Discworld 26 - The Thief of Time

Discworld 26 - The Thief of Time by Terry Pratchett Read Free Book Online

Book: Discworld 26 - The Thief of Time by Terry Pratchett Read Free Book Online
Authors: Terry Pratchett
speck of dust on them; the files,
hammers and pliers were ranged according to size, and the items on the work bench were
positioned with geometrical exactitude.
He pulled open a drawer. Screws were laid in perfect rows.
He looked around at the walls. They were bare, except for the shelves of clocks. This was
surprising - even Dribbling Doctor Vibes had had a calendar on the wall, which added a
splash of colour. Admittedly it was from the Acid Bath and Restraint Co., in Ugli, and the
colour it splashed was mostly red, but at least it showed some recognition of a world outside
the four walls.
Igor was puzzled. Igor had never worked for a sane person before. He'd worked for a number
of... well, the world called them madmen, and he'd worked for several normal people, in that
they only indulged in minor and socially acceptable insanities, but he couldn't recall ever
working for a completely sane person.
Obviously, he reasoned, if sticking screws up your nose was madness, then numbering them
and keeping them in careful compartments was sanity, which was the opposite-
Ah. No. It wasn't, was it... ?
He smiled. He was beginning to feel quite at home already.
Tick
Lu-Tze the sweeper was in his Garden of Five Surprises, carefully cultivating his mountains.
His broom leaned against the hedge.
Above him, looming over the temple gardens, the big stone statue of Wen the Eternally
Surprised sat with its face locked in its permanent wide-eyed expression of, yes, pleasant
surprise.
     
 
  
As a hobby, mountains appeal to those people who in normal circumstances are said to have a
great deal of time on their hands. Lu-Tze had no time at all. Time was something that largely
happened to other people; he viewed it in the same way that people on the shore viewed the
sea. It was big and it was out there, and sometimes it was an invigorating thing to dip a toe
into, but you couldn't live in it all the time. Besides, it always made his skin wrinkle.
At the moment, in the never-ending, ever-recreated moment of this peaceful, sunlit little
valley, he was fiddling with the little mirrors and shovels and morphic resonators and even
stranger devices required to make a mountain grow to no more than six inches high.
The cherry trees were still in bloom. They always were in bloom, here. A gong rang,
somewhere back in the temple. A flock of white doves took off from the monastery roof.
A shadow fell over the mountain.
Lu-Tze glanced at the person who had entered the garden. He made the perfunctory symbol
of servitude to the rather annoyed-looking boy in novice's robes.
'Yes, master?' he said.
'I am looking for the one they call Lu-Tze,' said the boy. 'Personally, I don't think he really
exists.'
'I've got glaciation,' said Lu-Tze, ignoring this. 'At last. See, master? It's only an inch long,
but already it's carving its own little valley. Magnificent, isn't it?'
'Yes, yes, very good,' said the novice, being kind to an underling. 'Isn't this the garden of Lu-
Tze?'
'You mean, Lu-Tze who is famous for his bonsai mountains?'
The novice looked from the line of plates to the little wrinkled smiling man.
'You are Lu-Tze? But you're just a sweeper! I've seen you cleaning out the dormitories! I've
seen people kick you!'
Lu-Tze, apparently not hearing this, picked up a plate about a foot across on which a small
cinder cone was smoking.
'What do you think of this, master?' he said. 'Volcanic. And it is bloody hard to do, excuse my
Klatchian.'
The novice took a step forward, and leaned down and looked directly into the sweeper's eyes.
Lu-Tze was not often disconcerted, but he was now.
'You are Lu-Tze?'
'Yes, lad. I am Lu-Tze.'
     
 
  
The novice took a deep breath and thrust out a skinny arm. It was holding a small scroll.
'From the abbot... er, venerable one!'
The scroll wobbled in the nervous hand.
'Most people call me Lu-Tze, lad. Or “Sweeper”. Until they get to know me better, some call
me “Get

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