The First Two Lives of Lukas-Kasha LLOYD ALEXANDER E. P. DUTTON NEW YORK Copyright © 1978 by Lloyd Alexander Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Alexander, Lloyd. The first two lives of Lukas-Kasha. SUMMARY : After paying a silver penny to encourage a magician to perform in the town square, a carpenter's helper is conjured to a strange place where the people call him King of Abadan. [1. Space and time—Fiction] I. Title. PZ7.A3774F1 [Fie] 77-26699 ISBN: 0-525-29748-0 Published in the United States by E. P. Dutton, a Division of Sequoia-Elsevier Publishing Company, Inc., New York Published simultaneously in Canada by Clarke, Irwin & Company Limited, Toronto and Vancouver Editor: Ann Durell Designer: Riki Levinson Printed in the U.S.A. First Edition 10 987654321 -For all who can imagine that it really happened, and for all who wish it could Chapter 1 Curled in a heap of wood shavings, Lukas was comfortable except for the carpenter's boot in his ribs and the carpenter's voice in his ear. "Wake up! I've got something to tell you." Lukas crawled out of the shavings, rubbing sleep and sawdust from his eyes. He unrolled the cap he had wadded up for a pillow. Nicholas stumped to his workbench and beckoned the lad to follow. "I've been thinking," Nicholas began. "What?" cried Lukas. "You could ruin your brain!" The carpenter ignored this, cleared his throat, and began again. "I've been thinking that I'm getting no younger. Suppose, now, I told you I want an apprentice. A quick, strong boy I can teach my trade. When I'm gone, he'd be town carpenter in my place, and make what he will of himself." "You've already made the boy a carpenter." Lukas yawned. "Why wake me up to tell me that?" "Blockhead! Must I hammer every nail? It's you I'm talking about." Lukas burst out laughing. "Me? Sneezing sawdust? Pounding my thumbs flat?" "You idler, I do you a favor and you take it like the plague. Honest work—" "Stop, stop! I can't bear it!" Lukas glanced around, then whispered, "I've never told anyone—who wants news like that to spread?—but I have a terrible ailment. Work makes me ill. Even the word gives me fits." He rolled his eyes and clutched his belly. "Aie! One's coming on me now. Hurry, Nicholas! The antidote! A broiled sausage! Two, for safety!" "Quit playing the fool. Is that how you carry on when you're offered a decent living?" "I suppose so." Lukas grinned. "It never happened before. What about the sausage?" "None," said Nicholas. "No more. You'll see, it will be for your own good." "That means it's boring, it hurts, or it tastes bad." The carpenter dug into his purse. "From now on, you work for what you get." He took out a silver penny and handed it to Lukas. "I'll give you that each week for wages. No apprentice gets more; most of them, less." "Handsome," Lukas admitted. "You're a prince of good fellows, even without the sausage. But, my ailment—" "Take it in advance," the carpenter said. "Think on it." "As soon as I have a moment to spare." Pocketing the coin, Lukas tipped his cap over one eye and was into the street before his would-be master could say a word more. Since it was market day, he hurried to the town square. Old Nicholas had called him an idler. Lukas, nevertheless, had many virtues. Generous, he shared every morsel of gossip he collected. Diligent, in a single night he chalked the Mayor's portrait on a dozen walls. Frugal, he took only one holiday and made it last all year. He loved to laugh, to sing, to dance on his hands, which he did frequently. He loved to eat, which he did seldom. He loved to sleep, which he did wherever it suited his fancy; though he best liked the carpenter shop. Nicholas, for all his grumbling, usually set out a plate of leftovers. He also made it his duty to know everything that was happening in Zara-Petra. Over the shouts of vegetable sellers and fishmongers, an unfamiliar jingling and rattling caught his ears, and he slipped through the crowd to the middle of the square. There, a gaily painted, canvas-topped wagon drawn by a donkey had halted near the town pump. Astride the donkey sat a skinny-armed ape dressed in crimson pantaloons and a vest studded with glass beads. The creature rattled a tambourine, tossed and caught it again. Then he sprang to his feet, danced a few nimble steps, and jumped head over heels to land on the donkey's back. These antics made Lukas laugh so heartily and so absorbed him that several moments passed before he realized the canvas flap had been hoisted up. Out stepped a sparrowlike little man with a stringy beard and a narrow, beaky face. He unlatched the tailboard, transforming it into a pair of wooden steps. Then, throwing back his threadbare cloak, he clapped for attention and in a scratchy voice announced himself: Battisto the Magnificent. "What's it going to be?" wondered Lukas. "Hair oil or a cure for bunions?" The ape, meantime, loped along the edge of the crowd, holding out his empty tambourine. The townsfolk were too shrewd to pay for undemonstrated marvels, and Battisto's bearing inspired no outburst of generosity. A few onlookers began drifting away. "If this fellow gets anyone to open a purse," Lukas told himself, "that's his best miracle for the day." Nevertheless, he did not want to miss any chance for amusement. So, as the ape drew closer, Lukas nudged the baker's apprentice, who was munching a wedge of pie. "Go ahead, give the poor beast something. He looks like he could stand a meal better than you." "You do it," challenged the apprentice. "Put up your own money. As if you could." The ape rattled his tambourine. Battisto, it seemed, was not going to perform without cash in hand. Lukas shrugged, pulled the silver penny from his pocket and tossed it into the tambourine. The eyes of the baker's boy popped, exactly as Lukas intended. The ape jabbered gleefully, bowed to the ground, then somersaulted into the wagon, where he offered the coin to his master. Battisto squinted at the silver piece, bit it, and flung it into the air along with the tambourine. Both vanished. The onlookers murmured mild approval. Battisto snapped his fingers and the ape scuttled behind the canvas to drag out a large, battered cook pot. The conjurer turned the vessel upside down to prove it was empty, then set it on the wagon bed. As if unsure what he might find, he thrust in a hand and fumbled out a string of kerchiefs; next, a bunch of paper flowers; and, lastly, a scruffy chicken that cackled indignantly as it flapped to roost on the donkey's head. There was a pattering of applause. "The chicken's not a bad touch," Lukas said to himself. "The rest, any rascal in the world can do." At the same time, one of the town militiamen waved his musket and called out, "Come on, whiskers! Show us something new." Battisto raised his arms. "Dear friends, forgive me. I should have known you were not mere country bumpkins. There's no putting you off with childish diversions. You demand nothing less than my wonder of wonders, a marvel to change your very life." "Now," thought Lukas, "is when he trots out the hair oil." The ape had already taken a pail from the wagon and filled it at the pump. He presented it to Battisto, who, without ceremony, poured the water into the pot. "I shall require the assistance of one of you," he declared. "Who is willing? I warn you, he must be bold enough to face every peril, to dare the unknown. Strong, quick-witted—" "That's our Kasha!" guffawed one of the idlers. "He's fearless!" shouted another. "I've seen him attack a roast mutton with his bare hands." Laughing and hooting, the onlookers pressed Lukas closer to the wagon. He needed no urging, since he enjoyed giving a performance as much as watching one. He bowed with mock reverence, flexed his arms in a comical show of brawn, then stood on his hands and kicked his heels in the air. The crowd whistled and the baker's boy called out: "That's right, Kasha! Show us where your wits are. In your feet!" This brought more laughter and catcalls. Lukas righted himself, but before he could fling a proper insult at the baker's dunce, Battisto motioned for him to climb the steps. Having spent his only coin for entertainment, entertainment there would be, even if Lukas had to provide it himself. "No offense," he said under his breath to Bat- tisto, "but if you want to peddle whatever you're peddling, you'll have to liven up your show. Tell me the trick. I'll make you look like a real wonder-worker." Battisto only studied him carefully. "Do you come willingly? Do you put yourself altogether in my hands?" Facing the mountebank, Lukas found him taller than he had seemed. The little man's eyes glittered as he cocked his head to one side. Instead of a sparrow, he resembled a hawk. Lukas shifted uneasily. But, with half the town looking on, there was no way to back out. He nodded. "What's your game, then? You'll saw me in half? Send me up in a puff of smoke?" "Look into the water," Battisto said. "Closer," he urged, as Lukas crouched and peered in. "Closer yet." Lukas felt the conjurer's bony hand on the nape of his neck. Before he could brace himself or turn away, his head was plunged into the vessel. Brine filled his nose and mouth. He struggled to clear his bursting lungs, and jumped to his feet only to feel his legs give way beneath him. He blinked open eyes that smarted with salt water. Battisto had vanished. All the town had vanished. Lukas, alone under a blinding sun, was drowning in the sea. Chapter 2 TOO busy saving his skin to wonder how Battisto had done him such a turn, Lukas flailed his arms and kicked his heels. As the undertow grappled him, he fought to keep his head above water. Close by, he glimpsed a line of cliffs and struck out for them. Able to swim nearly as fast as he could bolt down an alley, Lukas held his own against the waves. Their buffeting, however, grew stronger. Near the shore, foam spewed from the gaps in a jetty of rocks. A whirlpool sucked him in and so battered him he felt Battisto had plucked him from the sea only to plunge him into some giant's churn. He clutched at the rocks, but the tide ripped his hands away, seized him, toyed with him, wrapped him in trails of seaweed; and at last, beyond any effort of his own, flung him headlong onto the beach. Gasping and choking, Lukas crawled out of the surf and, arm-weary, sprawled full-length until his breath came back. He sat up, peeled the weeds from his face, and laughed until his sides ached. "Marvelous! Perfect! Battisto, I take off my cap to you." So he would have done, but his cap, along with most of his clothing, was gone. The waves had stripped him close to naked. What was left of his breeches hung in tatters. His shirt, threadbare to begin with, was no more than a rag on his shoulders. He shook his head in admiration. Once, at the town fair, he had seen a traveling hypnotist with a glance so powerful he could make his unwitting victims dance jigs or crow like roosters. Battisto must be a master of such trickery. The illusion here was amazing. The sand felt gritty under his feet. The dazzling sun, the ocean seemed real beyond a doubt. He had even begun trembling, and it was all he could do to keep his teeth from chattering. "Enough! Wake me up now. You'll have me imagine I'm coming down with the chills." He shut his eyes a moment and waited. When he opened them again, he was still shuddering on the beach. His ribs hurt not from laughter but from welts and bruises. "Hurry up, you rascal. This dream you've put me into—it smarts!" Nothing changed. The tumble of rocks, the cliff, the foaming eddies all stayed as they had been. "Don't wake me, then," said Lukas. "I'll wake myself." He gave himself a pinch on the arm, then another. This failing, he boxed his own ears and tugged his hair until his eyes watered. Panic rising, he buffeted himself as mercilessly as the waves. The blows fell solid and real. This was no dream. He was here, exactly where he saw himself to be. Nor was there any certainty the peddler would or could bring him back. He ran to the water's edge and cried Battisto's name at the sky. The wind swept his voice away. He shook his fist, roared, and shouted himself hoarse. His answer was only the mewing of gulls. He fell to his knees and flung up handfuls of sand as if he could dig his way home. By turn, he cursed and begged, commanded and pleaded, all in vain. Lukas buried his face in his hands. The sound of hoofbeats made him lift his head. Further down the beach, a white horse was galloping toward him. He stood, waved his arms, and ran to halt the steed. Mane flying, eyes rolling, the horse reared and struck at him with its forelegs. Lukas tumbled clear and called out to the rider. It was a girl, wearing rough cotton trousers and tunic. He put out a hand to catch the bridle, then saw she rode without saddle or harness. "Tell me," cried Lukas. "Where am I?" The girl stared for an instant. In her sunburnt face, her yellow eyes glared at him. She spun her mount aside. Without a word, she clapped bare heels against the horse's flanks. "Wait! Hold on a minute!" Lukas called, as horse and rider plunged away. "To the devil with you, then," he shouted after the girl, who soon galloped out of sight. "Little wretch. There's a friendly welcome to—to wherever this is." His vexation at least had shaken him out of his despair, and he turned his mind to the practical question of what to do. "If I keep walking inland," he thought, "I'm bound to find people sooner or later." A town, he told himself, was a town. And there, Lukas felt, he could manage very well indeed. He had no time to put his plan to work. A troop of horsemen in pointed helmets were bearing down on him at full tilt. Some broke away to follow the girl. The rest were brandishing long, curved blades at him. In these circumstances, he did the only sensible thing. He took to his heels. He scrambled up the rocks. Gravel tore at his bare feet, but he pressed higher, deliberately choosing the sheerest face of the cliff where the horses could not follow. When he looked back, the riders were no longer in sight. But his relief was short-lived. The troop had found an easier way up the other side of the cliff. He could make out the leader's white turban flashing through piles of boulders. His flight had brought him to the crest. Below lay the sea, churning around the rocks of the jetty. He could go neither forward nor back. The narrowing trail had forced the riders to dismount and climb after him on foot. He cast around for some defense. His only hope was somehow to block the path before his pursuers clambered through. His eye fell on the boulders half-buried in the earth. He gripped one and bent all his strength trying to dislodge and send it rolling into the gap. He tugged and wrestled and flung his weight against the rock. It began to shift in its bed. But the same instant he felt it loosen, his fingers slipped and he went sprawling backward. His head struck a ledge as solidly as the town smith had ever struck hammer on anvil. Lukas sighed happily, savoring the delicious moment between waking and