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Contents

   



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1 Plot  





2 Characters  





3 References  





4 External links  














Demon (novel)






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Demon
Cover of first edition (hardcover)
AuthorJohn Varley
Cover artistTony Russo
LanguageEnglish
SeriesGaea Trilogy
GenreScience fiction
PublisherBerkley Books

Publication date

1984
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
Pages464
ISBN0-399-12945-6
OCLC10558373

Dewey Decimal

813/.54 19
LC ClassPS3572.A724 D4 1984
Preceded byWizard 

Demon is a science fiction novel by American writer John Varley, published in 1984. The third and final book in his Gaea Trilogy, it was nominated to the Locus Award.[1]

Plot

[edit]

Demon takes place in the years 2113 through 2121, thirteen to twenty-one years after the events of Wizard.

Earth is in the grip of a protracted nuclear war, possibly started by Gaea herself. Some survivors are rescued by mysterious pods called mercy flights that bring them to Gaea. They are cured of all their physical ills, but still mentally damaged from the war, they are dumped in the twilight city of Bellinzona in Dione, an anarchic place where the local brain is dead, Gaea has limited control, and criminals run the show. Due to the war, humankind's future is now in the wheel, and at the mercy of its senile ruler.

Cirocco Jones has become a fugitive and resistance leader, supported by the Titanides, who call her the Captain, and the Angels, who call her the Wing Commander.

The increasingly demented and film-obsessed Gaea has replaced the Avatar that Jones destroyed at the end of Wizard with a 50-foot-tall (15 m) replica of Marilyn Monroe. She spends her time in a traveling film festival of her own making, called Pandemonium, where she is attended by various humans and many bizarre creatures of her own creation, such as living film cameras.

Gaea has developed deathsnakes, which infest and reanimate the corpses of humans and other creatures who die in the wheel. Leading these zombies are horrifying beings called Priests: undead field commanders made by Gaea from parts of her human victims.

Cirocco and her companions find some degree of safety in Bellinzona. It is revealed that all the captured Ringmaster crew were fitted with parasitic, worm-like spies living inside their brains. Cirocco's alcoholism was actually a means of obscuring at least some of her thoughts from the spy, and hence Gaea. Cirocco's brain parasite is extracted by a Titanide surgeon and imprisoned in a jar. Nicknamed Snitch, it is both a part of Gaea's fragmented and disintegrating mind, and a creature in its own right, able to talk, feel pain, and apparently recover from any injury. Cirocco ruthlessly exploits it as a source of information on Gaea's schemes, using a mixture of torture and bribery: Snitch has emerged from her alcohol-addled brain with an addiction to liquor.

As a result of the parasite broadcasting every thought and perception to Gaea, Gaby's personality has survived her physical death; she now exists as a rogue intelligence in the hub and nerve-center of the habitat. She is able to communicate with Cirocco, and together they hatch plans for the future of the wheel.

Chris Major has stayed in Gaea, where he is mutating into a Titanide. Robin of the Coven had returned to her people, but now returns to Gaea, along with her two children: a 19-year-old daughter named Nova, and an infant son, Adam. Having a son is anathema in her female-only community. The children were not planned, but are offspring of herself and Chris, owing to genetic material planted in her when she last was on Gaea and triggered to implant at later times.

Robin, along with her children, is reunited with Chris and Cirocco, and Nova immediately develops a crush on Cirocco. They also meet Conal Ray, a friend and lieutenant of Cirocco's, originally a none-too-bright bodybuilder from Canada and a descendant of Ringmaster crew member Gene who came to Gaea with an ill-formed plan to kill Cirocco. Chris asks Robin for custody of Adam, as his last link to humanity when he becomes a Titanide.

Cirocco learns that Adam shares her ability to activate Titanide eggs, and therefore represents the race's future, as well as a means of controlling them, just as Gaea's agents kidnap the infant. Gaea has arranged his birth so he can be Cirocco's successor, and his kidnapping is intended to force her into a confrontation. After a failed rescue attempt by the group, Chris decides to surrender to Pandemonium, now permanently located in the region of Hyperion, so that he can be near Adam.

Pandemonium is a now a fortified area dedicated to classic Hollywood themes, including a Yellow Brick Road and a replica of the house "Tara" from Gone with the Wind. Returning to base, Cirocco finds that all the zombies used in the kidnapping have died. The cause appears to be a "love potion" that Nova concocted from kitchen spices along with her own blood and pubic hair. This appears to be another of Gaea's pranks, but it is used to exterminate the deathsnakes, and thus the zombies. This leaves Gaea with a labor shortage in the new Pandemonium. Her senility has advanced to the point that she can no longer create new hazards for the human and Titanide populations.

Some months pass while Cirocco's forces regroup. Adam is beginning to see Gaea as a mother figure, and desperate to recover him, Cirocco uses her influence among the Titanides to conquer Bellinzona, imposing law and order with the intent of eventually raising an army to attack Pandemonium. In time, through her unusual mixture of charisma and ruthlessness, she manages to transform the inhabitants' disorganized chaos into a genuine community. She kills off the gangster leaders who ruled much of the city, and co-opts groups such as the "Free Females" and "Vigilantes", who used force to protect their enclaves.

Cirocco guides nearly 40,000 human soldiers and several thousand Titanides some 1500+ kilometers around the wheel, dealing with the various horrors living in the regions of the wheel, and fending off attacks from the Gaean Air Force, the successors to the old buzz-bombs. These new creatures are armed with rocket bullets, smart missiles, and bombs. On Cirocco's side are a set of highly advanced airplanes that she imported from Earth to destroy the first set of buzz-bombs. The pilots are a hastily assembled collection of people trained by Conal. With Gaby Plauget, Cirocco enlists the help of some of the Angels in a preemptive strike to destroy the Air Force's refueling bases. This prevents most of the attackers from reaching her army. Conal's own air force destroy the rest at the cost of several planes, including Conal's own. He parachutes down to join Cirocco's army.

When the army finally reaches Pandemonium, Cirocco's attack is a mixture of display and deadly force. Robin's former familiar Nasu, an anaconda lost in the previous novel, has become gigantic while living in the Wheel. She attacks Gaea's avatar and damages it severely, but is killed. Whistlestop the blimp, with the aged and dying Calvin inside, immolates Gaea in a Hindenburg-like blaze. But Gaea proves able to restore her body from almost any injury. Still, Gaea is lured out of the city to face Cirocco, enabling part of the army to rescue Adam. At that moment Gene, old and addled and living next to the dead remnant of one of the former regional brains, sets off the final blow (instigated by Gaby) by destroying with dynamite one of Gaea's major nerve-centers in full view of his own mind-parasite, which Gaby has removed from his head. Gaea is disoriented enough for Gaby to force her out of the hub, leading to the destruction of the giant Marilyn Monroe avatar in a scene reminiscent of the climactic battle in King Kong. The last fragment of Gaea's mind, in the shape of Snitch, dies in Cirocco's hand. Gaea's final act is to paraphrase last words from a classic movie, Little Caesar. Cirocco is then lifted bodily into the air to join Gaby in the hub of the Wheel.

Gaby, now the new divinity of the wheel, reveals to Cirocco that Gaea was in fact originally an entity distinct from the wheel, and took over just as Gaby has done. Changes of 'management' are a regular occurrence in the enormously long life-cycle of those entities, and all the plotting perpetrated by Gaea throughout the trilogy was aimed at securing her demise and replacement in a manner entertaining and flamboyant enough to suit her. Gaby invites Cirocco to share the position with her, but the former Wizard declines, choosing instead to simply live free for the first time in nearly a century. As she ponders her new and free future, she wonders what she will do next. She leans over, falling from the top of the spoke toward the ground 600 kilometers below, leaving her fate to chance — she is now finally free to live only for herself.

Characters

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "1985 Award Winners & Nominees". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 2009-09-26.
[edit]
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Demon_(novel)&oldid=1101088201"

Categories: 
1984 science fiction novels
1984 American novels
Novels by John Varley
Berkley Books books
Hidden categories: 
Articles with short description
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