“This is a dream? But it all seems so real.”
“It don't mean it ain't real, sonny,” Alder whistled through his teeth “Look, there's rules. The smarter you are, the more focused, the better you get on in this world. Lots of people are subject to the whims of others, particularly of the Sleepers themselves, but the better you know your own mind, the more control over your own destiny you've got. Me, I know what I like and what I don't. I like it out in the wilderness. Whenever the space I'm in turns into a city, I just move on until I find me a space where there ain't no people. Pretty soon it quiets down and I have things my own way again. Now, if I didn't know what I wanted, I'd be stuck in a big Frustration dream all the time.”
“I just had a Frustration Dream,” I said, staring off in the general direction in which Aahz had disappeared. “How is it that if I have so much power here I couldn't catch up with my friend?”
“He's gone off on a toot,” Alder said, knowingly. “It happens a lot to you Waking Worlders. You get here and you go a little crazy. He got a taste of what he wants, and he's gone after more of it.”
“He doesn't need anything,” I insisted. “He's got everything back at home.” But I paused.
“There's got to be something,” Alder smiled. “Everyone wants one thing they can't get at home. So what does your friend want?”
That was easy, Aahz had told me himself. “Respect.”
Alder shook his head. “Respect, eh? Well, I don't have a lot of respect for someone who abandons his partner like he did.”
I leaped immediately to Aahz's defense. “He didn't abandon me on purpose.”
“You call a fifty-mile bridge an accident?”
I tried to explain. “He was excited. I mean, who wouldn't be? He had his powers back. It was like… magik.”
“Been without influence a long time, has he?” Alder asked, with squint-eyed sympathy.
“Well, not exactly. He's very powerful where we come from,” I insisted, wondering why I was unburdening myself to a strange old coot in the wilderness, but it was either that or talk to myself. “But he hasn't been able to do magik in years. Not since my old mentor, er, put a curse on him. But I guess that doesn't apply here.”
“It wouldn't,” Alder assured me, grinning. “Your friend seems to have a strong personality, and that's what matters. So we're likely to find your friend in a place he'd get what he wanted. Come on. We'll find him.”
“Thanks,” I said dubiously. “I'm sure I'll be able to find him. I know him pretty well. Thanks.”
“Don't you want me to come along?”
I didn't want him to know how helpless I felt. Aahz and I had been in worse situations than this. Besides, I had Gleep, my trusty … dog … with me. “No, thanks,”
I said, brightly. “I'm such a powerful wizard I don't really need your help.”
“Okay, friend, whatever you want,” Alder said. He stood up and turned around. Suddenly, I was alone, completely surrounded by trees. I couldn't even see the sky.
“Hey!” I yelled. I sought about vainly. Not only couldn't I see the backwoodsman, but I'd lost sight of the cliffside path, the hillside, and even what remained of the sky. I gave in. “Well, maybe I need a little help,” I admitted sheepishly. A clearing appeared around me, and Alder stood beside me with a big grin on his face. “Come on, then, youngster. We've got a trail to pick up.”
Alder talked all the way through the woods. Normally the hum of sound would have helped me to focus my mind on the problem at hand, but I just could not concentrate. I'm happiest in the middle of a town, not out in the wilderness. Back when I was an apprentice magician and an opportunistic but largely unsuccessful thief, the bigger the population into which I could disappear after grabbing the valuables out of someone's bedroom, the better to escape detection. Alder's rural accent reminded me of my parents' farm that I had run away from to work for Garkin. I hated it. I forced myself to remember he was a nice guy who was helping us find Aahz.
“Now, looky-look here,” he said, glancing down as we came to a place where six or seven paths crossed in a knot of confusion. I couldn't tell which one Aahz and his moving bridge had taken, but I was about to bolt down the nearest turning, just out of sheer frustration. “Isn't this the most interesting thing?… What's the matter?” he asked, noticing the dumb suffering on my face. “I'm talking too much, am I?”
“Sorry,” I said, hiding my expression too late. “I'm worrying about my partner. He was so excited about getting his powers back that he didn't notice he was getting carried away — literally. I'm concerned that when he notices he's going to try to come back and find me.”
“If what you say is true it's going to take him a little time to get used to wielding influence again,” Alder said. I started to correct him, but if this was the way the locals referred to magik, I wouldn't argue. “Right now we're on the trail of that bridge. Something that big doesn't pass through without leaving its marks, and it didn't.” He lifted a handful of chocolate-colored pebbles from the convergence, and went on lecturing me.
“Now, this here trail mix is a clear blind. Those jokers must have strewn it to try and confuse us, but I'm too old a hand for that. I'm guessing that bridge is on its way to the capital, but I'd rather trust following the signs than my guesses. We have to hurry to see them before the winds of change blow through and mess up the tracks. I don't have enough strength myself to keep them back.”
“Can I help?” I asked. “I'm pretty good at ma — I mean influence. And if my partner packs a kick here, I should, too.”
Alder's branchlike eyebrows rose. “Maybe you could, at that. Let's give it a try!”
Let's just say I wasn't an unqualified success to start. Dreamish influence behaved like magik in that one concentrated hard picturing what one wanted to achieve, used the force lines to shape it, then hoped the committee running the place let one's plans pass. Like any committee they made some changes, the eventual result resembling, but not being completely like my original intention, but close enough. Over the several days it took us to walk out of the forest, I attained a certain amount of mastery over my surroundings, but never enough to pop us to the capital city of Celestia or locate Aahz. I did learn to tell when the winds of change were coming through. They felt like the gentle alteration that had hit me and Gleep the first day, but far stronger. They were difficult to resist, and I had to protect the entire path we were following. This I did by picturing it, even the parts we couldn't see, as a long rope stretched out in front of us. It could have knots in it, but we didn't want it breaking off unexpectedly. I might never find Aahz if we lost this trail. I did other little tasks around the campground, just to learn the skill of doing two things at once. Alder was a great help. He was a gentler teacher than either Garkin or Aahz. For someone who had little influence of his own, he sure knew how to bring out the best in other magicians.
“Control's the most important thing,” he said, as I struggled to contain a thicket fire I had started by accident when I tried to make a campfire one night. “Consider yourself at a distance from the action, and think smaller. What you can do with just a suggestion is more than most people can with their best whole efforts. Pull back and concentrate on getting the job done. A little effort sometimes pays off better than a whole parade with a brass band.”
I chuckled. “You sound like Aahz.”
“What?” Alder shouted.
“I said …” but my words were drowned out by deafening noise. The trees around us were suddenly thrust apart by hordes of men in colorful uniforms. I shouldn't say “horde,” though they were dressed in red, black, and gold, because they marched in orderly ranks, shoving me and Alder a dozen yards apart. Each of them carried a musical instrument from which blared music the likes of which I hadn't heard since halftime at the Big Game on the world of Jahk.