Wizard Squared (33 page)

Read Wizard Squared Online

Authors: K. E. Mills

Tags: #Fantasy, #Speculative Fiction

She flicked him a cold glance. “You’d be wise not to take that tone with me, Gerry. I warn you, taking that tone will get you into trouble.”

His jaw dropped open. “
What?
Emmerabiblia Markham, are you
squiffed
? Or running a desperately high fever? Or is that not exactly tobacco you’re smoking? And anyway, since when do you
smoke
? And—and—wear
makeup
. And
scarlet
. And when did you cut off all your
hair
?” Fed up with the disadvantage of being in bed, like a child, he flung back his blankets and faced her on his bare feet. “Look, either I
am
dreaming or the£dre wi world’s been turned completely upside—”

With a blast of raw thaumic energy the bedroom door blew open and banged against the wall.

“Ha! So he’s awake at last!” said the man framed in the doorway. “
Excellent
. Now we’ll
really
have some fun!”

“D’you think so, Gerald?” said Bibbie, pouting. “Because so far he’s not been any fun at
all
.”

Dumbstruck, Gerald watched as Bibbie undulated out of her chair, sashayed across the bedroom floor and—and entwined herself around—around—

Me! That’s me! But—but—how can that be me? I’m me. Aren’t I?

And then, with a second shock that punched right through his middle, he realized:
No. That’s not me. At least—not any more.

The man lounging in the doorway wore his face. They were the same height, the same weight. All right, the man in the doorway had a—a—
gloss
, a
polish
, that he absolutely lacked. Nevertheless, on the outside—except for the two good eyes—they were the same man.

But on the inside? Thaumaturgically? Oh, Saint Snodgrass…

The man—the other Gerald—had a
potentia
that choked the room. It reeked of death. Of murder. It stirred his blood with a visceral dread.

Heart thudding, he looked at the Bibbie before him, with her short hair and lipstick and the powder on her face. At the gold-and-ivory cigarette holder and the sheer scarlet silk dress clinging to those curves that day after day he made himself not notice. He looked at the man she’d called Gerald, whose familiar face hid a heart he couldn’t recognize. Who wore the most extraordinary, outlandish scarlet and black full-length silk dressing-gown embroidered with gold dragons, and on his fingers exquisitely wrought and fabulously expensive onyx and ruby rings.

And whose brown eyes burned with a flame he’d
not seen since the last time he faced mad King Lional of New Ottosland.

Lional…
Lional…
bloated with stolen
potentias
, his greedy mind teeming with the worst kind of incants ever devised and contained in the grimoires he’d kept by his bed, for handy reading.

Terrible memones woke, searing him. The man in the doorway stank of
Pygram’s Pestilences
, unforgettable after nine days in that cave. He reeked of
Grummen’s Lexicon
and other foul grimoire incants whose names he’d never learned because the texts Lional stole from Pomodoro Uffitzi had been confiscated without him ever laying eyes on them.

I had the chance to use those grimoires and I didn’t. But he did. So if this isn’t a dream—if he’s real, and he’s not me, and that’s not my Bibbie, and this isn’t my bedroom…

Sickened understanding crashed over him, so he had to sit on the bed.

Oh, bugger. So much for the theoretical part of theoretical thaumaturgical metaphysics and the postulated existence of parallel worlds.
<£em>

When Sir Alec found out about this he was going to go
spare
. It was hard enough keeping
one
world safe from thaumaturgical villains. And as for Monk, well, he’d likely explode with excitement.
Monk

Oh, God. Don’t tell me he’s gone rotten too.

The thought was enough to make the room spin and his belly heave.

No. No. I don’t—I won’t—believe that. Not Monk. I have to have one friend left in this place.

The other Gerald was grinning. “I knew you’d work it out. No flies on us, Professor Dunwoody.”

He felt like an idiot in his striped flannel nightshirt, but it couldn’t be helped. All that mattered now was getting answers… and getting home.

“So I’m right? This is a parallel world? An alternative reality? You’re some kind of copy of me?”

“No, Professor, it’s the real reality,” said the other Gerald, a snap in his voice. “
Your
world’s the impostor. And so are
you
.”

His double’s anger lit up the room like sheet lightning.
Right. Yes. So not to be making him cross, Dunwoody.
“Sorry. Sorry,” he said hastily. “Poor choice of words. So… how did you do it? How did you bring me here?”

His—his—
counterpart
—examined fingernails as beautifully manicured as Bibbie’s. “Oh, I can do a lot of things, Professor,” he boasted with airy self-congratulation. “Things you can only dream of.”

He decided to take a chance. Nothing ventured, nothing gained. “Monk didn’t help you?”

“Monk?” The other Gerald raised an eyebrow. And then he smiled. “Oh, Monk. Good old Monk. Yes. Our Mr. Markham’s been
wonderfully
helpful.”

Bibbie giggled. “Wonderfully.”

He had to wait for the nausea to subside before he could speak again. That horrible smile… and he’d never,
never
heard Bibbie giggle like that. Sly, like a nasty child. Even her voice had gone breathlessly girlish. The other Gerald’s hand trailed suggestively, possessively, up and down her bare arm. He almost squeezed his eyes shut, because that was so
wrong
. But even as he felt repulsed a little part of him thought:
Lucky bastard.

Time for a distraction.
There really is only one explanation…
“It was the portal, wasn’t it? You
pulled me through to your world using the Department’s unregistered portal. While I was traveling to Grande Splotze.”

And if that’s the case he must have tripped an alarm. Sir Alec will know I’ve gone missing. Everything’s going to be fine.

The other Gerald smoothed his hand over Bibbie’s hair. “Look at that, Bibs. We’re so clever, aren’t we?” He turned. “Yes. It was the portal.”

“But—how is that possible? I thought—”

<

“Oh, Professor!” The other Gerald’s eyes opened wide. “Portal thaumaturgics are
amazing
. Convenient travel is just the tip of the iceberg.”

“But you’re—
we’re
—not portal thaumaturgists,” he said warily. “That’s a highly specialized strand of metaphysical study.”

“True,” said the other Gerald. “But it so happens I have at my disposal most of the finest thaumaturgical minds in the world.”

“Really?” He swallowed.
Oh, lord. This isn’t going anywhere good, is it?
“In my experience, getting thaumaturgical experts to work cooperatively makes herding cats look like child’s play.”

Bibbie giggled again. “Oh, no, it was easy. Gerald’s very… persuasive.”

He took a deep breath and pushed back to his feet. “Yes. I’m sure he is.”

“And in case you’re thinking—and I know you are,” added the other Gerald, “that snatching you from the portal triggered an inconvenient alarm? Sorry, Professor. I’m far too good for that.”

Oh. Bugger. Still, it couldn’t be helped, so no point dwelling. “I’m sure you are. In fact—”

“You’re curious, aren’t you?” said the other Gerald, almost taunting. “You’re dying to know about my… thaumaturgical improvements. Jealous too, no doubt.”

Really neither. Not even a little bit.
“When did you do it?” he demanded, trying to keep the anger and despair from his voice. “
Why
did you do it? You had to know that you’d be—
changed.

And not for the better, but he didn’t dare say that.

Instead of answering, the other Gerald put a finger under Bibbie’s chin, tipped her face up to meet his and devoured her lips in a long, savage kiss. When at last he released her, blood glinted in the corner of her painted mouth.

“Wander down to the kitchen, Bibs, there’s a good girl. See how Melissande’s coming with breakfast, and tell her we’ve got an extra mouth to feed.”

Gerald felt the name jolt through him. Melissande? She was here? In the
kitchen
? But—

Does that mean Reg is here, too? God, I almost forgot them. Watching him and Bibbie, it’s scrambled my brain.

Bibbie was pouting. “Oh, Gerald. Can’t you just—”

“Bibbie.”

She went very still. Beneath the thin scarlet silk her breathing was shallow, and fast. A frightened pulse fluttered in the hollow of her throat.

The other Gerald flicked the end of her nose. “There’s a good girl.”

She left the bedroom without another word.

“When did I enhance my natural abilities?” said the other Gerald, as though there’d been no tense interlude. No primal, punishing kiss. Pushing away from the door jamb he st£dooce rolled into the room.
Wandered to the window and opened the curtains with a careless wave of his hand. Dull light spilled onto the carpet, sunshine filtering through gathering cloud. The other Gerald frowned. “It’s going to rain. Bloody weather. Y’know, once I’ve got a few other little things sorted out I think I’ll look into some meteorological thaumaturgy.” He glanced over his shoulder. “Want to help? It could be fun.”

“Ah—yes. Why not?” he said carefully. “You’re right, that—ah—does sound like fun. But just getting back to what—”

“Forget it,” snapped the other Gerald. “The diffident act doesn’t fool me.
Nothing
you do will fool me, Professor. Not only because you
are
me—well, the old me, anyway—but because since we took our different paths I’ve worked very hard to develop my skills. My
potentia
. So don’t waste your time. We’ve got better things to do than shadow box each other.”

Gerald let out a shaky breath. “All right then. Straight talking. I can do that. I’m thinking it was New Ottosland. You ignored Reg’s advice and got your hands on Lional’s collection of grimoires, didn’t you?”

The other Gerald’s lips curved in a small, scornful smile. “And you didn’t.”

“No. It wasn’t necessary. I still defeated Lional.”

“So I gather,” said the other Gerald, so disparaging. “And all your victory cost you was your sight.”

Unbidden, his fingers came up and touched the skin beneath his blind eye. “Only half of it. I manage. And I’d rather lose my eye than my humanity.”

“Oh, please,” said the other Gerald. “I give you fair warning, Professor—being lectured puts me in a very
bad mood. And whoever’s doing the lecturing tends to end up pretty damned sorry.”

It felt like the air in the bedroom had chilled by a swift ten degrees. “D’you know,” he said softly, “you sound uncannily like Lional when you say things like that.”

The other Gerald shrugged. “Then don’t lecture me, old chap, and you’ll be spared the trip down memory lane.”

He wiped a hand across his mouth, trying to banish the foul taste of bile. “So what happened? Did you lose your nerve? Doubt yourself? You shouldn’t have. You shouldn’t have let fear make—”

“Be careful, Professor!” the other Gerald snapped, and raised a clenched fist. Bright blue thaumic power danced over his skin, crackling the air. “I don’t permit anyone to speak to me like that.” His lips bared in a snarling smile. “Not even me.”

Gerald straightened his spine. The important thing was not to show weakness.
Rabid dogs always attack when they scent fear.
“Something tells me you wouldn’t have brought me here only to kill me ten minutes after we met.”

“Kill you, Professor?” His counterpart’s eyebrows shot up. “Don’t be ridiculous. But it’s only fair to point out I’ve no problem with hurting you.”

He braced himself, waiting for something terrible to knock him to his knees. But nothing happened. Instead, the other Gerald sighed agai£ald"27n and lowered his fist. “This is silly. We’re meant to be
friends
. How can we not be friends when you and I have so much in common?”

And that was the question, wasn’t it? Just how
much
did
he and this—this other Gerald have in common? Take away the dark magic and how alike were they, really? If the theories and suppositions were correct, he and this man who looked like him had at least started out the same person.

So are we still alike enough for me to reach him? Alike enough for me to stop whatever insane plan he’s cooked up, that he wants me to be part of?

He had no idea yet. He needed more time—and more information. “You took them all in, didn’t you? Every last incant in those grimoires Lional stole from that criminal idiot Uffitzi.”

A small, crimson flame flickered deep in the other Gerald’s shining eyes. “Yes, I did, Professor. And let me tell you—it was the best decision I’ve ever made. I mean, I had power before. I had lots of power. But until those grimoires I had no idea what to do with it.”

“And now you do?”

“Yes, Professor,” said the other Gerald, and laughed. “Now I do.”

He cleared his throat. “Congratulations. Don’t suppose you’d like to let me in on the secret?”

Other books

Kristy's Mystery Admirer by Ann M. Martin
Desolate (Desolation) by Cross, Ali
Someday: 3 (Sunrise) by Kingsbury, Karen
City in the Clouds by Tony Abbott
Jubilee by Eliza Graham
Crunch Time by Diane Mott Davidson