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Lock up your goddesses! Charlie Sheen’s in New York.

The self-proclaimed Malibu Messiah rolled into town yesterday.

It had been a long, 560-mile bus trip from a gig in Columbus, Ohio, to the Trump International Hotel in Columbus Circle, where the train-wreck former TV star is booked into 12 rooms through Sunday. Exhausted from his fourth 90-minute show in a week, Sheen boarded the bus around 2 a.m.

Nine hours later, outside the hotel, Sheen’s “goddesses,” Natalie “Natty” Kenly and former porn star Rachel Oberlin, were the first off the bus, skipping into the hotel with arms linked while still wearing their pajamas.

Kenly later came downstairs, this time fully dressed, to chat about life with Charlie.

“It’s awesome, man,” said the LA native, dressed in a spaghetti-strap, sheer lace baby-doll dress.

“It’s all about love. We’re winning.”

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She reappeared twice more throughout the evening, hamming it up with a phalanx of reporters and photographers.

“We’re not going out, we’re ordering a buttload of room service and watching ‘Family Guy’ and ‘Two and a Half Men,’ ” Kenly said during one interaction.

“I love New York . . . I do what ever I want,” she said during another.

Throughout the day, Sheen had food from top-rated Jean Georges restaurant delivered to his room, hotel insiders said.

Among the roughly 15 members of Sheen’s entourage who are staying at the $890-a-night hotel is Sheen pal and former MTV VJ Simon Rex; a personal photographer; Rob Patterson, the tour’s musical director; and Sheen’s assistant, Rick Calamaro.

The remaining rooms are occupied by various crew members from Live Nation, the company producing Sheen’s stage show, sources said.

Unlike many celebrities who stay at the hotel, Sheen was very “low-key and undemanding,” a well-placed hotel source there told The Post.

Sheen did not request a special rider with bizarre demands attached, as many celebs do, the source said.

Hotel officials responded in kind — they did not remove valuables or nail down anything he could throw, in a pre-emptive move to avoid the kind of damage resulting from a drunken meltdown like the one Sheen had last fall at The Plaza.

Tonight and Sunday, the actor may need to conjure up some of the “warlock” magic he has been touting. New York audiences are notoriously tougher than the soft-bellied crowds Sheen faced during tour stops in the Midwest.

“Do you really think New York cares?” legendary Broadway producer Manny Azenberg said yesterday. “This is beyond me.”

An after-party tonight is planned at a club in Carlstadt, NJ.

Late yesterday, there were still about 1,400 tickets left for Sheen’s Radio City shows, ranging from $33 to $40.

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