WIZARDRY COMPILED by Rick Cook

“He thinks we can make some kind of deal. But we’re going to have to work fast.”

“What would he require?”

Wiz looked uncomfortable. “It’s not him, exactly. The way he explained it to me, there are so many factions and kinds of non-mortals that we can’t just sit down and bargain. What we’ve got to do is remove the threat in their eyes so their coalition falls apart. Then maybe we can come to an agreement with the elves.”

“And what would this take?”

“Hey, I don’t know, I’m just the messenger boy.”

“Hardly,” rumbled Bal-Simba. “It was obviously your idea. Further, the elves, or at least Duke Aelric, are willing to treat with you.”

Yeah, Wiz thought, only one of them keeps trying to kill me. “You make it sound like I’m ambassador to the elves or something.”

“Very nearly, Sparrow. You have had more success dealing with them than any living mortal.”

“Great. Another job I don’t want and I’m no good at.”

Bal-Simba sighed. “Sparrow, we would be much further along if you would stop prejudging what you are or are not capable of. You can do a great deal more than you suppose if you put your mind to it. Now I ask you again, what will it take to avert a war?”

Wiz thought. “At the very least we’re going to have to fix things so they don’t feel threatened. That means we’re going to have to do something about demon_debug.”

“That falls within the purview of you and the team from your world,” Bal-Simba said. “What else?”

“Well, we’re going to have to stop this mad dash into the Wild Wood. We may be able to work out some kind of homesteading arrangement later, but for right now we need to keep people from going further.”

Bal-Simba stroked his chin and the little bones of his necklace clicked against each other. “As easy to sweep back the sea, I fear.”

“Can’t you order them to stop?”

The giant wizard smiled wryly. “Sparrow, even at the height of our power the Council never had that kind of hold over the people. Were we to issue such an order it would be ignored and there are not enough guardsmen to post at every forest road and trail.”

“You’ve got to do something.”

“We can only try.”

“I understand you’ve got a whole team of programmers here,” Wiz said to change the subject.

“Almost a score of them, recruited from the Valley of Quartz.”

“You mean Silicon Valley.”

“That is what I said, is it not? In any event they have been working on your system of magic and making excellent progress—or so they tell me.” He chuckled. “Meanwhile they have been, ah, enlivening things here to no end.”

“I dunno,” Wiz said. “You make me feel superfluous. I’ve been gone and you and Moira have been doing all the work. All I managed to do was get myself kidnapped and chased all over the City of Night.”

“Hardly. Aside from wiping out the remnants of the Dark League, you were the one who approached Duke Aelric with the notion of a treaty.”

“You could have done that.”

Bal-Simba shook his head. “No, Sparrow, I could not. In the first place he never would have talked to me. In the second place I would not have had the courage to do something so insanely dangerous.”

“Oh,” said Wiz in a very small voice.

“Well, I do not wish to tire you, so we will leave these matters for the morrow.”

“Fine. I’m pretty bushed. I’m going to get a snack and go back to sleep.”

Bal-Simba made no move to leave.

“Is there something else?”

“There are questions we must answer and soon,” he said at last. “Some things yet unclear about what happened to you.”

“For instance?”

“Was your kidnapping connected with the attempts on your life?”

“No. That was someone else. I think I can take care of that.”

“Ahh, I see,” he said and then hesitated again. “I understand Ebrion is dead.”

“Yeah. I was there when it happened.”

The wizard looked closely at him. “Was he involved in your kidnapping?”

Wiz opened his mouth and then stopped. Telling Bal-Simba what had happened would definitely discredit Ebrion’s faction—the people who had been trouble ever since he arrived at the Capital. But discrediting them wouldn’t make them go away. They’d still be here and they’d be even angrier and more frustrated.

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