Authors: Piers Anthony
Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #General, #Fantasy fiction, #Xanth (Imaginary place), #Xanth (Imaginary place) - Fiction
urged her to stay-, then she would have been sure that he was up to
nothing interesting.
The tracks veered toward the Void.
That was the nearby reion of no
return.
Of course every faun and nymph knew better than to enter it,
because there was no way out of it.
Anything that crossed the boundary
was doomed.
Only special creatures, like the night mares, could escape
it, because they weren't real in the way ordinary folk were.
They had
very little substance.
"Don't float too near the Void," Forrest warned the demoness.
She changed course to approach the boundary, then paused.
"Say, you are
a cunning one!" she said with admiration.
"You knew I'd automatically
do the opposite.
It almost worked, too.
But I'm only a little crazy.
You have to be a lot crazy to venture into the Void."
"Maybe next time," he muttered.
The nymph was clearly teasing Branch, by passing flirtingly close to the
fringe of the Void.
Her prints almost touched the boundary, then moved
away, then came close again.
The menace of that drelid region added to
the thrill of the chase.
Forrest had done it too, and knew exactly the
steps to take to be sure of never straying across the line.
Then his sandals balked.
He stopped, perplexed; what was the matter?
His sandals were magic, and protected his hoofs from harm, and if he
were about to step somewhere harmful, they stopped him.
Yet he saw
nothing ahead to be concerned about.
"So what's with you?" Mentia asked.
"Tired of walking?"
"I didn't stop," he explained.
"My sandals did."
"Say, I'm getting to like you.
You're almost as weird as I am."
"That's impossible."
"Thank you." This time her flush of pleasure was purple with green polka
dots, and it extended down her legs and out across the ground around
her.
"So why did your sandals stop?"
"I'm not sure.
Maybe it was a false alarm."
Still, his sandals had never yet been wrong.
So he dropped to his furry
knees and examined the ground before him.
It was ordinary. There were a
few smiling gladiolas, the happiest of flowers, and beyond them some
horse radishes were flicking off flies with their tails. He thought of
asking the nearest horse if it knew of anything harmful here, but he
didn't understand plant language very well, and in any event all it
would say would be "neigh." So finally he got up and made a detour
around the place.
"Oh, well," the demoness said, disappointed.
But now he couldn't find the trail.
Both sets of tracks were gone. So
he turned back-and that was when he saw it.
A splinter of reverse wood
on the ground.
He was sure of its identity, because the gladiola
closest to it was drooping sadly.
And right across it was a lady
slipper print.
The nymph had inadvertently stepped on the splinter.
It
hadn't hurt her directly, because it was lying flat.
But it must have
affected the fleet magic of her slipper, so that she had lost her sure
footing.
"You see something," D.
Mentia remarked astutely.
Now he saw the clog-print next to it, and realized the awful truth. The
nymph had lost her balance, because of the reversal of her slipper
magic, and teetered on the edge of the boundary of the Void.
Branch had
collided with her, caught by surprise by her sudden stop.
And the two
had sprawled into the Void.
"Yes.
They are gone."
It was a freak accident, the kind that would happen hardly once in a
century.
The reverse wood splinter might have been blown there recently
by an errant gust of wind.
It would have been harmless, except when it
came into contact with something magical.
Then that abrupt reversal
Branch and the nymph were lost.
They would never get out of the Void.
And their trees would suffer, for without its spirit a magical tree
slowly lost its magic and became, dreadful destiny, virtually mundane.
It was a fate, many believed, worse than extinction.
"I'm sorry," the demoness said.
"That means that you won't be
entertaining me any more."
Forrest had no idea where the nymph's tree was, but knew it was
suffering similarly.
He hoped there would be another nymph free to join
it and save it.
Meanwhile, he did know where Branch's tree was. But
what could he do?
He could not care for two trees; the relationship
didn't work that way.
He was bound to his sandalwood tree.
He knew of
no fauns looking for trees.
There were more trees than amenable fauns
and nymphs, so that some trees that might have flourished magically
became ordinary.
It was sad, because the right trees had much to offer
their companion spirits, but true.
Then he thought of something.
It was a vanishingly tiny chance, but
marginally better than nothing.
"You're a spirit," he said to the
demoness.
"How would you like to adopt a tree?"
"You mean, become a tree dryad, so that I would live almost forever and
always protect it?"
"Yes.
It's a worthy occupation.
It doesn't have to be a nymph. Any
caring spirit will do, if the commitment is there.
And the clogs would
protect your feet."
"Commitment.
Protected feet." She tried to look serious, but smoke
started puffing out her ears, and finally she exploded into a hilarious
fireball.
"Ho ho ho!"
Then again, maybe the notion had been worse than nothing.
Demons had no
souls, because they were the degraded remnants of souls themselves. They
cared for nothing and nobody.
"Sorry I mentioned It."
Oh, I'm not!
That was my laugh for the day." The smoke coalesced into
the extraordinarily feminine female woman distaff luscious shape of
girlish persuasion with the slightly translucent dress.
"A tree nymph!
You are a barrel of laughs." She formed into a brown barrel with
brightly colored pancake-shaped laughs overflowing its rim.
Forrest ignored her as well as he could, and headed for his home tree.
How could he have been so stupid as to make such a suggestion to a
demoness?
She followed.
"The oddest thing is that my better half well might have
agreed, were she not otherwise occupied.
She has half a soul. But also
a half mortal child, so she's busy.
I'm the half without the soul."
As if he couldn't have guessed.
"You could share the soul of the tree.
"The soul of a shoe tree," she exclaimed, her laughter building up
another head of steam.
"A clog sole.
Protecting my feet.
Oh, hold me,
somebody; I think I'm going to expire of mirth." Her body swelled until
it burst and disappeared, leaving only a faint titter behind.
This time, it seemed she really was gone.
But Forrest didn't chance it;
he walked directly back without looking around.
When he returned and looked at the clog tree, his heart sank into his
stomach.
The poor thing was so droopy and sad.
It was all that
remained of his friend Branch.
He had to do something to help it.
He walked up and put a hand on the trunk.
"Have confidence, clog tree.
I will find you another spirit.
Just give me time to do it."
The tree must have heard him, because its leaves perked up and became
greener.
It knew him, because he had been near it many times, and was
the friend of its faun.
It trusted him to help it.
He had promised, and he would do his best.
Some folk thought that fauns
and nymphs were empty-headed creatures, incapable of feeling or
commitment, but those folk were confusing types.
The creatures of the
Faun and Nymph Retreat had no memory beyond a day, so every new day was
a new adventure.
But that was the magic of the retreat; any who left
there started to turn real, which meant they aged and had memories. Some
preserved their youth by finding useful jobs.
Jewel the Nymph had taken
on the chore of spreading gems throughout Xanth, so that others would
have the delightful challenge of finding them, and later she had married
a mortal man and become a grandmother.
Many others had adopted magical
trees, just as Forrest had.
It was a kind of symbiosis, which was a
fancy word meaning that the two got along great together and helped each
other survive. The trees kept the fauns or nymphs young, because trees
lived a long time and their spirits shared that longevity.
The fauns or
nymphs protected their trees, bringing them water in times of drought
and harassing woodsmen who wanted to chop the trees down.
Nymphs had
very effective ways to distract woodsmen, or to persuade them to spare
their trees. Sometimes a nymph would even marry a woodsman, if that was
what it took. But her first loyalty was always to her tree.
Fauns had
other ways, such as setting booby traps or informing large dragons where
a nice man sized meal could be had near a certain tree.
One way or
another, they protected their timber, as well as enhancing the natural
magic of the trees.
But the sudden loss of Branch left the clog tree in trouble.
Such
relationships were not lightly made or broken.
A faun who lost his tree
died, and a tree who lost its faun turned mundane, an even sadder state.
So he had to find a replacement.