Small Gods (Discworld 13)
“That kind?” Brutha finished.
“It won't take any notice of us once it's fed,” said Om.
o;It's not even a very big snake,” said Brutha.
“And then while you're writhing there in indescrib?able agony, you imagine all the things you would have done to that damn snake if you'd got to it first,” said Om. “Well, your wish has been granted. Don't give any to Vorbis,” he added.
“He's running a bad fever. He keeps muttering.”
“Do you really think you'll get him back to the Cit?adel and they'll believe you?” said Om.
“Brother Nhumrod always said I was very truth?ful,” said Brutha. He smashed the rock on the cave wall to create a crude cutting edge, and gingerly started dismembering the snake. “Anyway, there isn't anything else I can do. I couldn't just leave him.”
“Yes you could,” said Om.
“To die in the desert?”
“Yes. It's easy. Much easier than not leaving him to die in the desert.”
No.
“This is how they do things in Ethics, is it?” said Om sarcastically.
“I don't know. It's how I'm doing it.”
The Unnamed Boat bobbed in a gully between the rocks. There was a low cliff beyond the beach. Simony climbed back down it, to where the philosophers were huddling out of the wind.
“I know this area,” he said. “We're a few miles from the village where a friend lives. All we have to do is wait till nightfall.”
“Why're you doing all this?” said Urn. “I mean, what's the point?”
“Have you ever heard of a country called Istanzia?” said Simony. “It wasn't very big. It had nothing anyone wanted. It was just a place for people to live.”
“Omnia conquered it fifteen years ago,” said Didactylos.
“That's right. My country,” said Simony. “I was just a kid then. But I won't forget. Nor will others. There's lots of people with a reason to hate the Church.”
“I saw you standing close to Vorbis,” said Urn. “I thought you were protecting him.”
“Oh, I was, I was,” said Simony. “I don't want anyone to kill him before I do.”
Didactylos wrapped his toga around himself and shivered.
The sun was riveted to the copper dome of the sky. Brutha dozed in the cave. In his own corner, Vorbis tossed and turned.
Om sat waiting in the cave mouth.
Waited expectantly.
Waited in dread.
And they came.
They came out from under scraps of stone, and from cracks in the rock. They fountained up from the sand, they distilled out of the wavering sky. The air was fiIled with their voices, as faint as the whispering of gnats.
Om tensed.
The language he spoke was not like the language of the high gods. It was hardly language at all. It was a mere modulation of desires and hungers, without nouns and with only a few verbs .