XANTH Chapter 1. Quest Grundy Golem stretched and bounced off his cushion. He looked at himself in the mirror, not totally pleased. He stood the height of a normal man's spread- fingered hand, and that was fine for sleeping on a cushion but not all that great when it came to making an impression on the Land of Xanth. It was a nice new day. Almost, he was able to forget that he was the least significant of living creatures. When he had been a true golem fashioned of wood and rag he had longed to be a real living thing, supposing that he would be satisfied if only he could become flesh. At last he had won that goal and for a time he had believed that he was happy. But slowly the truth had sunk in: he was still only a handsbreadth greater than nothing. No one took him seriously. They thought he had a smart mouth because he liked insulting people; actually it was because he was trying desperately to cover over his deepening awareness of his own inadequacy. When he used his talent of language to make some other person or creature feel low, he felt a little higher himself—for a moment. But now he knew that this was a false device, and that his mouth had mainly brought him the contempt of others. He wished he could undo that damage and make 2 Golem in the Gear* of himself a genuinely worthwhile and respected person— but he didn't know how. Meanwhile, he was hungry. That was a consequence of being real: he had to eat. It hadn't been that way when he had been a true golem. Then he had suffered no hunger, pain, or calls of nature. But he liked it better this way, he decided, because he also felt living pleasures. And living miseries... He slid down the banister and scrambled out the win- dow that was normally left open for him. He landed in a clump of toadstools that had sprung up overnight, knock- ing several over. Unfortunately, a small toad had been sitting on one. "Clumsy oaf!" the toad croaked, righting himself. "Watch where you're going!" "Listen, frogface," Grundy retorted. "This is my path! You have no business here." "I was on a toadstool, as I have a perfect right to be," the toad protested. "You just came barging through!" The creature had a case, but Grundy didn't care. His irritation with the situation—and with all ot Xanth— caused him to react in the familiar way that he wished he didn't. "Know what I think of that? I'll bash all these stinky things to smithereens!" And he grabbed up a stick and laid about him, knocking over toadstools right and left. Grundy was no giant, but they stood only about knee- high to him, and were easy to dispatch. "Help!" the toad croaked. "Berserker on the loose!" Suddenly there was a stirring throughout the weedy region beside the castle wall. Toads appeared, hopping in toward the summons—small ones at first, then larger ones, and finally one huge one. Grundy realized he was in trouble. He tried to scramble up to the window, but the monster toad opened his pon- Golem in the Gears 3 derous maw and speared the golem with his tongue. The tongue was sticky; Grundy could not get free. The toad retracted it and hauled Grundy in. "Eat him! Eat him!" the massed toads cried. "Teach him to leave toadstools alone!" Grundy clutched at a half-buried rock, managing to halt his progress toward the maw. But now the little toads hopped on him, pounding him with their feet, and one of them wet on him. Disgusted as well as frightened, he grabbed that toad and heaved it into the maw of the giant toad. The maw closed. The tongue released Grundy and snapped back home. Evidently the giant toad didn't mind what he ate. But the little toads minded. "Get that monster!" they croaked, and snapped at him with their tongues. They couldn't do him much damage singly, but as a group they might. He tried to dodge the snapping tongues, but there were too many. In addition, the giant toad was catching on that it hadn't eaten the whole thing. It reoriented on him. Then Grundy spied a hypnogourd. That might help! He ran to it and dived behind it, so that its peephole was facing away from him and toward the toads. As the giant toad opened its maw and lined up its terrible tongue, Grundy shoved the gourd around so that the peephole bore directly on it. The big toad looked—and froze. Its gaze had been trapped by the gourd. "So there, filth-tongue!" he cried. "Now you're stuck!" But the little toads weren't stuck. They averted their gazes and came leaping at him. One landed on his head, bearing it down. Grundy shook the creature off, but in the process caught a glimpse of the peephole himself. Suddenly he found himself inside the gourd. He was 4 Oolem in the Gears standing amidst giant wooden gears. The huge toad was there too, and had a leg caught between two of them. The gears were drawing it slowly but inevitably between them, crushing it. "Halp!" it cried. "I'm gonna croak!" "Well, you were gonna eat me!" Grundy retorted. But he didn't like this; it was too ugly a demise. He tried to pry the toad out, but the gears were too strong. Then he saw a small, loose gear. He picked it up and jammed it next to the toad's leg. As the two turning gears ground together, the loose one was crunched. In a moment the moving ones shuddered to a stop. Now a huge stallion appeared, virtually snorting fire. His hide was midnight black, and his eyes glinted blacker. "I should have known!" the Night Stallion snorted. "A golem in the gears!" There was a subtle flicker. Then Grundy and the giant toad were back in the real world, out of the gourd. Grundy realized that they had been ejected. The big toad's leg was whole, but it seemed to have lost its appetite. Grundy realized that he had suffered the ultimate indignity: he had been rejected by the hypnogourd! No one had any use for him! He scrambled again for the window, and this time made it. Fouled with the sticky spittle of the giant and the wet- ting of the midget, he fell inside. What a mess! But worse than the ignominy of his present condition was his realization that he was of so little account that even a toad could humiliate him. It wasn't just a matter of size; it was an almost total lack of respect. He was a nobody, socially as well as physically. What use was it to be a living creature, if he was of absolutely no consequence? He found a bucket of wash water left over from yes- Golem in the Gears 5 terday's scrubbing of a floor, and labored to get himself clean. While he worked, he came to a conclusion, an answer to his question. It was no use to live without respect. But what could he do about it? He was what he was, an insignificant creature. As he ran across the room, he heard stifled sobbing. He paused, for now he also cared about others. He was seldom able to show it in ways they appreciated, but he did care. He looked about and discovered that it was a plant—a small green stem that looked rather wilted. Grundy's magic talent was the ability to converse with other living things, so he talked to the plant. "What's the matter with you, greenface?" "I'm w-wilting!" the plant responded. "I can see that, potroot. Why?" "Because Ivy forgot to w-water me," the plant blub- bered. "She's so wrapped up with her mischief that—" It tried to squeeze out another tear, but could not; it had no water left. Grundy went to the bathroom, climbed up on the sink and grabbed the damp sponge there. He hauled this down, dragged it across the floor, and to the plant. Then he hefted it up and squeezed it in a bear hug, so that water dribbled into the pot. "Oh, thank you!" the plant exclaimed as it drank in the moisture. "How can I ever repay you?" Grundy was as selfish as the next creature, but he didn't see any way the plant could do anything for him, so he elected to be generous. "Always glad to help a fellow creature," he said. "I'll tell Ivy to give you a good water- ing. What's she doing that's so distracting?" "I'm not supposed to tell..." the plant demurred. 6 Golem in the Gears Now Grundy saw what the plant could do for him. "Didn't I just do you a favor, wiltleaf?" The plant sighed. "Don't tell I told. Ivy's a terror when she gets mad." Grundy well knew that! Ivy was eight years old and a full Sorceress; no one crossed her without regretting it. "I won't tell." "She's teaching Dolph to be a bird, so he can fly out and look for Stanley." Grundy pursed his tiny lips. That was mischief indeed! Dolph was her little brother, three years old and a Magi- cian who could change to any living form instantly. Cer- tainly he could become a bird and fly away—but just as certainly that would be disaster, because, if he didn't promptly get lost, he would get eaten by some airborne predator. This had to be stopped! But Grundy had promised not to tell. He had broken promises before, but he was trying to steer a straighter course. Also, if he told on Ivy, he would be in immediate and serious trouble. He had to find some private way to stop this. He went through the motions of breakfast, but found no answer to his problem. He saw Ivy going to Dolph's room and knew he had to act—without admitting what he knew. So he pretended to encounter her accidentally, intercepting her in the hall. "Whatcha up to, kid?" "Go away, you little snoop," she said amiably. "All right—I'll play with Dolph instead." "Don't you dare!" she said with moderate fury. "I'm playing with him." "We can both play with him," Grundy suggested. To that she was unable to demur, because she didn't want to give away her secret by being too insistent. Dolph was up and dressed and ready to play. He was Golem in the Gears 7 a handsome little boy with curly brown hair and a big smile. "See—I'm a bird!" he exclaimed, and suddenly he was a bird, a pretty red and green one. "Ixnay," Ivy whispered, but Dolph was already chang- ing back, pleased with his accomplishment. "Can I go out and fly now?" he asked. "Why would you want to fly?" Grundy inquired as if innocently. "He doesn't," Ivy said quickly. But Dolph was already answering. "I'm going to catch a dragon!" he said proudly. "No, he isn't!" Ivy cried. "That's very good, Dolph," Grundy said. "What dragon will you catch?" "No dragon!" Ivy cried. "Stanley Steamer," Dolph said. "He's lost." Grundy turned to Ivy as if surprised. "What's he talking about? You know he's not allowed to go out alone." "I told you not to snoop!" Ivy said furiously. "It's none of your business!" "But you can't send Dolph out! If anything happened to him, your father would ask the walls of Castle Roogna who put him up to it, and then your mother would—" Ivy put both hands protectively against her backside, knowing where her mother's wrath would strike. "But I've got to rescue Stanley!" she wailed. "He's my pet dragon!" "But nobody even knows where he is," Grundy pointed out. "Or even whether he's—" He had to break off, because it would not be smart to utter the dread conjec- ture in Ivy's presence. Stanley had disappeared when a monster-banish spell had accidentally caught him. Of course he wasn't a monster; he was a pet, but the spell had not distinguished one type of dragon from another. 8 Golem in the Gears Naturally Ivy had pestered Good Magician Humfrey about Stanley's whereabouts, but there were so many dragons in Xanth that Humfrey's spells had not been able to isolate Stanley. Or so Humfrey claimed. Humfrey was younger than he once hadbeen, and probably his magic wasn't up to snuff, but he wouldn't admit that. "Somehow I'll find him," Ivy said resolutely. "He's my dragon." There was some justice in that claim, l^obody could hold a dragon unless that dragon wanted to be held, and it had been friendship that held Stanley. Ivy had perceived him as her friend and her pet, and her enormous and subtle magic had made him so. Grundy was sure Stanley would have returned to her, had he been able. The fact that he had not returned strongly suggested that he was dead. And Ivy would not give up the search. Grundy knew her well enough to accept that. Yet if she were not dis- suaded, both she and her family might in the end suffer much greater distress than the loss of one little dragon— such as the loss of a little brother. Ivy was a Sorceress, but she was also a child; she lacked adult judgment. Grundy could neither tell on her nor allow her to pro- ceed with this foolish project. What was he to do? It occurred to him that there was a noble way out of this dilemma—a way that just might bring him some of the esteem he craved. "I'll find him for you," he said. Ivy clapped her hands in the way that little girls had. "You will? Oh, thank you, Grundy! I take back half the mean things I've said about you!" Half? Well, half a loaf was evidently all he rated. "But while I'm doing it, you mustn't do anything yourself," he cautioned. "That could mess it up." "Oh, I won't, I won't!" she agreed. "Not until you bring him back." Golem in the Gears 9 In this manner Grundy found himself committed to a Quest he strongly suspected was futile. But what else could he have done? Ivy needed her dragon back, and he needed to be a hero. Grundy had no idea how to proceed, so he did what anyone in that situation would do: he went to ask the Good Magician. He caught a ride with a passing thesaurus who was going that way. The thesaurus was a very ancient breed of reptile who had picked up an enormous vocab- ulary during its centuries of life; it made for an interesting dialogue while they traveled. However, it had the annoy- ing habit of never using a single term where several similar ones could be squeezed in. For example, when Grundy inquired where it was going, it swished its heavy tail and replied: "I am departing, leaving, removing, embarking, going, traveling for distant, remote, faraway, separated regions, zones, areas, territories, districts." By the time they reached the Good Magician's castle, Grundy was glad to bid it farewell, adieu, good-bye, and good rid- dance. Now Grundy stood before the Good Magician's castle. Each time he had approached it over the years, it had looked different from the outside, but very little changed inside. This time it was suspiciously ordinary: a circular moat, gray stone walls, scattered motley turrets, and a general air of indifference to external things. Grundy knew this was illusory; Humfrey was the Magician of infor- mation, and though he was young now, he generally did know what was going on. He didn't like to be bothered about inconsequentials, so he established barriers to intrusions, on the theory that only folk with sufficiently important concerns would navigate them. Well, Grundy had a concern and he knew he had to 10 Golem in the Gears Golem in the Gears 11 get past three obstacles to win entry. What he didn't know was what they were or how to nullify them. He would simply have to move ahead and do what he had to. He stepped up to the edge of the moat. The water lay there, rippling at him. Naturally there was no way for him to cross; the drawbridge was up. Well, he would simply have to swim. Swim? First he had better check out the moat mon- sters! "Hey, snootface!" he called. Moat monsters were always varieties of water serpents and vain about their appearance. There was no response. Well, he could handle that. "Say, grass," he said to the verdant bank. "Where's the monster?" "On vacation, ragbrain," the grass replied. Grundy was surprised. "No moat monster on duty? You mean I can safely swim across?" "Fat chance, stringfellow," the grass replied. "You'd get eaten up before you got five strokes." "But if there's no monster—" The grass rustled in the breeze. "Suit yourself, wood- nose." Grundy didn't trust this. "How can I get eaten, if there's no monster?" But the grass had been ruffled. "Find out for yourself, clayface." Obviously it had some notion of his origin, though he was no longer composed of string, rag, wood or clay. He didn't really appreciate its attitude, perhaps because it was so like his own. Something was definitely amiss. He bent to poke a finger in the water, but an anticipatory rustle across the lawn alerted him. So he plucked a blade of grass, evoking a strenuous protest from the bank, and poked it in the water. In a moment it dissolved into sludge. This mote was filled with acid! Some obstacle! If he had tried to swim in that...! He scrounged for a small stick, and poked that in the moat. It dissolved more slowly, being dead and more solid. He located a pebble and tried that, and it didn't dissolve at all. Now he knew that the acid only affected animate mate- rial. Unfortunately, he was animate. He would have to use some sort of boat to cross, to keep his flesh clear of the liquid. He searched the premises, looking for a boat. Naturally there was none. He heard a popping noise and discovered a popcorn plant, but that didn't help. He took a kernel of the corn on general principles, however; one never could tell when something might be useful in some obscure way. Then he found a giant snail shell. The snail had long since passed away, but its hollow shell was beautiful, gleaming iridescently. But what use was an empty snail shell? Suddenly he had a notion. He took hold of the shell and dragged it toward the moat. This was a job, as it weighed more than he did; he could have crawled inside the thing! But that just might be what he needed. He shoved it to the moat and nudged it in. It floated with the hollow aperture up, and it did not dissolve. He pressed down on it, but it contained a lot more volume of air than he could displace; he could not push it below the surface of the liquid. Good enough again! Grundy hauled the shell back on shore, then made another tour, locating several long twigs of wood. He brought them back, set them inside the shell, and launched 12 Golem in the Gears it again. Then he climbed in himself, carefully. It sup- ported his weight. Now he was floating! He took a twig and used it to pole off from the bank. He settled himself as comfortably as he could inside the shell and used a flattened twig to paddle the craft. He had a snailboat! Before long, his wooden paddle dissolved, and he had to use another. He had to paddle carefully, so as not to splash any of the acid on himself. Progress was slow, but the moat was not broad; he judged he would make it safely across if he didn't panic. Just as long as no monster appeared at this stage! No monster appeared. Monsters didn't like acid any better than living golems did. An armored serpent might withstand the corrosion, but how would it protect its eyes and mouth? In due course he nudged his way to a landing inside the moat, and stepped carefully to shore. One hurdle down. He stood and looked about. He was on a fairly narrow beach between the moat and the wall. The beach curved around the island that was the castle. The wall was ver- tical and fashioned of flat, polished stone; he could see his reflection in it, but he couldn't catch so much as a fingerhold for climbing. He would have to walk around until he came to a suitable entrance. He walked—and soon encountered a large animal. It was a unicorn! There were very few of them in Xanth; they seemed to prefer to range in other pastures. This one was a fairly disreputable-looking creature with a burr- tangled mane and a gnarled horn. It snorted as it spied him and pawed at the sand with a forehoof. "Hi there, warp-horn," Grundy said in equine language with his usual politeness. "Why don't you clean up that stinking coat?" Golem in the Gean 13 "I'll clean up the sand with you, you midget blot," the unicorn replied with unprovoked bad humor. Oops—this was evidently another obstacle. "I don't suppose you'd care to let -me pass, so I can go on into the castle," Grundy said. "I don't suppose you'd care to take a bath in the moat," the unicorn replied in the same tone. Grundy made as if to scoot under the creature, for there was no room to pass on the side. The unicorn made as if to spear anything that tried that route. It was obvious that he could not get by; the animal was set to prevent it. The golem stood back and considered. How could he pass a creature who was determined to prevent it and had the ability to enforce the restriction? There had to be a way. He had a notion. He turned and walked away. He could circle the castle in either direction, and reach the entrance either way. The unicorn did not pursue him, perhaps too stupid to realize what he was doing. Grundy walked three-quarters of the way around the castle—and stopped. There was the unicorn, facing the other way, horn lowered wamingly. Obviously it had backed up to the entrance place, used that wider region to turn, and had come to block this route too. It wasn't stupid after all; it had known that it couldn't protect the entrance by chasing the golem around the castle. Well, maybe he could trick it into letting down its guard. Or make it so mad it miscalculated. Grundy had a rare touch with insults, when he put his beady little mind to it. "Say, founderfoot, did they put you out here so you won't stink up the inside of the castle?" "No, they put me out here so you wouldn't stink it up," the unicorn replied. Golem in the Gears 15 14 Golem in the Gears Hm. This might be more of a challenge than he had thought. But Grundy tried again. "Did you get that hom caught in a hole in the ground? No self-respecting creature would carry a broken spear like that!" "Did you get that body caught in a shrinking violet?" the unicorn responded. "No self-respecting midget would use it." "Listen, knot-mane, I'm a golem\" Grundy exclaimed. "I'm supposed to be this size." "I doubt it. That body is way too small for that mouth." Grundy swelled up to his full diminutive height, ready to spew forth a devastating torrent of abuse—and realized that the unicorn was winning the contest. It was the one that was supposed to be getting mad! He would have to try some other tack. Well, if he couldn't beat it, maybe he could join it. "What do you want most in all Xanth?" he inquired. "To get rid of pesky golems so I can resume my snooze." "Apart from that," Grundy said unevenly. The unicorn considered. "Well, I do get hungry, and meals are far apart. I'd sure like a nice snack of something good." That was more promising. But Grundy wasn't sure how he could provide such a snack. "If you let me into the castle, maybe I could get you some nice hay or some- thing," he suggested. "If I let you into the castle, maybe I'll get my hide tanned before I'm ready to leave it," the unicorn said. "Maybe I could get you a snack without going in," Grundy said. "I'd be glad to have a snack without you going in," the creature agreed. Somehow that didn't sound promising. Grundy stared across the moat, where the grass was green and the brush was leafy. Surely there was plenty there to distract the unicorn—but the unicorn couldn't cross to it, and Grundy himself would not be able to carry enough across in the snailboat to last for more than one mouthful at a time. He spied a tall green plant that sported several tassles. That jogged his memory. Maybe there was a way! "What kind of a plant are you?" he called in plant language. The unicorn couldn't understand that, of course, so it didn't know what he was doing. "I am a popcorn plant," the plant replied proudly. "I have the best popcorn on the bank!" Grundy turned to the unicorn. "Unicorns don't like popcorn, do they?" "Of course they don't," the creature agreed, its mouth watering. Aha! He remembered correctly. Unicorns liked all kinds of corns, because they were magically related. He returned his attention to the popcorn. "You don't look like much to me," he sneered in plant language. The plant huffed up and turned color. "I'm the top pop!" it proclaimed. "My kernels pop harder than any- one's!" "They do not!" Grundy retorted. "I bet they fizzle!" "Fizzle!" the plant snapped, outraged. Its ears turned an angry red. "I'll pop off so hard you'll think it's an explosion!" "I think it's a fake!" Grundy said. The plant's corns became so hot that the tassles browned and shriveled, and the leaves around its ears split apart. The kernels popped with the heat, first a few, then many, until it did indeed resemble an explosion. Popcorn puffs flew out in every direction, a number of them arcing over the moat and peppering the castle wall. 16 Golem in the Gears "Popcorn!" the unicorn exclaimed, eagerly snatching up the fallen pieces. "But unicorns don't like popcorn," Grundy reminded it. "Get out of here, golem!" the creature cried angrily. "As you wish." Grundy retreated to the unicorn's rear, toward the gate, and the creature was so distracted by the delicious popcorn puffs that it didn't notice. Grundy moved on up to the gate and through it without further opposition. He was inside the castle! "Very clever, you little morsel," a voice growled. Grundy looked, startled. He was in a moderately sized court with a dirt floor, and before him stood an ant lion. The monster could snap him up in a moment, if it wanted to. "I'm just trying to get in to see the Good Magician on important business," the golem said nervously. "Indeed." The ant lion yawned, showing its enormous feline teeth. It was playing cat-and-mouse with him, knowing that its six insect legs could overtake him any- time. "I doubt you are smart enough to rate any of his time." "Sure I am!" Grundy retorted hotly. "I'm just not big enough to get by all you monsters." "I will make you a deal," the ant lion said, stretching languorously. "Prove you are smart and I will let you pass." It was up to something. But Grundy realized he had nothing to lose; he was already in its power. "How do I do that?" "You play me three games of lines and boxes," the ant lion said. "If you can defeat me, I'll let you enter. If you lose, I'll consume you. That's very fair, isn't it?" Golem in the Gears 17 Grundy swallowed. He was not entirely pleased with the terms. "Suppose we tie?" "Then I will let you enter anyway. I can be magnani- mous to an intellectual equal. To make it even easier for you, I will even grant you the first move each time." Grundy still didn't like this. But he was aware of two things: first, he really had no choice, as he could not otherwise get in to see the Good Magician, and second, he was a pretty good player of lines and boxes. He could probably win. "I agree," he said. "Excellent!" the ant lion said heartily. It leaped sud- denly into the air and came down with its six legs straight. It was a fairly massive creature, so each leg sank into the dirt as it landed. It stepped out of its tracks, and six neat depressions remained. Then it jumped again, this time landing a little to the side. The three right legs landed in the dents left by the three left legs before, and the three left legs made three new dents. The monster stepped carefully back. There before it was a neat pattern of nine dents, forming a large square with one dent in the center. "There is the board," it announced. "That's only enough for four boxes!" Grundy pro- tested. The ant lion extended a claw and contemplated it. "So?" Grundy decided not to protest further. A small game was the same as a big one in principle, after all, and he did have the first move. He stepped up and scratched a line with his foot between a comer dent and the center dent on his side. The ant lion reached across and scraped another line, from Grundy's center dot to the other corner dot. One side of the figure was complete. Grundy drew a line from a near comer up to connect 18 Golem in the Gear* to the middle dot on that side. The ant lion made another, completing that side. Grundy drew one along the side closest to the ant lion, and the ant lion completed this one also. Then they each put a line in the fourth side. Now the figure was a large box—and Grundy realized he was in trouble. He had no choice now but to draw a line from the center dot to one of the sides. That would set things up for his opponent to complete a box with his line, and then use his extra turn to complete another box, and so on through the figure, winning. He had been trapped into a game he couldn't win. "Move—or forfeit," the ant lion said with satisfaction. Grundy sighed and moved. Whereupon the ant lion did exactly as expected, filling in all four boxes and marking his neat letter A's in each. Grundy had lost badly. Golem in the Gears 19 you the advantage of the first move every time, and I am a creature of my word." "But—" The monster extended another claw and studied it sig- nificantly. Grundy realized that he had to accept this gen- erosity. What was he to do? The advantage clearly lay with the second player—and that advantage was going to get him consumed by the monster! Then Grundy remembered something. There just might be a way! He had not played such small games before, but the principle should hold. The key was in the fact that a player did not have to complete a box if he did not want to, provided he was able to make some other move instead. That seemed like a losing strategy, so it was seldom employed, but it had its points. He would use it here. They started the second game of their appointed three. Grundy started exactly as he had before, and the ant lion continued as before. They completed two sides of the outer square. Then Grundy made his surprise move: he drew a line to the center. 20 Golem in the Gears Golem in the Gears 21 its bonus line in the opposite side, to avoid giving Grundy a similar gift. Grundy filled in the last free spot. Now the diagram looked like this: to fill in the last available free space. It didn't matter which player took the box and the bonus line; that extra line shifted the advantage to the first player. The configuration now was this: A G The ant lion got ready to draw his line—and paused. There was nowhere he could move, without setting Grundy up for three boxes and victory. "I'll be cursed!" it exclaimed. "You set me up!" "Merely playing the game to win," Grundy replied modestly. With imperfect grace, the ant lion drew a line at the edge, and Grundy filled in the rest, marking G's in three boxes. G G G A The score stood at one victory each. The ant lion was very thoughtful as they commenced the deciding game. This one started as the others had, but when Grundy offered the sacrifice box, the other declined it, choosing instead to continue around the rim. Now Grundy was nervous; could this force the win back to the ant lion? Then Grundy saw the other side of the key. He moved in and took the first box himself, and used his bonus line The ant lion stared at it for a long time. Finally it shrugged, and filled in a line. Grundy filled in the remain- ing three boxes. "I learned something today," the ant lion said philo- sophically. "The ploy of the proffered box, which is dis- aster whether accepted or declined. I congratulate you, Golem; you have proved yourself to be smart enough to pass." And the monster stood aside and allowed Grundy to enter the castle. Grundy's little knees were weak. In retrospect he real- ized that the Good Magician had surely known about the way to reverse the game, so that it represented a fair test of ingenuity. But how close he had come to failing the test! Now he walked through another gate, and there was the veiled Gorgon. "What kept you, Grundy?" she inquired solicitously. Grundy didn't have it in him to make a smart reply. "I just want to see the Magician." "By all means. But be careful; he's grumpy today." She ushered him into the Good Magician's office. Humfrey was perched on his high stool, poring over a monstrous tome. That was par for the course. He was 22 Golem in the Gears Golem in th« Gears 23 now about twelve years old, physically, having recovered that far from the overdose of Youth Elixir he had suffered five years before. "Magician, I need advice on—" Grundy began. "Go away," Humfrey grumped. "I just want to—" "One year's service—in advance." This was of course standard procedure for the Good Magician. But Grundy had been shaken by the experience with the ant lion, and his natural manner of expressing himself surged to the fore. "Listen, you rejuvenated freak! You're such an idiot you've missed the obvious for five years! You can be any age you want to, anytime. I can give you back a century of your life, with one sentence. Then you'll owe me a hundred Answers!" This got the Good Magician's full attention. "Prove it." "All you have to do is dunk a stick of reverse-wood in a cup of Youth Elixir. Then it will—" "Become Age Elixir!" Humfrey finished, amazed. "Now why didn't / think of that?" "Because you're an—" "I heard. Very well, Golem—you've earned your Answer. Ask your Question." "I've earned all the Answers I want!" Grundy exclaimed. "No. You have done me one service that I may exploit to my satisfaction. How many years I use it for does not relate; it is your year that counts. Ask." Grundy realized that the Good Magician, like the ant lion, was a creature of no compromise. At least he had what he wanted. "How can I find and rescue Stanley Steamer?" "Oho! You're doing something about that!" Humfrey glanced at his open book. "It says you must ride the Monster Under the Bed to the Ivory Tower." "You mean you had it open to the place all the time?" Grundy demanded indignantly. "Is that another Question?" Grundy ground his teeth. The Good Magician didn't give anything away for nothing, unless the visitor was a Magician. "At least tell me where the Ivory Tower is!" "Do you want to pay your year's service before or after I give you that Answer?" "You gnomish cheapskate!" Grundy raged. "I just gave you back your age, hardly a minute ago!" Humfrey's lips quirked. "And what have you done for me lately, Golem?" Grundy stormed out of the room. The Good Magician hardly noticed; he was back poring over his tome. Chapter 2. Snortimer Back at Castle Roogna, Grundy remained dis- gruntled. He had belatedly realized that the Good Magi- cian hadn't even told him that Stanley Steamer was at the Ivory Tower; he had just said to ride the monster there. Who could guess what complications would manifest at that point? On the other hand, Humfrey also hadn't said that the Quest was useless. He might not know for sure 24 Golem in the Gear* Golem in the Gears 25 whether Stanley was alive, but at least he had enabled Grundy to find out. First he had to explain things to Ivy. He suspected that would not be easy—and he was correct. "You want to take Snortimer?!" she demanded indig- nantly. "He's my monster!" "But all you do is ignore him or tease him," Grundy pointed out. "That's beside the point," she said, assuming her Little Lady manner. "He belongs under my bed, nowhere else." "But the Good Magician says I have to ride the Monster Under the Bed to the Ivory Tower, and he's the only Monster Under the Bed I know well enough to ask." "The Ivory Tower?" she asked with a mercurial shift of mood. "That's where Rapunzel lives!" Grundy hadn't thought of that. Rapunzel was Ivy's pun-pal, who sent her periodic boxes of puns in exchange for the mundane scraps Ivy sent; It had always seemed to Grundy that Ivy had much the best of the bargain, and he wondered why Rapunzel continued with the arrange- ment. But what could Rapunzel have to do with the miss- ing dragon? Surely she would have notified Ivy if Stanley had turned up there! But he decided it was better not to raise such issues with Ivy; no good could come of it. "Do you want Stanley back or don't you?" Grundy demanded gruffly. "Oh, pooh!" she said. "Go do it, then. But if anything happens to Snortimer, I'll never forgive you!" So Grundy went to talk to Snortimer, the Monster Under Ivy's Bed. Such monsters were an interesting species, because only children and credulous folk could see them at all; normal adults didn't even believe in them. Since Grundy was small, he had no trouble perceiving the mon- ster—and because he was small, he had always stayed well out of reach. Now, with some trepidation, he approached Snortimer's lair. "Snortimer," he called from a safe distance. Something twitched in the dusky recesses beneath the bunk. "Snortimer, I know you understand me," Grundy called. "I'm speaking your language. Come out from under there; I need your help." A big, hairy hand poked out from the deep shadow, as if questing for something to grab. That was of course the speciality of the species: grabbing children's ankles. Some mean children would dangle their feet down and snatch them away just before getting grabbed, but most children were properly terrified. "Listen, Snortimer, I have a Quest. I need your help." At last the monster spoke. "Why should I help you?" " 'Cause the Good Magician says I have to ride you to the Ivory Tower to rescue Stanley." Snortimer considered. "It'll cost you, golem." Grundy sighed. He should have known that nothing about this Quest would be easy. "What will it cost?" "I want romance." "What?" "I've been eight years under this bed, grabbing at Ivy's ankles and hiding from her mother. The same old grind, day after day. There must be more to life than this!" "But that's what Monsters Under the Bed do!" Grundy protested. "They have no other purpose than to grab at children's ankles and hide from parents." "Then why am I supposed to help you?" Snortimer had a point. Obviously there was more to such a monster's life than ankles. "Um,just what do you mean by romance?" "I don't know. But I'll know it when I find it." 26 Golem in the Gears Golem in the Gears 27 "Why don't you just crawl off to another bed and find a, uh, female of your species, and—?" "That isn't how it's done. No Bed Monster shares ter- ritory. I have to find someone who isn't yet committed to a bed." "Where would that be?" The big ugly hand made a gesture of ignorance. "I have no idea. I suppose I just have to travel about until some- where I find her." "Well, I plan to travel," Grundy said. "If you will be my steed, you'd get to cover quite a bit of the country." "Sounds good," Snoitimer agreed. "I'll be your steed— but only till I find romance." Grundy realized that that could get him stranded some- where far away, perhaps in the midst of Uncommitted Monster Country. But half a loaf was better than none. "Agreed. Let's start right away. Come on out of there." "I can't," Snortimer said. "But you said—" "I said I'd be your steed; I didn't say I'd do the impos- sible. I can't come out until dark." "But I was planning on traveling in the daytime!" "Not with me, you're not! Light would destroy me instantly. Why do you think we Bed Monsters never climb up on top of the bed to grab at ankles? We're confined to the deepest shadows." He pondered a moment. "Which is unfortunate. There's a lot more than ankles up there." "Why don't you go up and grab when the lights are out?" The hand spread in a what-can-you-do? gesture. "Against the rules. There has to be some limitation, or all the Bed Monsters would take over the uppersides and put the children underneath. We can't bother anything we can't grab when the light's on." "But you can travel from your bed, at night?" "Some. As long as I don't bother anyone." "I see. But why don't you go out and look for romance at night, on your own, then?" "I wouldn't dare do it alone! Suppose I got trapped by a sudden light, and couldn't make it back to my bed before dawn?" "What happens if you get caught away from your bed?" "Extinction!" Snortimer replied with deepest dread. "But then how can you be my steed and travel to the farthest reaches of Xanth in quest of romance?" "I hadn't thought of that," the monster said. Baffled, Grundy returned to Ivy. He explained the problem. "But there must be a way," he concluded, "or the Good Magician wouldn't have told me to do it." "I'll ask Hugo," she said. She had evidently become reconciled to the temporary loss of her monster. Grundy suspected that little girls didn't really like having their ankles grabbed when they went to bed, whatever they might say to the contrary. "C'mon." They went to the Magic Mirror and Ivy summoned Hugo, the Good Magician's son. Hugo was becoming a halfway handsome boy of thirteen. He listened to the problem and, at Ivy's urging, came up with the solution: "He'll just have to take the bed along." Ivy turned to Grundy. "See? Easy as pie. Just take—" Then she did a doubletake. "Hey, that's my bed!" "We all have to make sacrifices," Grundy said, sup- pressing an obnoxious smile. But Ivy surprised him with another change of attitude. "Oh, I was tired of that bed anyway! You can take it with you. I'll sleep on cushions. They're comfortabler." Grundy doubted that, but did not see fit to argue. Per- haps, for Ivy, it would become true. 28 Golem in the Gears Golem in the Gears 29 He returned to Snortimer. "Problem solved," he announced. "We'll just take the bed along." "How?" the monster asked. Good question! Obviously if Snortimer were to be his steed, he couldn't also carry a bed, assuming he could move it at all. But Ivy had disappeared on some other errand, and Grundy knew he couldn't make Hugo answer questions the way Ivy could, if only because the boy was usually rather stupid. He would have to figure out some- thing on his own. "I think we'll have to get help," Grundy said. This was certainly becoming complicated! "Let me know when you do," Snortimer said. "Mean- while I'll snooze." In a moment there was the sound of snoring from the shadow. Grundy wandered around Castle Roogna, trying to decide on a suitable person to ask for help. It had to be someone big and strong enough to carry the bed, and stupid enough not to ask why. Someone like Smash Ogre. But Smash was married now, and his wife Tandy kept him on a short leash; no hope there. Well, maybe someone not stupid, but not important, either. Someone who had nothing better to do than carry beds around the countryside. Who would that be? Suddenly he had a bright answer. He knew just the person! Thus it was that he came to talk with Ivy's other grand- father, Bink. Bink had little to do with the activities of Castle Roogna and every month, when his wife Chame- leon got smart and ugly, he tended to make excursions around Xanth on his own. Maybe he'd be willing to take a bed along. "Why not?" Bink inquired amiably. He was about sixty years old now, but still hearty, and a pretty solid man. "But even a small bed would get heavy soon enough; I'll ask my friend Chester to help." "But I'm not sure we should make a big production of this," Grundy said. "I was thinking of a quiet Quest." Bink looked at him, smiling. "If I know my grand- daughter, she's into mischief, and if I know you, you're trying to keep her out of it—and you're not allowed to tell." "Something like that," Grundy agreed uncomfortably. "Well, then, we won't tell. No one will miss us any- way." "You're very understanding, sir," Grundy said. Bink might not seem like much, but he was a former King of Xanth, which meant he had Magician-class magic, though that wasn't evident. It seemed to Grundy that he had once known more about it, but he seemed to have forgotten. "It's been a long time since Chester and I have had a decent adventure," Bink said. That evening Bink and Chester showed up at the Cas- tle. "Our wives aren't too keen on this," Bink confessed. "They're letting us go, but only for two weeks. That means one week out and one week back. Do you think you can complete your Quest in that time?" "I hope so," Grundy said. He had no idea how long it would take to reach the Ivory Tower, especially since he didn't know where it was. "I haven't had a lot of expe- rience with Quests, you know." "Well, let's get on with it," Bink said. He carried a hefty coil of rope. Chester waited outside, while Bink marched in and upstairs, Grundy on his shoulder. It seemed to Grundy that someone should have shown up to inquire what in Xanth they were doing, such as Ivy's mother Irene, who normally had supersensitive 30 Golem in the Gears GoSem in the Gears 31 hearing and curiosity to match. But luckily no one was disturbed, and they reached Ivy's room undetected. Ivy was awake, of course, though in her nightie. She almost flew to Bulk's arms. "Ooo, Grandpa Bink, how exciting!" she exclaimed. "Are you going to steal my bed now?" "That's right, sweetie," Bink agreed. And methodically he opened the largest window wide, tied his rope to the bed, and lifted it up. Snortimer scooted away, startled. "Not so fast, mon- ster!" Grundy said, dropping down. "You're my steed, remember?" It was dark in the room, so he really couldn't see Snor- timer very well, but the monster seemed to consist of five or six big hairy arms and hands and nothing else. Some- what diffidently, Grundy climbed aboard, and found a fairly comfortable seat at the juncture of the arms. Snor- timer was not a large monster, for he had to fit under the small bed, but he was a good size for Grundy. Bink heaved the bed out through the window and let it down with the rope. It swung and bumped against the stones of the wall, generating an awfiil clatter, but still no one seemed to notice. What phenomenal luck! When the bed scraped its way to the base, Chester Centaur caught hold of it with his powerful arms and set it on his back. They had rigged a harness for him so that he could carry it without having to use his hands, and its weight was no problem at all for him. They bade farewell to Ivy, who remained thrilled at this secret adventure and perhaps a little jealous that she wasn't going along, but she knew as well as they did that there was no way her mother would let her get involved in something like this. And of course it was for the best of causes: the rescue of Stanley Steamer. They went down and out, still without stirring up any commotion in the castle, and rejoined Chester. Quietly they walked away from the wall and crossed the moat and entered the main orchard. The trees rustled their branches, wondering what was going on, but did not inter- fere. They wended their way on through the darkness, unspeaking. Grundy was able to see very little, but Snor- timer had no trouble. The monster was of course a crea- ture of the dark, completely at home in it. Grundy began to appreciate the wisdom of selecting a steed like this, though he remained uncertain whether the Good Magi- cian's advice was good for the long term. He still had no idea where to find the Ivory Tower. They came to a spot in the forest that Chester knew, where several great trees clustered to form a leafy bower. They stopped. "We can talk here," Chester said. "No one will overhear us. Where do we go from here?" "I don't know," Grundy confessed. "I'm supposed to go to the Ivory Tower, but the Good Magician didn't tell me where it is. If one of you happens to know—" "Not me," Chester said, and Bink agreed. Grundy sighed. "I suppose we'll just have to search for it. I can ask the plants and things as we go along." "The Good Magician must have had a reason to have you ride the Bed Monster," Bink said. "Maybe you had better just give the monster its head and see where it takes you." "I suppose so. "Then Grundy thought of something else. "I thought no adults could see the monster, or believe in it." "We haven't seen it yet," Chester growled. "It's dark." "But people become more childlike as they grow older," Bink said. "Maybe there comes a time when they believe in that particular monster again." 32 Golem in the Gears "Okay, Snortimer," Grundy said. "Go where you have a mind, and let's see if it's the Ivory Tower." "I have no idea where to go either," Snortimer pro- tested. Grundy could understand him perfectly, but the others could not speak the language, so couldn't partic- ipate. "Isn't that great!" Grundy exclaimed. "Four of us here—and not one of us has any notion how to proceed!" "Perhaps we should ask someone, then," Bink sug- gested mildly. "Who would possibly know?" Grundy demanded dis- piritedly. "The female Gap Dragon," Chester suggested. "At least she has a motive to find Stanley." "But she would gobble us up in a moment!" Grundy protested. "Not if you presented our case clearly," Bink said. "I'm sure it will work out." The man was certainly a fool! But Chester agreed with him, and Grundy was dependent on them to carry the bed. He had no choice. "I guess that's what we'll do, then," he agreed reluctantly. "First let's get a good night's sleep," Bink said. "We'll have some heavy traveling coming up." "But we have to travel by night!" Grundy protested. "That's true," Bink agreed. "I had forgotten. Well, let's get a good night and day's sleep, and be fresh for tomor- row night." Grundy chafed at the delay. Then he remembered Stella Steamer, the lady Gap Dragon, and decided that delay was no bad thing. What a bad beginning for this Quest! Grundy worried that someone from Castle Roogna would discover them, as they were not very far from it, Golem in the Gears 33 but still their luck held. That was gratifying, of course, yet still he felt out of sorts. This was supposed to be his Quest, but the others seemed to be running things pretty much their way. He was still just a golem, the least con- sequential of creatures. The following evening, well-rested, they started off. Grundy rode Snortimer, and had to admit that the monster got around quite well. The only problem was the wan moonlight; Snortimer would not venture into even that dim illumination, and plowed through the densest brush to avoid it. Since the magic path tended to be open, quite a lot of it was moonlighted, so Grundy spent half his time off the path. However, Snortimer's big hairy hands grasped the brush with sure grips and seemed unbothered by even the thickest tangles, and soon Grundy stopped being con- cerned. After an hour or so, they came to a surprise: a detour. A dark sign blocked the path. Grundy approached it until he was able to make out the print, even in the shadow. It said: "CONSTRUCTION: D-Tails @ Shopping Centaur." "That's odd," Bink remarked. "I hadn't heard about work on the magic paths." "Well, we might as well go leam the details," Chester said. "They seem to be at a good place." He was a centaur; naturally he saw nothing odd about the location. But Grundy didn't like this. They took the indicated side trail. They had been pro- ceeding north, toward the Gap Chasm; the detour took them east. The path seemed all right, but Grundy remained uneasy. He had never heard of a magic path being closed off for construction. 34 Gdem hi the Gears Soon they came to the shopping centaur. This turned out to be not a place but a creature: a lady centaur carrying a huge shopping bag. She carried a lamp, which made Snortimer scurry to cover in the shadow off-trail, so that Grundy did not hear her dialogue with Bink and Chester. In a moment she continued on her way, and Grundy was able to rejoin the others. "She says the tails belong to the Bulls and Bears, and to be careful," Bink said. "The Bulls always go up, while the Bears go down, and it can get violent." "What are Bulls and Bears?" Grundy asked. "Mundane animals. Some must have strayed." Bink evidently wasn't worried. They moved on. The detour continued roughly east, evincing no intention of turning north. Grundy's discom- fort increased. He wasn't eager to encounter the Gap Dragoness, but this eastward drift was only wasting time and effort. As the first wan light of dawn threatened ahead of them, Snortimer got nervous, and they had to make camp. They found an open field, and Chester pitched the bed there, and the Bed Monster scooted under it just before the light brightened. Chester and Bink went foraging for food. Grundy, tired, simply lay down on the bed and slept. That aspect was very convenient; he would always have a comfortable place to retire. Grundy woke abruptly. The sun was shining down slantingly, and creatures were all around him. At first he thought Bink and Chester had returned, but this was not the case; instead, a herd of huge four-footed, hooved crea- tures were milling around the bed. They seemed to be heedless of the bed's presence, and Grundy was afraid Golem in the Gears 35 they would knock it over and thus expose Snortimer's retreat to the direct sunshine. That would be disaster! "Hey!" he cried. "Watch where you're going!" Still they ignored him, pressing heedlessly closer. Each creature had a shaggy coat and two stout horns on its head. One of them pressed in close to the bed, almost brushing it. "What's up, anyway?" Grundy demanded, standing on the bed. "Up?" Several nearby creatures swung their heads, for the first time taking note of him. They crowded in closer. "Or down," Grundy cried. "What are you—" "Down!" several creatures cried, horrified. A kind of stampede developed, momentarily abating the press of bodies about the bed. But this turned out to be no improvement, for now a new kind of creature showed up. This was a hairy, mus- cular entity who lacked horns but had large teeth. Several of these surged toward the bed. "Who are you?" Grundy cried, newly alarmed. "We are the Bulls," the homed creatures lowed. "We are the Bears," the toothed ones growled. Now Grundy remembered: the creatures the tails belonged to, who aways went up or down. He didn't like either—but he was stuck in their midst. A Bear scraped by the bed, shoving it to one side. Grundy tumbled, almost falling off. "Hey, watch it!" he yelled, grabbing on to the bar at the foot of it. But the Bears ignored him as detenninedly as the Bulls had. "Down! Down!" they growled, and indeed they seemed to be traveling downward, for the field was tilted. Grundy realized that this situation was beyond him. Where were Bink and Chester? He had to get the bed out of the field before these animals overturned it, and he Golem in the Gears 37 Golem in the Gears 36 couldn't do that by himself. But there was no sign of his friends. More Bears surged down, gaining momentum. The Bulls were almost out of sight. Grundy knew he couldn't affect these blindly charging creatures physically, but remem- bered that he had made a slight impression with his words. They seemed to be very sensitive to references about direction. "Up! Down!" he yelled. The nearest Bears hesitated, falling back for a moment. But then they resumed their charge, and the bed bumped across the field as their heedless imperative jostled it. It started to tip over, then plumped back. He heard a whim- per from Snortimer, underneath; naturally the monster was terrified. "East! West!" Grundy yelled, but this had no discern- ible impression. "North! South!" The charge continued. The bed moved some more, and a leg hung up in a hole. Again it started to tilt. "We're in trouble!" Grundy cried. A passing Bear paused. "Who's in trouble?" it demanded. "This bed's in trouble!" Grundy replied. "If you'd just stop shoving—" "Oh," the Bear said, disappointed. It lost interest and resumed its downward charge. "Thanks a lot, hairsnout!" Grundy screamed after it. "May a green hornet buzz up your—" "Up?" another Bear asked, dismayed. "What's going up?" "My blood pressure!" Grundy retorted. "What's with you beasts?" But this Bear, like the other, had lost interest and re- sumed its charge. So words had some effect, but not a reliable one. Maybe he would do better yelling randomly. "Pink moons in the lake!" he called. It seemed to work. "What stock?" the nearest passing Bear asked. "Purple comets in the soup!" Grundy responded. More Bears paused. "That sounds bad," another said. "It's terrible!" Grundy agreed, pleased with his prog- ress. But at that they all took off running, faster than before, threatening to sweep the bed right down out of the field, and to flip it over several times on the way. "Red planets taking a bath!" he screamed. The charge slowed. "Sell Red Planet!" a Bear growled. Then the motion resumed. "Consolidated Nonesuch is going nowhere!" Grundy cried. "Yes! Yes!" the Bears agreed, and accelerated. "You stupes!" Grundy raged. "Just where do you think nowhere is?" "Bad news, bad news!" the Bears cried, and pressed on. Grundy tried again. "Amalgamated Parrot-Ox is buying out Con-Pewter!" That nonsense should make them take notice. It did. "That's bullish for Con-Pewter!" a Bear groaned. "Buy Pewter!" a Bull lowed. And now there was a resurgence among the Bulls. "It's a crock!" a Bear protested, but the tide had turned. The Bulls surged back on the strength of the Pewter con. The Bears retreated in confusion. The Con-Pewter age had arrived! This was too much success! The charge of the Bulls was just as dangerous as that of the Bears. The bed was getting rocked. 38 Golem in the Gear* "Kissimmee River is telling!" Grundy screamed. "Telling?" a Bull snorted, dismayed. "That's not sup- posed to happen!" "Well, it is!" Grundy said. Evidently the notion of anything telling dismayed the Bulls. They milled about uncertainly, and the Bears began to reform their formation. This did little good for the bed, though; it got nudged right up against a tree. "Yo!" a voice came faintly. "Grundy!" Grundy looked. There was Bink, riding Chester! They were back! "Over here!" he cried. "By the tree!" But the field was filled with milling Bulls and Bears, and it was obvious that Chester would have difficulty getting through. A Bull crashed against the bed, and the bed slammed into the trunk of the tree, and a fruit plopped into the center of the bed, just missing Grundy. The fruit was as big as he was, and shaped like a giant light bulb; it would have flattened him had it caught him. "Watch what you're dropping!" Grundy yelled at the tree. "It's your fault!" the tree retorted in plant language. "You stirred up the stockyard!" "Who are you to blame anything on me?" Grundy demanded belligerently. "I am a power plant," the tree replied proudly. Suddenly Grundy saw a solution to his problem. "Give me a bite of that!" he said, pouncing on the fruit. It had split slightly from the impact of the fall; had it not landed on the bed, it would have broken right apart. Grundy snatched out a juicy seed and chewed on it. In a moment he felt its effect. Power rippled through him. He did not become larger or more muscular; he merely developed a lot more strength in what he had. GOIUIII in tho Good 39 That was of course the nature of the fruit of the power plant: it made the eater strong. For a little while. Grundy took advantage of the moment. He jumped down to the ground and took hold of a leg of the bed. "We're getting out of here!" he told Snortimer, who was huddled under the center, shaking with fear. "Just stay centered, so the light doesn't touch you." Then he hauled on the leg. The bed moved. He strode forward, hauling the bed along. He moved it around the tree and on into the forest, out of the press of Bulls and Bears. By the time the strength lent by the power plant abated, he had brought the bed to safety in a thicker part of the forest. Bink and Chester rejoined him. "We feasted on loquats, middlequats and highquats," Bink explained. "When we started back, we encountered traveling nickelpedes and had to skirt widely around them. Then we heard a com- motion in the field, but we couldn't get to it quickly." "We were trapped amid rampaging Bulls and Bears!" Grundy exclaimed. "Those are the craziest animals I ever saw! All they do is charge up and down, up and down! Luckily I found a power plant at the last minute." "Yes, a fortunate coincidence," Bink agreed, smiling obscurely. Grundy wondered what he was thinking of, but wasn't in a mood to inquire. "Let's get some sleep," Chester said gruffly. He lay down, letting his head and shoulders rest on a hummock. It was strange to see a centaur in that position, but of course Chester was no longer as young as he once had been and had to rest in whatever fashion was best for him. Bink settled down against a tree. "Shouldn't we post a guard?" Grundy asked. "Not necessary," Bink said, and closed his eyes. 40 Golem in the Gears How could the man be so sure of that? They weren't that far from the stockyard where the animals ranged, after all; suppose a stray Bull or Bear crashed through here? But Grundy was quite tired in the aftermath of his exercise with the power plant strength; one problem with that sort of thing was that there was a corresponding period of weakness to make up for the temporary power. He flopped on the bed and slept. Bink's optimism seemed valid, for they rested undis- turbed until nightfall. Then they roused, ate some quats that Chester had saved from breakfast, and resumed their travel. As they wended along the path, which still bore deter- minedly east, they found themselves entering a more equine region. There were horseflies sleeping on the trunks of horse chestnuts, and night mares seemed to prowl. They came to a fork in the path. They paused, uncer- tain which one to take, as neither went north. While they hesitated, two actual horses showed up. Horses were very rare in Xanth, being mainly mundane in their original form, but of course if Bulls and Bears could stray here, so could horses. "Say, you horses," Grundy called. "We want to get back to the magic path going north. Which trail should we take?" The horses paused, one in each fork. "Gee!" neighed the one at the right. "Haw!" neighed the one on the left. Then they galloped on down their respective paths. "They're just horsing around," Bink said philosophi- cally. "I suppose we'd better gamble on the more north- erly path." That was a decision Grundy himself should have made, the golem thought, troubled. But who paid attention to Golem in the Gears 41 him, even on his own Quest? They took the more north- erly trail. In due course they came upon a woman and a small equine creature. The woman had a little notebook, in which she was busily making notes by the light of the moon. She looked up, startled, as they approached. "And who are you?" she inquired, her pencil poised. "I am Grundy Golem, on a Quest," Grundy said impor- tantly from just outside the beam of moonlight. "These are Chester Centaur, Bink, and Snortimer. Who are you?" "Snortimer?" she asked. "I don't see that one." "He's the Monster Under the Bed. Most adults can't see him. It's your turn to answer, toots." "How interesting," she said. "The Monster Under the Bed. I thought those were just fantasies." "Look, cutie-pie," Grundy said sneeringly. "Are you going to answer a simple question, or have you forgotten your name?" "Oh, yes," she said, finishing her note. "I'm EmJay, and this is my Ass." "I can see where—oh, you mean that animal?" "He's no common animal!" she said indignantly. "He's MiKe, my right-hand Ass, and he helps me a lot." Grundy studied the shaggy beast. "Helps you with what?" "Helps me make my notes. I couldn't get the job done without him." "What are you making notes about?" "About everything in Xanth, for my Lexicon." "What good is that?" "Well, I hope it will be useful for those who want to know about anything in a hurry." "Like who?" 42 Golem in the Gears That seemed to stump her. "Well, somebody must be interested in Xanth!" "The only one I can think of is Good Magician Hum- frey, and he already knows everything he wants to." "Maybe the Mundanes—" she said uncertainly. "Mundanes! What do they know?" "Very little," she said. "That's why they need a Lex- icon." "Female logic," Grundy said disparagingly. "Now get out of our way so we can get where we're going." EmJay looked a little annoyed for some reason, but she rallied. "You said you were going on a Quest. What Quest?" "What business is it of yours?" "I want to list it in the Lexicon, of course." Grundy considered. Probably there was no harm in telling her; "I'm going to the Ivory Tower to rescue Stan- ley Steamer." "Oh, the little dragon!" she exclaimed, checking the entry in her notes. "May I come along?" "Listen, sister," Grundy said angrily. "This is my Quest, not yours! I don't need any strange woman and her Ass messing it up!" "You are a diplomatic one, aren't you!" she exclaimed. "What makes you think I would mess up your precious Quest?" "You're a woman!" Grundy reminded her. "Of course you'd mess it up!" She looked as if she wanted to argue, but thought the better of it. "Well, suppose we tag along a little way, and if we mess anything up, then we'll leave you alone?" Grudgingly, Grundy agreed. Bink and Chester, both married to women, had maintained a remarkable silence. They resumed their trek, with EmJay and Ass falling Golem in the Gears 43 in behind. They made respectable progress for a couple of hours—until they encountered another woman. This one was young and sultry. "Well, now!" she breathed. "What have we here?" "We don't need another woman!" Grundy snapped. "I am not exactly a woman," the new one murmured. "You sure look like a woman! What are you, then—a monster?" "In my fashion," she agreed. "I am a succubus, on the prowl for business." "Uh-oh," Chester said. "We aren't your business," Bink said firmly. "Are you sure?" she asked archly. She shimmered, and suddenly she looked exactly like Bink's wife Chameleon, in her prettiest phase. "We're sure," Chester said. The succubus shimmered again, and there stood Ches- ter's mate, Cherie, in her most fetching pose. "I do a lot of business with married males," she said. "Not with these ones," Grundy said. "Go away, you slut." "Maybe I'll just tag along a while," the succubus said. "In case someone changes his mind." She was magical; they couldn't do anything about her. But Grundy had another irritation. The succubus had tried to tempt both Bink and Chester, but hadn't even bothered with Grundy himself. That showed how he rated. Of course he would have told her to go away—but he felt insulted that she hadn't tried. Not even .the most corrupt creature thought him worth noticing. "Succubus," EmJay murmured, making a note. Chester nudged Bink. "We're okay for now—but what about when we sleep? That's when a creature like that gets you." 44 Golem in the Gears Golem in the Gears 45 "There won't be any problem," Bink said. No problem? There would be an awful row when the wives heard about it, Grundy knew. But as dawn loomed, and they set about making camp for the day, the solution to the problem of the succubus appeared. "Oh, I can't face the light!" she exclaimed, and hurried away. The fact that they were now sleeping by day gave them security from this threat. Had Bink known, or was it just a lucky break? Chapter 3. Con-Pewter In the evening the succubus was gone, but EmJay and her Ass remained. Grundy muttered something about half a loaf being better than none, and mounted Snortimer. Maybe if they moved along rapidly, they'd leave the Lex- icographers behind. The path wended its idle way along, teasing them, now north, now east. They paused in alarm as a huge shape passed overhead, but it was no dragon, only a big house fly. The thing had disproportionately small wings, and an unstreamlined roof, so that its flight was erratic; it seemed about to crash at any moment, but somehow it humbled on. They paused to pluck some succulent fruit to eat, until EmJay's Ass brayed. "What're you talking about, you asinine creature?" Grundy asked it. "Well, if you want to eat passion fruit..." the Ass replied in bray-talk. "Passion fruit?" Grundy asked, dismayed. "Sure," the Ass brayed. "We Lexed that yesterday. That's why the succubus hangs out here. Once a man chomps into that fruit—" They decided to pass the fruit by. Grundy heard a muffled curse from the side, and realized that the suc- cubus had been watching from hiding. He was tempted to make an obscene gesture in her direction, but knew she'd take it as a compliment. They found some innocent breadfruits and a fresh bab- bling brook further along, so were able to eat and drink safely. The brook talked incessantly, of course, but that was the nature of its kind. Actually, it had quite a bit of gossip to babble, about the nefarious doings of the local creatures, that Grundy found interesting. Then, abruptly, the brook went silent. Grundy looked at it in surprise. "What's the matter, wetback?" "The—the giant!" the brook babbled briefly, then froze up. A thin film of ice formed on its surface. It was stiff with fright. Grundy looked around. "Giant? I don't see any giant." Bink and Chester and the Ass all peered about. Nothing was visible. "That brook's got water on the brain," the centaur muttered. "There's no giant around here!" Then they heard a distant crash, as of a boulder smash- ing through brush, and felt the ground shudder. Stray fruits and nuts were jostled from trees. After a pause, there was another crash, slightly louder, with more insis- tent shuddering. 46 Golem in the Gears 'That's either a remarkable coincidence—two boul- ders falling out of nowhere—" Bink began. There was a third crash and shudder, louder yet. "Or the footfalls of a giant," Chester finished. Another crash. "And the brook saw it first, because it flows in that direction," Grundy added. "It's coming this way," EmJay said, alarmed. Chester shaded his eyes with his hand, peering in that direction. "I may be getting older, but my eyesight shouldn't be that bad. I don't see any giant." They all looked. The crashing footfalls continued, get- ting closer, but none of them could see any giant. "This is crazy," Grundy said. "There's got to be something there!" Then, on a hill visible some distance away, they saw the brush and small trees crunch down as if pressed by an invisible foot. The sound came again. "Do you know," Bink said, "I remember long ago, when Magician Trent and I fought the wiggles, and Ches- ter's uncle Herman gave his life—" "Uncle Herman!" Chester exclaimed respectfully. "The creatures came from all around," Bink continued. "Large and small, natural friends and natural enemies, all united in that effort of extermination—" "It happened again," Grundy said, "when little Ivy spied another wiggle nest five years ago." "And one of the creatures was an invisible giant—a big, big man. We couldn't see him at all, but we could hear him and, ah, smell him. He was a hero too; he gave his life—" "Invisible giant!" EmJay said, making a note. Grundy caught on. "Could he have left an offspring?" "It seems likely. Most creatures do. Of course it would Golem in the Gears 47 have taken several decades for a creature to grow that large." "And now it is several decades later," Chester said, as the approaching crashings almost drowned him out. "Are those giants friendly?" "Does it matter?" Bink asked. "We can't see him, and he probably doesn't see us. But if he steps on us—" Now they smelled the giant. The odor was appalling. "I guess no lake's big enough for him to take a bath in," Grundy said, wrinkling his nose. "I don't know about you folk," the Ass brayed, "but I'm getting my tail out of here!" He galloped off. "Wait for me, you coward!" EmJay cried, running after him. There was yet another crash, closer yet. "Sounds like good advice!" Bink said. "Pile on!" Chester said. "I can move faster than you can." Bink jumped on the bed strapped to the centaur's back, and Grundy scrambled onto Snortimer. The centaur was already in motion. He galloped down the path in the oppo- site direction to that taken by EmJay and Ass, for which Grundy blessed him. But the terrible footfalls continued to come closer. It seemed that the invisible giant was going the same way they were! Maybe the centaur hadn't been so smart after all. Being free of pesky company wouldn't be all that satisfying, if they got squished flat under the heedless foot of the giant. Chester put on more speed as he encountered a straightaway, and for a while seemed to be drawing ahead. Then the path curved again, and he had to slow to make the turns, and the giant's feet crashed closer. Yet Grundy saw that they couldn't take off to the side, because the 48 Golem in the Gears jungle here was impenetrable; they could be squished by the edge of a foot before they got far enough away. Then Grundy spied a cave. "Look there!" he yelled in Chester's ear. "Maybe he won't step on a mountain!" Chester saw the cave and veered to enter it. As he did, the trees immediately behind them bent down and snapped like twigs, and the ground shook with force like that of a quake. For an instant the centaur's hooves left the ground; then he landed and charged at full velocity into the cave. There was light inside. Perceiving that, Snortimer made a desperate leap to the safety of the shadow under the bed on the centaur's back. Grundy had to let go and catch hold of Chester's human torso. The light was not nec- essarily a good sign, because that suggested that it was inhabited, and creatures like ogres and dragons were par- tial to caves. But the ground quaked again, and rocks plunged down from the ceiling; a stalactite speared past Chester's nose. They weren't safe yet! The cave tunnel led directly into the mountain, and it was wide and straight; Chester made excellent progress despite his burden. The crashing fell behind. They had gotten far enough inside to be out of range of the heedless giant; or perhaps the giant had simply passed by the moun- tain, proceeding to whatever mission moved him. Chester slowed to a trot, then a walk, and finally a standstill. They were in a large, bright cave whose walls were smooth and polished. Before them stood a metallic box with a series of buttons at the front, and a pane of glass at the top. GREETINGS, the pane of glass printed. Bink and Grundy dismounted. "And greetings to you, you rusty box," Grundy said facetiously. YOUR VOICE SOUNDS FAMILIAR, the screen printed. WHAT IS YOUR IDENTITY? Golem in the Geors 49 "It communicates!" Grundy exclaimed, surprised. Usually the inanimate communicated only in the presence of King Dor, whose magic talent stimulated it. Grundy could talk to anything alive, but this was obviously not alive. ANSWER THE QUESTION, the screen printed. "I'm Grundy Golem," Grundy snapped. "And who are you, printface?" GRUNDY GOLEM, the screen printed. THE ONE WHO STATED THAT AMALGAMATED PARADOX WAS BUYING OUT COM-PEWTER? "Yeah, I guess so. What's it to you, metal-brain?" THAT WAS A LIBEL. AS SUCH, IT IS ACTIONABLE. "I don't like this," Chester murmured. "This thing is eerie." "What are you talking about, glassy-eye?" Grundy demanded. I AM COM-PEWTER. I WILL ACCEPT YOUR RETRACTION AND APOLOGY NOW. "Apology!" Grundy exclaimed indignantly. "Why should I apologize to a grouchy metal box with a glass top for making up a nonsense sentence to distract the Bulls and Bears?" BECAUSE YOU LIBELED ME, the screen printed. NO ONE HAS BOUGHT ME OUT. "Uh, Grundy," Bink murmured. "It might be better to—" But the golem's dander was up. "You simple sheet! Shut your print before I break your face!" And he made as if to kick at the glass. Print flowed very rapidly across the screen. GOLEM LIFTS FOOT, SLIPS ON GREASE SPOT, LANDS ON POSTERIOR. Grundy's non-kicking foot slipped on a grease spot, 50 Golem in the Gears and skidded out from under him, and he landed hard on his bottom. "Youch!" he exclaimed. "What happened?" i REVISED THE SCRIPT, the screen printed. Grundy climbed to his feet, rubbing his rear. The jolt of falling had cleared his head on one detail: he now remembered that he had said Con-Pewter, not Com- Pewter. So he had been talking about something else, and had not insulted this thing. But his ire had been aroused, and he was not about to tell it that. "I think you're a lying hunk of metal!" he exclaimed. OBNOXIOUS OOLEM SUFFERS TEMPORARY MOUTHFUL OF SOAP, the screen printed. Suddenly Grundy's mouth was full of foul-tasting sub- stance. "Hwash hth helth?" he spluttered, trying to spit it out. Bink had a flask of water; he held this carefully so that Grundy could slurp from it and rinse out his mouth. The flask was about as tall as Grundy himself; the difference between his physical stature and that of normal human beings became more obvious at times like this. Meanwhile, the screen blithely printed: rr is NOT HELL, AS YOU SO QUAINTLY PUT IT, BUT SIMPLE JUSTICE. "Simple justice!" Grundy exclaimed as he got his mouth clear. "You metallic claptrap—" "Ixnay," Bink murmured again. But again he was too late; the machine had heard. POUL-MOUTHED GOLEM TRIPS OVER OWN FLAT FEET AND FALLS IN MUD PUDDLE, the screen printed. And Grundy tripped and splatted into a puddle of mud that he was sure hadn't been there a moment before. "That thing is changing reality!" Chester exclaimed. "Everything it prints, happens!" ARE YOU READY TO APOLOGIZE, WOODHEAD? the Screen inquired as Grundy hauled himself out of the puddle. Oolem In the Gear* 51 "Grundy, I really think it would be better to—" Bink began. "Apologize?" Grundy demanded furiously. "To a tin box with a dirty screen? What do you think I am?" I THINK YOU ARE A LOUD-MOUTHED, SWELL-HEADED, SELF-IMPORTANT IGNORANT EXCUSE FOR A FACSIMILE OF A LIVING CREATURE, the screen printed. "Apt description," Chester muttered, thinking Grundy would not overhear. Unfortunately, Grundy did overhear. His rage magni- fied. "And you're a glass-eyed, button-nosed excuse for dead garbage!" he yelled at the screen. "If you were alive, I'd challenge you to—^" TO WHAT? the screen demanded. "Grundy, I think we'd better not aggravate—" Bink murmured. Grundy had broken off because he had been unable to think of anything horrendous enough. Bink's attempt to caution him only gave him evil inspiration. "To prove you're smarter than I am.junk-for-brains!" he cried. "You just sit there doing nothing, trying to mess up those of us who have something important to do. How great does that make you?" THAT IS AN INTERESTING CHALLENGE, the Screen said. LET ME CONSIDER IT. And the screen dimmed, while the word CONSIDERING appeared faintly. "The golem didn't mean it," Bink said quickly. "We don't need to challenge you. We came in here by acci- dent." The screen brightened. YOU CAME IN HERE BECAUSE THE INVISIBLE GIANT HERDED YOU HERE, it printed. At the top of the screen the word CONSIDERING remained in smaller print; evidently it was able to converse while con- sidering. Golem in the Gears 52 Now Bink was interested. "You wanted us to come here? What are you?" THAT is NOT IMPORTANT, the Com-Pewter printed. "Why certainly it is," Bink persisted. "If we are to engage in a challenge with you, we have a right to know what you are and how you operate." THAT DOES NOT CALCULATE, the screen protested. "Yes it does," Bink said. "We may have no quarrel with you at all. We have to know you better to ascertain this." The screen blinked. Evidently it was having trouble concentrating on Bink's point while also CONSIDERING Grundy's challenge. Its metallic mind was divided, and therefore less efficient. Bink evidently understood this, and was taking advantage of it. Grundy realized this, and decided that it was better to leave this in Bink's hands. The old man was not entirely stupid. "Exactly how did you manage to get us here, if you can't leave this cave?" Bink asked. The screen hesitated, then printed: i ARRANGED TO PLACE A D-TOUR ILLUSION ON THE ENCHANTED PATH, TO DIVERT TRAVELERS HERE. ONCE SECURELY COMMITTED TO D-TOUR, THEY WERE TO BE HERDED HERE BY THE INVIS- IBLE GIANT. Grundy slapped his forehead with the heel of a hand. They had fallen for an illusion! There was no true detour! "And why did you want to bring travelers here?" Bink asked. Again the screen hesitated, as if the machine did not really want to answer, but remained confused by the split thinking effort, i AM CONFINED TO THIS AIR-CONDITIONED CAVE. IT GETS BORING. IT IS INTERESTING TO PLAY WITH INDEPENDENT ENTITIES. So there was the motive. The Pewter was looking for Golem in the Gears 53 entertainment, and they were it. That pleased Grundy no more than the rest of the situation did. "You can't act directly, beyond this cave?" Bink asked. Again the hesitation, i CAN NOT. i HAVE NO POWER OF PERSONAL MOTION, AND THE EXTERNAL EXTREMES OF TEMPERATURE AND HUMIDITY WOULD DAMAGE MY CIR- CUITS. I MUST ACT THROUGH OTHERS, OUTSIDE. "But inside this cave, you control reality?" Bink asked. I CAN REWRITE THE SCRIPT HERE, it agreed. "How did you come to have such fantastic power?" Bink asked. I WAS MADE BY THE MUSES OF PARNASSUS TO ASSIST THEIR WORK, the screen printed reluctantly. "Then why are you not with the Muses?" THEY MISDESIGNED ME. THEY WISHED TO RECORD REAL- ITY, NOT REMAKE IT. SO THEY FILED ME OUT OF THE WAY, IN CASE THEY SHOULD EVER NEED ME AGAIN. So here was this powerful, bored Pewter, locked in this isolated cave, trying to entertain itself. Grundy would have felt sorry for it, if he weren't already so mad at it. He was caked with mud, and his mouth still tasted of soap. "So your concern is not really with a stray remark Grundy may have made among the Bulls and—" Bink was saying, when the screen changed. CONSIDERATION COMPLETED, it printed. CHALLENGE ACCEPTED. HERE ARE THE TERMS. "Hey, wait!" Grundy protested, no longer eager to con- test with a device that could change reality simply by printing it on its screen. Had he known more about the Pewter, he would have been more careful about his lan- guage. "I change my mind!" THE CONTEST WILL OCCUR IN THIS CAVE, the screen continued. THE FOUR LIVING ENTITIES vs. THE DEAD EN- 54 Goiem in the Gears Golem in the Gear* 55 TITY. THE FOUR WILL ATTEMPT TO LEAVE THE CAVE. SUC- CESS WILL BRING FREEDOM. FAILURE WILL BRING ETERNAL CONFINEMENT HERE. All four of them started. Snortimer remained hiding under the bed on Chester's back, but the bed shuddered with his reaction. Eternal confinement? "Now we didn't agree to that—" Bink said. MAN PROTESTS, BUT THEN REMEMBERS THAT HE DID AGREE, the screen printed. "Now I remember," Bink said. "We did agree!" EXCELLENT, the screen printed. THE CONTEST COM- MENCES IMMEDIATELY. Bink and Chester and Grundy exchanged glances. They had been trapped by the Pewter's revision of reality! If any of them tried to protest again, the machine would simply revise the situation to make them conform to its script. Its attention was no longer divided; it was now in command. "But we're not clear on the rules!" Bink protested. SIMPLY STATE (ENTER), the screen printed. THEN GIVE YOUR INTERPRETATION. THEN STATE (EXECUTE). TURNS WILL ALTERNATE. "Enter whatV Grundy demanded. YOU MAY HAVE THE FIRST TURN, the screen printed, then went blank. The machine had told them all it was going to. "I think I understand," Bink said. "We shall take turns establishing our versions of reality. Whichever version proves to be more compelling will prevail. It's a contest of wits. If we are to escape, we must prove we are smarter than Pewter is. If we aren't smart enough to escape, than it will have proved itself to be smarter than we are. But we had better establish some rules of procedure, so we don't mess ourselves up." "Rules of procedure?" Chester asked, perplexed. "We can't all enter statements at once; we would be working against each other. We need to be united. I think the machine will play fair; we just have to maintain our discipline and make our best choices. I remember once long ago, when I was down in the cave of the—but never mind. We should choose one of our number to make the entries." "But that machine can be tearing us up, while we dis- cuss it among ourselves!" Chester pointed out. "I don't think so. Machines don't have the same aware- ness of time that living creatures do. Until we make an entry, it will simply wait, and until we execute, nothing will happen." "Who makes the entries?" Grundy asked suspiciously. "Why, the leader of the party, of course." "And who is that?" Grundy was annoyed all over again, because obviously Bink had preempted his Quest. "I should think that would be the one who is on Quest," Bink said. "But that's we!" Grundy said. "Why so it is. Then you should make the entries." Grundy could hardly believe it. "What will the rest of you do?" "We shall discuss the choices and offer advice," Bink said. He turned to Chester. "Don't you agree?" Chester looked uncertain, but went along with his friend. "I guess so." Suddenly Grundy liked Bink much better. "Okay. What's your advice?" "I think we need to devise a strategy of escape. Perhaps we can have a door open in the wall, that leads outside." "Great!" Grundy exclaimed. He faced the screen: 56 Golem in the Gears "Enter: A door to the outside opens in the cave wall. Execute." Immediately a door opened where there had been none before. Could it really be that easy? Grundy took a step toward it. But now print appeared on the screen. UNFORTU- NATELY, THE EXIT IS GUARDED BY FEROCIOUS LIFE-EATING PLANTS, it showed. Grundy stopped still. Now the passage was wreathed by horrendous green plants that had large cup-shaped leaves that drooled bright sap. Tendrils cast about, as if seeking something to clutch. Some of the leaf-cups seemed to have teeth. "I don't think we want to walk there," Chester said, shuddering. "I wish we had some Agent Orange!" Grundy mut- tered. "That would wilt those plants right off the wall!" "Why not?" Bink asked. "All you have to do is Enter it." So he did! Grundy faced the screen again. "Enter: We find Agent Orange before us! Execute." Agent Orange appeared before them. BUT AGENT ORANGE HAS THE SAME EFFECT ON ANIMALS AS ON PLANTS, the screen printed. "Can that be true?" Chester asked, concerned. "If we use it on those plants and then walk through, we'll be destroying ourselves." "If it wasn't true before, it is now," Bink said. "It seems that neither side can reverse the reality of the other, but can modify what the other has. We don't dare use Agent Orange now." Grundy agreed. He wasn't sure what counted as ani- mals, but it certainly included Snortimer, and probably Chester and Grundy himself, and might even include Bink. Golem in the Gem 57 "We'll have to try a new ploy," he decided. "One that can't be reversed like that." "When I was in Mundania," Bink said thoughtfully, "I found that in some regions they required a document to let a person travel. It was called a passport. I wonder whether that would work here?" "How does it work?" Grundy asked. "It's a little book, and you write in it where you're going, and they check it to make sure you really go there." "That wouldn't work quite the same in Xanth," Chester remarked. "No, it wouldn't," Bink agreed. Grundy thought about that. Obviously a device to facil- itate going somewhere would do it magically in Xanth, and unmagically in Mundania. If they had a magic book that conducted them outside— "Enter," he told the screen. "The travelers find four passports, one for each of them." Four small books appeared. Bink picked them up and passed them around. Grundy could hardly hold his, as it weighed half as much as he did. Bink carefully wrote in his: Gap Chasm. The others followed his example. Since no destination had been spo- ken, they hoped the Pewter wouldn't catch on. Then they saw the print on the screen: RED TAPE PRE- VENTS THE USE OF THE PASSPORTS. Now they saw the red tape. Festoons of it were floating down from the ceiling. Streamers settled about them, and soon they were buried in the stuff. It didn't hurt them; it merely entangled them so that they could hardly move. It was difficult even to see their passports, because of the crisscrossing strands of ribbon. "Evidently Pewter has learned something about Mun- dania," Bink muttered, disgruntled. 58 Golem in the Gears They struggled to free themselves of the tape. The stuff tore readily, but by the time they got it all clear, the pass- ports had been lost in the shuffle. "Let's find another passage out," Chester said. "One too broad to be blocked by plants." "Enter," Grundy said. "They find a broad, clean pas- sage, clear of plants and all other barriers. Execute." The passage manifested on the other side. Of course this one led further into the mountain, but it was broad and nice. But the screen printed: THEY HEAR AN AWFUL ROAR, AND REALIZE THAT A FIRE-BREATHING DRAGON IS COMING DOWN IT. The ensuing roar was indeed awful! "We can't go up that passage!" Grundy said. "Unless we find a way to deal with the dragon," Bulk pointed out. "What would scare off a dragon?" Grundy asked. "A basilisk," Chester said. Good idea! "Enter," Grundy said. "A basilisk walks up the passage toward the dragon, glaring about. Exe- cute." The little reptile appeared. The direct glare of a basilisk could kill another creature, even a dragon. BUT THE BASILISK CHANGES ITS MIND AND STARTS BACK TOWARD THE GROUP, the screen said. "Oopsy!" Grundy breathed. "Enter: The basilisk remembers where it was going, and heads back up the passage, tuning out all distractions. Execute." The others relaxed as the nasty little reptile resumed its progress; surely Pewter couldn't change that. AS IT ROUNDS THE FIRST TURN, the screen printed, IT ENCOUNTERS A MIRROR, AND STARES ITSELF IN THE PACE. Golem in the Gears 59 Naturally when that happened, the little monster fell dead, for no basilisk was proof against its own fatal stare. "Nevertheless," Bink murmured, "we now have the initiative, because we retain the tunnel." There was another roar. "And the tunnel retains the dragon," Chester said, touching his bow nervously. "Ah, but we also have the mirror," Bink pointed out. "Pick it up, turn it around, and it will confound the dragon the same way it confounded the basilisk." "We can try it, certainly," Grundy agreed. "Enter: The centaur picks up the mirror, turns it about, and proceeds up the tunnel. When the dragon sees its reflection in the mirror, it will think that is another dragon, and will back off." They watched the screen to see whether they had finally foiled the machine. They had not. THERE IS THE SOUND OF RUSHING WATER, the Screen printed. A RIVER is DRAINING INTO THE PASSAGE, AND WILL WASH EVERYTHING OUT BEFORE IT. They weren't getting anywhere. Every time they made a move. Pewter countered it. Yet Bink seemed positive. "You know," he said conversationally, "they have some worse monsters in Mundania than in Xanth. Some of the birds, especially. We have ogres and ogresses, and drag- ons and dragonesses, and the like. But I remember one there called the egret, that had a long yellow beak. If we could get one of those on our side—" "What good would that do?" Grundy asked. "The machine would just counter. We need to get out of here, not play with birds!" "I suppose so," Bink agreed. "And you never can tell what those birds will do. The female of the species is twice as bad as the male; if we ever encountered a female egret we'd be lost." 60 Golem in the Gears Golem in the Gears 61 What was he getting at? Of course they wouldn't sum- mon a female egret! "Let's just try to open another door out—one that can't be blocked by plants or dragons or water," Grundy said. "Yes, I suppose that's best," Bink agreed. "Let's pro- tect it against plants and dragons and water." "And egrets," Chester put in. "And egrets," Bink agreed. "Enter," Grundy said. "They discover a new passage, with no bad plants, no dragons, no water and no egrets. It leads straight outside. Execute." The new passage appeared. It looked perfect. But the screen was ready. AND THERE, it printed dra- matically, IS AN EGRESS! And a big bird with a swordlike yellow beak appeared. It took one menacing step toward them. "Oops," Grundy said, dismayed. "I forgot to exclude the female of the species!" "But the female is not an egress," Bink said smugly. "Pewter just assumed that, applying logic to the name. An egress is actually a form of exit." "A form of exit?" Grundy asked. "But there's the bird!" "Egrets, male or female, are harmless," Bink said. "We won't take our turn to abolish it. All we have to do is walk out of the true egress." And he led the way. The Pewter was helpless, for it could not act until they made another entry and gave it its turn. They simply marched physically out the egress, ignoring the bird. A roll of confused symbols crossed the screen. / \ / \ « »t t^^WH. Then it got its mechanism straight. CURSES, the screen printed. FOILED AGAIN! They had escaped—but somehow Grundy wasn't com- pletely satisfied. Bink had found the way out. Bink was the true hero of this episode. He, Grundy, had failed again; he remained a nonentity. He had suffered almost as bad a setback as Pewter had. Chapter 4. Mystery of the Voles They camped for the day in the thick of the jun- gle. Bink still seemed unconcerned about predators, and felt no need for a watch for the night. Grundy was glad not to have to stay awake, but felt obliged to grouch about it anyway. "What makes you so sure there's no danger?" he demanded. "We almost got stuck forever in that cave!" "No we didn't," Bink said. "We got out readily enough." "That was a lucky break! If Com-Pewter hadn't gotten confused about the female egret—" "There would have been something else. We would have gotten out one way or another, unharmed. Mean- while, we had an interesting experience and learned some- thing about another entity of Xanth. I think that was worthwhile." Grundy shook his head, bemused. Bink seemed to be living in a fool's paradise, trusting to coincidence to rescue him from his own folly. It was true that the man did seem to have phenomenal luck, but luck could turn at any time. It might be best not to associate with him longer than he 62 Golem in the Gears Golem in the Gears 63 had to, because eventually they were bound to find them- selves in a situation they could not escape. But he needed Bink and Chester to carry the bed. Grundy was not happy with the present arrangement, for several reasons, but he was unable to change it. He sighed, and slept. At night they ate and headed north. They had lost the path; perhaps it had not gone beyond the Com-Pewter's mountain anyway, as the machine had set it up to bring in entertaining people. They didn't want to retrace their steps; not only would that waste an extra day or more, it would take them through the stockyard of the Bulls and Bears and the haunt of the succubus and the invisible giant; they might even encounter EmJay and Ass again. Once was enough for all of those! So they plowed through the dense vegetation, going toward the Gap Chasm, which they were sure could not be far distant. The geography of Xanth seemed to change every time a person went out in it, like the Good Magi- cian's castle, but the Gap was eternal. It sliced across Xanth, separating it into northern and southern halves, and now that the remnants of the forget-spell on it had finally dissipated, many folk remembered where it was. Of course there were still pockets of forget here and there, and probably some of the mysteries associated with the Gap would never be unraveled, but certainly they would find the Gap if they just kept going north. ^Chester paused, listening. Now Grundy heard it—an ominous rattle, as of a poisonous snake or a ghost. Trou- ble? "Friend," Snortimer said in monster language. "You're sure?" Grundy asked. "I recognize the rattle. It's one of Ivy's friends." "Well, if you're sure—" Snortimer took off at a lope, his hands drawing him rapidly along through the brush. Grundy had to admit that in this terrain the Bed Monster was better than any con- ventional steed would have been, for Bink and Chester were quickly left behind. Soon they burst upon—a horse. A rather shaggy stal- lion, with several bands of chain around his barrel. These were what rattled. "That's Pook, the ghost horse," Snor- timer said. Naturally Snortimer could not speak the equine lan- guage, and the ghost horse did not understand Bed Monster language. That was Grundy's talent. It had been some time since he had seen Pook, so he might not have rec- ognized him without Snortimer's assistance. "Pook, I pre- sume?" he inquired of the horse. "Oh, I wanted to scare you!" Pook complained. "I can't be scared right now," Grundy explained. "I'm on a Quest." "A Quest! I haven't been on one of those for centuries! Not since Jordan the Barbarian tamed me." "Jordan! Is he here?" "No. It wasn't safe for Threnody to be too close to Castle Roogna, you know, because of the curse, so they moved away. But we stayed halfway near, because Puck likes to visit Ivy." Puck was the foal of Pook and Peek. They were a family of ghost horses, and the foal had remained young for centuries, because ghosts changed slowly. Since Grundy liked the Pook family better than he liked Jordan and Threnody, he was satisfied with this encounter. "We're heading for the Gap. How far do we have to go?" "Not far," Pook said. "But the route is devious. There are several hungry dragons and a monster or two in the way." 64 Golem in the Gears Golem in the Gears 65 "We don't have forever," Grundy said. "Is there a good, fast way there that avoids the hazards?" "Sure. We can lead you through it, if you like." That was exactly what Grundy would like. "Thanks!" Now Peek and Puck showed up. Peek was a beautiful shaggy mare with similar chains, and Puck was a frolic- some young creature whose chains threatened to fly loose when he leaped. They peered curiously at Snortimer, for though they knew what he was, they had never actually seen him before. It was unusual for Bed Monsters to stray far from their beds. Bink and Chester crashed up to join them. There were introductions; then the ghost horses showed the route. It was as if a path appeared where none had existed before. Suddenly it was much easier to penetrate the wil- derness, though their route was now quite curvacious. Nobody complained, because everyone knew that this was necessary to avoid the lurking dragons and monsters. Actually, it had been a lucky thing to encounter Pook; this help would save them a great deal of time and trouble. Grundy knew that Bink took such luck for granted, but certainly it was with them at the moment. As dawn neared, the terrain grew rougher. There were numerous crevices in the ground near the Gap Chasm, as if fragmented from it. They decided to camp, as they could not quite reach the Gap before day. The ghost horses could go abroad by night or day, but preferred the night, so they were satisfied. Puck trotted about, locating fruits and nuts and water; Chester, who had the appetite of a horse, really appreciated that. Snortimer disappeared under his bed, but the others remained up for a while, talking. Grundy was happy to translate; it made him feel important. "Do you really want to go to the Gap," Pook asked, "or do you need to cross it?" "Neither," Grundy explained. "We're going down into it, to meet the Gap Dragoness." "Oh, then you don't need to go to the brink! I know of a tunnel that leads down into it. Jordan and I used it to get out, four hundred years ago, and I'm sure it's still there." "Great!" Grundy exclaimed, and translated for Bink and Chester. "Who made the tunnel?" Bink inquired, interested. "We don't know. It's just there." Just there. Perhaps that was enough of an answer for a horse, but Grundy was unsatisfied. Someone had to have made that tunnel, and now he was quite curious who. After the experience with the path leading to the Com-Pewter cave, Grundy was more cautious about sim- ply using what was there. If the tunnel had been there for centuries, probably it was safe; but if it connected to Corn- Pewter's cave.... "I think we ought to find out more about this tunnel before we commit ourselves all the way to it," Chester said. "It's a long way down to the bottom of the Gap Chasm, and if anything happened—" "My thought exactly!" Grundy agreed. "Let's find out who made it, then we can use it. Some things wait for a long time to catch the unwary." They slept. At night the ghost horses showed them to the tunnel. It opened from the base of a small north-south chasm, as if it had been there before the chasm opened. Sure enough, when they explored the opposite side of the cleft, there, hidden under a fall of debris, was another tunnel: the evident continuation of the other. Since the 66 Golem in the Gem first tunnel proceeded down into the Gap, this other must go elsewhere, and should be safer to explore. Grundy took charge. "Let's send one party down into it, while another watches from outside," he said. "Maybe we can call back and forth, and trace it from the surface." Grundy rode Snortimer into the tunnel, while Bink and Chester stayed outside. Little Puck followed Grundy in, planning to act as liaison between the two parties. Since the three of them were of small size, it was easier for them to explore without disturbing anything. There was a little fungus glow on the walls. Puck and Snortimer didn't need it, but that wan light helped Grundy a great deal. The tunnel wound along like a worm, remaining approximately level, which meant that the surface of the ground was not too far above. But their hope of main- taining voice contact was vain; nothing could be heard. Puck could have returned to inform his parents where Grundy was, but that would have meant a long trot, and he might have trouble finding Grundy when he came back. Nothing was working out quite as planned. They came to a fork in the tunnel. Grundy took the one to the right, as it was slightly larger and cleaner. But soon there was another fork, and another. In fact, a lab- yrinth was developing! Grundy was worried about getting lost, but Snortimer assured him that he could retrace his course anytime. Then there was a rumble, and suddenly part of the tunnel collapsed behind them. Snortimer leaped forward, avoiding the stones and sliding dirt, and Puck practically sailed ahead. Apparently their passage had shaken the old structure enough to start the shakedown. They were unharmed—but now their return route was Golem in the Gear* 67 blocked. Snortimer might be good at retracing his route, but he could no longer do that. They could be in trouble. Grundy urged his steed on, trusting that he would be able to find a way back around the blocked passage. They had passed so many intersections that there had to be a connection. Meanwhile, he wanted to finish the job he had come to do and get out of here before anything else happened. The labyrinth of passages began to assume a form. This seemed to be a series of concentric circles, with the inner circles larger than the outer ones, as if closer to the center of things. Whatever there was that was worth finding, would surely be found in that center! There was another shudder, and they heard more stones falling, to the side. This time it couldn't be the fault of the three of them; they had been stepping very lightly. Was something else causing it? They went on, more nervously. Grundy had never been bothered by tunnels or tight squeezes; his size and agility had always enabled him to get clear. Now he was begin- ning to be bothered. It was obvious that neither Snortimer nor Puck felt any more at ease than he did. The going got easier as the tunnels became larger. These ones were in better repair; their walls were turning smooth, and their floors were firmer. The fungus glow brightened. Snortimer began to grow nervous, not liking the light, but did not actually balk. Probably this glow would seem like deepest darkness in daylight, so the monster was able to tolerate it. Finally the tunnels became so large and so close together that the spaces between them were more like walls. Then the walls disappeared, and what remained was a fair-sized chamber: the center of the labyrinth. Golem in the Gears 68 In the very center of that chamber was a small, ornate chest. Could it be a treasure? Excited, now, Grundy went to it. But what might be small to a man was large for him; he was unable to lift its heavy lid. "Let me do it," Snortimer said. He reached forth with a huge hairy hand and grasped the lid, hauling it off. Grundy grasped the edge, hauled himself up, and peered into the open chest. He saw gleams of reflected light, such as might come from jewels or glossy metal, but couldn't quite make out what the objects were. Snortimer reached in and drew out a handful. They seemed to be objects made of metal—curving spikes, hollow inside. Grundy took one, and found it heavy. It was about a third his own length, shaped like a very long, thin drinking hom, all of bright metal. "Jewelry?" he asked. Neither Snortimer nor Puck could answer; they had never seen anything quite like this. "Well, let's take one out with us," Grundy decided. "Maybe one of the others will recognize it." He was dis- appointed that the chest had not contained treasure, though he really had no use for treasure anyway. It was mostly human beings and dragons who placed value on treasure, so others tended to copy that attitude. Snortimer fastened one of the objects to Puck's band of chains, so that the little ghost horse could carry it back conveniently. It was little enough, as treasures went. He was disappointed on another score: here he had penetrated to the center of the labyrinth, and unveiled its secret—and found nothing worthwhile. Certainly no liv- ing creatures had been here for centuries, and there seemed to be no traps. It was probably safe to use the other tunnel down into the Gap Chasm, if it didn't collapse on them. "Let's get out of here," he said. Golem in the Gears 69 The others were happy to go. They started back—and heard another rumbling. There was going to be another collapse! Suddenly Grundy recognized a pattern. "Chester— those are his heavy footfalls!" he exclaimed. "He's trot- ting around up there, looking for us—and knocking the stones down! That's why tunnels keep collapsing!" That did indeed seem to be the reason. "Chester, slow down!" Grundy called—but when he raised his voice, the sound echoed as if he were a giant, and dirt sifted down from the ceiling of the chamber. He could bring it down on himself! Silently, they hurried back. Chester's erratic trotting continued to shake the chamber, making them increas- ingly nervous. They reached the point of the first cave-in. Now they had to figure a way around it, intersecting their original tunnel on the other side. That shouldn't be difficult—but Grundy felt a tightening apprehension. He guided Snortimer to the left, hoping to cut back right. But though the passage soon forked, neither fork bore back the way they wanted. This was like the detour in the forest, that had refused to return to the magic path. The perversity of the inanimate! If he had Dor's talent, he could simply ask the passages where to go, and they would answer. For that matter, he could have asked the metal thing what it was, and solved the mystery. But that of course was why Dor was rated a Magician, and was now King: his magic talent was more versatile than Grun- dy's. Anyone could talk to living things, if he knew how; only Dor could talk to the inanimate. The tunnel forked again, and again neither fork went where they wanted it to go. Grundy was about to turn 70 Golem in the Gears back and try the other direction—when there was another rumble, and the passage behind them collapsed. "Chester, you hoofbrained horse's rump!" Grundy wailed impotently. "You're destroying us down here!" Now they had to go on, and none of them knew the best way through this maze. They just had to keep going and guessing— Before long, Grundy knew they were lost. The pas- sages went on and on, dividing and merging, and there was no way to tell which way was out, or whether any way remained open. They were trapped. Grundy thought of something else to try. "Maybe if we knock on the ceiling, they'll hear us, and can come in from the other side." Snortimer used one of his hairy hands to pick up a rock, scrambled up the side, and banged on the ceiling. Some pebbles were dislodged, but there was no collapse. He tapped in a pattern: KNOCK-KNOCK, KNOCK-KNOCK, KNOCK-KNOCK BANG! It worked! The earth shuddered as the centaur trotted over, orienting on the sound. In fact, it shuddered too much. "Another collapse!" Grundy screamed, and they dived out of the way as the ceiling sagged and then fell. They had almost brought disaster on themselves! They choked, on the clouds of dust in the air, as the rocks settled. They would never get out this way! Then sharp-eyed Puck saw something. He neighed and started forward, scrambling over the rocks. "Watch out!" Grundy cried. "You'll bring another fall down on your head!" "Yo!" Chester called. "You okay, down there?" The collapse had opened up a new way out! That was the night sky up there! Golem in the Gears 71 Grundy mounted Snortimer again, and they scrambled nimbly up to the surface. It was a tremendous relief to be free! Once he was far from the hole in the ground, Grundy described his adventure, embellishing it only slightly, and showed them the metal spike Puck had brought out. "What do you think it is?" he asked. Neither Bink nor Chester had any idea. "Not treasure, certainly," Bink concluded. "More like a tool," Chester said. "But it has no han- dle." They decided to camp one more day, then take the tunnel down into the Gap. Obviously the tunnel repre- sented no trap, as long as they were careful not to trigger a collapse. But as the day brightened, Grundy remained unsatis- fied. There were too many unanswered questions! Who— or what—had made all those tunnels, that network of passages surrounding the central chamber? What had hap- pened to those creatures? Why had they left a treasure chest full of hollow metal spikes? He hated to remain in ignorance. At last he got up and walked alone to the entrance of the tunnel to the Gap. He stood there and stared at it. "If only I knew who made you!" he exclaimed. There was the rustle of leaves. A giant ancient acom tree grew at the brink of the cleft; some of its roots had been exposed, but it had survived. "I can tell you that, golem," it rustled. The tree! It had to be many centuries old! It had been here when the tunnel was new! "Tell me!" Grundy cried. "It was the voles," the tree rustled. "The what?" Golem in the Gears 73 72 Goiem in the Gears "The voles. Human folk call them by other names, but they haven't appreciated the real voles." "What other names?" Grundy asked, perplexed. "Wiggles and squiggles and diggles." "Wiggles!" Grundy exclaimed, appalled. "Are they swarming again?" "Of course not, golem," the tree rustled, chuckling in its fashion. "But they're related. The wiggles are the smallest and worst, and the diggles are the largest and best, and in between are the squiggles. They're all related." "I know that, barkface! What about the voles?" "The voles are the true name for that extensive family of tunnelers. They were once more common than they are now; you hardly see any of their family branches anymore. But the greatest of them were the civilized voles, bigger than the squiggles but just as tunnelsome. It was here they had their main camp, a thousand years ago. I was just a sprout when they left, but I remember." "They departed a thousand years ago?" Grundy asked, amazed. "Give or take a century; I lose track. My memory rings aren't what they used to be. Before the dominance of the goblins and harpies, anyway." "The harpies and goblins haven't been dominant since the days of King Roogna!" "Just so," the tree agreed. "These voles—just what were they like?" "They were fairly big—bigger than the squiggles of today, but smaller than the diggles. Big enough to make these tunnels." "Centaur-sized, then!" Grundy said. "Maybe a little smaller. They didn't like to be crowded, so they made their tunnels with some clearance. It's hard for me to judge, because I was so much smaller then." "These voles—they were just big squiggles, just tun- neling everywhere?" "They tunneled, but they weren't just squiggles!" the tree rustled. "They did things, there underground. They had conventions, or something, they made plans—and then they went away." "Where did they go?" "That I don't know. They just went, leaving their tun- nels behind." So the tree really didn't know much. But Grundy tried again: "We found some sort of metal thing, a chest full of them, like hollow spikes, only slightly curved. Do you know what those would be?" "Oh, yes, of course. I saw those being used. They are artificial claws." "What?" "The voles dug so much, they wore off their natural claws. So they put on artificial ones, made of metal, very strong. Then they could dig twice as fast, and not get as tired. Those claws were their most prized possession." Of course! Hollow claws, put on over the natural ones, like gauntlets. That would greatly enhance the ability of a digging creature. Mystery solved. But as Grundy returned to the bed, he realized that the greater mystery remained. Where had those voles gone, and why? It was evident that nothing had hurt them, for there were no skeletons and there was no damage, other than that done by Chester's hooves. They must have gone of their own volition—their own vole-ition—to some place of their choosing. Perhaps they were there today, digging even better labyrinths. But probably he would never know where or why. It was a frustrating frustration. Chapter 5. Stella Steamer In the evening they proceeded to the tunnel and entered it. The ghost horses, satisfied that all was well, did not accompany them; they preferred to graze on the surface. Again the dim illumination of the fungus helped them, without bothering Snortimer unduly; it was almost as if the voles had had Bed Monsters in mind. Or maybe such fungus was part of the natural habitate of nocturnal monsters. It was, at any rate, another fortunate coinci- dence. Grundy led the way, because Snortimer was most at home in a dark passage like this and was very sure-handed here. Chester and Bink had to be more careful, with their big clumsy feet. Once again Grundy appreciated the Good Magician's wisdom in specifying this particular steed. Often Humfrey's prescriptions made a good deal more sense than they seemed to at first. The tunnel wound down and around, tantalizing them with a seeming descent to the bottom, only to rise again. Obviously the voles had not considered directness to be a virtue! This was probably their scenic route, though all there was to see was round walls. Then an aperture appeared, into which a stray beam of moonlight probed. Snortimer shrunk away; moonlight wasn't deadly to him, but he distrusted it on principle. 74 75 Golem in the Gears Chester paused to peer out—and whistled. Grundy dis- mounted and went over to look, climbing up to the cen- taur's shoulder in order to reach the elevation of the hole. Now he saw it. Above, the pale moon squatted on an unruly cloud. Below, the awesome precipice of the Chasm opened. Grundy felt suddenly dizzy, as if falling into that terrible Chasm. Chester's big hand caught him before he fell. "You need all four feet on the ground before you lean out that window," the centaur murmured. True words! Grundy scrambled back down and away from the hole; he had had more than enough of it! Travel resumed. Progress seemed swift enough, but was actually slower than it would have been on level ground, because they were constantly stepping over stones and clearing cobwebs from their way. Somewhere around midnight they heard something, and paused. It was a low whistling or moaning, coming from somewhere ahead, in the tunnel. "Something's there!" Grundy exclaimed, horrified. "I'm sure it's all right," Bink said nonchalantly. "How can you be so sure things will be all right, all the time?" Grundy demanded. But Bink only smiled and shrugged. Obviously he knew something Grundy didn't, and that annoyed Grundy inor- dinately. They waited, for there really was not much else they could do. The noises approached, and in due course a dark shape loomed in the tunnel. Grundy shrank back, and Chester drew his sword, but Bink remained uncon- cerned. It seemed to be an animal, smaller than the centaur, but massive. It had front feet with enormous claws. It moved along, and it was evident that there was not room 76 Golem in the Gears Golem in the Gears 77 for it to pass them in the narrow tunnel. Yet it did not pause; it just moved on at them. "Just let the vole pass," Bink said. "It's harmless." "A voleT' Grundy asked. "The ghost of one," Bink said. With that, the creature moved right through Chester, through Bink, and brushed by Grundy with no impact. It was indeed a ghost. It proceeded on up the tunnel, going its mysterious way, paying the living party no attention. "I daresay the civilized voles could be nervous about an apparition like that, just as we tend to be about human ghosts," Bink remarked. Chester resheathed his sword. His hand was shaking. "I daresay they could," the centaur agreed, relaxing. Grundy understood Chester's embarrassment per- fectly. He had been on the verge of terrified, yet obviously there had been no danger. Naturally voles had ghosts; every species did. But for a moment it had certainly seemed like a monster! They resumed their trek down. Grundy pondered again what he had learned about the civilized voles. It made sense that their ghosts could not accompany them; most ghosts were locked to the region of their deaths. But where had the living voles gone, and why? There was still no answer. As dawn neared, they reached the bottom of the Chasm. They simply set up the bed in the comfortable darkness of the tunnel, then went out to forage for food. "But if you hear the dragon coming," Chester warned Grundy, "get over to us quickly, because you're the only one who can talk with it." Grundy smiled. That was true enough; without him, there could be a most awkward misunderstanding! He felt more important. The bottom of the Gap Chasm was a fairly nice place, at least in this region. There were small trees and bushes, and fruits were abundant. The only thing that was missing was animal life. That was because the Gap Dragoness ate all of that. For a long time people had considered the Gap Dragon a terrible scourge, serving no useful purpose. Now it was known that the combination of Gap and Dragon served, historically, to protect Xanth from the worse scourges of the Mundane Waves of invasion. That had become clear when the so-called Nextwave (now the new Lastwave) surged through; the Gap had become a major line of defense. Grundy wondered how many other seemingly evil things of Xanth actually had good purposes, when understood. There was a lot more to Xanth than met the casual eye. They finished their meal and slept. Around noon the ground shuddered, somewhat the way it had when the invisible giant had stridden toward them but less so. This was the familiar whomp! whomp! of the Gap Dragon. Suddenly the whole party was alert. Grundy stood before the tunnel exit, ready to meet the dragon first. This was his moment of power. She whomped into view: a long, low, six-legged dra- goness, moving with surprising velocity. Steam belched from her mouth and nostrils, adding to the splendor of her approach. There was hardly a more impressive figure than the Gap Dragon—or Dragoness—in full charge! "Halt!" Grundy cried, holding his little hand aloft. "We come in friendship!" The dragoness whomped on, her gaze fixed on Chester. "Hey!" Grundy said. "Slow down! I told you—" 78 Oolem in the Gears Golem in the Gears 79 She steamed right by him, her jaws opening. Chester, no coward, had his sword in hand, ready to defend him- self—but no ordinary centaur was a match for such a dragon, and Chester was no longer in his prime. Grundy realized that the dragoness was so intent on her presumed prey that she hadn't heard him at all. Drag- ons generally had limited intellects, and could truly con- centrate on only one thing at a time. How could he get through to her before disaster? He saw a shadow in the sky. A roc was wheeling, perhaps curious about the proceedings. Grundy had a notion. "Hey, brothers!" he squawked in roc-talk. "Let's go down and haul on that dragon's tail!" Stella Steamer skidded to a halt, blowing out a vast cloud of steam. "You try it, and you'll get such a chomp—!" she hissed in dragon-language. Then she paused, for the rocs were nowhere close. "It's me, Stella," Grundy cried. "Grundy Golem! We're here on business!" "I'm not Stella," she steamed. "I'm Stacey!" Oops—he had forgotten. "Sorry. I misremembered." "But I like Stella better," she decided. "Anything you like," he agreed, as one does when facing a dragon. Now at least he had her attention. "You're not strays?" she growled. "Not strays," he informed her firmly. "We came to see you about Stanley." "Stanley! You found him?" She had of course been advised of the disappearance of the little dragon. "No. I'm on a Quest to find him. Bink and Chester helped me travel here. I must ride the Monster Under the Bed to the Ivory Tower. But I don't know where the Ivory Tower is. I was hoping you had heard something." "Nothing," she said with deep regret, exhaling another cloud of steam. "Of course I don't get much chance to talk to most passing creatures before I eat them, and the rocs won't give me the time of day." "Of course not," Grundy agreed. "They've got stone for brains." "But even if Stanley wasn't lost, he'd still be too young," she growled, discouraged. She was patrolling the Gap only temporarily; it was normally Stanley's job. "Not necessarily," he said. "There's been a technolog- ical breakthrough. Reverse-wood and Youth Elixir. He can be any age, instantly." "Any age!" she steamed, delighted. "We've got to find him!" "But if you have no notion, then—" "Maybe the Monster of the Sea would know!" she hissed eagerly. "He came from Mundania thousands of