“I was sort of afraid it might be somebody I knew once, you know,” Irith said, the words spilling out in a rush. “And I really hated to think about anyone I know getting old and icky like that, and drinking so much and lying around, so I didn’t like it when he said he knew me and I wanted to get away from him-but I
“He says you traveled with him when he was young, and then one day he woke up and you weren’t there.”
“Well, that’s sort of true,” Irith admitted. “I mean, I was there, at first, but he didn’t see me. And I’ll bet he didn’t mention that we’d had a fight the night before, did he? Or that he’d been being a real pest, talking about all this stupid stuff about settling down and raising kids.”
“What’s stupid about it?” Asha asked, before Kelder could react.
“I’m too
Asha and Kelder looked at each other. Kelder’s visions of a life of domestic bliss with Irith suddenly seemed much less attainable.
“Oh, it was all a long time ago, anyway,” Irith said.
“Irith,” Kelder said, “it
“I
“A spell?” Irith stared at him.
“Turned to stone, maybe?”
“Silly,” she said, almost laughing, “of course not! I’ve been traveling, enjoying the World.”
“For forty years?”
“Longer, really.”
“How long?”
“Oh, well…”
Kelder found himself momentarily baffled by this response. How could anyone
Irith stared at him in mild irritation. “Why are you asking so many questions? What difference does it make?”
“When were you born?” Kelder asked. “What year?”
“Oh, well, if you put it like that,” Irith said, “I was born in 4978.”
“That’s more than two hundred years ago!” Kelder said, shocked.
“Yes, I guess it is,” Irith admitted.
“So you’re more than two hundred years old?” Asha asked, fascinated.
“No,” Irith insisted, “I’m fifteen! I’ve been fifteen for two hundred years, and I’ll
“Always?” Kelder asked.
Irith nodded. “It’s part of the spell,” she said.
Asha and Kelder exchanged glances. “So you
“No, not like that,” Irith said.
Kelder asked, “Then like what? What spell are you talking about?”
“Well, the one that made me what I am, of course,” Irith said. “The one that made me a shapeshifter and everything.”
Just then the young man in the apron returned with their drinks; they accepted them, and waited until the young man had departed again.
Kelder sipped his ale, then turned back to Irith. “I think,” he said, “that you’re going to have to tell us all about it.”
Irith looked at him, at the unsmiling expression on his face, and then down at Asha, sitting beside him, her own little mouth set firmly.
Irith sighed.
“Oh, all right,” she said, “I’ll tell you the whole story.” She shifted on the bench, and then remarked by way of preamble, “You know, you two aren’t being any fun at
The others just sat, and Irith began. “It’s called Javan’s Second Augmentation of Magical Memory,” she said. “The spell, I mean.”
“Tell us about it,” Kelder said.
“How did you learn it?” Asha asked. “Were you a magician?”
Irith frowned. “I guess I’d better start all the way back at the beginning,” she said.
She took a deep breath and began, “I was born in the Third Military District of Old Ethshar, which was already being called Dria-it was run by someone we called a Colonel, but he declared himself king when I was five. It was a lot bigger then than Dria is now-the Colonel ruled everything as far east as Thuth.”
She saw the rather blank expressions on both Kelder’s and Asha’s faces, and explained, “That’s all on the eastern plains, between the mountains and the desert-south of here.”
“But that’s not Ethshar,” Asha protested, “Ethshar’s way off to the west.”
“That’s the
“Go on,” Kelder said.
“Well, anyway,” Irith said, “I grew up in Dria, and it was still part of Old Ethshar, sort of, but only because of the Great War. You know about that, right? How we were all fighting against the Northern Empire? And they had demons and sorcerers fighting for them?”
Kelder said, “We know about the War.”