"Puiside," DeWar muttered. Perrund frowned severely and tutted.
"— there were big fiery rocks up there and Watch Out!" The boy stood and shouted the last two words, then sat down again and leant over the box of sweets, one finger to his lips. "And the Emperor didn't and the rocks killed him dead."
"Well, it's a little simplified," DeWar began.
"What a sad story!" Perrund said, now ruffling the boy's hair. "The poor old Emperor!"
"Yes," the boy shrugged. "But Daddy came along and made everything all right again."
The three adults looked at each other and laughed. "Indeed he did," Perrund said, taking away the box of sweets and hiding it behind her. "Tassasen is powerful again, isn't it?"
"Mm-hmm," Lattens said, trying to squirm behind Perrund in pursuit of the box of sweets.
"I think it might be time for a story," Perrund said, and pulled the boy back to a sitting position. "DeWar?"
DeWar sat and thought for a moment. "Well," he said, "it's not much of a story, but it is a story of sorts."
"Then tell it."
"It is suitable for the boy?" Huesse asked.
"I shall make it so." DeWar sat forward and shifted his sword and dagger. "Once upon a time there was a magical land where every man was a king, every woman a queen, each boy a prince and all girls princesses. In this land there were no hungry people and no crippled people."
"Were there any poor people?" asked Lattens.
"That depends what you mean. In a way no, because they could all have any amount of riches they wanted, but in a way yes, for there were people who chose to have nothing. Their hearts" desire was to be free from owning anything, and they usually preferred to stay in the desert or in the mountains or the forests, living in caves or trees or just wandering around. Some lived in the great cities, where they too just roved about. But wherever they chose to wander, the decision was always theirs."
"Were they holy people?" Lattens asked.
"Well, in a way, maybe."
"Were they all handsome and beautiful, too?" Huesse asked.
"Again, that depends what you mean by beautiful," DeWar said apologetically. Perrund sighed with exasperation. "Some people see a sort of beauty in ugliness," DeWar said. "And if everybody is beautiful there is something singular in being ugly, or just plain. But, generally, yes, everybody was as beautiful as they wanted to be."
"So many ifs and buts," Perrund said. "This sounds a very equivocal land."
"In a way," DeWar smiled. Perrund hit him with a cushion. "Sometimes," DeWar continued, "as people in the land brought more of it under cultivation-"
"What was the name of the land?" Lattens interrupted.
"Oh… Lavishia, of course. Anyway, sometimes the citizens of Lavishia would discover whole groups of people who lived a bit like the wanderers, that is, like the poor or holy — people in their own land, but who did not have the choice of living like that. Such people lived like that because they had to. These were people who hadn't had the advantages in life the people of Lavishia were used to. In fact, dealing with such people soon became the biggest problem the people of Lavishia had."
"What? They had no war, famine, pestilence, taxes?" Perrund asked.
"None. And no real likelihood of the last three."
"I feel my credulity being stretched," Perrund muttered.
"So in Lavishia everybody was happy?" Huesse asked.
"As happy as they could be," DeWar said. "People still managed to make their own unhappinesses, as people always do."
Perrund nodded. "Now it begins to sound plausible."
"In this land there lived two friends, a boy and a girl who were cousins and who had grown up together. They thought they were adults but really they were still just children. They were the best of friends but they disagreed on many things. One of the most important things they disagreed about was what to do when Lavishia chanced upon one of these tribes of poor people. Was it better to leave them alone or was it better to try and make life better for them? Even if you decided it was the right thing to do to make life better for them, which way did you do this? Did you say, Come and join us and be like us? Did you say, Give up all your own ways of doing things, the gods that you worship, the beliefs you hold most dear, the traditions that make you who you are? Or do you say, We have decided you should stay roughly as you are and we will treat you like children and give you toys that might make your life better? Indeed, who even decided what was better?"
Lattens was shifting and wriggling on the couch. Perrund was trying to keep him still. "Were there really not any wars?" the child asked.
"Yes," Perrund said, looking concernedly at DeWar. "This may all be a little abstract for a child of Lattens" age."
DeWar smiled sadly. "Well, there were some very small wars very far away, but to be brief, the two friends decided that they would put their arguments to a test. They had another friend, a lady, who… very much liked both of the friends, and who was very clever and very beautiful and who had a favour which she was prepared to grant either of them." DeWar looked at Perrund and Huesse.
`Either of them?" Perrund asked with a small smile. Huesse looked at the floor.
"She was broad-minded," DeWar said, and cleared his throat. "Anyway, it was agreed that the two cousins would present their arguments to her and whoever lost the argument had to leave and let the favour be granted to the other one alone."
"Did this third friend know about the cousins" amusing agreement?" Perrund inquired.
"Names! What are the names?" Lattens demanded.
"Yes, what are they called?" Huesse said.
"The girl was called Sechroom and the boy's name was Hiliti. Their beautiful friend was called Leleeril." DeWar looked at Perrund. "And no, she did not know about the agreement."
"Tut," Perrund pronounced.
"So, the three met in a hunting lodge in the high, high mountains-"
"As high as the Breathless Plains?" Lattens asked.
"Not so high, but steeper, with very sharp peaks. Now-"
"And which cousin believed in what?" Perrund asked.
"Hmm? Oh, Sechroom believed that one should always interfere, or try to help, while Hiliti thought it best to leave people be," DeWar said. "Anyway, they had good food and fine wine and they laughed and told each other stories and jokes and the two friends Sechroom and Hiliti explained their different ideas to Leleeril and asked which she thought was right. She tried to say that they were both right in their own ways, and that sometimes one was right and one wrong and sometimes the other way round… but eventually Sechroom and Hiliti said Leleeril had to choose one or the other, and she chose Hiliti, and poor Sechroom had to leave the hunting lodge."
"What was it Leeril was going to give Hiliti?" Lattens asked.
"Something sweet," DeWar said, and, magician-like, produced a crystallised fruit from his pocket. He presented the sweet to the delighted boy, who bit happily into it.
"What happened?" Huesse asked.
"Leleeril found out that her favours had been subject to a bet and she was hurt. She went away for a while-"
"Did she have to go away?" Perrund asked. "You know, the way girls in polite society sometimes have to, while nature takes its course?"
"No, she just wanted to be somewhere else, away from everybody she knew."
"What, without her parents?" Huesse asked sceptically.
"Without anybody. Then Sechroom and Hiliti realised that perhaps Leleeril had felt more for one of them than they had imagined and that they had done a bad thing."