Read Demons of the Dancing Gods Online
Authors: Jack L. Chalker
Tags: #Science Fiction, #General, #Fiction
is reinforcing all this, but that just makes it easier. You were
not, however, able to see her in person?"
Marge shook her head from side to side. "I tried to. Just
missed her once. But she takes a leaf from your book and turns
herself into a great white dove, or something similar, and gets
places faster than I can."
"Hmmm... This complicates matters. Have you any idea
how often she returns to the castle?"
The Kauri shrugged. "Hard to say. They're transforming
the place into a really stunning supertemple, by the way, at
least on the outside. All marble and spires."
Boquillas thought for a moment. "But you said Fajera was
trying to arrange an appearance in Todra. Any idea when?"
"The Goddess is due to appear in the City-States—which
arc, by the way, mostly very cynical but very curious—next
month. Does that help?"
"Yes and no. I hate giving him so much more time to
establish and consolidate his program, but this has to go exactly
right or it's no go. You'll be down there when she shows and
give us a firsthand account, plus that all-important spell information.
I've told you what to look for—the one string that ties
her to Kaladon."
Marge nodded.
"I don't see why I have to wait," Joe put in. "I mean, in
just a couple of weeks I'll be ready again to sneak in there.
Should be particularly easy with all the workmen."
"Perhaps, but we can't take any chances we don't have to,"
Boquillas replied. "First of all, I don't want you meeting the
Goddess. The spell would grab you, and that would be that.
Secondly, we might catch Kaladon with the barriers down for
a few days, even a week, but certainly not a month. He's bound
to notice, busy as he is, that he has no protection. You're the
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key man, Joe, the only human we can afford to use in this
operation. Marge and Poquah will handle the rest, but they
can't get in without you."
"Okay, but I just get itchy sitting around here, that's all."
"Better itchy than lost forever," the Count warned.
Four weeks and three nightly transformations for Joe later,
the conspirators held another meeting, this one far more pressing.
"I've seen her," Marge told them. "Man! Is she something'.
I tell you, I knew what was going on and I was immune from
the spell she radiates and I still almost bought it. This empathic
thing is a two-way sword. She radiated such, well, godliness
that it almost overwhelmed me."
"It probably would have overwhelmed any other Kauri,"
Boquillas told her. "Your mind and your past are your strength."
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She nodded. "Joe, she is ten feet tall and looks just like
those statues all over the place. Also, every little blemish and
imperfection is gone, and so is that great dark tan. She's almost
blindingly smooth and white, and her hair's now silver—and
I mean silver, not white or gray—and her eyes are a deep
emerald green. She still has her slight German accent, but her
voice is real soft and musical and super-sexy; yet it will carry
in a square jammed with ten thousand people, somehow. You
ought to see Kaladon, though. Wearing snow-white robes with
silver trim, he looks just like an angel from an old religious
movie."
"You have the spell, I hope?" Boquillas prompted.
She sighed. "Damned hard to do, I'll tell you. That white
inner glow is almost blinding, and I had to do it in daylight.
Bless old Ruddygore's dark goggles! I doubt if anybody without
'em could see through the glare enough to figure out the pattern."
"A smart move on Kaladon's part," Boquillas noted. "Just
in case some of the other councillors get ideas."
Marge passed him her sketch of the spell in colored pencils.
"Took me five different appearances to get it all down," she
told him, "and each time it was harder not to join the cult."
Boquillas studied the incredibly complex pattern for several
minutes, then grabbed a pad and began sketching his own series
of lines, shapes, forms, and relationships. It looked like kindergarten
scribble to Joe, but Poquah in particular was gazing
over the former sorcerer's shoulder and nodding.
"Can you do it?" Boquillas asked the Imir.
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"Of course," the adept responded. "It is not difficult when
you diagram it that way, but I can think of no other mind save
perhaps Ruddygore's that could have solved the pattern from
so basic a sketch."
"I was a theoretician far longer than I was an activist," the
Count told him. "In fact, Kaladon is cloddish enough or egomaniacal
enough to have used a slight variation of one of my
own designs. I suppose he no longer considers me a threat.
Still, a wise teacher never tells his student all he knows." He
looked up, smiled, and said to the Imir, "You have all the rest
of the preparation. Joe, you have the latest reports from Poquah's
and Marge's fairy friends about what's going on in
Morikay. Let's see... Your next cycle is in eight more nights,
right?"
Joe nodded. "Yeah, that's about it."
"And we have here from Marge evidence that our dear
Goddess will formally and personally dedicate Fajera's temple
a week from tomorrow." He sighed. "That's pretty dicey, and
cutting things rather fine, but I think we might manage. No, I
think we have to. If we let this go on another month, we won't
be able to get near the place without being converted ourselves.
Let's do it. Eight nights from tonight, Joe, you will be in
Morikay, and so will Marge and Poquah. If your phenomenal
luck holds, nine days from today we will free this world from
Kaladon, not to mention Tiana."
"I can hardly wait," Joe said truthfully.
It was easier to get into Castle Morikay, or the Palace of
the Angels, as it was referred to, than it was to stomach
two days in the city itself. The building boom was amazing,
with all sorts of bright-eyed men and women, aided by the
Halflings of equal fervor, working like insects in a hive for the
glory of the Goddess. How so many statues had been made in
so short a time without a production line was beyond Joe and
the others, and they were probably magical products, but it
was both stunning and disturbing to see them, not only as
decorations but actual objects of worship.
The people drove themselves with total fanaticism, calling
one another Brother and Sister and praising the Goddess all
the while they slaved. Even though he lay low and kept away
from much contact, Joe got blessed more times than a Swiss
guard at the Vatican. He had to admit, however, that, if it
wasn't for the sheer fanaticism of the people and the fact that
they looked malnourished and horribly overworked, he approved
of the face lift in progress. It was still hard to tell just
what the final thing would look like, though.
The great castle on the flat hilltop in the center of town was
getting a new marble facade, its towers extended, and, in front,
a tremendous statue of Tiana was being installed.
Still and all, Joe had the same distaste for this cult that he
had for the cults back home on Earth. About the only nice
thing he could say for this one was that at least they didn't ask
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for money all the time. In fact, he couldn't pay for anything
at all.
Not that there was an awful lot to be had. Restaurants and
cafes seemed a thing of the past, and inns were closed and
deserted. He had to depend on the charity of some of the brighteyed
converts for what food he could get, and they were sharing
obviously meager rations. The economic and trading system
had been given a lower priority than the building of Kaladon's
dream city.
As for the castle, or temple, or whatever it was now, passing
through into the inner courtyard proved quite easy in the evening,
since work never seemed to stop. As a mule, though,
Joe put in one hell of a tough night's work and almost had it
all go for nothing when they moved to take the animals out
come daylight. Fortunately, animals worked better when fed,
and there was an area inside the courtyard where the horses
and mules could munch on hay. Near sunup, he positioned
himself in the middle of a large group of animals and managed
to change back unseen, although he was almost chomped and
trampled getting out of the mob.
He wasted no time issuing his invitation with the earring he
still had, and he prayed that the batteries hadn't run down.
They had worked fine in a test the night before, but one never
knew.
His problem now was that he was naked and unarmed in
the midst of the enemy camp and he had no real way out.
Boquillas' memories of the inner castle, though, proved right
on the mark. After a few hairy near misses with some of the
people inside, who did not look or act completely entranced,
he found the right section and also found, to his relief, that it
was still used as an inner storage area. In fact, it had been
stuffed with lots of junk left over from the siege, causing him
no end of trouble to locate a comfortable place. He only hoped
that Marge would find him, preferably with a roast turkey or
a thick steak.
Fortunately, the night's work as a mule, powering-a complex
pulley system for the main steeple, had tired him out so much
that he just passed out for the day.
Marge got in, somehow, before nightfall, with a large cold
cuts sandwich and a small gourd of water. It was better than
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nothing, and he ate the food quickly. As planned, they remained
together until the full moon was again in the sky, making Joe
once more a twin of Marge; but this time a different Marge
was involved. The last time she'd been just a pixiewoman, but
now she was a full Kauri again—and could fly.
That gave him the double immunity of the were's curse and
a fairy form, as well as flying ability.
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"Poquah?" he asked her.
"By midnight," she told him. "He's using some of his magical
talents and coming in as a pilgrim worker."
"I just wish Tiana were back," he said. "I want to get this
over and done with."
"She is back. Came here in midmoming, as a huge white
bird with Kaladon perched on her back."
"Something symbolic in that."
Marge smiled and nodded. They settled down to wait in the
dark storeroom for Poquah.
"You know," Joe remarked, "it's a wonder they don't do
this sort of infiltrating each other all the time. Esmerada, for
example, would love to replace the Goddess with herself."
"They would if they could," Marge pointed out. "Remember,
it's only these neat little transmitters that make all this
possible. Kaladon's people are watching for any strangers, and
they'd prevent anybody new from talking to anybody outside.
They check every working person coming up here thoroughly,
too. No, Ruddygore's beaten the system with a were and some
Japanese transistors. Nobody else has even one, let alone both."
"Maybe I should rent myself out to bite specific people, if
being a were is so important."
They waited nervously for hours, but it was almost dawn
before the storeroom door creaked and a shadowy figure entered.
"I had real problems," the Imir told them as soon as they
saw that it was indeed he. "The spells to detect other spells
are very tight. This is a well-defended place, I'll have you
know. I had to—radio, isn't that the term?—Boquillas for
additional help."
"Boquillas! He's here?" Marge was both amazed and worried.
"He is. Hiding out in the cellar of a deserted inn just down
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the hill, and a good thing, too. He said either we do it or he
might as well join the cult. There was no purpose in his staying
away. I can communicate with him through Macore's little
devices." He pointed to a small object, like a golden hearing
aid, in his pointed left ear.
"Well, I just changed back, without even getting to fly
once," Joe grumped. "Damn! What do we do now?"
Poquah paused, as if listening, then nodded. "The Count
suggests that we either act straightaway or wait until dark once
again. The rest of the time, the halls will be filled with functionaries."
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"Take a chance and go now," Joe suggested. "I don't think
I can stand another night in this place."
Poquah, nodding agreement, pulled up his hood and silently
slipped away.
They almost went crazy waiting, but finally he returned
after what not only seemed like but might have been hours.
The impassive Imir was not in a better mood. "Problems," he