The Secret of Spring
Piers Anthony and Jo Anne Taeusch
This book is dedicated to
the memory of my Mother,
who loved life, laughter, and me.
-J. T.
Contents
Chapter 1: Playmate
Chapter 2: Secret
Chapter 3: Sharing
Chapter 4: Gabriel's Trump
Chapter 5: Polli Parlour
Chapter 6: New Moon
Chapter 7: A Tangled Vine
Chapter 8: Kamalot
Chapter 9: Discovery
Chapter 10: Unsuitable Suitor
Chapter 11: Down the Hatch
Chapter 12: The Visitor
Chapter 13: Lies
Chapter 14: And More Lies
Chapter 15: Double Trouble
Chapter 16: Lady Be Cool
Chapter 17: Fast Friends
Chapter 18: Ant We Got Fun
Chapter 19: Time and Again
Chapter 20: Snow Job
Chapter 21: Inner Struggle/Outer Bruises
Chapter 22: Jasmine's Castle
Chapter 23: Child's Play
Chapter 24: Zygote
Chapter 25: Truths
Chapter 26: Secrets
AUTHORS’ NOTES
1
Playmate
Wiping the perspiration from his brow, Herb Moss looked with admiration at Holly, the beautiful, fresh green Veganette resting next to him. She was a busty blossom, with luscious strawberry lips and long, thick emerald hair that fell enticingly to her hips. It had been tied up out of the way for greater freedom of movement, but the ribbons had worked loose with exertion. Now she was busy knotting a tighter bow. Finishing up the small task, she whirled around to grace Herb with a winning smile. His heart pounded faster at the flash of even white teeth.
Infertile pollination? Was that all life meant to him? And yet, why else had he travelled to this remote and expensive resort? It had seemed like a good idea at the time, but like so many of his spontaneous decisions, it had resulted in much less than he had anticipated. Herb knew he wasn’t above a little discreet Ip, given the improper circumstances. And Holly was more than another attractive girl, she was quite a woman.
Her soft voice brought him back to reality. “Let’s do it again!” she said breathlessly.
“Again?!” he protested. “Wasn’t five times enough?”
“Oh, I know! But, you are so good, Herbie! The best! Why, I’ve never known anyone like you before!”
Herb flushed at the generous praise; he couldn’t deny he was flattered, but a man could only go on for so long.
He hedged. “Thank you, Holly. But aren’t you feeling a little bushed?” He hoped!
“Me? Oh, no! I could go on like this all day! Just try me!”
Herb’s hopes of an honorable out wilted in the hot afternoon sun. He sighed audibly.
This was Holly’s signal to wheedle. She put her arms around his neck, heedless of the fine view of her bust this afforded Herb. Herb was not heedless. He heeded for all he was worth.
“Please Herbie,” she said with the sweet pout her lips formed with such expertise. Her fresh breath tickled his ear, and his firm resolve melted down to a watery puddle that seemed to form in his knees. It was all over.
“You win,” he said weakly. “But this is the last time today—or at least until after lunch.” He braced himself. “Take your position!”
Holly squealed with girlish glee and scampered to the other side of the nets to retrieve her stringed bat. “My serve!” she called gaily, giving the small yellow ball a swat. It bounced neatly up and across to meet Herb’s bat for a quick return. Their sixth match of the day was on.
Holly was one of several playmates Herb had met since coming to the city of Avocado for an extended vacation. Elite Club Algae was a small resort spa by Sea Weed for the idle, rich, and bored of this part of P#23. Herb added “the confused” for his category, for now that he was here, he hardly knew why.
The club had been touted in the colorful brochure as a hot bed for singles, but the actual selection, in his opinion, left much to be desired. First there was Rosy, who had attached herself to him the first day he arrived. While she was a sweet, friendly girl with a pretty face, she also happened to be there for the serious purpose of dropping over a hundred and fifty pounds at the exclusive spa. Clearly, too much woman for him.
Then, there was the dark exotic Flora, a winsome widow, who kept dropping hints of Ip. Tempting, yet he had the uncomfortable feeling that she regarded the resort as a shopping center for husband number four. Or was it five? And what had happened to the other three anyway? There was covert talk of poison ivy. Probably just pool gossip, but why take chances? True, she was mysteriously attractive, yet there was something in her eyes when she looked at him. Something unsavory that reminded him of the hungry glance of a big garden spider patiently awaiting the right moment to pounce.
Most of the others he had met had been the usual garden-variety types one would expect to meet at a singles resort. Just pretty, pleasant girls, hoping to meet a cute boy they could take back home to meet their parents. They claimed to be there for the moment, for a good time, but Herb was not deceived. He had seen that look before, on girls at home. On the face of one girl in particular. Those girls were just like her. Herb was getting thoroughly disgusted with his big adventure. If he had wanted a “nice” girl, he would have stayed at home and dated Lily.
He had left to find more. Whatever that was. Since his arrival a couple of weeks ago the wildest thing he had swung with had been a gourd club on the neatly mown greens. Holly had been the most promising of the group. Had been. Just his luck, that she had turned out to be a ten nets nut. These daily marathon matches had to stop! By the time he satisfied her insatiable lust for the silly game he was too tired for more pleasurable recreation. A thing like that could stunt a man’s growth.
He had Ip with Holly only once after a long, romantic boat cruise beneath the misty tri-moons, and that had been almost a week before. They had stopped into the Algae Bar afterward where she had quaffed down more than a few drinks of distilled water before Herb had noticed the effect they were having on her. Oh, they looked harmless enough with their carrot sticks and little umbrella trees, but cumulatively they packed quite a punch.
By the time he realized what was happening, Holly was wilted. Like the gentleman he was, he had guided her back to her own bungalow and put her to bed with every intention of fading quietly away until morning.
Holly, however, had different ideas. Unused to strong drink, she implored Herb to remain until she fell asleep, but somehow she never did, and eventually nature took a fascinating course. Herb felt only mild guilt, which had soon faded to a fond memory, and progressed to outright lust as he looked forward to more of her company. Not letting any grass grow under his feet, he called the next morning. They met for a game of ten nets, and his beauty turned into a back-hand beast. There had been, regrettably, no rematch of their night game.
Herb had come to the end of his rope, deciding to give it just one more day. If there were no improvements, he planned to push on down the coast and catch the Party Grass Festival at New Oleanders. There should be profusions of wild flowers there.
A ball whizzed by his ear, as his bat swished impotently in the air. “I win!” Holly exclaimed triumphantly, crisscrossing through the nets toward him. “Got that one right past you!” Then she frowned slightly. “Oh, you didn’t let me win, just to be a gentleman, did you? I want a rematch!”
“Blight, no,” Herb muttered, thinking how tired of the stupid game he was, in more than one way. “I mean, of course I wouldn’t do that, Holly. You won because you’re a good player, that’s all.”
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And because his mind had wandered. She was enthusiastic, but he had all the moves; a pity, considering that she cared more about it than he did. Looking at her bosom heaving from the combination of happiness and exertion, he was glad she was the winner. Herb watched that lovely structure quiver beneath the thin material of her ten nets suit as she continued to bask in the glory of her victory.
“That’s what I love about playing with you, Herb. You are a real natural at this game, and I knew if I could beat you, I would really have accomplished something. So I said to myself, ‘Holly, you are going to play until you win, or drop.’”
Herb cursed silently. That was all it would have taken? He would gladly have thrown the match long before if only he’d known. But no, his male ego sprang up like an ugly weed, and what had happened? Nothing, that’s what. How was he to know she hadn’t expected him to win all the time to impress her? She was always going on about how great he was. Women. Did they never mean what they said?
Herb looked into her beaming eyes and felt a tinge of guilt. After all, men didn’t always mean what they said either. Hadn’t he been the one to say how he loved ten nets, while in reality he wanted to play a more intimate game?
“Congratulations,” he said wearily. “How about that lunch now? Nice cool melon?”
Holly ventured a coy smile, lowering her long green lashes. “Are you really hungry, Herb? I’m still so excited over winning the game, and hot, too!” She stroked a manicured hand across her bust line. “Before lunch, wouldn’t you like to relax? Come back to my bungalow for a nice shower?”
A cold shower would be in order at the moment, Herb thought. What was going on now? He was beginning to warm up from more than the game.
“On second thought, no shower. Why don’t we make use of that hot tub? I’m paying enough extra for it. It’s cozy, but roomy enough for two,” she said huskily.
Herb decided that the Party Grass Festival could wait another day. Maybe two.
Indeed, things finally were going right. This time Holly wasn’t intoxicated on distilled water, but she was actually more ardent. The excitement of the ball game translated nicely into enthusiasm for the bedroom game as played in hot water, and Holly was a real delight.
“Too bad we didn’t think to do this sooner,” she murmured. “It’s even more fun than balling!”
Herb didn’t answer. His sentiments about timing were mixed. If only he had caught on to the key days ago . . .
Later that evening, Herb Moss was a mildly contented being. He’d reluctantly put Holly aboard the last transporter home. Her vacation was over, but she had left him with at least two nice memories.
There was nothing more for him at the resort, however. The time had come for him to move on. But not to the Party Grass Festival. Whatever he had been searching for was definitely not to be found in yet more places like Club Algae. The interlude with Holly had been fun, but he still wanted the elusive “more.” It was time to go home.
Snuggling down within the cool cotton sheeting, he drifted off to sleep with dreams of ten nets that were more like hot tubs, and a most accommodating Holly. He did not dream that in less than ten days he would become a pawn in a far deadlier game.
2
Secret
Spring was perplexed. “Father, you want me to what?” Magician Gabriel made an ineffective pacifying motion with his hands. “Just to help me test my equipment, my dear, as you have before.”
“Your equipment is fine, father. Nothing’s happened to it. Meanwhile, I have all these crystals to catalog. Can’t your routine tests wait?”
Gabriel looked pained. “I don’t think they can, dear. Something has, um, come up.” His hands twisted together in the way they had when he was disturbed.
She looked sharply at him. “Father, is something wrong?”
“Oh, no, no, no, of course not, dear.” But his hands continued to writhe.
Spring realized that she would have to humor him, and try to find out what was bothering him. She loved her father deeply, even if he did annoy her on occasion. “Of course I’ll help,” she said.
“Very good.” He sounded relieved, though his hands still quivered. “If you will just sit in the testing chair, and I will adjust the helmet—”
She didn’t remind him that she was well familiar with the routine; she had occupied this chair many times before. She set aside her collection of crystals and took the seat. She looked around while he somewhat fumblingly adjusted the helmet and connections. It was important that her emotions be neutral while the monitors were being placed, or the baseline settings would be slightly wrong. So she pretended that she was a first time client, to whom this was a novelty, and ran her father’s job description through her mind as if it were an announcement:
This was the office of the Magician Gabriel, one of Planet New Landers’ more prestigious healing practitioners. Not only did he enjoy a thriving local practice and the respect of his peers, but he had recently received wide acclaim for his work in Crystallography from both magical and scientific communities. His name was becoming known over the planet, and many new patients were arriving for the special treatments they believed only he could provide. His was a most profitable practice, to say the least.
Given the present circumstances he should have been a happy man. But she knew he wasn’t. Because his wife—oops. That would foul the setting for sure! So she carefully neutralized her thoughts again, thinking of pretty crystals, and soon he had things set.
“Now it is ready,” he said unnecessarily. “Except for a blip when you thought a naughty thought.” He forced a chuckle that only increased her concern. What was bothering him? It had to be pretty serious, for he was not a temperamental man. “If you will just recite some ancient history of a routine nature—”
So he hadn’t completely zeroed it in yet, and needed more ground neutral mental activity. Spring smiled, and recited the ancient canon, using a singsong voice:
“Lightships, Freezers, and Floaters faded in the sunlight of a former ultra-society that existed in those earliest of days when man had sown his seed from the Milky Way to the constellation Corona Borealis and beyond to galaxies now unknown.”
“Very good,” he said. “The registration is perfect. Continue.”
Perfect? Then why did she need to do more mindless recitation? The equipment should not take this long to get tuned. But she smiled, and spoke the next paragraph of the standard history lesson. “Earth, renamed New World at that time, had one great Central Government, utilizing the finest combination of scientific minds available from all former nations. They banded together, achieving breakthrough after phenomenal breakthrough. That union was in many respects, more feared than the gargantuan military machine. For all their might, it was no secret that the real power of New World rested in the hands of the super scientists.”
“Yes, yes, excellent, excellent,” Gabriel said, wringing his hands again. “Just a bit more—”
“Father—” she started, allowing some annoyance to show in her tone, though it was really concern that motivated her.
“Oh, no, quite routine, quite routine, very good, no problem at all, just a tiny—a little—nothing to be concerned about, no need to inquire. Merely a trace aberration in the—the attunement. Don’t be concerned.”
Spring sighed mentally. She had better recite some more mind-numbing rote material, to calm her rising concern for her father’s state of mental health.
“The entire island of what was once called Japan was designated as the NWSL, or New World Science Lab. It was so for several generations after the Great Migratory Act was rigorously enforced. Separate countries ceased to exist. Mandatory integration throughout many centuries eliminated most physical racial differences as New World became one large Family of Man.” She glanced at Gabriel again, covertly. He was watching the indicators so intently that she knew something was amiss. Had the equipment suffered a software virus infestation?
Rather than challenge him on th
is immediately, she continued the recitation, though her limit of tolerance was approaching. “Individualism was ostracized as differing cultures were assimilated into the whole, with none taking precedence above another. This did not come about from any ideal of brotherly love, but by decree from a firm dictatorship, determined in its zeal, that might would make right where morality had failed.” Even as a child she had questioned that, though her classmates had seen nothing wrong with it. Thus she had become aware that she was different, intellectually, from ordinary children of New Landers, and not just because she was the daughter of the planet’s leading magician. And there was the charged concept: magic was an accepted aspect of reality, but there were still those who looked askance at it, as if there were something wrong or strange about it. So she had felt the dawning isolation of her heritage.
But she preferred not to dwell on that, so she resumed the oration. “New World language became Unispeech, a simplified mono-phonic pattern of sounds based on mathematical equations. A child of three could communicate fluently in six weeks when aided by a computotech implant.” She herself had learned to speak that way, of course, and had become mistress of many other disciplines similarly, thanks to equipment simpler than what they were testing right now. By the same token, there was nothing extraordinary about it, and there was no need for a prolonged testing session. She glanced yet again at Gabriel.
He remained fascinated by the indications. Enough was enough! “Father, something is amiss. I know it. What—?”
“No, no, no, please, please, no problem,” he babbled, his hands threatening to twist their own fingers off. “Just a little more, and it’s done, it’s done.”
So she yielded, one more time. “The average life span increased to approximately two hundred and sixty years. Most women waited well into their seventies to bear children, and a woman of fifty was as attractive as a young girl in ancient times. Thus, the planet did not populate more rapidly than before, and with the last phases of the Great Migration in progress, natural resources were replenished by discoveries on bountiful distant worlds.” Of course the old technology had been mostly lost now, but lightships still transported beings to the more distant stars. Perhaps in a few more centuries the ancient techniques would be rediscovered; knowledge seemed to grow in patterns, ebbing and flowing in the tides of time.
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