A Circus of Hells by Poul Anderson. Part one

thrill. No game too exotic, no stakes too high or low. Continuous

sophisticated entertainment. Delicious food and drink, stimulants,

narcotics, hallucinogens, emphasizers, to your order, to your taste, to

your purse. Every sex and every technique of seventeen, yes, seventeen

intelligent species ready to serve your desires, and this does not count

racial, mutational, and biosculp variations. Come one, come all–”

Flandry went in. He chanced to brush against two or three of the

creature’s arms. The blue integument felt cold in the winter air.

The entrance hall was hot and stuffy. An outsize human in a gaudy

uniform said, “Welcome, sir. What is your wish?” while keeping eyes upon

him that were like chips of obsidian.

“Are you Lem?” Flandry responded.

“Uh, yeh. and you–?”

“I am expected.”

“Urh. Take the gravshaft to the top, that’s the sixth floor, go left

down the hall to a door numbered 666, stand in front of the scan and

wait. When it opens, go up the stairs.”

“Six-six-six?” murmured Flandry, who had read more than was common in

his service. “Is Citizen Ammon a humorist, do you think?”

“No names!” Lem dropped a hand to the stunner at his hip. “On your way,

kid.”

Flandry obeyed, even to letting himself be frisked and leaving his gun

at the checkstand. He was glad when Door 666 admitted him; that was the

sado-maso level, and he had glimpsed things.

The office which he entered, and which sealed itself behind him,

recalled Terra in its size and opulence and in the animation of a rose

garden which graced a wall. Or so it seemed; then he looked closer and

saw the shabbiness of the old furnishings, the garishness of the new. No

other human save Leon Ammon was present. A Gorzunian mercenary stood

like a shaggy statue in one corner. When Flandry turned his back, the

being’s musky scent continued to remind him that if he didn’t behave he

could be plucked into small pieces.

“G’evening,” said the man behind the desk. He was grossly fat, hairless,

sweating, not especially clean, although his scarlet tunic was of the

finest. His voice was high and scratchy. “You know who I am, right? Sit

down. Cigar? Brandy?”

Flandry accepted everything offered. It was of prime quality too. He

said so.

“You’ll do better than this if you stick by me,” Ammon replied. His

smile went no deeper than his lips. “You haven’t told about the

invitation my man whispered to you the other night?”

“No, sir, of course not.”

“Wouldn’t bother me if you did. Nothing illegal about inviting a young

chap for a drink and a gab. Right? But you could be in trouble yourself.

Mighty bad trouble, and not just with your commanding officer.”

Flandry had his suspicions about the origin of many of the subjects on

the floor below. Consenting adults … after brain-channeling and

surgical disguise … He studied the tip of his cigar. “I don’t imagine

you’d’ve asked me here, sir, if you thought I needed threatening,” he

said.

“No. I like your looks, Dominic,” Ammon said. “Have ever since you

started coming to Old Town for your fun. A lot of escapades, but

organized like military maneuvers, right? You’re cool and tough and

close-mouthed. I had a check done on your background.”

Flandry expanded his suspicions. Various incidents, when he had been

leaned on one way or another, began to look like engineered testing of

his reactions. “Wasn’t much to find out, was there?’ he said. “I’m only

a j.g., routinely fresh-minted after serving here for two months. Former

flyboy, reassigned to Intelligence, sent back to Terra for training in

it and then to Irumclaw for scouting duty.”

“I can’t really compute that,” Ammon said. “If they aim to make you a

spy, why have you spend a year flitting in and out of this system?”

“I need practice in surveillance, especially of planets that are poorly

known. And the no-man’s-land yonder needs watching. Our Merseian chums

could build an advanced base there, for instance, or start some other

kettle boiling, unbeknownst to us, if we didn’t keep scoutboats sweeping

around.” Maybe they have anyway.

“Yes, I got that answer before when I asked, and it still sounds to me

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