* * *
Savannah pedaled with all the ferocity of an athlete in a triathlon. Her face still burned from her conversation with Leslie. Her big sister had a way of making Savannah feel—well, awkward—about what she did.
It wouldn’t be so bad if I hadn’t been assigned as an Elf princess—not a warrior Elf princess, not a headstrong Elf princess, just a weak damsel-in-distress Elf princess. Plus, I have to wear these Vulcan ears, which is just wrong. But I’ll show them.
Savannah pulled up to her friend Caleb’s house. Caleb, dressed up as a goblin, was waiting to let Savannah park her bike in the garage. “You’re late,” he said, brandishing a plastic mace at her.
“Sorry,” said Savannah. “I came as fast as I could.” She slipped past Caleb into the house and down to the basement. There, the rest of the gang had arrived. There was Matt, the gold-rimmed glasses-wearing wizard, Roy the red-haired thief, Jeffrey the scrawny ranger, and Torv the game master. Torv’s real name was Laurie, but nobody blamed him for going by Torv.
While it was true that the Fantasy Club dressed up once a month, there was one thing Savannah hadn’t told her family. The Fantasy Club dressed up to play Roll Playing Games. As the only girl in the group, these RPG’s often involved the others rescuing Savannah, but today things were going to change.
The game started with Savannah trapped in a tower, guarded by the evil goblin Caleb. The wizard, thief, and ranger were supposed to battle through to the tower while Savannah’s goal was to befriend the goblin and his minions. Savannah didn’t play nice though. She fashioned a key using bits of her fingernails and toenails, which were stronger than usual thanks to the fact that she was an Elf—albeit an Elf with misshapen ears.
“No, they’re not,” said Torv.
“My nails are stronger if I say they are,” said Savannah. “So I use the key to unlock the door—”
“—And hundreds of goblins are waiting outside your cell,” said Torv, “led by—”
“—Me,” finished Caleb. He snarled. “And where do you think you’re going, little missy?”
“How do you plan to beat him or befriend him?” asked Torv.
“I jump over the heads of the goblins and down the stairs, dodging any arrows or spears they fling my way,” said Savannah.
“Sorry,” said Torv, looking at some papers in front of him. “Your agility’s a 2 and your strength is a 1. You land smack dab in the middle of the group. But your intelligence is a 10. What will you do now?”
In the end, the wizard, thief, and ranger saved the Elf princess. The princess did her best at fighting through her foes but failed. She did manage to befriend the goblin by promising him a triple scoop fudge-and-caramel ice cream sundae from the Igloo House Ice Cream Shop down the street. Plus, she got to whack the thief up the side of his head when he tried to steal her gold amulet. Sometimes having an intelligence level of 10 had its perks.
The game completed, the Fantasy Club settled back to talk theories. The topic turned to Alternate Realities. “How are we to know there aren’t other worlds out there?” asked Roy. “What if there are hundreds of me’s out there, and I don’t even realize it?”
Jeffrey said, “Maybe we compliment our other us-es. Maybe the stronger we are here, the stronger we are in the other realities.”
“Then all the Jeffries must be skin and bones,” said Caleb. Jeffrey the Scrawny squirmed.
Savannah thought of Gray. He’d talked about another world, but it didn’t seem like an alternate world. It seemed like its own unique world. She spoke up, “What if there are other worlds, but they aren’t alternates? What if—what if there people turn into animals or—or fly—or teleport just by thinking?”
Matt pushed up his glasses. “That’s not possible, not with science as we know it. You’re talking magic—worlds you can reach through a wardrobe or chanting special phrases. And, unfortunately, there’s nothing that says with absolute certainty that magic exists. Alternate realities are more probable.”
Savannah glowered in frustration. “But what about all the legends about other worlds—kingdoms under the sea, faeries who steal humans away to a world where time moves differently, underworlds and heavens, things like that? There’s got to be some basis in reality—there are so many of those stories.”
Matt shrugged. “Those stories probably arose from an effort to look beyond ourselves, to see something that was greater than us. Nowadays people see flying saucers instead of faeries.”
Savannah slammed her fist into her hand. “But what if magic is real? What if there’s another world where the laws of nature don’t work the same, and where their history is completely different than ours because it’s not an alternate? And what if someone from over there came over here or one of us went over there? And—and what if one of them was sick? What would happen to the civilization he landed in? Or would that civilization be immune because the laws of nature are different? Would he start changing according to the laws of nature in our world? Or would he still live according to his world’s laws? And how different is his world?”
Torv folded his arms. “Interesting questions, even though it’s a moot point. Anybody have any theories?”
Savannah hunched over and crossed her arms. She muttered, “But it’s not a moot point.”
While the others talked, Savannah fumed. She didn’t hear a word the others said.