The Carpet People

Free The Carpet People by Terry Pratchett

Book: The Carpet People by Terry Pratchett Read Free Book Online
Authors: Terry Pratchett
Tags: SF
with the hands of the ones behind, and the torches made flickering shadows of giant warriors against the walls. Ghostly as it was, Snibril welcomed it. He hated the darkness under the Carpet.
    Before it reached the circle of green light the stairway opened on to a little landing, just big enough to hold them all. There was another door in the wall.
    "Where-" Glurk began.
    Brocando shook his head and put his finger to his lips.
    There were voices on the other side of the door.
     

CHAPTER 10
    There were three voices, so loud that they could only be a metre or so from the hidden door.
    Snibril tried to imagine faces. One voice was thin and whiny, already raised in complaint.
    "Another hundred? But you took fifty only a few days ago!"
    "And now we need another hundred," said a soft voice that made Snibril's hair prickle. "I advise you to sign this paper, your majesty, and my guards will gather together this hundred and be gone. They will not be slaves. Just ... assistants."
    "I don't know why you don't just take them," said the first voice sulkily.
    "But you are the king," said the second voice. "It must be right, if the king says so. Everything signed and proper."
    Snibril thought he could hear Bane grinning in the darkness.
    "But no-one ever comes back," said first Voice.
    The third voice was like a rumble. "They like it so much in our lands we just cannot persuade them to return," it said.
    "I don't believe you," said First Voice.
    "That does not really matter," said Second Voice. "Sign!"
    "No! I will not! I am king ... "
    "And you think that I, who made you king, can't ... unmake you?" said Second Voice. "Your majesty," it added.
    "I'll report you to Jornarileesh! I'll tell on you!" said First Voice, but he did not sound very confident.
    "Jornarileesh! You think they care what is done here?" Second Voice purred. "Sign! Or perhaps Gorash here can find some other use for your hands?"
    "Yeah," said Third Voice. "A necklace."
    Brocando turned to face the others, while the voices on the other side of the door alternately threatened and whined.
    "That's my brother," he said. "Such as he is. Here's the plan. We rush in, and we kill as many mouls as possible."
    "You think that's a clever plan?" said Bane.
    "Sounds sensible to me," said Glurk.
    "But there's hundreds in the city, aren't there?" said Bane.
    "My people will rise up and overthrow them," hissed Brocando.
    "Have they got any weapons, then?" said Bane.
    "No, but the mouls have. So they'll start by getting their weapons off them," said Brocando placidly.
    Bane groaned. "We're all going to die," he said. "This isn't tactics. This is just making-it-up-as-you-go-along."
    "Let's start now, then," said Brocando. He put his foot against the door and pushed. It moved a fraction, and then stopped.
    "What's the matter?" said Snibril.
    "There's something on the other side," hissed Brocando. "There shouldn't be. Everyone give me a hand here."
    They put their shoulders to it. It resisted for a moment, and then flew open. There was a shriek.
    For a second the hall was motionless.
    Snibril saw a throne lying on the floor. It had blocked the door. Now it lay halfway down the steps and a thin Deftmene was struggling underneath it, making pathetic little noises. Beyond it two mouls were standing, staring at the open doorway. One was big, wide-shouldered, with a pale face almost hidden in his leather helmet. He held a coiled whip in one great paw. Voice Three, Snibril thought. He even looks as though he should be called Gorash. Beside him stood a thin moul wearing a long black cloak and a grin like a wolf that's just had dinner. Voice Two, said Snibril to himself. He looks like he ought to have a name with a lot of esses in it-something you can hiss.
    Both groups stared at one another for a second.
    Then Brocando whirred forward like an enraged chicken, waving his sword. The thin moul leapt backwards and drew its own sword with disheartening swiftness. Gorash uncurled his whip, but found that

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