Read Demons of the Dancing Gods Online
Authors: Jack L. Chalker
Tags: #Science Fiction, #General, #Fiction
an entire crew of workmen came out each night and scrubbed
the place clean, removing trash, droppings, and just about
everything else, then even polishing the brick and scrubbing
the building^ facades. The air was crisp and clean-smelling,
with no hints of garbage or even horse droppings.
At that moment, Joe's horse relieved herself on the bright
roadway, and he felt suddenly very guilty for her doing so. He
hurried on a bit, and they were a couple of blocks up and at
the next circle before he halted at Marge's call. "Hey, Joe—
look back!"
He looked and saw dozens of tiny fairy gnomes emerge
from the trees up and down the whole block where his horse
had violated the scenery. They hurried quickly to the center of
the street, swept up the droppings and took them away, then
scrubbed the whole area and vanished once more into the treelined
sides of the boulevard. "It figures," he muttered, then
turned and continued on.
Although the hotel and entertainment district was in the dead
center of the city, the fancy hotels for the business clientele
who would be visiting those financial centers were all directly
on this main, wide boulevard, and the grandest of them was
the Imperial Grand, a huge, fancy structure that took up more
than a square block. Like all the buildings, it wasn't really
very high—though at eight storeys it was one of the tallest
buildings in the city—but it was fancy.
The front, in fact, was almost entirely of glass, rising from
street level up four full storeys, creating a massive atrium and
lobby which was like a glass-covered right angle viewed from
the side. This connected to a solid four-storey stone and stucco
block with balconies sculpted on its face, so that anyone coming
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out of any room would have a free view of the open space
area. On top of this were three four-storey cubes, giving the
whole building a distinctive look. It reminded Joe of some
fancy American hotels, as if designed by Mayan temple designers.
There was even a parking entrance on the side, which
led down below the hotel to an underground stable that looked
fancy indeed. Liveried attendants helped Marge and Joe off
their animals, unloaded saddle and packs, put small collars on
both horse and mule and a sticker on the saddle, then handed
Joe three embossed leather claim checks. Another packed up
their meager luggage in an odd-looking cart, and they followed
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him to a wide, beltlike structure rising at a steep angle. Strong,
thin boards were spaced about eight feet apart going up. They
were instructed to sit down, and the attendant then went over
and rang a large bell.
"A real bellman," Marge noted dryly.
Suddenly the belt started moving slowly upward. It so startled
them, despite the obvious intent of the gadget, that both
almost feil off. The bellman, as soon as they were clear, rolled
his cart onto the next plank below them and hopped on himself.
Joe looked nervously around and saw that they were going to
be raised just above lobby level, followed by a steep drop. The
ascent wasn't very fast, but they were traveling backward.
When they were most of the way up, the bellman reached
over and grabbed another rope, ringing the bell below once
more; just as Joe rose up so that his feet were clear of the floor
level, the device stopped and he and Marge jumped off. It then
moved again, and the bellman and his load were lifted up.
Joe looked at the bellman with unconcealed curiosity. "How
does it work?"
The bellman smiled, telling them both that this was his most
asked question. "There's a treadmill down there. Put some
mules on it every once in a while and it winds up a tremendous
spring. When we need to run it, we just take the brake off and
it goes up until we hit the brake. During the busy periods, we
just keep the treadmill going all the time. Smart, huh? Wait
till you see what else this place has. There's no other hotel
like it anywhere."
They looked around the broad, glass-enclosed atrium, but
there were few people about, and Marge remarked on it."Oh,
JACK L. CHALKER
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they'll start coming in big tomorrow," the bellman assured her.
"We're full up the next seven days. Tonight we'd normally be
about half full, but with most of the businesses down the boulevard
taking a holiday during the convention, there are only
some early arrivers like you now. Ah, you are here for (he
convention, right?"
They nodded. "We thought we were late, I guess we made
better time than we expected," Marge commented.
They followed him to the registration desk, a massive horseshoe-
shaped affair of stained and polished oak. The desk clerk,
dressed in almost regal splendor, eyed both of them with some
suspicion and a nose high in the air. "Yesssss..." he virtually
hissed at them, trying to avoid any sort of eye contact.
"We may be a little early, but we're supposed to have rooms
reserved for us here," Joe told him.
Now the beady little eyes focused first on Joe, then on
Marge. "Are you certain you have the correct hotel?"
"This is the Imperial Grand Hotel, I presume."
"It most certainly is."
"Well, we're in the right place, then."
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The clerk gave a bored sigh. "Very well, then. Name?"
"Joseph the Golden, Castle Terindell, Valisandra."
"How original," the clerk muttered patronizingly. "A barbarian
with a mailing address." He checked through his large
card file, then checked again, and finally said, "As I suspected,
there is nothing, and our hotel is booked for the next week."
Joe thought a moment. "We are with Ruddy gore of Terindell,"
he told the clerk. "We are a part of his party."
The clerk was unimpressed and yet he dutifully checked
and cross-checked his file cards once more. Finally he nodded
to himself. "Ah, yes. Ruddygore, Throckmorton P., party of
seven. Let's see... Yes, an Imir is already in as the advance
man for the party. I will send a runner up to approve you." He
turned and tapped a small bell on the desk. From a place
somewhere beneath him, a tiny pixie, no more than two or
three inches high, popped up and waited for further instructions,
its transparent multiple wings beating so fast they were virtually
invisible. The clerk jotted something on a pad, tore off the top
sheet, folded it in quarters, and handed it to the little creature.
"Lake Suite," he told it.
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JACK L. CHALKER
71
The creature was off in a flash, flying into one of a number
of round tubes that seemed to go into the wall in back of the
clerk.
"Those tubes go to every room in the place?" Joe asked a
little suspiciously. If pixies could use them, so could other
things, and they made nice sound conductors as well.
"Oh, my, no!" the clerk huffed. "They go to each floor of
each wing, and the messenger then rings a bell."
Joe nodded, feeling a little better. He didn't trust hotels at
all, and his experience with any of the larger ones in Husaquahr
had been less than pleasant.
"Madam," the clerk said as they waited, "we would appreciate
it if you would, ah, cover up while in the public areas.
The Portside, down at Lake Boulevard and Pier Six, is more,
ah, suited to your sort."
Marge got mad fast. "And what exactly is my sort? Do you
discriminate against fairies? Are we not good enough for you?"
"Oh, of course not! That's not what I meant at all."
"Then make your meaning plain. I am a Kauri, and we have
very short tempers."
"Exactly my point. I mean, with the convention coming in,
it's very bad for the hotel's image."
Joe, too, got a little rankled. "With what I hear about this
convention, you'll be lucky to have a hotel left when it's over.
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Are you going to be working through the next week?"
"Why, uh, I expect to. Whatever do you mean?" The clerk
was uncomfortable when the topic got personal and forced him
to the defensive.
"When the adepts get through with you, you might wish
you'd gone on vacation with an attitude like that. Now you've
insulted my partner and friend, and we weren't doing anything
but following your rules and making no trouble." He put his
hand to his sword hilt, but Marge stopped him.
"No, Joe. Just stand to one side for a moment. This is my
little problem."
Curious, the big man moved over and just watched. Marge
stared hard at the clerk, then brought her two arms up over her
head, fully extending her magnificent, soft wings. The clerk
started to say something, then stopped and became suddenly
dull and glassy-eyed. She smiled at him, and he smiled back,
although Joe was surprised that it didn't crack his face. She
rose, floated over the desk, and landed just in front of the
transfixed man, whose gaze never left her. Marge nodded, still
smiling, put down her arms, and began systematically to undress
the clerk. Joe—and, he couldn't help noticing, the bellman
and other employees in the lobby area—watched with a
mixture of awe and amusement. Within two or three minutes,
the clerk was completely nude.
At that moment, the pixie shot back through the tube, flew
up to the clerk, and stopped short, the look on its face one of
total incredulousness. Marge reached out and took the small
paper from the pixie and glanced at it, then turned and handed
it to Joe. It was a scrawled mess, but they recognized Poquah's
distinctive calligraphy and guessed what it said. "Well, we can
go up now," Joe suggested a bit nervously.
"Awww..." Marge pouted, sounding disappointed. She
leaned over, kissed the clerk lightly, and said, "You'll wait
right here just like that until I get back, though, won't you?"
The clerk nodded dreamily.
Marge smiled, floated back to the other side of the desk,
and looked at the bellman. "Let's go."
The bellman led them around the big registration area to a
hallway and into the main building in back. On one side was
an opening in the wall, revealing a small, gondolalike car.
They could see a second about halfway down the hall, and
guess a third at the end.
The thing proved to be something like a ferris wheel, but
very, very slow and driven, apparently, by the same sort of
treadmill-gear-spring device as the escalator from the stables.
. They went to the top, then had to transfer to a smaller, similar
device and do the whole thing all over again. "Uh—you do
have stairs," Joe said to the bellman hopefully.
"Oh, sure. This is mostly for the bigwigs and the luggage.
The top two floors of each tower are suites only, and the kind
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of people who have 'em not only usually have tons of baggage
but they don't walk no place."
"Um—just out of curiosity, what do you think of that little
scene down there?" Joe wanted to know as they reached the
top floor of the south tower.
The bellman chuckled. "Some people, they run outta town
when this convention hits. Me, I love to stick around. I mean,
I gotta work under guys like that for most of the year."
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Both Joe and Marge grinned. "And you're not scared of
something happening to you?" she asked him, trying to sound
nonthreatening.
"Naw. I been around magicians and stuff a lot, and overall
they're a pretty fair lot. Mostly they stick it to people who
really need it, and, I mean, most of us can't, right? This convention's
the payoff to all them types who do the same to
everybody, and I love it."
They both chuckled and followed the little man to a large
and ornately carved set of double doors. The bellman pulled
on a satin rope that dangled from a small recess. In a few
seconds, the door opened, and the familiar face of the warrior
elf Poquah looked out at them. The Imir was as outwardly
impassive as always; but when he saw Marge, his thick, rulerstraight
eyebrows that flanked his cat-shaped eyes at a fortyfive-
degree angle went up about an inch. It was as much of a
rise from him as either of them could remember. He looked at
Joe, nodded, then turned back to her. "And this is our old
Marge?"
She grinned. "No, it's the new one. Hello, Imir."
"Hello, Kauri. Come in, both of you."
They entered, and the bellman followed. Marge stopped
short when she saw the suite and gave a low gasp.
It was impressive. The walls were entirely of some sort of
tinted glass, apparently going all the way around the top of the
tower. There were drapes, controlled by long, thin ropes, that
could be lowered from recesses in the ceiling to cover them,