Read Demons of the Dancing Gods Online
Authors: Jack L. Chalker
Tags: #Science Fiction, #General, #Fiction
The squat, middle-aged man with a light beard and no mustache
was Jeklir the grainer; the pudgy, middle-aged woman
with him was his wife Asarak; and the teen-ager with them
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who looked every bit their progeny was their son Takgis.
"So you're from Sachalin," Joe noted. "On your way home
from a trip?"
"Going on one, rather," Jeklir responded. "Time to visit the
wife's relatives in Mobadan, at least for a week or two."
Joe's eyebrows raised a bit. "I would think this would be
your busy season. I came through a good bit of farmland, and
it looked as if the harvest was just coming up."
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Jeklir's eyes darted nervously at the crowd around the inn.
"Um, usually you would be right, barbarian, but ordinarily
merchants would welcome a convention, not close up shop and
leave as it dawned, if you get my meaning."
Joe did. "I guess the ones coming will be a pretty scary
group, if what we've seen is any indication. My—partner—
and I ran into some unlucky thieves this past morning who had
run afoul of a sorcerer."
"You have no idea," Asarak assured him. "Every time this
convention comes to a town, horrible things happen. Be just
a trifle slow with the ale, and they turn you into who knows
what; and the adepts—they're the worst, practicing spells on
all the honest people with abandon. If you're going into the
city, you watch your step, young man. They pour love potions
in the punch, make people bark like dogs, and worse, just for
the fun of it. The authorities can't do a thing, either."
"I'm surprised anybody will have them, if what you say is
true," Joe noted between bites of the first really good, solid
food in a week.
"What choice do they have?" Jeklir responded. "I mean,
it's always sponsored by a master sorcerer, and if your local
sorcerer decides to host it, what can anybody, even the government,
do?"
Joe nodded sympathetically. "Yeah, I can see that. But you
mean the whole town will be closed up?"
"Oh, no. First of all, the government can't close, so all
those people have to stay and they have to have their services.
The hotels can't close—they're booked. And the bars, restaurants,
and shows will be open, of course. Many of the owners
will keep a low profile and send their families out of town,
but they hire a lot of farmers and contract for a lot of serf labor
to be out front. There are always the ones who do so good they
get special favors, too, and some of it can be put right after,
JACK L. CHALKER
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particularly the stuff done by the adepts. That doesn't help the
embarrassment and degradation while it's happening to you,
though."
Joe understood. Like all conventioneers, these magical ones
would let their inhibitions down and have a totally good time—
for them. In the process, they'd drive the town nuts, but there
was always a cleanup crew of powerful sorcerers around to fix
things. He wondered how long it took and whether everything
ever got fixed, but he suspected that, within the confines of
the host town or city, anyway, things were under more careful
watch than they seemed to be. In the end, it was mental anguish
applied to ordinary people that was the real price—but the
rewards, too, were great. Few groups had conventions this
large, and while some might get stuck a hundred times with
phony money or gems that vanished, others found overly generous
rewards. It really meant millions to the city, too.
Not, however, for a grain merchant. Joe couldn't blame the
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family for getting out for a while.
He finished his meal and settled his accounts. But after
saying luck and farewell to the temporary refugee family, he
still hadn't caught sight of Marge and he began to grow a little
worried. He found the innkeeper and asked if he'd seen her.
"The sexy fairy lady? Yeah, I seen her. Don't worry. She'll
be back down in a little while, like she has been."
Joe stared at the man. "Like she has been?"
Quickly and a little bit nervously, the innkeeper described
Marge's activities of the past couple of hours. Joe was incredulous
and more than a little hurt. He stalked outside to the
stable area, got the horse and the mule, saddled them, and reset
the packs, brooding all the time.
Marge came out of the inn entrance and spotted him, then
walked over to him with a very light and sassy manner. She
stopped short, though, about ten feet from him, and the smile
faded as she sensed his emotional turmoil. She instantly understood
the problem, but couldn't really sympathize all that much.
"Well? What did you expect?" she asked him. "You just kept
lying there, snoring like mad."
"Yeah, but..." he tried lamely. "It's so... cheap."
"It's not that," she told him, stepping more into the light
and putting out her hand. He looked at it and saw two large
and obviously very valuable rings on her fingers. He saw, too,
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that she wore a very expensive-looking gold necklace. In her
left hand she held a small velvet case. "I found out a lot of
things already tonight, and one of them is that you must give
a gift to a Kauri or she owns your soul. The first man practically
fell all over himself finding something to give me."
"Well, at least you'll always be able to buy what you need,"
he grumped.
"Oh, Joe—it's just in my nature. It's one of the things I
do."
"Yeah, but—so many?"
She shrugged and got on the mule. "It was like eating peanuts.
Once I got started, I just couldn't stop."
He sighed and mounted his horse. "Well, you ought to have
real fun in convention city up ahead."
"I intend to," she told him. "But don't be so damned sanctimonious
about it all. I heard Houma and Grogha talking in
little-kid whispers about the virgins of Kidim. It didn't matter
when it was you men against scared, defenseless girls, now
did it?"
"But that was different!" he protested.
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"How?"
"Well, um, the damned town deserved it, that's all. They
staked you out for the dragon, remember!"
"Even if that were a good excuse for the seduction of innocent
kids, which I doubt, it certainly wasn't true that first
night. You didn't know about it."
"But you were celibate theni A virgin witch!"
"And you weren't then and aren't now. The only difference
is that I'm not now, either. Deep down you're just like all
men, you know. It's okay when you do it, but women—uhuh.
And I'm even more of a threat—a woman who can control
the emotions of men. A woman in command, you might say.
No, Joe, don't pull that hurt act on me. Not until you can
explain to me why I'm an immoral prostitute while you're just
having a boy's night of fun out on the town." With that she
kicked the mule and started out onto the darkened road.
He waited a moment, not at all agreeing with her position
but unable at the moment to figure out why she was wrong,
then followed her.
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It took two more days' ride to reach the city, and during
that time he still hadn't really figured it out, but he'd partially
come to accept it. He did more or less understand why he took
it so personally, though. It was one thing for him, say, to meet
a woman he didn't know and have a fling in the hay, but Marge
was something else, somebody special and important to him.
People he knew and cared about just didn't do things like that.
Except, of course, once he'd known and cared about a very
special young woman, who'd even borne him a son, but now,
in another world and in another life, she was living with another
guy and probably griping about never getting any more alimony.
And he'd tried more than once to pick up truck-stop
waitresses and lady truckers, some of whom he knew very well
indeed, and sometimes he'd succeeded. In a sense, he realized,
he'd taken refuge in Marge's former self. She'd been safe,
dependable, nobody else's, even if not his.
But, irrational or not, he couldn't shake his sense of hurt
and perhaps jealousy, at least not yet, and he consistently refused
her advances as if, somehow, at least that could be preserved
between them. She would remain, then, somehow, his
partner and his friend and nothing more, in the same way that,
were she a male and a womanizer, he might accept but not
approve.
It was, damn it, just that she was so damned desirable...
Sachalin was truly deserving of the term city, rather than
the less important designation of town. It spread out for miles
along the shores of Lake Zahias, a lake so huge that it resembled
an ocean or, at least, one of the Great Lakes, and had tides.
The city was built up against a series of low hills that were,
perhaps, the moraines of the great glacier that carved and be-
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came Lake Zahias. Also deep, the lake actually made Sachalin
a major port, since at its southern end the River of Sorrows
began, winding its way through deep gorges to Lake Bragha,
then slowly between the mountain ranges to Lake Ogome, until
finally, as a great river, it reached the Dancing Gods itself. A
parallel canal had been built between Zahias and Bragha, but
two great falls prevented full access to the sea. Still, it was a
simple transfer of goods from ship to barge to ship to get
materials easily into the interior of Husaquahr, and this made
Sachalin a rich and important city indeed.
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The volcanic soil from the Firehills covered hundreds of
square miles to the north and west of the city and lake, meaning
that a tremendous amount of food, principally grains, was sent
back down from the port all the way to the City-States and
beyond.
Sachalin was set only slightly inland from the port and the
white, sandy beaches, and it seemed to be constructed of uniformly
blocky buildings, two to six storeys high, built of some
white stone and masonry materials, topped with characteristic
red shingle roofs. Unlike most cities and towns in Husaquahr,
it was not walled, being far too large and sprawling for that,
but it did have big, open arches at its entrance that served a
strictly decorative function. The road led along the lakeshore
after that, where Marge and Joe could see countless fishing
vessels tied up in neat rows for the night, as well as occasional
yachts and luxury vessels. The heavy-goods commercial port
was north of the city, leaving the center for public beaches and
pleasure use and not spoiling the view.
They arrived in early evening. The city did not die after
dark as most towns did, but took on a whole new character.
Uniformed men of the watch, as they were called, walked every
street, lighting lamps with long lamplighter torches. The glass
containers for the streetlamps were irregular and often multicolored,
their bright flames inside producing not only more
than ample light but also colorful, dancing patterns against the
white stucco buildings. It was, in a sense, fairyland by engineering
rather than by magic, but it was no less effective.
Although neither Joe nor Marge could read the language,
the pictograms on the signs were easy enough to follow. When
they reached a broad park with beach on one side and town on
the other, the road formed a circle around a huge monument
to some very odd-looking creature. Leading into the circle from
town was a tremendously wide avenue, paved with tiny little
bricks and lined with trees the entire way. It seemed to have
a series of circles through town to the hills in back, each one
with a small park and monument in the middle, but far back,
against and seemingly either carved out of or sitting on a ledge
in the hills, was the great capitol building itself, looking less
like any capitol building they had seen than a huge, columnar,
Grecian-style temple to some ancient gods, bathed in great
lights.
They turned toward the capitol and started into the city
proper, following directions on the small map Ruddygore had
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sketched for them of the city center. The large buildings behind
the trees on either side seemed to be mostly banks and offices—
shipping brokers, the grain exchange, and other such institutions.
This was the financial heart of the city, it was clear.
"It's beautiful," Marge said, mostly to herself. "And everything's
so clean."
Joe understood what she meant. Even the best of towns
they'd seen in Husaquahr had been straight out of the Middle
Ages, with sanitation to match. Here, though, it looked as if