Demons Don't Dream - BestLightNovel.com
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Sammy headed off. Jenny held on to the invisible leash the demons had given her, so that she could fell by its tug where the cat was. Sammy couldn't feel the leash; in fact, he didn't know she had it. It stretched just as far as it needed to, invisibly long, but contracted as she caught up, until it was invisibly short. So she no longer had to dash pell-mell after the cat, trying to keep him in sight; he was always within the feel of her hand.
However, this did not make things perfect, because the cat took the most direct cat-route to whatever he was finding. If this was along a path, fine. But it could as readily be under a thorn bush, or up along a tree branch, or through a river. Or under the nose of a sleeping dragon. Sammy would zip by before the dragon woke, but Jenny was slower, larger, and smelled of elf, and all those things made a difference to a dragon. So care was still required.
In this case the cat merely zipped through the thickest tangle of a cornfield. The corn popped madly as she forged through it. "Oooh, firecrackers!" Kim exclaimed, delighted.
"No, just popping corn," Jenny said. "Oh, I hope the sound of it doesn't alert the ogres!"
Then she felt something sticking to her. She looked, and discovered kernels of caramel corn. They were overripe and gooey, so they made a real mess. She tried to pull them off her clothing, but they had melted in and wouldn't come out. Well, this was the kind of nuisance that happened, when she chased after Sammy.
Soon they came to the cat, who was sitting at the end of a path, licking the caramel from his fur. This was the one.
Jenny glanced at Kim. Kim was not really here; instead there was the square window to Mundania, showing her as she sat at her keyboard. The window was always right in sight, so that the Player could see the game scene; it moved along with Jenny. So it was easy to forget that Jenny was traveling alone, physically. Kim would not really be in the scene until she achieved the second act of belief, and believed in magic. But that would happen as the game progressed. Some things just took time to believe.
Jenny picked up the cat. They followed the path through the deepening reaches of the dread Ogre Fen. Jenny would be glad when they got out of here, because it was the kind of place only an ogre could like. The trees were warped, the victims of ogre pranks; some had been tied in knots, and others looked like pretzels. Some were in tatters, showing that once an ogre in a bad mood had pa.s.sed. The ground was no better, it was grudgingly s.h.i.+fting from a swamp to a bog, and thence to a marsh; soon it would become a full fen. Fortunately the path itself was dry. This was because the ogres preferred awful paths, so didn't use this one; thus Sammy had found the one safe from ogres. Or at least less dangerous; no path was truly safe from an ogre.
They pa.s.sed some cords hanging down from branches extending over the path. Jenny's elbow brushed one. It tw.a.n.ged loudly. Immediately several other cords tw.a.n.ged, forming a quartet of notes, as if several people were singing.
"What's that?" Kim inquired, startled.
"A vocal cord," Jenny said. "I hope it doesn't attract the ogres."
But when she tried to move on, she brushed another cord, and there was another group of simultaneous notes. She shuddered; the ogres were sure to hear this music! They were lucky; no ogres came. Jenny breathed a sigh of relief. But she knew that the danger wasn't over. They needed to get out of ogre country.
They came to a hugely spreading tree whose trunk looked like thick rubber and whose branches had rubber rings s.p.a.ced along them. The tips of the branches touched thin wires, which in turn swung away through the branches of other trees. There was a faint humming coming from the wires, and now and then a crackling sound.
"What kind of tree is that?" Kim asked. "It's grotesque!"
Jenny studied it. She had had to take a cram course in the flora of Xanth, so that she could be a good Companion and identify anything that might be either helpful or dangerous. "It's an electrici-tree," she said. "It has a lot of power, I think."
Kim laughed. "I'm sure it has! Maybe this is where our electric power comes from. I see the wires headed away. We better not stay here too long; the electric field might be bad for us."
Jenny looked. Sure enough, the tree's roots extended down into a s.h.i.+mmering field. There was water below, but the wire gra.s.s grew up thickly. She hadn't run into this in her studies; maybe she had snoozed through that particular lecture. "An electric field is harmful?" she asked.
"Well, we don't know, for sure. But folk don't like to live too close to power lines, just in case."
Then they heard an ominous thudding, and the ground trembled. "The ogres are coming!" Jenny said, alarmed. They must have heard the vocal cords after all. "We'd better hide in the tree."
So she scrambled up, with Sammy scampering up ahead of her, and the screen view that connected them to Kim angling along. Just in time; the first monster was already heaving into awful sight of course there was no such thing as a good sight, near an ogre, except the sight of a last way out of sight.
"Oooo, an ogre!" Kim exclaimed.
"Quiet!" Jenny hissed, horribly alarmed. Ogres had adequate hearing: adequate to locate whatever they wanted to squish flat or pound into oblivion or chomp into quivering fragments.
"What are they doing?" Kim asked, in a lower tone.
Jenny studied the scene. It was a whole tribe of ogres, males and females, and they seemed to be looking for something. Then they spied it: a glowing ball nestled in the electric field. One ogre lumbered into the field and grabbed the ball-and burned his hands. He dropped it, with a small curse that set fire to the nearby gra.s.s. Or maybe it was the fiery ball that did that. "I think they're collecting a ball of lightning to heat their cook pot," Jenny whispered. "Ogres aren't smart enough to make their own fire, so they must have to take it where they find it"
"A lightning ball!" Kim exclaimed. "How Xanthly!"
"Not so loud!" Jenny warned.
But it was too late. An ogre perked an ear. "Me hear thing near," he said. Jenny felt deepest dread. Then he c.o.c.ked an eye. "Me see a she!"
Disaster! "We have to flee!" Jenny said.
But the only route out was the one they had come in on, and the ogres were standing too close to it. The big male ogre was already stomping toward the electrici-tree. They were trapped.
The ogre reached up and whammed the branch they were on with his hamfist. The whole tree shuddered, and the branch vibrated violently. Jenny was jarred right out of her perch. She screamed as she fell.
But the ogre swept his hamhand across and caught her by the scruff of her collar. "See she!" he exulted, waving her around for the others to inspect.
"Leave her alone!" Kim cried. "She's with me."
The ogre peered at the sound of her voice. There was the window-screen, showing Kim beyond. "Fox in box," he grunted, and grabbed the screen. He hauled it up to snout level, upside down.
"Eeeek!" Kim cried as the picture jolted around. Her hair fell away from her body as the screen was inverted. Then the ogre got it turned over, and her hair flopped back into place. "Let go of that screen!" she said, shaken. "Imagination in the game is fine, but this is ridiculous!"
The ogre laughed. "Me dump in sump," he said, shoving the screen down into the water of the marsh.
"Oh!" Kim cried as her picture emerged. "Blub!" Now her hair was soaking wet "Stop that!"
"Just look-me cook," the ogre said, carrying both Jenny and the screen toward a huge pot an ogress was setting up. The lightning ball was already under it, and the muddy swamp water was beginning to bubble.
Jenny tried to think of something to do, but couldn't. They had fallen right into the worst possible situation: captives of the ogres. She had tried to warn Kim to be careful and quiet, but the girl hadn't paid enough attention.
But now Kim regrouped her composure. "You can't do this," she said angrily.
The ogre paused, evidently perplexed. He was trying to figure out how to ask why not, but couldn't make it rhyme, so he just stood there stupidly. Ogres were good at that But then he put it together. "Not got?"
Jenny still couldn't think of an answer. She was really was.h.i.+ng out as a Companion! She should have thought of some way to stop Kim from insisting on coming here.
But Kim was now defending herself. "You can't cook us just like that. We're people. You have to win us in a contest."
All the ogres looked at each other, confused. They had never heard of this. That meant that they couldn't be quite sure it was wrong. But Jenny was confused too. What kind of contest? An ogre could win just about any physical contest, especially if it required strength. Ogres were justifiably proud of their strength and ugliness. "How, now?" the ogre who held them inquired.
"We must have a stupid contest," Kim said. "To see who is most stupid."
The ogres liked that They were most proud, with most justification, of their stupidity. They were bound to win such a contest. "Rules, tools," the main ogre said in what in a smarter person would have pa.s.sed for bad rhyme and worse logic.
"It's like a game," Kim said. "You must be the Ver and me be the Pid. Those are our names. But we have to find the rest of our names. When we do, we'll know who is smarter, and so who loses."
The ogres were confused. That wasn't surprising; so was Jenny. What did Kim have on her mind? She obviously wasn't stupider than any ogre, and would be hard put to it to prove it especially to an ogre.
"Me Ver," the ogre said. "She Pid." He was so confused tjat he wasn't rhyming.
"First put us down," Kim said. "You can't play with your hands full."
The ogre set the screen down next to the bubbling pot. He set Jenny down beside the screen. The other ogres settled on their haunches, waiting to see what to make of this.
Kim brushed back her hair, which was drying. "Now we will take turns naming us, until we find names that fit."
"How know?" the ogre asked, in another sloppy attempt at rhyme.
"Why, the other ogres will know," Kim said brightly. "When they hear a name that makes sense, they'll exclaim with recognition."
The other ogres looked doubtful. Their doubt was well taken; they were hardly smart enough to recognize any sense in anything even if they understood the game, which they didn't.
"To start," Kim said. "Sil. That's the name. Can you match it to our names?"
The ogre pondered hard. Fleas jumped off his head, annoyed by the heat. But it was no good; he did not know what to do.
"Like this," Kim said. "You are Sil-Ver. I am Sil-Pid. Are those good names?"
The ogre pondered harder. A wisp of steam rose from his head as a thought tried to forge through heavy resistance. He was unable to form a conclusion. Neither could the other ogres.
Jenny saw that the ogre's name made a word: silver. That could be considered a name. But it didn't seem to be very unintelligent. That might be why the ogres couldn't recognize it What was Kim trying to do?
"Well, then," Kim said. "They must be bad names. You try one now."
Jenny was afraid the ogre's hair was going to catch on fire as he tried to think. But just as the first curl of smoke appeared, he got it: "Bop."
"Very well," Kim agreed. "You have challenged me to make good names with that. You are Bop-Ver and I am Bop-Pid. Are those good names?"
The ogres remained doubtful. So did Jenny. They were nonsensical names.
Kim looked disappointed. "I guess I couldn't make any good names with your suggestion. So I'll make another for you. Riv. Can you make good names from that?"
The ogre was finally catching on. "Me Riv-Ver," he said. "She Riv-pid."
There was a stir among the other ogres. "Riv-Ver," an ogress said "River! Good name."
"Oh, my," Kim said, looking unhappy. "You did make a good name! It's probably a really stinky river, too."
The ogres clapped their hamhands, pleased. They were getting into it now. But Jenny wasn't; she didn't see how this was going to keep Kim's screen out of the boiling pot She knew that if Kim's picture got boiled, it would be just as if she got boiled: she would be out of the game.
Then Kim frowned. "But is it a really obtuse name?" Then, seeing the ogres' confusion, she clarified her reference: "witless."
The ogres considered the matter, and slowly concluded that it was not ogrishly witless.
Now it was the ogre's turn to offer a name. "Chomp," he said.
Kim concentrated. "Now, let me see. You are Chomp-Ver. I am Chomp-Pid. Are those good names?"
It turned out that they were not. She had lost her chance, again.
But now it was her turn to supply a name. "Stu," she said. "Can you make a good name with mat?"
The ogre tried. "Me Stu-Ver," he said. "She Stu-Pid."
There was a pause. Then an exclamation. They had recognized a name! "She Stu-Pid!" an ogress exclaimed. "She Stu-pid! Stupid!"
Then they were all chorusing it "Stupid! Stupid! Stupid!"
Jenny began to get a glimmer where this might be headed.
Kim sighed. "I guess you have done it You have found a good name for me. I'm Stupid."
The ogres were quick to agree.
"But we still haven't found a good name for him," Kim said after a moment "Do you have another one to try?"
The ogres were unable to change mental gears so swiftly, and could not come up with a name.
"Well, then, let's try Cle," Kim said. "Does mat work?"
The ogre managed to put it together. "She Cle-Pid. Me Cle-Ver."
There was another slow reaction. The ogres recognized a word! "Cle-Ver! Clever! He Clever!"
"Why, so he is," Kim agreed. "That must be his name. Clever."
"Clever! Clever! Clever!" the ogres chorused. Kim frowned. "Now we both have names. He is Clever. I am Stupid. "So which one of us is more stupid?"
"She stupid!" the ogre said, nailing it down.
"So he is Clever, and I am Stupid," Kim said. "So I am more stupid than he is."
They chorused agreement.
Suddenly Jenny saw the point. "So she wins! Because she is the most stupid!"
The ogres stared at each other. How had this happened? Kim had won the stupid contest! They had to let her go.
But when Jenny started to walk away, the ogre stopped her. "Elf no stupid," he said. "Elf go potty." He picked her up by the scruff and swung her toward the hot pot. Sammy Cat, perched on her shoulder, seemed about ready to jump off.
Oops. Kim had won her own freedom, but not Jenny's. Without Jenny as her Companion, she would not fare well in the game. She would not actually die if they dumped her in the pot; the demons would conjure her back to the character storage bunker. But she would be through for this session.
"Then we shall have to have a contest for the elf,** Kim said. "But we'll need new names." She pondered briefly. "Let's see, you're male, so you must be called Gent She is female, so let's call her Belle. Can we find good names?"
The ogre couldn't think of one, so Kim suggested one. "Co.**
"Me Co-Gent," the ogre said. "She Co-Belle.**
Cogent? Jenny saw that Kim had this set up for another win. But it didn't work, because the ogres didn't recognize the word.