Authors: Peter David
   Â
Bernie had barely listened. He was too busy shaking his head, saying, “The laws dictate the punishment that should fit the crime. Can't he see that? It's impossible.”
   Â
“People don't care, Bernie. Don't you get that? They don't care about practicality, or what's reasonable, or even what makes sense. They care about what sounds good and what looks good, and right now he sounds and looks pretty good.”
   Â
Bernie scratched his head. “So how do you figure we deal with this nutcase?”
   Â
“Frankly, I'm not sure yet. I think we can only take a wait-and-see attitude for now.” Moe interlaced his fingers and crossed his legs almost daintily. “I mean, we shouldn't start attacking his positions yet. All that will do is give him publicity. Hell, maybe that's what he's hoping for.”
   Â
“Too bad,” muttered Bernie. “I'd like to take this guy apart in public.”
   Â
“You may yet get your chance, if he sticks around. Which, I have a sick feeling, he's going to do.” His nose wrinkled slightly. “Go hit the showers, Bernie. With the sweat you worked up, you're starting to smell like New Jersey.”
M
OE PUSHED OPEN
the door to his Park Avenue office and stopped dead in his tracks. His secretary had said nothing about anyone with an appointment waiting for him, and yet there she was. And from the back, at least, she was a knockout (she had her back to him, gazing out the window at his impressive view). She was clad in a black leather jumpsuit that had revealing openings up the legs, and the back of the suit was cut all the way down to the dimples just above her buttocks. She had thick black hair cascading around her shoulders, and even from behind he could tell that she practically radiated sex.
   Â
Gods, let the face match the rest of it ... and you know what? Even if it doesn't, that's why we have bedroom lights that shut
off and eyes that close,
he thought as he adjusted the knot in his tie and saidâwith as much suavity as he could muster under the circumstances, “Well, hello ... did we have an appointment?”
   Â
She turned to face him and, sure enough, the face matched the body. “Or,” he continued smoothly, “we could discuss your personal situation over dinner ... at my place, perhaps ... ?”
   Â
Then she spoke, and the voice cut right through him as she said, “I think, little dear, that sex with my half-brother is about as far as I wish to push the notion of incest.”
   Â
His voice jumped an octave. “M-mother! My ... my God,” and he stepped back, stumbling into a chair he kept for clients and sitting down in it hard. “You're ... that is ... you're ...”
   Â
“Younger?”
   Â
He bobbed his head. “I ... didn't recognize you ...”
   Â
“I surmised as much.” She turned and looked around, pretending to be impressed. “You've been doing well for yourself, Modred.”
   Â
“It's ... it's Moe Dreskin now, Mother.” He tried to sound cheery about it. “Who would believe a PR man named âDread?'”
   Â
She leveled her gaze upon him. “Who would believe the bastard son of King Arthur as a PR man named Dreskin? A PR man, Modred? Centuries you had lain out before you, like jewels in the sand ... and you did nothing to exploit your longevity? Your thirst for power?”
   Â
“
Your
thirst for power, Mother. Me, I've learned the lessons of history. And the lessons say that the person at the top, sooner or later, falls off the top. I far prefer being in the background, making a healthy living manipulating those who are stupid enough to make themselves targets.”
   Â
“Indeed,” was all she said ... but with that one word, her dripping contempt for her son spoke volumes.
   Â
He felt a bit weak in the knees, but he didn't like the
way his mother seemed to loom over him, and so he forced himself to walk past her. He leaned on his desk in what he hoped appeared to be a nonchalant fashion and said, “Last time I saw you, Mother, you looked like hell.”
   Â
“Flatterer.”
   Â
“So ... have you been working out? What?”
   Â
She stared at him in open disbelief. “You can't truly be that obtuse. It's exactly what I told you, Modred. Arthur's returned. Providence set Merlin free from his imprisonment, and he in turn released Arthur from his. And they're here in New York.”
   Â
“Yes, I know. Running for mayor.”
   Â
He took grim satisfaction in the surprised look on her face. “How did you know that?” she demanded. “I hadn't told you that.”
   Â
“I make it my business to know these things,” he said airily. The truth was that he had stumbled upon Arthur's little pep rally purely by accident, but he wasn't about to admit that.
   Â
“Good. Now,” she said briskly, “I am going to be endeavoring to attend to him, quickly and cleanly andâ ideallyâin the messiest fashion possible.”
   Â
“âMessiest?'”
   Â
She smiled nastily. “I still have resources, Modred. Creatures that are beholden to me, beasts of the night that I command. However, I wished to alert you personally, face-to-face, that I may have need of your aid as well.”
   Â
He had known this was coming sooner or later, the moment he'd spoken to her on the phone. He had practiced the speech a hundred times in his head, and even so it was a physical effort for him to get it out. “It is ... kind of you to think of me, Mother, but you don't seem to understand my situation.”
   Â
“Situation,” she repeated tonelessly.
   Â
“Yes. Situation.” He was feeling more confident with each moment. “The simple truth, Mother, is that it was a thousand years ago. I had my revenge. I killed him. The
fact that he returned doesn't change the fact that I avenged myself upon him. I did what I set out to do. I feel no need to do it again.”
   Â
“You don't.”
   Â
“No. I don't.” Even though it didn't need it, Moe turned to a mirror hanging on the wall and adjusted his tie once more. It gave his hands something to do. “Revenge burns brightly for you, Mother dear, but for me it's the faintest of embers. And I don't see any need to stir them up. So if you'd be so kind as to leave me out ofâ”
   Â
Suddenly his image in the mirror changed. He was aging rapidly, horrifically, his skin wrinkling, teeth rotting away, eyes receding into their sockets, his hair whitening and falling out in clumps. And as he stood there, transfixed, staring in horror at himself, he heard his mother say with icy calm, “I would hate to think, my love, what it would be like for you if the friendly confines of my sorcery were to be removed. The years can be ... merciless.”
   Â
Modred let out a pitiable shriek and fell back, his hands going to his face. And then he discovered that, to his touch, his skin felt perfectly normal. Very slowly, as if afraid his face might fall off if he let go of it, he lowered his hands. It was everything he could do to look in the mirror, but when he did, he was rewarded with a reflection of his normal face.
   Â
He let out an unsteady breath, and then he turned and faced Morgan, managing a stiff bow. “Your servant ... as ever, Mother.”
   Â
“Good,” she said calmly. “Cheer up, âMoe Dreskin.' If my little catspaw does as he is supposed to, you won't even factor into this business. And if he doesn't, well then, my love ...” and she rubbed her hands together, “It will be just like old times.”
   Â
“Oh ... joy,” he said.
C
HAPTRE
THE
N
INTH
A
RTHUR LOVED THE
crackling of the torches that lined the wall of his castle. He loved the solid feeling of flagging beneath his feet, the cool touch of the stone wall against his hand. He loved the tapestries that hung upon those same stone walls, and the rich assortment of leather-bound books that lined the shelves. But most of all ... he loved having the telephone in the castle. Oh, would that they had had such a glorious device back in the olden days. What a difference in his life it would have made.
   Â
The telephone rang, summoning him now, and of course there was only one person it could possibly be. Arthur grabbed up the telephone before the first ring had ended. “Hello, yes? Merlin!”
   Â
Merlin's voice was overwhelmed by traffic noises in the background. “Calm down, Arthur. You're not getting a call from the Messiah, after all.”
   Â
“Merlin, where the devil have you been?” The excitement in his voice was not very king-like, but he didn't care a bit. “I haven't seen you in over a week. I have so
much to tell you! Where are you? What are you doing? What are you up to?”
   Â
“Arthur, please! I don't understand,” came Merlin's confused voice. “What's been happening? I mean, you've just been out getting signatures, haven't you? What could be so exciting about that? It'sâ”
   Â
“Oh, no, Merlin! It's gone beyond that. Way beyond that.”
   Â
Merlin sounded extremely wary. “What are you talking about?” he said slowly.
   Â
Arthur sat back in his throne. Surrounded by the walls of his castle, he felt power surging through his body and spirit. “I,” he said proudly, “have been politicking.”
   Â
“You've been what!”
   Â
“Politicking. Getting people to like me. That was what you said we had to do, after all.”
   Â
“Yes! We! In tandem, Arthur!” Merlin's voice sounded exceptionally put out, and Arthur wasn't pleased with the tone. “I didn't intend that you should go running about half-cocked!”
   Â
“I was not half-cocked, Merlin. I wasâ”
   Â
“Completely cocked?” he said disdainfully, and before Arthur could say anything Merlin continued, “Wart, who told you that it would be a good idea to start addressing ... what, a few people?”
   Â
“No, crowds.”
   Â
Merlin moaned. “Crowds. Why were you talking to crowds? You just got up and started spouting off?”
   Â
“Not exactly. Gwen fed me questions thatâ”
   Â
“Ohhh, Gwen. Of course, Gwen,” Merlin moaned even louder this time. “I mean, naturally, if something related to you is going to become a complete and utter balls-up, then of course Gwen would have to be intimately involved with it.”
   Â
Arthur frowned. “I don't think I like the tone of your voice, Merlin.”
   Â
“Tone of myâ”
   Â
“One would almost think that you were jealous that I was receiving aid from someone other than you.”
   Â
“Then one would be an idiot,” Merlin shot back tartly. “Arthur, what in the name of the gods have you been saying to the people? How did this start?”
   Â
“It began the first day I was out,” said Arthur cheerily, as if relating the details of a thrilling game of cricket, and proceeded to describe in detail what had happened at the rally.
   Â
“I wish I was there to see your brilliance,” Merlin said dryly.
   Â
“Oh, don't worry. You'll be able to. We videotaped the news broadcast that carried it. Remarkable things, these machines that enable you to tapeâ”
   Â
“
News broadcast?!
”
   Â
“Yes, they happened by. Asked me questions. I told them about my campaign. Excellent publicity, correct?”
   Â
“
Are you out of your mind?
”
   Â
Even though Merlin was speaking over the phone, Arthur bristled at the tone. “Merlin ... do I need to remind you who, exactly, is the king?”
   Â
“Only if I'm entitled to remind you who is the wizard, the demon spawn, the one who sees the far destinies, the planner, the seer, the soothsayer, theâ”
   Â
“All right, Merlin, I get the picture.”
   Â
“No, that was merely the frame, Arthur. The picture is what we're now endeavoring to sketch in. We were to rehearse everything you were going to be saying. Have you forgotten all of that?”