Great silent streamers of blue and green flame hung from the roof of the world. Curtains of octarine glow danced slowly and majestically over the Disc as the fire of the Aurora Coriolis,{11} the vast discharge of magic from the Disc’s standing field, earthed itself in the green ice mountains of the Hub.
The central spire of Cori Celesti, home of the gods, was a ten mile high column of cold coruscating fire.
It was a sight seen by few people, and Mort wasn’t one of them, because he lay low over Binky’s neck and clung on for his life as they pounded through the night sky ahead of a comet trail of steam.
There were other mountains clustered around Cori. By comparison they were no more than termite mounds, although in reality each one was a majestic assortment of cols, ridges, faces, cliffs, screes and glaciers that any normal mountain range would be happy to associate with.
Among the highest of them, at the end of a funnel-shaped valley, dwelt the Listeners.
They were one of the oldest of the Disc’s religious sects, although even the gods themselves were divided as to whether Listening was really a proper religion, and all that prevented their temple being wiped out by a few well-aimed avalanches was the fact that even the gods were curious as to what it was that the Listeners might Hear. If there’s one thing that really annoys a god, it’s not knowing something.
It’ll take Mort several minutes to arrive. A row of dots would fill in the time nicely, but the reader will already be noticing the strange shape of the temple—curled like a great white ammonite at the end of the valley—and will probably want an explanation.
The fact is that the Listeners are trying to work out precisely what it was that the Creator said when He made the universe.
The theory is quite straightforward.
Clearly, nothing that the Creator makes could ever be destroyed, which means that the echoes of those first syllables must still be around somewhere, bouncing and rebounding off all the matter in the cosmos but still audible to a really good listener.
Eons ago the Listeners had found that ice and chance had carved this one valley into the perfect acoustic opposite of an echo valley, and had built their multi-chambered temple in the exact position that the one comfy chair always occupies in the home of a rabid hi-fi fanatic. Complex baffles caught and amplified the sound that was funnelled up the chilly valley, steering it ever inwards to the central chamber where, at any hour of the day or night, three monks always sat.
Listening.
There were certain problems caused by the fact that they didn’t hear only the subtle echoes of the first words, but every other sound made on the Disc. In order to recognise the sound of the Words, they had to learn to recognise all the other noises. This called for a certain talent, and a novice was only accepted for training if he could distinguish by sound alone, at a distance of a thousand yards, which side a dropped coin landed. He wasn’t actually accepted into the order until he could tell what colour it was.
And although the Holy Listeners were so remote, many people took the extremely long and dangerous path to their temple, travelling through frozen, troll-haunted lands, fording swift icy rivers, climbing forbidding mountains, trekking across inhospitable tundra, in order to climb the narrow stairway that led into the hidden valley and seek with an open heart the secrets of being.
And the monks would cry unto them, “Keep the bloody noise down!”
Binky came through the mountain tops like a white blur, touching down in the snowy emptiness of a courtyard made spectral by the disco light from the sky. Mort leapt from his back and ran through the silent cloisters to the room where the 88th abbot lay dying, surrounded by his devout followers.
Mort’s footsteps boomed as he hurried across the intricate mosaic floor. The monks themselves wore woollen overshoes.
He reached the bed and waited for a moment, leaning on the scythe, until he could get his breath back.
The abbot, who was small and totally bald and had more wrinkles than a sackful of prunes, opened his eyes.
“You’re late,” he whispered, and died.
Mort swallowed, fought for breath, and brought the scythe around in a slow arc. Nevertheless, it was accurate enough; the abbot sat up, leaving his corpse behind.
“Not a moment too soon,” he said, in a voice only Mort could hear. “You had me worried for a moment there.”
“Okay?” said Mort. “Only I’ve got to rush—”
The abbot swung himself off the bed and walked towards Mort through the ranks of his bereaved followers.
“Don’t rush off,” he said. “I always look forward to these talks. What’s happened to the usual fellow?”
“Usual fellow?” said Mort, bewildered.
“Tall chap. Black cloak. Doesn’t get enough to eat, by the look of him,” said the abbot.
“Usual fellow? You mean Death?” said Mort.
“That’s him,” said the abbot, cheerfully. Mort’s mouth hung open.
“Die a lot, do you?” he managed.{12}
“A fair bit. A fair bit. Of course,” said the abbot, “once you get the hang of it, it’s only a matter of practice.”
“It is?”
“We must be off,” said the abbot. Mort’s mouth snapped shut.
“That’s what I’ve been trying to say,” he said.
“So if you could just drop me off down in the valley,” the little monk continued placidly. He swept past Mort and headed for the courtyard. Mort stared at the floor for a moment, and then ran after him in a way which he knew to be extremely unprofessional and undignified.
“Now look—” he began.
“The other one had a horse called Binky, I remember,” said the abbot pleasantly. “Did you buy the round off him?”
“The round?” said Mort, now completely lost.
“Or whatever. Forgive me,” said the abbot, “I don’t really know how these things are organised, lad.”
“Mort,” said Mort, absently. “And I think you’re supposed to come back with me, sir. If you don’t mind,” he added, in what he hoped was a firm and authoritative manner. The monk turned and smiled pleasantly at him.
“I wish I could,” he said. “Perhaps one day. Now, if you could give me a lift as far as the nearest village, I imagine I’m being conceived about now.”
“Conceived? But you’ve just died!” said Mort.
“Yes, but, you see, I have what you might call a season ticket,” the abbot explained.
Light dawned on Mort, but very slowly.
“Oh,” he said, “I’ve read about this. Reincarnation, yes?”
“That’s the word. Fifty-three times so far. Or fifty-four.”
Binky looked up as they approached and gave a short neigh of recognition when the abbot patted his nose. Mort mounted up and helped the abbot up behind him.
“It must be very interesting,” he said, as Binky climbed away from the temple. On the absolute scale of small talk this comment must rate minus quite a lot, but Mort couldn’t think of anything better.
“No, it mustn’t,” said the abbot. “You think it must be because you believe I can remember all my lives, but of course I can’t. Not while I’m alive, anyway.”
“I hadn’t thought of that,” Mort conceded.
“Imagine toilet training fifty times.”
“Nothing to look back on, I imagine,” said Mort.
“You’re right. If I had my time all over again I wouldn’t reincarnate. And just when I’m getting the hang of things, the lads come down from the temple looking for a boy conceived at the hour the old abbot died. Talk about unimaginative. Stop here a moment, please.”
Mort looked down.
“We’re in mid-air,” he said doubtfully.
“I won’t keep you a minute.” The abbot slid down from Binky’s back, walked a few steps on thin air, and shouted.