focused on a point a few inches beyond the back of the old wizardâs head.
Somewhat disconcerted, Billias flexed his fingers. Suddenly this wasnât quite the game he had intended, and he felt an overpowering urge to impress. It was swiftly overtaken by a surge of annoyance at his own stupidity in being unnerved.
âI shall show you,â he said, and took a deep breath, âMaligreeâs Wonderful Garden.â
There was a susurration from the diners. Only four wizards in the entire history of the University had ever succeeded in achieving the complete Garden. Most wizards could create the trees and flowers, and a few had managed the birds. It wasnât the most powerful spell, it couldnât move mountains, but achieving the fine detail built into Maligreeâs complex syllables took a finely tuned skill.
âYou will observe,â Billias added, ânothing up my sleeve.â
His lips began to move. His hands flickered through the air. A pool of golden sparks sizzled in the palm of his hand, curved up, formed a faint sphere, began to fill in the detail...
Legend had it that Maligree, one of the last of the true sourcerers, created the Garden as a small, timeless, private self-locking universe where he could have a quiet smoke and a bit of a think while avoiding the cares of the world. Which was itself a puzzle, because no wizard could possibly understand how any being as powerful as a sourcerer could have a care in the world. Whatever the reason, Maligree retreated further and further into a world of his own and then, one day, closed the entrance after him.
The garden was a glittering ball in Billiasâs hands. The nearest wizards craned admiringly over his shoulders, and looked down into a two-foot sphere that showed a delicate, flower-strewn landscape; there was a lake in the middle distance, complete in every ripple, and purple mountains behind an interesting-looking forest. Tiny birds the size of bees flew from tree to tree, and a couple of deer no larger than mice glanced up from their grazing and stared out at Coin.
Who said critically: âItâs quite good. Give it to me.â
He took the intangible globe out of the wizardâs hands and held it up.
âWhy isnât it bigger?â he said.
Billias mopped his brow with a lace-edged handkerchief.
âWell,â he said weakly, so stunned by Coinâs tone that he was quite unable to be affronted, âsince the old days, the efficacity of the spell has ratherââ
Coin stood with his head on one side for a moment, as though listening to something. Then he whispered a few syllables and stroked the surface of the sphere.
It expanded. One moment it was a toy in the boyâs hands, and the next...
. . . the wizards were standing on cool grass, in a shady meadow rolling down to the lake. There was a gentle breeze blowing from the mountains; it was scented with thyme and hay. The sky was deep blue shading to purple at the zenith.
The deer watched the newcomers suspiciously from their grazing ground under the trees.
Spelter looked down in shock. A peacock was pecking at his bootlaces.
âââ he began, and stopped. Coin was still holding a sphere, a sphere of air. Inside it, distorted as though seen through a fish-eye lens or the bottom of a bottle, was the Great Hall of Unseen University.
The boy looked around at the trees, squinted thoughtfully at the distant, snow-capped mountains, and nodded at the astonished men.
âItâs not bad,â he said. âI should like to come here again.â He moved his hands in a complicated motion that seemed, in some unexplained way, to turn them inside out .
Now the wizards were back in the hall, and the boy was holding the shrinking Garden in his palm. In the heavy, shocked silence he put it back into Billiasâs hands, and said: âThat was quite interesting. Now I will do some magic.â
He raised his hands, stared at
Alice Clayton, Nina Bocci