Read Demons of the Dancing Gods Online
Authors: Jack L. Chalker
Tags: #Science Fiction, #General, #Fiction
through the second day out from the border crossing, the main
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JACK L. CHALKER
road diverged into three branches, one heading west, one south,
and one southeast. Joe looked at Marge quizzically. "Which
one?"
She didn't hesitate. "None of them. We go due east now.
That way." She pointed.
He looked in the indicated direction and could make out a
not-very-wom dirt path that went out over the meadows and
toward a wild forested area far to the east. "You sure?"
She nodded. "Forget the maps and road markers now. I
can—well, I can feel it. It's kind of like a—magnet, is the
best way I can say it."
He shrugged, and they set off on the primitive path.
And yet it wasn't so much a magnet as a presence, she
decided. There was something there, something warm and alive,
something that she could feel with every step now. It was an
odd, indescribable feeling, and she could only hope that Joe
would trust her.
Joe really had no choice. He let her take the lead, although
the path was still clear enough to follow, and just relaxed.
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They camped well into the forest that night. It was a pretty
peaceful place, but he didn't want to take any chances; he
suggested they alternate sleeping, with Marge going first. She
tried it, but soon was back by the small fire.
"Trouble?"
She shrugged. "I don't know. We're very close now, Joe.
We'll reach it easily tomorrow with^time to spare."
"Cold feet, huh?"
"Something like that. I mean, I don't know what to say,
what to do. I really don't know what's going to happen to me—
what I'm really turning into, if that makes any sense."
He nodded sympathetically. "Yeah, I think I know. It's been
pretty rough on you here."
"Oh, no, not really. Remember, I was a total washout back
home. I was on my way to kill myself when I ran into you,
you know. No, it's the other side. I've been happy here. For
the first time in my life since I was a kid, I've been happy. I
really like this place. And now, somehow, I'm afraid again.
This—whatever it is—is forever. What if I don't like it? Or
what if they don't accept me? What if I change into somebody
you and all my other friends don't like or can't relate to? It
seems that every time I have something right, it goes wrong."
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He squeezed her hand tightly. "Don't worry so much. You'll
have a real home here, with people you can call your own.
None of the people of faerie I've met are any kind of holy
terrors if you just treat 'em as people. Besides, Ruddygore said
we were gonna be a super team, and he wouldn't say that if
we couldn't stand each other, right?"
She smiled and kissed him lightly. "You're right, I guess.
But I can't help worrying."
She was able to go to sleep after that, but she started him
thinking in odd directions, some of which he didn't like. He
wished for one thing that he were as confident of this changeling
thing as he made out. He really cared for her, and that made
her special in more than one way. He also valued her because
she was his only link back to Earth, to the world in which both
of them had been born and raised. Oh, sure, Ruddygore went
back and forth all the time, but he was still a man of this world,
not of the other, and he was hardly around all the time. Joe
needed Marge, he knew—she was the one link he had to all
that had been his world. He couldn't help but fear that she
would have no such need of him—not after this.
No matter how he sliced it, after tomorrow she would be at
least as much of this world as of their native land, and she
would have roots, family, tribe, grounding. Not he. Even here
he was the outcast, the outsider, the barbarian from a far-off
land that didn't really exist.
The Kauri would be her new roots, her anchor, he knew—
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but she was the only family he'd ever have here. He wasn't
like her. He'd never read all those books, dreamed those fancy
romantic dreams, the way she had. He hadn't wanted to be
here and had never felt at home here.
He wondered what all those trainees who watched him knock
their arrows from the air and all those people who cleared the
streets for him would say if they knew that this big, hulking
brute of a muscleman was scared to death.
CHAPTER 4
BECOMING AN ELEMENTAL SUBJECT
Faerie seats of power may not be invaded by mortals without
permission without exacting severe penalties.
—Rules, XIX, 106(c)
THEY REACHED THE BIRD'S BREATH, LITTLE MORE THAN A
creek at this point, about midday. The air was hot and thick
and insects buzzed around them in constant frenzy, setting up
a cacophony of buzzing sounds. Marge halted and turned to
Joe.
"This is where we split up," she said a bit nervously. "Make
camp somewhere along here and wait for me." She turned back
and pointed to a dark grove of trees beyond the small river.
"That is the start of Mohr Jerahl."
He stared at it, but could tell no difference between the
forest they'd been traveling through and the one on the other
side. Still, he knew, there was little to distinguish the Glen
Dinig from the surrounding countryside, either, and it was
certainly a real and, for him. deadly place. "I still think I should
go with you, at least as far as I can," he argued. "You don't
know what's there, really."
"No. Absolutely not. First of all, you remember Ruddygore's
warning. That's magic over there, Joe—a place of enchantment."
"If you remember, Irving and I have done pretty good against
enchanted places and things. As for Ruddygore—he's not my
father, whom I never listened to, anyway. I paid my dues to
the fat man; he don't own me any more—just rents me for a
bit."
She grew alarmed at his stubbornness, remembering Hus-
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peth's very dark scenario. As best she could, she tried to explain
the position to him. It was possibly true that Joe could survive,
even triumph, but not without dire cost to her. "For my sake,
Joe, stay here. Promise me. Give me your solemn word."
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He sensed her genuine concern and, although he put up
something of a front, he knew from that point on that he'd lost
the argument. He glanced around. "Okay. Two days from right
now—then I'm coming in looking for you."
"Two days! Joe, I don't know how long this is going to
take! It could be going just right and then you'll come in and
screw it all up!"
"Thanks for the confidence," he grumbled, "but two days
is it."
She thought a moment. "How about this, then? If I'm delayed
for any reason, I'll send a message somehow. One that
could only come from me. Fair enough?"
He considered it. "Maybe. But remember, we've got a hard
way to go to that wizard's convention yet. We'll see. That's
the best I'll do for now."
And, in fact, it was the most she could get out of him, and
she decided it would have to do. She realized that his attitude
was entirely based on his concern for her safety, and that made
it really impossible to go further. She got down from her horse
and turned toward Mohr Jerahl.
"You gonna walk?" he called out, surprised.
She nodded. "I think it's best. I know it is, somehow."
"No weapons or food or stuff?"
"No, Joe. This one I walk into clean. You take care of
yourself. You're going to be a sitting duck out here for a couple
of days, and this kind of place holds who knows what kind of
dangers."
"I can take care of myself," he assured her. "Just make sure
you can."
She blew him a kiss. "I think I'll be pretty safe once I get
across the creek." With that, she walked down to the riverbank
and into the water. It wasn't very deep; even at the center, it
did not come up beyond her waist, and the current was weak
and lazy. She had no trouble making the other side. Emerging,
she turned and saw him, still there atop his horse, staring after
her. She waved at him, then turned and disappeared into the
forest. •
JACK L. CHALKER 27
* * *
That feeling that she'd had since they diverged from the
road less than two days earlier was tremendous now. She'd
felt its overpowering influence from the first time she'd looked
at the place across the river, but now she was in it and the
feeling was all around her. For the first time she sensed, at
least, what the nature of that strange sensation was.
It was raw power.
Mohr Jerahl was in some ways an analog to the Glen Dinig;
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it was a place of enormous magical power, power that could
be seen, touched, felt. But while Huspeth's small realm was
under tight and absolute control, Mohr Jerahl was not. The
term "raw power" was literally correct—this was no tame and
obedient magic, neatly tied into complex spells, but a force of
supemature, an unbridled power that just was. It was incredibly
strong, yet it had a single defined center, a locus, that she
instinctively headed for. There, at that central radiation point,
would be Kauri. There she would meet what she must become.
It seemed to take forever to get anywhere in the forest, and
the sun was passing out of sight and influence by the time she
was sure of any real progress, yet she felt neither hunger nor
thirst, nor did she feel the least bit tired. The tremendous
magical radiation went through her, tickling and even slightly
burning not only her skin but inside as well, yet she knew it
could not harm her. How she knew this, she wasn't sure, but
it was a certainty that she was feeding off the radiation, drawing
strength and whatever else she needed from it.
Darkness fell, in a land where the trees were so thick they
would block the sun in daylight, yet she had no problem with
that darkness. In fact, fed by the radiation she could now see
as a bright, bluish glow that illuminated everything and bathed
it in its eerie light, she saw every object distinctly and without
shadow. In many ways it was a clearer vision than normal
sight, although a more colorless one.
She knew that, somehow, she'd been delayed until darkness
fell, that the magic was strongest then, and that the Kauri, as
was the case with a majority of the fairy races, were more in
their element.
She heard all sorts of stirrings in the trees; once or twice,
she thought she caught girlish laughter from above and sensed
the sudden shift of mysterious bodies, but they kept too far
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JACK L. CHALKER
29
away for her to tell who or what was making the sounds. She
was beginning to regret leaving her bronze dagger and bow
back at the river, though.
And then, with a suddenness that startled her, she broke
through the trees and saw the locus of Kauri power.
The clearing was enormous, composed entirely of some gray
lava base that seemed permanently rippled, as if built of a
frozen river rather than a hard-rock base. It rose slightly for
perhaps a half mile, forming a cone-shaped structure, and at
its center was a perfectly circular opening through which bubbling,
roaring sounds and heavy, sulfurous smoke billowed
upward. The crater was not only the source of the radiation
but also a source of tremendous heat, and she knew that, somehow,
this was a perfect miniature volcano.
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Again she heard the girlish laughter, this time behind her,
and she whirled and faced five of the Kauri.
The thing that struck her first was that they were absolutely
identical; some fantastic, fairy quintuplets. Their basic form
was human; all were female and might be called by many
voluptuous. Their rounded, cute, sexy faces were marked with
large, sensuous lips and huge, playful brown eyes. Yet the
faces had a quality that could only be described as elfin, and
through short-cropped hair that was a steely blue-black color,
slightly more blue than black, protruded two cute, pointed elfin
ears.
They were under five feet tall, but not by more than an inch
or so. Their skins were a deep orange in color. Looking closer,
though, she could see some familiar yet quite nonhuman differences.
Their fingers were abnormally long and ended in
clawlike nails; their toes, too, were a bit longer and more
regular than human toes and ended in similar sharp, pointed,
animallike nails, pointing slightly downward. Between digits
on both hands and feet was the webbing that had first appeared
on Marge back in the mountain town of Kidim. But their most
distinctive feature was their wings, sinister and batlike, yet