Discworld 27 - The Last Hero

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Authors: Terry Pratchett
was a whole ten seconds before he let
go!“
”Yes, but he's throwing up more, and it's going further,“ said the Chair
as they strolled away.
The Dean looked up. It was hard to see the flying device in the shadows
of the tarpaulin-covered barge. Sheets were spread over the more
interesting bits. There were strong smells of glue and varnish. The
Librarian, who tended to get involved in things, was hanging peacefully
from a spar and hammering wooden pegs into a plank.
”It'll be balloons, you mark my words.“ said the Dean. ”I've got a mental
picture. Balloons and sails and rigging and so on. Probably an anchor,
too. Fanciful stuff“
”Over in the Agatean Empire they have kites big enough to carry men,“
said the Chair.
”Perhaps he's just building a bigger kite, then.“ In the distance Leonard
of Quirm was sitting in a pool of light, sketching. Occasionally he'd
hand a page to a waiting apprentice, who would hurry away.
”Did you see the design he came up with yesterday?“ said the Dean. ”Had
this idea that they might have to get outside the machine to repair it so
- so he designed a sort of device to let you fly around with a dragon on
your back! Said it was for emergencies!“
”What kind of emergency would be worse than having a dragon strapped to
your back?" said the Chair of Indefinite Studies.
    Discworld 27 - The Last Hero
    Discworld 27 - The Last Hero
     
 
   
“Exactly! The man lives in an ivory tower!”
“Does he? I thought Vetinari had him locked up in some attic.”
“Well, I mean, years of that is going to give a man a very limited
vision, in my humble opinion. Nothing much to do but tick the clays off
on the wall.”
“They say he paints good pictures,” said the Chair.
“Well, pictures, said the Dean dismissively.
”But they say that his are so good the eyes follow you round the room.“
”Really? What does the rest of the face do?“
”That stays where it is, I suppose.“ said the Chair of Indefinite
Studies.
”To me, this does not sound good,“ said the Dean as they wandered out
into the daylight. At his desk, while considering the problem of steering
a craft in thin air, Leonard carefullv drew a rose.
Evil Harry shut his eyes. ”This does not feel good.“ he said.
”It's easy when you get used to it.“ said Cohen. ”It's just a matter of
how you look at things.“
Evil Harry opened his eyes again.
He was standing on a broad, greenish plain, which curved down gently to
right and left. It was like being on a high, grassy ridge. It stretched
off into a cloudy distance.
”It's just a stroll,“ said Boy Willie, beside him.
”Look, my feet aren't the problem here,“ said Evil Harry. ”My feet aren't
quarrelling. It's my brain.“
”It helps if you think of the ground as being behind you,“ said Boy
Willie.
”No,“ said Evil Harry. ”It doesn't.“
The strange feature of the mountain was this: once a foot was set on it,
direction became a matter of personal choice. To put it another way,
gravity was optional. It stayed under your feet, no matter which way your
feet were pointing.
Evil Harry wondered why it was affecting only him. The Horde seemed
entirely unmoved. Even Mad Hamish's horrible wheelchair was howling along
happily in a direction which, up until now, Harry had thought of as
vertical. It was, he thought, probably because Evil Lords were generally
brighter than heroes. You needed some functioning brain cells to do the
payroll even for half a dozen henchmen. And Evil Harry's braincells were
telling him to look straight ahead and try to believe that he was
strolling along a broad, happy ridge and on no account to turn around, to
even think about turning round, because behind him was gnh gnk gnk ...
”Steady on!“ said Boy Willie, steadying his arm. ”Listen to your feet.
They know what they're about.“
To Harry's horror, Cohen chose this moment to turn around.
”Will you look at that view!“

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