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| Thief
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Chapter One
According
to the First Scroll of Wen the Eternally Surprised, Wen stepped out of the cave
where he had received enlightenment and into the dawning light of the first
day of the rest of his life. He stared at the rising sun for some time, because
he had never seen it before.
He prodded with
a sandal the dozing form of Clodpool the Apprentice, and said: "I have seen.
Now I understand."
Then he stopped
and looked at the thing next to Clodpool.
"What is that amazing thing?" he said.
"Er . . . er .
. . it's a tree, master," said Clodpool, still not quite awake. "Remember? It
was there yesterday."
"There was no yesterday."
"Er . . . er .
. . I think there was, master," said Clodpool, struggling to his feet. "Remember?
We came up here, and I cooked a meal, and had the rind off your sklang because
you didn't want it."
"I remember yesterday,"
said Wen, thoughtfully. "But the memory is in my head now. Was yesterday real?
Or is it only the memory that is real? Truly, yesterday I was not born."
Clodpool's face
became a mask of agonized incomprehension.
"Dear stupid Clodpool,
I have learned everything," said Wen. "In the cup of the hand there is no past,
no future. There is only now. There is no time but the present. We have a great
deal to do."
Clodpool hesitated.
There was something new about his master. There was a glow in his eyes and,
when he moved, there were strange silvery-blue lights in the air, like reflections
from liquid mirrors.
"She has told me
everything," Wen went on. "I know that time was made for men, not the other
way around. I have learned how to shape it and bend it. I know how to make a
moment last forever, because it already has. And I can teach these skills even
to you, Clodpool. I have heard the heartbeat of the universe. I know the answers
to many questions. Ask me."
The apprentice
gave him a bleary look. It was too early in the morning for it to be early in
the morning. That was the only thing that he currently knew for sure."Er . .
. what does master want for breakfast?" he said.
Wen looked down
from their camp, and across the snowfields and purple mountains to the golden
daylight creating the world, and mused upon certain aspects of humanity.
"Ah," he said.
"One of the difficult ones."
*****
For something to
exist, it has to be observed.
For something to
exist, it has to have a position in time and space.
And this explains
why nine-tenths of the mass of the universe is unaccounted for.
Nine-tenths of
the universe is the knowledge of the position and direction of everything in
the other tenth. Every atom has its biography, every star its file, every chemical
exchange its equivalent of the inspector with a clipboard. It is unaccounted
for because it is doing the accounting for the rest of it, and you cannot see
the back of your own head.
Nine-tenths of
the universe, in fact, is the paperwork.And if you want the story, then remember
that a story does not unwind. It weaves. Events that start in different places
and different times all bear down on that one tiny point in space-time, which
is the perfect moment.
Suppose an emperor
was persuaded to wear a new suit of clothes whose material was so fine that,
to the common eye, the clothes weren't there. And suppose a little boy pointed
out this fact in a loud clear voice . . .
Then you have The
Story Of The Emperor Who Had No Clothes.
But if you knew
a bit more, it would be The Story Of The Boy Who Got A Well-Deserved Thrashing
From His Dad For Being Rude To Royalty, And Was Locked Up.
Or The Story Of
The Whole Crowd That Was Rounded Up By The Guards And Told "This Didn't Happen,
Okay? Does Anyone Want To Argue?"
Or it could be
a story of how a whole kingdom suddenly saw the benefits of the "new clothes,"
and developed an enthusiasm for healthy sports* in a lively and refreshing atmosphere
that gets many new adherents every year, which led to a recession caused by
the collapse of the conventional clothing industry.
It could even be
a story about The Great Pneumonia Epidemic of '09.
It all depends
on how much you know.
Suppose you'd watched
the slow accretion of snow over thousands of years as it was compressed and
pushed over the deep rock until the glacier calved its icebergs into the sea,
and you watched an iceberg drift out through the chilly waters, and you got
to know its cargo of happy polar bears and seals as they looked forward to a
brave new life in the other hemisphere where they say the ice floes are lined
with crunchy penguins, and then wham'tragedy loomed in the shape of thousands
of tons of unaccountably floating iron and an exciting soundtrack . . .
. . . you'd want
to know the whole story.
And this one starts
with desks.
This is the desk
of a professional. It is clear that their job is their life. There are . . .
human touches, but they are the human touches that strict usage allows in a
chilly world of duty and routine.
Mostly they're
on the only piece of real color in this picture of blacks and grays. It's a
coffee mug. Someone somewhere wanted to make it a jolly mug. It bears a rather
unconvincing picture of a teddy bear, and the legend "To The World's Greatest
Grandad," and the slight change in the style of lettering on the word "Grandad"
makes it clear that this has come from one of those stalls that have hundreds
of mugs like these, declaring that they're for the world's greatest Grandad/Dad/Mum/Granny/Uncle/Aunt/Blank.
Only someone whose life contains very little else, one feels, would treasure
a piece of gimcrackery like this.
It currently holds
tea, with a slice of lemon.
The bleak desktop
also contains a paper knife in the shape of a scythe, and a number of hourglasses.
Death picks up
the mug in a skeletal hand . . .
. . . and took
a sip, pausing only to look again at the wording he'd seen thousands of times
before, and then put it down.
Excerpted
from chapter 1 of THIEF OF TIME. Copyright 2001 by Terry and Lyn Pratchett.
All Rights reserved.
Thief
of Time
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British
author Terry Pratchett's latest novel, Thief of Time, is the 26th book
in his fabulously funny and bestselling Discworld series will be published in
the U.S.A. and UK this month. After an early career in journalism he became
the press officer at a nuclear power plant, all the time writing on the side.
His first novel, The Carpet People, was published in 1971. Besides the
Discworld series he has written seven books for children, two science fiction
novels, and collaborated with Neil Gaiman on the hilarious and apocalyptic Good
Omens. He was named an Officer of the British Empire "for services to literature"
in the Queen's Birthday Honours of 1998 -- next time you're in the UK check
out any bookshop and you'll see why, there are shelves devoted just to
his novels.
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