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;I mean, the man wouldn't do anything to endanger his own phome, would he?
34 "Where to?" the driver said, casually forcing his vehici back into the flow of traffic.
"Urn, just take me to a hotel."
"Expensive . . . cheap . . . what?"
"Oh, something moderate, maybe a bit on the inexpensive side."
"Right."
I was actually pretty well set financially. A money belt around my waist had over two thousand in gold I had brought along to cover expenses on my search. Still, there was no sense throwing it away needlessly, and I figured since didn't plan to spend much time in my room, I wouldn'
need anything particularly grand.
Within the first few blocks, however, I had pause to reconsider the wisdom of my choice of vehicles. As far as I could tell, the lizards were blindfolded to prevent their animal survival instinct from interfering with the driver's orders. I couldn't figure out how he was controlling them but he seemed determined to maintain a breakneck pace regardless of minor considerations like safety and common sense.
"So, have you two been on Perv long?"
The driver's voice dragged me back to the present my mind had been trying so desperately to ignore.
"Just got here today. In fact."
Suddenly, I zeroed in on what he had said.
"Excuse me, did you say 'you two'T'
The driver bobbed his head in acknowledgment.
"That's right. It isn't often I get a Klahd or a Djin, much less one of each in the same fare." .
He not only knew how many we were, he had spotted!
what we were! Needless to say, the news was not welcome. "What the ..." Kalvin started, but I silenced him with a gesture. MYTH-NOMERS AND IM-PERVECHONS 35.
"Before I answer, do you mind my asking how you knew?" I said, casually glancing around to see if there was a way we could exit rapidly if necessary.
"Scanned you when you got in," the driver said, pointing briefly to a small screen amidst the clutter of his other devices. "A cabbie can't be too careful these days . . . not with the crime rate the way it is. We're moving targets for every amateur stick-up artist or hijacker who needs a quick bankroll. I had that baby installed so I'd know in advance what was sittin' down behind me."
He shot me a quick wink over his shoulder.
"Don't worry, though. I won't charge you extra for the Djin. He don't take up much s.p.a.ce. So far as I can tell, you two are harmless enough."
That rea.s.sured me, at least to a point where I no longer considered jumping from the moving vehicle.
"I take it you don't share the general low opinion of folks from off-dimension?"
"Don't make no never mind to me, as long as you pay your way," the driver waved. "As far as I can tell, you got enough money on ya that I don't think you'll try to welch on anything as piddling as a cab fare. Keep up the disguise, though. Some of the merchants around here will raise their prices at the sight of someone from off-dimension just to make you feel unwelcome . . . and things are already priced sky-high."
"Thanks for the warning."
"... And you might be careful carrying so much cash.
Everything you've heard about crime on the streets in this place is true. In fact, you'd probably be best off hiring yourself a bodyguard while you're here. If you want, I can recommend a couple good ones."
"You know, that might not be a bad idea," Kalvin said.
"In case I hadn't mentioned it, Djinger is a pretty peaceful 36 dimension. I won't be much help to you in a fight."
I ignored him as the cabbie continued, apparently unable to hear the Djin despite his various devices. Remembering some of the dangers I had faced in my adventures, the idea of hiring someone to guard me just to walk down the street seemed a little ludicrous.
' 'I appreciate your concern, but I'm pretty good at looking out for myself."
"Suit yourself, it was just a suggestion. Say, you want something to eat? I sell snack packs."
He used one hand to pick up a box from the seat beside him and shove it in my direction. It was filled with small bags with stuff oozing through the sides.
"Uh . . . not just now, thanks," I said, trying to fight down the sudden queasiness I felt.
The driver was not to be daunted. He tossed the box back onto the seat and s.n.a.t.c.hed up a booklet.
"How about a guidebook, then? I write and print 'em myself. It's better'n anything you'll find on the stands . . .
and cheaper, too."
That might have come in handy, but glancing at it I could see the print was a series of squiggles and hieroglyphics that were meaningless to me. I always travel with a translator pendant to get around the language barrier, but unfortunately its powers don't extend to the written word.
"I don't suppose you have a Klahdish translation, do you?"
"Sorry," he said, tossing the booklet in the same general direction the box had gone. "I'm takin' a few courses to try to leam some other languages, but Klahdish isn't one ; of them. Not enough demand, ya know?" I Despite my continuing concern over his attention to his driving, the cabbie was beginning to interest me.
"I must say you're enterprising enough. Cab driver, pub- 37.
lisher, cook, translator... is there anything else you do?''
"Oh, I'm into a lot of things. Photography, tour guide .. .
I even draw a little. Some of these drawings I did. I'd be willing to part with them for the right price."
He gestured at some of the sheets adorning the interior, and the cab veered dangerously to the right.
"Ah . . . actually, I was interested in something else you said just now."
"Yeah? What's that?"
"Tour guide."
"Oh, that. Sure. I love to when I get the chance. It's sweet money. Beats the heck out of fighting the other hacks for fares all day long."
I glanced at Kalvin and raised a questioning eyebrow.
"Go ahead," he said. "We could use a guide, and you seem to be getting along with this guy pretty well. You know what they say, 'Better the Deveel you know.' "
Obviously the Djin's knowledge did not extend to De- veels, but this wasn't the time or place to instruct him. I turned my attention back to the driver.
"I was thinking of hiring you more as a guide than a tour guide. How much do you make a day with this cab?"
' 'Well, on a good day I can turn better than a hundred.''
"Uh-huh," I said. "How about on an average day?"
That earned me another over-the-shoulder glance.
"I gotta say, fella, you sure don't talk like a Klahd."
"I live at the Bazaar at Deva," I smiled. "It does wonders for your bargaining skills. How much?"
We haggled back and forth for a few minutes, but even- tually settled on a figure. It seemed fair, and I wasn't exactly in a position to be choosy. If the device the cabbie had used was widespread in his profession, my disguise would be blown the second I stepped into a cab, and there was no guarantee the next driver would be as well disposed toward 38.
off-dimensioners as our current junior entrepreneur.
"Okay, you've got yourself a guide," the driver said at last. "Now, who am I working for?"
"I'm Skeeve, and the Djin with me is Kalvin."
"Don't know about the Djin," the cabbie shrugged.
"Either he don't talk much or I can't hear him. Pleased to meetcha, though, Mr. Skeeve. I'm Edvik."
He extended a hand into the back seat, which I shook cautiously. I had encountered Pervish handshakes before and could still feel them in my joints in wet weather.
"So, where do you want to go first?"
That seemed like a strange question to me, but I answered it anyway.
"To a hotel, same as before."
"Uh-uh."
"Excuse me?" I said, puzzled.
"Hey, you hired a guide, you're going to get one. You're about to check into a hotel, right?"
"That's right."
"Well, you try to check into a Pervish hotel the way you are, without luggage, and they're going to give you a rough time whether they figure you're from off-dimension or not.
They'll be afraid that you're trying to get access to a room to steal the furniture or maybe to try to break into other rooms on the same floor."
That was a new concept to me. While I had a fairly extensive wardrobe at home, I usually traveled light when I was working . . . like with the clothes I was wearing and money. It had never occurred to me that a lack of luggage would cause people to be suspicious of my intentions.
"What do you think, Kalvin?"
"Beats me," the Djin shrugged "I've never run into the problem. Of course, I travel in a bottle and people can't see me anyway."
39.
"Well, what do you recommend, Edvik?"
"Let me take you by a department store. You can pick up a small bag there and maybe some stuff to put in it.
Believe me, it'll pay in the long run in dealing with a hotel.''
I pondered the point for a moment, then decided it was senseless to hire a guide, then not listen to his advice.
"All right," I said at last. "How far is it to this store you were talking about?"
"Oh, not far at all. Hang on!"
This last warning was a bit late, as he had already thrown the cab into a tight U-tum which scrambled the traffic around us and sent me tumbling across the seat. Before I could recover my balance we were well on our way back in the direction we had come from.
As accustomed as I was to madcap excursions, it occurred to me that this one was quickly becoming more complex than anything I had previously experienced. I hoped the education would prove to be more enjoyable and beneficial than it had been so far.
Chapter Five:.
"I just need to pick up a few things."
-I. MARCOS I'VE MADE NUMEROUS references to the Bazaar at Deva, where I make my home. For the benefit of those who do not travel the dimensions or read these books, it's the largest market center in the known dimensions. Anything you can imagine, as well as many an item you can't, is for sale there. Compet.i.tion is stiff, and the Deveel merchants will turn themselves or their customers inside out before they'll let a sale get away.
I mention this so that everyone following this adventure will realize what a shock shopping on Perv was to me. The differences were so many, it was almost hard to accept that the same activity was underway in both instances.
For openers, there was the basic layout. The Bazaar is an endless series of stalls and shops that stretch over the horizon in all directions. There are various concentrations of specialty shops, to be sure, but no real pattern and, more important, no way of finding anything without looking. In direct contrast, Pervish shopping is dominated by what Edvik 41.
42 Robert Asprin referred to as "department stores." One store could take up an entire city block with as many as six stories crammed full of merchandise. The goods are organized into sections or "departments" and carefully controlled so as not to be in compet.i.tion with each other. Signs are prominently dis- played to tell shoppers where everything is-, though it is still relatively easy to get lost in the maze of aisles and counters.
Of course, it also helps if you can read Pervish.
Perhaps the biggest difference, however is in the general att.i.tude toward customers. This was apparent when I made my first stop in the luggage department.
There was a good selection of bags and cases there, and the displays were laid out well enough so that I could distin- guish between the magikal and non-magikal bags without being able to read the signs. It wasn't even that hard to make my selection. There was a small canvas suitcase roughly the size of a thick attache case which caught my eye both from the simplicity of. the design and the fact that it was magikally endowed. That is, it had a permanent spell on it which made it about three times as large on the inside as it showed on the exterior. It occurred to me it might be a handy item to have, and if I was going to buy something to check into a hotel with, it might as well be something I could actually get some use out of later. The difficulties started when I was ready to make my purchase.
Up to this point, I had been pleasantly surprised that the sales help had left me alone. On Deva,I would have been approached by the proprietor or one of his a.s.sistants as soon as I set foot in the display area, and it was kind of nice for a change to browse leisurely without being pressured or having whatever overstock was on sale that day touted to the heavens. Once I had made my selection, however, I found that getting the attention of one of the salesmen was astoundingly difficult.