Read Demons of the Dancing Gods Online
Authors: Jack L. Chalker
Tags: #Science Fiction, #General, #Fiction
they'had feared, since the girls were busy and there were few
of them.
"What happens when we get to the top?" Joe whispered to
Marge as they climbed and climbed.
"We don't get that far—I hope. I think maybe we ought to
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find a hiding place and just camp out. The top level's the home
of those packs of birds, I'm pretty sure."
"The storerooms would be handy," he suggested. "Shall we
go back down?"
"One more level. I'm really curious about this place."
He shrugged and followed. They emerged into a brightly
lighted room with a polished and stained oak floor and walls
that squared off the chamber, made of some sort of paneling.
There were no furnishings, but at the far end of the room,
flanked by two floor-to-ceiling red satin curtains, was a huge
and hideous multi-armed idol, seated in the lotus position. Its
face was a travesty of a human woman's face, and it had eight
human arms coming from its somewhat distorted human torso.
Each of the hands held a different deadly weapon—dagger,
sword, crossbow, garrote, and the like. While it seemed made
of some black stone, its eyes were blazing red rubies of nearly
impossible size and perfection.
"Looks like something out of Gunga Din," Joe noted. He
wasn't much on books, but he loved old movies.
"The goddess of death, all right—or what passes for Kali
here," she agreed. Together they approached the altar and its
statue and examined it. "Look at those stones! Wouldn't Macore
love it?"
"I, for one, wouldn't touch it. It's probably cursed a thousand
ways from Sunday."
"Actually, I'm not," the idol responded. "If you looked like
this, would you need much in the way of curses?"
They both jumped. Joe started to pull his sword—and found
that it would not come out of its scabbard. He pulled and
strained at it, but it just wouldn't come. There was a chuckling
behind him, and he and Marge whirled to see a tall, attractive
woman standing there. She was dressed in a black satin robe
and, except for snow-white hair, looked very young and pretty.
Both, in fact, had seen that face only weeks before.
"Esmerada," Marge said, feeling trapped.
Joe stopped tugging at Irving and just stared at the witch
queen. Swords wouldn't do for somebody like her. It would
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be like going against an elephant with a peashooter.
"This is all quite amusing and interesting," Esmerada said
conversationally. "How in the world did you two get in? Well,
never mind that for now. I assume the plot was to get inside
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somehow, then issue an invitation to Tubby Ruddy for a showdown.
How droll. Well, you're here, but old Tubby's nowhere
in sight; and since the invitation must pass from inside to
outside, I hardly think you'll get the chance." She turned and
shouted down the stairs, "All right, boys—bring her up!"
There was a commotion below, and Tiana was brought up,
flanked by half a dozen Bentar. She had her hands tied behind
her back and her arms lashed with heavy rope around her chest.
She looked at her friends, shrugged, and said, "Sorry."
"Since you two were taking the tour, come on up one more
flight," Esmerada invited Joe and Marge, still being casual.
They followed her, with the Bentar and Tiana bringing up
the rear. The next level proved to be a comfortably appointed
apartment, obviously the witch queen's private quarters.
"Untie the woman," Esmerada commanded the Bentar. They
hesitated, and she added, "She's no threat—now."
The rope and hand ties were swiftly cut, and Tiana massaged
her wrists for a few moments.
"You can go," the witch told the Bentar. "I'll handle things
from here on in." They looked uncertain, but left.
"Please, take seats, all of you," the witch urged. "We might
as well be as comfortable as possible for a little while."
Figuring that they had no other choice, all three of them
took seats. There really wasn't much else to do. Esmerada
seated herself in a large, high-backed plush chair opposite them
and crossed her legs. "So, now. What shall we talk about?"
"That idol—is it really alive?" Joe asked, genuinely curious.
She chuckled. "Oh, yes. A former adept of mine who got
too big for her robes. I changed her into the statue because it
was amusing. She's totally frozen except for her mouth. She's
a useful object lesson, though, to the newer girls, don't you
think?"
"Charming," Tiana muttered.
Esmerada smiled. "So glad you approve. I'll try and make
things equally entertaining in this case. You, Kauri, are simple.
Just neutralize your therapeutic qualities, remove your ability
to think, and give you to the soldier boys. You and they will
have a continual ball. Nothing but animalistic sex until the end
of time."
Marge shivered but said nothing.
"As for you, big boy—you're more of a challenge.
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DEMONS OF THE DANCING GODS
Hmmm... Let's see... We really shouldn't lose the properties
of that magic sword, I think. Maybe a gargoyle. Yes, definitely
—a big, lurking, hulking gargoyle with bat's wings to
guard the gate and attack any who enter that I wish eliminated.
No, too ordinary. Well, I'll think of something." She sighed.
"I wish I had the complete set. Too bad I can't play with both
you and the amazon here."
Joe looked up at her. "What's that mean?"
"She's due on the ten o'clock broom to Morikay. There's
a friend of mine there just dying to meet her."
Tiana bristled. "You would not do this!"
"Why not? Then he owes me one." The witch chuckled.
"Seeing your reaction, I think it's the absolutely perfect thing
to do."
Tiana started to rise, but Esmerada gave an idle flick of her
hand, and it was as if a giant's hand pushed the big woman
back into the chair. The witch smiled sweetly, then made a
few gestures in the air. Marge switched to the magic band and
was startled to see just what a riot of color and complex patterns
filled the room. Still, she could see the witch's hand actually
trace out a basic pattern of new material. It shot out from her
rapidly moving fingers like spider's silk, reaching and covering
the big woman. "Just stay there for a few minutes, won't you
dear? I have to stick these two in storage for a bit."
Tiana struggled, but she was bound tightly and securely to
the chair with a pattern so complex that neither she nor Marge
could have understood or duplicated it in hours—and the witch
had done it almost as an afterthought!
Esmerada got up and gestured to Joe and Marge. "Come
with me." She paused. "Oh, take the sword off first and just
leave it over there on the floor."
He hesitated, and she gave another seemingly random series
of finger motions. Abruptly the sword belt tore on the side
opposite the scabbard, and both it and Joe's breechclout were
flung against the far wall by a force invisible to him, but all
too visible to Marge.
The witch smiled her sweet smile once more. "Now, follow
me and don't dawdle, or I'll have to get a little unpleasant,"
she warned them. It was enough, and they followed her.
To their surprise, they went not down but up. "I put the
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dungeons up here when I redecorated," Esmerada told them.
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"In the basement, escape was unlikely but possible. Up here,
you not only have to break out but must get down through all
the lower levels. Or fly, of course."
The dungeon level, as she called it, was second from the
top and contained about two dozen small cells. They walked
along and saw some pitiful remnants of humanity and fairy
people in them, most certainly no longer sane. All were naked,
but one wore on his head a helmet that totally enclosed it. As
they passed, he rushed forward, crying, "You must listen! I
am King Louis! I aw!"
Marge frowned and hesitated, then shook her head and went
on.
They finally reached the end of the cell block, and Esmerada
opened a cell door. "In here, big man."
Joe hesitated, there was the hand motion, and he felt himself
violently shoved inside the cell. The door clanged shut behind
him. Marge made no resistance to entering the next cell. The
doors, while of metal, bore no clear locks. They were made
fast by Esmerada's spell, and that was better than any lock.
The witch looked back at the Kauri and thought a moment,
then made a few more motions with her hand. Marge saw long
threads of gold and silver emerge and bind her in a pattern
even more complex than the one that held Tiana downstairs.
"What is that all about?" she asked.
"You're grounded, dearie," Esmerada replied. "In technical
terms, I just increased your density and altered your specific
gravity. You won't notice it, because I've compensated you
for it, but if you try and take off, you'll get nowhere. You now
weigh two hundred pounds, you see. I also removed your wings
so you wouldn't smash them, although I fear that also removes
any power you might have."
Marge gasped and raised her arms; they were totally free
once more. She now must look pretty much like a wingless,
naked, burnt orange version of Disney's Tinker Bell.
"Well, goodbye for now, darlings!" the witch queen called
as she walked away. "I have much to do today, including
getting our big beauty off to the city, but I won't forget about
you, never fear. Ta-ta!" With that, she was gone down the
stairs.
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The cells were made of solid stone blocks, bound with some
very hard mortarlike substance, and it was clear that escape
was all but impossible from them.
Joe looked around his cell. There was a large pile of straw
that served as a bed, he supposed, and what looked like a
bronze chamber pot. That was about it. The old girl took no
chances with her prisoners, that was for sure.
He walked to the only opening, the barred door. It was far
too tight for him to do more than get a hand through between
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the bars, and there was no lock even to try to pick or reach.
It was hopeless. "Marge?" he called.
"Yeah, Joe," came her voice, sounding a little far away.
"I'm sorry I have to stay back a bit, but those bars are iron."
"I understand." He sighed. "Well, I guess we just pray for
rescue before she remembers us again, huh?"
"I guess so," Marge responded dejectedly. "I hope it's a
rush job. It wouldn't take more than a few flips of the wrist
for her to do to me what she said she would."
"Yeah, I know.",He sighed again. "Wonder why she even
waited?"
"It's no fun to her unless she lets you stew for a while,"
came a man's cultured voice from the other side.
Joe was startled. "What? Who's that?"
"A fellow prisoner, I fear," the voice replied sadly. "I've
been here quite some time. Months, actually, although it seems
like years."
"Huh? How come she hasn't turned you into a toad or
something?"
The voice sighed. "She doesn't dare let me out of this box.
I am held, my friend, by the strongest, most diabolical set of
locks you can imagine, and I'm actually inside an inner box
as well. She is very evil and very clever. My inner box is but
a scant foot from the outer one, which is only a fraction short
of what I can reach. She is diabolical."
"Why two boxes and locks?" Joe asked.
"One finger," the voice said mournfully. "If I could just get
one finger a fraction outside the cell, all would be changed.
She knows that, and she's tortured me with this arrangement."
"Who's that, Joe?" Marge called. "I can hardly hear him."
"Yeah," Joe pressed, "who are you, anyway?"
"I am Count Esmilio Boquillas," the voice replied.
CHAPTER 13
OF FRYING PANS AND FIRES
No thief shall ever travel without all the necessary tools of his or
her trade.
—Rules, VIII, 117(b)
"IT WAS THE BARON WHO DID IT," BOQUILLAS TOLD THEM AS
the morning passed. "I believe in the necessity of social revolution,
but the battle should be for the minds and hearts of
the people, not their lives. Yet what could I do? As a theoretician,
both of social principles and of the magical arts, I was
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no threat. I have no vast armies nor great cults. By common
agreement, the City-States remain neutral territory, lest all Husaquahr
strangle for lack of trade. I gave my word to them. I
would be free to speak out against this terrible war, but I would
not actively intervene on either side. As neutral, then, as morality
would permit me. For a while it was enough."