Baen Books Logo Mathemagics

Copyright © 1996

by Margaret Ball

Chapter

        I fumed at the idiot school and the idiot counselors all the time I was putting away the groceries. It was beginning to look like my whole plan of commuting to the Paper- Pushers’ planet so Salla could get a good education had been one big mistake. I’d been lulled by the last two years, when things had seemed to be going so easily. Now everything was going wrong at once. Where had I gone wrong?
        I didn’t know, but I did know that standing in the kitchen counting Dennis’s Szechwan cooking supplies wasn’t going to help me figure it out.
        Our bedroom had been about the size of one of Zolkir’s prison cells before Dennis moved in his collection of classic science-fiction paperbacks. Now, with floor-to-ceiling shelves lining three walls, it was more like a walk-in closet. Sasulau, my sword, hung in her sheath from one bedpost, and the rest of my old fighting gear was stashed under the bed in a cardboard box from the Container Store. I shucked my Paper-Pushers costume, hung the jeans and shirt on a handy bookcase, knelt on the floor and fished around under the bed for the box.
        “That’s a beautiful sight to greet a man after a hard day of eighth-grade math,” said an appreciative voice behind me.
        “Mumph murph phttt,” I said. One of us really ought to do something about the dust bunny collection under the bed. I backed out, dragging the box of armor by one hand, and saw Dennis leaning against the door. “I’m going to work out,” I explained to him.
        “I can think of better workouts than fooling around with that sword and shield,” he said, reaching for me.
        I could, too, but not while I was so mad at the school. “Hold that thought,” I suggested. “I need to-- We need to talk, too, but--Nauzu klevulkedimmu! I’m too angry to do anything but work out right now.” I kissed him. It was meant to be a brief kiss, but Dennis managed to involve his hands and my bare rump and a lot of small muscle control around the mouth, and by the time we broke off I was breathing even harder than I had been when I left Stankewitz’s office.
        An entrancing image of the counselor’s head on a pike swam before my eyes. It would be a waste of good lust to jump into bed with Dennis right now; he was a man who kept his mind on what he was doing, and I wanted to reciprocate, not get side-tracked into fantasies about Stankewitz’s blood. “Really,” I said. “I need to work out. Besides, Salla should be home any minute.”
        “I’ll cook Szechwan for dinner,” Dennis said. “Did you get the star anise?”
        Fiend. He knew exactly what star anise, Szechwan peppercorns and chili oil did to me. Dennis’s Chinese cooking is a sensual experience equaled only by--well, as I said, Salla would be home any minute. And I was still too steamed up over Stankewitz to enjoy life’s normal pleasures.
        “I don’t want to feel happy and relaxed,” I muttered. “I want to slash, hew, maim and destroy. The star anise is in the brown paper bag with the paper towels, and Norah gave us some habañero peppers from her garden.”
        “Wonderful! I’ll improvise.” Dennis went off to the kitchen, humming under his breath, and I put on some of my fighting gear. It was too hot for full armor, and anyway I didn’t need the protection when I was just running through exercises on my own. On the other hand, it was important to keep in training to fight with the full weight of armor. I compromised by putting on the basics--your standard chain-mail bra with welded D cups, crotch guard and shield--and adding jogging weights at ankles and wrists.
        I started with some basic stretches, then went through a full cycle of boklu against an imaginary mirror-fighter. Dennis says this looks like something he used to study called Ty Chee or something like that, but it seems unlikely to me that there’s any real connection. Boklu prepares your heart and mind to cleave through any obstacles in your path bare-handed if necessary, always assuming you aren’t already in that frame of mind just from waking up alive another day on Dazau. From what I’ve observed of this universe of the Paper-Pushers, they aren’t much on cleaving either opponents or obstacles. They just wrap them up in red tape.
        Which was exactly how I felt now--encircled in a wizard’s web of words. One might as well fight clouds as try to get sense out of people like Stankewitz. Nothing she said meant anything real--until the end, when she’d as good as told me they could do whatever they wanted with Salla and they didn’t need to answer to me for it.
        My Dazau life had been simpler, if harder. I earned a day’s pay for a day’s fighting and then gave back most of it to Furo Fykrou to pay for the costs of transporting me to Paper- Pushers’ each afternoon by the time Salla came back from school. What was left barely covered rent and groceries in the Paper-Pushers’ neighborhood where I’d established residence as Riva Konneva so that Salla could get the schooling I’d never had.
        Just two years ago that way of life had begun to feel like a trap closing in on me. We were just scraping by, but the future did not look bright. As a swordswoman gets older, her earning power diminishes; just when Salla would be needing even more money to pay for higher education on Paper-Pushers’, my take-home zolkys would be dwindling to nearly nothing. That was if Duke Zolkir kept me on at all. If he didn’t, I’d be just another middle-aged freelance swordswoman, always on the road, and Salla would have to leave her schooling to come with me; I’d never be able to afford Furo Fykrou’s transport fees on the odd jobs I would pick up as caravan guard or merchanters’ security. The only way out of that trap was to find another way of earning a living, and I didn’t have time to learn a new profession while working as Duke Zolkir’s top swordswoman.
        Then I met Dennis.
        We got stuck together chaperoning a fourth-grade field trip to my workplace. It seemed like a bad idea at the time, but I’d learned it was no use arguing with the earnest, dull young women who organized these things. It seemed like an even worse idea when we arrived in my home reality--after paying exorbitant fees to Furo Fykrou for transporting the entire class--and discovered that I was scheduled for a revenge duel with Vordokaunneviko, the acknowledged champion fighter of all Dazau. And it seemed like an absolutely terrible idea when the duel started and Vordo announced his intention of turning me into something suitable for Chinese stir-fry.
        It was one of Salla’s classmates who saved my butt that day. The kid was called “hyperactive” and “difficult” on Paper-Pushers’; what that meant was that he noticed absolutely everything that was going on around him and insisted on discussing it. At the top of his voice. When he noticed that Vordo was flickering with the activation of a magic shield every time I tried to land a blow, he discussed that in a loud clear voice. Once I realized that the magic shielding was being provided by Baron Rodograunnizo’s new house wizard, a sleazeball if ever I saw one, it was a simple matter to work Vordo around so that the wizard couldn’t get a clear view of him. And when the wizard-- Mikhalleviko, his name was--started throwing differential mathemagics directly at me, Dennis integrated every one of his incantations right back at him.
        When the dust cleared, Vordo and Mikh had both run for it, and Dennis talked Baron Rodo into paying me very substantial compensation for having lured me into an unfair fight. (My patron, Duke Zolkir, and about half of the Bronze Bra Guild helped persuade Rodograunnizo to pay up.)
        The zolkys I got from that fiasco had been enough to support Salla and me here on Paper- Pushers’ for nearly two years. And now that I had some free time, Dennis offered to teach me enough math so that I could go back to Dazau and apprentice to a wizard. (An honorable wizard, needless to say, not a scumbag like Mikhalleviko--even supposing he ever dared show his face in the trade again.)
        It had all seemed to be working out perfectly. After a few months of late-night tutoring sessions, Dennis moved in with Salla and me so that he could tutor me all the time when he wasn’t at school. In practice that meant he went over the math texts with me first thing in the morning, I sweated out the problems he had fiendishly devised while Salla was in school and he was teaching, he corrected my work in the afternoon, and our nights were free for more interesting pursuits. Did I say “working out perfectly”? Make that better than perfect. Dennis is a very creative man, and he concentrates his full attention on whatever he is doing. Also, he cooks great Szechwan food, which is the only cuisine on Paper-Pushers’ that I consider truly superior to Dazau cooking.
        It’s a dynamite combination of talents, let me tell you.
        When Dennis picked up the Chinese cleaver and began chopping the ingredients for dinner, I took up Sasulau and matched his rhythm with my own fybilka practice--short, fast strokes to mince the air around my imaginary opponent while coming closer and closer to her skin. Fybilka was one of the classic arts of swordcraft at home, something every Guild member studied but that few of us mastered. A swordswoman trained in the art could literally flay her opponent by inches. Even those of us who’d passed the final exercises seldom got a chance to put the art into practice, though; hiring a fybilka killing is expensive, and most of our patrons prefer the cheaper and quicker methods. And even back home, there aren’t that many people who really deserve to die that way.
        I could think of one now, though.
        “There--and there--and there!” I shouted at my imaginary opponent as my sword took precise shavings of skin from her pasty cheeks, one pudgy thigh, the tip of a fat white finger. I could feel Sasulau humming with pleasure as her blade whizzed through the motions of a fybilka execution. “That’s how you’ll answer to me, Stankewitz!”
        Fybilka was too slow; I plunged forward to drive Sasulau through the spot where her heart would be if she were facing me. Always assuming she had one.
        The screen door slammed and Salla came down the steps, munching an apple. “Why are you yelling at Stinky Wits?” she inquired through mouthfuls of Golden Delicious. “You didn’t really run her through the heart, did you? That would be too cool for words.”
        “You know Ms. Stankewitz?”
        Salla shrugged. “Yeah, I hadda go to her office one afternoon last week. She’s always asking these dumb questions, like, you know, she goes, how do you feel about puberty, and aren’t you confused about boys, and really gross stuff about like private things, you know? And I go, like, I’m just a little kid, ma’am, I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
        “She called you in for counseling without asking my permission? Oh, I forgot. They don’t have to ask permission.”
        “Mom,” Salla said indistinctly through a bite of apple, “don’t snarl, okay? Like, it’s no big deal. She’s like, we do this with all the kids, it’s just like a routine checkup, like seeing your doctor.”
        “And does she call in all the kids?”
        Salla shrugged again. “Enough of them that I knew what to expect. Why do you think we call her Stinky Wits? She’s best friends with Fishbreath,” she added. “About all they use the computers for is to e-mail back and forth about what rotten kids we are. I think Fishbreath hates our whole class.”
        “Ms. Fishbeck to you,” I said automatically, “and how do you know what teachers say in their private e-mail?”
        Salla smirked. “Never mind,” I said hastily, “on second thoughts, I don’t want to know. I want you to take your sketch pad into the front yard and draw a picture of our house. This house,” I emphasized. “This plain, ordinary, Paper-Pushers’--I mean, Earth-style house. Four windows. One door. White siding, green trim, tree in front yard.”
        “Why?” Salla demanded.
        “Because you were idiot enough to draw a picture of Dazau as your homework assignment for the first six-weeks report, and Stinky Wits--I mean, Ms. Stankewitz--got ahold of it and claims you’re emotionally disturbed and she wants to have you moved to a special classroom for problem kids. “Mind you,” I added, “I’m impressed by how well you remember the Falls of Nauzu’s Blood. It must be, what, five years since I took you there for a picnic?”
        Salla had that totally blank expression she puts on when you cut too close to her feelings. Well, I was sorry if she was hurt by finding out that she was on the verge of being bounced out of the Gifted and Talented program, but she’d be a lot more hurt if it actually happened. “So you’re going to draw a nice normal boring picture of this house and I’m going to substitute it in your folder and say Ms. Stankewitz must be emotionally disturbed herself to imagine such wild fantasies.”
        Salla looked at me with more respect than I’d seen since I gave up sword work to study mathemagics. “Like really sneaky, Mom. I didn’t know you had it in you. But don’t worry about Stinky Wits. For the next assignment I’m doing this like wizard report on the Female Quest. See, I’m gonna like rip Joseph Campbell and his sexist theories to shreds. Even Fishbreath has gotta give me an A+ on this one.”
        Well, I told you Salla was the one with brains in this family; I didn’t have the faintest idea what she was talking about. “Just draw the picture, okay?”
        “Okay, Mom. I never argue back to a lady with a sword in her hand.” Salla flipped her apple core into the bushes and sauntered back inside.
        < center> * * *< /center>
        After dinner Dennis had papers to grade. Salla holed up in her room to practice her new computer skills (like reading other people’s e-mail?). And I went into our bedroom to activate Call Trans-Forwarding through the universes to Furo Fykrou.
        “It’ll cost extra,” Furo Fykrou said, predictably, when I explained what I needed. “You can’t just transimage the papers to me; I’ll have to have them in their physical form. And you want it done tonight? Did you know the Wizards’ Guild has approved a minimum Express Magic fee for overnight work?”
        “I still have credit with you from the compensation Rodograunnizo paid me,” I reminded him.
        “Not that much. You’ve been having a lot of it translated into Paper-Pushers’ green stuff. Now, let me see, at forty zolkys for the round-trip cross-universe transform of the physical papers, plus the fee for mathemagical alterations indistinguishable to the mundane or nonwizardly eye . . . You wouldn’t want to buy the Anti-Wizard-Detection Warranty for just an extra ten zolkys, would you?”
        “I would not,” I said. “There aren’t any wizards here. If you can fake up the transcripts to pass mundane inspection, that’s all I need. But I need them back before 7:00 A.M. on Paper-Pushers’.”
        After a little discussion of the Express Magic fee, Furo Fykrou announced that the zolkys I’d left with him would, surprise surprise, just cover the cost of magically altering Salla’s transcripts and returning the improved file to me by tomorrow morning.
        “There might even be a little over,” he said. “A few kauven, at least.”
        Furo Fykrou made a point of never fleecing his victims--clients, I mean--of their last copper kauve. He said it created ill-feeling. All the same, the thought that my assets now amounted to about $1.56 in Paper-Pushers money did not fill me with a tide of warm feelings towards Fykrou. I cut off the Trans-Forwarding call before he could think about charging me for that, too, and flopped down on the bed.
        “I wish you’d take your armor off before collapsing,” Dennis said when he came in. “It’s hell on the sheets. What was all that about?”
        I lifted one hand to unhook my chain mail corselet and decided it was too much trouble. Besides, I could probably get Dennis to do it for me. “I’m broke,” I said. “But by tomorrow, Salla’s transcripts will show that she is an emotionally stable, responsible, respectful gifted child.”
        “She is,” Dennis said.
        “Not according to her files. Do you know a counselor named Erica Stankewitz?” I filled him in on the afternoon’s events.
        “Bitch,” Dennis said when I finished. “I quit referring any of my problem kids to counseling a few years ago when I noticed that they were coming back more mixed up than they went in. Now I know why.”
        “So,” I said, “tomorrow I’ll return the files to Stankewitz and go look for a job.”
        “Why?”
        “I’m broke. I told you. Furo Fykrou is skinning me of my last zolkys to do the transcripts up properly.”
        “So? I make enough for us both to live on. In fact, now that you mention it, why don’t we make this arrangement legal? Solves everything.” Dennis beamed at me while reaching one hand around to find the clasp of my bronze corselet.
        “I can’t let you support me!”
        “I don’t see why not. You’re finishing your studies. Lots of women work to put their husbands through school and nobody thinks anything’s wrong with that.”
        “Yeah, well, most of those women are counting on their husbands to get high-paying jobs after school and support them for a while . . . not that it always works out that way,” I said, remembering Norah Tibbs and her ex. Dennis had the top half of the corselet unfastened now, but instead of doing anything about it, he was trailing his fingers along the chain mail fringe. The man made it very difficult to concentrate.
        “I thought you were going to get one of those high-paying jobs when you’d learned enough math,” he said while investigating the lower edges of the fringe. I shivered and felt my stomach muscles tightening.
        “Umm . . . there are some complications I didn’t mention when we started this project,” I said slowly. “Because they weren’t complications then, but now they are. I think. See, I don’t just need the math; I need the magic, too. Normally I could learn that by apprenticing to a wizard. But that means living full-time on Dazau. An apprentice has to serve the wizard day and night, whatever hour she’s called on. Some of those spells have to be checked every three hours for weeks and weeks. I couldn’t do that and come back here at night. I’d have to live there.”
        “For how long?” Dennis asked.
        I shrugged. “For however long the wizard decides it takes, I guess.”
        “Sort of like grad school,” he commented, “only worse. No, I take that back; one year I roomed with a guy who was doing his Ph.D. dissertation on oats. He had to get up and measure how much the baby oat seedlings had grown every three hours. How come you didn’t mention this little fact when I started tutoring you?”
        “I didn’t think . . . it would be that important.”
        “Or when I moved in?” Dennis’s voice had an unfamiliar tone, one I wasn’t sure I liked; and he’d quit exploring the boundaries of my corselet. “When I was hauling all those boxes of books into your house? You don’t think that might have been a good time to mention this little matter?”
        “Hey, I carried as many boxes as you did, and they were your books,” I pointed out. “Anyway, I guess . . . I guess I was trying not to think about it. I didn’t want to . . . I don’t want to . . .”
        “Go on,” Dennis said. “Say it.” He sounded as though he was bracing himself for a double-handed sword blow.
        “I like living with you,” I said miserably. “I don’t want anything to change. I . . . oh, all right. I love you. I think. Sort of.”
        Dennis propped himself up on one elbow and studied me intently. “I want to remember this moment,” he said fondly. “Riva the Invincible, Riva the Amazon Warrior of Dazau, waffling and side-stepping an issue. What’s the matter? Were you afraid I wouldn’t be willing to come to Dazau with you?”
        I gasped. “You’d do that?”
        “I’ve always wanted to travel,” Dennis said blandly.
        “Well, I haven’t. I’ve done more than enough traveling,” I told him. “And I’m not even sure I want to go back to Dazau.”
        “Fine. We can do it either way. We go back to Dazau and you support me in idle luxury, or we stay here and get married and I support you in--well, okay, a teacher’s salary isn’t exactly luxury, but we can live on it. Plus, once you’re married they won’t be able to tag Salla with ‘dysfunctional family’ and ‘single-parent household,’ and all that other garbage. Solves everything.”
        “It does not! I told you, I can’t just let you support me.”
        “Why not?” Dennis lay back down and pulled me towards him. I discovered that he had, in fact, been doing something practical all the time I’d thought he was just fiddling with the fringe on my corselet; he’d opened every one of the leather-bound fasteners. The armor stayed on the bed. I sprawled over Dennis. “See?” he murmured in my ear while caressing the areas that had just been freed from the armor. “I’m supporting you right now, and it doesn’t hurt a bit, does it?”
        I couldn’t answer that for a few minutes. Finally I pushed his hand away. “Did I ever tell you how I happened to join the Bronze Bra Guild?”
        “Later,” Dennis murmured, reaching for me again.
        “It’s relevant.”
        “So is this.”
        “Mmmm, yes . . . but wait a minute, would you? I want to tell you about this. I . . . when Salla was born, I . . . “
        “Your ears are turning pink,” Dennis said. “I didn’t think anything could make you blush. I’ll have to try harder.”
        “I thought I was apprenticing to a wizard,” I said. “I was fresh out of the mountains, dumber than a box of rocks, didn’t know you have to pass Elementary Mathemagics and Linear Transformations before you can even seal a binding apprenticeship contract. This sleazeball says, ‘Apprentice to me, do exactly what I say, you’ll learn magic and make a good living.’”
        “Is this going to be a story about sex for grades?”
        “It’s a story about a dumb mountain girl who thought everything the slimy sleazeball did was making magic. And who believed he was using contraceptive spells. Then when I found out I was pregnant, he said that needn’t interfere with the apprentice training . . . until Salla was born. Then he smirked and said he’d be perfectly willing to support me, that I didn’t know enough to learn wizardry and had no talent anyway but that he’d let me stick around to keep house for him and cook his meals. On Dazau,” I explained carefully, “the rules are basically the same as here, only they’re a little more explicit. If you take support from somebody without providing services for it, you’re his property.”
        “And housekeeping and cooking and child care don’t count as services worth paying for?”
        “Do they count for that here? If you’re married to the person providing the services?”
        Dennis sighed. “I see your point. But I’m not like that. You should know that by now.”
        “So. I was a dumb mountain girl, but I was big and strong. The Bronze Bra Guild was willing to give me an apprentice loan while I learned fighting, and they’re one of the few guilds that provides decent child care. So I became a swordswoman. And,” I added after a few moments of silent reflection, “rather a good one, if I do say so myself.”
        “That’s not the only thing you’re good at,” Dennis said. “How does this leather panty thing come off?”
        “You know perfectly well,” I said. “I have to wriggle out of it. Like this.”
        “Uh-huh,” Dennis agreed. “And I like to watch you wriggle.”
        For quite some time after that we didn’t argue about anything, partly because our mouths were otherwise occupied. My armor got shoved over the side of the bed, and I felt guilty about that--no way to treat a perfectly good set of armor--but not guilty enough to stop what we were doing and put it away properly.
        We were drifting companionably off to sleep when I remembered the other thing I’d forgotten to tell Dennis. “Guess what,” I said. “Vordo’s here!”
        “What? Where?”
        “Not here. Here,” I explained. “Somewhere in this reality. Probably somewhere in this country.” I told him about the display I’d seen in the supermarket. “And Louise Pilkinton knew his name and everything. It was definitely him. Where do they make covers for romance novels?”
        “New York? That’s where the publishing industry is.”
        “Then that’s where Vordo is,” I said with some relief. New York was nice and far away.
        “You sound worried.”
        “Not about Vordo,” I said. That was absolutely true, if not quite complete. “He was running for his life last time I saw him; he wouldn’t give us any trouble here even if he did know where we were.”
        “But that wizard who was working with him nearly got you killed first. Maybe it would be a good idea to find out exactly how Vordo got to this universe.”
        “Yeah, well,” I said, trying to sound bored, “mathemagics doesn’t work in this world.” At least not as far as I knew. “So even if the wizard came here too, he can’t be any trouble. But you’re right, we might as well check it out. Let’s ask Norah Tibbs to dinner and she can give us the scoop on the romance publishing industry.” Because it had just dawned on me: even if Vordo was way off in New York, that didn’t necessarily mean the wizard who’d helped him was there.
        And I would very much like to know whether Mikhalleviko had transported himself as well as Vordo to this reality, and why, and what he was doing here.
        That sleazeball.

Copyright © 1996 by Margaret Ball

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