Small Gods (Discworld 13) - Page 254

Brutha glanced at Vorbis. He was walking unaided now, provided that you gently turned him around whenever you needed to change direction.

But even Om had to admit that the tracks were some comfort. In a way they were alive, in the same way that an echo is alive. People had been this way, not long ago. There were other people in the world. Someone, somewhere, was surviving.

Or not. After an hour or so they came across a mound beside the track. There was a helmet atop it, and a sword stuck in the sand.

“A lot of soldiers died to get here quickly,” said Brutha.

Whoever had taken enough time to bury their dead had also drawn a symbol in the sand of the mound. Brutha half?expected it to be a turtle, but the desert wind had not quite eroded the crude shape of a pair of horns.

“I don't understand that,” said Om. “They don't really believe I exist, but they go and put something like that on a grave.”

“It's hard to explain. I think it's because they believe they exist,” said Brutha. “It's because they're people, and so was he.”

He pulled the sword out of the sand.

“What do you want that for?”

“Might be useful.”

“Against who?”

“Might be useful.”

An hour later the lion, who was limping after Brutha, also arrived at the grave. It had lived in the desert for sixteen years, and the reason it had lived so long was that it had not died, and it had not died because it never wasted handy protein. It dug.

Humans have always wasted handy protein ever since they started wondering who had lived in it.

But, on the whole, there are worse places to be buried than inside a lion.

There were snakes and lizards on the rock islands. They were probably very nourishing and every one was, in its own way, a taste explosion.

There was no more water.

But there were plants . . . more or less. They looked like groups of stones, except where a few had put up a central flower spike that was a brilliant pink and purple in the dawn light.

“Where do they get the water from?”

“Fossil seas.”

“Water that's turned to stone?”

"No. Water that sank down thousands of years ago.

Right down in the bedrock."

“Can you dig down to it?”

“Don't be stupid.”

Brutha glanced from the flower to the nearest rock island.

“Honey,” he said.

“What?”

The bees had a nest high on the side of a spire of rock. The buzzing could be heard from ground level. There was no possible way up.

s just that, here and now and suddenly, Brutha felt so alone that even Vorbis was good company.

Tags: Terry Pratchett Discworld Fantasy
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