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Authors: L. Sprague deCamp

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BOOK: The Undesired Princess
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There were no more speeches. A pair of public performers appeared; one girl in a noticeable lack of filmy clothing, who plucked a lyre; her partner a man, gorgeous in plumed helmet, who went through callisthenic motions with his spear while he sang. The song was a slow repetitive thing with about as much tune as a set of church-bell changes.

Hobart was grateful when the banquet broke up. His gratitude at once gave place to apprehension when the princess caught his hand and towed him after the king and queen.

She led him through a maze of halls and rooms until they came to a moderate-sized one with subdued lighting and a large sofa. The king and queen were standing; Gordius laid a pudgy hand on Hobart’s shoulder, saying: “I thought you’d like it better if I didn’t order a full-dress state banquet, my boy. Some kingdoms do for their champions and wear the poor fellows out. When a man’s fought a dragon all day, he’s not apt to feel like reveling all night.”

“Fine,” said Hobart.

“You’ll be up early for the behemoth hunt tomorrow, won’t you?”

“Huh? I suppose so.”

“Splendid! If there’s anything you want, or any information— “

“Gordius!” interrupted Queen Vasalina. “Don’t talk the poor boy to death. Can’t you see they want to be alone?”

“Heh, heh, I guess you’re right. So, goodnight, Rollin. You know what to do.” King Gordius poked Hobart’s ribs with his thumb, grinning. Hobart despairingly watched the royal pair depart; they beamed back at him from the door, and his soul sickened.

Princess Argimanda leaned back against one end of the couch, with one leg doubled under her and one arm along the back. She was a dazzling creature, but Hobart repeated to himself: I won’t propose, I won’t propose . . .

“Rollin,” she said at last, “won’t you sit down?”

That seemed like a harmless request. He complied, then remembered some girls were repelled by cigars. He got out one. “Mind?”

“Not at all, dear.”

Hobart bit off the end and lit up. When it was going comfortably, he asked: “What’s become of your friend the lion?”

“Oh, Theiax will be along some time; I don’t know when. He has no sense of time, which is why he always speaks in the present tense.”

Silence. Then Argimanda said: “You made a remarkable speech, Rollin.”

“Thanks. Didn’t think it was much good, myself.”

“I did not say it was good, dear.”

“Oh. You mean remarkably bad?”

“No. It was remarkable in that I could not understand it.” Hobart looked at her sharply, and she explained: “You see, my fairy godmother gave me intelligence as her foremost gift. Yet, as nearly as I could make out, the last paragraph was simply a complex way of saying ‘I don’t know.’ ”

“That’s all it was,” grinned Hobart. “What about this fairy godmother? Is it a metaphor?”

“A—what? Your language must differ from pure Logaian, which has no such word.”

“Sure of that?”

“I should be; I edited the new standard dictionary,” said the princess calmly.

“I meant,” said Hobart, “do you really have fairy godmothers and all that?”

“Of course! The word exists, so the thing the word refers to must exist. I know mine well; her name is Kyzikeia, and she visits me every year on my birthday to see how I’m doing.”

“And if a fairy godmother gives you a quality, such as intelligence, you have to have that quality all your life?”

“But naturally! For example, Alaxius received the qualities of selfishness and superficiality along with his virtues, so selfish and superficial he must be. Poor Charion had the worst luck; he got neurosis, irritability, and mendacity.”

“That what you meant when you warned me against believing him?”

“Yes. Not that he lies all the time; so much mendacity in one soul would be impractical. But in important matters you can generally count on him to lie.”

“Then why does your father employ him?” asked Hobart.

“Because Father has affability, and no matter what anybody says about Charion, Charion can always talk his way back into Father’s good graces.”

Hobart mused: “When I tried to pump him—”

“Excuse me?”

“To get information out of him about the kingdom, he shut up like a clam.”

Argimanda thought a while, and explained: “He has some plan afoot; I don’t know what, but connected with his disarmament project, and I think he fears you and would like to frighten you away. The most logical way to do this would be to tell you that the kingdom is nearly bankrupt and is threatened by the barbarians. But this unfortunately is the truth, and Charion could never tell the truth in such a crucial matter. So his only remaining course was to say nothing.”

Some reward for the champion, thought Hobart. He puffed silently.

Argimanda’s voice came softly through the smoke: “Rollin, are we not going to discuss—dates and things?”

“Nope,” said Hobart. “I don’t want to be brutal, but I’m not going to ask you to marry me.” He threw a glance at her widening blue eyes, then looked quickly away. “Sorry as hell if it hurts your feelings, but I’ve got my own plans, and they don’t include a wife.”

The blue eyes brimmed with tears, but she did not break down or sniffle. The tears rolled slowly and hesitantly, with a decent interval between each.

“Now, now,” said Hobart, “it’s not as bad as that. Look. I don’t belong in this world. I’ve got my own world and my own life.”

She said very softly: “I’m sure I could make you happy in any world.”

“But—good lord, I couldn’t be in love with you; I’ve only known you a few hours!”

“I love you,” she whispered.

“For Pete’s sake why? How?”

“A princess
always
falls in love with her rescuer. When I knew you were he, I could not help it.” She gave a sigh with a little catch in it. “But, strange man, if you do not want me, I could not force myself upon you, since I love you and would not do anything to make you unhappy. What is it that you wish?”

Hobart hesitated, then said: “Tell you one reason I couldn’t marry you, Argimanda. You’re beautiful, intelligent, kind, and so on; practically perfect. That’s the trouble; you’re too perfect. You’d give me an inferiority complex a yard wide.”

“You need not labor the explanations, my love that was to be. What do you wish?”

“Well, mainly I want to get back to my own world. That means locating Hoimon and arranging an escape from Oroloia for me, and it would have to be fixed so Theiax wouldn’t catch me at it.”

“Why Theiax?”

“He practically promised to eat me if I tried it.”

“Very well, my prince. I will do what I can.”

“Okay; I’ll appreciate that. And better not say anything to the king about it. Tell him we’re in no hurry, will you?”

“I will.”

“Swell. I’ll go, now. Good-night.”

“Farewell.” The tears were coming faster. Hobart hurried out of the room and almost ran to his own quarters.

5

At 6:00 a.m. by Hobart’s watch, his bedroom door flew open; the business end of a trumpet was thrust into the room and began a maddening
tah-taa-teh-tah-taa-teh-tah-taa-teh.
The impact of the sound almost made Hobart bounce out of bed with shock. When his racing heart slowed and his vision cleared enough to become aware of surroundings, he shouted: “Stop that racket!”

The racket stopped and the trumpeter’s face, red with blowing, appeared. “Your Dignity—”

“Get out!” yelled Hobart, reaching for a shoe to throw.

“The hunt, Your Dignity!”

“Oh,” yawned Hobart. “Excuse me.”

A phalanx of servants trooped in with breakfast. He was rushed through the meal, shaved, and dressed before he knew it, though he tried fuzzily to do as much for himself as possible.

The hunting party congregated at the mammoth main entrance to the palace. Hobart was just as glad to see that the sinister chancellor was not among the gaudy crowd of Logaians, though the burly black-bearded General Valangas was. The king slapped Hobart’s back, gripped his arm, and hauled him about introducing him to Counts and Sirs and Esquires whose names Hobart promptly forgot. A man on a horse trotted around from one side—Psambides, the Master of the Horse, the king explained—and after him came a swarm of grooms afoot towing horses. The king grinned fondly at his prospective son-in-law, and said: “I ordered Xenthops specially for you, son.”

“Who, your Altitude?”

“Call me Dad. Xenthops is my fierce barbarian stallion. It takes a real hero to ride him at all. Heh, heh.”

Hobart opened his mouth to protest that he was at best a mediocre rider, but as he did so he noted that all the Logaian gentlemen had swung into their saddles. There was one horse left, a large black creature with staring eyes. It would cause a lot of fuss to make a change now. Anyway, he’d be damned if he’d let a mere horse . . .

As he walked up to Xenthops, the horse bared a set of large white incisors and extended them tentatively toward him. Hobart reached out and cuffed the stallion’s muzzle, saying: “Behave yourself!” Xenthop’s eyes opened still wider as he jerked his head back and shifted his feet angrily. Hobart mounted without delay and took as firm a knee-grip as his unhardened thigh-muscles would allow. Xenthops fidgeted but did nothing otherwise untoward. Hobart reasoned that he could get away with it as long as he kept an attitude of confident superiority; but if he once showed hesitation or timidity, Xenthops would feel the difference, buck him off, and probably step on him.

The king’s mount now appeared: a spotted camel-like beast similar to the one Hobart had seen the day before in the streets of Oroloia. To Hobart’s question, Sir Somebody explained: “The king’s cameleopard.” Hobart had always thought a cameleopard was a giraffe; everything was so remorselessly literal in this world . . .

And more servants appeared carrying lances and muskets, which they handed out to the huntsmen. Hobart, given his choice, took a gun and the power horn and bullet bag that went with it.

They were all clattering out of the palace lot when a groaning made Hobart turn in his saddle to look back. Bringing up the tail of the procession was a wheeled, horse-drawn cannon manned by a squad of kilted soldiers commanded by General Valangas. Evidently the behemoth was no chipmunk.

Hobart would have liked to ask questions, but talking while trotting is not the easiest combination. Besides, he had to keep his eye peeled for chances to escape, and keep this fiery nag under both physical and psychological control.

After an hour’s riding, the agricultural checkerboard gave way with the usual abruptness to a rolling, roadless savannah. After another hour Psambides halted the crowd with upraised arm and began assigning them missions, as if this were a full-fledged military operation. Hobart found himself assigned to a squad of four who were to reconnoiter. The horses had to be kicked along a bit, as they wanted to crop the long swishing grass. Presently the troop halved. Hobart’s companion, a lean young Logaian named Sphindex, informed him: “We’re to scout along the bed of the Keio, and come back here to rendezvous in an hour.”

“Is that a river?” asked Hobart innocently.

“Of course.”

“What’s a behemoth like?”

Sphindex stared. “Mean to say you’ve never hunted one?”

“Right.”

“What have you hunted then?”

“Nothing, except a few targets.”

“But—but my dear Prince, how do you
exist?”

“I manage.” The subject of hunting did not seem promising. “Do you know an ascetic named Hoimon?”

Up went Sphindex’s brows. “Me know an ascetic? Great Nois no! They don’t hunt.”

Hobart persisted: “Know anything about the cavepeople?”

“Fellas who live in the Conical Mountains, that’s all. Never seen one; Gordius won’t let us hunt them. Though I don’t know why; they’re not really human. Look, there’s the Keio ahead.”

He pointed with his lance toward a dark streak on the landscape. When they had topped a few more rises they overlooked the nearly dry bed of a small river, bordered by clumps of trees and brush.

Sphindex at once exhibited signs of excitement; he spurred his horse down the slope and ducked through the screen of blue vegetation for a closer look at the stream bed. Hobart, following at a more cautious pace, met him dashing back. “Come on!” cried the hunting enthusiast.

Xenthops banked for a turn without a signal on Hobart’s part and galloped after Sphindex’s horse. Hobart called: “Find your behemoth?”

“No,” Sphindex flung back, “but there’s one drinking upstream.”

“How do you know?”

“Don’t be absurd; what other game can drink a river dry?”

Hobart saved his breath till they rejoined the main army, which at once set out at a gallop in a direction at a small angle to the one the scouts had taken. The cannon bounded thunderously in the rear behind its team, followed by the ammunition-caisson.

“Your Dignity!” It was the Master of the Horse, speaking to Hobart. “You’re to join the troop covering the artillery.”

“Yes, but what am I supposed to
do?”

“Oh, stay with the king and do what he does.” And off went Psambides to complete his arrangements.

The party deployed on a wide front, with the gun in the middle. They stopped on the last rise before reaching the Keio; somewhat farther upstream, Hobart judged. The gun and caisson were trotted up to the crest, and the teams unhitched and led back. Hobart got his first good look at the cannon. It had a cylindrical barrel with no taper; Logaia must still lack an Admiral Dahlgren. Instead of an elevation screw it had a crude arrangement with a shiftable crossbar like that of a morris chair. The gunners were ramming in the powder, followed by the ball. Valangas himself filled the touch hole.

Hobart could not see anything through the trees bordering the river, though the sun flashed on the metal of huntsmen closing in from above and below on the section of stream in front of the cannon.

“Son!” called King Gordius from the back of his cameleopard, “over this way! You’re in the line of fire!”

Hobart had no more than started to trot to the group of Logaians, sitting in their saddles with lances and muskets around the king, when his ear caught a sucking, burbling sound from the river. There were loud, plopping reports as of something huge being pulled out of the mud. A slate-black back appeared over the treetops.

A wave of retrograde motion ran through the huntsmen nearest to this portent. The trees whipped; one of them came down crashing, and the behemoth appeared.

Hobart’s first reaction was: is
that
all? The behemoth combined an elephantine body, twice the dimensions of an elephant, however, with a long thick tail and a head like that of a magnified hippopotamus. From its nose grew a pair of lateral horns. The beast, which might have been classed with the titanotheres, was big enough to be alarming but too plausible to be very interesting to Rollin Hobart
per se.

The first members of the party to attract the behemoth’s attention were a group of riders picking their way among the bushes on the hither side of the trees. It lumbered toward them. There was a sharp
pop-pop-pop
of muskets, and the riders whirled and galloped off to the right, upstream, leaving white puffs of smoke hanging in the still air behind them like clouds of ink from a group of retreating squids.

The behemoth crashed after them, apparently unhurt, exposing its right flank to the cannon as it did so. One of the riders fell off his horse, scrambled up, and disappeared into the vegetation. A yell from Valangas made Hobart swing his regard 180 degrees.

“Ho!” roared the general. “You there, Something, get out of the way!”

Hobart got, his horse bounding toward the group around the king. Then, as the gunners hauled the trail still further around, the king and his party streamed clockwise in a big circle around the gun to get out of the line of fire.

“Here it comes,” said a voice.

Hobart looked around to see the behemoth head-on, trotting along the ridge on which the gun stood. It moved with deceptive speed, and was growing with panicking rapidity; it looked fifty feet tall though it was less than half that.

The cannon banged somewhere on Hobart’s left, and the cloud of smoke leaped into the tail of his eye. He heard the smack of the ball hitting hide, and got a glimpse of a receding black dot against the sky: the shot, high, had glanced from the creature’s back. The behemoth kept right on looming.

Then the muskets around Hobart went off, one or two and then all the rest with a crash. Hobart had not had a chance to examine his gun closely. Now he learned to his dismay that it was some sort of matchlock, and that the little tarred string that was led from a spool on the left side of the stock to the swiveled clamp that substituted for a hammer was not even lit. Then the black-powder smoke stung his eyes shut, and he felt Xenthops under him begin to move, first with little nervous steps, then faster. He heard the earth-shaking thumps of the behemoth’s tread just about the time he could see again.

His first glance picked up gunners afoot and hunters on horseback, all making tracks, and then King Gordius of Logaia, down near the river, rolling over and over in the yellow grass like one who has fallen from an express train in motion. The riderless cameleopard was doing crazy buck-jumps; as Hobart watched, it disappeared into the trees. A back glance showed Hobart that the behemoth, too, was looking at the king; was in fact heading in that direction.

Hobart thought that if he could control Xenthops, he could get to his Altitude first. Of course if that fat old fool wanted to provoke a fifty-ton animal into squashing him like a strawberry, it served him right, and it was certainly none of his, Hobart’s business . . . but he had already headed the horse toward the king, who had ceased his dizzy roll and was getting up. Gordius put up a hand as Hobart approached; the engineer braced himself and reached out to haul the king up behind him. It did not work that way: Gordius got a good grip on Hobart’s wrist, heaved—and Hobart left the saddle and came down on top of the king.

The king yipped as the musket barrel got him over the ear; but with the behemoth towering over them they did not stop to feel for broken bones. They scrambled up and bolted into the timber like frantic rabbits. The monster crashed in after them. It blundered about for a bit, snapping tree trunks; then headed back for the deserted cannon.

Rollin Hobart and King Gordius, lying in a thicket, drew a pair of whews. The king said: “Can you see what he’s doing, son?”

Hobart raised his head to peer. “He’s trampling the gun.” A wooden crackle confirmed this statement, as the gun carriage was flattened. “Good lord, he’s eating the barrel!”

“Strange,” said the king; “I thought they ate nothing but grass. What now?”

“He seems to have some trouble swallowing it—it’s down now.” They heard a snort from the behemoth; it thumped off out of sight over the crest of the rise. There were a couple of distant musket shots and some thin shouts, and all was peaceful.

“We had better start looking for our mounts,” said the king, getting up with a grunt. As he did so, something went
whtht.

“What—” said the king.
Whuck!
An arrow stuck quivering in a tree trunk six inches from His Altitude’s nose.

Gordius turned to Hobart, mild blue eyes round. “Somebody,” he said in an awed voice, “is shooting at me!”

“Duck!” cried Hobart. The king did so, just as a third arrow whistled through the leaves.

“How do you work this thing?” said Hobart in a stage whisper, indicating the musket. “It is loaded?”

“It is unless you’ve fired it,” replied the king. “Let’s see—you have to light the match—this thing.” Hobart did so with his cigarette lighter. “And the powder was all shaken out of the firing pan when you fell off Xenthops. You put more in, like this, and smooth it down with your thumb. Then you close the pan cover, so. Blow your match now and then so it doesn’t go out. Ho, not so hard; you’ll blow a spark into the pan.”

Hobart extended the barrel cautiously toward the source point of the arrows, meantime moving his head to bring holes in the greenery—or rather bluery—into line. The gun weighed well over twenty pounds, but Hobart could manage it from his prone position. He whispered: “Got a sword or spear? I’m going to shoot and then go after the guy.”

“I lost them when I fell off,” said Gordius. “Use the musket butt.”

The firearm had a front sight—a knob—but no rear sight. Hobart lined the barrel up as best he could. His eye caught a suggestion of motion, and he pulled the trigger.

The gun roared; smoke blotted out the foliage; the butt came back like a mule’s kick; and Hobart’s right thumb, which he had injudiciously wrapped around the stock; hit his nose an agonizing blow. Though his vision was as full of stars as of woods, he jumped up and bounded over the bushes after his shot, reversing the musket as he did so.

But there was no lurking assassin for him to club. He hunted for some minutes without result; then he saw something dark lying on the blue moss, and picked it up. It was a wig of short black hair.

BOOK: The Undesired Princess
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