Alan, and King Irving.
“Remember,” said one of the servers to King Irving, “at the bottom of your bowl is a happy face, so eat it all up!”
Randall looked down into his bowl. The soup was thick and sort of a pale orange color. “What is this?” he whispered to his server.
“Peel soup.”
“Excuse me?”
“You know, the peels of fruits and vegetables are the most nutritious part, so that's what this soup is made from. Plus a special sauce.”
“That's disgusting.”
“Shhhhh. Eat up.”
The servers filed out of the room. Randall put his spoon into the soup, and was not pleased to find that the spoon could stand straight up without him holding it.
King Irving swallowed a spoonful. “Ahhh, delicious!” he proclaimed. “So delicious, in fact, that I would be extremely disappointed and unforgiving if my guest should feel differently about the soup and not finish the entire bowl.”
Randall scooped up a spoonful, and lifted it to his mouth. He smelled it. It made his nose hurt.
“So,” he began, “about that necklace crystal. You say it comes from the Necklace of Power?”
“Is that what I said, Alan?”
“No, Your Highness, that is not what you said.”
“Explain to our guest what I said.”
“He said it was the Necklace of Powerfulness.”
“That's exactly what I said.”
Randall continued to hold the spoon next to his mouth. “They're the same thing, right? Is it conceivable that if I were to, say, need the Necklace of Power really bad and were to, say, obtain the Necklace of Powerfulness instead, that it wouldn't make a difference?”
“Heck, I dunno. Eat your soup.”
Randall continued to hold the spoon next to his mouth. “I wonder if Sir William would appreciate me enjoying such a fine meal, while he's no doubt surviving on grubs.”
“That's not our problem. Go on, eat up.”
Randall continue to hold the spoon next to his mouth. Then, calling upon his full reserves of willpower, he placed the spoon inside his open mouth and closed his lips over it. He stayed in that position for a moment. Finally, he pulled the spoon out, leaving the soup behind.
He knew that spitting it out onto the table, gasping for breath, and shrieking “What psychopathic idiot in the kitchen thought this was edible?!?” would be quite a faux pas. As would simply keeling over. But, as desperately as he tried, his throat refused to admit the offending liquid, which meant that his tongue, clearly the suffering party, had to remain in soup-contact.
“Gak,” he said, not meaning to.
“Pardon me?” asked King Irving.
“Gurk,” Randall replied. He pointed across the table. As the king and Alan turned around to look, Randall leaned forward and spit the soup into the flower arrangement in the center of the table.
“What?” asked Alan.
“That painting,” said Randall, gesturing to a painting of a chicken that hung on the wall behind the king and Alan. “It's very artistic. Where'd you get it?”
“The queen did it,” said King Irving. “She says it symbolizes our lack of knowledge, since though the chicken lays an egg, we don't know which came first.”
“It could also symbolize transportation by crossing the road,” Randall pointed out.
“Shut up,” said the king.
Randall looked over at the open window. “Forgive me, but I've always wanted to see what the view is like from a royal dining room. Do you mind?”
“Go right ahead,” said the king.
Randall scooped up a mouthful of the soup, then stood up and walked over to the window. He leaned out, peering down at the commoners below, then spit out the repugnant fluid.
“Nice view from up here,” said Randall. “The people on the ground look like ants.”
“Yes, a rather unfortunate series of mutations,” said Alan. “Probably something in the water. Come to think of it, you might not want to drink any more.”