"This is too much. That thing doesn’t hurt anyone permanently. From what they say it doesn’t even affect anyone who doesn’t climb it."
"Still, it is strong magic and that makes it an unchancy neighbor. The villagers’ desire to rid themselves of the thing is understandable."
"Great. But where will it all end? Are these people going to go around destroying anything just because it’s magic?"
"If they have the opportunity."
"That’s crazy!"
"No, it is understandable. It is the people in the villages, especially along the Fringe, who have suffered the most from magic. To you in your pale tower in the Capital magic may be a thing to be learned and applied. Here it is a thing to be hated and feared. Is it any wonder that as soon as they were given an opportunity to practice magic safely, they should go looking for a weapon?"
"I gave them a defense," Wiz protested. "I didn’t expect them to turn it into something so dangerous!"
"You did say you wanted even common folk to learn your new way of magic," Philomen said mildly.
"Yes, but not like this!"
"Are you now complaining because someone took you at your word?"
"I’m complaining because this spell is fucking magical napalm!" Wiz yelled. "I expected people to have more sense than this."
"Sense?" Philomen asked with a trace of malice. "My Lord, forgive me, but when have the folk of the villages ever shown such sense?
"Once it was the Council’s job to maintain the balance of the World. But as you have said, the Council is outworn and lives beyond its usefulness. Or did you expect the folk along the Fringe to learn restraint and balance overnight?"
"I never said the Council was useless."
"You never put it in words," Philomen retorted. "But you said it with every act, every gesture, every roll of the eyes or yawn in Council meeting. Oh, your message got through, right enough. Even to the villages on the Fringe of the Wild Wood.
"Then you compound your actions by giving villagers a powerful spell they can use freely and telling everyone who would listen that you do not have to be a wizard to practice magic." Philomen’s lip curled in contempt. "No, My Lord, you are getting exactly what you strived for."
Wiz couldn’t think of anything to say.
"So come, My Lord, let us attend the laying of this thing. And for the sake of what little order remains in the World, let us put a good face on it." With that he turned and walked back across the meadow to where Alaina was waiting. Wiz hesitated for an instant and then followed.
The entire village was gathered before the stone by the time the three magicians arrived. All of them were wearing their holiday best. The adults were clumped together talking excitedly and the children were running around laughing and shrieking at play.
They parted like a wave for the three magicians. Andrew was standing at the front of a few of the other people from the feast last night.
Alaina looked over the crowd, eyes shining and her coarse face split in a huge smile.
"Well," she said briskly, "shall we begin?"
She motioned with her staff and the villagers fell back, Wiz and Philomen with them. Then she turned to face the rock, struck a dramatic pose and thrust her staff skyward.
"demon_debug BEGONE exe!" she bawled.
At first nothing seemed to happen. Wiz could feel the tension rising in the crowd and knotting up in his stomach. He took a firmer grip on his staff and began to review the spells he might use if this only roused the creature.
Maybe it won’t work, he thought to himself, half-afraid and half-hopeful. Maybe the spell will crash.
Then the rock moaned.
The sound was so low it sent shivers through Wiz’s bones, as if someone was playing the lowest possible note on the biggest bass fiddle in the world. It started low and then built and rose until it threatened to drown out all other sound.
There was something else there besides sound, Wiz realized. Some sort of mental influence, as if…
Wiz went white. "That thing’s alive," he shouted to Philomen. "It’s alive and intelligent!"
"Such things often are in their own way," the wizard agreed, keeping his eyes on the mass before them.
"But you can’t kill it, it’s intelligent!"
"Can we not? Watch."
Still groaning, the stone reared above them, heaving itself free of the earth and towering above them as if it would slam down on them and crush them like bugs. The villagers gasped and shrank back, but the thing slammed to earth in its own bed. The ground shook so hard Wiz nearly lost his balance. The creature reared again, not so high this time, and pounded to the earth once more. It tried to rear a third time, but could only quiver.
"Stop it!" Wiz yelled. "Stop it! Can’t you see it can’t hurt you?"
" ’Tis magic," Andrew replied. " ’Tis magic and must be burned from the land.
"Too long we trembled under the magical ones. Now let them tremble." His voice rose to a shout over the windy moans of the dying stone. "Let them know fear!"
The crowd behind him growled agreement.
The thing thinned, its stony gray turning opalescent and gradually lightening until Wiz could dimly see the outline of the hills through it. Then the creature’s body went foggy and he could see that the hills were cloaked in summer’s green. The outline blurred and became indistinct and finally, at last, the mist dissipated, leaving nothing but a hole in the ground with tendrils of smoke rising from it.
Wiz stood shocked and numb, oblivious to the cheers of the villagers. Someone was pounding him on the back and shouting in his ear, but he couldn’t make out the words.
Alaina left in the midst of an excited knot of villagers, talking and cheering and doing everything but hoisting her on their shoulders in triumph. Some of the others remained behind to gape at the huge pit where the rock creature had stood. Then by ones and twos they began to drift back toward the village square.
"A waste, I calls it," one old gaffer said to his younger companion as they passed by where Wiz stood. "They should have pounded it into gravel stead of just making it disappear. We needs gravel for our roads, we does."
Finally only Wiz remained, standing at the edge of the pit and looking down.
He didn’t know what the thing was that had died here today. He had never heard of such a creature and it may well have been the only one of its kind. But whatever it was it didn’t deserve what had been done to it.
His cheeks were wet and he realized he was crying.
There was a footstep behind him. Wiz didn’t turn around.
"Are you coming, My Lord?" Philomen asked. "There will be a feast tonight in honor of slaying the monster."
Wiz turned to face the wizard. "No thanks. Right now I don’t think my stomach could stand a feast."
"Our presence is expected."
"Vomiting on your hosts is probably bad form, even in this bunch."
Philomen’s face froze and he bowed formally. "As you will, My Lord. I will see you at the mayor’s house then."
"Maybe." Wiz strode off toward Leafmarsh Brook and the bridge into the Fringe beyond.
"My Lord, where are you going?"
"Into the Wild Wood," Wiz flung back over his shoulder. "Right now I want some civilized company. Weasels maybe, or snakes."
Eight: Side Effects
You can’t do just one thing.