"You can see she can take anything you throw at her," I panted. "You give up yet?"
"Never!" Buirnie said. He switched tempos, going to a broken beat. Calypsa didn't even blink. She added whirls and leaps to her footwork, clicking her fingers together. She fixed her luminous eyes on him. Buirnie's music hesitated. I could tell Calypsa had him now. She circled in on him, slowing. The music slowed down in response. My feet stopped pounding the stage like telegraph keys and settled into a two-step so I could keep an eye on them. She picked up the Flute from his pillow and held it aloft in triumph.
"Will you yield to me now?" she demanded.
"You bet, little lady!"
"ATTA GIRL," I said, smirking. "Well, flute, you've been outclassed, outsung and outdanced. What do you say?"
"I think I'm in love," Buirnie said, the emeralds turning heart-shaped. "Little lady, I'll go anywhere you want me to!"
"Er...I...well, all right," Calypsa said, a little uncertainly. I shook my head. She was going to have to learn to handle her successes with more confidence.
The tootling concluded in an exhausted coda that I'd describe as 'shave and a haircut, two bits' with extreme prejudice. I whirled to a halt, gasping for breath. Tananda spun in against me. I caught her before she fell over.
"I feel sick," Asti said, from my side pocket.
"You and me both," I said. "You got anything in the way of motion sickness potions?"
"Coming right up," she said. Pale pink liquid flooded the bowl of the goblet. The level immediately sank by a couple of inches. She sighed. "Ah, that's better." I tipped her up and glugged down a hefty swig of what was left. It tasted of peppermint and the hair of the dog, but I felt the vertigo recede immediately. I passed it off to Tananda, who gulped the rest of the potion gratefully. Calypsa didn't need it. She didn't even look winded. Buirnie was delighted. He never stopped talking.
"You're
"Back off!" Ersatz thundered from his scabbard. "I have first call upon this wench's education!"
"You? What can a sword teach a little gal like this one? She's none of your warrior stock! Look at those legs! Look at those graceful arms."
"I see great promise in this child, and she will not be well served by such a frivolous tootler as yourself!"
"Frivolous! Who are you calling frivolous? Swords are like dress clothes—you only need them once in a while, then you stick them in the closet until the next time! Music is for every day!"
"That is why you must not waste her time, with your everyday
"Who do you think you are?" Ersatz asked, magnificent in his dudgeon. I see promise in this girl, the likes of which I have not seen since the great Marisu! It should not be wasted on such nonsense as tootling!"
Buirnie wasn't going to let the matter drop. "Well, you
"My goodness, Marisu! I haven't thought of her in years!" Kelsa said.
"Who's Marisu?" I asked.
"A protege of the greatest possible promise," Ersatz said with a sigh. "She might have accomplished anything, any goal she chose to strive for. I was sorely grieved to lose her."
Tananda's face softened. "What happened to her?"
"She got married to a handsome prince," Kelsa said.
"And lived happily ever after," Ersatz added, glumly.
"I suppose that is a tragedy if you're a war-sword," Tananda said, trying not to laugh.
"Ah, fair lady, you have no notion of how great a tragedy it is!" He glanced at Calypsa. "It would be an honor to teach you my craft, if you would care to learn."
"How about mine?" Buirnie asked. "Music is a lot closer to her natural talent than hacking and slashing!"
"Hold it right there," I said, getting between them. "What makes you think you have ANY authority over Calypsa at all?"
That stopped the two of them dead. They glared at one another, then Ersatz turned to me.
"Forgive me, Aahz," the Sword said, apologetically. "If I have stepped upon your purview. I did not realize you had taken her on as your protege."
"Well, how could you...WHAT?"