121072.fb2 Beauty and the Werewolf - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 79

Beauty and the Werewolf - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 79

After ensuring that the next stage of her concoction was well under way — cold-pressing, a long and tedious process, but one which fortunately only needed to be dealt with once every half day or so — she ran back up to her rooms, and impatiently sat before the mirror.

Just when she was getting ready to prod the recalcitrant Servant into appearing — her control of magic had progressed to the point where she was fairly certain she could do just that — his face appeared.

“Greetings, Isabella,” he said. “I have mixed results. I shall be as brief as one such as I can. In my researches, I have indeed come upon creatures who will act as Protectors and who switch from animal to human form. The difficultly lies in the fact that those creatures are invariably one of two types. They are either wholly magical in nature, such as the Fox-Spirit, the Rus Firebird or Zhar-Ptica, or they are, in fact, animals who have somehow gained the ability to become a human.” Even though he had no shoulders, she got the sense of a shrug. “It is as if, I fear, that while transforming from animal to human brings out the best in these creatures, transforming from human to animal brings out the worst in a man, unless it is the purely voluntary and magical Transformation spell, which most Godmothers and a few magicians have mastered — the one that does not require the shedding of blood, nor the belt of the skin of the creature you wish to become.”

She felt her heart sink, but the Mirror Servant was not done quite yet.

“Now, having said that, it is a fact that Sebastian has not killed anyone.”

“He hasn’t exactly had the opportunity,” she demurred.

“Pish, he could easily have killed you,” the Servant chided her. “If you please, I am trying to research a Path out of this dilemma, failing being able to break the magic on him. Now, may I continue?”

She apologized. He peered at her as if to determine whether or not the apology was sincere. When he decided that it was, he picked up where he had left off.

“You will recall that we had determined that this was done to Sebastian by means of magic — though whether it is a curse-spell, or an actual curse, which does not require a magician to set it. Correct?”

Since the face waited patiently after this, she assumed she was supposed to respond. “Yes, I have been told that this was a curse, and that you hadn’t — Wait, what is the difference between a curse and a simple spell?”

The face beamed. “Now, there you are! That is the real question, isn’t it? The difference, my dear sorceress, is passion!”

She gave this careful thought. The Servant allowed her to take her time. Evidently there was no one else clamoring for it — or perhaps it, too, had apprentices, who could take over the more mundane task of telling callers, “I am sorry, but the Godmother is unavailable. Would you care to leave a message?”

“Sebastian has been quite adamant that I am supposed to keep emotion at bay when I work magic,” she said slowly, “because emotion interferes with control.”

“Yes,” the face said, smiling genially.

“He’s right. When I get upset, or worried, I can’t concentrate.” Or when I happen to notice how Sebastian’s eyes take on a stormy-gray color when he’s unhappy, and a green glint when he’s — Bother, not now! Think this through!

“Indeed,” the Servant encouraged.

But was there ever a time when emotion had made it easier to concentra —

“When Eric tried to bully me, just before I was bitten, I was truly angry. And it made me sharper. I knew exactly what to say, and how to say it. I was able to figure out from how he stood and the expression on his face what he was likely to do next. And when I was frightened, when those poachers attacked us, that made me very sharp, too. I knew instantly that I couldn’t get to my knife, and it wasn’t as if I even thought about it. My hand went right to the quiver, I got a crossbow bolt and I used it like a knife.” She paused. “I think I would have to say in both cases I was very passionate.”

The face bobbed. “And there you have it. Fear, anger, hate, pain — all these things can create a single-mindedness that surpasses everything a trained will can do. Not everyone has this sort of mental quirk. Many — I would say most — people become more confused when they are consumed by passion. But those who possess this same talent as you are able to cast curses. This is why incredibly powerful curses can be cast by the dying and the desperate. The Tradition, of course, has a lot to do with this, as well — it responds to an exceedingly well-worn Traditional Path and puts all the force of its power behind the curse. But before The Tradition can feel this, the passion itself must be single-minded. If it’s not, if the passion does not have a single object and a single goal in its focus, then The Tradition can’t sense it.”

She shivered, despite being cozily close to the fire. “It’s like this giant slug, isn’t it? Incredibly powerful, but so stupid that it will always follow the path of least resistance, and always be attracted to — ” she paused, feeling a moment of startled epiphany “ — what it feeds on?”

“Very good.” The face beamed at her. “You are going to make a quite outstanding magician, I do believe. Yes, we think that The Tradition feeds on, derives its power from, emotion, at least in part. So this may explain why it does what it does — it ‘knows,’ as a slug knows, that if it forces matters into this shape, there will be a richer reward. So it does.”

“All right, so what does this have to do with Sebastian?” she asked.

“It means that he didn’t have to actually do something that he remembers to cause someone to hate him enough to cast a curse. It means that for all we know, it could have been something completely out of his control. But that, in turn, means that we — or more precisely, he — may be able to alter the curse. Casting a curse on the curse, so to speak.”

“But why can’t the Godmother — Oh.”

“Exactly. She has a hundred concerns as pressing as Sebastian. There is no way she can muster enough passion. Only Sebastian himself can.”