Small Gods: Discworld Novel, A

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by Terry Pratchett


  “I’m not going to read them.” Brutha looked blankly at the first scroll, which happened to be De Chelonian Mobile.

  “Oh. My god,” he said.

  “Something wrong?” said Didactylos.

  “Could someone fetch my tortoise?”

  Simony trotted through the palace. No one was paying him much attention. Most of the Ephebian guard was outside the labyrinth, and Vorbis had made it clear to anyone who was thinking of venturing inside just what would happen to the palace’s inhabitants. Groups of Omnian soldiers were looting in a disciplined sort of way.

  Besides, he was returning to his quarters.

  There was a tortoise in Brutha’s room. It was sitting on the table, between a rolled-up scroll and a gnawed melon rind and, insofar as it was possible to tell with tortoises, was asleep. Simony grabbed it without ceremony, rammed it into his pack, and hurried back towards the Library.

  He hated himself for doing it. The stupid priest had ruined everything! But Didactylos had made him promise, and Didactylos was the man who knew the Truth.

  All the way there he had the impression that someone was trying to attract his attention.

  “You can remember them just by looking?” said Urn.

  “Yes.”

  “The whole scroll?”

  “Yes.”

  “I don’t believe you.”

  “The word LIBRVM outside this building has a chip in the top of the first letter,” said Brutha. “Xeno wrote Reflections, and old Aristocrates wrote Platitudes, and Didactylos thinks Ibid’s Discourses are bloody stupid. There are six hundred paces from the Tyrant’s throne room to the Library. There is a—”

  “He’s got a good memory, you’ve got to grant him that,” said Didactylos. “Show him some more scrolls.”

  “How will we know he’s remembered them?” Urn demanded, unrolling a scroll of geometrical theorems. “He can’t read! And even if he could read, he can’t write!”

  “We shall have to teach him.”

  Brutha looked at a scroll full of maps. He shut his eyes. For a moment the jagged outline glowed against the inside of his eyelids, and then he felt them settle into his mind. They were still there somewhere—he could bring them back at any time. Urn unrolled another scroll. Pictures of animals. This one, drawings of plants and lots of writing. This one, just writing. This one, triangles and things. They settled down in his memory. After a while, he wasn’t even aware of the scroll unrolling. He just had to keep looking.

  He wondered how much he could remember, but that was stupid. You just remembered everything you saw. A tabletop, or a scroll full of writing. There was as much information in the grain and coloring of the wood as there was in Xeno’s Reflections.

  Even so, he was conscious of a certain heaviness of mind, a feeling that if he turned his head sharply then memory would slosh out of his ears.

  Urn picked up a scroll at random and unrolled it part-way.

  “Describe what an Ambiguous Puzuma looks like,” he demanded.

  “Don’t know,” said Brutha. He blinked.

  “So much for Mr. Memory,” said Urn.

  “He can’t read, boy. That’s not fair,” said the philosopher.

  “All right. I mean—the fourth picture in the third scroll you saw,” said Urn.

  “A four-legged creature facing left,” said Brutha. “A large head similar to a cat’s and broad shoulders with the body tapering towards the hindquarters. The body is a pattern of dark and light squares. The ears are very small and laid flat against the head. There are six whiskers. The tail is stubby. Only the hind feet are clawed, three claws on each foot. The fore feet are about the same length as the head and held up against the body. A band of thick hair—”

  “That was fifty scrolls ago,” said Urn. “He saw the whole scroll for a second or two.”

  They looked at Brutha. Brutha blinked again.

  “You know everything?” said Urn.

  “I don’t know.”

  “You’ve got half the Library in your head!”

  “I feel…a…bit…”

  The Library of Ephebe was a furnace. The flames burned blue where the melted copper roof dripped on to the shelves.

  All libraries, everywhere, are connected by the bookworm holes in space created by the strong space-time distortions found around any large collections of books.

  Only a very few librarians learn the secret, and there are inflexible rules about making use of the fact. Because it amounts to time travel, and time travel causes big problems.

  But if a library is on fire, and down in the history books as having been on fire…

  There was a small pop, utterly unheard among the crackling of the bookshelves, and a figure dropped out of nowhere on to a small patch of unburned floor in the middle of the Library.

  It looked ape-like, but it moved in a very purposeful way. Long simian arms beat out the flames, pulled scrolls off the shelves, and stuffed them into a sack. When the sack was full, it knuckled back into the middle of the room…and vanished, with another pop.

  This has nothing to do with the story.

  Nor does the fact that, some time later, scrolls thought to have been destroyed in the Great Ephebian Library Fire turned up in remarkably good condition in the Library of Unseen University in Ankh-Morpork.

  But it’s nice to know, even so.

  Brutha awoke with the smell of the sea in his nostrils.

  At least it was what people think of as the smell of the sea, which is the stink of antique fish and rotten seaweed.

  He was in some sort of shed. Such light as managed to come through its one unglazed window was red, and flickered. One end of the shed was open to the water. The ruddy light showed a few figures clustered around something there.

  Brutha gently probed the contents of his memory. Everything seemed to be there, the Library scrolls neatly arranged. The words were as meaningless to him as any other written word, but the pictures were interesting. More interesting than most things in his memory, anyway.

  He sat up, carefully.

  “You’re awake, then,” said the voice of Om, in his head. “Feel a bit full, do we? Feel a bit like a stack of shelves? Feel like we’ve got big notices saying ‘SILENCIOS!’ all over the place inside our head? What did you go and do that for?”

  “I…don’t know. It seemed like…the next thing to do. Where are you?”

  “Your soldier friend has got me in his pack. Thanks for looking after me so carefully, by the way.”

  Brutha managed to get to his feet. The world revolved around him for a moment, adding a third astronomical theory to the two currently occupying the minds of local thinkers.

  He peered out of the window. The red light was coming from fires all over Ephebe, but there was one huge glow over the Library.

  “Guerrilla activity,” said Om. “Even the slaves are fighting. Can’t understand why. You think they’d jump at the chance to be revenged on their masters, eh?”

  “I suppose a slave in Ephebe has the chance to be free,” said Brutha.

  There was a hiss from the other end of the shed, and a metallic, whirring noise. Brutha heard Urn say, “There! I told you. Just a block in the tubes. Lets get some more fuel in.”

  Brutha tottered towards the group.

  They were clustered around a boat. As boats went, it was of normal shape—a pointed end in front, a flat end at the back. But there was no mast. What there was, was a large, copper-colored ball, hanging in a wooden framework toward the back of the boat. There was an iron basket underneath it, in which someone had already got a good fire going.

  And the ball was spinning in its frame, in a cloud of steam.

  “I’ve seen that,” he said. “In De Chelonian Mobile. There was a drawing.”

  “Oh, it’s the walking Library,” said Didactylos. “Yes. You’re right. Illustrating the principle of reaction. I never asked Urn to build a big one. This is what comes of thinking with your hands.”

  “I took it around
the lighthouse one night last week,” said Urn. “No problems at all.”

  “Ankh-Morpork is a lot further than that,” said Simony.

  “Yes, it is five times further than the distance between Ephebe and Omnia,” said Brutha solemnly. “There was a scroll of maps,” he added.

  Steam rose in scalding clouds from the whirring ball. Now he was closer, Brutha could see that half a dozen very short oars had been joined together in a star-shaped pattern behind the copper globe, and hung over the rear of the boat. Wooden cogwheels and a couple of endless belts filled the intervening space. As the globe spun, the paddles thrashed at the air.

  “How does it work?” he said.

  “Very simple,” said Urn. “The fire makes—”

  “We haven’t got time for this,” said Simony.

  “—makes the water hot and so it gets angry,” said the apprentice philosopher. “So it rushes out of the globe through these four little nozzles to get away from the fire. The plumes of steam push the globe around, and the cogwheels and Legibus’s screw mechanism transfer the motion to the paddles which turn, pushing the boat through the water.”

  “Very philosophical,” said Didactylos.

  Brutha felt that he ought to stand up for Omnian progress.

  “The great doors of the Citadel weigh tons but are opened solely by the power of faith,” he said. “One push and they swing open.”

  “I should very much like to see that,” said Urn.

  Brutha felt a faint sinful twinge of pride that Omnia still had anything he could be proud of.

  “Very good balance and some hydraulics, probably.”

  “Oh.”

  Simony thoughtfully prodded the mechanism with his sword.

  “Have you thought of all the possibilities?” he said.

  Urn’s hands began to weave through the air. “You mean mighty ships plowing the wine-dark sea with no—” he began.

  “On land, I was thinking,” said Simony. “Perhaps…on some sort of cart…”

  “Oh, no point in putting a boat on a cart.”

  Simony’s eyes gleamed with the gleam of a man who had seen the future and found it covered with armor plating.

  “Hmm,” he said.

  “It’s all very well, but it’s not philosophy,” said Didactylos.

  “Where’s the priest?”

  “I’m here, but I’m not a—”

  “How’re you feeling? You went out like a candle back there.”

  “I’m…better now.”

  “One minute upright, next minute a draft-excluder.”

  “I’m much better.”

  “Happen a lot, does it?”

  “Sometimes.”

  “Remembering the scrolls okay?”

  “I…think so. Who set fire to the Library?”

  Urn looked up from the mechanism.

  “He did,” he said.

  Brutha stared at Didactylos.

  “You set fire to your own Library?”

  “I’m the only one qualified,” said the philosopher. “Besides, it keeps it out of the way of Vorbis.”

  “What?”

  “Suppose he’d read the scrolls? He’s bad enough as it is. He’d be a lot worse with all that knowledge inside him.”

  “He wouldn’t have read them,” said Brutha.

  “Oh, he would. I know that type,” said Didactylos. “All holy piety in public, and all peeled grapes and self-indulgence in private.”

  “Not Vorbis,” said Brutha, with absolute certainty. “He wouldn’t have read them.”

  “Well, anyway,” said Didactylos, “if it had to be done, I did it.”

  Urn turned away from the bow of the boat, where he was feeding more wood into the brazier under the globe.

  “Can we all get on board?” he said.

  Brutha eased his way on a rough bench seat amid-ships, or whatever it was called. The air smelled of hot water.

  “Right,” said Urn. He pulled a lever. The spinning paddles hit the water; there was a jerk and then, steam hanging in the air behind it, the boat moved forward.

  “What’s the name of this vessel?” said Didactylos.

  Urn looked surprised.

  “Name?” he said. “It’s a boat. A thing, of the nature of things. It doesn’t need a name.”

  “Names are more philosophical,” said Didactylos, with a trace of sulkiness. “And you should have broken an amphora of wine over it.”

  “That would have been a waste.”

  The boat chugged out of the boathouse and into the dark harbor. Away to one side, an Ephebian galley was on fire. The whole of the city was a patchwork of flame.

  “But you’ve got an amphora on board?” said Didactylos.

  “Yes.”

  “Pass it over, then.”

  White water trailed behind the boat. The paddles churned.

  “No wind. No rowers!” said Simony. “Do you even begin to understand what you have here, Urn?”

  “Absolutely. The operating principles are amazingly simple,” said Urn.

  “That wasn’t what I meant. I meant the things you could do with this power!”

  Urn pushed another log on the fire.

  “It’s just the transforming of heat into work,” he said. “I suppose…oh, the pumping of water. Mills that can grind even when the wind isn’t blowing. That sort of thing? Is that what you had in mind?”

  Simony the soldier hesitated.

  “Yeah,” he said. “Something like that.”

  Brutha whispered, “Om?”

  “Yes?”

  “Are you all right?”

  “It smells like a soldier’s knapsack in here. Get me out.”

  The copper ball spun madly over the fire. It gleamed almost as brightly as Simony’s eyes.

  Brutha tapped him on the shoulder.

  “Can I have my tortoise?”

  Simony laughed bitterly.

  “There’s good eating on one of these things,” he said, fishing out Om.

  “Everyone says so,” said Brutha. He lowered his voice to a whisper.

  “What sort of place is Ankh?”

  “A city of a million souls,” said the voice of Om, “many of them occupying bodies. And a thousand religions. There’s even a temple to the small gods! Sounds like a place where people don’t have trouble believing things. Not a bad place for a fresh start, I think. With my brains and your…with my brains, we should soon be in business again.”

  “You don’t want to go back to Omnia?”

  “No point,” said the voice of Om. “It’s always possible to overthrow an established god. People get fed up, they want a change. But you can’t overthrow yourself, can you?”

  “Who’re you talking to, priest?” said Simony.

  “I…er…was praying.”

  “Hah! To Om? You might as well pray to that tortoise.”

  “Yes.”

  “I am ashamed for Omnia,” said Simony. “Look at us. Stuck in the past. Held back by repressive monotheism. Shunned by our neighbors. What good has our God been to us? Gods? Hah!”

  “Steady on, steady on,” said Didactylos. “We’re on seawater and that’s highly conductive armor you’re wearing.”

  “Oh, I say nothing about other gods,” said Simony quickly. “I have not the right. But Om? A bogeyman for the Quisition! If he exists, let him strike me down here and now!”

  Simony drew his sword and held it up at arm’s length.

  Om sat peacefully on Brutha’s lap. “I like this boy,” he said. “He’s almost as good as a believer. It’s like love and hate, know what I mean?”

  Simony sheathed his sword again.

  “Thus I refute Om,” he said.

  “Yes, but what’s the alternative?”

  “Philosophy! Practical philosophy! Like Urn’s engine there. It could drag Omnia kicking and screaming into the Century of the Fruitbat!”

  “Kicking and screaming,” said Brutha.

  “By any means necessary,” said Simony.

/>   He beamed at them.

  “Don’t worry about him,” said Om. “We’ll be far away. Just as well, too. I don’t think Omnia’s going to be a popular country when news of last night’s work gets about.”

  “But it was Vorbis’s fault!” said Brutha out loud. “He started the whole thing! He sent poor Brother Murduck, and then he had him killed so he could blame it on the Ephebians! He never intended any peace treaty! He just wanted to get into the palace!”

  “Beats me how he managed that, too,” said Urn. “No one ever got through the labyrinth without a guide. How did he do it?”

  Didactylos’s blind eyes sought out Brutha.

  “Can’t imagine,” he said. Brutha hung his head.

  “He really did all that?” said Simony.

  “Yes.”

  “You idiot! You total sandhead!” screamed Om.

  “And you’d tell this to other people?” said Simony, insistently.

  “I suppose so.”

  “You’d speak out against the Quisition?”

  Brutha stared miserably into the night. Behind them, the flames of Ephebe had merged into one orange spark.

  “All I can say is what I remember,” he said.

  “We’re dead,” said Om. “Throw me over the side, why don’t you? This bonehead will want to take us back to Omnia!”

  Simony rubbed his chin thoughtfully.

  “Vorbis has many enemies,” he said, “in certain circumstances. Better he should be killed, but some would call that murder. Or even martyrdom. But a trial…if there was evidence…if they even thought there could be evidence…”

  “I can see his mind working!” Om screamed. “We’d all be safe if you’d shut up!”

  “Vorbis on trial,” Simony mused.

  Brutha blanched at the thought. It was the kind of thought that was almost impossible to hold in the mind. It was the kind of thought that made no sense. Vorbis on trial? Trials were things that happened to other people.

  He remembered Brother Murduck. And the soldiers who had been lost in the desert. And all the things that had been done to people, even to Brutha.

  “Tell him you can’t remember!” Om yelled. “Tell him you can’t recall!”

  “And if he was on trial,” said Simony, “he’d be found guilty. No one would dare do anything else.”

 

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