Pratchett, Terry – Discworld10 – Moving Pictures

‘Yes.’

‘Maybe we ought to put up a statue to them, or something.’

‘I’m not sure about that,’ said Victor. ‘I mean, considering what dogs do to statues. Maybe dogs dying is all part of Holy Wood. I don’t know.’

Ginger traced the outline of a knothole on the tabletop.

‘It’s all over now,’ she said. ‘You do know that, don’t you? No more Holy Wood. It’s all over.’

‘Yes.’

‘The Patrician and the wizards won’t let anyone make any more clicks. The Patrician was very definite about it.’

‘I don’t think anyone wants to make any,’ said Victor. ‘Who’s going to remember Holy Wood now?’

‘What do you mean?’

‘Those old priests built a kind of half-baked religion around it. They forgot all about what it really was. That didn’t matter, though. I don’t think you need chants and fires. You just need to remember Holy Wood. We need someone to remember Holy Wood really well.’

‘Yeah,’ said Ginger, grinning. ‘You’d need a thousand

elephants.’ !

‘Yeah.’ Victor laughed. ‘Poor old Dibbler,’ he said. ‘He never got them, either . . . ‘

Ginger moved a fragment of potato round and round on her plate. There was something on her mind, and it wasn’t food.

‘But it was great, wasn’t it?’ she burst out. ‘We had something really amazing, didn’t we?’

‘Yes.’

‘People really thought it was good, didn’t they?’

‘Oh, yes,’ said Victor sombrely.

‘I mean, didn’t we bring something really great into the world?’

‘No kidding.’

‘I didn’t mean that. Being a screen goddess isn’t all it’s cracked up to be, you know,’ said Ginger.

‘Right.’

Ginger sighed. ‘No more Holy Wood magic,’ she said.

‘I think there may be some left,’ said Victor.

‘Where?’

‘Just drifting around. Finding ways to use itself up, I expect.’

Ginger stared at her glass. ‘What are you going to do now?’ she said.

‘Don’t know. How about you?’

‘Go back to the farm, maybe.’

‘Why ?’

‘Holy Wood was my chance, you see? There aren’t many jobs for women in Ankh-Morpork. At least,’ she added, ‘none that I’d care to do. I’ve had three offers of marriage. From quite important men.’

‘Have you? Why?’

She frowned. ‘Hey, I’m not that unattractive-‘

‘I didn’t mean it like that,’ said Victor hurriedly.

‘Oh, I suppose if you’re a powerful merchant it’s nice to have a famous wife. It’s like owning jewellery.’ She looked down. ‘Mrs Cosmopilite says can she have one of the ones I don’t want. I said she could have all three.’

‘I’ve always been that way about choices myself,’ said ‘victor, cheering up.

‘Have you? If that’s all the choice there is, I’m not choosing. What can you be, after you’ve been yourself, as big as possible?’

‘Nothing,’ said Victor.

‘No-one knows what it feels like.’

‘Except us.’

‘Yes.’

‘Yes.’

Ginger grinned. It was the first time Victor had ever seen her face shorn of petulance, anger, worry or Holy Wood make-up.

‘Cheer up,’ she said. ‘Tomorrow is another day.’

Click . . .

Sergeant Colon, Ankh-Morpork city watch, was awakened from his peaceful doze in the guardhouse over the main gate by a distant rumbling.

A cloud of dust stretched from horizon to horizon. He watched it thoughtfully for some time. It grew bigger and, eventually, disgorged a dark-skinned young man riding an elephant.

It trotted up the road to the gates and lumbered to a halt at the city wall. The dust cloud, Colon couldn’t help noticing, was still on the horizon and still getting bigger.

The boy cupped his hands around his mouth and shouted: ‘Can you tell me the way to Holy Wood?’

‘There ain’t no Holy Wood any more, from what I hear,’ said Colon.

The boy appeared to consider this. He looked down at a piece of paper in his hand. Then he said: ‘Do you know where I can find Mr C.M.O.T. Dibbler?’

Sgt Colon repeated the initials under his breath.

‘You mean Throat?” he said. ‘Cut-me-own-Throat Dibbler?’

‘Is he in?’

Sgt Colon glanced at the city behind him. ‘I’ll just go and see,’ he said. ‘Who shall I say wants him?’

‘We’ve got a delivery for him. COD.’

‘Cod?’ hazarded Colon, glancing at the lowering cloud. ‘You’re herding fish?’

‘Not fish.’

Huge grey foreheads were becoming visible in the dust. There was also the very distinctive smell you get when a thousand elephants have been foraging for days in cabbage fields:

‘Just hang on,’ he said. ‘I’ll go and fetch him.’

Colon pulled his head back into the guardroom and nudged the sleeping form of Corporal Nobbs, currently the other half of the keen-eyed fighting force that was ceaselessly guarding the city.

‘Wassat?’

‘You seen .ole Throat this morning, Nobby?’

‘Yeah, he was in Easy Street. Bought a Jumbo Sausage Surprise off him.’

‘He’s back selling sausages?’

‘Got to. Lost all his money. What’s up?’

‘Just take a look outside, will you?’ said Colon, in a level voice.

Nobby took a look.

‘Looks like – would you say it was a thousand elephants, Sarge?’

‘Yeah. About a thousand, I’d say.’

‘Thought it looked about a thousand.’

‘Man down there says Throat ordered ’em,’ said Sergeant Colon.

‘Get away? He’s going into this Jumbo Sausage thing in a big way, then?’

Their eyes met. Nobby’s grin was evil.

‘Oh, go on,’ he said. ‘Let me go and tell him. Please?’

Click . . .

Thomas Silverfish, alchemist and failed click producer, stirred the contents of a crucible and sighed wistfully.

A lot of gold had been left behind in Holy Wood, for anyone who had the nerve to go and dig for it. For those who hadn’t, and Silverfish wouldn’t hesitate to put himself first among that number, there were the old tried-and-tested or, to put it another way, tried-and-repeatedly-failed methods of wealth production. So now he was back home, picking up where he had left off.

‘Any good?’ said Peavie, who had dropped in to commiserate.

‘Well, it’s silvery,’ said Silverfish doubtfully. ‘And it’s sort of metallic. And it’s heavier than lead. You have to cook up a ton of ore, too. Funny thing is, I thought I was on to something this time. I really thought that this time we were on the way to a new, clear future . . . ‘

‘What are you going to call it?’ said Peavie.

‘Oh, I don’t know. It’s probably not worth naming,’ said Silverfish.

‘Ankhmorporkery? Silverfishium? Notleadium?’ said Peavie.

‘Uselessium, more like,’ said Silverfish. ‘I’m giving up on it and going back to something more sensible.’

Peavie peered into the furnace.

‘It doesn’t go boom, does it?’ he said.

Silverfish gave him a withering look.

‘This stuff?’ he said. ‘Whatever gave you that idea?’

Click . . .

It was pitch dark under the rubble.

It had been pitch dark for a long time.

Gaspode could feel the tons of stone above this little space. You didn’t need any special doggy senses for that.

He dragged himself over to where a pillar had smashed down into the cellar.

Laddie raised his head with difficulty, licked Gaspode’s face, and managed the faintest of barks.

‘Good boy Laddie . . . Good boy Gaspode . . . ‘

‘Good boy Laddie,’ Gaspode whispered.

Laddie’s tail thumped once or twice on the stones. Then he whimpered for a while, with longer and longer pauses between the sounds.

Then there was a faint noise. Just like bone on stone.

Gaspode’s ears twitched. He looked up at the advancing figure, visible even in utter darkness because it Would forever be darker than mere blackness alone could manage.

He pulled himself upright, the hairs rising along his back, and growled.

‘Another step and I’ll have your leg off and bury it,’ he said.

A skeletal hand reached out and tickled him behind the ears.

There was a faint barking from the darkness.

‘Good boy Laddie!’

Gaspode, tears pouring down his face, gave Death an apologetic grin.

‘Pathetic, isn’t it?’ he said hoarsely.

I WOULDN’T KNOW. I’VE NEVER BEEN THAT MUCH OF A DOG PERSON, said Death.

‘Oh? Come to that, I’ve never liked the idea of dyin’,’ said Gaspode. ‘We are dyin’, ain’t we?’

YES.

‘Not surprised, really. Story of my life, dyin’,’ said Gaspode. ‘It’s just that I fought’, he added, hopefully, ‘that there was a special Death for dogs. A big black dog, maybe’ .

No, said Death.

‘Funny that,’ said Gaspode. ‘I heard where every type of animal had its own ghastly dark spectre what come for it at the end. No offence meant,’ he added quickly. ‘I fought there was this big dog that trots up to you an’ says, “OK, Gaspode, your work is done and so forth, lay down your

weary burden, style offing, and follow me to a land flowin’ with steak and offal.” ‘

NO. THERE’S JUST ME, said Death. THE FINAL FRONTIER.

‘How come I’m seein’ you, if I ain’t dead yet?’

YOU’RE HALLUCINATING.

Gaspode looked alert. ‘Am I? Cor.’

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