"I'm dying," Clothahump wheezed. The wizard glanced
to his left. 'Tm dying and you stand there gawking like a
virginal adolescent who's just discovered that his blind
date is a noted courtesan. With your kind of help I'll never
live to see my three-hundredth birthday."
"With your kind of attitude it's a wonder you've man-
aged to live this long." Jon-Tom was more than a little
irritated at his mentor. "Listen to yourself: two weeks of
nonstop griping and whining. You know what you are,
turtle of a wizardly mien? You're a damned hypochondriac.''
Clothahump's face did not permit him much of a frown,
but he studied the tall young human warily. "What is that?
It sounds vaguely like a swear word. Don't toy with me,
boy, or it will go hard on you. What is it? Some magic
word from your own world?"
"More like a medical word. It's a descriptive term, not
a threat. It refers to someone who thinks they're sick all
the time, when they're not."
"Oh, so I'm imagining that my head is fragmenting, is
that what you're saying?" Jon-Tom resisted the urge to
2 Alan Dean Foster
reply, sat his six-feet-plus frame down near the pile of
pillows that served the old turtle for a bed.
Not for the first time he wondered at the number of
spacious rooms the old oak tree encompassed. There were
more alcoves and chambers and tunnels in that single trunk
than in a termite's hive.
He had to admit, though, that despite his melodramatic
moans and wails, the wizard didn't look like himself. His
plastron had lost its normal healthy luster, and the old eyes
behind the granny glasses were rheumy with tears from the
pain. Perhaps he shouldn't have been so abrupt. If
Clothahump couldn't cure himself with his own masterly
potions and spells, then he was well and truly ill.
"I know what I am," Clothahump continued, "but
what of you? A fine spellsinger you've turned out to be."
"I'm still learning," Jon-Tom replied defensively. He
fingered the duar slung over his shoulder. The peculiar
instrument enabled him to sing spells, to make magic
through the use of song. One might think it a dream come
true for a young rock guitarist-cum-law student, save for
the fact that he didn't seem to have a great deal of control
' over the magic he made.
Since the onslaught of Clothahump's pains, Jon-Tom
had sung two dozen songs dealing with good health and
good feelings. None had produced the slightest effect with
the exception of his spirited rendition of the Beach Boys'
"Good Vibrations." That bit of spellsinging caused
Clothahump to giggle uncontrollably, sending powders and
potions flying and cracking his glasses.
Following that ignominious failure, Jon-Tom kept his
hands off the duar and made no further attempts to cure the
wizard.
"I didn't really mean to imply that you're faking it," he
added apologetically. "It's just that I'm as frustrated as
you are."
Clothahump nodded, his breath coming in short, labored
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE 3
gasps. His poor respiration was a reflection of the constant
pain he was suffering, as was his general weakness.
"I did the best I could," Jon-Tom murmured.
"I know you did, my boy. I know you did. As you say,
there is much yet for you to learn, many skills still to
master."
"I'm just bulling my way through. Half the time I pick
the wrong song and the other half it has the wrong result.
What else can I do?"
Clothahump looked up sharply. "There is one chance
for me, lad. There is a medicine which can cure what ails
me now. Not a spell, not a magic. A true medicine."
Jon-Tom rose from the edge of the pile of pillows. "I
think I'd better be going. I haven't practiced yet today and
I need to..."
Clothahump moaned in pain and Jon-Tom hesitated,
feeling guilty. Maybe it was a genuine moan and maybe it
wasn't, but it had the intended effect.
"You must obtain this medicine for me, my boy. I can't
trust the task to anyone else. Evil forces are afoot."
Jon-Tom sighed deeply, spoke resignedly. "Why is it
whenever you want something, whether it's help making it
to the bathroom or a snack or someone to go on a
dangerous journey for you, that evil forces are always
afoot?"
"You ever see an evil force, boy?"
"Not in the flesh, no."
"Evil forces always go afoot. They're lousy fliers."
"That's not what I meant."
"Doesn't matter what you meant, my boy. You have to
run this errand for me. That's all it is, a little errand."
"Last time you asked me to help you run an errand we
ended up with the fate of civilization at stake."
"Well, this time it's only my fate that hangs in the
balance." His voice shrank to a pitiful whisper. "You
wouldn't want me to die, would you?"
"No," Jon-Tom admitted. "I wouldn't."
4 Alan Dean Foster
"Of course you wouldn't. Because if I die it means the
end of your chances to return to your own world. Because
only I know the necessary, complicated, dangerous spell
that can send you back. It is in your own interest to see
that I remain alive and well."
"I know, I know. Don't rub it in."
"Furthermore," the wizard went on, pressing his advan-
tage, "you are partly to blame for my present discomfort."
"What!" Jon-Tom whirled on the bed. "I don't know
what the hell you've got, Clothahump, but I certainly
didn't give it to you."
"My illness is compounded of many factors, not the
least of which are my current awkward living conditions."
Jon-Tom frowned and leaned on his long ramwood staff.
"What are you talking about?"
"Ever since we returned from the great battle at the
Jo-Troom Gate my daily life has been one unending litany
of misery and frustration. All because you had to go and
turn my rude but dutiful famulus Pog into a phoenix.
Whereupon he promptly departed my service for the dubi-
ous pleasures his falcon ladylove could bestow on him."
"Is it my fault you've had a hard time replacing him?
That's hardly a surprise, considering the reputation you got
for mistreating Pog."
"I did not mistreat Pog," the wizard insisted. "I treated
him exactly as an apprentice should be treated. It's true
that I had to discipline him from time to time. That was
due to his own laziness and incompetence. All part of the
learning process." Clothahump straightened his new glasses.
"Pog spread the details of your teaching methods all
over the Betlwoods. But 1 thought the new famulus you
finally settled on was working out okay."
"Ha! It just goes to show what can happen when you
don't read the fine print on someone's resume. It's too late
now. I've made him my assistant and am bound to him, as
he is to me."
"What's wrong? I thought he was brilliant."
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE 5
"He can be. He can be studious, efficient, and eager to
learn."
"Sounds good to me."
"Unfortunately, he has one little problem."
"What kind of problem?"
Clothahump's reply was interrupted by a loud, slurred
curse from the room off to the left. The wizard gestured
with his head toward the doorway, looked regretful.
"Go see for yourself, my boy, and understand then what
a constant upset my life has become."
Jon-Tom considered, then shrugged and headed under
the arched passageway toward the next chamber, bending
low to clear the sill. He was so much taller than most of
the inhabitants of this world that his height was an ever-
present problem.
Something shattered and there was another high-pitched
curse. He held his ramwood staff protectively in front of
him as he emerged into the storeroom.
It was as spacious as Clothahump's bedroom and the
other chambers which somehow managed to coexist within
the trunk of the old oak. Pots, tins, crates, and beakers full
of noisome brews were carefully arranged on shelves and
workbenches. Several bottles lay in pieces on the floor.
Standing, or rather weaving, in the midst of the break-
age was Sorbl, Clothahump's new famulus. The young
great homed owl stood slightly over three feet tall. He
wore a thin vest and a brown and yellow kilt of the Ule
Clan.
He spotted Jon-Tom, waved cheerily, and fell over on
his beak. As he struggled to raise himself on flexible
wingtips, Jon-Tom saw that the vast yellow eyes were
exquisitely bloodshot.
"Hello, Sorbl. You know who I am?"
The owl squinted at him as he climbed unsteadily to his
feet, staggered to port, and caught himself on the edge of
'the workbench.
6
Alan Dean Foster
"Shure I remember you," he said thickly. "You... you're
that spielsunger... spoilsanger. ..."
"Spellsinger," Jon-Tom said helpfully.
"Thas what I said. You're that what I said from another
world that the master brought through to hulp him against
the Pleated Filk."
"The master is not feeling well." He put his staff aside.
"And you're not looking too hot either."
"Hooo, me?" The owl looked indignant, walked away
from the bench wavering only slightly. "I am perfectly
fine, thank you." He glanced back at the bench. "Is just
that I was looking for a certain bottle."
"What bottle?"
"Not marked, thish one." Sorbl looked conspiratorial
and winked knowingly with one great bloodshot eye.
"Medicinal liquid. Not for his ancientness in there. My
bottle," he finished, suddenly belligerent. "Nectar."
"Nectar? I thought owls liked mice."
"What?" said the outraged famulus. For an instant
Jon-Tom had forgotten where he was. The rodents here-
abouts were as intelligent and lively as any of the other
citizens of this world. "If I tried to take a bite out of a
mouse, his relatives would come string me up. I'll stick to
small lizards and snakishes. Listen," he continued more
softly, "it's hard working for this wizard. I need a lil'
lubrication now and then."
"You get any more lubricated," Jon-Tom observed
distastefully, "and your brains are going to slide out your
ass."
"Nonshensh. I am in complete control of myself." He
turned back toward the bench, staggered over to the edge,
and commenced a minute inspection of the surface with
eyes that should have been capable of spotting an ant from
a hundred yards away. At the moment, however, those
huge orbs were operating at less than maximum efficiency.
Jon-Tom shook his head in disgust and returned to the
wizard's bedside.
THE DAY OF THK DISSONANCE 7
"Well," asked Clothahump meaningfully, "what is your
opinion of my new famulus?"
"I think I see what you're driving at. I didn't notice any
of the qualities you said he possesses. I'm pretty sure he
was drunk."
"Really?" said Clothahump dryly. "What a profound
observation. We'll make a perceptive spellsinger out of
you yet. He is like that too much of the time, my boy. I am
blessed with a potentially brilliant famulus, a first-rate,
worthy assistant. Sadly, Sorbl is also a lush. Do you know
that I have to make him take a cart into town to buy
supplies because every time he tries to fly in he ends up by
running head-first into a tree and the local farmers have to
haul him back to me in a wagon? Do you have any idea
how embarrassing that is for the world's greatest wizard?"
"I can imagine. Can't you cure him? I'd think an
anti-inebriation spell would be fairly simple and straight-
forward."
"It is a vicious circle, my boy. Were I not so sick I
could do so, but as it stands I cannot concentrate. Past two
hundred the mind loses some of its resilience. I tried just
that last week. All those methyl ethyl bethels in the spell
are difficult enough to get straight when you're at the top
of your form. Sick as I was, I must have transposed an -yl
somewhere. Made him throw up for three days. Cured his
drinking, but made him so ill the only way he could cure
himself was by getting falling-down-drunk again.
"I must have that medicine, lad, so that I can function
properly again. Otherwise I'm liable to try some complex
spell, slip an incantation, and end up with something
dangerous in my pentagram. It's hard enough making sure
that idiot in there passes me the proper powders. Once he
substituted lettuce for liverwort, and I ended up with a
ten-foot-tall saber-toothed rabbit. Took me two hasty re-
traction spells to bunny it down."
"Why don't you just conjure the stuff up?"
"I do not possess the necessary ingredients," Clothahump
8
Alan Dean Foster
explained patiently. "If I did, I could just take them, now,
couldn't I?"
"Beats me. I've seen you make chocolate out of garbage."
"Medicine is rather more specific in its requirements.
Everything must be so precise. You can make milk choco-
late, bittersweet chocolate, white chocolate, semisweet
chocolate: it's still all chocolate. Alter the composition of
a medicinal spell ever so slightly and you might end up
with a deadly poison. No, it must be brought whole and
ready, and you must bring it to me, my boy." He reached
out with a trembling hand. Jon-Tom moved close, sitting
down again on the edge of the soft bed.
"I know I did a bad thing when I reached out into the
beyond and plucked you hence from your own comfortable
world, but the need was great. In the end, you vindicated
my judgment, though in a fashion that could not have been
foreseen." He adjusted his glasses. "You proved yourself
in spite of what everyone thought."
"Mostly by accident." Jon-Tom realized that the wizard
was flattering him in order to break down his resistance to
making the journey. At the same time he felt himself
succumbing to the flattery.
"It need not be by accident any longer. Work at your
new profession. Study hard, practice your skills, and heed
my advice. You can be more than a man in this world. I
don't know what you might have been in your own, but
here you have the potential to be a master. // you can
wrestle your strengths and talent under control."
"With your instruction, of course."
"Why not learn from the best?" said Clothahump with
typical immodesty. "In order for me to train you I need
many years. One does not master the arcane arts of
spellsinging in a day, a week, a year. If you do not fetch
this medicine that can cure this bedamned affliction, I will
not be around much longer to help you.
"I need only a small quantity. It will fit easily into a
THE DAY OF THE DISSOJVAWCE 9
pocket of those garish trousers or that absurd purple shirt
that foppish tailor Carlemot fashioned for you."
"It's not purple, it's indigo," Jon-Tom muttered, looking
down to where it tucked into the pants. His iridescent
green lizard-skin cape hung on a wall hook. "From what
I've seen, this qualifies as subdued attire here."
"Go naked if you will, but go you must."
"All right, all right! Haven't you made me feel guilty
enough?''
"I sincerely hope so," the wizard murmured.
"I don't know how I let you talk me into these things."
"You have the misfortune to be a decent person, a
constant burden in any world. You suffer from knowing
right from wrong."
"No I don't. If I knew what was right, I'd be long gone
from this tree. But you did take me in, help me out, even
if you did use me for your own ends. Not that I feel used.
You used everyone for your own ends."
"We saved the world," Clothahump demurred. "Not
bad ends."
"You're also right about my being stuck here unless you
can work the spell to send me home someday. So 1
suppose I have no choice but to go after this special
medicine. It's not by any chance available from the apoth-
ecary in Lynchbany?"
"I fear not."
"What a lucky guess on my part."
"Teh. Sarcasm in one so young is bad for the liver."
Clothahump raised himself slowly, turned to the end table
that doubled as a bedside desk. He scribbled with a quill
pen on a piece of paper. A moment passed, he cursed, put
a refill cartridge in the quill, and resumed writing.
When he finished, he rolled the paper tight, inserted it
into a small metal tube which hung from a chain, and
handed it to Jon-Tom.
"Here is the formula," he said reverently. "She who is
to fill it will know its meaning."
10
Alan Dean Foster
Jon-Tom nodded, took the chain, and hung it around his
neck. The tube was cool against his chest.
"That is all you need to know."
"Except how to find this magician, or druggist, or
whatever she is."
"A store. Nothing more." Clothahump's reassuring tone
immediately put Jon-Tom on his guard. "The Shop of the
Aether and Neither. It lies in the town of Crancularn."
"I take it this Crancularn isn't a hop, skip, and a jump
from Lynchbany?"
"Depends on your method of locomotion, but for most
mortals, I would say not. It lies well to the south and west
of the Bellwoods."
Jon-Tom made a face. He'd been around enough to have
picked up some knowledge of local geography. "There
isn't anything well to the southwest of here. The Bellwoods
run down to the River Tailaroam which flows into..." he
stopped. "Cranculara's a village on the shore of the
Glittergeist?"
Clothahump looked the other way. "Uh, not exactly, my
boy. Actually it lies on the other side."
"The other side of the river?"
"Noooo. The other side of the ocean."
Jon-Tom threw up his hands in despair. "And that's the
last straw,"
"Actually, lad, it's only the first straw. There are many
more to pass before you reach Crancularn. But reach it you
must," he finished emphatically, "or I will surely perish
from the pain, and any chance you have of returning home
will perish with me."
"But I don't even know how big the Glittergeist is."
"Not all that big, as oceans go." Clothahump strove to
sound reassuring. "It can be crossed in a few weeks. All
you have to do is book passage on one of the many ships
that trade between the mouth of the Glittergeist and distant
Snarken."
"I've heard of Snarken. Big place?"
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
11
"A most magnificent city. So I have been told, never
having visited there myself. Grander than Polastrindu.
You'd find it fascinating."
"And dangerous."
"No journey is worthwhile unless it is dangerous, but
we romanticize. I do not see any reason for anticipating
trouble. You are a tourist, nothing more, embarked on a
voyage of rest, relaxation, and discovery."
"Sure. From what I've seen of this world it doesn't treat
tourists real well."
"That should not trouble an accomplished spellsinger
like you."
The wizard was interrupted by the sound of another
crash from the nearby storeroom, followed by a few
snatches of drunken song.
"You also have your ramwood staff for protection, and
you no longer are a stranger to our ways. Think of it as a
holiday, a vacation."
"Why do I have this persistent feeling you're not telling
me everything?"
"Because you are a pessimist, my boy. I do not criti-
cize. That is a healthy attitude for one embarked on a
career in magic. I am not sending you after trouble this
time. We do not go to battle powerful invaders from the
east. I am asking you only to go and fetch a handful of
powder, a little medicine. That is all. No war awaits. True,
it is a long journey, but there is no reason why it should
be an arduous one.
"You leave from here, proceed south to the banks of the
Tailaroam, book passage downstream. At its mouth where
the merchant ships dock you, board a comfortable vessel
heading for Snarken. Thence overland to Crancularn. A
short jaunt, I should imagine."
"Imagine? You mean you don't know how far it is from
Snarken to Crancularn?"
"Not very far."
"For someone who deals in exact formulas and spells,
12
Alan Dean Foster
you can be disconcertingly nonspecific at times, Clotha-
hump.''
"And you can be unnecessarily verbose," the turtle shot
back.
"Sorry. My pre-law training. Never use one word where
five will fit. Maybe I would've ended up a lawyer instead
of a heavy-metal bass player."
"You'll never know if you don't return to your own
world, which you cannot do unless ..."
"I know, I know," Jon-Tom said tiredly. "Unless 1
make the trip to this Crancularn and bring back the
medicine you need. Okay, so I'm stuck."
"I would rather know that you had undertaken this
journey with enthusiasm, willingly, out of a desire to help
one who only wishes you well."'
"So would I, but you'll settle for my going because I
haven't got any choice, won't you?"
"Yes," said Clothahump thoughtfully, "I expect that 1
will."
II
He wasn't in the best frame of mind the morning he set
off. Not that anything was keeping him occupied else-
where, he told himself sourly. He had no place in this
world and certainly no intention of setting himself up in
practice as a professional spellsinger.
For one thing, that would put him in direct competition
with Clothahump. Although the wizard thought well of
him, Jon-Tom didn't think Clothahump would take kindly
to the idea. For another, he hadn't mastered his odd
abilities to the point where he could guarantee services for
value received, and might never achieve that degree of
expertise. He preferred to regard his spellsinging as a
talent of last resort, choosing to rely instead on his staff
and his wits to keep him out of trouble.
In fact, the duar provided him with far more pleasure
when he simply played it for fun, just like his battered old
Fender guitar back home. Now he played it to ease his
mind as he walked into town, strumming a few snatches of
very unmagical Neil Diamond while wishing he had Ted
Nugent's way with strings. At the same time he had to be
careful in his selections. Diamond was innocuous enough.
13
14
Alan Dean Poster
If he tried a little Nugent—say, "Cat Scratch Fever" or
"Scream Dream"—there was no telling what he might
accidentally conjure up.
At least the weather favored his journey. It was early
spring- Deep within the Bellwoods, so named for the
bell-shaped leaves which produced a tinkling sound when
the wind blew through them, there was the smell of dew
and new blossoms on the air. Glass butterflies flew every-
where, their stained-glass wings sending shafts of brilliant
color twinkling over the ground. Peppermint bees striped
in psychedelic hues darted among the flowers.
One hitched a ride on his indigo shirt. Perhaps it thought
he was some kind of giant ambulatory flower. Jon-Tom
examined it with interest. Instead of the yellow-and-black
pattern he was accustomed to, his visitor's abdomen was
striped pink, lemon yellow, orange, chocolate brown, and
bright blue. Man and insect regarded one another thought-
fully for a long moment. Deciding he was neither a source
of pollen or enlightenment, the bee droned off in search of
sweeter forage.
Lynchbany Towne was unchanged from the first time
Jon-Tom had seen it, on that rainy day when he, a strange-
to this world, had entered it accompanied by Mudge tl
otter. It was Mudge he sought now. He had no intention
striking out across the Glittergeist alone, no matter ho
much confidence Clothahump vested in him. There was
still far too much of the ways and customs of this place he
was ignorant of.
Mudge's knowledge was of the practical and non-
intellectual variety. Too, nothing was more precious to the
otter than his own skin. He was sort of a furry walking
alarm, ready to jump or take whatever evasive action the
situation dictated at the barest suggestion of danger. Jon-
Tom intended to use him the way the allies had used
pigeons in World War I to detect the presence of poison
gas.
Mudge would have considered the analogy unflattering,
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
15
but Jon-Tom didn't care what the otter thought. Despite his
questionable morals and wavering sense of loyalty, the
otter had been a great help in the past and could be so
again.
Luck wasn't with Jon-Tom, however. There was no sign
of Mudge in the taverns he normally frequented, nor word
of him in the eating establishments or gambling dens. He
hadn't been seen in some time in any of his usual haunts.
Jon-Tom finally found mention of him in one of the
more reputable rooming houses on the far side of town,
where the stink from the central open sewer was less.
The concierge was an overweight koala in a bad mood.
A carved pipe dangled from her lips as she scrubbed the
floor near the entrance.
"Hay, I've seen him," she told Jon-Tom. Part of her
right ear was missing, probably bitten off during a dispute
with an irate customer.
"I'd laik to know where he gone to much as you, man.
He skip away owing me half a week's rent. That not bad
as some have dun me, but I work hand to run this place
and every silver counts."
"Only a few days' rent, is it?" Jon-Tom squatted to be
at eye level with the koala. "You know where he is, don't
you? You're feeding me some story old Mudge paid you to
tell anyone who came looking for him because he paid you
to do so, because he probably owes everyone but you."
She wrinkled her black nose and wiped her paws on her
apron. Then she broke out in a wide grin. "You a clever
one, you are, man, though strange of manner and talk."
"I'm not really from around here," Jon-Tom confessed.
"Actually my home lies quite a distance from Lynchbany.
Nor am I a creditor or bill collector. Mudge is my friend."
"Is he now?" She dropped her scrub brush in the pail of
wash water and rose. Jon-Tom did likewise. She reached
barely to his stomach. That wasn't unusual. Jon-Tom was
something of a giant in this world where humans barely
topped five and a half feet and many others stood shorter.
16
Alan Dean Foster
"So you his friend, hay? That make you sort of unique.
I wasn't aware the otter had any friends. Only acquain-
tances and enemies."
"No matter. I am his friend, and I need to get in touch
with him."
"What for?"
"I am embarked on a journey in the service of the great
wizard Clothahump."
"Ah, that old fraud."
"He's not a fraud. Haven't you heard of the battle for
the Jo-Troom Gate?"
"Yea, yea, I heard, I heard." She picked up the bucket
of wash water, the scrub brush sloshing around inside. "I
also know you never believe everything you read in the
papers. This journey you going on for him. It going be a
hard one, where someone might get deaded?"
"Possibly."
"Hay, then I tell you where the otter is and you make
sure he go with you?"
"That's the idea."
"Good! Then I tell you where he is. Because I tell you
true, man, he owe me half a week's rent. I just don't want
to tell anyone else because maybe they get to him before
me. But this is better, much better. Worth a few days'
rent.''
"About that rent," Jon-Tom said, jiggling the purse full
of gold Clothahump had given him to pay for his passage
across the Glittergeist.
The concierge waved him off. "Hay nay, man. Just
make sure he go with you on this dangerous journey. More
better I dream of him roasting over some cannibal's spit in
some far-off land. That will give me more pleasure than a
few coins."
"As you wish, madame." Jon-Tom put the purse aside.
"Only, you must be sure promise to come back here
someday and regale me with the gory details. For that I
pay you myself."
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
17
"I'll be sure to make it my business," Jon-Tom said
dryly. "Now, where might I find my friend?"
"Not here. North."
"Oglagia Towne?"
"Hay nay, farther west. In Timswitty."
"Timswitty," Jon-Tom repeated. "Thanks. You know
what business he has there?"
She let out a short, sharp bark, a koalaish laugh. "Same
business that otter he have any place he go: thievery,
deception, debauchery, and drunkenness. I wager you find
him easy enough you keep that in mind."
"I will. Tell me. I've never been north of Lynchbany.
What's Timswitty like?"
She shrugged. "Like heah. Like Oglagia. Like any of
the Bellwoods towns. Backward, crowded, primitive, but
not bad if you willing stand up for your rights and work
hard."
"Thank you, madame. You're sure I can't pay you
anything for the information you've given me?"
"Keep you money and make you journey," she told
him. "I look forward to hearing about the otter's slow and
painful death upon you return."
"Don't hold your breath in expectation of his demise,"
Jon-Tom warned her as he turned to leave. "Mudge has a
way of surviving in the damndest places."
"I know he do. He slip out of heah without me smelling
his going. I tell you what. If he don't get himself killed on
this journey of yours, you can pay me his back rent when
you return."
"I'll do better than that, madame. I'll make him pay it
himself, in person."
"Fair enough. You have good traveling, man."
"Good day to you too, madame."
Jon-Tom had no intention of walking all the way to
Timswitty. Not since Clothahump had provided him with
funds for transport. The local equivalent of a stagecoach
was passing through Lynchbany, and he bought himself a
18
Alan Dean Poster
seat on the boxy contraption. It was pulled by four hand-
some horses and presided over by a couple of three-foot-
tall chimpmunks who cursed like longshoremen. They
wore dirty uniforms and scurried about, wrestling baggage
and cartons into the rear of the stage.
Jon-Tom had the wrong notion of who was in charge,
however. As he strolled past the team of four, one of the
horses cocked an eye in his direction.
"Come on, bud, hurry it up. We haven't got all day."
"Sorry. The ticket agent told me you weren't leaving for
another fifteen minutes."
The mare snorted. "That senile bastard. I don't know
what the world's coming to when you can't rely on your
local service people anymore."
"Tell me about it," said the stallion yoked to her.
"Unfortunately we were bom with hooves instead of
hands, so we still have to hire slow-moving fools with
small brains to handle business details for us."
"Right on, Elvar," said the stallion behind him.
The discussion continued until the stage left the depot.
"All aboard?" asked the mare second in harness. "Hold
on to your seats, then."
The two chipmunks squatted in the rear along with the
luggage, preening themselves and trying to catch their
breath. There was no need for drovers, since the horses
knew the way themselves. The chipmunks were loaders
and unloaders and went along to see to the needs of the
team, who, after all, did the real work of pulling the stage.
This would have been fine as far as Jon-Tom and the
other passengers were concerned except that the horses had
an unfortunate tendency to break into song as they galloped,
and while their voices were strong and clear, not a one of
them could carry a tune in a bucket. So the passengers
were compelled to suffer a series of endless, screeching
songs all the way through to Timswitty.
When one passenger had the temerity to complain, he
was invited to get out and walk. There were two other
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
19
unscheduled stops along the way as well, once when the
team got hungry and stopped to graze a lush meadow
through which the road conveniently cut, and again when
the two mares got into a heated argument about just who
boasted the daintier fetlocks.
It was dark when they finally pulled into Timswitty.
"Come on," snapped the lead stallion, "let's get a
move on back there. Our stable's waiting. I know you're
all stuck with only two legs, but that's no reason for
loafing."
"Really!" One of the outraged travelers was an elegantly
attired vixen. Gold chains twined through her tail, and her
elaborate hat was badly askew over her ears from the
jouncing the stage had undergone. "I have never been
treated so rudely in my life! I assure you I shall speak to
your line manager at first opportunity,"
"You're talking to him, sister," said the stallion. "You
got a complaint, you might as well tell me to my face."
He looked her up and down. "Me, I think you ought to
thank us for not charging you for the extra poundage."
"Well!" Her tail swatted the stallion across the snout as
she turned and flounced away to collect her luggage.
Only the fact that his mate restrained him kept him from
taking a bite out of that fluffy appendage.
"Watch your temper, Dreal," she told him. "It doesn't
do to bite the paying freight. Rotten public relations."
"Bet all her relations have been public," he snorted,
pawing the ground impatiently. "What's slowing up those
striped rats back there? I need a rubdown and some sweet
alfalfa."
"I know you do, dear," she said as she nuzzled his
neck, "but you have to try and maintain a professional
-attitude, if only for the sake of the business."
"Yeah, I know," Jon-Tom overheard as he made his
way toward the depot. "It's only that there are times when
I think maybe we'd have been better off if we'd bought
ourselves a little farm somewhere out in the country and
20
Alan Dean Foster
THE DAY OF THE DISSOKAWCE
21
hired some housemice and maybe a human or two to do
the dirty work."
He was the only one in the office. The fox and the other
passengers already had destinations in mind.
"Can I help you?" asked the elderly marten seated
behind the low desk. With his long torso and short waist,
the clerk reminded Jon-Tom of Mudge. The marten was
slimmer still, and instead of Mudge's jaunty cap and bright
vest and pantaloons he wore dark shorts and a sleeveless
white shirt, a visor to shade his eyes, and bifocals.
"I'm a stranger in town."
"I suspect you're a stranger everywhere," said the
marten presciently.
Jon-Tom ignored the comment. "Where would a visitor
go for a little harmless fun and entertainment in Timswitty?"
"Well now," replied the marten primly, "I am a family
man myself. You might try the Golden Seal. They offer
folksinging by many species and occasionally a string trio
from Kolansor."
"You don't understand." Jon-Tom grinned insinuatingly.
"I'm looking for a good time, not culture."
"I see." The marten sighed. "Well, if you will go down
the main street to Born Lily Lane and follow the lane to its
end, you will come to two small side streets leading off
into separate cul-de-sacs. Take the north close. If the smell
and noise isn't enough to guide you further, look for the
small sign just above an oil lamp, the one with the carving
of an Afghan on it."
"As in canine or cloth?"
The marten wet his lips. "The place is called the
Elegant Bitch. No doubt you will find its pleasures suita-
ble. I wouldn't know, of course. I am a family man."
"Of course," said Jon-Tom gravely. "Thanks."
As he made his solitary way down the dimly lit main
street, he found himself wishing Talea was at his side.
Talea of the flame-red hair and infinite resourcefulness.
Talea of the blind courage and quick temper. Did he love
her? He wasn't sure anymore. He thought so, thought she
loved him in return. But she was too full of life to settle
down as the wife of an itinerant spellsinger who had not
yet managed to master his craft.
Not long after the battle of the Jo-Troom Gate, she had
regretfully proposed they go their separate ways, at least
for a little while. She needed time to think on serious
matters and suggested he do likewise. It was hard on him.
He did miss her. But there was the possibility she was
simply too independent for any one man.
He held to his hopes, however. Perhaps someday she
would tire of her wanderings and come back to him. There
wasn't a thing he could do but wait.
As for Flor Quintera, the cheerleader he'd inadvertently
brought into this world, she had turned out to be a major
disappointment. Instead of being properly fascinated by
him, it developed that she lusted after a career as a
sword-wielding soldier of fortune and had gone off with
Caz, the tall, suave rabbit with the Ronald Colman voice
and sophisticated manners. Jon-Tom hadn't heard of them
hi months. Flor was a dream that had brought him back to
reality, and fast.
At least this was a fit world in which to pursue dreams.
At the moment, though, he was supposed to be pursuing
medicine. He clung to that thought as he turned down the
tiny side street.
True to the marten's information he heard sounds of
singing and raucous laughter. But instead of a single small
oil lamp there were big impressive ones flanking the door,
fashioned of clear beveled crystal.
Above the door was a swinging sign showing a finely
coiffed hound clad in feathers and jewels. She was gazing
back over her furry shoulder with a distinctly come-hither
look, and her hips were cocked rakishly.
There was a small porch. Standing beneath the rain
shield, Jon-Tom knocked twice on the heavily oiled door.
It was opened by a three-foot-tall mouse in a starched suit.
22
Alan Dean Poster
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
23
Sound flooded over Jon-Tom as the doormouse looked him
over.
"Step inside and enjoy, sir," he finally said, moving
aside.
Jon-Tom nodded and entered. The doormouse closed the
door behind him.
He found himself in a parlor full of fine furniture and a
wild assortment of creatures representing several dozen
species. All were cavorting without a. care as to who they
happened to be matching up with. There were several
humans in the group, men and women. They moved freely
among their intelligent furry counterparts.
Jon-Tom noted the activity, listened to the lascivious
dialogue, saw the movement of hands and paws, and
suspected he had not entered a bar. No question what kind
of place this was. He was still surprised, though he
shouldn't have been. It was a logical place to look for
Mudge.
Still, he didn't want to take the chance of embarrassing
himself. First impressions could be wrong. He spoke to the
doormouse.
"I beg your pardon, but this is a whorehouse, isn't it?"
The mouse's voice was surprisingly deep, rumbling out
of the tiny gray body. "All kinds we get in here," he
muttered dolefully, "all kinds. What did you think it was,
jack? A library?"
"Not really. There aren't any books."
The doormouse showed sharp teeth in a smile. "Oh, we
have books, too. With pictures. Lots of pictures, if that's
to your taste, sir."
"Not right now." He was curious, though. Maybe later,
after he'd found Mudge.
"You look like you've been a-traveling, sir. Would
you like something to eat and drink?"
"Thanks, I'm not hungry. Actually, I'm looking for a
friend."
"Everyone comes to the Elegant Bitch in search of a
friend.''
"You misunderstand. That's not the way I mean."
"Just tell me your ways, sir. We cater to all ways here."
"I'm looking for a buddy, an acquaintance," Jon-Tom
said in exasperation. The doormouse had a one-track
mind.
"Ah, now I understand. No divertissements, then? This
isn't a meeting house, you know."
"You're a good salesman." Jon-Tom tried to placate
him. "Maybe later. I have to say that you're the smallest
pimp I've ever seen."
"I am not small and I am not a pimp," replied the
doormouse with some dignity. "If you wish to speak to the
madam..."
"Not necessary," Jon-Tom told him, though he won-
dered not only what she'd look like but what she'd be.
"The fellow I'm after wears a peaked cap with a feather in
it, a leather vest, carries a longbow with him everywhere
he goes, and is an otter. Name of Mudge."
The doormouse preened a whisker, scratched behind one
ear. For the first time Jon-Tom noticed the small earplugs.
Made sense. Given the mouse's sensitivity to sound, he'd
need the plugs to keep from going deaf while working
amid the nonstop celebration.
"I recognize neither name nor attire, sir, but there is one
otter staying with us currently. He would be in room
twenty-three on the second floor."
"Great. Thanks." Jon-Tom almost ran into the mouse's
outstretched palm. He placed a small silver piece there and
saw it vanish instantly.
"Thank you, sir. If there is anything I can do for you
after you have met with this possible friend, please let me
know. My name is Whort and I'm the majordomo here."
"Maybe later," Jon-Tom assured him as he started up
the carved stairway.
He had no intention of taking the doormouse up on his
24
Alan Dean Foster
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
25
offer. Not that he had anything against the house brand of
entertainment. His long separation from Talea plagued him
physically as well as mentally, but this wasn't the place to
indulge in any lingering fancies of the flesh. It looked
fancy and clean, but you never could tell where you might
pick up an interesting strain of VD, and not only the
human varieties. In the absence of modern medicine he
didn't want to have to count on curing a good dose of the
clap with a song or two.
So he restrained his libido as he mounted the second-
floor landing and hunted for the right door. He was
interrupted in his search by a sight that reminded him this
was a real place and not a drug-induced excursion into a
dreamland zoo.
A couple of creatures had passed him, and he'd paid
them no mind. Coming down the hall toward him now was
an exceptionally proportioned young woman in her early
twenties- She was barely five feet tall and wore only a
filmy peach-colored peignoir. The small pipe she smoked
did little to blur the image of prancing, bouncing femininity.
"Well, what are you staring at, tall-skinny-and-hand-
some?"
It occurred to Jon-Tom this was not intended as a
rhetorical question, and he mumbled a reply that got all
caught up in his tongue and teeth. Somehow he managed
to shamble past her. Only the fact that Clothahump lay
dying in his tree along with any chance Jon-Tom had of
returning home kept him moving. His head rotated like a
searchlight, and he followed the perfect vision with his
eyes until she'd disappeared down the stairs.
As he forced himself down the hall, that image lingered
on his retinas like a bright light. Sadly, he found the right
door and knocked gently, sparing a last sorrowful glance
for the now empty landing.
"Mudge?" He repeated the knock, was about to repeat
the call, when the door suddenly flew open, causing him to
step back hastily. Standing in the opening was a female
otter holding a delicate lace nightgown around her. Her
eyebrows had been curled and painted, and the tips of her
whiskers dipped in gold. She was sniffling, an act to which
Jon-Tom attached no particular significance. Otters sniffled
a lot.
She took one look at him before dashing past his bulk
down the hallway, short legs churning.
Jon-Tom stared after her, was about to go in when a
second fur of the night came out, accompanied by an
equally distraught third otter. They followed their sister
toward the stairs. Shaking his head, he entered the dark
room.
Faint light flickered from a single chandelier. Golden
shadows danced on the flocked wallpaper. Nothing else
moved. Two curved mirrors on opposing walls ran from
floor to ceiling. An elegant china washbasin rested on a
chellow-wood dresser. The door to the John stood half-
agape.
A wrought-iron bed decorated with cast grapevines and
leaves stood against the far wall. The headboard curved
slightly forward. A pile of sheets and pillows filled the
bed, an eruption of fine linen. Jon-Tom guessed this was
not the cheapest room in the house.
From within the silks and satins came a muffled but still
familiar voice. "Is that you, Lisette? Are you comin' back
to forgive me, luv? Wot I said, that were only a joke.
Meant nothin' by it, I did."
"That would be the first time," Jon-Tom said coolly.
There was silence, then the pile of sheets stirred and a head
emerged, black eyes blinking in the darkness. "Cor, I'm
'aving a bloody nightmare, I am! Too much bubbly."
"I don't know what you've had," Jon-Tom said as he
moved toward the bed, "but this is no nightmare."
Mudge wiped at his eyes with the backs of his paws.
"Right then, mate, it is no nightmare. You're too damned
big to be a nightmare. Wot^the 'ell are you doin' 'ere,
anyways?"
"Looking for you."
26
Alan Dean Poster
"You picked the time for it." He vanished beneath the
linens. "Where's me clothes?"
Jon-Tom turned, searched the shadows until he'd located
the vest, cap, pants and boots. The oversized bow and
quiver of arrows lay beneath the bed. He tossed the whole
business onto the mattress.
"Here."
"Thanks, mate." The otter began to flow into the
clothes, his movements short and fast. " 'Tis a providence,
it is, wot brings you to poor oF Mudge now."
"I don't know about that. You actually seem glad to see
me. It's not what I expected."
Mudge looked hurt. "Wot, not 'appy to see an old
friend? You pierce me to the quick. Now why wouldn't I
be glad to see an old friend?"
Something funny going on here, Jon-Tom mused warily.
Where were the otter's usual suspicious questions, his
casual abusiveness?
As if to answer his questions the door burst inward.
Standing there backlit by the light from the hall was a sight
to give an opium eater pause.
The immensely overweight lady badger wore a bright
red dress fringed with organdy ruffles. Rings dripped from
her manicured fingers, and it was hard to believe that the
massive gems that encircled her neck were real. They
threw the light back into the room.
A few curious customers crowded in behind her as she
raised a paw and pointed imperiously at the bed.
"There he is!" she growled.
"Ah, Madam Lorsha," said Mudge as he finished his
dressing in a hurry, "I 'ave to compliment you on the
facilities of your establishment."
"That will be the last compliment you ever give any-
one, you deadbeat. Your ass is a rug." She snapped her
fingers as she stepped into the room. "Tork."
Bending to pass under the sill was the largest intelligent
warmlander Jon-Tom had yet encountered. It was a shock
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
27
to see someone taller than himself. The grizzly rose at
least seven and a half feet, wore black-leather pants and
shirt. He also wore what appeared in the bad light to be
heavy leather gloves. Their true nature was revealed all too
quickly.
Now, Jon-Tom did not know precisely what had tran-
spired in the elegant room or beyond its walls or between
his furry friend who was slipping on his boots in a
veritable frenzy and the badger who was clearly the owner
of the house of ill repute, but he suspected the sight of the
full-grown grizzly adjusting the brass knuckles over his
immense paws did not bode well for the future.
"I understand your concern, luv," said Mudge as he
casually recovered his bow and quiver, "but now that me
mate's 'ere everything will be squared away."
"Will it, now?" she said. The grizzly stood rubbing one
palm with a massive fist and grinning. His teeth were very
white. The badger eyed Jon-Tom. "Does he mean to say
that you'll pay his bill?"
"Pay his bill? What do you mean, pay his bill?"
"He's been up here for three days without coming
down, enjoying my best liquor and girls, and now he tells
them he hasn't got a silver to his bastard name."
Jon-Tom glared back at Mudge. The otter shrugged,
didn't appear in the least embarrassed. "Hey, at least I was
honest about it, mate. I told 'em I was broke. But it's all
right, ain't it? You'll pay for me, won't you?"
"You are his friend?" inquired the badger.
"Well, yeah." He brought out the purse Clothahump
had given him and jiggled it. The gold inside jingled
musically, and the badger and the bear relaxed.
She smiled at him. "Now that's more like it.. .sir. I
can see that you are a gentleman, though I don't think
much of your choice of friends." Mudge looked wronged.
"How much does he owe you?"
She didn't even have to think. "Two hundred and fifty,
sir. Plus any damages to the linen. I'll have to check."
28
Alan Dean Poster
"I can cover it," Jon-Tom assured her. He turned to
look darkly at Mudge, hefting his ramwood staff. "If
you'd be kind enough to give me a moment alone with
him, I intend to take at least some of it out of his hide."
The badger's smile widened. "Your pleasure is mine,
sir." Again she snapped her fingers. The grizzly let out a
disappointed grunt, turned, and ducked back through the
doorway.
"Take your time, sir. If you need anything helpful—
acid, some thin wooden slivers, anything at all—the house
will be delighted to supply it."
The door closed behind her. As soon as they were alone,
Jon-Tom began to search the room. There was only one
window, off to the left. He tried to open it, found it
wouldn't budge.
" 'Ere now, mate," said Mudge, ambling over, "wot's
the trouble? Just pay the old whore and let's be gone from
'ere."
"It's not that simple, Mudge. That money is from
Clothahump, to pay for our passage at least as far as
Snarken. And I lied about the amount. No way is there
two hundred and fifty there."
Mudge took a step backward as Jon-Tom strove to
puzzle out the window. "Just a minute there, mate. Wot's
that about payin' our way? Snarken, you said? That's all
the way across the Glittergeist, ain't it?"
"That's right." Jon-Tom squinted at the jamb. "I think
this locks from the outside. Clever. Must be a way to
break through it."
Mudge continued backing toward the bed. "Nice of you
to come lookin' for me, mate, but I'm afraid I can't go
with you. And you say 'is wizardship is behind it?"
"That's right. He's sick and I have to go get him some
medicine."
"Right. Give the old reptile me best wishes, and I 'ope he
makes a speedy recovery. As for me, I've some (ravelin' to do
for me 'ealth, and salt air doesn't agree with me lungs."
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
29
"You're not going anywhere unless it's with me,"
Jon-Tom snapped at him. "You take one step out that door
and I'll call the madam. I saw the look in her eyes. She'd
enjoy separating your head from the rest of you. So would
that side of beef that came in with her."
"I ain't "afraid of no bag of suet wot communicates in
grunts," Mudge said.
Jon-Tom turned from the window. "Then maybe I ought
to call them. I can always find someone else to accompany
me."
Mudge rushed at him. "Take it easy, mate, 'old on. To
Snarken, you say?"
"Maybe beyond."
"Ain't no place beyond Snarken."
"Yes there is. Little town not too far inland from
there." He fumbled between the windowpanes, was rewarded
by a double clicking sound. "Ah,"
He lifted the window slowly. Halfway up, something
loud and brassy began to clang inside the building.
"Shit! There's an alarm spell on this thing!" The
sounds of pounding feet came from the hall.
"No time for regrets, mate, and you'd best not stand
there gawkin'." Mudge was over the sill in a flash and
shinnying down the rainpipe outside. Jon-Tom followed
more slowly, envying the otter his agility.
By the time they reached the pavement, faces had
appeared at the open window.
"You won't get away from me, otter!" Madam Lorsha
yelled, shaking her fist at them as they ran up the side
street. At any moment Jon-Tom expected to hear the
grizzly's footsteps behind them, feel huge paws closing
around his throat. "I'll hunt you to the ends of the world!
No one runs out owing Madam Lorsha!"
"Funny what she said about the ends of the world,"
Jon-Tom murmured as he followed the otter down endless
alleyways and turns. He was sure Mudge had memorized
30
Alan Dean Foster
this escape route before stepping inside the brothel. "That's
where we're going."
"There you go again, mate," said Mudge, "usin' them
words like we and us."
"I need your help, Mudge."
They reached a main street and slowed to a walk as they
joined the crowd of evening strollers. Timswirty was a
good-sized town, much bigger than Lynchbany. It was
unlikely Madam Lorsha's thugs would be able to find
them. Jon-Tom tried to hunch over and mask his excep-
tional height.
"Clothahump is deathly ill, and we must have this
medicine. I'm not any happier about making this trip than
you are."
"You must be, mate, because I'm not goin' to make it.
Don't get me wrongo. You just 'elped me clear out of a
bad spot. 1 am grateful, I am, but she weren't worth
enough to make me put me life on the line for you, much
less for that old word-poisoner."
They edged around a strolling couple. "I need someone
who knows the way, Mudge."
"Then you needs some other bloke, mate. I ain't never
been to Snarken."
"I mean someone who knows the ways of the world,
Mudge. I've learned a lot since I've been here, but that's
nothing compared to what I don't know. I need your good
advice as well as your unconventional knowledge."
"Sure you do." Mudge puffed up importantly in spite of
knowing better. "You think you can flatter me into goin',
is that it? Or did you think I'd forgotten your intentions to
be a solicitor in your own world? Don't take me for a fool,
mate."
"I have to have someone along I can trust," Jon-Tom
went on. The otter's expression showed that was one ploy
he wasn't expecting.
"Now that ain't fair, guv'nor, and you knows it."
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
31
"There will also," Jon-Tom added, saving the best for
last, "be a good fee for helping me."
That piqued the otter's interest. " 'Ere now, why didn't
you come out and say that t' begin with instead of goin' on
with all this twaddle about *ow 'is poor old 'ardheaded
curmudgeonly 'oiiness was 'aving an attack of the gout or
whatever, or 'ow badly you need me unique talents." He
moved nearer and put a comradely arm around Jon-Tom's
waist, as high as he could comfortably reach.
"You 'ave a 'ell of a lot to learn about life, guv'nor."
He rambled on as the evening fog closed in comfortingly
around them, explaining that though he didn't know how it
was in Jon-Tom's world, here it was gold that spoke
clearest and bought one's trust. Not words.
Jon-Tom allowed as how things indeed were different,
deferring to the otter's claims while privately disagreeing.
It did not matter who was right, however. All that mattered
was that Mudge had agreed to join him.
Mudge managed to steer them into a tavern in a high-
class district. Having already flashed Clothahump's gold,
Jon-Tom couldn't very well claim he didn't have the
wherewithal to pay. So he went slowly through his own
meal while the otter devoured a gigantic banquet more
suitable to the appetite of Madam Lorsha's bouncer. As
Mudge explained between mouthfuls, he'd burned up a lot
of energy this past week and wanted to make certain he
embarked on their long journey at full strength.
Only when the otter had finished the final morsel did he
lean contentedly back in his chair.
"So you say we're goin' to distant Snarken, wot, and
beyond, and I say there's nothin' beyond. Wot did 'is nibs
say it would be like?"
"He didn't exactly say." Jon-Tom picked at a sweet
dessert. "Just the town where the store with the medicine
is kept."
"Yeah, I 'eard you say somethin' about a town. 'As it
got a name?"
32
Alan Dean Poster
Jon-Tom decided the bittersweet berry dessert was to his
taste, finished the last of it. "Cranculam."
"WOT?" Mudge suddenly was sitting bolt upright,
dribbling the last traces of wrinklerry jelly from his lips as
he gaped at the man sitting across the table from him. A
few curious diners spared him a glance, returned to their
business when they saw no fighting was involved.
Mudge wiped at his sticky whiskers and spoke more
softly, eyeing Jon-Tom sideways. "Wot did you say the
name o' this dump was, guv'nor?"
"Crancularn. I see you've heard of it."
" 'Hard of it, you're bloody well right I've 'card of it.
That's a place o' the dead, mate."
"I thought there wasn't anything beyond Snarken."
"Not supposed to be, mate, but then, nobody knows
where this Crancularn is supposed to be either, except that
it moves about from time to time, like lice, and that
anyone who ever gets there never comes back. 'Tis the
entrance to 'ell itself, mate. Surely you don't mean to go
there."
"Not only do I mean to go there, I intend to make a
small purchase and return safely with it. And you're
coming with me. You promised."
"'Ere now, mate, when I made this 'ere bargain,
weren't nothin' said about Cranculam. I'm out." He stepped
off the chair and discovered he was straddling the far end
of Jon-Tom's ramwood staff, which had been slipped
under the table earlier.
"Sit down," Jon-Tom ordered him. Gingerly, the otter
resumed his seat. "You made a promise, Mudge. You
agreed to accompany me. In a sense, you accepted the
proffered fee. Where I come from an oral contract is
enforceable when the details are known to both parties,
and in this case the details are now known."
"But Crancularn, mate. Can't this medicine be got
anywheres else?"
Jon-Tom shook his head. "I pressed Clothahump on that
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
33
point repeatedly, and he never wavered. The only place it
can be bought is Crancularn." He leaned over the table,
spoke almost angrily. "Look, do you think I want to go
gallivanting halfway across a strange world in search of
some old fart's pills? I like Clothahump, sure, but I have
my own life to live. What's left of it. If he dies leaving me
stuck here, I might as well be dead. It's interesting
enough, your world, but I want to go home, damn it! I
miss Westwood on the opening night of a Steven Spielberg
movie, and I miss the bookstores on Hollywood Boule-
vard, and the beach, and bagels at the deli, and take-out
Chinese food, and—"
"All right, mate, I believe you. Spare me your memo-
ries. So it's a contract, is it? At least you're learnin' 'ow to
stick up for your rights." He smiled and tapped the staff.
Jon-Tem was taken aback. He'd acted almost exactly the
way Mudge would have if their situations had been re-
versed. The thought was more than a little appalling.
"You'll keep your end of the bargain, then?"
"Aye." Mudge spoke with obvious reluctance. "I gave
me word, so I'm stuck with it. Well, a short life but a
happy one, they say. Tis better than dyin' in one's bed.
Alone, anyway."
"There's no need for all this talk of dying." Jon-Tom
sipped at the mug of cold cider in front of him. "We are
going to get to Cranculam, obtain the necessary medica-
tion, and return here. All we're doing is running an
errand."
"That's right, mate. Just an errand." He belched derisively,
to the unconcealed disgust of the well-dressed diners
nearby. "Wot a day it was for me when you tumbled into
that glade where I was huntin' so peaceful. Why couldn't
you 'ave settled on some other poor bloke besides old
Mudge?"
"You were just lucky. As for your ill fortune, we don't
know yet who's the fool in this play: you for agreeing to
come with me or me for wanting you to."
1
34
Alan Dean Foster
"You singe me privates, mate," said Mudge, looking
wounded, an expression he had mastered.
"A wonder there's anything left to singe, after three
days in that brothel. Finish up and let's find a place to
sleep. I'm bushed."
ill
It took six tries to finally wake Mudge. After three days of
nonstop debauchery and the huge mea! of the previous
night, the otter had to be helped to the bathroom. He got
his pants on backwards and his boots on opposite feet.
Jon-Tom straightened him out and together they worked
their way through Tims witty in search of transportation.
From a nervous dealer badly in need of business they
rented a low wooden wagon pulled by a single aged dray
lizard, promising to drop it off at the port of Yarrowl at the
mouth of the Tailaroam. From Yarrowl it should be a
simple matter to book passage on a merchantman making
the run across the Glittergeist to Snarken.
They succeeded in slipping quietly out of town without
catching the eye of Madam Lorsha or her hirelings and
were soon heading south along the narrow trade road.
Once within the forest Mudge relaxed visibly.
" 'Peers we gave the old harridan the slip, mate."
Jon-Tom's eyebrows lifted. "We?"
"Well now, guv'nor, since 'tis we who are goin* on this
little jaunt and we who are goin' to risk our lives for the
sake o' some half-dotty ol' wizard, I think 'tis fair enough
35
36
Alan Dean Foster
for me to say that 'tis we who escaped the clutches of her
haunches."
"Plural good and plural bad, is that it?" Jon-Tom
chucked the reins, trying to spur the ancient lumbering
reptile to greater speed. "I guess you're right."
"Nice of you to agree, mate," said Mudge slyly. "So
'ow's about lettin' me 'ave a looksee at our money?"
"I'll keep an eye on our travel expenses, thanks. I need
your help with several matters, Mudge, but counting coin
isn't one of them."
"Ah well, then." Mudge leaned back against the hard
back of the bench, put his arms behind his head, and gazed
through the tinkling branches at the morning sun. "If you
don't trust me, then to 'ell with you, mate."
"At least if I end up there it'll be with our money
intact."
They stopped for lunch beneath a tree with bell leaves
the size of quart jars. Mudge unpacked snake jerky and
fruit juice. The appearance of the fruit juice made the otter
shudder, but he was intelligent enough to know that he'd
overdone his alcoholic intake just a hair the past week and
that the percentage in his blood could not be raised much
higher without permanent damage resulting. He poured
himself a glass, wincing as he did so.
Something glinted in the glass and he looked sharply to
his right. Nothing amiss. Bell leaves making music with
the morning breezes, flying lizards darting from branch to
branch in pursuit of a psychedelic bee.
Still... Carefully he set down his glass next to the
wagon wheel. The dray lizard snoozed gratefully in a
patch of sunlight, resting its massive head on its forelegs.
Jon-Tom lay in the shade of the tree. All seemed right with
the world.
But it wasn't.
"Back in a sec, mate." Mudge reached into the back of
the wagon. Instead of food and drink he grabbed for his
bow and quiver. The crossbow bolt that rammed into the
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
37
wood between his reaching hands gave him pause. He
withdrew them slowly.
"A wise decision," said a voice from the trees.
Jon-Tom sat up fast. "Who said that?"
He found himself staring at the business ends of an
assortment of pikes and spears, wielded by an unpleasant-
looking assortment of furry assailants.
"Me fault," Mudge muttered, angry at himself. "I
'eard 'em comin', I did, but not quite soon enough."
"It wouldn't have mattered," said the voice which had
spoken a moment, before. "There are too many of us
anyway, and though we are instructed to bring you in
alive, it wasn't specified in what condition."
Stepping through the circle of armed warmlanders was a
coatimundi nearly as tall as Mudge. His natural black
striping had been enhanced with brown decorations painted
on muzzle and tail. One front canine was missing, and the
remainder of the long, sharp teeth were stained yellow. He
rested one paw on the hilt of a thick, curved dagger belted
at his waist. The dagger was also stained, but not yellow.
Jon-Tom thought rapidly. Like Mudge's bow, his own
duar and ramwood staff lay in the bed of the wagon. If he
could just get to them.... Well, what if he could? As this
apparent leader of their captors had said, they were badly
outnumbered.
"Right. Wot is it you want with us?" Mudge asked.
"We're just a couple of innocent travelers, poor prospects
for thieves."
The coati shook his head and glared at them over his
long snout out of bright black eyes. "I'm not interested in
your worldly possessions, whatever they might be. I've
been ordered by my master to bring you in."
"So Lorsha found us out anyway," the otter muttered.
He sounded wistful. "Well, them three days were almost
worth dyin' for. You should've been with me, mate."
"Well, I wasn't, and they're not worth dying for from
my viewpoint."
38
Alan Dean Foster
"Calm yourselves," said the coati. "No one's speaking
of dying here. Cooperate and give me no trouble, and I'll
give none back to you." He squinted at Mudge. "And
what's all this chattering about someone named Lorsha?"
Mudge came back from his memories and made a face
at the coati. "You ain't 'ere to take us back to Madam
Lorsha of Timswitty?"
"No. I come from Malderpot."
"Malderpot?" Jon-Tom gaped at him.
"Big town," Mudge informed him, "full of dour folk
and little pleasure."
"We like it," said a raccoon hefting a halberd.
"No offense," Mudge told him. "Who wants us in
Malderpot?"
"Our master Zancresta," said the coati.
"Who's this Zancresta?" Jon-Tom asked him.
A few incredulous looks showed on the faces of their
captors, including the coati.
"You mean you've never heard of the Master of Dark-
ness and Manipulator of the Secret Arts?"
Jon-Tom shook his head. " 'Fraid not."
The coati was suddenly uncertain. "Perhaps we have
made a mistake. Perhaps these are not the ones we were
sent to fetch. Thile, you and Alo check their wagon."
Two of the band rushed to climb aboard, began going
through the supplies with fine disregard for neatness. It
took them only moments to find Jon-Tom's staff and duar,
which Thile held up triumphantly.
"It's the spellsinger, all right," said the muskrat.
"Keep a close watch on his instrument and he'll do us
no harm," the coati instructed his men.
"I mean you no harm in any case," said Jon-Tom.
"What does your Zancresta want with us?"
"Nothin' good. You can be certain o' that, mate," said
Mudge.
"So one of you, at least, has heard of our master."
"Aye, I've 'eard of 'im, thVmgh I don't mean to flatter
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
39
'is reputation by it." He turned to Jon-Tom. "This 'ere
Zancresta chap's the 'ead wizard not only for the town of
Malderpot but for much of the northern part o' the Bellwoods.
See, each town or village 'as its own wizard or sorcerer or
witch, and each o' them claims to be better than 'is
neighbor at the arts o' magickin'."
"Zancresta is the best," said the coati. "He is the
master."
"I ain't goin' to argue the point with you," said Mudge.
"I 'ave no interest whatsoever in wizardry debates and
functions, for all that I seem to be gettin' repeatedly
screwed by 'em.
"Now, if it's the spellsinger 'ere you're come after, take
'im and let me go. I'm only a poor traveler tryin' 'is best
to make it down the windy road o' life, and I've 'ad a 'ard
enough time makin* ends meet as it is without gettin'
caught up again in the world's troubles."
"It may be true," said the coati, eyeing him unflatteringly.
"But I have my orders. They say I am to bring back the
spellsinger known as Jon-Tom and any who travel with
him. You will have the chance to plead your case before
the master. Perhaps he will let you go."
"And if *e don't?"
The coati shrugged. "That's not my affair."
"Easy for you to say," Mudge grumbled.
Spears prodded Jon-Tom and Mudge into the back of the
wagon, where they sat with their hands tied behind their
backs. A couple of the coati's henchmen took over the
reins. The little procession swung back northward, slightly
west of Timswitty but also in the opposite direction from
Lynchbany and the River Tailaroam.
"This Zancresta 'as a bad reputation, mate," Mudge
whispered to his companion. "Mind now, I'm not denyin'
'is abilities. From wot I've 'eard 'e ain't bad at sorcerin',
but 'e's unscrupulous as 'ell. Cheats on 'is spells and
short-changes 'is incantations, but 'e's too powerful for
anyone to go up against. I've 'ad no dealin's with 'im
40
Alan Dean Foster
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
41
tneself, and I stay clear o' folk from Malderpot. As I said,
they ain't much for partyinV
"From what you tell me about their chief wizard, I can
see why they aren't."
"Right." Mudge nodded past the drivers. "Now, 'tis
clear this 'ere ringtail knows nothin' o' wot 'is master
wants with us. That may be somethin' we can turn to our
advantage. So somehow we 'ave to get clear o' this
charmin' bunch o' throat-slitters before we're brought up
before Zancresta himself. If that 'appens, I 'ave this funny
feelin' that we'll never see the shores o' the Glittergeist or
any other calm water."
"Don't underestimate this one." Jon-Tom indicated the
coati, who strolled along in the lead, talking with a couple
of his band. "He seems more than the usual hired thug."
"Fancy clothes can't hide one's origin," said Mudge.
"No harm in trying." He raised his voice. "Hey, you,
leader!"
"Shut up," snapped the muskrat from the driver's
bench. He showed a short sword. "Or you will eat your
own tongues for breakfast and can see how your words
taste then."
"I just want a word with your chief. Surely one as
illustrious as he can spare a prisoner a few minutes of his
time."
Evidently the coati's ears were as sensitive as his nose,
because he slowed his pace until he was walking alongside
the wagon.
"I bear you no hatred, spellsinger. What do you wish to
talk about? By the way, my name is Chenelska."
"Don't you have any idea what your master wants with
us? What use has so great and powerful a wizard for a
mere spellsinger like me?"
Chenelska considered a moment, then glanced past Jon-
Tom to Mudge. "Tell me, water rat, is this tall human as
ignorant as he appears or is he making fun of me?"
"No." Mudge spoke with sufficient conviction to per-
suade the coati that he was telling the truth. " 'E's as
dumb as he looks."
"Thanks, Mudge. Nice to know I can rely on your good
opinion."
"Don't mention it, mate."
"Can it be," said the dumbfounded Chenelska, "that
you have never heard of the rivalry between our master
and the one that you serve?"
"The one I serve? You mean Clothahump? I don't serve
him. I'm not an apprentice or anything like that. He has
another who serves him. We're just friends."
"Indeed. Good enough friends that you undertake a
long, dangerous mission on his behalf when he lies too ill
to travel himself. A mission to cross the Glittergeist in
search of a rare and precious medicine he requires to cure
himself."
"How the hell do you know that?" Jon-Tom said
angrily.
The coati grinned and laughed, a single sharp barking.
"It seems that this Clothahump does have another who
serves him. A true famulus. A fine, intelligent, hard-
working apprentice who serves faithfully and well. Except
when he's been treated to a few stiff sips of good belly-
warmer."
"Sorbl! That stupid big-eyed sot!"
The coati nodded, still grinning. "Not that we had to
work hard at it, you understand. The poor little fellow
merely wanted companionship, and other servants of my
master provided it, whereupon the turtle's servant grew
extremely talkative."
"I'll bet he did," Jon-Tom mumbled disconsolately.
"It has always been a matter of great contention in this
part of the world," the coati explained, "as to who the
greater wizard is. Clothahump of the tree or my master
Zancresta. It didn't bother my master when opinion was
divided and drifted back and forth. But it has lately
become apparent that outside the immediate environs of
42
Alan Dean Foster
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
43
Malderpot, the consensus is that your Clothahump is the
greater." He moved closer to the wagon and lowered his
voice so that his band could not overhear.
"It's true that saving the whole world is a tough act to
follow. When word came of the victory over the Piated
Folk at the Jo-Troom Gate, and the part your master
Clothahump played in it, there was very little my master
couid do to counteract the great shift in public opinion,
and he has been in a murderous mood ever since."
' 'As if Clothahump saved all the warmlands just to spite
him," Jon-Tom said disgustedly.
"Be that as it may, wizards can be very touchy about
such things. Zancresta dwells on evil spells and prepares
toxic presents and calls down all who cross him. He has
been dangerous to approach ever since this happened. The
only way for him to regain his self-respect and cancel his
shame is to do something to make himself again be
considered the equal of the turtie of the tree. Yet he sees
no way to do this. This Clothahump refuses all challenges
and duels."
"Clothahump," Jon-Tom explained politely, "doesn't
think much of games."
"Word travels that he does not because he is getting
senile.''
Jon-Tom didn't reply. There was nothing to be gained by
arguing with Chenelska and angering him.
"Therefore, my master is badly frustrated, since there is
no way he can prove that he is truly the most skilled in the
wizardly arts.
"Word arrived recently about this severe sickness
Clothahump is suffering from and that he cannot cure with
his own magic, that he needs medicine obtainable only
from a land beyond Snarken. My master was delighted by
it."
"When we get out of this," Jon-Tom whispered to
Mudge, "I'm going to string Sorbl up by his feet and hang
him beak-first over an open bottle of brandy."
"Mate, I truly 'ope you get that opportunity," said
Mudge.
"Thanks to the information the wizard's famulus pro-
vided, we were able to locate and intercept you," said
Chenelska.
"What does your master intend doing with us?"
"I do not know, man. For now, it would seem sufficient
to prevent you from carrying out your mission and returning
with the necessary medicine. Perhaps after he has weakened
enough my master will take pity on him and travel south to
allow him the privilege of begging for his help."
"Clothahump would never do that," Jon-Tom assured
the coati. "He'll spit in Zancresta's face before he asks his
help."
"Then I imagine he will die." The coati spoke without
emotion. "It is of no import to me. I only serve my
master."
"Yes, you're a good slave."
The coati moved closer to the wagon and slapped the
sideboard angrily. "I am no slave!"
"A slave is one who unquestioningly carries out the
orders of his master without considering the possible
consequences."
"I know the consequences of what I do." Chenelska
glowered at him, no longer friendly. "Of one consequence
I am sure. I will emerge from this little journey far better
ofif than you. You think you're smart, man? I was instruct-
ed in all the tricks a spellsinger can play. You can make
only music with your voice and not magic without your
instrument. If I choose to cut your throat, I will be safer
still.
"As for the water rat that accompanies you, it may be
that the master will free him. If he does so, I will be
waiting for him myself, to greet him as is his due." With
that, the coati left them, increasing his stride to again
assume his place at the head of the little procession.
44
Alan Dean Foster
"I'm beginnin' to wish you'd left me at Madam Lorsha's,"
the otter said later that night.
"To Tork's tender mercies?" Jon-Tom snorted. "You'd
be scattered all over Timswitty by now if I hadn't shown
up to save you, and you know it."
"Better to die after three days o' bliss than to lie in
some filthy cell in Malderpot contemplatin' a more mun-
dane way o' passin'."
"We're not dead yet. That's something."
"Is it now? You're a fine one for graspin' at straws."
"I once saw a man start a fire with nothing more than a
blade of dry grass. It kept both of us warm through a night
in high mountains."
"Well 'e ain't 'ere and neither is 'is fire."
"You give up too quickly." Jon-Tom looked ahead, to
where Chenelska strode proudly at the head of his band.
"I could put in for a writ of habeas corpus after we arrive,
but somehow I don't think it would have much sway with
this Zancresta."
"Wot's that, mate? Some kind of otherworldly magic?"
"Yes. We're going to need something like it to get out
of this with our heads in place. And let's not forget poor
Clothahump for worrying about our own skins. He's de-
pending on us."
"Aye, and see 'ow well 'is trust is placed."
They kept to back roads and trails, staying under cover
of the forest, avoiding intervening communities. Chenelska
intended to avoid unnecessary confrontations as well as
keep his not always reliable troops clear of civilization's
temptations. So they made good time and after a number
of days arrived on the outskirts of a town too small to be a
city but too large to be called a village.
A crudely fashioned but solid stone wall encircled it, in
contrast to the open city boundaries of Lynchbany and
Timswitty. It wasn't a very high wall, a fact Jon-Tom
commented on as they headed west.
A small door provided an entrance. The prisoners were
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
45
I
hustled quickly down several flights of stone stairs, past
crackling torches smelling of creosote, and thrust into a
dark, odiferous cell. An obese porcupine turned the large
key in the iron lock and departed, leaving them alone in
the near blackness.
"Still optimistic, mate?" Mudge leaned against a dank
wall and sniffed. "Cast into a dungeon without hope of
rescue to spend our last hours talkin' philosophy."
Jon-Tom was running his fingers speculatively over the
mossy walls. "Not very well masoned or mortared."
"I stand corrected," said Mudge sardonically. "Talkin'
about architecture."
"Architecture's an interesting subject, Mudge. Don't be
so quick to dismiss it. If you know how something is put
together, you might learn how to take it apart."
"That's right, guv'nor. You find us a loose stone in the
wall, take it out, and bring the whole stinkin* city down on
top o' us. Then we'll be well and truly free." He slunk eff
toward a comer.
"Not even a chamber pot in this cesspool. I 'ope they
kill us fast instead o' leavin' us to die with this smell." He
moved back to grab the bars of the cell, shouted toward the
jailer.
"Hey mate, get your fat ass over "ere!"
In no hurry, the porcupine ambled across the floor from
his chair. When he reached the bars he turned his back,
and Mudge backed hastily away from the two-foot-long
barbed quills.
"I will thank you to be a little more polite."
"Right, sure, guv. Take 'er easy. No offense. You can
imagine me state o' mind, chucked in 'ere like an old
coat."
"No, I cannot," said the jaiier. "I do my job and go
home to my family. I do not imagine your state of mind."
"Excuse me," said Jon-Tom, "but have you any idea
how long we are to be held in here?"
"Ah, no."
46
Alan Dean Foster
THE DAY or THE DISSONANCE
47
Slow. Their jailer was a little slow in all areas. It was a
characteristic of all porcupines, and this one was no
exception. That didn't mean he was a moron. Tread
slowly, Jon-Tom warned himself.
"Our possessions have become separated from us," he
went on. "Do you know what was done with them?"
Lazily, the porcupine pointed upward. "They are in the
main guard chamber, to be taken out and sent along with
you when word comes for you to be moved."
"Do you know what's going to happen to us?"
The porcupine shook his head. "No idea. None of my
business. I do my job and stay out of other people's
business, I do."
Mudge instantly divined his companion's intentions,
said sadly, "We were searched before we were sent down
here. I wonder if they found your sack o' gold, mate?"
"Sack of gold?" Evidently the porcupine wasn't all that
slow. For the first time the half-lidded eyes opened fully,
then narrowed again. "You are trying to fool me. Chenelska
would never leave a sack of gold in a place where others
could find it and steal it."
"Yeah, but wot if 'e didn't think to look for somethin'
like that?" Mudge said insinuatingly. "We just don't want
'im to get 'is 'ands on it, after 'im throwin' us down 'ere
and all. If you wanted to find out if we were lyin' or not,
all you'd 'ave to do is go look for yourself, mate. You 'ave
the keys, and we ain't 'ardly goin' to dig our way out o'
this cell while you're gone."
' 'That is true.'' The jailer started for the stairs. ' 'Do not
get any funny ideas. You cannot cut through the bars, and
there is no one else here but me."
"Oh, we ain't goin' anywhere, we ain't," Mudge insisted.
"By the way," Jon-Tom added offhandedly, "as long as
you're going upstairs, maybe you could do something for
us? This is an awfully dank and somber place. A little
music would do a lot to lighten it up. Surely working
down here day after day, the atmosphere must get pretty
depressing after a while."
"No, it does not," said the porcupine as he ascended
the stairs. "I like it dank and somber and quiet, though I
would be interested in hearing the kind of mxisic you could
play. You see, Chenelska told me you were a spellsinger."
Jon-Tom's heart sank. "Not really. I'm more of an
apprentice. I don't know enough yet to really spellsing. I
just like to make music."
"Nonetheless, I cannot take the chance."
"Wait!" Jon-Tom called desperately. "If you know
what spellsinging's all about, then surely you know that a
spellsinger can't make magic without his instrument."
"That is so." The porcupine eyed him warily.
"Well then, how about this? You bring down my duar,
my instrument, but after you give it to me you chain my
hands so I can't pull them back through these bars. That
way if I tried to sing anything that sounded dangerous to
you, you could yank the duar away from me before I could
finish and I couldn't do a thing to stop you from doing
so."
The jailer considered, wrestling with unfamiliar con-
cepts. Jon-Tom and Mudge waited breathlessly, glad of the
darkness. It helped to conceal their anxiety.
"Yes, I think that would be safe enough," the jailer said
finally. "And I am curious to hear you sing. I will see if
your instrument is with your other possessions. While I
look for the sack of gold."
"You won't regret it!" Jon-Tom called after him as he
disappeared up the stairway. As soon as he'd left, Mudge
looked excitedly at his friend.
"Cor, mate, can you really do anythin' tied like that?"
"I don't know. I have to try. It's clear he wasn't just
going to hand me the duar without some kind of safeguard.
I just don't know what I could sing that could help us out
of here before he decided it sounded threatening and took
the duar away from me. Not that I ever know what to sing.
48
Alan Dean Foster
I had the same problem in my own world. But it was all I
could think of."
"You better think o' somethin', mate, or it'll be two
worlds that'll be missin' you permanent. I don't know
what this Zancresta has planned for us, but as much as 'e
hates Clothahump, I don't figure on 'im bein' overly polite
to a couple o* the turtle's servants."
"We're not his servants. At least, you're not."
"Aye, an' you saw 'ow far that got me with Chenelska,
I'm stuck with the bedamned label just like you are, like it
or not. So think of somethin'. Somethin' effective, and
fast."
"I don't know." Jon-Tom fought with his memory.
"Practically everything I know is hard rock."
Mudge gestured at the walls. "Strikes me as damned
appropriate."
"Not like that," Jon-Tom explained impatiently. "It's a
name for a kind of popular music. You've heard me sing
it."
"Aye, an1 I don't pretend to understand a word o' it."
"Then you have something in common with my parents."
Footsteps coming down the stairs interrupted them
momentarily.
"You'd better think up somethin' quick, mate."
"I'll try." He stuck his arms out between the bars,
waiting expectantly. His spirits were boosted by the sight
of the undamaged duar dangling from one of the jailer's
paws.
"There was no gold," the porcupine declared sourly.
"Sorry." Mudge sighed fitfully. "About wot one would
expect from a snurge like Zancresta. Still, 'tweren't no
'arm in lookin', were there?"
"What were you two talking about while I was gone? I
heard you talking." The porcupine looked suspicious.
"Nothin' much, mate. Just makin' conversation. We
talk while you're right 'ere, too, don't we?"
"Yes, that is so. Very well." He stepped forward and
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
49
made as if to hand the duar to Jon-Tom, then hesitated. "I
do not know."
"Oh, come on," Jon-Tom urged him, a big smile
frozen on his face. "A little music would be nice. Not
everyone has the chance to hear an apprentice spellsinger
make music just for pleasure."
"That is what concerns me." The jailer stepped back
and rummaged through a wooden chest. When he returned
it was to clap a pair of thick leather cuffs on Jon-Tom's
wrists. They were connected to one another by a chain. He
also, to Jon-Tom's dismay, tied a thick cord around the
neck of the duar.
"There," he said, apparently satisfied, and handed over
the instrument. Jon-Tom's fingers closed gratefully over
the familiar wooden surface, lightly stroked the double set
of strings.
The porcupine returned to his chair, keeping a firm grip
on his end of the cord. "Now if you try anything funny I
don't even have to run over to you. All I have to do is pull
this rope." He gave the cord an experimental yank, and
Jon-Tom had to fight to hold onto the duar.
"I need a little slack," he pleaded, "or I won't be able
to play at all."
"All right." The jailer relaxed his grip slightly. "But if I
think you are trying to trick me I will pull it right out of
your hands and smash it against the floor."
"Don't worry. I wouldn't try anything like that. Would
I, Mudge?"
"Oh, no, sor. Not after you've all but given this
gentlebeing your word." The otter assumed an air of mock
unconcern as he settled down on the floor to listen. "Play
us a lullaby, Jon-Tom. Somethin' soothin' and relaxin' to
'eip us poor ones forget the troubles we face and the
problems o' the world."
"Yes, play something like that," asked the porcupine.
Jon-Tom struggled with himself. Best to first play a
couple of innocuous ditties to lull this sod into a false
SO
Alan Dean Foster
sense of security. The trouble was, being mostly into
heavy metal, he knew about as many gentle tunes as he did
operatic arias. Somehow something by Ozzy Osbourne or
Ted Nugent didn't seem right, nor did anything by KISS.
He considered "Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap" by AC/DC,
decided quickly that one stanza would cost him control of
the duar permanently.
He decided to take a chance with some golden oldies.
Maybe a few of Roy Orbison's songs, even if his voice
wasn't up to it. It seemed to work. The porcupine lazed
back in his chair, obviously content, but still holding tight
to the cord.
Jon-Tom segued into the part of one song where the
lyrics went "the day you walked out on me" and the jailer
didn't stir, but neither did the walls part to let them
through. Discouraged, he moved on to "America" by Neil
Diamond. A few faint images of the Statue of Liberty and
Ellis Island flickered fitfully in the cell, but Jon-Tom did
not find himself standing safe at either location.
Then he noticed Mudge. The otter sat back in the shad-
ows making long pulling and throwing motions. It took
Jon-Tom a moment to understand what his companion was
driving at. In the middle of humming "Won't Get Fooled
Again," he figured the otter's movements out.
The porcupine had tied the cord to the duar in order to
be able to jerk it quickly out of Jon-Tom's hands. If they
could somehow gain control of the rope, they might be
able to make a small lasso and cast it toward a weapon or
even the big keyring lying on the table.
In order to try that, of course, they had to somehow
incapacitate their jailer. Since he seemed half-asleep al-
ready, Jon-Tom softened his voice as much as possible and
sang the sweetest ballads he could think of, finishing with
"Sounds of Silence" by Simon and Garfunkel. That par-
ticularly apt selection set the porcupine to snoozing. To
make sure, he added a relaxing rendition of "Scarborough
Fair."
I
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
51
Carefully, he tugged gently on the cord. Two half-witted
eyes popped wide open and the line went taut.
"I told you not to try anything," the porcupine growled.
For an instant Jon-Tom was sure they'd lose the duar
along with their last hope. "I didn't mean anything!" he
said desperately. "It's only that playing in the same
position all the time hurts my arms. I wasn't doing
anything else."
"Well..." The jailer slumped back in his chair. "See
that you don't do it no more. Please play another song. I
never heard anything like them. Pretty."
Despairingly, Jon-Tom simply sang the first thing that
came to mind, the theme song from one of the Rocky
films. Maybe it was his frustration, perhaps his sudden
indifference. Whatever the reason, he almost thought he
could feel the power running through him. He tried to
focus on it, really working himself into the useless song in
the hope it might lead to something better.
A faint smell of ozone began to filter into the air of the
dungeon. Something crackled near the ceiling. Mudge
scrambled warily back into the farthest comer of the cell.
Jon-Tom jumped as an electric shock ran up his wrists. He
tried to pull back into the cell, found he was trapped
against the bars by the leather wristcuffs and linking chain.
Oh, shit, he mumbled silently. I've gone and done
something weird again.
Only this time he was trapped up against whatever it
was. Something was materializing in the air next to him.
He tugged futilely at the leather cuffs, dropping the duar in
the process. The instrument was glowing brightly as it
bounced around on the floor like a toad at a disco.
The slow-moving porcupine was on his feet and staring.
He'd abandoned the cord in favor of edging 'round toward
the rack of weapons. Selecting a long spear, he aimed it at
the cell. Jon-Tom was uncomfortably aware of the fact that
if the jailer so chose, he could run him through where he
stood.
"What are you doing, spellsinger? Stop it!"
52
Alan Dean Foster
"I'm not doing anything!" Jon-Tom prayed his hysteria
was as convincing as it was heartfelt. "Untie my hands!"
The jailer ignored him, gazing in stupefied fascination at
the slowly rotating cylinder of fluorescent gas that had
gathered inside the cell. "Don't lie to me. Something is
happening. Something is happening!"
"I know something's happening, you moron! Let me
loose!" He wrenched uselessly at his bonds.
The jailer continued to keep his distance. ' 'I am warning
you, spellsinger. Put an end to this magic right now!"
Keeping his thorny back against the walls, he edged
around until he was standing close to the bars. From there
he was able to prod the prisoner with the tip of his spear. It
was extremely sharp.
"I can't stop it! I don't know what I did and I don't
know what's happening."
"I do not believe you." The jailer's voice had turned
shrill and he was jabbing seriously with the spear.
Suddenly a loud bang came from the cloud of gas. The
glowing cylinder dissipated to reveal a massive, powerful
form at least seven feet tall standing in the center of the
jail cell. It had to crouch to keep from bumping its head
against the ceiling.
Mudge quailed back against the wall while Jon-Tom
thought wildly about his last song. The indifferently sung
song which apparently had been far more effective than all
its anxiety-laden predecessors. The theme song from that
Rocky film ... what was it?
Oh, yeah. The "Eye of the Tiger."
Actually there were two of them, and they glared around
in bewilderment. Jon-Tom had never seen a white tiger
before, much less one that wore armor and stood on two
legs. Leather and brass strips made a skirt which covered
the body from waist to the knees. Additional armor protected
the back of arms and legs, was secured over the legs with
crisscrossing leather straps. A finely worked brass helmet
shielded the head, and an intricate inscription covered the
thin nose guard. Holes cut in the top of the helmet allowed
the ears to protrude.
The huge furry skull glanced in all directions, taking in
unanticipated surroundings. White and black ears flicked
nervously as a quarter ton of tiger tried to orient itself.
Paws dropped to sheaths, and in an instant each one held a
five-foot-long sword with razor-sharp serrated edges.
"By all the nine feline demons, what's going on heah? I
declare I'll have some answers right quick or there'll be
hell to pay." Slitted eyes fixed on the bars. She took a step
forward and glared down at the quivering porcupine.
"You! What is this place? Why am ah locked up? Y'all
53
54
Alan Dean Foster
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
55
answer me fast or ah'll make a necklace out of yo
backbone!"
"G-g-g-guards," the porcupine stammered. It came out
as a whisper. Aware his cry wasn't reaching very far, he
raised his voice. "Guards!"
"Quit stabling and talk to me." Feminine, Jon-Tom
decided. Thunderous, but undeniably feminine. The conju-
ration was a she. She turned to eye Mudge. "Yo theah.
Why won't he talk to me?"
"You talkin' to me, m'dear?" Mudge inquired reluctantly.
She reached down and lifted him easily off the floor with
one paw, setting her second sword aside but within easy
reach. Fully extended, her claws were nearly as long as
Mudge's fingers.
"Now, who else would ah be talking to, you little
sponge?"
"Blimey, m'dear, I ain't considered the possibility."
"Guards!" Suddenly it occurred to the porcupine that
since he wasn't having much luck obtaining help with his
voice, it might be efficacious to employ his feet. He raced
up the stairs with unexpected speed. "Guards, help me!"
"Hey, yo!" The tigress dropped Mudge, who promptly
retreated to the back of the cell. "Come back heah! Yo
heah me?"
"He thinks you're a threat to him."
"What's that?" For the first time she focused her
attention on Jon-Tom.
"I said, he thinks you're a threat to him. Because
you're in here with us."
"Y'all are awfully big fo a human."
"And you're awfully big period." He continued strug-
gling with the cuffs that bound him to the bars of the cell.
"What is this place?" She turned slowly to make a
more careful inspection of the prison. She did not appear
frightened. Only irritated.
"We're in a dungeon in a town called Malderpot."
"Nevah heard of it," said the feline amazon. "A dun-
geon, you say. I can see that fo mahself, honey." She eyed
his restraints. "Why ah yo tied up like that?"
"I'm a spellsinger," he explained. "I've been doing a
little singing and I think I accidently brought you here."
"So that's it!" Jon-Tom did his best not to cower away
from those burning yellow eyes. She stepped back and
hefted both her swords. "Well then, y'all can just send me
back."
He squirmed against the bars. "I, uh, I'm afraid I can't
do that. 1 don't know how I brought you here. I can try
later, maybe. But not without my duar." He pointed into
the room. "And I can't play it with my hands tied like
this."
"Well, that much is obvious. Ah've got eyes, yo
know."
"Very pretty eyes, too."
"Huh," she said, a little more softly. "Spellsingah, yo
say? Yo sound moah like a solicitah to me." Jon-Tom
didn't inform her about his legal training, not being sure of
her opinion of solicitors.
One sword suddenly cut forward and down. Mudge let
out a half moan, half squeak, and Jon-Tom closed his
eyes. But the sword passed between the bars to delicately
cut the chain linking his wrist cuffs. A couple of quick
twists of a clawed paw and his hands were free. He spoke,
as he rubbed the circulation back into his wrists.
"I still need the duar." Loud noises reached them from
somewhere on the level above, and he hurried his introduc-
tions. '-'That's Mudge, I'm Jon-Tom Meriweather." He
recalled the song he'd sung prior to "Eye of the Tiger."
"By any chance would your name be Sage, Rosemary, or
Thyme?" Somehow Scarborough didn't seem a possibility.
"Close enuf. Ah am called Rcseroar."
Jon-Tom nodded to himself. Once again his songs and
his desires had gotten themselves thoroughly mixed. He
took a deep breath, repeated the gist of a by now familiar
story.
56
Alan Dean Foster
DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
57
"We're trying to help a wizard who is dying. Because
of that a jealous wizard is trying to prevent us from doing
so. He had us captured, brought here, and locked up."
"That's no business of mine," said the tigress. "Yo
really think man eyes are pretty?"
"Extremely so." Why didn't Mudge chip in with a
word or two? he wondered. He was better at this sort of
thing. But the otter hugged his comer of the cell and kept
his mouth shut. Jon-Tom plunged on. "Like topaz."
"Yo have a gift of words as well as music, don't yo?
Well, let me tell yo, ah am not subject to the simple
flattery of the male of any species!''
"Of course you're not. I didn't mean for you to think I
was intentionally flattering you, or anything like that. I just
made a simple statement of fact."
"Did y'all, now? Where do yo have to go to help this
dying friend of yours?"
"Across the Glittergeist Sea."
"So ah'm that fah west, am ah?" She shook her head in
wonder. "It's a peculiah world we live in."
"You don't know the half of it," Jon-Tom muttered.
"Ah've nevah been to an ocean, much less the
Glittergeist." She looked out through the bars. "So that's
yo instrument fo making magic?"
"It is. Also, the keys are on the table nearby. If we
could get ahold of the rope attached to the duar, we could
maybe drag the keys over here." He eyed the stairwell.
"But I don't think we've got much time."
"Well, sugah, if it's the keys you want. . ." Roseroar
put one paw on a bar to the left, the other on the bar
immediately opposite, inhaled mightily, and pushed. Mus-
cles rippled beneath the armor.
There was a groan and the metal bent like spaghetti. The
tigress stepped through the resultant gap, walked over to
the table, and picked up the keyring.
"Yo still want these?"
Mudge was already out in the corridor. Jon-Tom was
eht on his heels. He snatched the duar and slung it over
his shoulder.
"I think we'll be able to manage without them. Roseroar,
you're quite a lady."
"Aye, with a delicate and ladylike touch," Mudge
"Ah think ah like you two," she said thoughtfully,
staring at Mudge, "though ah can't decide if y'all are
trying to be funny or flattering." She gestured with the two
heavy swords. "Ah hope fo yo sake y'all are trying to be
funny."
Jon-Tom hastened to reassure her. "You've got to take
whatever Mudge says with a grain of salt. Comments like
that are part of his nature. Sort of like a disease." He
turned to bestow a warning look on the otter.
"Ah can see that," said the tigress. "Well, ah don't
know how ah'm going to get home, but ah sure don't
fancy this hole. Let's go somewhere quiet and talk."
"Suits me," said Jon-Tom agreeably.
At that moment the porcupine appeared at the top of the
stairs, preceded by a pair of big, heavily armed wolves.
They saw Roseroar about the time she saw them. She
emitted a battle cry, a mixture of roar and curse, that shook
moss from the ceiling. Waving both swords like propel-
11'' lers, she charged the stairway, which cleared with astonishing
speed.
Mudge executed a little bow and gestured with his right
hand. "After you, master o' magic and spellsinger
extraordinaire."
Jon-Tom made a face at him, hurried to follow Roseroar
upward. From ahead sounded shouts, screams, frantic
cries, and yelps. Above all rose the tigress's earthshaking
growls.
"Don't be so quick to compliment me," Jon-Tom told
the otter. "She's not what I was trying to conjure up."
"I know that, guv'nor," said Mudge, striding along
happily in his companion's wake. "It never is, wot? But
58
Alan Dean Poster
even though you never get wot you're after with your
spellsingin', wotever you gets always seems to work out."
"Tell me that again when she finds out there's no way I
can send her home-"
"Now, mate," Mudge told him as they started up to the
next level, "wot's the use o' creatin' worry where there
ain't none? Besides," he went on, his grin widening, "if
she turns quarrelsome, you can tell 'er 'ow beautiful 'er
eyes are."
"Oh, shut up."
They emerged into the main guardroom, which looked
as if a modest typhoon had thundered through it. Every
table was overturned and broken furniture littered the floor.
Broken spears and pikes sopped up spilled liquid from
shattered jugs. A couple of the guards remained, decoratively
draped over the broken furniture. None offered a protest as
Jon-Tom and Mudge began to search the still intact chests
and drawers.
One .yielded Mudge's longbow and arrows, another
Jon-Tom's ramwood fighting staff. There was no sign of
the full purse Clothahump had given him, nor did he
expect to find it. Mudge was more disappointed than his
companion at the absence of the gold.
"Bloody bedamned stinkin' thieves," he mumbled, ig-
noring the fact that he'd lifted a purse or two in his own
time.
"Be quiet." Jon-Tom led him up the next flight of
stairs. "From the way you're carrying on, you'd think this
was the first time you'd ever been penniless."
"I'm not sayin' that, mate," replied Mudge, putting a
leash on his lamentations, "but when I gets friendly with a
bit o' gold or silver and it ups and disappears on me, I feel
as if I've lost a good friend. The loss strikes me to the
quick."
"One of these days it'd be nice to see you get so
emotional over something besides money."
"You do me an injustice, mate." Mudge carried his bow
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
59
in front of him, a hunting arrow notched and ready to fire.
If the fates were kind they'd give him one clear shot at
Chenelska or his bullyboys. Nothing would please him
more than to be able to give the coati the shaft.
"You want emotional?" he continued as they climbed.
"You should've seen me at Madam Lorsha's."
"I'm talking about honest emotion, about caring. Not
lust."
"Cor, you mean there's a difference?"
The third landing was the last. They emerged into a
small open square lit by torches and oil lamps. To their left
was the city wall, to the right the outermost buildings of
the town. The light danced wildly as sources of illumina-
tion were hastily moved to different positions. Shouts and
yells filled the air.
Jon-Tom ducked as a wolf whizzed over his head. It
pinwheeled once before striking the wall with a sickening
thud.
Roseroar's efforts threw everything into confusion. Horns
and shouts were beginning to rouse a whole section of the
community. Lights were starting to appear in nearby windows
as residents were awakened by the commotion.
Mudge bounced gleefully up and down, pointing at the
evidence of the chaos the tigress was causing. "Wot a
show! The poor buggers must think the 'ole bloomin' city
is under attack."
"Maybe they're right." Jon-Tom started forward.
"Hey, you two!" Roseroar called to them as she idly
batted aside a large rat armed with a short sword who had
tried to sneak under her guard. The rodent went skidding
across the paving stones, shedding bits and pieces of armor
and flesh as he went. "Ovah heah! This way!"
They ran toward her. Jon-Tom placed his staff in front of
him while Mudge ran backward to guard their rear, his
short legs a blur. As they ran they dodged spears and
arrows. Mudge responded to each attack individually, and
6O
Alan Dean Foster
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
61
they were rewarded as one figure after another fell from
the wall above.
Snarling, a hyena draped in heavy chain mail headed
right for Ion-Tom, swinging a viciously studded mace over
his head. Jon-Tom blocked it with his staff, and the
ramwood held as the mace's chain wrapped around it. He
pulled and twisted in one motion, bringing the knobbed
end of the staff down on his assailant's helmet. The hyena
dropped like a stone. They ran on, Jon-Tom unwrapping
the chain from his staff.
Then they were up against the thick wooden door in the
city wall. Crossbow bolts thudded into the wood or splintered
against the rock as the wall's garrison struggled to regroup.
Mudge inspected it rapidly. "Locked, damn it, from the
other side!"
"Pahdon me," said Roseroar. While they covered her
she put her back against the door, dug her feet into the
pavement, and shoved. The door broke with a snap, the
wood holding but not the iron hinges. It fell with a crash.
The trio ran out, pursued by yells and weapons. No one
chose to pursue beyond the city wall in person. The tigress
had demonstrated what she could do at close range, and
Malderpot's soldiery had taken the lesson to heart. They
held back, waiting for someone higher up to give the
necessary orders, and praying those directions would take
their time arriving.
Before they did, the fugitives were deep within the
concealment offered by the Bellwoods and the night.
Eventually they located a place where several giant trees
had fallen, forming a natural palisade, and settled in
behind the wooden barricade nature had so thoughtfully
provided.
The long run hadn't troubled Jon-Tom, who was a
good distance runner, nor Mudge, who was blessed with
inexhaustible energy, but Roseroar was tired. They waited
while she caught her breath.
There in the moonlight she pulled off her helmet, undid
the thick belt that held both swords, and put it aside. Then
she leaned back against one fallen trunk. Her bright yellow
eyes seemed to glow in the darkness. Physically she was
unharmed by the fighting, though her armor showed plenty
of cuts and dents.
"We owe you our lives," he finally told her.
"Yes, ah expect that's so. Damned if ah know how
ah'm going to collect on that debt. Yo told me yo didn't
mean to conjuh me up in the first place?"
"That's right," he confessed. "It was an accident. I
was trying to put our jailer to sleep. When it didn't work I
got upset and spellsang the first thing that came to mind
and—poof—there you were."
"Ah was the first thing that came to yo mind?"
"Well, not exactly. Matter of fact, I've never seen
anybody like you. This kind of thing happens to me a lot
when I try to spellsing."
She nodded, turned to look to where Mudge was already
searching the bushes for something edible. "Is he telling
the truth, squirt?"
"Me name is Mudge, lady o' the long tooth," said the
voice in the bushes, "and I'll make you a deal right now.
You can like me o' not, but you don't call me names and
I'll respond likewise."
"Ah favor politeness in all things, being a lady of
refined tastes," she replied evenly.
Mudge restrained the first reply that came to mind, said
instead, "Aye, 'e's tellin' you the truth. A powerful spellsinger
'e is. Maybe the most powerful ever, though we ain't yet
sure o' that. 'E certainly ain't. See, 'e 'as this bad 'abit o'
tryin' to do one thing and 'e ends up doin' something total
unexpected."
Jon-Tom spread his hands in a gesture of helplessness.
"It's true. I have this ability but I don't seem able to
control it. And now it's caused me to go and inconve-
nience you."
62
Alan Dean Foster
"That's a fine, politic way of putting it, sub. Going to
the Glittergeist, yo said?"
"And across it. We have to get to Snarken."
"Ah've heard of Snahken. It's supposed to be an inter-
esting place, rich in culture." She thought a long moment,
then sighed. "Since yo say y'all can't send me home, ah
guess ah maht as well tag along with y'all. Besides, ah
kind of like the way you have with words, man." Her eyes
glittered and Jon-Tom felt suddenly uncomfortable, though
he wasn't sure why.
"Oh, Vs a fine one with words 'e is, luv," Mudge said
as he reappeared. He was carrying an armful of some
lime-green berries. Jon-Tom took a few, bit into one, and
found the taste sweet. More out of politeness than any
expectation of acceptance, the otter offered some to the
tigress.
"Bleh!" she said as she pulled back. She smiled widely,
displaying an impressive array of cutlery. "Sun, do ah
look like the kind to enjoy weeds?"
"No you don't, luv, but I thought I'd be polite, since
you place such store by it."
She nodded thankfully as she scanned the surrounding
woods. "Come the morning ah'll find mahself something
to eat. This appeahs to be good game country. Theah
should be ample meat about."
Jon-Tom was glad she wasn't looking at him when she
said that. "I'm sure we'll run across something edible."
He turned to the otter. "What about our pursuit, Mudge?"
The otter responded with his ingratiating, amused bark.
"Why, them sorry twits will be all night just tryin' t' get
their stories straight. From wot I saw on our way out, most
of 'em were your typical city guard and likely ain't in
Zancresta's personal service. It'd be that arse'ole Chenelska
who'd be put in charge o' organizin' any kind o' formal
chase. By the time 'e gets the word, gets 'is conflictin'
reports sorted out, and puts together anythin' like a formal
pursuit, we'll be well out o' it."
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
63
"Then you don't think they'll be able to track us
down?"
"I've been seein' to the coverin' o' our tracks ever since
we left that cesspool o' a town, mate. They won't find a
sign o' us."
"What if they do come after us, though? We can't
conceal all of Roseroar's petite footprints."
Mudge assumed a crafty mien. "Aye, that they might,
guv. They'll likely comb a wide front to the south, knowin'
that we're to be headin' for the ol' Tailaroam. They can
run up every tree in the Bellwoods without fmdin' sign o'
us, because we ain't goin' t' go south. We'll fool 'em
inside out by goin' west from 'ere. We're so far north o'
the river we might as well do it anyhows."
Jon-Tom struggled to recall what he'd been taught of the
local geography. "If you go far enough west of here, the
forest disappears and you're into the Muddletup Moors."
"You got it, mate. No one would think t'ave a looksee
for us there."
"Isn't that because no one ever does go in there?"
"That's right. Wot better place o' safety t' flee to?"
Jon-Tom looked doubtful as he sat back against a fallen
trunk. "Mudge, I don't know about your thinking."
"I'm willin' enough to entertain alternative suggestions,
m'lord warbler, but you're 'ardly in shape for some straight
arguin'."
"Now, that I won't argue. We'll discuss it in the
morning."
"In the mornin', then. Night to you, mate."
The thunder woke Jon-Tom. He blinked sleepily and
looked up into a gray sky full of massive clouds. He
blinked a second time. White clouds were common
enough in this world, just as they were in his own. But not
with black stripes.
He tried to move, discovered he could not. A huge furry
arm lay half on and half off his chest while another curved
behind his head to form a warm pillow. Unfortunately, it
64
Alan Dean Foster
M
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
65
was also cutting off the circulation to his throbbing left
arm.
He tried to disengage himself. As he did so the thunder
of Roseroar's purring was broken by a coughing snarl. She
stirred, but her arms did not budge.
Another shape moved nearby. Mudge was sitting up on
the bed of leaves he'd fashioned for himself. He looked
over toward Jon-Tom as he stretched.
"Well, don't just sit there, damn it. Give me a hand
here!"
"Wot, and interrupt a charmin' domestic tableau like
that?"
"Don't try to be funny."
"Funnier than that?" He pointed at the helpless spell-
singer. "Couldn't be if I tried, mate."
Glaring at him, Jon-Tom tried again to disengage him-
self, but the weight was too much for him. It was like
trying to move a soft mountain.
"Come on, Mudge. Have a heart."
"Who, me? You know me better than that, mate." As
he spoke Roseroar moved in her sleep, rolling partly across
Jon-Tom's midsection and chest. He gasped and kicked his
legs in a frantic attempt to extricate himself. The tigress
purred thunderously atop him.
Mudge took his time getting to his feet, ambled lazily
over to eye the arrangement thoughtfully. "Our dainty lady
friend sounds 'appy enough. Best not to disturb 'er. I don't
see wot you're fussin' about. It's not like she's got a 'and
over your mouth. From where I stands it looks almost
invitin', though I can't say as 'ow I'd trade places with
you. I'd be lost under 'er."
Jon-Tom put a hand on the tigress's face and pushed.
She stirred, moved slightly, and nearly bit his fingers off.
He withdrew his hand quickly. She'd moved enough for
him to breathe again, anyway.
' 'Any signs of pursuit?''
" 'Aven't smelled or 'card a thing, mate. I think they're
still too disorganized. If they are tookin' fq_r us, you can be
sure 'tis to the south o' Malderpot and not 'ere. Still, the
sooner we're on our way, the better." He turned, began
gathering up his effects.
"Come on now, lad. No time to waste."
"That's real funny, Mudge. How am I supposed to get
her off me?"
"Wake 'er up. Belt 'er one, mate."
"No thanks. I like my head where it is. On my shoul-
ders. I don't know how'd she react to something like that
in her sleep."
Mudge's eyes twinkled. "Be more interestin' to see wot
she might do while she's awake."
There was no need to consider extreme action, however.
All the talking had done its job. Roseroar snorted once and
opened those bottomless yellow eyes.
"Well, good morning, man."
"Good morning yourself. Roseroar, I value your friend-
ship, but you're breaking my arm."
Her expression narrowed. "Suh, are you insinuatin' that
ah am too heavy?"
"No, no, nothing like that." Somewhere off in the
bushes Mudge was attending to necessary bodily functions
while trying to stifle his laughter. "Actually, I think you're
rather svelte."
"Svelte." Roseroar considered the word. "That's nice.
Ah like that. Are you saying I have a nice figure?"
"I never saw a tiger I didn't think was attractive," he
confessed, honestly enough.
She looked mildly disappointed as she rolled off him.
"What the fuzz-ball said is true. Yo ah at least half
solicitah."
Jon-Tom rolled over and tried shaking his left arm,
trying to restore the circulation at the same time as he was
dreading its return. Pins and needles flooded his nerves
and he gritted his teeth at the sensation.
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AlaA Dean Foster
"I did study some law in my own world. It might be my
profession someday."
- "Spellsinging's better," she rumbled. "Svelte?"
"Yeah." He sat up and began pulling on his boots.
"Nice. Ah think ah like yo, man."
"I like you, too, Roseroar."
"Svelte." She considered the new word thoughtfully.
"Want to know mah word fo yo?" She was putting on her
armor, checking to make sure each catch and strap was
fastened securely. She grinned at him, showing six-inch
fangs. "Cute. Yo ah kind o' cute."
"Gee." Jon-Tom kept his voice carefully neutral as he
replied. "That's nice."
Mudge emerged from the woods, buttoning his shorts.
"Gee, I always thought you were cute, too, mate."
"How'd you like your whiskers shoved up your ass?"
Jon-Tom asked him softly.
"Calm down, mate." Somehow Mudge stifled his laugh-
ter. "Best we get goin' westward. We've given 'em the
slip for the nonce, but sooner o' later the absence o' tracks
o' mention of us south o' 'ere will hit 'im as distinctly
peculiar and they'll start 'untin' for us elsewhere."
Jon-Tom slung the duar over his shoulder and hefted his
staff. "Lead on."
Mudge bowed, his voice rich with mock servility. "As
thy exalted cuteness decrees."
* Jon-Tom tried to bash him with the staff, but the otter
was much too fast for him.
v
It took several days for them to reach the outskirts of the
Moors, a vast and, as far as anyone knew, uninhabited
land which formed the western border of the Bellwoods
and reached south all the way to the northern coast of the
GHttergeist Sea. After a day's march into the Moors'
depths, Mudge felt safe enough to angle southward for the
first time since fleeing the city.
Transportation across the ocean was going to present a
problem. No ports existed where the ocean met the south-
ern edge of the Moors, and Jon-Tom agreed with the otter
that it would be a bad idea to follow the shoreline back
eastward toward the mouth of the Tailaroam. Chenelska
would be sure to be looking for them in ports like Yarrowl.
As for the Moors themselves, they looked bleak but
hardly threatening. Jon-Tom wondered how the place had
acquired its widespread onerous reputation. Mudge could
shed little light on the mystery, explaining only that rumor
insisted anyone who went into the place never came out
again, a pleasant thought to mull over as they hiked ever
deeper into the foggy terrain.
It was a sorry land, mostly gray stone occasionally
67
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Alan Dean Foster
stained red by iron. There were no trees, few bushes, a
little grass. The sky was a perpetual puffy, moist gray.
Fog and mist made them miserable, except for Mudge.
Nothing appeared to challenge their progress. A few mind-
less hoots and mournful howls were the only indications of
mobile inhabitants, and nothing ever came close to their
camps.
They marched onward into the heart of the Muddletup,
where none penetrated. As they moved ever deeper into
the Moors the landscape began to change, and not for the
better. The last stunted trees disappeared. Here, in a place
of eternal dampness and cloud cover, the fungi had taken
over.
Enormous mushrooms and toadstools dripped with mois-
ture as Jon-Tom and his companions walked beneath
spore-filled canopies. Some of the gnarled, ugly growths
had trunks as thick as junipers, while others thrust deli-
cate, semi-transparent stems toward the sodden sky. There
were no bright, cheerful colors to mitigate the depressing
scene, which was mostly brown and gray. Even the occa-
sional maroon or unwholesomely yellow specimen was a
relief from the monotonous parade of dullness.
Some of the flora was spotted, some striped. One
displayed a checkerboard pattern that reminded Jon-Tom of
a non-Euclidian chessboard. Liverworts grew waist-high,
while lichens and mosses formed a thick, cushiony carpet
into which their boots sank up to the ankles. Clean granite
was disfigured by crawling fungoid corruption growing on
its surface. And over this vast, wild eruption of thallophytic
life there hung a pervasive sense of desolation, of waste
and fossilized hope.
The first couple of days had seen no slowing of their
progress. Now their pace began to degenerate. They slept
longer and spent less time over meals. It didn't matter
what food they took from their packs or scavenged from
the land: everything seemed to have lost its flavor. What-
ever they consumed turned flat and tasteless in their
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
69
mouths and sat heavy in their bellies. Even the water
which fell fresh from the clouds had acquired a metallic,
unsatisfying aftertaste.
They'd been in the Moors for almost a week when
Jon-Tom tripped over the skeleton. Like everything else
lately its discovery provoked little more than a tired mur-
mur of indifference from his companions.
"So wot?" muttered Mudge. "Don't mean a damn
thing."
"Ah'm sitting down," said Roseroar. "Ah'm tired."
So was Jon-Tom, but the sight of the stark white bone
peeping out from beneath the encrusting rusts and mildews
roused a dormant concern in his mind.
"This is all wrong," he told them. "There's something
very wrong going on here."
"No poison, if that's wot you're thinkin', mate." Mudge
indicated the growths surrounding them. "I've been care-
ful. Everythin' local we've swallowed 'as been edible,
even if it's tasted lousy."
"Lucky yo," said Roseroar. "No game at all fo me.
Ah find mahself reduced to eating not just weeds, but this
crap. Ah declah ah've nevah been so bored with eating in
all man life."
"Boring, tired, tasteless.. .don't you see what's hap-
pening?" Jon-Tom told them.
"You're gettin' worked up over nothin', mate." The
otter was lying on a mound of soft moss. "Settle yourself
down. 'Ave a sip o' somethinV
"Yes." Roseroar slipped off her swordbelt. "Let's just
sit heah and rest awhile. There's no need to rush. We
haven't seen a sign of pursuit since we left that town, and
ah don't think we're likely to encounter any now."
"She's right, mate. Pull up a soft spot and 'ave a sit."
"Both of you listen to me." Jon-Tom tried to put some
force into his voice, was frightened to hear it emerge from
his lips flat and curiously empty of emotion. He felt sad
and utterly useless. Something had begun to afflict him
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Alan Dean Foster
from the day they'd first set foot in the Moors. It was
something more than just boredom with their surround-
ings, something far more penetrating and dangerous. It
was a grayness of the heart, and it was digging its
insidious way deeper and deeper into their thoughts, kill-
ing off determination and assurance as it went. Eventually,
it would ruin their bodies as well. The skeleton was proof
enough of that. Whatever was into them was patient and
clever, much too calculating, it occurred to Jon-Tpm, to be
an accident of the environment.
He tried to find the enthusiasm to fight back as he
turned to scream at the landscape. "Who are you? Why
are you doing this to us? What is it you wan??"
He felt like a fool. Worse, he knew his companions
might think he was becoming unhinged. But they said
nothing. He would've welcomed some outcry of skepti-
cism. Instead, the sense of hopelessness settled ever deeper
around them.
Nothing moved within the Moors. Of one thing he was
fairly confident: this wasn't wizardry at work. It was too
slow. He had to do something, but he didn't know what.
All he could think of was how ironic it would be if, after
surviving Malderpot, they were to perish here from a
terminal case of the blahs.
So he was startled when a dull voice asked, "Don't you
understand it all by now?"
"Who said that?" He whirled, trying to spot the speak-
er. Nothing moved.
"I did."
The voice came from an eight-foot-tall mushroom off to
his left. The cap of this blotchy ochre growth dipped
slightly toward him.
"Not that I couldn't have," said another growth.
"Nor I," agreed a third'.
"Mushrooms," Jon-Tom said unsteadily, "don't talk."
"What?" said the first growth. "Sure, we're not loqua-
cious, but that's a natural function of our existence. There
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
71
isn't much to talk about, is there? I mean, it's not just a
dull life, man, it's boring. B-o-r-i-n-g."
"That's about the extent of it," agreed the giant toad-
stool against which Roseroar rested. She moved away from
it hastily, showing more energy than she had in the
previous several days, and put a hand to the haft of each
sword.
"I mean, give it some thought." The first mushroom
again, which was taking on something of the air of a
fungoid spokesman. Jon-Tom saw no lips or mouth. The
words, the thoughts, came fully formed into his mind
through a kind of clammy telepathy. "What would we talk
about?"
"Nothing worth wasting the time discussing," agreed
another mushroom with a long, narrow cap in the manner
of a morrel. "I mean, you spend your whole existence
sitting in the same spot, never seeing anything new, never
moving around. So what's your biggest thrill? Getting to
make spores?"
"Yeah, big deal," commented the toadstool. "So we
don't talk. You never hear us talk, you think fungoids
don't talk. Ambulatories are such know-it-alls."
"It doesn't matter," said the second mushroom. "Noth-
ing matters. We're wasting our efforts."
"Wait." Jon-Tom approached the major mushroom,
feeling a little silly as he did so. "You're doing something
to us. You have been ever since we entered the deep
moors."
"What makes you think we're doing anything to you?"
said the spokesthing. "Why should we make the effort to
do anything to anyone?"
"We've changed since we entered this land. We feel
different."
"Different how, man?" asked the toadstool.
"Depressed. Tired, worn-out^ useless, hopeless. Our
outlook on life has been altered."
"What makes you think we're responsible?" said the
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Alan Dean Poster
second mushroom. "That's just how life is. It's the normal
state of existence. You can't blame us for that."
"It's not the normal state of existence."
"It is in the Moors," argued the first mushroom.
Jon-Tom held his ground. "There's some kind of telepa-
thy at work here. We've been absorbing your feelings of
hopelessness, your idea that nothing's worth much of
anything. It's been eating at us."
"Look around you, man. What do you see?"
Jon-Tom turned a slow circle. Instead of the half-hoped-
for revelation, his gaze swept over more of what they'd
seen the past dreary days—rocks, mushrooms, lichens and
mosses, mist and cloud cover.
"Now, I ask you," sighed the first mushroom, "is that
depressing or what? I mean, it is de-press-ing."
Jon-Tom could feel his resolve slipping dangerously.
Mudge and Roseroar were half-asleep already. He had the
distinct feeling that if he joined them, none of them would
ever wake up again. The sight of white bone nearby
revitalized him. How long had it taken the owner of that
skeleton to become permanently depressed?
"I guess you might consider your existence here
depressing."
"Might consider?" moaned the toadstool. "It is de-
pressing. No maybes about it. Like, I'm afiingus, man.
That's depressing all by itself."
"I've eaten some mushrooms that were downright excit-
ing," Jon-Tom countered.
"A cannibal, too," said the tall toadstool tiredly. "How
depressing." It let out a vast telepathic sigh, a wave of
anxiety and sadness that rolled over Jon-Tom like a wave.
He staggered, shook off the cobwebs that threatened to
bind his mind. "Stop that."
"Stop what? Why sweat it? Just relax, man. You're full
of hurry, and desire, and all kinds of useless mental
baggage. Why knock yourself out worrying about things
that don't matter? Nothing matters. Lie down here, relax,
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
73
take it easy. Let your foolish concerns fly bye-bye. Open
yourself to the true blandness of reality and see how much
better you'll feel for it."
Jon-Tom started to sit down, wrestled himself back to an
upright stance. He pointed toward the skeleton.
"Like that one?"
"He was only reacting sensibly," said the toadstool.
"He's dead." Jon-Tom's voice turned accusing. "You
killed him. At least, this place killed him."
"Life killed him. Slain by dullness. Murdered by mo-
notony. He did what comes naturally to all life. He
decayed."
"Decayed? You flourish amidst decay, don't'you? You
thrive on it."
"He calls this thriving," mumbled another toadstool.
"He went the way of all flesh, that's all. Sure, we broke
down his organic components. Sometimes I wonder why
we bother. It's all such a waste. We live for death. Talk
about dull, man. It's, like, numbsville."
Jon-Tom turned and walked over to shake Roseroar,
shoving hard against the enormous shoulder. "Wake up,
Roseroar. Come on, wake up, damn it!"
"Why bother?" she murmured sleepily, eyeing him
through half-closed eyes. "Let me sleep. No, don't !et me
sleep." The feeble plea hit him like a cry for help.
"Don't worry, I won't. Wake up!" He continued to
shake her until she sat up and rubbed at her eyes.
He moved over to where Mudge lay sprawled on his
side, kicked the otter ungently. "Move it, water rat! This
isn't like you- Think about where we're going. Think of
the ocean, of clear salt air."
"I'd rather not, mate," said the otter tiredly. "No point
to it, really."
"True true, true," intoned the fungoid chorus of doom.
"I'll get up in a minute, guv'nor. There's no rush, and
we're in no 'urry. Let me be."
"Like hell, I will. Think of the food we've enjoyed.
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Alan Dean Poster
Think of the good times ahead, of the money to be made.
Think," he said with sudden alacrity, "of die three days
you spent at the Elegant Bitch."
The otter opened his eyes wide, smiling weakly. "Aye,
now that's a memory t' 'old tight to."
"Useless, useless, useless," boomed the a cappella
ascomycetes.
" Tis kind o' pointless, mate," said the otter. For an
instant Jon-Tom despaired, fearing he'd lost his friend for
good. Then Mudge sprang to his feet and glared at the
surrounding growth. "But 'tis also one 'ell of a lot o'
fun!"
"Help Roseroar," Jon-Tom ordered him, a great relief
surging through him. He turned his attention back to their
subtle, even indifferent, assailants.
"Look, I can't help what you are and I can't help it if
you find your existences so depressing."
"It's not how we find them," said the first mushroom.
"It's how they are. Don't you think we'd change it if we
could? But we can't. This is iife: boring, dull, unchanging,
gray, depressing, decay..."
"But it doesn't have to be that way. It's you who let it
remain so." Unslinging the duar, he launched into the
brightest, cheeriest song he could think of: John Denver's
"Rocky Mountain High." He finished with Rick Springfield's
"We All Need the Human Touch." The gray sky didn't
clear, the mist didn't lift, but he felt a lot better.
"There! What did you think of that?"
"Truly depressing," said the toadstool. "Not the songs.
Your voice."
Eighty million mushrooms in the Muddletup Moors,
Jon-Tom mused, and I have to get a music critic. He
laughed at the absurdity of it, and the laughter made him
feel better still.
"Isn't there anything that can lighten your existence,
make your lives more bearable so you'll leave us alone?"
"We can't help sharing our feelings," said the second
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
75
mushroom, "We're not laying all this heavy stuff on you
to be mean, man. We ain't mean. We're indifferent.
What's bringing you down is your own knowledge of life's
futility and your own inability to do anything about it.
Face it, man: the cosmos is a downer."
Hopeless. These beings were hopeless, Jon-Tom told
himself angrily. How could you fight something that didn't
come at you with shields and swords and spears? What
could he employ against a broadside of moroseness, a
barrage of doubt?
They sounded so sure of themselves, so confident of the
truth. All right then, he'd show them the truth! If he
couldn't fight them by differing with them, maybe he
could win by agreeing with them.
He took a deep breath. "The trouble with you is that
you're all manic-depressives."
A long silence, an atmosphere of consideration, before
the toadstool inquired, "What are you talking about,
man?" In the background a couple of rusts whispered to
one another, "Talk about a weird dude."
"I haven't had that much psychology, but pre-law re-
quires some," Jon-Tom explained. "You know, I'll bet not
one of you has ever considered psychoanalysis for your
problems."
"Considered what?" asked the first mushroom.
Jon-Tom found a suitable rock—a hard, uncomfortable
one sure to keep him awake. "Pay attention now. Anybody
here ever heard of Franz Kafka?"
Several hours passed. Mudge and Roseroar had time to
reawaken completely, and the mental voices surrounding
them had become almost alive, though all were still flat
and tinged with melancholy.
". . .And another thing," Jon-Tom was saying as he
pointed upward, "that sky you're all always referring to.
Nothing but infantile anal-retentive reinforcement. Well,
maybe not exactly that," he corrected himself as he
reminded himself of the rather drastic anatomical differ-
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Alan Dean Foster
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
77
ences between himself and his audience, "but it's the
same idea."
"We can't do anything about it," said the giant toad-
stool. "The mist and clouds and coolness are always with
us. If they weren't, we'd all die. That's depressing. And
what's even more depressing is that we don't particularly
like perpetual mist and clouds and fog."
Jon-Tom struggled desperately for a reply, feeling victo-
ry slipping from his grasp. "It's not the fact that it's
cloudy and damp all the time that matters. What matters is
your outlook on the fact."
"What do you mean, our outlook?" asked a newcomer,
an interested slime mold. "Our outlook is glum and
miserable and pointless."
"Only if you think of it that way," Jon-Tom informed
it. "Sure, you can think of yourselves as hopeless. But
why not view your situation in a positive light? It's just a
matter of redirecting your outlook on life. Instead of
regarding your natural state as depressing, think of the
constancy of climate and terrain as stabilizing, reassuring.
In mental health, attitude is everything."
"I'm not sure I follow you, man," said another mushroom.
"Me neither, mate."
"Be quiet, Mudge. Listen, existence is what you make
of it. How you view your surroundings will affect how you
feel about them."
"How can we feel anything other than depressed in
surroundings like these?" wondered the liverworts.
"Right, then. If you feel more comfortable, go with
those thoughts. There's nothing wrong with being de-
pressed and miserable all the time, so long as you feel
good about it. Have you ever felt bright and cheery?"
"No, no, no," was the immediate and general consensus.
"Then how do you know that it's any better than feeling
depressed and miserable? Maybe one's no better than the
other.''
"That's not what the other travelers who come our way
say," murmured the toadstool, "before they relax, see it
our way, and settle down for a couple of months of steady
decomposition."
Jon-Tom shivered slightly. "Sure, that's what they say,
but do they look any better off, act any more contented,
any more in tune with their surroundings than you do?"
"Naturally they're not as in tune with their surround-
ings," said the first mushroom, "but these surroundings
are.. •"
"...Damp and depressing," Jon-Tom finished for it.
"That's okay if you accept it. It's all right to feel de-
pressed all the time if you feel good about it. Why can't it
be fun to feel depressed? If that's how your environment
makes you feel, then if you feel that why it means you're
in tune with your environment, and that should make you
feel good, and secure, and confident."
Roseroar's expression reflected her confusion, but she
said nothing. Mudge just sat quietly, shaking his head.
But they were thinking, and it kept them from growing
dangerously listless again.
"Hey," murmured a purple toadstool, "maybe it is
okay to feel down and dumpy all the time, if that's what
works for you."
"That's it," said Jon-Tom excitedly. "That's the point
I'm trying to make. Everything, every entity, is different.
Just because one state of mind works for us ambulatories
doesn't mean it ought to work the same way for you. At
least you aren't confused all the time, the way most of my
kind are."
"Far fucking out," announced one enlightened truffle
from beneath a clump of shelf fungi. "Existence is point-
less. Life is decrepit. Consciousness sucks. And you know
what? I feel good about it! It all fits."
"Beautiful," said Jon-Tom. "Go with that." He put his
hands on his hips and turned a circle. "Anybody else here
have any trouble dealing with that?"
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Alan Dean Foster
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
79
"Well, we do," said a flotilla of mushrooms clinging to
a scummy pile of dead weeds near a small pool.
"Tell me about it," said Jon-Tom coaxingly.
"It started when we were just spores. ..."
It went on like that all through the night. By morning,
Jon-Tom was exhausted, but the fungoid forest surround-
ing him was suffused with the first stages of exhilaration... in
a maudlin manner, of course. But by and large, the
group-therapy session had been wildly successful,
Mudge and Roseroar had recovered completely from
their insidiously induced lethargies and were eager to set
out again. Jon-Tom held back. He wanted to make certain
the session would have at least a semipermanent effect, or
it wouldn't last them through the Moors to the Glittergeist.
"You've certainly laid a heavy trip on us, man," said
the large mushroom that served as speaker for the rest of
the forest.
"I'm sure that if you hold to those thoughts, go with the
flow, make sure you leave yourselves enough mental space,
you'll find that you'll always feel better about your places
in existence," Jon-Tom assured it.
"I don't know," said the big toadstool, and for an
instant the veil of gloom which had nearly proved lethal
descended about Jon-Tom all over again. "But just consid-
ering it makes me more inclined to accept it."
The cloud of despair dissipated. "That's it." Jon-Tom
grew aware of just how tired he was. "I'd like to stay and
chat some more, but we need to be on our way to the
Glittergeist again. You wouldn't happen to know in which
direction it lies?"
Behind him, the shapes of three giant amanitas crooked
their crowns into the mist. "This way, friend. Pass freely
from this place.. . though if you'd like to join us in our
contented dissolution, you're more than welcome to re-
main and decompose among us."
"Couldn't think of it," Jon-Tom replied politely, falling
in behind Mudge and Roseroar as they started southward.
"See, I'm not into decomposition."
"Tell us about it," several rusts urged him.
Worrying that he might be leaving behind a forest full of
fungoid Frankensteins, Jon-Tom waved it off by saying,
"Some other time."
"Sure, that's it, go on and leave," snapped the toad-
stool. "We're not worth talking to."
"I've just spent a whole night talking to you. Now
you're bringing out new feelings of insecurity."
"No I'm not," said the toadstool, defensive. "It's the
same thing as depression."
"Isn't. Why don't you discuss it for a while?" A rising
mental susurration trailed in his wake as he hastened after
his companions.
Word of the therapy session preceded them through the
Muddletup. The intensity of the depression around them
varied considerably in strength according to the success of
Jon-Tom's therapy. They detoured around the worst areas
of despair, where the mental aura bordered on the coma-
tose, and as a result they were never again afflicted with
the urge to lie down and chuck it all.
Eventually the fungi gave way to blossoming bushes and
evergreens. The morning they emerged from the woods
onto a wide, gravelly beach formed of wave-polished
agates and jade was one of the happiest of Jon-Tom's life.
Pushing his ram wood staff into the gravel, he hung his
backpack from the knobbed end, sat down, and inhaled
deeply of the sea air. The sharp salty smell was heartbreak-
ingly familiar.
Mudge let out a whoop; threw off his bow, quiver, pack,
and clothes; and plunged recklessly into the warm surf.
Jon-Tom felt the urge to join him, but he was just too
damn tired. Roseroar sat down next to him. Together they
watched the gleeful otter porpoise gracefully through the
waves.
"I wish I had my board," Jon-Tom murmured.
"Yo what?" Roseroar looked down at him.
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Alan Dean Foster
"It's a flat piece of fiberglass and epoxy resin. It
floats. You stand on it and let the waves carry you toward
shore."
Roseroar considered, decided. "That sounds like fun.
Do y'all think yo could teach me?"
He smiled apologetically. "Like I said, I don't have my
board with me."
"How big a board do yo need?" Rising, she started
stripping off her armor. "Surely not biggah than this?"
"Now, wait a minute, Roseroar. I thought cats hated the
water."
"Not tigahs, sugah. Come on. Ah'll race yo to the
beach."
He hesitated, glanced up and down the gravel as though
somone might appear on this deserted section of shore.
What the hell, he told himself.
The clean tropical salt water washed away the last
lingering feelings of depression. Though Roseroar's back
wasn't as even as waxed fiberglass, his toes found plenty
of purchase in the thick white fur. The tigress's muscles
shifted according to his instructions as she steered easily
through the waves with powerful arms and legs. It took no
time at all to discover that surfing on the back of a tiger
was far more exhilarating than plying the waves on a hunk
of inanimate resin.
As the afternoon drew to a close, they lay on the warm
beach and let the sun dry them. Clean and refreshed,
Jon-Tom made a fire and temporary shelter of driftwood
while Mudge and Roseroar went scavenging. Life in abun-
dance clung to the shore.
The two unlikely hunters returned with a load of crusta-
ceans the size of king crabs. Three of these—killed,
cracked, and cooked over an open fire—were sufficient to
fill even the tigress's belly. This time Jon-Tom didn't even
twitch as he snuggled up against the amazon's flank.
Mudge curled up on the far side of the fire. For the first
time since they'd fled Malderpot, they all slept peacefully.
VI
As usual, Mudge woke first. He sat up, stretched, and
yawned, his whiskers quivering with the effort. The sun
was just up and the last smoke fleeing the firepit. Some-
thing, some slight noise, had disturbed the best night's rest
he'd had in weeks.
He heard it again, no mistake. Curious, he dressed
quickly and tiptoed past his still somnolent companions.
As he made his way over a sandy hillock flecked with
beach grass, he slowed. A cautious glance over the crest
revealed the source of the disturbance.
They were not alone on the beach. A small single-
masted sailing craft was grounded on the gravel. Four
large, ugly-looking specimens of varying species clustered
around a single, much smaller individual. Two of them
were arguing over a piece of clothing. Mudge shrugged
mentally and prepared to retreat. None of his business.
What had awakened him was the piteous cry for help of
the person trapped among the ruffians. It was an elderly
voice but a strong one.
There was a touch on his shoulder. Inhaling sharply, he
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Alan Dean Foster
rolled and reached for his short sword, then relaxed. It was
Jon-Tom, with Roseroar close behind.
"What's happening?"
"Nothin', mate. None o' our business, wot? Let's leave
it be. I'm ready for breakfast."
"Is that all you ever think of? Food, money, and sex?"
"You do me a wrong, guv'nor. Sometimes 'tis sex,
food, and money. Then again at times 'tis—"
"Never mind," said the exasperated Jon-Tom.
"Foah against one," muttered Roseroar angrily, "and
the one looks none too strong. Not very gallant."
"We've got to do something," Jon-Tom murmured.
"Mudge, you sneak around behind the trees off to the left
and cover them from there. I'll make a frontal assault from
here. Roseroar, you..." But the tigress was already over
the hill and charging down the slope on the other side.
So much for careful tactics and strategy, Jon-Tom thought.
"Come on, Mudge!"
"Now wait a minim, mate." The otter watched Jon-
Tom follow in Roseroar's wake, waving his staff and
yelling at the top of his lungs. "Bloody fools!" He
notched an arrow into his bow and followed.
But there was to be no fight. The assailants turned to see
all seven feet and five hundred pounds of white tigress bear-
ing down on them, waving twin swords and bellowing fit
to shake the leaves off the nearby trees. There was a
concerted rush for the boat.
The four paddled like fiends and were out of sword
range before she entered the water in angry pursuit, throw-
ing insults and challenges after them. Mudge might have
reached the boat with an arrow or two, but saw no point in
meaningless killing or antagonizing strangers. As far as he
was concerned, the best battle was the one that never took
place.
Meantime Jon-Tom was bending solicitously over the
exhausted subject of their rescue. He put an arm beneath
the slim furry neck and helped it sit up. It was a ferret, and
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
83
an old one, distant kin to Mudge's line but thinner still.
Much of the normally brown fur was tipped with silver. So
was the black mask that ran across the face.
The stranger was clad in beige shorts and vest and wore
sandals instead of boots. A plain, floppy hat lay trampled
in the sand nearby, next to a small leather sack. Several
other similar sacks lay scattered along the beach. All
looked empty.
Gradually the elderly ferret's breathing slowed. He opened
his eyes, saw Jon-Tom, then looked around wildly.
"Easy, easy, friend. They're gone. We saw to that."
The ferret gave him a disbelieving look, then turned his
gaze toward the beach. His eyes settled on the scattered
leather sacks.
"My stock, my goods!" He broke away from Jon-Tom,
who watched while the oldster went through each sack,
one at a time. Finally he sat down on the sand, one sack
draped across his lap. He sighed listlessly, threw it aside.
"Gone." He shook his head sadly. "AH gone."
"Wot's all gone, senior?" Mudge prodded one of the
sacks with a boot.
The ferret didn't look up at him. "My stock, my poor
stock. I am... I was, a humble trader of trinkets, plying
my trade along the shores east of here. I was set upon by
those worthless brigands"—he nodded seaward, to where
the retreating boat had raised sail and was disappearing
toward the horizon—"who stole everything I have man-
aged to accumulate in a short, unworthy life. They kept
me and forced me to do their menial work, to cook and
clean and wash for them while they preyed upon other
unsuspecting travelers.
"They said they would let me go unharmed. Finally
they tired of me, but instead of returning me to a place of
civilization they brought me here to this empty, uninhabited
shore, intending to maroon me in an unknown land where
I might starve. They stole what little I had in this world,
taunted me by leaving my stock bags, and would have
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Alan Dean Foster
stolen my life as well at the last moment had you not come
along, for I was refusing to be abandoned."
"Don't give us too much credit," Jon-Tom advised
him. "Our being in a position to rescue you was an
accident."
"You can say that again, mate," growled the disgusted
Mudge as he slung his bow back over his shoulder.
Jon-Tom ignored the otter. "We're glad we could help. I
don't like seeing anyone taken advantage of, especially
senior citizens."
"What?"
"Older people."
"Ah. But how can I thank you, sir? How can I show my
gratitude? I am destitute."
"Forget it." The ferret's effusiveness was making Jon-
Tom uncomfortable. "We're glad we could help."
The ferret rose, wincing and putting one hand against
his back. "I am called Jalwar. To whom do I owe my
salvation?"
"I'm Jon-Tom. I'm a spellsinger. Of sorts."
The ferret nodded gravely. "I knew at once you were
mighty ones."
Jon-Tom indicated the disgruntled Mudge. "That ball of
fuzzy discontent is my friend Mudge." The otter grunted
once. "And this tower of cautionless strength is Roseroar."
"I am honored to be in your presence," said the ferret
humbly, proceeding to prostrate himself on the beach and
grasping Jon-Tom's boots. "I have nothing left. My stock
is gone, my money, everything save the clothes I wear. I
owe you my life. Take me into your service and let me
serve you."
"Now, wait a minute." Jon-Tom moved his boots out of
the ferret's paws. "I don't believe in slavery."
" 'Ere now, mate, let's not be 'asty." Mudge was quick
to intervene. "Consider the poor suck—uh, this poor
unfortunate chap. 'E's got nothin', 'e 'asn't. 'E'll need
protection, or the next bunch 'e runs into will kill Mm for
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
85
sure, just for 'is clothes." He eyed the ferret hopefully.
"Wot about it, guv? Can you cook?"
"I have some small talent in the kitchen, good sir."
"Mudge..." Jon-Tom said warningly. The otter ig-
nored him.
"You said you washed clothes."
"That I did, good sir. I have the ability to make even
ancient attire smell sweet as clover again, with the slightest
of cleansing materials. I am also handy at repairing gar-
ments. Despite my age, I am not a weakling. I can more
than carry my weight."
Mudge strutted about importantly. " 'Ere then, friend, I
think we should take pity on you and admit you to our
company, wot"?"
"Mudge, you know how I feel about servants."
"It wouldn't be like that at all, Jon-Tom. 'E does need
our protection, and 'e'll never get out o' this place without
our 'elp, and 'e's more than willin' to contribute 'is
share."
The ferret nodded enthusiastically. "Please accept my
service, good sir... and madame. Allow me to accompany
you. Perhaps being proximate to such mighty ones as your-
selves will improve my own ill fortune."
"I'll bet you were a good trader," Jon-Tom commented.
"Okay, you can come with us, but as an equal. Not as a
servant or slave. We'll pay you a decent wage." He
remembered the purse filled with gold, stolen by Zancresta's
thugs. "As soon as we can afford it, that is."
"Food and shelter and protection is all I ask, great sir."
"And stop calling me sir," said Jon-Tom. "I've intro-
duced you to everyone by name."
"As you wish, Jon-Tom." The ferret turned to look
down the beach. "What do we now? I presume you are
bound to the east, for if one walks long enough one will
come 'round again to the lands bordering the Bellwoods
and the River Tailaroam, where civilization is to be
encountered."
"Don't I wish," Mudge grumbled.
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Alan Dean Poster
Jon-Tom shook his head. "We don't go to the east,
Jalwar. We go southwest, to Snarken."
' 'Across the Glittergeist? Sir... Jon-Tom... I have lived
long and seen much. The voyage to Snarken is long and
fraught with danger and difficulty. Better to begin the long
trek to the mouth of the Tailaroam. Besides, how could
one take ship from this deserted land? And north of here
lie the Muddletup Moors, where none may penetrate."
"We penetrated," said Mudge importantly.
"Did you? If you say it so, I doubt it not. Still, this far
north places us well away from the east-west trade routes.
We will encounter no vessels here."
"You won't get any arguments from me on that score,
mate," said Mudge. "Best to do as you say, go back to the
Bellwoods and the Tailaroam and start over. Likely
Chenelska's give up on us by now."
"No," said Jon-Tom firmly. "I am not going back and I
am not starting over. We've come too far."
Mudge squinted up at him. "Well now, you've just
'eard this wise old chap. 'Ow do you propose to get us
across that?" He pointed to the broad, sailless expanse of
the Glittergeist. "I like to swim, lad, but I prefer swimmin'
across water I can cross."
"What can yo do, Jon-Tom?" Roseroar asked him.
He stood fuming silently for a moment before blurting
out, "I can damn well conjure us up a boat, that's what!"
"Uh-oh." Mudge retreated toward the trees, searching
for a boulder of appropriate size to conceal himself behind.
" 'Is nibs is pissed off and 'e's goin' to try spellsingin'
again."
Roseroar eyed the otter curiously. "Isn't that his busi-
ness, fuzzball?"
"That may be wot some calls it. Me, I'd as soon brush
a crocodile's teeth than 'elp 'im with 'is work."
"Ah don't understand. Is he a spellsinger or not?"
" 'E is," Mudge admitted. "Of that there's no longer
any doubt. 'Tis just that 'e 'as this disconcertin' tendency
THE DAT OF THE DISSONANCE
87
to misfire from time to time, and when it 'appens, I don't
want to be in the line o' fire."
"Go on, Roseroar," Jon-Tom told her. "Get back there
and hide behind a rock with him." He was mad at the
otter. Hadn't he, Jon-Tom, helped to bring about the great
victory at the Jo-Troom Gate? Purely by accident of
course, but still...
"No sun," said the tigress, offended. "If n y'all don't
mind, I'll stand right heah."
"Good for you." Jon-Tom unlimbered his duar, turned
away to confront the open sea, where soon he hoped to see
a proper ship riding empty at anchor. Turning also kept
Roseroar from seeing how nervous he was.
Once before on a far-distant river he'd tried to bring
forth a boat to carry himself and his companions. Instead,
he'd ended up with Falameezar, the Marxist dragon. That
misplaced conjuration had produced unexpectedly benign
results, but there was no guarantee he'd be as fortunate if he
fouled up a second time.
It was too late to back down now. He'd already made his
boast. He felt Roseroar's gaze on the back of his neck. If
he backed down now he'd prove himself an incompetent to
Mudge and a coward to the tigress. He had to try.
He considered several songs and discarded them all as
unsuitable. He was beginning to grow frantic when a song
so obvious, so simple, offered what seemed like an obvi-
ous way out,
His fingers tested the duar's strings and he began to
sing.
Flecks of light sprang to instant life around him. It was
as though the sand underfoot had come to glowing life.
The lights were Gneechees, those minute ultrafast specks
of existence that were drawn irresistibly to magic in
motion. They coalesced into a bright, dancing cloud around
him, and as usual, when he tried to look straight at any of
them, they vanished. Gneechees were those suggestions of
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Alan Dean Foster
THE DAT OF THE DISSONANCE
89
something everyone sees out of the corner of an eye but
aren't there when you turn to look at them.
But he sensed their presence. So did Roseroar and the
others. It was a good sign, an indication that the spellsinging
was working. Certainly the tune he played seemed harm-
less enough, even to the wary Mudge, whose opinion of
Jon-Tom's musical tastes differed little from that of the
average PTA president.
The otter had to admit that for a change the otherworldly
ditty Jon-Tom was reciting was easy on the ears, even if
the majority of the words, as was true of all of Jon-Tom's
songs, were quite incomprehensible.
Jon-Tom had chosen the song as much out of despera-
tion as need. The song was "Sloop John 5.," by the
Beach Boys. Given their present needs, it was a logical
enough choice.
Nothing happened right away. But before long, Jalwar
was making protective signs over his face and chest while
cowering close to Mudge for protection, while the otter
waited nervously for the unexpected to manifest itself.
Despite her own awe at what was taking place on the
beach, Roseroar stood her ground.
Mudge was worrying needlessly. For once, for the very
first time, it looked like Jon-Tom's efforts were to be
rewarded with success. For once it appeared that his
spellsong was going to produce only what he wanted. The
otter moved hesitantly out from behind the shelter of the
boulder, while simultaneously holding himself ready to
rush for the trees at the first hint of trouble.
"Bugger me for a blue-eyed bandicoot," he muttered
excitedly. "The lad's gone an' done it!"
Rocking gently in the waves just beyond the breaking
surf was a single-masted sloop. The stern faced shoreward
and on the name-plate everyone could clearly make out the
words JOHN B.
Jon-Tom let the last words of the song trail away. With it
went the Gneechees and the cloud of blue fog from which
the boat had emerged. It bobbed gently at anchor, awaiting
mem.
Roseroar put a proud paw on Jon-Tom's shoulder. "Sugah,
bless man soul if it isn't a spellsingah yo are. That's a
fine-looking ship, for all that her lines are strange to me,
and ah've sailed many a craft."
Jon-Tom continued to pluck fitfully at the duar as if
fearful that the sloop, solid as she looked, might disappear
at any moment in a rush of fog.
"Glad you think so. Me, I've never been on anything
il bigger than a surfboard in my life."
13 "Not to worry. Ah don't recognize the mannah of ship,
but if she sails, ah can handle her."
"So can I." Jalwar appeared behind them, "hi my
youth I spent much time sailing many kinds of ships."
"See?" said Mudge, joining them on the beach. "The
old fur's provin' 'imself valuable already."
"Okay." Jon-Tom nodded reluctantly. "Let's see what
:^ she's like on board."
13 Mudge led them out to the boat, as at home in the water
]1 as he was on land. The others followed. By the time
•\ Jon-Tom reached the bottom of the boarding ladder, the
-'?. otter had completed a preliminary inspection.
^ "She's fully stocked, she is, though the packin's bloody
jl strange."
iJ "Let me have a look." Jon-Tom went first to the galley.
| Cans and packages bore familiar labels like Hormel,
~i Armor, Oscar Mayer, and Hebrew National. There was
,| more than enough food for an extensive journey, and they
! could fish on the way. The tank for the propane stove read
full. Jon-Tom tried a burner, was rewarded with a blast of
blue flame that caused Roseroar to pull back.
"Ah don't see no source of fire."
"The ship arrives already fully spelled for traveling,"
Jalwar murmured appreciatively. "Impressive."
"hi the song she's supposed to be on a long voyage,"
Jon-Tom explained.
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Alan Dean Foster
There was a diesel engine meant to supplement the sails.
Jon-Tom didn't try it. Let it wait until they were becalmed.
Then he could dazzle them with new magic.
"Roseroar, since you're the most experienced sailor
among us, why don't you be captain?"
"As you wish, Jon-Tom." She squeezed through the
hatchway back onto the deck and began familiarizing
herself with the unusual but not unfathomable rigging. As
with any modern sailing ship, the sloop would almost run
the sails up and down the masts all by itself. It didn't take
the tigress long to figure it out.
An electric winch made short work of the anchor.
Roseroar spun the wheel, the sloop hove around with a
warm breeze filling its sails, and they headed out to sea.
Within an hour they had left the gravel beach and the
Muddletup Moors with its confused fungoid inhabitants far
behind.
"Which way to Snarken?" she asked as she worked the
wheel and a hand winch simultaneously. The mainsail
billowed in the freshening wind.
"I don't know. You're the sailor."
"Sailor ah confess to, but ah'm no navigator, man."
"Southwest," Mudge told her. "For now that's good
enough."
Roseroar adjusted their heading, brought it in line with
the directions supplied by the compass. "Southwest it is."
The sloop changed directions smoothly, responding instantly
to the tigress's light touch on the wheel.
Feeling reasonably confident that at last all was right
with the world, Jon-Tom reprised the song and for good
measure added a chorus of the Beach Boys' "Sail On, Sail
On, Sailor." The sun was warm, the wind steady, and
Snarken seemed just over the near horizon.
Putting up the duar, he escorted Jalwar down to the
galley, there to explain the intricacies of the propane stove
and such otherworldly esoterica as Saran Wrap and can
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
91
openers to their designated chef. That and the rest of a fine
day well done, he allowed himself to be first to bed.
To be awakened by rough hands shaking him violently.
"Get up, get up, spellsinger!"
Feeling very strange, Jon-Tom rolled over, to find him-
self staring into the worried face of the ferret.
"What... whash wrong?" He was startled by the sound
of his own voice, unnaturally thick and slurred. And the
boat seemed to be rolling in circles.
"We are in bad trouble, spellsinger. Bad trouble."
Jalwar disappeared.
Jon-Tom sat up. It took three tries. Then he tried to get
out of the bunk and discovered he couldn't tell the floor
from the ceiling. The floor found him.
"Wot was that?" said a distant voice.
He struggled to get up. "I don't..." He reached for the
railing of the lower bunk and tried to pull himself upright.
"Wheresh the... ?" Somehow he managed to drag him-
self to a standing position. He stood there on shaky knees
that felt determined to go their own way, exclusive of any
contrariwise instructions from his brain.
"Whash wrong with me?" he moaned.
Two faces appeared in the doorway, one above the other.
Both were blurred.
"Shee-it," said Roseroar. "He's drunk! Ah didn't see
him get into any liquor."
"Nor did I," said Mudge, trying to push past her.
"Give me room, you bloody great amazon!" He put his
hands on Jon-Tom's shoulders and gripped hard. Jon-Tom
staggered backward.
"Blister me for a brown vole if you're not. Where'd you
find the hootch, guv'nor?"
"What hoosh?" Jon-Tom replied thickly. "I didn't..."
The floor almost went out from under him. "Say, whoosh
driving thish bush?"
A disgusted Mudge stepped back. "Can't abide anyone
who can't 'old 'is booze."
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Alan Dean Foster
"Leave him fo now," said Roseroar. "We'll have to
handle this ourselves." They turned to leave.
"Hey, wait!" Jon-Tom yelled. He took a step forward,
and the boat, sly and tricky craft that it was, deliberately
yanked the floor out from under him. He slammed into the
door, hung on for dear life.
Mudge was right, he realized through the glassy haze
that had formed over his eyeballs. I am drunk. Try as he
might, he couldn't remember imbibing anything stronger
than orange juice at supper. After reprising a couple of
choruses of "Sloop John #." to make sure the boat didn't
dematerialize out from beneath them in the middle of the
night, he'd gone to bed. Jalwar was awake and alert.
Everyone was except him.
Suddenly he found himself in desperate need of a
porthole, barely located one in time to stick his face out
and throw his guts all over the equally upset ocean. When
he Finally finished puking he was soaking wet from the
spray. He felt a little less queasy but not any soberer.
Somehow he managed to slam the porthole shut and
refasten it. He staggered toward the gangway, pulled him-
self toward the deck.
Wind hit him hard the instant he stepped out on the teak
planking, and rain filled his vision. Roseroar was holding
the wheel steady with grim determination, but Mudge and
Jalwar were having a terrible time trying to wrestle the
mainsail down.
"Hurry it up!" the tigress roared, her voice barely
audible above the storm, "or we'll lose it fo sure!"
"I don't care if we do," Jon-Tom moaned, putting both
hands to the sides of his head, "just let's not shout about
it, shall we?"
1 'Tell it to the sky, spellsinger,'' pleaded Jalwar.
"Yeah, use your magic, mate," added Mudge. "Turn
this bloomin' weather back to normal!" Jon-Tom noticed
that both of them were soaked. "Get rid of this bloody
bedamned storm!"
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
93
"Anything, anything," he told them, "if you'll just stop
shouting." He staggered and nearly went careening over-
board, just managed to save himself by grabbing on to a
stay. "I don't unnershtand. It wash so calm when I went to
bed."
"Well 'tis not calm now, mate," snapped Mudge, wres-
tling with the heavy, wet sail.
"Ah've nevah seen a storm like this come up so quick-
ly." Roseroar continued fighting with the wheel.
"The words," Jalwar muttered. "The words of the
spellsinging! Don't you remember?" He looked straight at
Jon-Tom. "Don't you remember the words?"
"But ish just the chorush," Jon-Tom groaned. "Jusht
the chorush." He mumbled them again. " 'Thish ish the
worsht trip, I've ever been on.' I didn't mean that part of
the shong."
The ferret was nodding. "So you sang. The spirits
cannot distinguish between what you sing and mean and
what you sing and do not mean. They have a way of taking
everything literally."
"But ish not the worsht trip I've ever been on!"
Jon-Tom stood away from the rail on rubbery legs and
screamed his protest at the skies that threatened to swamp
them. "Ish not\"
The skies paid him no heed.
For hours they battled the winds. Twice they were in
danger of being swamped. They were saved only by the
unmagical efforts of the sloop's pump. Somehow Jon-Tom
got it started, though the effort made him upchuck all over
the engine room. That wouldn't happen again, though. His
stomach was empty.
If only it would feel empty.
Soon after they pumped out the second holdful of water,
the storm began to abate. An hour later the mountainous
seas started to subside. And still there was no real relief,
because thunder and lightning gave way to a thick,
impenetrable fog.
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Alan Dean Poster
Mudge was leaning on the rail, grumbling. "We'd
better not be near any land, mates." He glanced upward.
A faint glow suffused the upper reaches of the fog bank,
which had not thinned in the slightest. "I know you're up
there, you great big ugly yellow bastard! Why don't you
bum this driftin' piss off so we can see to be on our way!"
"The words of the song," Ja!war murmured. Mudge
snarled at him.
"And you pack in it, guv'nor, or I'll do it for you."
It was morning. Somewhere the sun was up there,
probably laughing at them. The compass still showed the
way, but the wind had vanished with the storm, and none
of Jon-Tom's feeble coaxing could induce the shiny new
diesel engine to perform.
The restored sail hung limp against the mast. The sloop
was floating through glassy, smooth, shallow water. A
sandy bottom occasionally rose dangerously close to the
keel, only to fall away again into pale blue depths each
time it looked like they were about to ground. Roseroar
steered as best she could, and with an otter and a ferret
aboard there was at least no shortage of sharp eyesight.
But as the day wore on and the fog clung tenaciously to
them, it began to look as if Jon-Tom's song was to prove
their simultaneous salvation and doom. The wind remained
conspicuous by its absence. Sooner or later the shallows
would close in around them and they would find them-
selves marooned forever in the midst of a strange sea.
The tension was taking its toll on everyone, even Roseroar.
Their spellsinger, who had conjured up this wonderful
craft, was of no use to anyone, least of all himself.
Thankfully he no longer threw up. Yet despite his unarguable
abstinence from any kind of drink, he remained falling-
down drunk. Smashed. Potted.
If anything, his condition had worsened. He strolled
about the deck muttering songs so incomprehensible and
slurred none of his companions could decipher them.
Just as a precaution, Mudge had sequestered Jon-Tom's
THE DAY OF THK DISSONANCE
95
duar in a safe place. He'd gotten them into this situation
while sober. It was terrifying to contemplate what might
happen if he started spellsinging while drunk.
"We have one chance," Jalwar finally declared.
"Wot's that, guv'nor?" Mudge sat on the port side of
the bow, keeping his eyes on the threatening shallows.
"To turn around. We aren't that far yet from the beach
where this unfortunate turn of events began. We can return
there, land, or use this craft, provided the wind will return,
to take us back to the mouth of the Tailaroam and
civilization."
"I'm tempted, guv, but 'e'll never stand for it." He
nodded back to where Jon-Tom lay sprawled on his back
on the deck, alternately laughing and hiccuping at the fog.
"How can he object to stop us?" wondered Jalwar. "He
has the gift, but no control over it."
"That may be, guv. I'm sure as 'ell no expert on
spellsingin', but this I do know. 'E's me friend, and I
promised 'im that I'd see 'im through this journey to its
end, no matter wot 'appens."
Besides which, the otter reminded himself, if they
returned without the medicine, there would be no rich
reward from a grateful Clothahump. Mudge had endured
too much already to throw that promise away now.
"But what else can we do?" Jalwar moaned. "None of
us is a wizard or sorcerer. We cannot cure his odd
condition, because it is the result of his own spellsinging."
"Maybe it'll cure itself." Mudge tried to sound optimis-
tic. He watched sadly as Jon-Tom rolled over on the center
cabin and tried to puke again. "I feel sorry for 'im. 'Tis
clear 'e ain't used to liquorish effects." As if to reinforce
the otter's observation, Jon-Tom rolled over again and fell
off the cabin, nearly knocking himself out on the deck.
Lifting himself to a sitting position, he burst out laughing.
He was the only one on the boat who found the situation
amusing.
Mudge shook his head. "Bleedin' pitiful."
"Yes, it is sad," Jalwar agreed.
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Alan Dean Foster
"Cor, but not the way you think it is, mate. 'Ere 'e is,
sufferin' from one o' the finest binges I've ever seen
anybody on, and 'e ain't even had the pleasure o' drinkin'
the booze. Truly pitiful." A glance downward showed
sand looming near.
"Couple o' degrees to starboard, luv!" he called stemward.
"Ah heah y'all." Roseroar adjusted the boat's heading.
The sandy bottom fell away once again.
"It'll wear off," the otter mumbled. "It 'as to. Ain't
nobody can stay drunk this long no matter 'ow strong a
spell's been laid on 'is belly. I wonder when 'e did it?"
"The same tune he did everything else," Jalwar explained.
"Don't you remember the song?"
"You mean that part about it bein' 'the worst trip I've
ever been on'?"
"Not just that. Remember that he made the tigress
captain because she was the best sailor among us? That
would leave him as next in command, would it not?"
"Beats me, mate. I'm not much on ships and their
lore."
"He reduced himself to first mate," Jalwar said posi-
tively. "That was in the song, too. A line that went
something like "The first mate, he got drunk.' "
"Aye, now I recall." The otter nodded toward the
helpless spellsinger, who remained enraptured by a hyste-
ria perceptible only to himself. "So 'e spellsung 'imself
into this condition without even bein' aware o1 doin' it."
"I fear that is the case."
"Downright pitiful. Why couldn't 'e 'ave made me first
mate? I'd 'andle a long drunk like this ten times better than
'e would. 'E's got to come out of it sometime."
"I hope so," said Jalwar. He glanced at the sky.
"Perhaps we will lose this infernal fog, anyway. Then we
might pick up a wind enabling us to turn back."
"Now, I told you, guv," Mudge began, only to be
interrupted by a shout.
What stunned him to silence, however, was not the fact
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
97
of the shout but its origin. It came from the water off to
starboard.
It was repeated. "Ahoy, there! You on the sloop! What's
happenin'!"
"What's happenin'?" Roseroar frowned, tried to see
into the fog. "Jon-Tom, wake up!" The sails continued to
luff against the mainmast.
"Huh? Wash?" Jon-Tom laughed one more time, then
struggled to stand up.
"Ahoy, aboard the sloop!" A new voice this time,
female.
"Wash... whosh that?" He stumbled around the center
cabin and tried to squint into the fog. Neither his eyesight
nor his brain was functioning at optimum efficiency at the
moment.
A second boat materialized out of the mist. It was a low-
slung outboard with a pearlescent fiberglass body. Three ...
no, four people lounged in the vinyl seats. Two couples in
their twenties, all human, all normal size.
"What's happenin', John B.I" asked the young man
standing behind the wheel. He didn't look too steady on
his feet himself. A cooler sat between the front seats, full
of ice and aluminum cans. The cans had names like Coors
and Lone Star on them.
Jon-Tom swayed. He was hallucinating, the next logical
step in his mental disintegration. He leaned over the rail
and tried to focus his remaining consciousness on the funny
cigarette the couple in the front of the boat were passing
back and forth.The other pair were exchanging hits on a
glass pipe.
The big outboard was idling noisily. One girl leaned
over the side to clean her Foster Grants in the ocean. Next
to the beer cooler was a picnic basket. A big open bag of
pretzels sat on top. The twisted, skinny kind that tasted
like pure fried salt. Next to the bag was a two-pound tin of
Planter's Redskin Peanuts, and several brightly colored
tropical fruits.
98
Alan Dean Poster
THE DAY OF THE DISSONANCE
99
He tried to will himself sober. If anything could have
cleared his mind, it should have been the sight of the boat
and its occupants. But the uncontrollable power of his own
spellsinging held true. Despite everything he tried, the
self-declared first mate still stayed drunk. He swallowed
the words on his tongue and tried a second time.
"Who... who are you?"
"I'm Charlie MacReady," said the boat's driver cheeri-
ly, through a cannabis-induced fog of his own. He smiled
broadly, leaned down to speak to his girlfriend. "Dig that
getup that guy's got on. Must've been a helluva party!"
Jon-Tom briefly considered his iridescent lizard-skin
cape, his indigo shut, and the rest of his attire. Subdued
clothing... for Clothahump's world.
The girl in the front was having a tough time with her
sunshades. Maybe she didn't realize that the glasses were
clean and that it was her eyes that needed washing out.
She leaned over again and nearly tumbled into the water.
Her boyfriend grabbed the strap of her bikini top and
pulled hard enough to hold her in the boat. Unfortunately,
it was also hard enough to compress certain sensitive parts
of her anatomy. She whirled to swing at him, missed badly
thanks to the effects of what the foursome had been
smoking all morning. For some unknown reason this
started her giggling uncontrollably.
Jon-Tom wasn't laughing anymore. He was battling his
own sozzled thoughts and magically contaminated blood-
stream.
"Who are you people?"
"I told you." The boat's driver spoke with pot-induced
ponderousness. "MacReady's the name. Charles MacReady.
I am a stockbroker from Manhattan. Merrill Lynching.
You know, the bull?" He rested one hand on the shoulder
of the suddenly contemplative woman seated next to him.
She appeared fascinated by the sheen of her nail polish.
"This is Buffy." He nodded toward the front of the
boat. "The two kids up front are Steve and Mary-Ann.
Steve works in my office. Don't you, Steve?" Steve didn't
reply. He and Mary-Ann were giggling in tandem now.
The driver turned back to Jon-Tom. "Who are you?"
"One hell of a good question," Jon-Tom replied thickly.
He glanced down at his outrageous costume. Is this what
happens when you get the DTs? he wondered. Somehow
he'd always imagined having the DTs would involve
stronger hallucinations than a quartet of happily stoned
vacationers loaded down with pot and pretzels.
"My name... my name..." For one terrible instant
there was a soft, puffy blank in his mind where his name
belonged. The kind of disorientation one encounters in a
cheap house of mirrors at the state fair, where you have to
feel your way through to the exit by putting your hands out
in front of you and pushing through the nothingness of
your own reflections.