Read Demons of the Dancing Gods Online
Authors: Jack L. Chalker
Tags: #Science Fiction, #General, #Fiction
as she seemed to, and certainly this was the most peaceful and
uneventful part of any of their journeys in Husaquahr.
They reached a farm road which, they were assured, led to
the main highway, and it was in the early morning, with Marge
barely dozing on the mule's back, that they met their first odd
or unusua! experience.
Joe stopped both animals, reached over, flipped down the
dark glasses, and shook her awake.
"Hmph? Uh? Something the matter?" she muttered drowsily,
still mostly asleep.
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"I'm not really sure," he responded a bit cautiously, "but
unless I've gone nuts, the road ahead is being blocked by a
pig-"
"So? Shoo it away."
"Uh—this pig is standing up like a human on its hind legs
and is holding a cutlass, and I really don't like the mean glint
in its eye."
CHAPTER 6
THE TROUBLE WITH MAGICIANS
Once a thief has committed himself or herself to that vocation by
deed rather than by inclination, the thief is bound by that nature,
regardless of consequences, or.d the Rules apply for life.
—Rules, VIII, 41(b)
MARGE SUDDENLY SAT BOLT UPRIGHT AND STARED AHEAD OF
them. Sure enough, there in the middle of the farm road was
the biggest pig she'd ever seen, impossibly standing on its hind
legs. The creature was easily Joe's height that way and must
have weighed in at half a ton or more. Around its middle was
a belt of some sort, its only clothing, and again impossibly, in
its right foreleg it gripped a menacing-Iooking cutlass, apparently
held mittenlike between the two parts of the unnaturally
pliable split hooves.
"Halt! Stand and deliver!" the pig grunted menacingly.
Joe sat back and shook his head in wonder. Of all the sights
in Husaquahr, this was certainly the most ridiculous he'd ever
encountered. "So, pork chops, what do you need with money?"
he called back.
"You think I like being like this?" the giant pig retorted. "It
takes money to hire somebody good enough to break a spell
like this."
Joe reached down and took hold of the hilt of his great
sword, which hummed in anticipation of action. "Well, porker,
it will take more than a pig with a pig-sticker to get anything
from us. Stand aside and pick an easier victim."
"Your choice," the pig grunted back. "We take what you
have from you now and you escape with your lives, or we pick
over your bodies."
"We?"
- There was a rustling from the underbrush on either side of
the road ahead of them, and there appeared the most incredible
trio of creatures they could imagine. One had the head and
torso of a chimpanzee that blended into the body of a large
snake. The second had a giant duck's head on a cow, udder
and all, while the third looked like nothing so much as a humansized
catfish whose fishy body merged into that of a crab,
complete with pincers. The monkey-thing had a broadsword,
while the cow-thing held a bow. The fish-crab needed no other
weapons than those pincers.
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It was hard to take such monstrosities seriously. "What in
hell happened to you?" Joe asked them, as Marge just gaped,
open-mouthed.
"We were lying in wait for the Sachalin night coach, which
was late as usual," the cow-duck quacked, "when we saw this
guy coming, all alone, decked out as if he was king of the gem
mines. It just got the better of us, I guess. The sight of all that
wealth made us forget about the sorcerer's convention."
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Joe nodded. "I see. And when you jumped him, he turned
out to be somebody powerful and he zapped you. I must say
he had a real sense of humor."
"Hilarious," the pig snorted. "Now that we've had our introductions,
can we get back to business?"
Joe sighed and sat back a bit in the saddle, positioning
himself. "Your bad luck continues, my odd thieves. As you
can see, neither my fairy companion nor I have much to hide,
and we are going to that same convention. I think, again, you'd
better wait for safer game."
"Says you," the monkey-snake retorted. "You don't look
like a sorcerer to me, and it's clear her magic powers, whatever
they are, aren't for fighting." It chuckled. "Care to kiss me,
honey?"
"It's true, we're not magicians, although we serve Ruddygore
ofTerindell, whose power will find you no matter where
you are—and you look to be pretty easy to find in any case.
But I do have one bit of magic, and it is of the most fatal
kind." Joe paused and whispered so low he could only hope
Marge could hear. "Be ready to charge when I do."
"Yeah? And what kind of magic's that?" the pig sneered.
Joe drew his sword, which began to hum even louder. Its
blade seemed like something alive, pulsing a glowing bronze.
"This," he told them, "is my very good friend Irving."
"Irving!" They all started laughing and sniggering. "What
sort of name is that for a sword?"
The great sword's hum rose in pitch, as if it were angry
and insulted by the remarks. The sword was, in fact, a semiliving
thing of sorcery and iron, as only the dwarfs could make
it.
"Irving doesn't like to be laughed at," Joe said quietly, then
suddenly kicked his horse and sprang forward with a yell. The
attack took the thieves by surprise, and he was on the pig before
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any of them could react, bringing Irving down on the cutlass
and slicing through the thief's weapon as if it were butter. With
his foot, he kicked out and sent the great pig sprawling on all
fours.
The monkey-snake screamed in anger and launched itself
at Joe, but he whirled around and this time was not so gentle,
slicing off not only the sword but the arm that held it.
Needing no more of a cue. Marge charged on her mule right
through the melee, the mule jumping over the pig.
Joe reined in his horse, reared back, and looked at the other
two creatures. The duck-cow had seen enough, dropped its
bow and stepped back. The fish-crab, however, looked uncertain.
"Well, fish-face? Do we see what Irving does to those claws?"
"Uh—I think Irving is 'a real nice name for a sword," the
fish-crab blurbled and backed off.
By this time, though, the pig had gotten back up behind
Joe and now reached to unhorse the big man. Joe saw the move
from the comer of his eye and pulled back on the reins, causing
his horse to rear up on its hind legs. The pig, startled, fell
backward and Joe came down and had his sword at the creature's
throat before it could recover. "Be thankful I spare your
lives," he told them. "If I meet the man who did this to you
all, though, I'm going to buy him one hell of a good drink."
With that, he whirled and rode off, following Marge, who'd
stopped to watch about a hundred feet farther on. He passed
her, slowed, and called out, "Well? What are you waiting for?
Run for it before they get their wits back!" Then he was off.
She shrugged and kicked the mule, proceeding forward at
a lesser pace.
They kept it up for almost a mile before Joe slowed to a
walk and relaxed, allowing her to catch up. "Close one," he
commented. "If they'd had any guts at all, they'd have had us,
Irving or not."
She burst out laughing. "Somehow I don't think they'll ever
have the guts. A pretty poor lot of robbers they are, even as
monsters."
"Don't laugh too long, though. Remember, we're riding
into a whole city just crammed with magicians, and most of
'em with the power won't think any more of us than they would
of bugs."
"That's more your worry than mine, I think. I'm not really
sure of my powers, but they seem made for a situation like
that."
He cleared his throat. "Urn, yeah. I've been meaning to ask
you about that. I kind of assumed that your powers were in
the, ah, lovemaking area."
She laughed. "Well, so I'm told. But that's only the lesser
part. Supposedly, I can cancel out magic, even redirect it. I'm
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not sure how that works, and they weren't very good at explanations.
It's just supposed to come when I need it, more or
less."
He thought about that. "It makes sense, sort of. No great
powers, like a lot of the fairy folk are supposed to have, but
you'll have the power of whatever is used against you. Seems
to me, they'll think twice about using you for a subject with
that in mind."
She nodded. "If they know it. Kauri are better known for
the other thing we do best, and I don't think it would work
well against somebody like Ruddygore or the Dark Baron or
even Huspeth. Still, most magicians aren't on that level, so I
feel fairly safe. Truth is, I might not have much offense, but
I'm a catalog of defenses, which is what I think Ruddygore
had in mind. You're the offense and I'm the defense." She
saw him frown at that. "What's wrong?"
"The old bastard hasn't done anything for us or to us, unless
it's for some reason of his own. That magic Lamp business
was big, but I don't think it's what he really brought us here
for and made us what we are today, whatever that is. He's got
something big planned for us, and I don't like the smell of it."
"You were the one who was bored," she reminded him. "I
would think you'd like a real challenge."
"Challenge, yeah, but if that Lamp business was just practice,
what's he really got in mind, and can we survive it?"
"You're unusually gloomy today! Huspeth said Ruddygore
could see the direction of the future and planned accordingly,
and those silly Rules said we were destined for at least three
great adventures. Me, I'm not going to worry until the third
one. Instead, I'm going back to sleep."
And she did.
The main road was wide and well traveled, as they expected
one of the primary routes between the capital of Marquewood
and the rest of the nation to be. Not only were there the usual
wagon trains of goods going to and from Sachalin, but there
was much traffic by individuals and small groups. Joe noticed
that most of the people going away from the city looked rather
ordinary—merchants, deliverymen, carpenters, all the people
a capital would be expected to have. The traffic in the city's
direction, though, beyond the commercial trade, seemed a different
sort. Old women in black cloaks and hoods, small groups
dressed in varicolored robes, and mysterious, mystical, even
sinister folk were the rule.
Joe stopped at a roadside inn that was doing a large business
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and went inside. He was getting really tired and he figured that
they would most likely have a room available at midday. Few
landlords could resist the possibility of renting a room twice
in one day, and he could use a bed after so long on the road.
The innkeeper, a big, burly man named Isinsson, didn't
disappoint him, although a large eyebrow was raised at the
sight of a groggy Marge wearing only dark glasses.
The price was reasonable, and Joe agreed readily to leave
by eight in the evening. The room was small but adequate, and
the double bed had a genuine feather mattress. They looked at
it groggily, and Joe said, "Too bad. If we weren't both so dead,
we could make real use of it, as the landlord thinks we will."
"Maybe we'll wake up early," she muttered and lay face
down on the bed. Joe looked at the velvety wings sticking out
from her back and, with a silent wish that she didn't toss and
turn in her sleep, he secured the door and joined her in slumber.
When he awoke, to his great disappointment, it was after
seven. Marge, he saw, had already arisen and gone from the
room. For a second, he was worried about that, remembering
the last time she'd disappeared from a hotel, but she hadn't
been fairy then. He was pretty sure she could take care of
herself. At least, he hoped so. The next dragon they met might
not have a neurotic fear of fair maidens.
He packed up and went down to the main floor, which was
fairly crowded with traffic. He didn't see Marge anyplace, but
he decided not to get really worried until it was time to leave.
There were no empty tables; but with such a crowd, any
empty chair belonged to the first person to sit in it, and he
picked one with a small group of ordinary-looking people and
ordered a heavy meal.
The people at the table were a little taken aback by the giant
barbarian in their company, but they soon relaxed and wanned
to him as the place filled with those more mysterious sorts and
various kinds of not very pleasant-appearing fairies.