
"Oh?" The frown returned.
"It's that."
I pointed in disgust to the small dumpy figure asleep in her lap. It was Hooli, one of Marack's two sacred
Pug-Boos. Flat-footed, he stood about two feet tall, had a rounded basketball head with fur-tufted ears,
stubby arms and legs, shoe-button eyes, and a forever runny nose. She'd dressed him for the occasion in
a spanking new orange tarn (made by her own two hands, as were all his clothes), green booties and a
waist-length jacket buttoned down the front The jacket was a bright vermillion.
The Boo, or Hooli, as of that particular moment held a half-eaten, wilted, squishy-bung-jot leaf in one
hand, blew bubbles as he slept and had already soiled Murie's spotless jump-pants with the goo from his
runny nose.
Actually, there were two Hoolis, though Murie, of course, was unaware of this fact. The first, the one she
held, was a low-I.Q. blob, a mindless rodentius-drusis described by Great Ap, the Vuun, one of the
intelligent saurians that inhabit Fregis's southern mountains of Ilt, as a stupid leaf-eater. "And if the trees
do not leaf at their proper time," Ap had told me, "why then the Boos simply wait and stare and stare and
wait, until they fall from the trees quite dead. They are that stupid."
The other Hooli—he who truly deserved the formality of the name—was an entity-controller, something
like myself, Kriloy and Ragan, excepting, as he put it, we were simply galactic whereas he was universal!
I'd never seen him in his actual body. For reasons well get to, I hadn't dared. Suffice it to say, I had a
deep affection for the real Hooli; this, for various reasons, among them that without him there would
never have been a victory over the Dark One; indeed, the lot of us could as easily be damn well dead!
The blob that Murie held, that all northerners worshiped, was exactly what it was: a snot-nosed, vacuous,
bag-assed nothing! It was demeaning. And yet she forever clutched it to her heart. Without a doubt, my
feelings were partly jealousy. But to be forced to be jealous of that was a contradiction I found difficult
to deal with.
Next to Murie sat her companion, Lady Caroween Hoggle-Fitz, a vibrant red-headed valkyrie with a
temper to match. Then came Garoween's .betrothed, Sir Rawl Fergis, ' Murie's cousin and my own
sword companion across many months of bloody war. Rawl, at the moment, was diligently spooning his
third bowl of ice cream; oblivious to either the "music of the spheres," or his own personal viewscreen, in
which the scanner had now boxed the alien ships. . . . They were at a hundred thousand miles from
surface, in two sets of five each and, as stated, in the basic pyramid attack or defense formation.
The others of our twelve were: Per-Looris, king's sorcerer and wizard to Murie's father. The great lord
Fel-Holdt, commander of all Marack's armies. The newly found Sir Dosh, the slain Breen Hoggle-Fitz's
son and brother to Caroween; he'd been thought lost at the battle of Dunguring. The aforementioned
Lors Sernas of Hish and four of the greatest lords of the remaining northern kingdoms.
Admittedly, they were by no means representative. Still, there had to be a first contact and they'd been
the only ones available at Castle Glagmaron. The wars were over. The single remaining danger to Fregis
lay in that, out there, the alien ships and the alien-created "gateway." That they were here at all was
because I'd insisted upon it and Ragan and Kriloy had agreed. What with all that had happened—indeed,
was continuing to happen how—their presence aboard the Deneb was most certainly overdue.
Ragan Orr then burst out in a voice which this time would not be silenced. "Kyrie," he demanded, "have a
look, quick! Here comes the big one!"