file:///F|/rah/Piers%20Anthony/Anthony,%20Piers%20-%20Mode%202%20-%20Fractal%20Mode.txt
So she had her answer. She would have to seek the Players where their instruments lay. She
would have to appeal to them, and if they responded, they might act to abolish the despots. It
would be easy, for them, for the magic of the Megaplayers was like none known since.
Yet what had banished the Players, long ago? Surely it could only have been some power
even greater than they. Where was that power now?
Nona shook her head. Whatever the answers were, she had perhaps two months to find them.
Then she would be eighteen, and her fate would pursue her.
SHE could not risk a trip alone to the instruments. This was not because there was
physical danger, for the region was sanguine. It was because it might alert the suspicion of the
despots. She had to have a seemingly unrelated pretext to go there.
So she did the obvious: she made a date with Stave to view the sea. The fact was that the
place of the instruments was a rendezvous for lovers, because of the bracing sea air and the
lingering magic of the region. But she specified afternoon, thus signaling that the prospects for
romantic involvement were limited. He, however, was free to hope that if the afternoon excursion
turned out to be successful, there would be an evening liaison on another occasion. He was happy
to agree to the date.
The day was beautiful. There had been recent rain, and the meadows were greening. Even the
dread castle of the despots, at the crest of the highest hill, looked almost pretty. Of course it
had not been built by the despots; they had merely moved in after the Megaplayers left. So
whatever beauty it possessed was what lingered despite its present occupancy.
She wore her best red theow tunic with the matching slippers. Stave, more sensibly garbed
in his dull blue work tunic, was taken aback. "You'll soil it on the grass!" he protested.
"Not if I don't sit," she replied.
8 FRACTAL MODE
"Of course," he agreed, politely masking his disappointment. Couples normally sat near the
brink of the cliffs, looking out over the waves, and drew close when the sea winds were chill. It
was a most seductive pretext. Hands could stray as far as desired or tolerated, concealed under
those tunics. In fact, almost anything could be done under tunics, when both parties wished.
She did not want to turn him off, however. She had no intention of getting serious, but
Stave was a decent young man who deserved decent treatment. Had she desired a settled life and
babies, he would have been as good a choice to share them with as any. "If I do sit, it will be on
you," she said. "So that my tunic will not touch the ground."
He pondered that as they walked. There were ways and ways to interpret it, and some of
them were intriguing. His disappointment faded.
There was a bark to the side, and a blur of white. Cougar had spied them, and was running
to join them. He was the village dog, of mixed breed, not at all like a cougar, but somehow he had
acquired that name. Normally only the despots kept animals, but sometimes they allowed one to
wander unattached. Cougar loved adventure, and a trip to the instruments was that, by his
definition. Indeed, it was said that a tryst wasn't complete without the dog.
Stave picked up a stick. "Fetch, Cougar!" he cried, hurling it ahead of them.
The dog launched himself in pursuit, joyfully. But as the stick landed, it assumed the
likeness of a skunk. As the dog caught up, the skunk turned tail, making ready to spray.
"You shouldn't tease him," Nona murmured.
"He's too smart to tease," Stave replied.
Sure enough, Cougar charged right in and caught the skunk in his jaws. He had not been
fooled by the illusion. But, in a seeming act of retribution, he brought the stick back not to
Stave but to Nona.
She reached down to take it, using her own illusion to convert the skunk into a bouquet of
flowers. "Thank you, Cougar," she said, patting him on the head.
"You're welcome, lass," the dog replied.
She elbowed Stave in the ribs. "Watch you don't get bitten in the hind pocket!" the dog
said in a more feminine voice.
NONA 9
Cougar wagged his tail. He enjoyed being part of an illusion.
There was a rumble of thunder. They looked, and there beyond the castle a storm was
building, appropriately sinister. However, it was unlikely to come in this direction, and if it
did, they would have time to return to the village before it struck. There was even a rainbow,
probably the work of an idle villager, because the angle was wrong for it to be natural.
They reached the place of the instruments. Nona handed Stave the bouquet, which became the
skunk again as he took it. She ran ahead, up to the very brink, and stood looking out. Cougar did
the same, to the right, sharing her spirit.
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