Eric - Terry Pratchett [13]
Contrary to general belief, the Tezumen did invent the wheel. They just had radically different ideas about what you used it for.
It was the first chariot Rincewind had ever seen that was pulled by llamas. That wasn’t what was odd about it. What was odd about it was that it was being carried by people, two holding each side of the axle and running after the animals, their sandaled feet flapping on the flagstones.
“Do you think it’s got the tribute in it?” said Eric.
All the leading chariot seemed to contain, apart from the driver, was a squat, basically cube-shaped man wearing a puma-skin outfit and a feather headdress.
The runners panted to a halt, and Rincewind saw that each man wore what would probably be described as a primitive sword, made by affixing shards of obsidian into a wooden club. They looked to him no less deadly than sophisticated, extremely civilized swords. In fact, they looked worse.
“Well?” said Eric.
“Well what?” said Rincewind.
“Tell him to give me my tribute.”
The fat man got down ponderously, marched over to Eric and, to Rincewind’s extreme surprise, groveled.
Rincewind felt something claw its way up his back and onto his shoulder, where a voice like a sheet of metal being torn in half said, “That’s better. Very wossname, comfy. If you try and knock me off, demon, you can wossname your ear goodbye. What a turn up for the scrolls, eh? They seemed to be expecting him.”
“Why do you keep saying wossname?” said Rincewind.
“Limited wossname. Doodah. Thingy. You know. It’s got words in it,” said the parrot.
“Dictionary?” said Rincewind. The passengers in the other chariots had got out and were also groveling to Eric, who was beaming like an idiot.
The parrot considered this.
“Yeah, probably,” it said. “I’ve got to wing it to you,” it went on. “I thought you were a bit of a wossname at the start, but you seem to be delivering the wossname.”
“Demon?” said Eric, airily.
“Yes?”
“What are they saying? Can’t you speak their language?”
“Er, no,” said Rincewind. “I can read it, though,” he called out, as Eric turned away. “If you could just sort of make signs for them to write it down…”
It was around noon. In the jungle behind Rincewind creatures whooped and gibbered. Mosquitoes the size of hummingbirds whined around his head.
“Of course,” he said, for the tenth time, “They’ve never really got around to inventing paper.”
The stonemason stood back, handed the latest blunted obsidian chisel to his assistant, and gave Rincewind an expectant look.
Rincewind stood back and examined the rock critically.
“It’s very good,” he said. “I mean, it’s a very good likeness. You’ve got his hairstyle and everything. Of course, he’s not as, er, square as that normally but, yes, very good. And here’s the chariot and there’s the step-pyramids. Yes. Well, it looks as though they want you to go to the city with them,” he said to Eric.
“Tell them yes,” said Eric firmly.
Rincewind turned to the headman.
“Yes,” he said.
“¿[Hunched-figure-in-triple-feathered-headdress-over-three-dots]?”
Rincewind sighed. Without saying a word, the stonemason put a fresh stone chisel into his unresisting fingers and manhandled a new slab of granite into position.
One of the problems of being a Tezuman, apart from having a god like Quezovercoatl, is that if you unexpectedly need to order an extra pint of milk tomorrow you probably should have started writing the note for the milkman last month. Tezumen are the only people who beat themselves to death with their own suicide notes.
It was late afternoon by the time the chariot trotted into the slab city around the largest pyramid, between lines of cheering Tezumen.
“This is more like it,” said Eric, graciously acknowledging the cheers. “They’re very pleased to see us.”
“Yes,” said Rincewind, gloomily. “I wonder why?”
“Well, because I’m the new ruler, of course.”
“Hmm.” Rincewind glanced sidelong at the parrot, who had been unnaturally silent for some time and was now cowering up against his ear like an elderly spinster