Small Gods
The Great God Om, although currently the small god Om, ate a lettuce leaf.
    All my life, Brutha thought, I’ve known that the Great God Om—he made the holy horns sign in a fairly halfhearted way—was a…a…great big beard in the sky, or sometimes, when He comes down into the world, as a huge bull or a lion or…something big, anyway. Something you could look up to.
    Somehow a tortoise isn’t the same. I’m trying hard…but it isn’t the same. And hearing him talk about the SeptArchs as if they were just…just some mad old men…it’s like a dream…
    In the rain-forests of Brutha’s subconscious the butterfly of doubt emerged and flapped an experimental wing, all unaware of what chaos theory has to say about this sort of thing…
    “I feel a lot better now,” said the tortoise. “Better than I have for months.”
    “Months?” said Brutha. “How long have you been…ill?”
    The tortoise put its foot on a leaf.
    “What day is it?” it said.
    “Tenth of Grune,” said Brutha.
    “Yes? What year?”
    “Er…Notional Serpent…what do you mean, what year ?”
    “Then…three years,” said the tortoise. “This is good lettuce. And it’s me saying it. You don’t get lettuce up in the hills. A bit of plantain, a thorn bush or two. Let there be another leaf.”
    Brutha pulled one off the nearest plant. And lo, he thought, there was another leaf.
    “And you were going to be a bull?” he said.
    “Opened my eyes…my eye…and I was a tortoise.”
    “Why?”
    “How should I know? I don’t know!” lied the tortoise.
    “But you…you’re omnicognisant,” said Brutha.
    “That doesn’t mean I know everything.”
    Brutha bit his lip. “Um. Yes. It does.”
    “You sure?”
    “Yes.”
    “Thought that was omnipotent.”
    “No. That means you’re all-powerful. And you are . That’s what it says in the Book of Ossory. He was one of the Great Prophets, you know. I hope,” Brutha added.
    “Who told him I was omnipotent?”
    “You did.”
    “No I didn’t.”
    “Well, he said you did.”
    “Don’t even remember anyone called Ossory,” the tortoise muttered.
    “You spoke to him in the desert,” said Brutha. “You must remember. He was eight feet tall? With a very long beard? And a huge staff? And the glow of the holy horns shining out of his head?” He hesitated. But he’d seen the statues and the holy icons. They couldn’t be wrong.
    “Never met anyone like that,” said the small god Om.
    “Maybe he was a bit shorter,” Brutha conceded.
    “Ossory. Ossory,” said the tortoise. “No…no…can’t say I—”
    “He said that you spoke unto him from out of a pillar of flame,” said Brutha.
    “Oh, that Ossory,” said the tortoise. “Pillar of flame. Yes.”
    “And you dictated to him the Book of Ossory,” said Brutha. “Which contains the Directions, the Gateways, the Abjurations, and the Precepts. One hundred and ninety-three chapters.”
    “I don’t think I did all that,” said Om doubtfully. “I’m sure I would have remembered one hundred and ninety-three chapters.”
    “What did you say to him, then?”
    “As far as I can remember it was ‘Hey, see what I can do!’” said the tortoise.
    Brutha stared at it. It looked embarrassed, insofar as that’s possible for a tortoise.
    “Even gods like to relax,” it said.
    “Hundreds of thousands of people live their lives by the Abjurations and the Precepts!” Brutha snarled.
    “Well? I’m not stopping them,” said Om.
    “If you didn’t dictate them, who did?”
    “Don’t ask me. I’m not omnicognisant!”
    Brutha was shaking with anger.
    “And the Prophet Abbys? I suppose someone just happened to give him the Codicils, did they?”
    “It wasn’t me—”
    “They’re written on slabs of lead ten feet tall!”
    “Oh, well, it must have been me, yes? I always have a ton of lead slabs around in case I meet someone in the desert, yes?”
    “What! If you didn’t give them to him, who did?”
    “I don’t

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