Snuggled luxuriously amidst pillows and comforters, dreaming of Theodora, I heard a bird singing. For a few moments I was able to incorporate the sound into my dream, but at last, reluctantly, I opened my eyes. A brilliant scarlet bird hung on a branch two feet above my head, pouring out a golden song to greet the morning. It flew away as I rose on one elbow and looked around. It was already full daylight, but lumps in the other three beds showed that I was by no means the last awake.
I lay down again, hoping to recapture my dream, but the realization that Theodora was three thousand miles away, and even if she was still alive and well did not want to marry me, brought me fully awake. It had been a remarkably vivid dream, in which she had had no reservations about marrying me or about anything else. The nixie, I thought, had been influencing our sleeping minds for her own purposes.
The other three also stretched and sat up, not meeting each others’ eyes. “One problem with nixies,” said Vor, “is that they’re not very subtle.”
We had fruit and wine for breakfast; the bottles and the baskets had been replenished while we slept. “Is your ankle any better?” I asked Lucas.
“It doesn’t hurt with every breath the way it did last night,” he admitted, “but I certainly couldn’t walk on it.”
“I’m going to try to break the spell that’s holding us in the grove,” I said. “Until I do, I’m afraid we’re going to have to stay here-unless of course we decide to take up the nixie’s offer.”
“But Lucas is married,” said Paul puritanically. “If she wants us all before she’ll let any of us go, that means we’re trapped here.”
Lucas gave him a sour look, and I almost expected the older prince to say that, married or not, he could and would do anything he wanted. But instead he turned away to finish the strawberries.
“Come with me, Vor,” I said. “I want your help.”
“What should we do if the nixie comes back?” asked Paul in some alarm.
“Be polite,” said Vor. “Call her Lady. Nixies like that. And don’t even bother trying to explain that it’s hard to feel in the right mood to respond to her charms when you’ve been imprisoned against your will. That’s something nixies never have been able to understand.”
The invisible wall at the edge of the grove once again met my outstretched hand. It was as impenetrable to Vor as to Paul and me. I tried several variations on dissolving spells, but none of them worked. Vor tried pushing other objects through the barrier and found they passed without difficulty. He was even able, by holding onto a leafy branch, to push most of his arm through. But as soon as he reached the rest of his body, not surrounded by leaves, the wall stopped him solidly.
“How about turning us into birds?” Vor suggested half-seriously. “We could fly through. The real birds are coming and going without any problem.”
“I’ve thought of it,” I said, entirely seriously. “The problem is, if I turned myself into anything non-human, I wouldn’t be able to say the spell to return us all to ourselves. I’d even been thinking that I could turn the three of you into some other creatures so that you could escape, and stay here myself, but that wouldn’t work either. Human magic doesn’t penetrate this wall, so you would all have to remain birds.”
“Could you turn us into some creature that it would be nice to be for the rest of our lives?”
I gave this suggestion more attention than it probably deserved. When I had been at the wizards’ school in the City by the sea, I had often gone down to the breakwater to watch the dolphins playing in the surf. But being a dolphin would be difficult in these dry borderlands of the land of magic.
“I wish I had my books,” I said. “I’m not familiar with the kind of magic that formed this barrier, and it will take me a while to work it out from first principles.”
“I know what we could do,” said Vor, almost playfully. I was quite sure I had never seen him being playful before. “We could all turn into nixies.”
“We could what?”
“If we were nixies, the nixie of this grove wouldn’t try to stop us from leaving, and we could pass right through this barrier. But we’d still be able to speak, so you could turn us back into ourselves once we were out in the plain.”
“Transformations spells cannot be used frivolously,” I said firmly, inwardly appalled. “Besides, the princes would never agree.”
“I’m not sure I would agree either,” Vor said lightly. “But at least it was an idea.”
When we returned to the beds under the trees, Paul said, “The nixie came while you were gone. We called her Lady and managed to persuade her that we weren’t in the right mood. She went away again, but now I’m wondering if she’s poisoned the fruit.”
“Poisoned the fruit!”
“Usually in the morning when I’m home I can’t wait to get outside, to ride, to run. We slept better on these beds last night than we’ve slept the whole trip, so I should be brimful of energy. But now I don’t feel like moving at all-and look at Lucas!”
The older prince rolled over and opened his eyes at the sound of his name. “I’m not asleep.”
But Paul was right. The nixie was affecting more than our dreams. Making us feel languorous, making us playful, in a few days she would have us forgetting the world outside her grove.
“I don’t think it’s the fruit,” I said. “I think it’s in the air. I’d better work fast.”
Lucas stretched and sat up. “Tell me, Wizard,” he said in much better humor than I expected, “what real harm would come to us if we did take up the nixie’s offer?”
I shot Vor a quick glance. He shook his head and said, “Complete exhaustion, but it should wear off.” Paul glared at Lucas, indignant on behalf of the crown princess of Caelrhon, but the other prince ignored the look.
I took a deep breath. “The three of you can do what you like. But Paul was right that the nixie won’t let us go until she’s been satisfied by all of us. And as a wizard, I am bound by iron oaths.” This was a prevarication, because the oaths I had taken had nothing to do with chastity. But I didn’t want to explain that, in love with both Theodora and the queen, I found the nixie’s advances repellant-though even that might change in a few days in this soft air.
Instead I folded my arms. “While we’re all here,” I said, “I want to take the opportunity to finish the discussion we were having yesterday.” This at least took the rather listless half smile off Lucas’s face. “I’m getting very tired of having to drag this out of you. You keep talking, Prince, about aristocrats needing to break free of their wizards. Then how do you explain waiting in the city of Caelrhon until the old bishop died, to make sure that a renegade wizard you’d hired yourself insulted his memory by attacking the cathedral?”
IV
Lucas gave me a vicious look; I was actually rather pleased to see that languor had not yet taken him over. But he had the sense not to try to jump me again. “I stayed in the city all summer to defend it from you!”
He seemed to mean it. “What threat could I possibly be?” I demanded indignantly.
“Why else,” shifting his scowl from me to Paul, “would the wizard of Yurt spend so much time in Caelrhon unless planning an attack on my kingdom? Would you care to tell me, Prince, just what plot you have been concocting against me?”
Lucas feared an attack from Paul? Everything had made sense for a moment, but now suddenly all my suppositions were disintegrating.
I expected Paul to reply hotly but he only laughed, momentarily easing the tension. “Our wizard was in Caelrhon at the request of the cathedral, to defend the church against the monster some other wizard had already brought there-at Vor’s suggestion.”
Vor was about to reply, but I interrupted him. “Wait,” I said. Try to sort it out one piece at a time. “You mean, Lucas, you weren’t anticipating the gorgos at the bishop’s funeral?”