Hogfather by Terry Pratchett

‘Couple of chimneys ago we were over that big posh restaurant…

REALLY? I DON’T REMEMBER

‘And it seemed to me you were down there a bit longer than usual, if you don’t mind

me saying so.

REALLY

‘How exactly were they just inverted comma lying around inverted comma?

JUST… LYING AROUND. YOU KNOW. RECUMBENT

‘In a kitchen?

THERE WAS A CERTAIN CULINARINESS ABOUT THE PLACE, I RECALL

Albert pointed a trembling finger

‘You nicked someone’s Hogswatch dinner, master!

IT’S GOING TO BE EATEN, said Death defensively. ANYWAY, YOU THOUGHT IT

WAS A GOOD IDEA WHEN I SHOWED THAT KING THE DOOR

‘Yeah, wel , that was a bit different,’ said Albert, lowering his voice. ‘But, I mean, the

Hogfather doesn’t drop down the chimney and pinch people’s grub!

THE BEGGARS WILL ENJOY IT, ALBERT

‘Wel , yes, but-

IT WASN’T STEALING. IT WAS JUST… REDISTRIBUTION. IT WILL BE A GOOD

DEED IN A NAUGHTY WORLD

‘No, it won’t!

THEN IT WILL BE A NAUGHTY DEED IN A NAUGHTY WORLD AND WILL PASS

COMPLETELY UNNOTICED

‘Yeah, but you might at least have thought about the people whose grub you

pinched.

THEY HAVE BEEN PROVIDED FOR, OF COURSE. I AM NOT COMPLETELY

HEARTLESS. IN A METAPHORICAL SENSE. AND NOW – ONWARDS AND

UPWARDS

‘We’re heading down, master.

ONWARDS AND DOWNWARDS, THEN

There were… swirls. Binky gal oped easily through them, except that he did not seem

to move. He might have been hanging in the air

‘Oh, me,’ said the oh god weakly

‘What?’ said Susan

‘Try shutting your eyes–

Susan shut her eyes. Then she reached up to touch her face

‘I’m stil seeing.

‘I thought it was just me. It’s usual y just me.’ The swirls vanished

There was greenery below

And that was odd. It was greenery. Susan had flown a few times over countryside,

even swamps and jungles, and there had never been a green as green as this. If green

could be a primary colour, this was it

And that wiggly thin

‘That’s not a river!’ she said

‘Isn’t it?

‘It’s blue!

The oh god risked a look down

‘Water’s blue,’ he said

‘Of course it’s not!

‘Grass is green, water’s blue… I can remember that. It’s some of the stuff I just know.

‘Wel , in a way…’ Susan hesitated. Everyone knew grass was green and water was

blue. Quit

often it wasn’t true, but everyone knew it in the same way they knew the sky was

blue, too

She made the mistake of looking up as she thought that

There was the sky. It was, indeed, blue. And down there was the land. It was green

And in between was nothing. Not white space. Not black night. Just… nothing, al

round the edges of the world. Where the brain said there should be, wel , sky and land,

meeting neatly at the horizon, there was simply a void that sucked at the eyebal like a

loose tooth

And there was the sun

It was under the sky, floating above the land

And it was yel ow

Buttercup yel ow

Binky landed on the grass beside the river. Or at least on the green. It felt more like

sponge, or moss. He nuzzled it

Susan slid off, trying to keep her gaze low. That meant she was looking at the vivid

blue of the water

There were orange fish in it. They didn’t look quite right, as if they’d been created by

someone who real y did think a fish was two curved lines and a dot and a triangular

tail. They reminded her of the skeletal fish in Death’s quiet pool. Fish that were…

appropriate to their surroundings. And she could see them, even though the water was

just a block of colour which part of her insisted ought to be opaque..

She knelt down and dipped her hand in. It fel

like water, but what poured through her fingers was liquid blue

And now she knew where she was. The last piece clicked into place and the

knowledge bloomed inside her. She knew if she saw a house just how its windows

would be placed, and just how the smoke would come out of the chimney

There would almost certainly be apples on the trees. And they would be red,

because everyone knew that apples were red. And the sun was yel ow. And the sky

was blue. And the grass was green

But there was another world, cal ed the real world by the people who believed in it,

where the sky could be anything from off-white to sunset red to thunderstorm yel ow.

And the trees would be anything from bare branches, mere scribbles against the sky,

to red flames before the frost. And the sun was white or yel ow or orange. And water was brown and grey and green..

The colours here were springtime colours, and not the springtime of the world. They

were the colours of the springtime of the eye

‘This is a child’s painting,’ she said

The oh god slumped onto the green

‘Every time I look at the gap my eyes water,’ he mumbled. ‘I feel awful.

‘I said this is a child’s painting,’ said Susan

‘Oh, me… I think the wizards’ potion is wearing off…

‘I’ve seen dozens of pictures of it,’ said Susan

ignoring him. ‘You put the sky overhead because the sky’s above you and when you

are a couple of feet high there’s not a lot of sideways to the sky in any case. And

everyone tel s you grass is green and water is blue. This is the landscape you paint.

Twyla paints like that. I painted like that. Grandfather saved some of-

She stopped

‘Al children do it, anyway,’ she muttered. ‘Come on, let’s find the house.

‘What house?’ the oh god moaned. ‘And can you speak quieter, please?

‘There’l be a house,’ said Susan, standing up. ‘There’s always a house. With four

windows. And the smoke coming out of the chimney al curly like a spring. Look, this is

a place like gr— Death’s country. It’s not real y geography.

The oh god walked over to the nearest tree and banged his head on it as if he hoped

it was going to hurt

‘Feels like geo’fy,’ he muttered

‘But have you ever seen a tree like that? A big green blob on a brown stick? It looks

like a lol ipop!’ said Susan, pul ing him along

‘Dunno. Firs’ time I ever saw a tree. Arrgh. Somethin’ dropped on m’head.’ He

blinked owlishly at the ground. ‘ ‘s red.

‘It’s an apple,’ she said. She sighed. ‘Everyone knows apples are red.

There were no bushes. But there were flowers, each with a couple of green leaves.

They grew individual y, dotted around the rol ing green

And then they were out of the trees and there, by a bend in the river, was the house

It didn’t look very big. There were four windows and a door. Corkscrew smoke curled

out of the chimney

‘You know, it’s a funny thing,’ said Susan, staring at it. ‘Twyla draws houses like that.

And she practical y lives in a mansion. I drew houses like that. And I was born in a

palace. Why?

‘P’raps it’s al this house,’ muttered the oh. god miserably

‘What? You real y think so? Kids’ paintings are al of this place? It’s in our heads?

‘Don’t ask me, I was just making conversation,’ said the oh god

Susan hesitated. The words What Now? loomed. Should she just go and knock

And she realized that was normal thinking..

In the glittering, clattering, chattering atmosphere a head waiter was having a difficult

time. There were a lot of people in, and the staff should have been ful y stretched,

putting bicarbonate of soda in the white wine to make very expensive bubbles and

cutting the vegetables very smal to make them cost more

Instead they were standing in a dejected group in the kitchen

‘Where did it al go?’ screamed the manager. ‘Someone’s been through the cel ar,

too!

‘Wil iam said he felt a cold wind,’ said th

waiter. He’d been backed up against a hot plate, and now knew why it was cal ed a

hot plate in a way he hadn’t ful y comprehended before

‘I’l give him a cold wind! Haven’t we got anything?

‘There’s odds and ends.

‘You don’t mean odds and ends, you mean des curieux et des bouts,’ corrected the

manager

‘Yeah, right, yeah. And, er, and, er .

‘There’s nothing else?

‘Er… old boots. Muddy old boots.

‘Old-?

‘Boots. Lots of ’em,’ said the waiter. He felt he was beginning to singe

‘How come we’ve got… vintage footwear?

‘Dunno. They just turned up, sir. The oven, s ful of old boots. So’s the pantry.

‘There’s a hundred people booked in! Al the shops’l be shut! Where’s Chef?

‘Wil iam’s trying to get him to come out of the privy, sir. He’s locked himself in and is

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *