Part 12 (1/2)
But at that point Justin discovered another problem. ”We need to get there quickly. Walking will take days. But what else is there?”
”Nozing.”
Justin looked around. His seventy-seven years as a tree had given him a certain insight into the vegetative realm. He spied several orange-yellow cloudberries that must have fallen from pa.s.sing clouds. They weren't vegetables, of course, but he had seen them before. ”These may do.”
”Whath?”
He went to pick up two of the berries. ”If we eat these, they will make us float like clouds. Then we can float to Castle Roogna.”
”Noo.”
”Now Unpun, you know we have to get there,” Justin said reasonably.
”Wonth worrk.”
”Won't work? Why not?”
”Winnd wrongg.”
Justin looked up. Sure enough, the clouds above were moving in the opposite direction they needed to go. ”Why, you are correct, Unpun.” He didn't want to add that he had a.s.sumed the zombie would not be very smart, because most weren't. That was because of their rotten brains.
”I nnew a punn would noth do.”
And a cloudberry was a pun. Unpun had seen right through the humor, having no sense of it, and caught the flaw in the plan. They would have to find another way.
Justin looked around again. This time he saw hoofprints. He had developed a fair eye for prints too, as many creatures had pa.s.sed by his tree in the course of those decades. He recognized these: ”Peek,” he said.
”Whath?”
”I see the hoofprints of Peek. She's a ghost mare. She and her family pa.s.sed my tree many times. They are nice ghost horses. I'm sure they'll help.”
”Where?”
”Oh, those prints are fresh. They are close by. I'm sure they'll hear me if I call.” He put his hands to his mouth and called: ”Pook! Peek! Puck! It is I, Justin Tree, in man form.”
In three-quarters of an instant three pooka appeared: the ghost horse family. All of them had chains wrapped around their barrels. The chains were necessary to keep the horses solid, since they were ghosts. Pook was the stallion, s.h.a.ggy and wild-looking. Peek was his mate, with beautiful eyes. Puck was their colt, much smaller and cuter; it would take him centuries to grow.
”h.e.l.lo, ghosts!” Justin said cheerily. ”Remember me from my days as a tree? Breanna of the Black Wave made me change back to man form, and we expect to marry soon. But first I have an errand to do at Castle Roogna. I would be much obliged if you would carry me and Unpun Zombie there.”
They hesitated, understandably, so Justin explained. ”We need to fetch the Ring of Idea, to help save Xanth from a loss of gravity. To do that we must see Princess Ida, and visit her moon of Ptero. So it is essential that we reach Castle Roogna rapidly.”
The three ghost horses shared a glance. Then Pook nodded. They would help.
”Thank you,” Justin said. ”Unpun, you may ride Peek. I shall ride Pook.” He went to the pooka stallion.
”Buth I donth know how,” the zombie protested.
”Have no concern,” Justin said. ”You would never be able to stay on a ghost horse without its consent, and you will not be able to fall off if one agrees to carry you. Peek is very nice; she will safeguard you.”
Still Unpun hesitated, until Peek shot him a pretty-eyed look; then he went to her and climbed awkwardly onto her chains. Justin did the same with Pook. He expected the chains to be uncomfortable, but they weren't; they made a reasonable saddle.
Suddenly the two ghost horses were off like the wind, which was not surprising, considering their nature. Little Puck raced along behind them, every so often kicking up his hind feet. Justin had no trouble remaining mounted; Pook was indeed keeping him secure. That was one advantage of riding a magical beast.
But even at the speed of the wind, their travel was not instant. The landscape of Xanth pa.s.sed around them, field and forest, hill and dale, country and village, plain and lake. They pa.s.sed individual settings so quickly that they did not have time to move; they seemed like a series of pictures, frozen flashes. Surely the rapidly moving horses seemed like mere blurs to those they pa.s.sed.
Pook angled his head so as to send a one-eyed glance back at Justin. Oh-he wanted to know more about their mission, and the news of the day, in exchange for the ride. It was customary.
”It seems that Cynthia Centaur went to the Good Magician Humfrey to inquire whether her offspring would breed true to the winged centaur line,” Justin said as Peek and Puck drew closer to listen. ”The answer was affirmative, but the Service required entails the saving of the Demon Earth, who it seems has been abducted, surely by some other Demon. The only way to accomplish that is to obtain the Swell Foop, which is a-” He hesitated. ”Actually, I don't know what it is or what it does or how it works. But it is surely a very powerful instrument, as it requires the ma.s.sed effect of all six Rings of Xanth to locate and control it. Thus Cynthia is being a.s.sisted by Che Centaur, and by Sim the Simurgh's chick, and by Breanna of the Black Wave, and myself. We are on five separate missions to obtain the Rings.”
Peek sent him a sidelong glance, which was convenient for her to do because she was now running beside Pook. The pooka did not talk, but they understood perfectly, and their glances could convey much.
”Why, you are correct,” Justin said, surprised. ”There are five of us-seeking six Rings. We are missing a Ring holder! That is surely a complication, unless someone else volunteers.” He shook his head. ”Oh, dear, I fear this will delay my marriage to Breanna. She will not be pleased.” In fact she would probably generate such a black cloud of ire that Castle Zombie itself would shake on its mushy foundation. It was enough to make a man wonder whether they shouldn't have eloped.
In such manner their journey to Castle Roogna pa.s.sed. In due course they spied its orchard and moat and turrets and all. The ghost horses deposited them at the drawbridge, went to sniff noses briefly with Souffle the moat monster, then were gone in a ghostly stir of invisible air.
Justin and Unpun introduced themselves to Souffle who was all the guard the castle needed on a quiet day like this, and walked on into the castle. No one met them; they were unannounced, and the castle ghosts had probably been rea.s.sured by the presence of the ghost horses. Had they been hostile intruders it would have been another matter; the castle had its own ways of dealing with those.
They found Princess Ida's little chamber. She was ent.i.tled to much fancier lodgings, but preferred to live simply. Her talent was the Idea; whatever she believed would come true, did come true, if suggested by someone who did not know her talent. Most folk did know her talent now, so it didn't get much exercise. But she also had Ptero, and that made all the difference. That was her moon, whereon all the characters who ever existed, or would exist, or might exist, stayed, waiting their turns for lives in regular Xanth.
”Why, h.e.l.lo, Justin,” Ida said, rising from her simple chair to greet them. A ball the size of a cherry bomb circled her head. It hid shyly behind her hair the moment Justin looked directly at it. ”But I don't think I know your friend.”
”He is Unpun Zombie. He knows where-”
”Oh, Punny's friend!” she said. ”She came here last year, hoping to wait until there came a way to restore him to full life.”
”Yeth!” Unpun agreed.
”And have you found a way?”
”We have, perhaps,” Justin said. ”We have come for the Ring of Idea.”
She looked at him with surprise. ”What use could you have for that?” Her moon was evidently curious too, for now it swung back into sight.
”We need it to obtain the Swell Foop. Unpun says that Punny has it. When I get it, I can use it to restore Unpun to life, so that he can resume dissipating puns. That seems straightforward.”
”Yes, it surely is,” she agreed. Justin knew then that it was true, for Ida did not agree to things she did not believe, and what she believed was true. It did not matter, in this case, that Justin knew her talent; he was not originating the concept, merely repeating what he had learned from Unpun. The zombie evidently did not know.
”We shall need to go to Ptero to find it.”
”I will help you go,” she agreed. ”Lie down on those cots.” She indicated two beds in the chamber. Perhaps their visit had not been entirely unexpected. She brought out a bottle. ”Sniff this soul remover; it will release your souls for the journey.”
”Buth I can'th go there,” Unpun protested.
”Yes you can,” Justin said immediately. ”You must lead me to Punny.”
”Noo!”
”If he does not wish to go-” Ida said, concerned. Her little moon clouded over; evidently it did not like stress.
”He does want to go,” Justin said. ”It's just that he can't stand all the puns that have acc.u.mulated around her. So I must be guided by his objections. It's the only way.”