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Laura eyed the window warily. "And what will happen to my career if I don't help you?" The demi-amazon shrugged. "Nothing."
"Nothing? Really?"
"Absolutely nothing. Ever." Nnagartha's eyes were as cold and hard as her swordblade.
"I see." Well, what else did she have planned before she hit the unemployment lines? "So, what do I do?"
"Iwill tell all presently. We must hurry. No doubt our thief's veilstone has already alerted him to our presence. We must capture him unawares, or he can use his stone to lock us all on the other side-permanently."
A dragons snout poked through the window, followed by the head and the beginnings of a long neck.
Covered with irridescent green and gold scales, its Spielbergish head could barely squeeze through the opening. Softball-sized eyes blinked and cavernous nostrils twitched in the SoCal air. "So will she do it?"
it said. "When do we start? I have some suggestions for the script. First, I think the dragon should get lots more lines-"
Nnagartha thwacked the snout with her fist. "Silence, Ruadherra!"
"Well, pardonme!" huffed the beast. Sulfurous smoke roiled from its nostrils as it retreated back into the opening.
"Actors!" grumped Nnagartha.
"Tell me about it," Laura replied.
Following Nnagartha, Laura stepped through the not-window onto a meadow of lush, green gra.s.s and wild-flowers. Nearby, a brook gurgled serenely, and the air smelled of sweet berries and honey. A pair of unicorns gazed at her with intelligent eyes, then turned and galloped over a hill. The sharp, shocking contrast with the world she knew-with the smog and the traffic noise and the subconscious spoor of thousands of stressed-out people-knocked Laura off balance. Collapsing into a soft copse of foxglove or bluebell wouldn't be a bad thing.
"Here it is, babe," said Gurack as he stepped out of the view of Lauras backyard pool. "Here's our set.
And your script." He handed her a stack of vellum sheets st.i.tched with gold twine. "It's called 'Dragon's Wrath,' based on a real event that happened, oh, a h.e.l.l of a long time ago. You'll love it. 'Course, we put some spice in it. Y'know, added a few characters, made it one big battle in act four rather than the series of small ones. Gave you-I mean, Xora-some good scenes with our local talent. It'll be a hit. Love ya, babe." He looked around the meadow. "Where the h.e.l.l are the others? Where'd that troll-calloopin'
dragon go? G.o.ddammit, I told them to be here on time-" The director stomped grumbling off toward the sparkling city.
"How do you feel?" asked Nnagartha. She placed a firm yet gentle hand on Laura's shoulder.
"A bit wobbly, I guess. This isn't how I expected my day to go." "You will be at ease soon, I promise. This land can have an effect on people. I remember my first time back-"
"What do you mean?"
Nnagartha pulled back her gorgeous auburn hair, more out of distraction than necessity. "Oh, nothing, my girl. Your script is ready, and all the cast and crew have been rehearsing their respective parts. They will be pleased that you agreed to join us. Before the others return, though, I must fight you." With a quick gesture, she withdrew her sword and flowed into an attacker's stance.
"Excuse me?" Laura said. She backed up a step and almost tripped over a ma.s.sive sword on the ground behind her.
"Take the blade," Nnagartha demanded.
Laura did. It was alotheavier than the props she was used to.
"Attack me," the other woman ordered.
"Why?" Laura swung the sword in her warm-up pattern, gauging its heft and size.
"Because I desire it!" And Nnagartha arced her blade in a killing swing.
Laura blocked it, but the blow forced her to her knees. Nnagartha stood over her, sword already sheathed and fists on hips.
"What the h.e.l.l what that for?" Laura shouted. "You tried to kill me!"
"Not at all." The warrior offered Laura a hand. Laura refused, standing and brus.h.i.+ng herself off on her own. Pleased, Nnagartha added, "I apologize, Lady. It was just a test. Xora brandishes her blade with ease and grace, though I suspect that that has more due to editing than actual warrior's skill."
"My swordplay coach says I'm the best student he's ever had."
"I don't doubt that, Lady. You are good-in your world. Here, though, we have set different standards.
You must look as though your can fight with Xora's skill, or else your fans here will be sorely disappointed. Would you like a few pointers?"
Sparring with a pro far better even than her coach? Shedidhave a lot of stress to work out, and Terry didn't like her practicing at home...
Laura smiled. "Can't let down the fans."
s.h.i.+nng! "Then attack me."
Laura did. It felt good.
An hour later, the meadow was a stage set populated by a.s.sorted gnomes, sprites, goblins, faeries, and warriors. Swords and s.h.i.+elds clanged together like thunder as the centaur army practiced the climactica.s.sault from act four. Nnagartha was off somewhere searching for something... or someone.
Feeling strong and more than a little s.e.xy in the authentic costume Nnagartha had provided for her, Laura sat studying her script on an Alice-sized mushroom that seemed to have appeared for just that purpose. A quick study, she had already memorized her lines and was rereading goggle-eyed the outrageous scenes coming up. Who was playing this "Bran" character, the capital-H Hero who enters after the first few scenes? Probably another over-inflated, self-loving, brainless beefcake like all the others the writers kept sticking her with.
Footsteps behind her. Furtive and hesitant. She turned. A young elf boy, shy and awkward in his leaves and pointed ears, stood gazing up at her raptly.
"h.e.l.lo," she said. She hopped off the mushroom.
The boy elf wore a moss-green tunic, on the breast of which was pinned a large, round b.u.t.ton. The b.u.t.ton bore words written in red script. Laura leaned close to read:
Idohave a life!
It'sXora: Avenger Priestess!
From her experience, that wasn't a good sign.
"Excuse me, um, Laura... Miss Lundy?" the elfling stammered. "I'm your biggest fan. I know you're busy, but, um, I was wondering if I could ask you a few questions? Only for a minute?"
The centaurs were arguing loudly about who was most photogenic and therefore should lead the attack on the dragon's lair. There was time. "Sure."
He rushed to her side. "Okay. In episode 12, 'Lettuce Prey,' when you battled the enchanted plant creatures of the evil Lord D'spair, how come you controlled the ivy monsters with D'spair's Sword of Power but you had to chop up the wolfweed beasts to stopthem? Did the ivy monsters have more lifeforce than the wolfweed beasts? Or were the wolfweed beasts enchanted by a different level of magic?"
Oh, to be able to conjure up the idiot writer who came up with that one. She smiled politely. "I don't know."
"Why didn't Lord D'spair hide the Sword of Power in a secret place instead of displaying it in the center of his trophy room with bright lights s.h.i.+ning on it?"
"I don't know."
"When you were captured by Lord Kandor in episode 31, 'Dirge for a Scourge,' and he had you chained to that wall above the Pit of Eternity, and you asked him, 'Before you kill me, will you at least tell me what this is all about?' why didn't he just say no and drop you instead of telling you his plan and giving you time to escape?" "I don't know."
"How come in episode-"
With a quick motion, she jutted her elbow into the side of his head-hard. "I don't know."
"Lady Laura," called Nnagartha's voice. Pleased by the distraction of the approaching warrior, Laura was startled to see striding confidently alongside Nnagartha the most handsome man she had ever beheld. Square-jawed and Adonis-featured beneath a leonine head of hair that would make Fabio consider implants, he was the type of man for whom the term "mighty-thewed" was invented. Wearing an animal hide draped about his stunning shoulders, a leather breech cloth that bulged with robust good health, and leather leggings up his solid calves, he could make a fortune smoldering those soulful blue-green eyes on the covers of romance novels.
"Lady Laura, this is your leading man. His name is Bran-"
"-Son of Tur Gwynthorn, mightiest of the Northern Kings!" he said, bowing. "My Lady, it is a privilege to serve at your side. Pray, be patient with me, for I am new at this 'acting' art that Mistress Nnagartha asks of me, and you are even more beautiful standing before me than you are in the mages' vision boxes."
Nnagartha gave Laura a wink. "I'll leave you two to get acquainted. Perhaps you should go over your lines together. I see that Gurack is almost done rehearsing the dwarfs."
When they were alone, Bran took Laura's hand and held it as if it were a sacred relic. "My Lady," he said with a voice like Brad Pitt ma.s.saging her feet with aromatic oils. "Long have I admired you from afar, and wors.h.i.+pped you as a G.o.ddess. When told that I, of all the men of our kingdom, had been chosen to play he who captures your heart, my own heart nigh burst with song."
In any other case, Laura would have spoiled the moment by trying to stifle a giggle. Yet unlike the typical muscleman from Central Casting, this handsome specimen wore-if little else-an honest reality that was refres.h.i.+ng. Clearly he didn't just play at being a Hero. The firm, sculpted-by-Michelangelo face betrayed a boyish earnestness that softened his aura of strength and rugged n.o.bility.
The goblin approached and jabbed Bran in a thigh bigger than the goblin's head. "Okay, hunkazoid, save the fan mail until the wrap party." An old-fas.h.i.+oned megaphone sparkled into the directors hand. "Listen up, everybody! Let's start with scene four, in which Bran-that's you, buddy-first encounters Xora after the unsuccessful battle against the Black Dragon of Doomlair. Elven Sages, you be ready for your entrance. Pixies, check your scripts; take your positions and be ready to fly in and beg Xora and Bran to attempt another raid on the dragon's cave. And Ruadherra, this time don't keep ad-libbing the way you did in rehearsal. We don't need a prima-f.u.c.king-donna. There were other dragons at the audition, you know."
At Gurack's direction, will-o'-the-wisps rose from the ground to light the scene effectively. Something flitted near Laura's face. She resisted the urge to swat it. When it stopped in mid-air at her eye level, it looked like a Hummingbird Barbie wearing night-goggles. Nnagartha had explained that these small faeries with the "mage-cams" were the audio-visual crews for their production.
After a few moments, Gurack stood on Nnagartha's shoulders and surveyed the set. At last he brought the megaphone back to his lips. "Act one, scene four. Andaction!" It was a good shoot.
After Gurack again praised her performance, touching her often enough to discover that his nose was an easy target, he hurried away to warn the dragon against continued unnecessary improvisation. Where was Nnagartha? Her mentor had spent the hours looking nervously about, studying people and objects with intense scrutiny. At last, Laura saw her on the far side of the meadow, speaking to the regiment of goblin balloon bombers. Nnagartha was frowning. Laura had decided to check up on her when- "Lady, may I speak with you?" Bran had stepped alongside her. She shot a glance at Nnagartha, who was examining a goblin balloonist by holding him at eye-level with one hand.
"Sure, Bran. For a minute."
"Lady, where I am from, a man shouts his love for his woman to the trees and the hills and the stars."
"What about to the woman?"
Bran blinked, then smiled. His white teeth glistened. "To her he entreats more softly. I wish to ride into battle if only to be your champion and win for you a lovers victory. In longing desire for you to stay here with us and let me woo you with courtly reverence, I have composed a song. Would you like to hear it?"
Flattered. Fl.u.s.tered. Part of her wanted to giggle, another to cry. He was probably a good hugger. "Oh, G.o.d. I'm sorry, Bran. That's sweet, really. It's just that-" She waved her hands about vaguely. "I already have someone in my life, and we're-"
"Another man, a mighty warrior true and virtuous, has earned your affections, my Lady?"
She looked him squarely in those gorgeous aqua-blues and nodded. "Something like that."
Bran gazed into the distance. Emotion threatened to crack his proud visage. "Then he is a worthy man indeed to have captured your love so fully. I may be a mere prince and a warrior, yet I can feel your love for this man, and the pain it has recently caused you." He inhaled deeply, held the breath a moment, then exhaled a slow sigh that conveyed sadness and resignation. "I would like to meet him, and pay him the honor and respect I feel for the one worthy of your love, my Lady."
"I'd love to introduce you. You two'd get along well, I think."
"Warrior to warrior then! We three shall drink from shared flagons and toast the memories of loves lost and finer loves gained!"
"Right." Hewascute. Buns of steel, oh lordy.
Striding her way was Nnagartha, Gurack struggling to keep up with her.
"You're worried," Laura said.
"Observant as well, I see," Nagartha declared without sarcasm. "Yes, I am concerned. I had hoped that our activities would attract our prey, but I cannot sense his presence. He is a master of stealth and disguise, and I trusted my hunter's experience to make uncovering him easy work. I was mistaken. Myfear now is that this was all in vain, that he has chosen to stay permanently in your world. The damage he could do there... I do not like to think about it."
Gurack coughed. "Look, pardon me, Mistress, but we still got a h.e.l.l of an episode ofXorain the works here. Wouldn't it be worth it just for that? I mean, I know it ain't like the old days and all, but hey, you gotta admit the people are gonna love 'Dragon's Wrath.' They'll pay more attention to it than anything else. Even the Jesters Guild has tossed in the towel and contacted me about producing a comedy series.
It's just too bad we can't make more than one newXora. Oh, I can see it now! A whole 'nuther series shot on location! With the best director-that's me-and the best-"
"That's enough," said Laura. She was deep in thought, an idea dancing just out of grasping range.
"Something Gurack said just now," she whispered. "I believe I now understand why he took the veilstone, why he wishes to seeXoracanceled." She raised her voice. "Give me the veilstone!"
Gurack looked stunned. "Say again, Lady?"
"Give. Me. The veilstone." Her best Xora intonation.
"I'm sure it's here somewhere. Just a minute." While the goblin searched his pockets, Nnagartha fixed Laura with a questioning look.
Just play along with me. Let me be the pro here.
"Fraggin' pockets! Here it is!" Gurack handed the blue crystal to Laura.
She held it in her palms. It was heavier than she expected, and warm, and began glowing with auroral colors. "Is it true, Nnagartha, that with this stone I could close the veil between this world and mine forever?"
The warrior was silent for a moment. Then a shade of a smile twitched the comers of her lips.Bingo!
"Why, yes, Lady. If that is your wish."
"So I could conceivably keep on playing Xora here, without the troubles of strikes and studio executives and s.h.i.+fting time-slots."
Laura heard the soft sound of Nnagartha's foot pressing down-hard-on Guracks. The goblin yelped.
"Why, um, yes, of course, Lady!" he bleated. "Absolutely! Why, any, er, thing you want, you just ask me." Then he followed Lauras directing eyes to the left. His own eyes met hers, then widened appreciably.Bingo 2! "As a matter of fact, you're great! Marvelous! A sure-fire smas.h.!.+ The best entertainer this land has ever seen. And I do meanever! You can write your own ticket, with total control of your career. I'll get a small percentage, of course, a finder's fee, but you'll be the top of the heap, let there be no mistake about that!"
A sheet of rough paper materialized in his hand. In ornate script at the top was the wordContract. "By signing here with one hand while holding the stone in the other, you will be granted an exclusive and binding contract to be Faerie's most favored actor. You'll be the toast of the entire Kingdom. Finvarra himself is eager to get your autograph. Here's a pen." He gave her a colorful quill. The veilstone glowed even more brightly. The window behind them wavered and fluttered like a bad transmission.
What if it didn't work? She didn't like the way the window flickered now. Her backyard was difficult to see, going dark and fading to static snow. Laura gripped the quill tightly. Nnagartha took the contract from Gurack, looked around for a suitable writing desk, then walked ten paces to the left, placing it on the giant mushroom. Laura followed. "Here's a good place to sign," she said. "When you do, the veil will be closed forever, the veilstone powerless, and you will be our land's most favored performer. With no turning back." The last sentence held a barely shaded hint of warning.
"I know," Laura said firmly. She placed the pen to the paper. The stone was a tiny sun now. She didn't want to look back and see what was happening to the only pa.s.sageway home.