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Last Continent Page 17

by Pratchett, Terry


  ‘Nah, that’s “gonging like a possum’s armpit”, mate.’

  ‘Excuse me—’ said Rincewind.

  ‘That ain’t right. “Gonging like a possum’s armpit” is when you crack a crusty. When your ears are stuffed like a Mudjee’s kettle after a week of Fridays, that’s “stuck up like Morgan’s mule”.’

  ‘No, you’re referrin’ to “happier than Morgan’s mule in a choccy patch”—’

  ‘You mean “as fast as Morgan’s mule after it ate Ma’s crow pie”.’

  ‘How fast was that? Exactly?’ said Rincewind.

  They all stared at him.

  ‘Faster’n an eel in a snakepit, mate!’ said Clancy. ‘Don’t you understand plain language?’

  ‘Yeah,’ said one of the men, ‘he might be a fancy rider but I reckon he’s dumber than a—’

  ‘Don’t anyone say anything!’ shouted Rincewind. ‘I’m feeling a lot better, all right? Just . . . all right, all right?’ He straightened his ragged robe and adjusted his hat. ‘Now, if you could just set me on the right road to Bugarup, I will not trespass further on your time. You may keep Snowy. He can bed down on a ceiling somewhere.’

  ‘Oh, no, mister,’ said Remorse. He reached into a shirt pocket, pulled out a bundle of notes and licked his thumb to count off twenty. ‘I always pays me debts. You want to stay with us a while first? We could use another rider and it’s tough going on the road by yourself. There’s bush rangers about.’

  Rincewind rubbed his head again. Now that his various bodily organs had wobbled their way back into their approximate positions he could get back to general low-key generalized dread.

  ‘They won’t have to worry about me,’ he mumbled. ‘I promise not to light fires or feed the animals. Well, I say promise – most of the time they’re trying to feed off me.’

  Remorse shrugged.

  ‘Just so long as there’s no more of those damn dropping bears,’ said Rincewind.

  The men laughed.

  ‘Drop-bears? Who’s been feedin’ you a line about drop-bears?’

  ‘What do you mean?’

  ‘There’s no such thing as drop-bears! Someone must’ve seen you coming, mate!’

  ‘Huh? They’ve got . . . they went,’ Rincewind waved his arm, ‘boing . . . all over the place . . . great big teeth . . .’

  ‘I reckon he madder’n Morgan’s mule, mate!’ said Clancy.

  The group went silent.

  ‘How mad is that, then?’ said Rincewind.

  Clancy leaned on his saddle and looked nervously at the other men. He licked his lips. ‘Well, it’s . . .’

  ‘Yes?’

  ‘Well, it’s . . . it’s . . .’ His face twisted up. ‘It’s . . .’

  ‘Ver’ . . . ?’ Rincewind hinted.

  ‘Ver’ . . .’ Clancy mumbled, clutching the syllable like a lifeline.

  ‘Hmm?’

  ‘Ver . . . ry . . .’

  ‘Keep going, keep going . . .’

  ‘Ver . . . ry . . . mad?’ said Clancy.

  ‘Well done! See? So much easier,’ said Rincewind. ‘Someone mentioned something about food?’

  Remorse nodded to one of the men, who handed Rincewind a sack.

  ‘There’s beer and veggies and stuff and, ’cos you’re a good sport, we’re giving you a tin of jam, too.’

  ‘Gooseberry?’

  ‘Yep.’

  ‘And I’m wondering about your hat,’ said Remorse. ‘Why’s there all corks round it?’

  ‘Knocks the flies out,’ said Rincewind.

  ‘That works, does it?’

  ‘Course not,’ said Clancy. ‘If’n it does, someone’d have thought of it by now.’

  ‘Yes. Me,’ said Rincewind. ‘No worries.’

  ‘Makes you look a bit of a drongo, mate,’ said Clancy.

  ‘Oh, good,’ said Rincewind. ‘Which way’s Bugarup?’

  ‘Just turn left at the bottom of the canyon, mate.’

  ‘That’s all?’

  ‘You can ask again when you meet the bush rangers.’

  ‘They’ve got some sort of cabin or station, have they?’

  ‘They’ve . . . Well, just remember they’ll find you if you get lost.’

  ‘Really? Oh, well, I suppose that’s part of their job. Good day to you.’

  ‘G’day.’

  ‘No worries.’

  The men watched Rincewind until he was out of sight.

  ‘Didn’t seem very bothered, did he?’

  ‘He’s a bit gujeroo, if you ask me.’

  ‘Clancy?’

  ‘Yes, boss?’

  ‘You made that one up, didn’t you . . . ?’

  ‘Well . . .’

  ‘You bloody did, Clancy.’

  Clancy looked embarrassed, but then rallied. ‘All right, then,’ he said hotly. ‘What about that one you used yesterday, “as busy as a one-armed carpenter in Smackaroo”?’

  ‘What about it?’

  ‘I looked it up in the atlas and there’s no such place, boss.’

  ‘There damn well is!’

  ‘There isn’t. Anyway, no one’d employ a one-armed carpenter, would they? So he wouldn’t be busy, would he?’

  ‘Listen, Clancy—’

  ‘He’d go fishing or something, wouldn’t he?’

  ‘Clancy, we’re supposed to be carving a new language out of the wilderness here—’

  ‘Probably’d need someone to help him bait the line, but—’

  ‘Clancy, will you shut up and go and get the horses?’

  It took twenty minutes to roll enough of the rocks away, and five minutes after that Clancy reported back.

  ‘Can’t find the little bastard, boss. And we looked underneath all the others.’

  ‘It couldn’t have got past us!’

  ‘Yes it could, boss. You saw it goin’ up those cliffs. Probably miles away by now. You want I should go after that bloke?’

  Remorse thought about it, and spat. ‘No, we got the colt back. That’s worth the money.’ He stared reflectively down the canyon.

  ‘You all right, boss?’

  ‘Clancy, after we get back to the station, go on into town and call in at the Pastoral Hotel and bring back as many corks as they’ve got, willya?’

  ‘Think it’ll work, boss? He was as weird as . . .’ Clancy was pulled up by the look in his boss’s eye. ‘He was pretty weird,’ he said.

  ‘Weird, yeah. But smart, too. No flies on him.’

  Behind them, in the jumble of rocks and bushes at the end of the canyon, a drawing of a small horse became a drawing of a kangaroo and then faded into the stone.

  The worst thing about losing your temper with Mustrum Ridcully was that he never noticed when you did.

  Wizards, when faced with danger, would immediately stop and argue amongst themselves about exactly what kind of danger it was. By the time everyone in the party understood, either it had become the sort of danger where your options are so very, very clear that you instantly take one of them or die, or it had got bored and gone away. Even danger has its pride.

  When he was a boy, Ponder Stibbons had imagined that wizards would be powerful demi-gods able to change the whole world at the flick of a finger, and then he’d grown up and found that they were tiresome old men who worried about the state of their feet and, in harm’s way, would even bicker about the origin of the phrase ‘in harm’s way’.

  It had never struck him that evolution works in all kinds of ways. There were still quite deep scars in old buildings that showed what happened when you had the other kind of wizard.

  His footsteps took him, almost without his being aware, along the gently winding path up the mountain. Strange creatures peered at him from the undergrowth on either side. Some of them looked like—

  Wizards think in terms of books, and, now, one crept out from the shelves of Ponder’s memory. It had been given to him when he was small. In fact, he’d still got it somewhere, filed away in a cardboard box.17

  It had consi
sted of lots of small pages on a central spiral. Each one showed the head, body or tail of some bird, fish or animal. It was possible for the sufficiently bored to shuffle and turn them so that you got, say, a creature with the head of a horse, the body of a beetle and the tail of a fish. The cover promised ‘hours of fun’ although, after the first three minutes, you couldn’t help wondering what kind of person could make that kind of fun last for hours, and whether suffocating him as kindly as possible now would save the Serial Crimes Squad a lot of trouble in years to come. Ponder, however, had hours of fun.

  Some of the creat— things in the undergrowth looked like the pages of that book. There were birds with beaks as long as their bodies. There were spiders the size of hands. Here and there the air shimmered like water. It resisted very gently as Ponder tried to walk through it, and then let him pass, but the birds and insects didn’t seem inclined to follow him.

  There were beetles everywhere.

  Eventually, by easy stages, the winding path reached the top of the mountain. There was a tiny valley there, just below the peak. At the far end was a large cave mouth, lit by a blue glow within.

  A large beetle sang past Ponder’s ear.

  The cave mouth opened into a cavern, filled with misty blue fog. There was a suggestion of complex shadows. And there were sounds – whistles, little zipping noises, the occasional thud or clang that suggested work going on somewhere in the mist.

  Ponder brushed aside a beetle that had landed on his cheek and stared at the shape right in front of him.

  It was the front half of an elephant.

  The other half of the elephant, balancing against all probability on the two legs at the rear end, stood a few yards away. In between was . . . the rest of the elephant.

  Ponder Stibbons told himself that if you cut an elephant in half and scooped out the middle, what you would get would be . . . well, mess. There wasn’t much mess here. Pink and purple tubes had uncoiled neatly on to a workbench. A small stepladder led up into another complexity of tubes and bulky organs. There was a general feel of methodical work in progress. This wasn’t the horror of an elephant in an explosive death. This was an elephant under construction.

  Little clouds of white light spiralled in from all corners of the cavern, spun for a moment, and became the god of evolution, who was standing on the stepladder.

  He blinked at Ponder. ‘Oh, it’s you,’ he said. ‘One of the pointy creatures. Can you tell me what happens when I do this?’

  He reached inside the echoing depths of the front half. The elephant’s ears flapped.

  ‘The ears flapped,’ squeaked Ponder.

  The god emerged, beaming. ‘It’s amazing how difficult that is to achieve,’ he said. ‘Anyway . . . what do you think of it?’

  Ponder swallowed. ‘It’s . . . very good,’ he managed. He took a step back, bumped into something, and turned and looked into the gaping maw of a very large shark. It was in the middle of another . . . well, he had to think of it as a sort of biological scaffolding. It rolled an eye at him. Behind it, a much bigger whale was being assembled.

  ‘It is, isn’t it?’ said the god.

  Ponder tried to concentrate on the elephant. ‘Although—’ he said.

  ‘Yes?’

  ‘Are you sure about the wheels?’

  The god looked concerned. ‘You think they’re too small? Not quite suitable for the veldt?’

  ‘Er, probably not . . .’

  ‘It’s very hard to design an organic wheel, you know,’ said the god reproachfully. ‘They’re little masterpieces.’

  ‘You don’t think just, you know, moving the legs about would be simpler?’

  ‘Oh, we’d never get anywhere if I just copied earlier ideas,’ said the god. ‘Diversify and fill all niches, that’s the ticket.’

  ‘But is lying on your side in a mud hole with your wheels spinning a very important niche?’ said Ponder.

  The god looked at him, and then stared glumly at the half-completed elephant.

  ‘Perhaps if I made the tyres bigger?’ he said, hopefully yet in a hopeless voice.

  ‘I don’t think so,’ said Ponder.

  ‘Oh, you’re probably right.’ The little god’s hands twitched. ‘I don’t know, I do try to diversify, but sometimes it’s so difficult . . .’

  Suddenly he ran across the crowded cave towards a huge pair of doors at the far end, and flung them open.

  ‘I’m sorry, but I just have to do one,’ said the god. ‘They calm me down, you know.’

  Ponder caught up. The cave beyond the doors was bigger than this one, and brilliantly lit. The air was full of small, bright things, hovering in their millions like beads on invisible strings.

  ‘Beetles?’ said Ponder.

  ‘There’s nothing like a beetle when you’re feeling depressed!’ said the god. He’d stopped by a large metal desk and was feverishly opening drawers and pulling out boxes. ‘Can you pass me that box of antennae? It’s just on the shelf there. Oh yes, you can’t beat a beetle when you’re feeling down. Sometimes I think it’s what it’s all about, you know.’

  ‘What all?’ said Ponder.

  The god swept an arm in an expansive gesture. ‘Everything,’ he said cheerfully. ‘The whole thing. Trees, grass, flowers . . . What did you think it was all for?’

  ‘Well, I didn’t think it was for beetles,’ said Ponder. ‘What about, well, what about the elephant, for a start?’

  The god already had a half-finished beetle in one hand. It was green.

  ‘Dung,’ he said triumphantly. No head, when screwed on to a body, ought to make a sound like a cork being pushed into a bottle, but the beetle’s did in the hands of the god.

  ‘What?’ said Ponder. ‘That’s rather a lot of trouble to go to just for dung, isn’t it?’

  ‘That’s ecology for you, I’m afraid,’ said the god.

  ‘No, no, that can’t be right, surely?’ said Ponder. ‘What about the higher lifeforms?’

  ‘Higher?’ said the god. ‘You mean like . . . birds?’

  ‘No, I mean like—’ Ponder hesitated. The god had seemed remarkably incurious about the wizards, possibly because of their lack of resemblance to beetles, but he could see a certain amount of theological unpleasantness ahead.

  ‘Like . . . apes,’ he said.

  ‘Apes? Oh, very amusing, certainly, and obviously the beetles have to have something to entertain them, but . . .’ The god looked at him, and a celestial penny seemed to drop. ‘Oh dear, you don’t think they’re the purpose of the whole business, do you?’

  ‘I’d rather assumed—’

  ‘Dear me, the purpose of the whole business, you see, is in fact to be the whole business. Although,’ he sniffed, ‘if we can do it all with beetles I shan’t complain.’

  ‘But surely the purpose of— I mean, wouldn’t it be nice if you ended up with some creature that started to think about the universe—?’

  ‘Good gravy, I don’t want anything poking around!’ said the god testily. ‘There’s enough patches and stitches in it as it is without some clever devil trying to find more, I can assure you. No, the gods on the mainland have got that right at least. Intelligence is like legs – too many and you trip yourself up. Six is about the right number, in my view.’

  ‘But surely, ultimately, one creature might—’

  The god let go of his latest creation. It whirred up and along the rows and rows of beetles and slotted itself in between two that were almost, but not exactly, quite like it.

  ‘Worked that one out, have you?’ he said. ‘Well, of course you’re right. I can see you have quite an efficient brain— Damn.’

  There was a little sparkle in the air and a bird appeared alongside the god. It was clearly alive but entirely stationary, hanging in frozen flight. A flickering blue glow hovered around it.

  The god sighed, reached into a pocket and pulled out the most complex-looking tool Ponder had ever seen. The bits that you could see suggested that there were other, e
ven stranger bits that you couldn’t and that this was probably just as well.

  ‘However,’ he said, slicing the bird’s beak off, the blue glow simply closing over the hole, ‘if I’m going to get any serious work done I’m really going to have to find some way of organizing the whole business. All I’m faced with these days is bills.’

  ‘Yes, it must be quite expens—’

  ‘Big bills, short bills, bills for winkling insects out of bark, bills for cracking nuts, bills for eating fruit,’ the god went on. ‘They’re supposed to do their own evolving. I mean, that’s the whole point. I shouldn’t have to be running around all the time.’ The god waved his hand in the air and a sort of display stand of beaks appeared beside him. He selected one that, to Ponder, hardly looked any different from the one he’d removed, and used the tool to attach it to the hanging bird. The blue glow covered it for a moment, and then the bird vanished. In the moment that it disappeared, Ponder thought he saw its wings begin to move.

  And in that moment he knew that, despite the apparent beetle fixation, here was where he’d always wanted to be, at the cutting edge of the envelope in the fast lane of the state of the art.

  He’d become a wizard because he’d thought that wizards knew how the universe worked, and Unseen University had turned out to be stifling.

  Take that business with the tame lightning. It had demonstrably worked. He made the Bursar’s hair stand on end and sparks crackle out of his fingers, and that was by using only one cat and a couple of amber rods. His perfectly reasonable plan to use several thousand cats tied to a huge wheel that would rotate against hundreds of rods had been vetoed on the ridiculous grounds that it would be too noisy. His carefully worked out scheme to split the thaum, and thus provide endless supplies of cheap clean magic, had been quite unfairly sat upon because it was felt that it might make the place untidy. And that was even after he had presented figures to prove that the chances of the process completely destroying the entire world were no greater than being knocked down while crossing the street, and it wasn’t his fault he said this just before the six-cart pile-up outside the University.

  Here was a chance to do something that made sense. Besides, he thought he could see where the god was going wrong.

 

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