“What's that?”
“I don't feel like it, being evil and all.”
“I see,” said Randall. “What if I said I'd located your one true love, Romeoo?”
“I'd say something like ‘Wow!’ Or perhaps ‘Gosh!'”
“I've learned a lot during my adventures, and when I went back to get the crystal, I learned probably the most interesting thing of all. Come on in,” Randall said, raising his voice to be heard outside the mausoleum. Scar entered.
“Who is this?”
“Grysh, meet Scarlet, formerly known as Romeoo.”
“I beg your &#@*!%$ pardon?”
“It's the truth,” said Scar, tears flowing down her cheeks. “I was angry at you, but I knew I could never be with another woman again. And so I visited the wizard Turville and had him transform me into one.”
“Turville?” said Grysh, incredulous. “The guy's a quack and a half!”
“That's what I found out! To make sure you would never recognize me if we should meet again, I had him perform plastic surgery on my face ... but he messed it up, leaving me with this horrible scar!”
“This is wonderful!” said Grysh. “I can revert you to your original looks and gender, then we can start all over! You still love me, don't you?”
Scar sighed. “Of course I still love you. But not as much. Because you're not the beautiful woman I once loved. You're more along the lines of a hag from hell.”
“I can change!” said Grysh, transforming into her beautiful state. “See? I'm gorgeous!”
“It's not your outer beauty I'm concerned with. It's the beauty that lies within that is important.”
Grysh tapped her stomach. “You won't see a more aesthetically pleasing gall bladder anywhere!”
“The gall bladder is a little higher up,” Scar said.
“Be that way, then!” Grysh screamed, letting loose with a bolt of lightning that was supposed to incinerate Scar but got Demon Baby instead. “I'll destroy you all! I'll destroy this entire forest!”
She raised her arms, and the walls and ceiling of the mausoleum exploded. Stone pieces flew off into the sky and out of sight, leaving nothing but the floor. Yvonne, Jack, Toby, and Bug looked at each other uncomfortably.
“Guess this blows our surprise entrance,” said Yvonne.
“Vandalism is nothing to be taken lightly,” remarked one of the graveyard zombies.
Suddenly all of the trees burst into flames, surrounding everyone with a raging inferno. “Burn!” Grysh shouted. “Burn to the ground and let nothing grow in your place!”
“Talkin’ to trees,” said Jack. “Somebody's gone looney.”
Grysh glared at Randall, her eyes glowing bright red with fury, or lack of sleep. “Now, you shall suffer an agony beyond that of even Steven of Jardins, whose pinky was slammed in the rusty metal gates of Hell Land not twenty, not thirty, but six times!”
“Stop this!” shouted Randall. “Having the mother of all cows isn't going to solve anything! If it's inner beauty that Scar is interested in, prove that you have it!”
Grysh snapped her fingers. A cute little bunny rabbit appeared in her hand. “See?” she said. “I'm not going to kill this rabbit!” The rabbit bit her on the finger, hard. “I'm still not killing it!” The rabbit dropped a series of bunny pellets on her. “How about this? I'll give it a merciful death! That shows inner beauty, right?”
“It would be better if you just let the rabbit go.”
Grysh set the rabbit down, and it scampered off into the woods, which were unfortunately still a raging inferno. “Was that good enough?”
Scar shook her head. “I'm sorry, Grysh, but it's over between us. No more kissy-wissies. No more snugglie-wugglies. No more spanky-wankies.”
“Unless, of course,” said Randall, a little annoyed, “you prove your inner beauty in such a way that Scar feels compelled to love you again, which was not anticipated as being that difficult, and which would be the whole reason he/she was brought here. Right, Scar?”
“Oh, that's right. Re-animate the torched rabbit and we'll talk.”
“No!” Randall exclaimed. “Not the rabbit! The princess!”
“What have you got against rabbits?” Scar asked.
“I don't have anything against rabbits!”
“Rabbits serve a useful ecological purpose, you know.”
“I know, but the princess is much more important!”
“The princess doesn't have a cute little twitching nose.”
“Very well,” said Grysh. “If I bring the rabbit back from the ashes and return it to life, will you be my eternal lover?”
“I will,” said Scar.
“No! No! No!” shouted Randall. “The princess! We need the princess back! There will always be rabbits! Rabbits are eternal! Princess Janice is not!”
“He has kind of a one-track-mind, doesn't he?” asked Grysh.
“I think he's pretty darn selfish, myself.”
“Selfish?” asked Randall. “Look, you hypocritical squirrel slayer—”
“They were dead when we found them!”
“Does that excuse your abuse of their tiny cute little dead squirrel bodies? I think not!”
“Ignore him!” said Grysh. “I will now return the bunny to life.” She snapped her fingers, and a bright glow came from the burning woods. The rabbit came running across the path, bouncing happily, and ran back into the inferno on the opposite side.
“Silly rabbit,” said Grysh.
“These tricks are for kids,” said Randall. “This is wimpy stuff. Darn it, this is a chance to prove your powers!”
“I was pretty impressed by the rabbit thing, myself,” said Jack.
Grysh looked at the crystal, thoughtfully. “I'll make you a deal. I'll return the knight to the flesh, but the princess stays ashy. Otherwise, what reason would you have to come back and visit?”
With that, she snapped her fingers, and the statue of Sir William transformed into the real-life version of the knight, which was more of a pinkish hue without quite as rocky an exterior. Sir William stood there, dumbfounded, for a moment, then proceeded to drop face-first onto the floor.
“He'll be okay once he recovers,” said Grysh. “Now if you'll excuse me, I must return my Loaf of Love back into a man.”
“I'm not leaving until you bring back the princess,” said Randall. “We had a deal.”
“Deals are made to be broken.”
“So are witches who fail to keep their word.”
“You're aware, of course, that with one small gesture I could disintegrate you.”
“I'm aware of that.”
“I wasn't,” said Jack, backing away.
Suddenly Randall grabbed Scar and pulled him/her toward him, pressing the tip of his sword against his/her back. “Make you a brand spanking new deal. Bring the princess back to life and your honey-pot won't get a sword through him/her.”
“But I can just bring him/her right back to life,” said Grysh. “Duuuuh.”
“Perhaps. But my guess is that he/she doesn't want to deal with the heartache of having his/her heart poked. And for you to let him/her die proves that you care more about your evil ways than you do about him/her.”
“Shut up and die,” said Grysh, throwing a bolt of lightning at Randall. Her aim was a bit off, and the bolt struck Scar, turning her into a pile of dust that got all over Randall's clothes. “Drat,” said the witch. “That's the sixth time I've done that today. No, wait, the seventh.”
Another bolt of lightning formed in her hand. “Say goodbye to your need for oxygen,” she said.
“You don't want to do that!” Randall told her.
“Yes I do.”
“No, really, you don't. Because if you fry me, my ashes will get mixed up with Scar's, and then when you return us to the flesh the sexual identity problems will be even more complicated!”