"Uh, isn't that a demon container?" Bink asked, thinking he recognized the style. Some bottles were solider than others, and more carefully crafted, with magical symbols inscribed. "Shouldn't you-?"
The Magician paused. "Umph."
"He says he was just about to, nitwit," the golem said. "Believe it if you will."
The Magician scraped a pentacle in the dirt, sat the ^bottle in it, and uttered an indecipherable incantation. The cork popped out and the smoky demon issued, coalescing into the bespectacled entity Bink recognized as Beauregard.
The educated demon didn't even wait for the question. "You routed me out for this, old man? Of course it's safe; that ogre's a vegetarian. It's your mission that's unsafe."
"I didn't ask you about the mission!" Humfrey snapped. "I know it's unsafe! That's why I'm along."
"It is not like you to indulge in such foolishness, especially at the expense of your personal comfort," Beauregard continued, pushing his spectacles back along his nose with one finger. "Are you losing your marbles at last? Getting senile? Or merely attempting to go out in a blaze of ignominy?"
"Begone, infernal spirit! I will summon you when I need your useless conjectures."
Beauregard shook his head sadly, then dissipated back into the bottle.
"That's another feeling spirit," Bink said, uneasy. "Do you have to coop him up like that, in such a little bottle?"
"No one can coop a demon," the Magician said shortly. "Besides, his term of service is not yet up."
At times it was hard to follow the man's logic! "But you had him when I first met you, more than a year ago."
"He had a complex Question."
"A demon of information, who answers the questions you get paid fees for, has to pay you for Answers?"
Humfrey did not respond. Bink heard a faint booming laughter, and realized after a moment that it was coming from the demon's bottle. Something was certainly funny here, but not humorous.
"We'd better move in before it gets dark," Chester said, eyeing the ogre's door somewhat dubiously.
Bink would have liked to explore the matter of the demon further, but the centaur had a point.
They stepped up to the door. It was a massive portal formed of whole tree trunks of hewn ironwood, scraped clean of bark and bound together by several severed predator vines. Bink marveled at this; unrusted iron-wood could be harvested only from freshly felled trees, and not even a magic axe could cut those very well. And what monster could blithely appropriate the deadly vines for this purpose? The vines normally used their constrictive power to crush their prey, and they were killingly strong.
Chester knocked resoundingly. There was a pause while the metallic echoes faded. Then slow thuds approached from inside. The door wrenched open with such violence that the ironwood hinges grew hot and the suction of air drew the centaur forward a pace. Light burst out blindingly, and the ogre stood there in terrible silhouette. It stood twice Bink's height, dwarfing even the monstrous door, and its body was thick in proportion. The limbs carried knots of muscles like the gnarly boles of trees. "Ungh!" it boomed.
"He says what the hell is this bad smell?" the golem translated.
"Bad smell!" Chester cried. "He's the one who smells!"
It was true. The ogre seemed not to believe in washing or in cleansing magic. Dirt was caked on his flesh, and he reeked of rotting vegetation. "But we don't want to spend the night outside," Bink cautioned.
Crombie squawked. "Birdbeak says let's get on with it, slowpokes."
"Birdbeak would," Chester grumbled.
The ogre grunted. "Stoneface says that's what he's sniffin', a putrid griffin."
The griffin stood tall and angry, half-spreading his brilliant wings as he squawked. "How'd you like that problem corrected by amputation of your schnozzle?" Grundy translated.
The ogre swelled up even more massively than before. He growled. "Me grind you head to make me bread," the golem said.
Then there was a medley of squawks and growls, with the golem happily carrying both parts of the dialogue.
"Come outside and repeat that, numbskull!"
"Come into me house, you beaked mouse. Me break you bone upon me dome."
"You'd break your dome just trying to think!" Crombie squawked.
"Do all ogres speak in rhyming couplets?" Bink asked when there was a pause to replenish the reservoirs of invective. "Or is that just the golem's invention?"
"That little twit not have wit," the golem said, then reacted angrily. "Who's a twit, you frog-faced sh-"
"Ogres vary, as do other creatures," Humfrey cut in smoothly. "This one does seem friendly."
"Friendly!" Bink exclaimed.
"For an ogre. We'd better go on in."
"Me test you mettle in me kettle!" the ogre growled via the golem. But the griffin nudged on in, and the ogre gave grudging way.
The interior was close and gloomy, as befitted the abode of a monster. The blinding light that had manifested when the door first opened was gone; evidently the proprietor had charged up a new torch for the occasion, and it had already burned out. Dank straw was matted on the floor, stocked cordwood lined the walls, and a cauldron bubbled like volcanic mud over a fire blazing in a pit in the center of the room. There seemed to be, however, no piles of bones. That, at least, was encouraging. Bink had never before heard of a vegetarian ogre, but the demon Beauregard surely knew his business.
Bink, realizing that the constant threats were mostly bluffs, found himself embarrassed to be imposing on the good-natured (for an ogre) monster. "What is your name?" he inquired.
"You lunch; me crunch."
Apparently the brute had not understood. "My name's Bink; what's your name?"
"Me have hunch you not know crunch." The ogre dipped a hairy, grimy mitt into the boiling cauldron, fished about, grabbed, withdrew a gooey fistful, plunked it into a gnarly wooden bowl which he shoved at Bink. "Drink, Bink."
"He means his name is Crunch," Chester said, catching on. "He's offering you something to eat. He doesn't distinguish between meals; all food is 'lunch.'"
"Oh. Uh-thank you, Crunch," Bink said awkwardly. You lunch; me Crunch-now it made sense. An offer of food, an answer to a question, rather than a threat. He accepted the glop. The ogre served the others similarly; his huge paw seemed immune to the heat
Bink looked at his portion dubiously. The stuff was too thick to pool, too thin to pick up, and despite its bubbling heat it hardly seemed dead yet. It was a deep-purple hue, with green excrescences. It smelled rather good, actually, though there was a scalded fly floating in it.
Chester sniffed his serving appreciatively. "Why this is purple bouillon with green nutwood-a phenomenal delicacy! But it requires a magic process to extract the bouillon juice, and only a nutty green elf can procure nutwood. How did you come by this?"
The ogre smiled. The effect was horrendous, even in the gloom. "Me have elf, work for pelf," the golem translated. Then Crunch lifted a log from his stack and held it over the cauldron. He twisted one hand on each end-and the wood screwed up like a wet towel. A thin stream of purple liquid fell from it into the cauldron. When the log was dry, the ogre casually ripped it into its component cords and tossed it into the fire, where it flared up eagerly. Well, that was one way to burn cordwood.