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Thief of Time tds-26

Page 30

by Terry Pratchett

“There will be grey men around the clock!” he shouted.

  “Trying to find what makes it tick?”

  “Hah! Yes!”

  “What are you going to do?”

  “Smash it!”

  “That'll destroy history!”

  “So?”

  He reached out and took her hand. She felt a shock run up her arm.

  “You won't need to open the door! You won't need to stop! Head straight for the clock!” he said.

  “But—”

  “Don't talk to me! I've got to remember!”

  “Remember what?”

  “Everything!”

  Mr White was already raising the axe as he turned round. But you just can't trust a body. It thinks for itself. When it is surprised, it does a number of things even before the brain has been informed. The mouth opens, for example.

  “Ah, good,” said Lu-Tze, raising his cupped hand. “Eat this!”

  The door was no more substantial than mist. There were Auditors in the workshop, but Susan moved through them like a ghost.

  The clock glowed. And, as she ran towards it, it moved away. The floor unrolled in front of her, dragging her back. The clock accelerated towards some distant event horizon. At the same time it grew bigger but became more insubstantial, as if the same amount of clockness was trying to spread itself across more space.

  Other things were happening. She blinked, but there was no flicker of darkness.

  “Ah,” she said to herself, “so I'm not seeing with my eyes. And what else? What's happening to me? My hand… looks normal, but does that mean it is? Am I getting smaller or bigger? Does—?”

  “Are you always like this?” said the voice of Lobsang.

  “Like what? I can feel your hand and I can hear your voice—at least, I think I can hear it, but maybe it's just in my head—but I can't feel myself running—”

  “So… so analytical?”

  “Of course. What am I supposed to be thinking? ‘Oh, my paws and whiskers’? Anyway, it's quite straightforward. It's all metaphorical. My senses are telling me stories because they can't cope with what is really happening—”

  “Don't let go of my hand.”

  “It's all right, I won't let you go.”

  “I meant, don't let go of my hand because otherwise every part of your body will be compressed into a space much, much smaller than an atom.”

  “Oh.”

  “And don't try to imagine what this really looks like from outside. Here comes the cloooccckkkkkkk—”

  Mr White's mouth closed. His expression of surprise became one of horror, and then one of shock, and then one of terrible, wonderful bliss.

  He began to unravel. He came apart like a big and complex jigsaw puzzle made of tiny pieces, crumbling gently at the extremities and then vanishing into the air. The last piece to evaporate was the lips, and then they too were gone.

  A half-chewed chocolate-coated coffee bean dropped onto the street. Lu-Tze reached down quickly, picked up the axe and flourished it at the other Auditors. They leaned back out of the way, mesmerized by authority.

  “Who does this belong to now?” he demanded. “Come on, whose is it?”

  “It is mine! I am Miss Taupe!” shouted a woman in grey.

  “I am Mr Orange and it belongs to me! No one is even sure that taupe is a proper colour!” screamed Mr Orange.

  An Auditor in the crowd said, rather more thoughtfully, “Is it the case, then, that hierarchy is negotiable?”

  “Certainly not!” Mr Orange was jumping up and down.

  “You have to decide it amongst yourselves,” said Lu-Tze. He tossed the axe into the air. A hundred pairs of eyes watched it fall.

  Mr Orange got there first, but Miss Taupe trod on his fingers. After that, it became very busy and confusing and, to judge by the sounds from within the growing scrum, also very, very painful.

  Lu-Tze took the arm of the astonished Unity.

  “Shall we be going?” he said. “Oh, don't worry about me. I was just desperate enough to try something I'd learned from a yeti. It did sting a bit…”

  There was a scream from somewhere in the mob.

  “Democracy at work,” said Lu-Tze happily. He glanced up. The flames above the world were dying out, and he wondered who'd won.

  There was bright blue light ahead and dark red light behind, and it amazed Susan how she could see both kinds without opening her eyes and turning her head. Eyes open or shut, she couldn't see herself. All that told her that she was something else besides mere point of view was a slight pressure on what she remembered as her fingers. And the sound of someone laughing, close to her.

  A voice said, “The sweeper said everyone has to find a teacher and then find their Way.”

  “And?” said Susan.

  “This is my Way. It's the way home.”

  And then, with a noise that was unromantically very similar to the kind Jason would make by putting a wooden ruler on the edge of his desk and twanging it, the journey ended.

  It might not even have begun. The glass clock was in front of her, full size, glittering. There was no blue glow inside. It was just a clock, entirely transparent, and ticking.

  Susan looked down the length of her arm, and up his arm to Lobsang. He let go of her hand.

  “We're here,” he said.

  “With the clock?” said Susan. She could feel herself gasping to get her breath back.

  “This is only a part of the clock,” said Lobsang. “The other part.”

  “The bit outside the universe?”

  “Yes. The clock has many dimensions. Do not be afraid.”

  “I don't think I have ever been afraid of anything in my life,” said Susan, still gulping air. “Not really afraid. I get angry. I'm getting angry now, in fact. Are you Lobsang or are you Jeremy?”

  “Yes.”

  “Yes, I walked into that. Are you Lobsang and are you Jeremy?”

  “Much closer. Yes. I will always remember both of them. But I would prefer you to call me Lobsang. Lobsang has the better memories. I never liked the name Jeremy even when I was Jeremy.”

  “You really are both of them?”

  “I am… everything about them that was worth being, I hope. They were very different and they were both me, born just an instant apart, and neither of them was very happy by himself. It makes you wonder if there is anything to astrology after all.”

  “Oh, there is,” said Susan. “Delusion, wishful thinking and gullibility.”

  “Don't you ever let go?”

  “I haven't yet.”

  “Why?”

  “I suppose… because in this world, after everyone panics, there's always got to be someone to tip the wee out of the shoe.”

  The clock ticked. The pendulum swung. But the hands did not move.

  “Interesting,” said Lobsang. “You're not a follower of the Way of Mrs Cosmopilite, are you?”

  “I don't even know what it is,” said Susan.

  “Have you got your breath back now?”

  “Yes.”

  “Let's turn around, then.”

  Personal time moved on again, and a voice behind them said, “Is this yours?”

  Behind them there were glass steps. At the top of the steps was a man dressed like a History Monk, shaven-headed, besandalled. The eyes gave away a lot more. A young man who'd been alive for a very long time, Mrs Ogg had said, and she had been right.

  He was holding a struggling Death of Rats by the scruff of his robe.

  “Er, he's his own,” said Susan, as Lobsang bowed.

  “Then please take him away with you. We cannot have him running around here. Hello, my son.”

  Lobsang walked towards him and they embraced, briefly and formally.

  “Father,” said Lobsang, straightening up. “This is Susan. She has been… very helpful.”

  “Of course she has,” said the monk, smiling at Susan. “She is helpfulness personified.” He put the Death of Rats on the floor and prodded him forward.
>
  “Yes, I'm very dependable,” said Susan.

  “And interestingly sarcastic, too,” the monk added. “I am Wen. Thank you for joining us. And for helping our son find himself.”

  Susan looked from the father to the son. The words and the movements were stilted and chilly, but there was a communication going on that she wasn't party to, and it was happening a lot faster than speech.

  “Aren't we supposed to be saving the world?” she said. “I don't want to rush anybody, of course.”

  “There's something I must do first,” said Lobsang. “I must meet my mother.”

  “Have we got ti—?” Susan began, and then added, “We have, haven't we? All the time in the world.”

  “Oh, no. Far more time than that,” said Wen. “Besides, there's always time to save the world.”

  Time appeared. Again there was the impression that a figure that was in the air, unfocused, was resolving itself into a million specks of matter that poured together and filled a shape in space, slowly at first and then… someone was there.

  She was a tall woman, quite young, dark-haired, wearing a long red-and-black dress. By the look on her face, Susan thought, she had been weeping. But she was smiling now.

  Wen took Susan by the arm, and gently pulled her aside.

  “They'll want to talk,” he said. “Shall we walk?”

  The room vanished. Now there was a garden, with peacocks and fountains, and a stone seat, upholstered with moss.

  Lawns unrolled towards woodlands that had the manicured look of an estate that had been maintained for hundreds of years so that nothing grew here that was not wanted, or in the wrong place. Long-tailed birds, their plumage like living jewels, flashed from treetop to treetop. Deeper in the woods, other birds called.

  As Susan watched, a kingfisher alighted on the edge of a fountain. It glanced at her and flew away, its wingbeats sounding like a snapping of tiny fans.

  “Look,” said Susan, “I don't… I'm not… Look, I understand this sort of thing. Really. I'm not stupid. My grandfather has a garden where everything is black. But Lobsang built the clock! Well, part of him did. So he's saving the world and destroying it, all at once?”

  “Family trait,” said Wen. “It is what Time does at every instant.”

  He gave Susan the look of a teacher confronted with a keen but stupid pupil.

  “Think like this,” he said at last. “Think of everything. It's an everyday word. But ‘everything’ means… everything. It's a much bigger word than ‘universe’. And everything contains all possible things that can happen at all possible times in all possible worlds. Don't look for complete solutions in anyone of them. Sooner or later, everything causes everything else.”

  “Are you saying one little world is not important, then?” said Susan.

  Wen waved a hand, and two glasses of wine appeared on the stone.

  “Everything is as important as everything else,” he said.

  Susan grimaced. “You know, that's why I've never liked philosophers,” she said. “They make it all sound grand and simple, and then you step out into a world that's full of complications. I mean, look around. I bet this garden needs regular weeding, and the fountains have to be unblocked, and the peacocks shed feathers and dig up the lawn… and if they don't do that, then this is just a fake.”

  “No, everything is real” said Wen. “At least, it is as real as anything else. But this is a perfect moment.” He smiled at Susan again. “Against one perfect moment, the centuries beat in vain.”

  “I'd prefer a more specific philosophy,” said Susan. She tried the wine. It was perfect.

  “Certainly. I expected that you would. I see you cling to logic as a limpet clings to a rock in a storm. Let me see… Defend the small spaces, don't run with scissors, and remember that there is often an unexpected chocolate,” said Wen. He smiled. “And never resist a perfect moment.”

  A breeze made the fountains splash over the sides of their bowls, just for a second. Wen stood up.

  “And now, I believe my wife and son have finished their meeting,” he said.

  The garden faded. The stone seat melted like mist as soon as Susan got up, although until then it had felt as solid as, well, rock. The wineglass vanished from her hand, leaving only a memory of its pressure on her fingers and the taste lingering in her mouth. Lobsang was standing in front of the clock. Time herself was not visible, but the song that wove through the rooms now had a different tone.

  “She's happier,” said Lobsang. “She's free now.”

  Susan looked around. Wen had vanished along with the garden. There was nothing but the endless glass rooms.

  “Don't you want to talk to your father?” she said.

  “Later. There will be plenty of time,” said Lobsang. “I shall see to it.”

  The way he said it, so carefully dropping the words into place, made her turn.

  “You're going to take over?” she said. “You are Time now?”

  “Yes.”

  “But you're mostly human!”

  “So?” Lobsang's smile took after his father. It was the gentle and, to Susan, the infuriating smile of a god.

  “What's in all these rooms?” she demanded. “Do you know?”

  “One perfect moment. In each one. An oodleplex of oodleplexes.”

  “I'm not certain there's such a thing as a genuinely perfect moment,” said Susan. “Can we go home now?”

  Lobsang wrapped the edge of his robe around his fist and smashed it against the glass front panel of the clock. It shattered, and dropped to the ground.

  “When we get to the other side,” he said, “don't stop and don't look back. There will be a lot of flying glass.”

  “I'll try to dive behind one of the benches,” said Susan.

  “They probably won't be there.”

  SQUEAK?

  The Death of Rats had scurried up the side of the clock and was peering cheerfully over the top.

  “What do we do about that?” said Lobsang.

  “That looks after itself,” said Susan. “I never worry about it.”

  Lobsang nodded. “Take my hand,” he said. She reached out.

  With his free hand Lobsang grasped the pendulum and stopped the clock.

  A blue-green hole opened in the world.

  The return journey was a lot swifter but, when the world existed again, she was falling into water. It was brown, muddy and stank of dead plants. Susan surfaced, fighting against the drag of her skirts, and trod water while she tried to get her bearings.

  The sun was nailed to the sky, the air was heavy and humid, and a pair of nostrils was watching her from a few feet away.

  Susan had been brought up to be practical and that meant swimming lessons. The Quirm College for Young Ladies had been very advanced in that respect, and its teachers took the view that a girl who couldn't swim two lengths of the pool with her clothes on wasn't making an effort. To their credit, she'd left knowing four swimming strokes and several life-saving techniques, and was entirely at home in the water. She also knew what to do if you were sharing the same stretch of water with a hippopotamus, which was to find another stretch of water. Hippos only look big and cuddly from a distance. Close up, they just look big.

  Susan summoned up all the inherited powers of the deathly voice plus the terrible authority of the schoolroom, and yelled, GO AWAY!

  The creature floundered madly in its effort to turn round, and Susan struck out for the shore. It was an unsure shore, the water becoming land in a tangle of sandbanks, sucking black muck, rotted tree roots and swamp. Insects swirled around and—

  –the cobbles were muddy underfoot, and there was the sound of horsemen in the mist

  –and ice, piled up against dead trees—

  –and Lobsang, taking her arm.

  “Found you,” he said.

  “You just shattered history,” said Susan. “You broke it!”

  The hippo had come as a shock. She'd never realized one mouth could hold so
much bad breath, or be so big and deep.

  “I know. I had to. There was no other way. Can you find Lu-Tze? I know Death can locate any living thing, and since you—”

  “All right, all right, I know,” said Susan darkly. She held out her hand and concentrated. An image of Lu-Tze's extremely heavy lifetimer appeared, and gathered weight.

  “He's only a few hundred yards over there,” she said, pointing to a frozen drift.

  “And I know when he is,” said Lobsang. “Only sixty thousand years away. So…”

  Lu-Tze, when they found him, was looking calmly up at an enormous mammoth. Under its huge hairy brow its eyes were squinting with the effort both of seeing him and of getting all three of its brain cells lined up so that it could decide whether to trample on him or gouge him out of the frost-bound landscape. One brain cell was saying “gouge”, one was going for “trample” but the third had wandered off and was thinking about as much sex as possible.

  At the far end of its trunk, Lu-Tze was saying, “So, you've never heard of Rule One, then?”

  Lobsang stepped out of the air beside him. “We must go, Sweeper!”

  The appearance of Lobsang did not seem to surprise Lu-Tze at all, although he did seem annoyed at the interruption.

  “No rush, wonder boy,” he said. “I've got this perfectly under control—”

  “Where's the lady?” said Susan.

  “Over by that snowdrift,” said Lu-Tze, indicating with his thumb while still trying to outstare a pair of eyes five feet apart. “When this turned up she screamed and twisted her ankle. Look, you can see I've made it nervous—”

  Susan waded into the drift and hauled Unity upright. “Come on, we're leaving,” she said brusquely.

  “I saw his head cut off!” Unity babbled. “And then suddenly we were here!”

  “Yes, that kind of thing happens,” said Susan.

  Unity stared at her, wild-eyed.

  “Life is full of surprises,” said Susan, but the sight of the creature's distress made her hesitate. All right, the thing was one of them, one that was merely wearing—Well, at least had started out merely wearing a body as a kind of coat, but now… After all, you could say that about everyone, couldn't you?

  Susan had even wondered if the human soul without the anchor of a body would end up, eventually, as something like an Auditor. Which, to be fair, meant that Unity, who was getting more firmly wrapped in flesh by the minute, was something like a human. And that was a pretty good definition of Lobsang and, if it came to it, Susan as well. Who knew where humanity began and where it finished?

 

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