Belphebe said: «What’s this I hear anent the subject of magic? Are you practitioners of the art?»
Chalmers replied: «Well — uh — I would not go so far as to say —»
«We know a couple of little tricks,» put in Shea.
«White or black?» said Belphebe sharply.
«White as the driven snow,» said Shea.
Belphebe looked hard at them. She took a bite of parrot, and seemed to have no difficulty with it. Shea had found his piece of the consistency of a mouthful of bedsprings.
Belphebe said: «Few are the white magicians of Faerie, and all are entered. Had there been additions to the roster, my lord Artegall had so acquainted me when last I saw him.»
«Good lord,» said Shea with sinking heart, «are you a policewoman too?»
«A — what?»
«One of the Companions.»
«Nay, not a jot I. I rove where I will. But virtue is a good master. I am — but stay, you meet not my query by half.»
«Which query?» asked Chalmers.
«How it is that you be unknown to me, though you claim to be sorcerers white?»
«Oh,» said Shea modestly, «I guess we aren’t good enough yet to he worth noticing.»
«That may be,» said Belphebe. «I, too, have what you call ‘a couple of tricks’, yet ’twere immodesty in me to place myself beside Cambina.»
Chalmers said: «Anyhow, my dear young lady, I — uh — am convinced, from my own studies of the subject, that the distinction between ‘black’ and ‘white’ magic is purely verbal; a spurious distinction that does not reflect any actual division in the fundamental laws that govern magic.»
«Good palmer!» cried Belphebe. «What say you, no differcnce between ‘black’ and ‘white’? ’Tis plainly heresy.»
«Not at all,» persisted Chalmers, unaware that Shea was trying to shush him. «The people of the country have agreed to call magic ‘white’ when practised for lawful ends by duly authorized agents of the governing authority, and ‘black’ when practised by unauthorized persons for criminal ends. That is not to say that the principles of the science — or art — are not the same in either event. You should confine such terms as ‘black’ and ‘white’ to the objects for which the magic is performed, and not apply it to the science itself, which like all branches of knowledge is morally neutral —»
«But,» protested Belphebe, «is’t not that the spell used to, let us say, kidnap a worthy citizen be different from that used to trap a malefactor?»
«Verbally but not structurally,» Chalmers went on. After some minutes of wrangling, Chalmers held up the bone of his drumstick. «I think I can, for instance, conjure the parrot back on this bone — or at least fetch another parrot in place of the one we ate. Will you concede, young lady, that that is a harmless manifestation of the art?»
«Aye, for the now,» said the girl. «Though I know you schoolmen; say ‘I admit this; I concede that,’ are ere long one finds oneself conceded into a noose.»
«Therefore it would be ‘white’ magic. But suppose I desired the parrot for some — uh — illegal purpose —»
«What manner of crime for ensample, good sir?» asked Belphebe.
«I — uh — can’t think just now. Assume that I did. The spell would be the same in either case —»
«Ah, but would it?» cried Belphebe. «Let me see you conjure a brace of parrots, one fair, one foul; then truly I’ll concede.»
Chalmers frowned. «Harold, what would be a legal purpose for which to conjure a parrot?»
Shea shrugged. «If you really want an answer, no purpose would be as legal as any, unless there’s something in gamelaws. Personally I think it’s the silliest damned argument —»
«No purpose it shall be,» said Chalmers. He got together a few props — the parrot’s remains, some ferns, a pair of scissors from his kit, one of Belphebe’s arrows. He stoked the fire, put grass on it to make it smoke, and began to walk back and forth pigeon-toed, holding his arms out and chanting:
«Oh bird that speaks
With the words of men
Mocking their wisdom
Of tongue and pen —»
Crash! A monster burst out of the forest and was upon them before they could get to their feet. With a frightful roar it knocked Chalmers down with one scaly forepaw. Shea got to his knees and pulled his épée halfway out of the scabbard before a paw knocked him down too.
The pressure on Shea’s back let up. He rolled over and sat up. Chalmers and Belphebe were doing the same. They were close to the monster’s chest. Around them the thing’s forelegs ran like a wall. It was sitting down with its prey between it’s paws like a cat. Shea stared up into a pair of huge slit-pupilled eyes. The creature arched its neck like a swan to get a better look at them.
«The Blatant Beast!» cried Belphebe. «Now surely are we lost!»
«What mean you?» roared the monster. «You called me, did you not? Then wherefore such surprise when I do you miserable mortals the boon of answering?»
Chalmers gibbered: «Really — I had no idea — I thought I asked for a bird —»
«Well?» bellowed the monster.
«B-but you’re a reptile —»
«What is a bird but a reptile with feathers? Nay, you scaleless tadpole, reach not for your sorry sword!» it shouted at Shea. «Else I’ll mortify you thus!» The monster spat, whock, ptoo! The green saliva sprayed over a weed, which turned black and shrivelled rapidly. «Now then, an you ransom yourselves not, I’ll do you die ere you can say ‘William of Occam’!»
«What sort of ransom, fair monster?» asked Belphebe, her face white.
«Why, words! The only valuable thing your vile kind produces.»
Belphebe turned to her companions. «Know, good sirs, that this monster, proud of his gift of speech, does collect all manner of literary expressions, both prose and verse. I fear me unless we can satisfy his craving, he will truly slay us.»
Shea said hesitantly: «I know a couple of jokes about Hitler —»
«Nay!» snarled the monster. «All jests are stale. I would an epic poem.»
«An — epic poem?» quavered Chalmers.
«Aye,» roared the Blatant Beast. «Ye know, like
Herkeneth to me, gode men
Wives, maydnes, and alle men,
Of a tale ich you wil telle,
Hwo-so-it wile here, and there-to dwelle.
The tale of Havelok is i-maked;
Hwil he was litel, he yede ful naked.»
Shea asked Chalmers: «Can you do it. Doc? How about Beowulf?»
«Dear me,» replied Chalmers. «I’m sure I couldn’t repeat it from memory.»
The monster sneered: «And ’twould do you no good; I know that one:»
Hwaet! we Gar-Thena in gear-dagum
theod cyninga thrym gefrunon,
hu tha aethelingas ellen fremedon.
«Twill have to be something else. Come now; an epic or shrive yourselves!»
Shea said: «Give him some of your Gilbert and Sullivan, Doc.»
«I — uh — I hardly think he —»
«Give it to him!»
Chalmers cleared his throat, and readily quavered:
«Oh! My name is John Wellington Wells.
I’m a dealer in magic and spells,
In blessings and curses
And ever-filled purses
And ever-filled purses,
And ever-filled —»
«I can’t! I can’t remember a thing! Can’t you recite something, Harold?»
«I don’t know anything either.»
«You must! How about Barbara Frietchie?»
«Don’t know it.»