Last Continent

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Last Continent Page 31

by Pratchett, Terry


  ‘Stop the regatta!’ panted one of the coxes. ‘The river . . . the river . . .’

  But by then everyone could see it. Around the bend, travelling slowly because it was pushing in front of it a huge logjam of bushes, carts, rocks and trees, was the flood.

  It thundered past and the mobile dam slid on, scything the river bottom free of all obstruction. Behind it foaming water filled the river from bank to bank.

  They cancelled the regatta. A river full of water made a mockery of the whole idea.

  The university’s gates had burst open and now the angry mob was in the grounds and hammering on the walls.

  Above the din, the wizards searched feverishly through the books.

  ‘Well, have you got something like Maxwell’s Impressive Separator?’ said Ridcully.

  ‘What’s that do?’ said Archchancellor Rincewind.

  ‘Unmixes two things, like . . . sugar and sand, for example. Uses nanny’s demons.’

  ‘Nano-demons, possibly,’ murmured Ponder wearily.

  ‘Oh, like Bonza Charlie’s Beaut Sieve? Yeah, we’ve got that.’

  ‘Ah, parallel evolution. Fine. Dig it out, man.’

  Archchancellor Rincewind nodded at one of the wizards, and then broke into a grin.

  ‘Are you thinking about it working on salt?’ he said.

  ‘Exactly! One spell, one bucket of seawater, no more problem . . .’

  ‘Er, that’s not exactly true,’ said Ponder Stibbons.

  ‘Sounds perfect to me, man!’

  ‘It takes a great deal of magic, sir. And the demons take about a fortnight per pint, sir.’

  ‘Ah. A significant point, Mister Stibbons.’

  ‘Yes, sir.’

  ‘However, just because it wouldn’t work does not mean it was a bad idea – I wish they’d stop that shouting!’

  The shouting outside stopped.

  ‘Perhaps they heard you, sir,’ said Ponder.

  Pang. Pang, pang . . .

  ‘Are they throwing stuff on to the roof?’ said Archchancellor Rincewind.

  ‘No, that’s probably just rain,’ said Ridcully. ‘Now, I suppose you’ve tried evaporating—’

  He realized that no one was listening. Everyone was looking up.

  Now the individual thuds had merged into a steady hammering and from outside came the sound of wild cheering.

  The wizards struggled in the doorway and finally fought their way outside, where water was pouring off the roof in a solid sheet and cutting a channel in the lawn.

  Archchancellor Rincewind stopped abruptly and reached out to the water like a man not sure if the stove is hot.

  ‘Out of the sky?’ he said. He pushed his way out through the liquid curtain. Then he took off his hat and held it upside down to catch the rain.

  The crowd had filled the university grounds and spilled out into the surrounding streets. Every face was turned upwards.

  ‘And those dark things?’ Archchancellor Rincewind called out.

  ‘They are the clouds, archchancellor.’

  ‘There’s a hell of a lot of them!’

  There were. They piled up over the tower in an enormous, spreading black thunderhead.

  A couple of people looked down long enough to see the group of soaked wizards, and there were some cheers. And suddenly they were the new centre of attention, and being picked up and carried shoulder high.

  ‘They think we did it!’ shouted Archchancellor Rincewind, as he was borne aloft.

  ‘Who’s to say we didn’t?’ shouted Ridcully, tapping the side of his nose conspiratorially.

  ‘Er . . .’ someone began.

  Ridcully didn’t even look round. ‘Shut up, Mister Stibbons,’ he said.

  ‘Shutting up, sir.’

  ‘Can you hear that thunder?’ said Ridcully, as a rumble rolled across the city. ‘We’d better take cover . . .’

  The clouds above the tower were rising like water against a dam. Ponder said afterwards the fact that the BU tower was very short and extremely tall at the same time might have been the problem, since the storm was trying to go around it, over it and through it, all at the same time.

  From the ground the clouds seemed to open up slowly, leaving a glowing, spreading chimney filled with the blue haze of electrical discharges . . .

  . . . and pounced. One solid blue bolt hit the tower at every height all at once, which is technically impossible. Pieces of wood and corrugated iron roared into the air and rained down across the city.

  Then there was just a sizzling, and the rushing of the rain.

  The crowd stood up again, cautiously, but the fireworks were over.

  ‘And that’s what we call lightning,’ said Ridcully.

  Archchancellor Rincewind got up and tried to brush mud off his robe, then found out why you cannot do this.

  ‘It’s not usually as big as that, though,’ Ridcully went on.

  ‘Oh. Good.’

  There was a clank from the steaming debris where the tower had stood, and a sheet of metal was pushed aside. Slowly, with much mutual aid and many false starts, two blackened figures emerged. One of them was still wearing a hat, which was on fire although the rain was putting out the flames.

  Leaning against one another, weaving from side to side, they approached the wizards.

  One of them said, ‘Ook,’ very quietly and fell backwards.

  The other one looked blearily at the two archchancellors, and saluted. This caused a spark to leap from its fingers and burn its ear.

  ‘Er, Rincewind,’ it said.

  ‘And what have you been up to while we’ve been doing all this hard work, pray?’ said Ridcully.

  Rincewind looked around, very slowly. Occasional little blue streaks crackled in his beard.

  ‘Well, that all seemed to go pretty well, really. All things considered,’ he said, and fell full length into a puddle.

  It rained. After that, it rained. Then it rained some more. The clouds were stacked like impatient charter flights over the coast, low on fuel, jockeying for position, and raining. Above all, raining.

  Floodwater roared down the rocks and scoured out the ancient muddy waterholes. A species of tiny shrimps whose world for thousands of years had been one small hole under a stone were picked up and carried wholesale into a lake that was spreading faster than a man could run. There had been fewer than a thousand of them. There were a lot more next day. Even if the shrimps had been able to count how many, they were far too busy to bother.

  In the new estuaries, rich in sudden silt and unexpected food, a few fish began the experiment of a salt-free diet. The mangroves started their stop-motion conquests of the new mudbanks.

  It went on raining.

  Then it rained some more.

  After that, it rained.

  It was some days later.

  The ship rose and fell gently by the dock. The water around it was red with suspended silt in which a few leaves and twigs floated.

  ‘A week or two to NoThingfjord and we’re practically home,’ said Ridcully.

  ‘Practically on the same continent, anyway,’ said the Dean.

  ‘Quite an int’resting long vacation, really,’ said the Lecturer in Recent Runes.

  ‘Probably the longest ever,’ said Ponder. ‘Did Mrs Whitlow like her stateroom?’

  ‘I for one will quite enjoy bunking down in the hold,’ said the Senior Wrangler loyally.

  ‘The bilges, actually,’ said Ponder. ‘The hold’s full. Of opals, beer, sheep, wool and bananas.’

  ‘Where’s the Librarian?’ said Ridcully.

  ‘In the hold, sir.’

  ‘Yes, I suppose it was silly of me to ask. Still, nice to see him his old self again.’

  ‘I think it may have been the lightning, sir. He’s certainly very lively now.’

  And Rincewind sat on the Luggage, down on the dock.

  Somehow, he felt, something should be happening. The worst time in your life was when nothing much was going on, because that m
eant that something bad was about to hit you. For some strange reason.

  He could be back in the University Library in a month or so, and then ho! for a life of stacking books. One dull day after another, with occasional periods of boredom. He could hardly wait. Every minute not being a minute wasted was, well, a minute wasted. Excitement? That could happen to other people.

  He’d watched the merchants loading the ship. It was pretty low in the water, because there would be so many Ecksian things the rest of the world wanted. Of course, it’d come back light, because it was hard to think of any bloody thing it could bloody import that was better than any bloody thing in EcksEcksEcksEcks.

  There were even a few more passengers willing to see the world, and most of them were young.

  ‘Hey, aren’t you one of the foreign wizards?’

  The speaker was a young man carrying a very large knapsack topped by a bedroll. He seemed to be the impromptu leader of a small group of similarly overloaded people, with wide, open faces and slightly worried expressions.

  ‘You can tell, can’t you?’ said Rincewind. ‘Er . . . you wanted something?’

  ‘D’yew think we can buy a cart in this place NoThingfjord?’

  ‘Yes, I should think so.’

  ‘Only me and Clive and Shirl and Gerleen were thinkin’ of picking one up and driving to—’ He looked around.

  ‘Ankh-Morpork,’ said Shirl.

  ‘Right, and then selling it, and gettin’ a job for a while, having a look round, y’know . . . for a while. That’d be right?’

  Rincewind glanced at the others trooping up the gangplank. Since the invention of the dung beetle, which had in fact happened not too far away, it was probable that no creature had ever carried so much weight.

  ‘I can see it catching on,’ he said.

  ‘No worries!’

  ‘But . . . er . . .’

  ‘Yes, mate?’

  ‘Do you mind not humming that tune? It was only a sheep, and I didn’t even steal it . . .’

  Someone tapped him on the shoulder. It was Neilette. Letitia and Darleen were standing behind her, grinning. It was ten in the morning. They were wearing sequinned evening gowns.

  ‘Budge up,’ she said, and settled down beside him. ‘We just thought . . . well, we’ve come to say, you know, thanks and everything. Letitia and Darleen are coming in with me and we’re going to open up the brewery again.’

  Rincewind glanced up at the ladies.

  ‘I’ve had enough beer thrown at me, I ought to know something about it,’ said Letitia. ‘Although I do think we could make it a more attractive colour. It’s so . . .’ she waved a large, be-ringed hand irritably, ‘. . . aggressively masculine.’

  ‘Pink would be nice,’ said Rincewind. ‘And you could put in a pickled onion on a stick, perhaps.’

  ‘Bloody good suggestion!’ said Darleen, slapping him so hard on the back that his hat fell over his eyes.

  ‘You wouldn’t like to stay?’ said Neilette. ‘You look like someone with ideas.’

  Rincewind considered this attractive proposition, and then shook his head.

  ‘It’s a nice offer, but I think I ought to stick to what I do best,’ he said.

  ‘But everyone says you’re no good at magic!’ said Neilette.

  ‘Er . . . yes, well, being no good at magic is what I do best,’ said Rincewind. ‘Thanks all the same.’

  ‘At least let me give you a big wet sloppy kiss,’ said Darleen, grabbing his shoulders. Out of the corner of his eye Rincewind saw Neilette’s foot stamp down.

  ‘All right, all right!’ said Darleen, letting go and hopping away. ‘It wasn’t as if I was going to bite him, miss!’

  Neilette gave Rincewind a peck on the cheek.

  ‘Well, drop in whenever you’re passing,’ she said.

  ‘Certainly will!’ said Rincewind. ‘I’ll look for the pubs with the mauve umbrellas outside, shall I?’

  Neilette gave him a wave and Darleen made an amusing gesture as they walked away, almost bumping into a group of men in white. One of them shouted, ‘Hey, there he is . . . Sorry, ladies . . .’

  ‘Oh, hello, Charley . . . Ron . . .’ said Rincewind, as the chefs bore down on him.

  ‘Heard you wuzzas was leavin’,’ said Ron. ‘Wouldn’t be fair to let you go without shaking you by the hand, Charley said.’

  ‘The Peach Nellie went down a treat,’ said Charley, beaming broadly.

  ‘Glad to hear it,’ said Rincewind. ‘Good to see you looking so cheerful.’

  ‘It gets better!’ said Ron. ‘There’s a new soprano just been taken on and she’s a winner if I’m any judge and . . . no, Charley, you tell him her name . . .’

  ‘Germaine Trifle,’ said Charley. A wider grin would have resulted in the top of his head slipping off.

  ‘I’m very happy for you,’ said Rincewind. ‘Start whipping that cream right now, y’hear?’

  Ron patted him on the shoulder. ‘We could always do with another hand in the kitchens,’ he said. ‘Just say the word, mate.’

  ‘Well, it’s very kind of you, and when I pull another tissue out of a box I’ll always remember you blokes at the Opera House, but—’

  ‘There he is!’

  The gaoler and the captain of the guard were jogging along the quay. The gaoler was waving encouragingly at him.

  ‘Nah, nah, it’s all right, you don’t have to run!’ he shouted. ‘We’ve got a pardon for you!’

  ‘Pardon?’ said Rincewind.

  ‘That’s right!’ The gaoler reached him, and fought for breath. ‘Signed . . . by . . . the prime minister,’ he managed. ‘Says you’re a . . . good bloke and we’re not to . . . hang you . . .’ He straightened up. ‘Mind you, we wouldn’t do that anyway, not now. Best bloody escape we’ve ever bloody had since Tinhead Ned!’

  Rincewind looked down at the writing on the official lined prison notepaper.

  ‘Oh. Good,’ he said weakly. ‘At least someone thinks I didn’t steal the damn thing.’

  ‘Oh, everyone knows you stole it,’ said the gaoler happily. ‘But after that escape, we-ell . . . and that chase, eh? Bluey here says he’s never seen anyone run like you, and that’s a fact!’

  The guard punched Rincewind playfully on the arm. ‘Good on yer, mate,’ he said, grinning. ‘But we’ll catch yer next time!’

  Rincewind looked blankly at the pardon. ‘You mean I’m getting this for being a good sport?’

  ‘No worries!’ said the gaoler. ‘And there’s a queue of farmers sayin’ if you want to steal one of their sheep next time that’d be bonza, just so long as they get a verse in the ballad.’

  Rincewind gave up. ‘What can I say?’ he said. ‘You keep one of the best condemned cells I’ve ever stayed in, and I’ve been in a few.’ He looked at the glow of admiration in their faces and decided that, since fortune had been kind, it was time to give something back. ‘Er . . . I’d take it kindly, though, if you’d never ever redecorate that cell.’

  ‘No worries. Here, I thought we ought to give you this,’ said the gaoler, handing him a little giftwrapped package. ‘Got no use for it now, eh?’

  Rincewind unwrapped the hempen rope.

  ‘I’m lost for words,’ he said. ‘How thoughtful. I’m bound to find lots of uses for it. And what’s this . . . sandwiches?’

  ‘Y’know that sticky brown stuff you made? Well, all the lads tried it and they all went “yukk” and then they all wanted some more, so we tried cooking up a batch,’ said the gaoler. ‘I was thinking of going into business. You don’t mind, do you?’

  ‘No worries. Be my guest.’

  ‘Good on yer!’

  Someone else wandered up as he watched them hurry away.

  ‘I heard you were going back,’ said Bill Rincewind. ‘Want to stay on here? I had a word with your Dean. He gave you a bloody good reference.’

  ‘Did he? What did he say?’

  ‘He said if I could get you to do any work for me I’d be lucky,’ said Bill. />
  Rincewind looked around at the city, glistening under the rain.

  ‘It’s a nice offer,’ he said. ‘But . . . oh, I dunno . . . all this sun, sea, surf and sand wouldn’t be good for me. Thanks all the same.’

  ‘You sure?’

  ‘Yes.’

  Bill Rincewind held out his hand. ‘No worries,’ he said. ‘I’ll send you a card at Hogswatch, and some bit of clothing that doesn’t fit properly. I’d better get back to the university now, I’ve got all the staff up on the roof mending the leaks . . .’

  And that was it.

  Rincewind sat for a while watching the last of the passengers get aboard, and took a final look around the rain-soaked harbour. Then he stood up.

  ‘Come on, then,’ he said.

  The Luggage followed him up the gangplank, and they went home.

  It rained.

  The flood gurgled along ancient creek beds and overflowed, spreading out in a lacework of gullies and rivulets.

  Further rain ensued.

  Near the centre of the last continent, where waterfalls streamed down the flanks of a great red rock that steamed with the heat of a ten-thousand-year summer, a small naked boy sat in the branches of a tree along with three bears, several possums, innumerable parrots and a camel.

  Apart from the rock, the world was a sea.

  And someone was wading through it. He was an old man, carrying a leather bag on his back.

  He stopped, waist deep in swirling water, and looked up at the sky.

  Something was coming. The clouds were twisting, spinning, leaving a silvery hole all the way up to the blue sky, and there was a sound that you might get if you took a roll of thunder and stretched it out thin.

  A dot appeared, growing bigger. The man raised a skinny arm and, suddenly, it was holding an oval of wood that trailed a cord, which hit his hand with a slap.

  The rain stopped.

  The last few drops hammered out a little rhythm that said: now we know where you are, we’ll be coming back . . .

  The boy laughed.

  The old man looked up, caught sight of him, and grinned. He tucked the bullroarer into the string around his waist and took up a boomerang painted in more colours than the boy had ever seen in one place together.

 

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