Last Continent

Home > Other > Last Continent > Page 5
Last Continent Page 5

by Pratchett, Terry


  ‘Well, no . . .’ said Ridcully, staring at the tropical scene and tapping his chin thoughtfully with the seashell.

  ‘Can’t see what you’re treading in, for one thing,’ said the Senior Wrangler.

  ‘One opened up in one of the cellars once, all by itself,’ said the Dean. ‘Just a round black hole. Anything you put in it just disappeared. So old Archchancellor Weatherwax had a privy built over it.’

  ‘Very sensible idea,’ said Ridcully, still looking thoughtful.

  ‘We thought so too, until we found the other one that had opened in the attic. Turned out to be the other side of the same hole. I’m sure I don’t need to draw you a picture.’

  ‘I’ve never heard of these!’ said Ponder Stibbons. ‘The possibilities are amazing!’

  ‘Everyone says that when they first hear about them,’ said the Senior Wrangler. ‘But when you’ve been a wizard as long as I have, my boy, you’ll learn that as soon as you find anything that offers amazing possibilities for the improvement of the human condition it’s best to put the lid back on and pretend it never happened.’

  ‘But if you could get one to open above another you could drop something through the bottom hole and it’d come out of the top hole and fall through the bottom hole again . . . It’d reach meteoritic speed and the amount of power you could generate would be—’

  ‘That’s pretty much what happened between the attic and the cellar,’ said the Dean, taking a cold chicken leg. ‘Thank goodness for air friction, that’s all I’ll say.’

  Ponder waved his hand gingerly through the window and felt the sun’s heat.

  ‘And no one’s ever studied them?’ he said.

  The Senior Wrangler shrugged. ‘Studied what? They’re just holes. You get a lot of magic in one place, it kind of drops through the world like a hot steel ball through pork dripping. If it comes to the edge of something, it kind of fills it in.’

  ‘Stress points in the space-time continuinuinuum . . .’ said Ponder. ‘There must be hundreds of uses—’

  ‘Hah, yes, no wonder our Egregious Professor is always so suntanned,’ said the Dean. ‘I feel he’s been cheating. Geography should be hard to get to. It shouldn’t be in your windowbox, is what I’m saying. You shouldn’t get at it just by sneaking out of the University.’

  ‘Well, he hasn’t, really, has he?’ said the Senior Wrangler. ‘He’s really just extended his study a bit.’

  ‘Do you think that is EcksEcksEcksEcks, by any chance?’ said the Dean. ‘It certainly looks foreign.’

  ‘Well, there is sea,’ said the Senior Wrangler. ‘But would you say that it looks as if it is actually girting?’

  ‘It’s just . . . you know . . . sloshing.’

  ‘One would somehow imagine that sea that was girting something would look more, well . . . defiant,’ said the Lecturer in Recent Runes. ‘You know? Thundering waves and so on. Definitely sending a message to outsiders that it was girting this coast and they’d better be jolly respectful.’

  ‘Perhaps we could go right through and investigate,’ said Ponder.

  ‘Something dreadful’ll happen if we do,’ said the Senior Wrangler gloomily.

  ‘It hasn’t happened to the Bursar,’ said Ridcully. The wizards crowded around. There was a figure standing in the surf. Its robe was rolled up above the knees. A few birds wheeled overhead. Palm trees waved in the background.

  ‘My word, he must have snuck out while we weren’t looking,’ said the Senior Wrangler.

  ‘Bursaar!’ Ridcully yelled.

  The figure didn’t look round.

  ‘I don’t want to, you know, make trouble,’ said the Chair of Indefinite Studies, looking wistfully at the sundrenched beach, ‘but it’s freezing cold in my bedroom and last night there was frost on my eiderdown. I don’t see any harm in a quick stroll in the warm.’

  ‘We’re here to help the Librarian!’ snapped Ridcully. Faint snores were coming from the volume entitled Ook.

  ‘My point exactly. The poor chap’d be a lot happier in those trees there.’

  ‘You mean we could wedge him in the branches?’ said the Archchancellor. ‘He’s still The Story of Ook.’

  ‘You know what I mean, Mustrum. A day at the seaside for him would be better than a . . . a day at the seaside, as it were. Let’s get out there, I’m freezing.’

  ‘Are you mad? There could be terrible monsters! Look at the poor chap standing there in the surf! That sea’s probably teeming with—’

  ‘Sharks,’ said the Senior Wrangler.

  ‘Right!’ said Ridcully. ‘And—’

  ‘Barracudas,’ said the Senior Wrangler. ‘Marlins. Swordfish. Looks like somewhere out near the Rim to me. Fishermen say there’s fish there that’d take your arm off.’

  ‘Right,’ said Ridcully. ‘Right . . .’ There was a small but significant change in his tone. Everyone knew about the stuffed fish on his walls. Archchancellor Ridcully would hunt anything. The only cockerel still crowing within two hundred yards of the University these days stood under a cart to do it.

  ‘And that jungle,’ said the Senior Wrangler, sniffing. ‘Looks pretty damn dangerous to me. Could be anything in it. Fatal. Could be tigers and gorillas and elephants and pineapples. I wouldn’t go near it. I’m with you, Archchancellor. Better to freeze here than look some rabid man-eater in the eye.’

  Ridcully’s own eyes were burning bright. He stroked his beard thoughtfully. ‘Tigers, eh?’ he said. Then his expression changed. ‘Pineapples?’

  ‘Deadly,’ said the Senior Wrangler firmly. ‘One of them got my aunt. We couldn’t get it off her. I told her that’s not the way you’re supposed to eat them, but would she listen?’

  The Dean looked sidelong at his Archchancellor. It was the glance of a man who also didn’t want another night in a frigid bedroom and had suddenly worked out where the levers were.

  ‘That gets my vote, Mustrum,’ he said. ‘Catch me going through some hole in space on to some warm beach with a sea teeming with huge fish and a jungle full of hunting trophies.’ He yawned like a bad poker player. ‘No, it’s me for my nice freezing bed, I don’t know about you. Archchancellor?’

  ‘I think—’ Ridcully began.

  ‘Yes?’

  ‘Clams,’ said the Senior Wrangler, shaking his head. ‘Looks just the beach for the devils. You just ask my cousin. You’ll have to find a good medium first, though. They shouldn’t ooze green, I said. They shouldn’t bubble, I told him. But would he listen?’

  The Archchancellor was currently amongst those who wouldn’t. ‘You think that taking him out there would be just the thing for the Librarian, do you?’ he said. ‘Just the tonic for the poor old chap, an hour or two under that sun?’

  ‘But I expect we ought to be ready to protect him, eh, Archchancellor?’ the Dean said, innocently.

  ‘Why, yes, I really hadn’t thought of that,’ said Ridcully. ‘Hmm, yes. Important point. Better get them to bring down my 500-pound crossbow with the armour-piercing arrows and my home taxidermy outfit. And all ten fishing rods. And all four tackle boxes. And the big set of scales.’

  ‘Good thinking, Archchancellor,’ said the Dean. ‘He may want to take a swim when he’s feeling better.’

  ‘In that case,’ said Ponder, ‘I think I’ll get my thaumodalite and my notebooks. It’s vital to work out where we are. It could be EcksEcksEcksEcks, I suppose. It looks very foreign.’

  ‘I suppose I’d better fetch my reptile press and my herbarium,’ said the Chair of Indefinite Studies, who had got there eventually. ‘Much may be learned from the plants here, I’ll wager.’

  ‘I shall certainly endeavour to make a study of any primitive grass-skirted peoples hereabouts,’ added the Dean, with a lawnmower look in his eyes.

  ‘What about you, Runes?’ said Ridcully.

  ‘Me? Oh, er . . .’ The Lecturer in Recent Runes looked wildly at his colleagues, who were nodding frantically at him. ‘Er . . . this would be a good time to catch up on my readi
ng, obviously.’

  ‘Right,’ said Ridcully. ‘Because we are not, and I want to make this very clear, we are not doing this in order to enjoy ourselves, is that understood?’

  ‘What about the Senior Wrangler?’ said the Dean nastily.

  ‘Me? Enjoy it? There might even be prawns out there,’ said the Senior Wrangler miserably.

  Ridcully hesitated. The other wizards shrugged when he glanced at them. ‘Look, old chap,’ he said eventually, ‘I think I understood about the clams, and I’ve got a sort of mental picture about your granny and the pineapple—’

  ‘—my aunt—’

  ‘—your aunt and the pineapple, but . . . What’s deadly about prawns?’

  ‘Hah, see how you like a crate of them dropping off the crane on to your head,’ said the Senior Wrangler. ‘My uncle didn’t, I can tell you!’

  ‘Okay, I think I understand. Important safety tip, everyone,’ said Ridcully. ‘Avoid all crates. Understood? But we are not here on some kind of holiday! Do you all understand me?’

  ‘Absolutely,’ said the wizards in unison.

  They all understood him.

  Rincewind awoke with a scream, to get it over with.

  Then he saw the man watching him.

  He was sitting cross-legged against the dawn. He was black. Not brown, or blue-black, but black as space. This place baked people.

  Rincewind pulled himself up and thought about reaching for his stick. And then he thought again. The man had a couple of spears stuck in the ground, and people here were good at spears, because if you didn’t get efficient at hitting the things that moved fast you had to eat the things that moved slowly. He was also holding a boomerang, and it wasn’t one of those toy ones that came back. This was one of the big, heavy, gently curved sort that didn’t come back because it was sticking in something’s ribcage. You could laugh at the idea of wooden weapons until you saw the kind of wood that grew here.

  It had been painted with stripes of all colours, but it still looked like a business item.

  Rincewind tried to seem harmless. It required little in the way of acting.

  The watcher regarded him in that sucking silence that you just have to fill. And Rincewind came from a culture where, if there was nothing to say, you said something.

  ‘Er . . .’ said Rincewind. ‘Me . . . big-fella . . . fella . . . belong . . . damn, what’s the—’ He gave up, and glanced at the blue sky. ‘Turned out nice again,’ he said.

  The man seemed to sigh, stuck the boomerang into the strip of animal skin that was his belt and, in fact, the whole of his wardrobe, and stood up. Then he picked up a leathery sack, slung it over one shoulder, took the spears and, without a backward glance, ambled off around a rock.

  This might have struck anyone else as rude, but Rincewind was always happy to see any heavily armed person walking away. He rubbed his eyes and contemplated the dismal task of subduing breakfast.

  ‘You want some grub?’ The voice was almost a whisper.

  Rincewind looked around. A little way off was the hole from which last night’s supper had been dug. Apart from that, there was nothing all the way to the infinite horizon but scrubby bushes and hot red rocks.

  ‘I think I dug up most of them,’ he said, weakly.

  ‘Nah, mate. I got to tell you the secret of findin’ tucker in the bush. There’s always a beaut feed if you know where to look, mate.’

  ‘How come you’re speaking my language, mystery voice?’ said Rincewind.

  ‘I ain’t,’ said the voice. ‘You’re listenin’ to mine. Got to feed you up proper. Gonna sing you into a real bush-tucker finder, true.’

  ‘Lovely grub,’ said Rincewind.

  ‘Just you stand there and don’t move.’

  It sounded as though the unseen voice then began to chant very quietly through an unseen nose.

  Rincewind was, after all, a wizard. Not a good one, but he was sensitive to magic. And the chant was doing strange things.

  The hairs on the back of his hands tried to crawl up his arms, and the back of his neck began to sweat. His ears popped and, very gently, the landscape began to spin around him.

  He looked down at the ground. There were his feet. Almost certainly his feet. And they were standing on the red earth and not moving at all. Things were moving round him. He wasn’t dizzy but, by the look of it, the landscape was.

  The chanting stopped. There was a sort of echo, which seemed to happen inside his head, as if the words had been merely the shadow of something more important.

  Rincewind shut his eyes for a while, and then opened them again.

  ‘Er . . . fine,’ he said. ‘Very . . . catchy.’

  He couldn’t see the speaker, so he spoke with that careful politeness you reserve for someone armed who is probably standing behind you.

  He turned. ‘I expect you . . . er . . . had to go somewhere, did you?’ he said, to the empty air.

  ‘Er . . . hello?’

  Even the insects had gone quiet.

  ‘Er . . . you haven’t noticed a box walking around on legs, have you? By any chance?’

  He tried to see if anyone could possibly be hiding behind a bush.

  ‘It’s not important, it’s just that it’s got my clean underwear in it.’

  The boundless silence made an eloquent statement about the universe’s views on clean underwear.

  ‘So . . . er . . . I’m going to know how to find food in the bush, right?’ he ventured. He glared at the nearest trees. They didn’t look any more fruitful than before. He shrugged.

  ‘What a strange person.’

  He edged over to a flat stone and, with a stick raised in case of resistance from anything below, pulled it up.

  There was a chicken sandwich underneath.

  It tasted rather like chicken.

  A little way away, behind the rocks near the waterhole, a drawing faded into the stone.

  This was another desert, elsewhere. No matter where you were, this place would always be elsewhere. It was one of those places further than any conceivable journey, but possibly as close as the far side of a mirror, or just a breath away.

  There was no sun in the sky here, unless the whole sky was sun – it glowed yellow. The desert underfoot was still red sand, but hot enough to burn.

  A crude drawing of a man appeared on a rock. Gradually, layer by layer, it got more complex, as if the unseen hand was trying to draw bones and organs and a nervous system and a soul.

  And he stepped on to the sand and put down his bag which, here, seemed a lot heavier. He stretched his arms and cracked his knuckles.

  At least here he could talk normally. He daren’t raise his voice down there in the shadow world, lest he raise mountains as well.

  He said a word which, on the other side of the rock, would have shaken trees and created meadows. It meant, in the true language of things which the old man spoke, something like: Trickster. A creature like him appears in many belief systems, although the jolly name can be misleading. Tricksters have that robust sense of humour that puts a landmine under a seat cushion for a bit of a laugh.

  A black and white bird appeared, and perched on his head.

  ‘You know what to do,’ said the old man.

  ‘Him? What a wonga,’ said the bird. ‘I’ve been lookin’ at him. He’s not even heroic. He’s just in the right place at the right time.’

  The old man indicated that this was maybe the definition of a hero.

  ‘All right, but why not go and get the thing yerself?’ said the bird.

  ‘You’ve gotta have heroes,’ said the old man.

  ‘And I suppose I’ll have to help,’ said the bird. It sniffed, which is quite hard to do through a beak.

  ‘Yep. Off you go.’

  The bird shrugged, which is easy to do if you have wings, and flew down off the old man’s head. It didn’t land on the rock but flew into it; for a moment there was a drawing of a bird, and then it faded.

  Creators aren’t gods. They mak
e places, which is quite hard. It’s men that make gods. This explains a lot.

  The old man sat down and waited.

  Confront a wizard with the concept of a bathing suit and he’ll start to get nervous. Why does it have to be so skimpy? he’ll ask. Where can I put the gold embroidery? How can you have any kind of costume without at least forty useful pockets? And occult symbols made out of sequins? There appears to be no place for them. And where, when you get right down to it, are the lapels?

  There is also the concept of acreage. It is vitally important that as large an amount of wizard as possible is covered, so that timid people and horses are not frightened. There may be strapping young wizards with copper-coloured skins and muscles as solid as a plank, but not after sixty years of UU dinners. It gives senior wizards what they think is called gravitas but is more accurately called gravity.

  Also, it takes heavy machinery to part a wizard from his pointy hat.

  The Chair of Indefinite Studies looked sidelong at the Dean. They both wore a variety of garments, in which red and white stripes predominated.

  ‘Last one into the water’s a man standing all by himself on the beach!’ he shouted.10

  Out on a point of rock, surf washing over his bare feet, Mustrum Ridcully lit his pipe and cast a line on the end of which was such a fearsome array of spinners and weights that any fish it didn’t hook it might successfully bludgeon.

  The change of scenery seemed to be working on the Librarian. Within a few minutes of being laid in the sunlight he’d sneezed himself back into his old shape, and he now sat on the beach with a blanket around him and a fern leaf on his head.

  It was, indeed, a lovely day. It was warm, the sea murmured beautifully, the wind whispered in the trees. The Librarian knew he ought to be feeling better, but, instead, he was beginning to feel extremely uneasy.

  He stared around him. The Lecturer in Recent Runes had gone to sleep with his book carefully shading his eyes. It had originally been entitled Principles of Thaumic Propagation but, because of the action of the sunlight and some specialized high-frequency vibrations from the sand granules on the beach, the words on the cover now read The Omega Conspiracy.11

 

‹ Prev