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The Bromeliad 1 - Truckers

Page 2

by Terry Pratchett


  Somewhere inside Masklin's head, the bit of him that was really him - old Torrit had a lot to say about this bit was horrified to see him snatch up his spear, which was still in the ground where he had plunged it, and stab the fox as hard as he could in a hind leg.

  There was a muffled yelp and the animal struggled backwards, turning an evil, foaming mask to its tormentor. Two bright yellow eyes focused on Masklin, who leaned panting on his spear. This was one of those times when time itself slowed down and everything was sud­denly more real. Perhaps, if you knew you were going to die, your senses crammed in as much detail as they could while they still had the chance...

  There were flecks of blood around the creature's muzzle.

  Masklin felt himself become angry. It welled up inside him, like a huge bubble He didn't-have much, and this grinning thing was taking even that away from him.

  As the red tongue lolled out, he knew that he had two choices. He could run, or he could die. So he attacked instead. The spear soared from his hand like a bird, catching the fox in the lip. It screamed and pawed at the wound, and Masklin was running, running across the dirt, propelled by the engine of his anger, and then jumping and grabbing handfuls of rank red fur and hauling him­self up the fox's flank to land astride its neck and drawing his stone knife and stabbing, stabbing, at everything that was wrong with the world...

  The fox screamed again and leapt away. If he was capable of thinking then Masklin would have known that his knife wasn't doing much more than annoying the creature, but it wasn't used to meals fighting back with such fury and its only thought now was to get away. It breasted the embankment and rushed headlong down it, towards the lights of the motorway.

  Masklin started to think again. The rushing of the traffic filled his ears. He let go and threw himself into the long grass as the creature galloped out on to the asphalt.

  He landed heavily and rolled over, all the breath knocked out of him.

  But he remembered what happened next. It stayed in his memory for a long time, long after he'd seen so many strange things that there really should have been no room for it.

  The fox, as still as a statue in a headlight's beam, snarled its defiance as it tried to outstare ten tons of metal hurtling towards it at seventy miles an hour.

  There was a bump, a swish, and darkness.

  Masklin lay face down in the cool moss for a long time. Then, dreading what he was about to see, trying not to imagine it, he pulled himself to his feet and plodded back towards whatever was left of his home.

  Grimma was waiting at the burrow's mouth, holding a twig like a club. She spun round and nearly brained Masklin as he staggered out of the darkness and leaned against the bank. He stuck out a weary hand and pushed the stick aside.

  'We didn't know where you'd gone,' she said, her voice on the edge of hysteria. 'We just heard the noise and there it was you should have been here and it got Mr Mert and Mrs Coom and it was dig­ging at the-' She stopped, and seemed to sag.

  'Yes, thank you,' said Masklin coldly, 'I'm all right, thank you very much.' 'What what happened?' He ignored her, and trooped into the darkness of the burrow and lay down. He could hear the old ones whispering as he sank into a deep, chilly sleep.

  I should have been here, he thought.

  They depend on me.

  We're going. All of us.

  It had seemed a good idea, then.

  It looked a bit different, now.

  Now the nomes clustered at one end of the great dark space inside the lorry. They were silent. There wasn't any room to be noisy. The roar of the engine filled the air from edge to edge. Sometimes it would falter, and start again. Occasionally the whole lorry lurched.

  Grimma crawled across the trembling floor.

  'How long is it going to take to get there?' she said.

  'Where?' said Masklin.

  'Wherever we're going.' 'I don't know.' 'They're hungry, you see.' They always were. Masklin looked hopelessly at the huddle of old ones. One or two of them were watching him expectantly.

  'There isn't anything I can do,' he said. 'I'm hungry too, but there's nothing here. It's empty.' 'Granny Morkie gets very upset when she's missed a meal,' said Grimma.

  Masklin gave her a long, blank stare. Then he crawled his way to the group and sat down between Torrit and the old woman.

  He'd never really talked to them, he realized. When he was small they were giants who were no concern of his, and then he'd been a hunter among hunters, and this year he'd either been out looking for food or deep in an exhausted sleep. But he knew why Torrit was the leader of the tribe. It stood to reason, he was the oldest nome. The oldest was always leader, that way there couldn't be any arguments. Not the oldest woman, of course, because everyone knew this was unthinkable; even Granny Morkie was quite firm about that. Which was a bit odd, because she treated him like an idiot and Torrit never made a decision without looking at her out of the corner of his eye. Masklin sighed. He stared at his knees.

  'Look, I don't know how long-' he began.

  'Don't you worry about me, boy,' said Granny Morkie, who seemed to have quite recovered. 'This is all rather excitin', ain't it?' 'But it might take ages,' said Masklin, 'I didn't know it was going to take this long. It was just a mad idea...' She poked him with a bony finger. 'Young man,' she said, 'I was alive in the Great Winter of 1986. Terrible, that was. You can't tell me anything about going hungry. Grimma's a good girl, but she worries.' 'But I don't even know where we're going!' Masklin burst out. 'I'm sorry!' Torrit, who was sitting with the Thing on his skinny knees, peered shortsightedly at him.

  We have the Thing,' he said. 'It will show us the Way, it will.' Masklin nodded gloomily. Funny how Torrit always knew what the Thing wanted. It was just a black square thing, but it had some very defi­nite ideas about the importance of regular meals and how you should always listen to what the old folk said. It seemed to have an answer for every­thing.

  'And where does this Way take us?' said Masklin.

  'You knows that well enough. To the Heavens.' 'Oh. Yes,' said Masklin. He glared at the Thing. He was pretty certain that it didn't tell old Torrit anything at all; he knew he had pretty good hear­ing, and he never heard it say anything. It never did anything, it never moved. The only thing it ever did was look black and square. It was good at that.

  'Only by followin' the Thing closely in all par­ticulars can we be sure of going to the Heavens,' said Torrit, uncertainly, as if he'd been told this a long time ago and hadn't understood it even then.

  'Yes, well,' said Masklin. He stood up on the swaying floor and made his way to the tarpaulin.

  Then he paused to screw up his courage and poked his head under the gap.

  There- was nothing but blurs and lights,. and strange smells.

  It was-all going wrong. It had seemed so sensible that night, a week ago. Anything was better than here. That seemed so obvious then. But it was odd. The old ones moaned like anything when things weren't exactly to their liking but now, when everything was looking bad, they were almost cheerful.

  People were a lot more complicated than they looked. Perhaps the Thing could tell you that, too, if you knew how to ask.

  The lorry turned a corner and rumbled down into blackness and then, without warning, stopped. He found himself looking into a huge lighted- space, full of lorries, full of humans...

  He pulled his head back quickly and scuttled across the floor to Torrit.

  'Er,' he said.

  'Yes, lad?' 'Heaven. Do humans go there?' The old nome shook his head. 'The Heavens,' he said. 'More than one of'em see? Only nomes go there.' 'You're absolutely certain?' 'Oh, yes.' Torrit beamed. 'O'course, they may have heavens of their own,' he said, 'I don't know about that. But they ain't ours, you may depend upon it.' 'Oh.' Torrit stared at the Thing again.

  We've stopped,' he said. 'Where are we?' Masklin stared wearily into the darkness.

  'I think I had better go and find out,' he said.

  There was whistling outsi
de, and the distant rumble of human voices. The lights went out. There was a rattling noise, followed by a click, and then silence.

  After awhile there was a faint scrabbling around the back of one of the silent lorries. A length of line, no thicker than thread, dropped down until it touched the oily floor of the garage.

  A minute went by. Then, lowering itself with great care hand overhand, a small, stumpy figure shinned down the line and dropped on to the floor. It stood rock-still for a few seconds after landing, with only its eyes moving.

  It was not entirely human. There were defi­nitely the right number of arms and legs, and - the additional bits like eyes and so on were in the usual places, but the figure that was now creeping across the darkened floor in its mouseskins looked like a brick wall on legs. Nomes are so stocky that a Japanese Sumo wrestler would look half-starved by comparison, and the way this one moved sug­gested that it was considerably tougher than old boots.

  Masklin was, in fact, terrified out of his life. There was nothing here that he recognized, except for the smell of all, which he had come to associate with humans and especially with lorries (Torrit had told him loftily that all was a burning water that lorries drank, at which point Masklin knew the old nome had gone mad. It stood to reason. Water didn't burn).

  None of it made any sense. Vast cans loomed above him. There were huge pieces of metal that had a made look about them. This was definitely apart of a human heaven. Humans liked metal.

  He did skirt warily around a cigarette-end, and made a mental note to take it back for Torrit.

  There were other lorries in this place, all of them silent. It was, Masklin decided, a lorry nest. Which meant that the only food in it was probably all.

  He untensed a bit, and prodded about under a bench that towered against one wall like a house. There were drifts of waste paper there, and, led by a smell which here was even stronger than all, he found a whole apple core. It was going brown, but it was a pretty good find.

  He slung it across one shoulder and turned around.

  There was a rat watching him thoughtfully. It was considerably bigger and sleeker than the things that fought the nomes for the scraps from the waste-bin. It dropped on all fours and trotted towards him.

  Masklin felt that he was on firmer ground here. All these huge dark shapes and cans and ghastly smells were quite beyond him, but he knew what a rat was all right, and what to do about one.

  He dropped the core, brought his spear back slowly and carefully, aimed at a point just between the creature's eyes.

  Two things happened at once.

  Masklin noticed that the rat had a little red collar.

  And a voice said: 'Don't! He took a long time to train. Bargains Galore! Where did you come from?' The stranger was a nome. At least, Masklin had to assume so. He was certainly nome height, and moved like a nome.

  But his clothes. .

  The basic colour for a practical nome's clothes is mud. That was common sense. Grimma knew fifty ways of making dyes from wild plants and they all yielded a colour that was, when you came right down to it, basically muddy. Sometimes yel­low mud, sometimes brown mud, sometimes even greenish mud but still, well, mud. Because any nome who ventured out wearing jolly reds and blues would have a life expectancy of perhaps half an hour before something digestive happened to him.

  Whereas this nome looked like a rainbow. He wore brightly coloured clothes of a material so fine it looked like chip wrapping, a belt studded with bits of glass, proper leather boots, and a hat with a feather in it. As he talked he slapped his leg idly with a leather strap which, it turned out, was the lead for the rat.

  'Well?' he snapped. 'Answer me!' 'I came off the lorry,' said Masklin shortly, eyeing the rat. It stopped scratching its ears, gave him a look, and went and hid behind its master.

  'What were you doing on there? Answer me!' Masklin pulled himself up. 'We were travelling,' he said. The nome glared at him. 'What's travelling?' he snapped.

  'Moving along,' said Masklin. 'You know? Com­ing from one place and going to another place.' This seemed to have a strange effect on the stranger. If it didn't actually make him polite, at least it took the edge off his tone.

  'Are you trying to tell me you came from Out­side?' he said.

  'That's right.' 'But that's impossible!' 'Is it?' Masklin looked worried.

  'There's nothing Outside!' 'Is there? Sorry,' said Masklin. 'But we seem to have come in from it, anyway. Is this a problem? 'You mean really Outside?' said the nome sidling closer.

  'I suppose I do. We never really thought about it What's this p1-' 'What's it like?' 'What?' 'Outside! What's it like?' Masklin looked blank. Well,' he said. 'It's sort of big-' 'Yes?' 'And, er, there's a lot of it-' 'Yes? Yes?' 'With, you know, things in it-' 'Is it true the ceiling is so high you can't see it?' said the nome, apparently beside himself with excitement.

  'Don't know. What's a ceiling?' said Masklin.

  'That is,' said the nome, pointing up to a gloom. roof of girders and shadows. 'Oh, I haven't seen anything like that,' said Masklin. 'Outside it's blue or grey, with white things floating around in it.' 'And, and, the walls are such a long way off, and there's a sort of green carpet thing that grows on the ground?' said the nome, hopping from one foot to the other.

  'Don't know,' said Masklin, even more mystified 'What's a carpet?' Wow!' The nome got a grip on himself and e tended a shaking hand. 'My name's Angalo,' he said. 'Angalo de Haberdasheri. Haha. Of course that won't mean anything to you! And this is Bobo.' The rat appeared to grin. Masklin had never heard a rat called anything, except perhaps, if you were driven to it, 'dinner'.

  'I'm Masklin,' he said. 'Is it all right if the rest of us come down? It was a long journey.' 'Gosh, yes! All from Outside? My father'll never believe it!' 'I'm. sorry,' said Masklin. 'I don't understand. What's so special? We were outside. Now we're inside.' Angalo ignored him. He was staring at the oth­ers as they came stiffly down the line, grumbling.

  'Old people, too!' said Angalo. 'And they look just like us! Not even pointy heads or anything!' 'Sauce!' said Granny Morkie. Angalo stopped grinning.

  'Madam,' he said icily, 'do you know who you're talking to?' 'Someone who's not too old for a smacked bot­tom,' said Granny Morkie. 'If I looked just like you, my lad, I'd look a great deal better. Pointy heads, indeed!' Angalo's mouth opened and shut silently. Then he said: 'It's amazing! I mean, Dorcas said that even if there was a possibility of life outside the Store, it wouldn't be life as we know it! Please, please, all follow me.' They exchanged glances as Angalo scurried away towards the edge of the lorry nest, but followed him anyway. There wasn't much of an alternative.

  'I remember when your old dad stayed out too in the sun one day. He talked rubbish, too, just like this one,' said Granny Morkie quietly. Torrit appeared to be reaching a conclusion. They waited for it politely.

  'I reckon,' he said at last, 'I reckon we ought to eat his rat.' 'You shut up, you,' said Granny, automatically. 'I'm leader, I am. You've got no right, talking like that to a leader,' Torrit whined.

  'O'course you're leader,' snapped Granny Mor­kie 'Who said you weren't leader? I never said you. weren't leader. You're leader.' 'Right,' sniffed Torrit.

  'And now shut up,' said Granny. Masklin tapped Angalo on the shoulder. 'Where is this place?' he said.

  Angalo stopped by the wall, which towered up into the distance.

  'You don't know?' he said.

  We just thought, well, we just hoped that the lorries went to - to a good place to be,' said Grimma.

  'Well, you heard right,' said Angalo proudly. 'This is the best place to be. This is the Store!'

  2

  xiii. And in the Store there was neither Night nor Day, only Opening Time and Closing Time. Rain fell not, neither was there Snow.

  xiv. And the nomes grew fat and multiplied as the years passed, and spent their time in Rivalry and Small War, Department unto Department, and forgot all they knew of the Outside.

  xv. For they sai
d, Is it not so, Arnold Bros (est. 1905) has put All Things Under One Roof'? xvi. And those who said, Perhaps Not All Things, were cruelly laughed at, and prodded.

  xvii. And other nomes said, Even if there were an Outside, What can it hold that we would need? For here we have the power of the Electric, the Food Hall, and All manner of Diversions.

  xviii. And thus the Seasons fell thicker than the cushions that are in Soft Furnishings (3rd Floor).

  xix. Until a Stranger came from afar, crying out in a loud voice, and he cried, woe, woe.

  From The Book of Nome, First Floor v.XII-XIX They tripped over one another, they walked with their heads turned upward and their mouths open they gawked. Angalo had stopped by a hole in the wall, and waved them through hurriedly.

  'In here,' he said.

  Granny Morkie sniffed.

  'That's a rat hole,' she said. 'You're not asking me to go down a rat hole?' She turned to Torrit 'He's asking me to go down a rat hole! I'm not going down a rat hole!' 'Why not?' said Angalo..

  'It's a rat hole!' 'That's just what it looks like,' said Angalo. 'It' a disguised entrance, that's all.' 'Your rat just went through it,' said Granny Morkie triumphantly. 'I've got eyes. It's a rat hole.' Angalo gave Grimma a pleading look and ducked through the hole. She poked her head through after him.

  'I don't think it's a rat hole, Granny,' she said, in a slightly muffled voice.

  'And why is that, pray?' 'Because there's stairs inside. Oh, and dear little lights.' It was a long climb. They had to stop and wail several times for the old ones to catch up, and Torrit had to be helped most of the way. At the top, the stairs went through a more dignified sort of door into- Even when he was young, Masklin had never seen more than forty nomes all together at once There were more that that here. And there was food. It didn't look like anything he recognized, but it had to be food. After all, people were eating it A space about twice as high as he was stretched away into the distance. Food was stacked in neat piles with aisles between them, and these were thronged with nomes. No one paid much attention to the little group as it shuffled obediently behind Angalo,, who had got some of his old swagger back.

 

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