The Light Fantastic d-2

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The Light Fantastic d-2 Page 12

by Terry David John Pratchett


  ‘That’s not quite right,’ said Twoflower carefully. ‘They’re not mine, they just belong to me.’

  ‘You put shomeone elshe’s teethsh in your mouth?’

  ‘No, someone made them, lots of people wear them where I come from, it’s a—’

  But Twoflower’s lecture on dental appliances went ungiven, because somebody hit him.

  * * *

  The Disc’s little moon toiled across the sky. It shone by its own light, owing to the cramped and rather inefficient astronomical arrangements made by the Creator, and was quite crowded with assorted lunar goddesses who were not, at this particular time, paying much attention to what went on in the Disc but were getting up a petition about the Ice Giants.

  Had they looked down, they would have seen Rincewind talking urgently to a bunch of rocks.

  Trolls are one of the oldest lifeforms in the multiverse, dating from an early attempt to get the whole life thing on the road without all that squashy protoplasm. Individual trolls live for a long time, hibernating during the summertime and sleeping during the day, since heat affects them and makes them slow. They have a fascinating geology. One could talk about tribology, one could mention the semiconductor effects of impure silicon, one could talk about the giant trolls of prehistory who make up most of the Disc’s major mountain ranges and will cause some real problems if they ever awake, but the plain fact is that without the Disc’s powerful and pervasive magical field trolls would have died out a long time ago.

  Psychiatry hadn’t been invented on the Disc. No-one had ever shoved an inkblot under Rincewind’s nose to see if he had any loose toys in the attic. So the only way he’d have been able to describe the rocks turning back into trolls was by gabbling vaguely about how pictures suddenly form when you look at the fire, or clouds.

  One minute there’d be a perfectly ordinary rock, and suddenly a few cracks that had been there all along took on the definite appearance of a mouth or a pointed ear. A moment later, and without anything actually changing at all, a troll would be sitting there, grinning at him with a mouth full of diamonds.

  They wouldn’t be able to digest me, he told himself. I’d make them awfully ill.

  It wasn’t much of a comfort.

  ‘So you’re Rincewind the wizard,’ said the nearest one. It sounded like someone running over gravel. ‘I dunno. I thought you’d be taller.’

  ‘Perhaps he’s eroded a bit,’ said another one. ‘The legend is awfully old.’

  Rincewind shifted awkwardly. He was pretty certain the rock he was sitting on was changing shape, and a tiny troll—hardly any more than a pebble—was sitting companionably on his foot and watching him with extreme interest.

  ‘Legend?’ he said. ‘What legend?’

  ‘It’s been handed down from mountain to gravel since the sunset [3] of time,’ said the first troll. ‘ “When the red star lights the sky Rincewind the wizard will come looking for onions. Do not bite him. It is very important that you help him stay alive.” ’

  There was a pause.

  ‘That’s it?’ said Rincewind.

  ‘Yes,’ said the troll. ‘We’ve always been puzzled about it. Most of our legends are much more exciting. It was more interesting being a rock in the old days.’

  ‘It was?’ said Rincewind weakly.

  ‘Oh yes. No end of fun. Volcanoes all over the place. It really meant something, being a rock then. There was none of this sedimentary nonsense, you were igneous or nothing. Of course, that’s all gone now. People call themselves trolls today, well, sometimes they’re hardly more than slate. Chalk even. I wouldn’t give myself airs if you could use me to draw with, would you?’

  ‘No,’ said Rincewind quickly. ‘Absolutely not, no. This, er, this legend thing. It said you shouldn’t bite me?’

  ‘That’s right!’ said the little troll on his foot, ‘and it was me who told you where the onions were!’

  ‘We’re rather glad you came along,’ said the first troll, which Rincewind couldn’t help noticing was the biggest one there. ‘We’re a bit worried about this new star. What does it mean?’

  ‘I don’t know,’ said Rincewind. ‘Everyone seems to think I know about it, but I don’t—’

  ‘It’s not that we would mind being melted down,’ said the big troll. ‘That’s how we all started, anyway. But we thought, maybe, it might mean the end of everything and that doesn’t seem a very good thing.’

  ‘It’s getting bigger,’ said another troll. ‘Look at it now. Bigger than last night.’

  Rincewind looked. It was definitely bigger than last night.

  ‘So we thought you might have some suggestions?’ said the head troll, as meekly as it is possible to sound with a voice like a granite gargle.

  ‘You could jump over the Edge,’ said Rincewind. ‘There must be lots of places in the universe that could do with some extra rocks.’

  ‘We’ve heard about that,’ said the troll. ‘We’ve met rocks that tried it. They say you float about for millions of years and then you get very hot and burn away and end up at the bottom of a big hole in the scenery. That doesn’t sound very bright.’

  It stood up with a noise like coal rattling down a chute, and stretched its thick, knobbly arms.

  ‘Well, we’re supposed to help you,’ it said. ‘Anything you want doing?’

  ‘I was supposed to be making some soup,’ said Rincewind. He waved the onions vaguely. It was probably not the most heroic or purposeful gesture ever made.

  ‘Soup?’ said the troll. ‘Is that all?’

  ‘Well, maybe some biscuits too.’

  The trolls looked at one another, exposing enough mouth jewellery to buy a medium-sized city.

  Eventually the biggest troll said, ‘Soup it is, then.’ It shrugged grittily. ‘It’s just that we imagined that the legend would, well, be a little more—I don’t know, somehow I thought—still, I expect it doesn’t matter.’

  It extended a hand like a bunch of fossil bananas.

  ‘I’m Kwartz,’ it said. ‘That’s Krysoprase over there, and Breccia, and Jasper, and my wife Beryl—she’s a bit metamorphic, but who isn’t these days? Jasper, get off his foot.’

  Rincewind took the hand gingerly, bracing himself for the crunch of crushed bone. It didn’t come. The troll’s hand was rough and a bit lichenous around the fingernails.

  ‘I’m sorry,’ said Rincewind. ‘I never really met trolls before.’

  ‘We’re a dying race,’ said Kwartz sadly, as the party set off under the stars. ‘Young Jasper’s the only pebble in our tribe. We suffer from philosophy, you know.’

  ‘Yes?’ said Rincewind, trying to keep up. The troll band moved very quickly, but also very quietly, big round shapes moving like wraiths through the night. Only the occasional flat squeak of a night creature who hadn’t heard them approaching marked their passage.

  ‘Oh, yes. Martyrs to it. It comes to all of us in the end. One evening, they say, you start to wake up and then you think “Why bother?” and you just don’t. See those boulders over there?’

  Rincewind saw some huge shapes lying in the grass.

  ‘The one on the end’s my aunt. I don’t know what’s she’s thinking about, but she hasn’t moved for two hundred years.’

  ‘Gosh, I’m sorry.’

  ‘Oh, it’s no problem with us around to look after them,’ aid Kwartz. ‘Not many humans around here, you see. I know it’s not your fault, but you don’t seem to be able to spot the difference between a thinking troll and an ordinary rock. My great-uncle was actually quarried, you know.’

  ‘That’s terrible!’

  ‘Yes, one minute he was a troll, the next he was an ornamental fireplace.’

  They paused in front of a familiar-looking cliff. The scuffed remains of a fire smouldered in the darkness.

  ‘It looks like there’s been a fight,’ said Beryl.

  ‘They’re all gone!’ said Rincewind. He ran to the end of the clearing. ‘The horses, too! Even the Luggage!’
<
br />   ‘One of them’s leaked,’ said Kwartz, kneeling down. ‘That red watery stuff you have in your insides. Look.’

  ‘Blood!’

  ‘Is that what it’s called? I’ve never really seen the point of it.’

  Rincewind scuttled about in the manner of one totally at his wits’ end, peering behind bushes in case anyone was hiding there. That was why he tripped over a small green bottle.

  ‘Cohen’s linament!’ he moaned. ‘He never goes anywhere without it!’

  ‘Well,’ said Kwartz, ‘you humans have something you can do, I mean like when we slow right down and catch philosophy, only you just fall to bits—’

  ‘Dying, it’s called!’ screamed Rincewind.

  ‘That’s it. They haven’t done that, because they’re not here.’

  ‘Unless they were eaten!’ suggested Jasper excitedly.

  ‘Hmm,’ said Kwartz.

  ‘Wolves?’ said Rincewind.

  ‘We flattened all the wolves around here years ago,’ said the troll. ‘Old Grandad did, anyway.’

  ‘He didn’t like them?’

  ‘No, he just didn’t used to look where he was going. Hmm.’ The trolls looked at the ground again.

  ‘There’s a trail,’ he said. ‘Quite a lot of horses.’ He looked up at the nearby hills, where sheer cliffs and dangerous crags loomed over the moonlit forests.

  ‘Old Grandad lives up there,’ he said quietly.

  There was something about the way he said it that made Rincewind decide that he didn’t ever want to meet Old Grandad.

  ‘Dangerous, is he?’ he ventured.

  ‘He’s very old and big and mean. We haven’t seen him about for years,’ said Kwartz.

  ‘Centuries,’ corrected Beryl.

  ‘He’ll squash them all flat!’ added Jasper, jumping up and down on Rincewind’s toes.

  ‘It just happens sometimes that a really old and big troll will go off by himself into the hills, and—um—the rock takes over, if you follow me.’

  ‘No?’

  Kwartz sighed. ‘People sometimes act like animals, don’t they? And sometimes a troll will start thinking like a rock, and rocks don’t like people much.’

  Breccia, a skinny troll with a sandstone finish, rapped on Kwartz’s shoulder.

  ‘Are we going to follow them, then?’ he said. ‘The legend says we should help this Rincewind squashy.’

  Kwartz stood up, thought for a moment, then picked Rincewind up by the scruff of his neck and with a big gritty movement placed him on his shoulders.

  ‘We go,’ he said firmly. ‘If we meet Old Grandad I’ll try to explain…’

  * * *

  Two miles away a string of horses trotted through the night. Three of them carried captives, expertly gagged and bound. A fourth pulled a rough travois on which the Luggage lay trussed and netted and silent.

  Herrena softly called the column to a halt and beckoned one of her men to her.

  ‘Are you quite sure?’ she said. ‘I can’t hear anything.’

  ‘I saw troll shapes,’ he said flatly.

  She looked around. The trees had thinned out here, there was a lot of scree, and ahead of them the track led towards a bald, rocky hill that looked especially unpleasant by red starlight.

  She was worried about that track. It was extremely old, but something had made it, and trolls took a lot of killing.

  She sighed. Suddenly it looked as though that secretarial career was not such a bad option, at that.

  Not for the first time she reflected that there were many drawbacks to being a swordswoman, not least of which was that men didn’t take you seriously until you’d actually killed them, by which time it didn’t really matter anyway. Then there was all the leather, which brought her out in a rash but seemed to be unbreakably traditional. And then there was the ale. It was all right for the likes of Hrun the Barbarian or Cimbar the Assassin to carouse all night in low bars, but Herrena drew the line at it unless they sold proper drinks in small glasses, preferably with a cherry in. As for the toilet facilities…

  But she was too big to be a thief, too honest to be an assassin, too intelligent to be a wife, and too proud to enter the only other female profession generally available.

  So she’d become a swordswoman and had been a good one, amassing a modest fortune that she was carefully husbanding for a future that she hadn’t quite worked out yet but which would certainly include a bidet if she had anything to say about it.

  There was a distant sound of splintering timber. Trolls had never seen the point of walking around trees.

  She looked up at the hill again. Two arms of high ground swept away to right and left, and up ahead was a large outcrop with—she squinted—some caves in it?

  Troll caves. But maybe a better option than blundering around at night. And come sunup, there’d be no problem.

  She leaned across to Gancia, leader of the gang of Morpork mercenaries. She wasn’t very happy about him. It was true that he had the muscles of an ox and the stamina of an ox, the trouble was that he seemed to have the brains of an ox. And the viciousness of a ferret. Like most of the lads in downtown Morpork he’d have cheerfully sold his granny for glue, and probably had.

  ‘We’ll head for the caves and light a big fire in the entrance,’ she said. ‘Trolls don’t like fire.’

  He gave her a look which suggested he had his own ideas about who should be giving the orders, but his lips said, ‘You’re the boss.’

  ‘Right.’

  Herrena looked back at the three captives. That was the box all right—Trymon’s description had been absolutely accurate. But neither of the men looked like a wizard. Not even a failed wizard.

  * * *

  ‘Oh, dear,’ said Kwartz.

  The trolls halted. The night closed in like velvet. An owl hooted eerily—at least Rincewind assumed it was an owl, he was a little hazy on ornithology. Perhaps a nightingale hooted, unless it was a thrush. A bat flittered overhead. He was quite confident about that.

  He was also very tired and quite bruised.

  ‘Why oh dear?’ he said.

  He peered into the gloom. There was a distant speck in the hills that might have been a fire.

  ‘Oh,’ he said. ‘You don’t like fires, do you?’

  Kwartz nodded. ‘It destroys the superconductivity of our brains,’ he said, ‘but a fire that small wouldn’t have much effect on Old Grandad.’

  Rincewind looked around cautiously, listening for the sound of a rogue troll. He’d seen what normal trolls could do to a forest. They weren’t naturally destructive, they just treated organic matter as a sort of inconvenient fog.

  ‘Let’s hope he doesn’t find it, then,’ he said fervently.

  Kwartz sighed. ‘Not much chance of that,’ he said. ‘They’ve lit it in his mouth.’

  * * *

  ‘It’sh a judgeshment on me!’ moaned Cohen. He tugged ineffectually at his bonds.

  Twoflower peered at him muzzily. Gancia’s slingshot had raised quite a lump on the back of his head and he was a little uncertain about things, starting with his name and working upwards.

  ‘I should have been lisshening out,’ said Cohen. ‘I should have been paying attenshion and not being shwayed by all this talk about your wosshnames, your din-chewers. I mussht be getting shoft.’

  He levered himself up by his elbows. Herrena and the rest of the gang were standing around the fire in the cave mouth. The Luggage was still and silent under its net in a corner.

  ‘There’s something funny about this cave,’ said Bethan.

  ‘What?’ said Cohen.

  ‘Well, look at it. Have you ever seen rocks like those before?’

  Cohen had to agree that the semi-circle of stones around the cave entrance were unusual; each one was higher than a man, and heavily worn, and surprisingly shiny. There was a matching semi-circle on the ceiling. The whole effect was that of a stone computer built by a druid with a vague idea of geometry and no sense of gravity.


  ‘Look at the walls, too.’

  Cohen squinted at the wall next to him. There were veins of red crystal in it. He couldn’t be quite certain, but it was almost as if little points of light kept flashing on and off deep within the rock itself.

  It was also extremely drafty. A steady breeze blew out of the black depths of the cave.

  ‘I’m sure it was blowing the other way when we came in,’ whispered Bethan. ‘What do you think, Twoflower?’

  ‘Well, I’m not a cave expert,’ he said, ‘but I was just thinking, that’s a very interesting stalag-thingy hanging from the ceiling up there. Sort of bulbous, isn’t it?’

  They looked at it.

  ‘I can’t quite put my finger on why,’ said Twoflower, ‘but I think it might be a rather good idea to get out of here.’

  ‘Oh yesh,’ said Cohen sarcastically, ‘I shupposhe we’d jusht better ashk theesh people to untie ush and let us go, eh?’

  Cohen hadn’t spent much time in Twoflower’s company, otherwise he would not have been surprised when the little man nodded brightly and said, in the loud, slow and careful voice he employed as an alternative to actually speaking other people’s languages: ‘Excuse me? Could you please untie us and let us go? It’s rather damp and drafty here. Sorry.’

  Bethan looked sidelong at Cohen.

  ‘Was he supposed to say that?’

  ‘It’sh novel, I’ll grant you.’

  And, indeed, three people detached themselves from the group around the fire and came towards them. They did not look as if they intended to untie anyone. The two men, in fact, looked the sort of people who, when they see other people tied up, start playing around with knives and making greasy suggestions and leering a lot.

  Herrena introduced herself by drawing her sword and pointing it at Twoflower’s heart.

  ‘Which one of you is Rincewind the wizard?’ she said. ‘There were four horses. Is he here?’

  ‘Um, I don’t know where he is,’ said Twoflower. ‘He was looking for some onions.’

  ‘Then you are his friends and he will come looking for you,’ said Herrena. She glanced at Cohen and Bethan, then looked closely at the Luggage.

  Trymon had been emphatic that they shouldn’t touch the Luggage. Curiosity may have killed the cat, but Herrena’s curiosity could have massacred a pride of lions.

 

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