Dream Park

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by Larry Niven;Steven Barnes




  THEY WERE PLAYING GAMES

  Chester Henderson was playing at revenge, to shore up his faltering reputation as a Loremaster and erase the memory of an embarrassing debacle . . .

  Richard Lopez was out to crush Chet Henderson, and prove that his earlier successes as a Gamesmaster were no fluke . . .

  Ollie and Gwen and Tony and Accacia were all playing at heroics to escape priefly from a world beyond their control into one where they could direct their own lives . . .

  Yes, they were all playing games—and then suddenly one of them was playing rough . . . and for keeps.

  DREAM PARK

  Copyright © 1981 by Larry Niven and Steven Barnes

  All rights reserved. No part of this book my be reproduced in an form or by any means, except for the inclusion of brief quotations in a review, without permission in writing from the publisher.

  All characters in this book are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  An ACE book

  A limited first edition of this book has been published by Phantasia Press.

  First Ace printing : April 1981

  Published simultaneously in Canada

  2 4 6 8 0 9 7 5 3 1

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  TABLE OF CONTENTS

  PART ONE

  Chapter One: ARRIVALS

  Chapter Two: A STROLL THROUGH OLD LOS ANGELES

  Chapter Three: THE LORE MASTER

  Chapter Four: THE MASTER DREAMERS

  Chapter Five: THE NAMING OF NAMES

  Chapter Six: FLIGHT OF FANCY

  Chapter Seven: THE ROAD OF THE CARGO

  Chapter Eight: THE BANQUET

  Chapter Nine: KILLED OUT

  Chapter Ten: NEUTRAL SCENT

  Chapter Eleven: GAME PLAN

  Chapter Twelve: OVERVIEW

  PART TWO

  Chapter Thirteen: ENTER THE GRIFFIN

  Chapter Fourteen: THE WATER PEOPLE

  Chapter Fifteen: The RITE OF HORRIFIC SPLENDOR

  Chapter Sixteen: REST BREAK

  Chapter Seventeen: THE LAST REPLACEMENTS

  Chapter Eighteen: SNAKEBITE CURE

  Chapter Nineteen: NECK RIDDLES

  Chapter Twenty: THE SEA OF LOST SHIPS

  Chapter Twenty–One: THE HAIAVAHA

  Chapter Twenty–Two: THE ELECTRIC PIZZA MYSTERY

  Chapter Twenty–Three: BLACK FIRE

  Chapter Twenty–Four: AMBUSH

  Chapter Twenty–Five: THE EGG OF THE AIRPLANE

  Chapter Twenty–Six: THE LAUGHING DEAD

  Chapter Twenty–Seven: CARGO CRAFT

  Chapter Twenty–Eight: THIEVES IN THE NIGHT

  Chapter Twenty–Nine: END GAME

  PART THREE

  Chapter Thirty: THE FINAL TALLY

  Chapter Thirty–One: DEPARTURES

  CAST OF CHARACTERS

  DRAMATIS PERSONNAE

  The Creators

  RICHARD LOPEZ: The world’s most respected Game Master, co-author and presently monitor of the South Seas Treasure game.

  MITSUKO (Chi-chi) LOPEZ: Richard’s wife, partner, coauthor, and public representative.

  The Players

  ACACIA (Panthesilea) GARCIA: Experienced fantasy game player. Warrior.

  TONY (Fortunato) MCWHIRTER: Inexperienced gamer, and Acacia’s guest. Thief.

  CHESTER HENDERSON: Famed Lore Master, leader of the South Seas Treasure party.

  GINA (Semiramis) PERKINS: Experienced fantasy gamer. Cleric.

  ADOLPH (Ollie, or Frankish Oliver) NORLISS: Experienced fantasy gamer. Warrior.

  GWEN (Guinevere) RYDER: Fantasy gamer, and Ollie’s fiancé. Cleric.

  MARY-MARTHA (Mary-em) CORBETT: Experienced and highly eccentric gamer. Warrior.

  FELICIA (Dark Star) MADDOX: Experienced gamer. Thief.

  BOWAN THE BLACK: Dark Star’s partner, an experienced Gamer. Magic User.

  ALAN LEIGH: Experienced fantasy game player. Magic user.

  S. J. WATERS: Novice gamer. Engineer.

  OWEN BRADDON: Elderly, moderately experienced gamer. Cleric.

  MARGIE BRADDON: Experienced elderly gamer. Engineer.

  HOLLY FROST: Aspiring novice gamer. Warrior.

  GEORGE EAMES: Moderately experienced gamer. Warrior.

  LARRY GARRET: Moderately experienced gamer. Cleric.

  RUDY DREAGER: Moderately experienced gamer. Engineer.

  HARVEY (Kasan Maibang) WAYLAND: Professional actor. Guide.

  NIGORAI: Native bearer and spy. (Actor.)

  KAGOIANO: Native bearer. (Actor.)

  KIBUGONAI: Native bearer. (Actor.)

  PIGIBIDI: Native chieftain. (Actor.)

  LADY JANET: Damsel in distress. (Actor.)

  GARY (the Griffin) TEGNER: Novice Gamer. Thief. Alias for Alex Griffin.

  The Dream Park Personnel

  ALEX GRIFFIN: Head of Dream Park Security.

  HARMONY: Dream Park Director of Operations.

  MILLICENT SUMMERS: Griffin’s secretary.

  MARTY BOBBICK: Griffin’s assistant.

  ALBERT RICE: Dream Park security guard.

  SKIP O’BRIEN: Dream Park research psychologist.

  MELINDA O’BRIEN: Skip’s wife.

  MS. GAIL METESKY: Dream Park liaison with the International Fantasy Gaming Society.

  ARLAN MYERS: I.F.G.S. official.

  DWIGHT WELLES: Dream Park computer tech.

  LARRY CHICON: Dream Park computer tech Together with Welles and the Game Masters, he monitors the Gaming Central computer.

  NOVOTNEY: Cowles Modular Community’s resident doctor.

  MELONE: Dream Park security guard.

  * * *

  PART ONE

  Chapter One

  ARRIVALS

  The train sat rigid as a steel bar, poised in midair above its magnetic monorail track, disgorging passengers into Dallas Station. Its fifteen cars had borne their passengers in quiet efficiency from New York to Dallas in just over half an hour, cradled in magnetic fields, traveling through vacuum at close to orbital velocity, deep underground.

  Chester had cut it close. He shifted his heavy backpack and strode back along the train, walking like a king, projecting confidence. There would be Gamers aboard, and some would recognize him. Lore Master Chester Henderson was conscious of his unseen audience.

  “Chester!”

  He stopped, dismayed. He knew that voice—

  There she was, a vision in leopard tights that drew stares from all but the most jaded. Her long red hair, plaited into a thick rope, dangled down her back to the top of her belt line. She wore heavy makeup that almost hid the fact that she was, indeed, a very lovely woman. But the leotards hid nothing.

  “Hello, Gina,” Chester sighed with a tone somewhere south of resignation. “I should have guessed you’d be along.”

  “I wouldn’t miss it for anything. Remember last time, when you saved me from the mammoth?”

  “Cost me three points for frostbite. I remember.”

  “Don’t complain, it’s mean. Anyway, I was very appreciative.” She coiled her arm around him and joined him in a rather strained lock-step toward the Dream Park shuttle.

  She had been, he remembered, very appreciative. “One of your strong points,” he said, and put his arm around her. It felt disturbingly good, nestled there between warm curves. “Well, I’m glad you’re with us. We may need to pass you off as a virgin or something.”

  “Would you really?” she giggled. “I’ve always loved your imagination.”

  Chester didn’t smile. “But, Gina. . .if you’re in, you’re going to have to follow orders a mite more carefully. You almost screwed me good—stop that, I’m serious. This is extremely important to me,
all right?”

  Gina looked up at him and her face grew almost serious. “Anything you say, Chester.”

  Chester groaned to himself as they boarded the train. She had skill; she was better than most newcorners; she carried her weight and sometimes followed orders too. But she treated it like some kind of goddam game.

  Alex Griffin took his shuttle seat and settled back with eyes closed and arms folded comfortably. He had long since learned the value of catching bits of rest where he could, and could catnap during minutes most people spent fidgeting.

  He stretched, and heard popping sounds as muscles and joints woke up. Small wonder they were still half asleep. Ten minutes earlier he had been snoring in his apartment at the Cowles Modular Community, with the alarm buzzing in his ears. The third time it went off, it would refuse to shut up until his 190 pounds were lifted from the sensor in the mattress.

  He opened a sleepy green eye and watched the rear monitor as the cluster of buildings receded from view. Five hundred Dream Park employees maintained residences in Cowles Modular Community, nestled in the Little San Bernardino Mountains, fifteen kilometers and six shuttle minutes away from work. Griffin was on call twenty four hours a day, three weeks out of the month, and he appreciated the convenience of CMC. But this morning was nothing special, just the usual 6:00 A.M. roust.

  Alex rolled his wrist over to check the watch imprinted on his sleeve. (Expensive indulgence. Even dry cleaning eventually messed up the printed circuitry.) Three minutes until the shuttle slid into the employee depot. He had about decided to close his eyes again when the picture in front of him changed.

  The woman on the flatscreen might have been beautiful by the light of noon. At 5:56 A.M. she was evil incarnate. “Morning, Chief,” she chirped, obscenely wide-awake.

  “No. No, it isn’t, Millicent.” Alex yawned rudely, remotely disliking himself for it. He ran blunt fingers through his light red hair and made a serious attempt to focus his eyes. “Oh, what the hay. Maybe it is a good morning. Maybe it’ll even be a good day. I’m sorry, Millicent. What’s up?”

  “Final prep for the South Seas Treasure Game tomorrow is the hottest item. You have some dossiers to go over.”

  “I know. What else?”

  She shook her head, her loosely curled afro bouncing a bit as she studied the computer display on a second screen offscreen. “Umm . . . budget meeting with the Boss.”

  He was definitely more alert now. “Did I exceed Harmony’s projected red last quarter?”

  “Don’t think so. Better not have. That’s my department, and I don’t make mistakes like that. Heh heh.”

  “Heh heh. Well?”

  “I think we’re switching over from zero base budgeting to some new system that Harmony is hot on.”

  “Oh, Lord. What else? Don’t I have a class to teach today?”

  “Yes. One o’clock, right after a scheduled lunch with O’Brien.”

  Alex’s face lit up. “Hallelujah. A bright spot at last. Tell Skip to meet me at ’leven thirty at the White Hart, okay? And ask him to bring me the L5 specs. I want to see them. What about the class?”

  “Standard Constraint and Detention stuff. For the new security people.”

  “Right.” Alex glanced at his sleeve; the station was seconds away. “Make me a memo. Standing arm bar, crossover toe hold for the ground work, and oh, let’s say knife disarms. Right and left wrist locks with low kicks. I’ll wing it from there. I’m almost in, now, hon. I’ll see you in a few minutes, okay?”

  “Right, Griff,” she said, flashing him a smile as the picture faded out.

  The shuttle let him out in the central core of the 1200 acre Dream Park complex, two levels underground. Activity was heavy for this early, he thought. Then he remembered the Game. Odds were there would be five thousand dollars of last-minute work to be done, or he didn’t know the catch-up kings over in Special Projects.

  Tunnels stretched off in all directions: up, down, sideways and maybe to yesterday and tomorrow if the Research Department had come up with anything since breakfast. Most of the people scurrying past knew him by name, tossing off a “Hi, Alex,” or “ ’Sappening, Griff?”, or “Morning, Chief” as they ferried racks of costumes, or props, or electronic equipment to the different divisions. A cargo tram hissed in, and a crew of overalled workers and tiny humming cargo ’bots rushed in to unload so that another shipment could hurry down the line.

  He tossed a friendly salute to the guard at the elevator and pressed his right thumb against the ID pad. The door opened. Five or six people crowded in after him, and Alex controlled his annoyance when only two of them put their thumbs to the pad for clearance. More memos, dammit.

  It was 6:22 A.M., Thursday, March 5, 2051, according to Alex’s desk clock. Propped on the clock was a sheet of fanfold paper, Millicent’s printout of the day’s obligations.

  Alex doffed his coat and dropped into his chair. He punched a finger at the desk console. A hologram “window” formed above his desk: a nameplate that read “Ms. Summers,” and behind the nameplate a dark pretty face whipping around to answer the buzz.

  “Millicent, can’t I foist some of this off on Bobbick? How the hell is he going to earn his pay if I do all the work?”

  “Marty is already with Insurance going over the damage report on the Salvage Game that ended yesterday in Gaming Area B. He should be free by about two this afternoon, or do you want me to . . . ”

  “No, leave him on it. Listen. Do I have to go all the way over to R&D or can we take care of this mess by phone? Lord knows I’ve got enough paper to shuffle before eight. Check it out, would you?”

  “Right, Griff. I’m pretty sure that’ll go.”

  Her face blinked out, and Alex punched for a display of today’s “paperwork.” Three columns of headings ran off the screen. An executive secretary and a deputy Security Chief and this much garbage still filtered up to him. Work first?

  A slow smile played over his face. A little peek at the Park first.

  He triggered the exterior monitor and watched the room swell with the darkened spirals of Dream Park. From the vantage of the monitoring camera the workers readying the Park for the day’s visitors were ants streaming in and out of the long black shadows of early morning.

  There was the somber shape of the Olde Arkham tour. (The kids loved it. The adults. . . well, an old lady with a heart murmur had damn near croaked when Chthulhu appeared to devour her grandchildren. Some people!)

  Snakelike and far off around the edge of the Park the Gravity Whip coiled, offering a total of thirty seconds of weightlessness via computer-designed parabolic arcs. The monitor eye swept over to Gaming Area B, where the Salvage Game had been conducted.

  That one was interesting. Partly in desert territory and partly underwater, it had involved twelve players for two days. Alex figured that the Game Master on that one would just about break even. It had cost three hundred thousand dollars to set the Game up. The twelve participants had paid four hundred a day, each, for the privilege of earning “Gaming Points” for the fantasy characters they portrayed and, not incidentally, for having the bejeezus scared out of them. Book rights presold, film rights likewise. . . . He couldn’t pretend to understand the logic behind it. The vagaries of the International Gaming Society were totally beyond him. The players seemed to speak a foreign language. And this month they had two Games back to back!

  The Games did help the Park, though. The Olde Arkham Tour had started as a Game, thirty or forty years ago.

  There, now, that was more like it. The big shooting gallery over across from the Hell Ride was more his cup of tea. Alex slipped in there occasionally to knock off a few Nazis or dinosaurs or muggers. God, that was a realistic “experience.” The R&D boys were incredible. And quite mad.

  He thumbed the control, and the camera roved further afield. Over there—

  His monitor buzzed, and with a grimace Alex shut off the holo and answered the call. Millie’s voice spoke, but the congealing visua
l image was of a guard Griffin couldn’t quite place.

  “Research and Development, Griff,” Millie’s voice said.

  “Right.” Name and background fell into place now. This would be Albert Rice calling from his guard station between Files and the technological monster known as Game Center.

  Rice was strong and smart, quick to volunteer his services, and Griffin sometimes felt a twinge of guilt at not warming to the man. Maybe just jealousy, he mused. Rice cut a handsome blond profile, almost pretty, and several of the secretaries in Protective Services had bets going to see who would score with him first. In the year Rice had been with Dream Park, nobody had yet collected.

  Something was bothering Rice. He seemed agitated; he kept shifting his feet.

  “Yes, Rice, what’s the problem?”

  “Ah, good morning, sir. Nothing wrong here at the post, but—” He hesitated, then blurted, “I just got word that my apartment in CMC was vandalized.”

  Griffin felt himself coming to attention. “When was the report filed?”

  “Only about a half hour ago. Lock broken, and some stuff scattered around, the cop said, but they didn’t take my electronics. I’d like to see what is missing.”

  Griffin nodded somberly. “You don’t have any crazy friends over there in R&D, do you—No, scratch that.” They weren’t that crazy. “You’d better take the rest of your shift off. I’ll get somebody over there to fill in in about twenty minutes. Check out then. What’s going on over there?”

 

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