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Chapter Eleven
"Tell you what. Let me sweeten the deal a bit for you…"
"OH! This is simply marvelous! Who would have ever thought… another dimension, you say?"
"That's right," I said off-handedly. "It's called Deva."
Of course, I was quite in agreement with Don Bruce. The Bazaar on Deva was really something, and every time I visited it, I was impressed anew. It was an incredible tangle of tents and displays stretching as far as the eye could see in every direction, crammed full of enough magikal devices and beings to defy anyone's imagination and sanity. It was the main crossroads of trade for the dimensions. Anything worth trading money or credits for was here.
This time, however, I was the senior member of the expedition. As much as I wanted to rubberneck and explore, it was more important to pretend to be bored and worldly… or other-worldly as the case might be.
Don Bruce led the parade, as wide-eyed as a farm-kid in his first big city, with Shai-ster, myself, and the two bodyguards trailing along behind. The bodyguards seemed more interested in crowding close to me than in protecting their superiors, but then again, they had just had some bad experiences with magik.
"The people here all look kinda strange," one of them muttered to me. "You know, like foreigners."
"They are foreigners … or rather you are," I said. "You're on their turf, and a long way from home. These are Deveels."
"Devils?" the man responded, looking a little wildeyed. "You're tellin' me we're surrounded by devils?"
While it was reassuring to me to see the Mob's bullyboys terrified by something I had grown used to, it also occurred to me that if they were too scared, it might ruin the deal I was trying to set up.
"Look … say, what is your name, anyway?"
"Guido," the man confided, "and this here's my cousin Nunzio."
"Well look, Guido. Don't be thrown by these jokers. Look at them. They're storekeepers like storekeepers anywhere. Just because they look fu
"I suppose you're right. Say, I meant to thank you for the drink back there at the castle."
"Don't mention it," I waved. "It was the least I could do after bouncing you off the ceiling. Incidentally, there was nothing personal in that. I wasn't trying to make you two look bad, I was trying to make myself look good … if you see the difference."
Guide's brow furrowed slightly.
"I … think so. Yeah! I get it. Well, it worked. You looked real good. I wouldn't want to cross you, and neither would Nunzio. In fact, if we can ever do you a favor… you know, bend someone a little for you… well, just let us know."
"Hey, what's that?"
I looked in the direction Don Bruce was pointing. A booth was filled with short painted sticks, all floating in midair.
"I think he's selling magic wands," I guessed. "Oh! I want one. Now, don't go anywhere without me."
The bodyguards hesitated for a moment, then followed as Don Bruce plunged into negotiations with the booth's proprietor, who gaped a bit at his new customer.
"Does he always dress like that?" I asked Shai-ster.
"You know, all in light purple?"
The Mob spokesman raised an eyebrow at me. "Do you always dress in green when you travel to other dimensions?"
Just to be on the safe side, I had do
Unfortunately, this had dawned on me just as we were preparing to make our departure, so I hadn't had much time to choose someone to disguise myself as. Any of my friends were out, as were Massha, Quigley, Garkin … in desperation I settled on Rupert … I mean, there was one being I owed a bad turn or two. Consequently, I was currently parading around the Bazaar as a scaly green Pervert… excuse me, Pervect.
"I have my reasons," I dodged loftily.
"Well, so has Don Bruce," Shai-ster scowled. "Now if you don't mind, I've got a few questions about this place. If we try to move in here, won't language be a problem? I can't understand anything these freaks are saying."
"Take a look," I instructed, pointing.
Don Bruce and the Deveel proprietor were haggling earnestly, obviously having no difficulty understanding each other, however much they disagreed.
"No Deveel worth his salt is going to let a little thing like language stand in the way of a sale."
"Hey, everybody! Look what I got!"
We turned to find Don Bruce bearing down on us, proudly waving a small rod the same color as his clothes.
"It's a magic wand!" he exclaimed. "I got it for a song."
"A song plus some gold, I'd wager," Shai-ster observed dryly. "What does it do?"
"What does it do?" Don Bruce gri
He swept the wand across the air with a grand gesture, and a cloud of shiny dust sparkled to the ground.
"That's it?" Shai-ster grimaced.
Don Bruce frowned at the wand.
"That's fu
He pointed the wand at the ground and shook it… and three blades materialized out of thin air, lancing into the dust at our feet.
"Careful!" Shai-ster warned, hopping back out of range. "You'd better read the instructions on that thing."
"I don't need instructions," Don Bruce insisted. "I'm a fairy godfather. I know what I'm doing."
As he spoke, he gestured emphatically with the wand, and a jet of flame narrowly missed one of the bodyguards.
"… But this can wait," Don Bruce concluded, tucking the wand into his waistband. "We've got business to discuss."
"Yes. We were just…" Shai-ster began. "Shuddup! I'm talking to Skeeve here." The force behind Don Bruce's sudden admonishment, combined with the Shai-ster's quick obedience, made me hastily revise my opinion of the Mob leader. Strange or not, he was a force to be recognized.
"Now then, Mister Skeeve, what's the police situation around here?" "There aren't any." Shai-ster's eyebrows shot up.
"Then how do they enforce the laws?" he asked, forgetting himself.
"As far as I can tell, there are no laws either." "How 'bout that, Shai-ster?" Don Bruce laughed.
"No police, no laws, no lawyers. You'd be in trouble if you were born here.''
I started to ask what a lawyer was, but the godfather saved me from my own ignorance by plunging into the next question.
"How about politicians?"
"None."
"Unions?"
"None."
"Bookies?"
"Lots," I admitted. "This is the gambling capital of the dimensions. As near as I can tell, though, they all operate independently. There's no central organization."
Don Bruce rubbed his hands together gleefully. "You listening to this, Shai-ster? This is some world Mister Skeeve is givin' us here."
"He's not giving it to us," Shai-ster corrected. "He's offering access to it."
"That's right," I said quickly. "Exploiting it is up to your organization. Now, if you don't think your boys can handle it. …"
"We can handle it. A layout like this? It's a piece of cake."
Guido and Nunzio exchanged nervous glances, but held their silence as Don Bruce continued.
"Now if I understand this right, what you want in return for letting us into this territory is that we lay off Big June and Possiltum. Right?"
I count real good up to three.
"And me," I added. "No 'getting even with the guy who thrashed our army plans,' no 'join the Mob or die' pressure. I'm an independent operator and happy to stay that way."
"Sure, sure," Don Bruce waved. "Now that we've seen how you operate, no reason we can't eat out of the same bowl. If anything, we owe you a favor for opening up a new area to our organization."