He relaxed slightly. Now, provided there was still enough water to make the weight drop . . .
“Both of you-stand still.”
He looked around, his mind going numb.
There was a heavy-set man in a black robe standing in the stricken doorway. Behind him, a guard held a sword in a meaningful manner.
“Who are you? Why are you here?”
Urn hesitated for only a moment.
He gestured with his spanner.
“Well, it's the seating, innit,” he said. “You've got shocking seepage around the seating. Amazing it holds together.”
The man stepped into the room. He glared uncer?tainly at Urn for a moment and then turned his atten?tion to the gushing pipe. And then back to Urn.
"But you're not- he began.
He spun around as Fergmen hit the guard hard with a length of broken pipe. When he turned back, Urn's spanner caught him full in the stomach. Urn wasn't strong, but it was a long spanner, and the well?known principles of leverage did the rest. He doubled up and then sagged backwards against one of the weights.
What happened next happened in frozen time. Dea?con Cusp grabbed at the weight for support. It sank down, ponderously, his extra poundage adding to the weight of the water. He clawed higher. It sank further, dropping below the lip of the pit. He sought for bal?ance again, but this time it was against fresh air, and he tumbled on top of the falling weight.
Urn saw his face staring up at him as the weight fell into the gloom.
With a lever, he could change the world. It had certainly changed it for Deacon Cusp. It had made it stop existing.
Fergmen was standing over the guard, his pipe raised.
“I know this one,” he said. "I'm going to give him a-
“Never mind about that!”
"But-
Above them linkage clanked into action. There was a distant creaking of bronze against bronze.
“Let's get out of here,” said Urn. “Only the gods know what's happening up there.”
And blows rained on the unmoving Moving Turtle's carapace.
“Damn! Damn! Damn!” shouted Simony, thump?ing it again. “Move! I command you to move! Can you understand plain Ephebian! Move!”
The unmoving machine leaked steam and sat there.
And Om pulled himself up the slope of a small hill. So it came to this, then. There was only one way to get to the Citadel now.
It was a million-to-one chance, with any luck.
And Brutha stood in front of the huge doors, oblivious to the crowd and the muttering guards. The Quisition could arrest anyone, but the guards weren't certain what happened to you if you apprehended an arch?bishop, especially one so recently favored by the Prophet.
Just a sign, Brutha thought, in the loneliness of his head.
The doors trembled, and swung slowly outwards.
Brutha stepped forward. He wasn't fully conscious now, not in any coherent way as understood by normal people. Just one part of him was still capable of looking at the state of his own mind and thinking: perhaps the Great Prophets felt like this all the time.
The thousands inside the temple were looking around in confusion. The choirs of lesser Iams paused in their chant. Brutha walked on up the aisle, the only one with a purpose in the suddenly bewildered throng.