Eric - Terry Pratchett [9]
Its cool black surface was surrounded by an ornate frame, from which curls of greasy smoke constantly unfolded and drifted.
Your wish, master? it said.
“Show me the events around the Pseudopolis gate over the last hour,” said the King, and settled down to watch.
After a while he went and looked up the name “Rincewind” in the filing cabinet he had recently had installed, in place of the distressingly-bound old ledgers that had been there; the system still needed ironing out, though, because the bewildered demons filed everything under P for People.
Then he sat watching the flickering pictures and absentmindedly played with the stuff on his desk, to soothe his nerves.
He had any amount of desk things: notepads with magnets for paperclips, handy devices for holding pens and those tiny jotters that always came in handy, incredibly funny statuettes with slogans like “You’re the Boss!,” and little chromium balls and spirals operated by a sort of ersatz and short-lived perpetual motion. No one looking at that desk could have any doubt that they were, in cold fact, truly damned.
“I see,” said Lord Astfgl, setting a selection of shiny balls swinging with one tap of a talon.
He couldn’t remember any demon called Rincewind. On the other hand, there were millions of the wretched things, swarming all over the place with no sense of order, and he hadn’t yet had time to carry out a proper census and retire the unnecessary ones. This one seemed to have fewer appendages and more vowels in its name than most. But it had to be a demon.
Vassenego was a proud old fool, one of the elder demons who smiled and despised him and not-quite-obeyed him, just because the King’d worked hard over the millennia to get from humble beginnings to where he was today. He wouldn’t put it past the old devil to do this on purpose, just to spite him.
Well, he’d have to see about that later. Send him a memo or something. Too late to do anything about it now. He’d have to take a personal interest.
Eric Thursley was too good a prospect to pass up. Getting Eric Thursley would really annoy the gods.
Gods! How he hated the gods! He hated the gods even more than he hated the old guard like Vassenego, even more than he hated humans. He’d thrown a little soirée last week, he’d put a lot of thought into it, he wanted to show that he was prepared to let bygones be bygones, work with them for a new, better and more efficient universe. He’d called it a “Getting to Know You!” party. There’d been sausages on sticks and everything, he’d done his best to make it nice.
They hadn’t even bothered to answer the invitations. And he’d made a special point of putting RSVP on them.
“Demon?”
Eric peered around the door.
“What shape are you?” he said.
“Pretty poor shape,” said Rincewind.
“I’ve brought you some food. You do eat, do you?”
Rincewind tried some. It was a bowl of cereal, nuts, and dried fruit. He didn’t have any quarrel with any of that. It was just that somewhere in the preparation something had apparently done to these innocent ingredients what it takes a million gravities to do to a neutron star. If you died of eating this sort of thing they wouldn’t have to bury you, they would just need to drop you somewhere where the ground was soft.
He managed to swallow it. It wasn’t difficult. The trick would have been preventing it from heading downward.
“Lovely,” he choked. The parrot did a splendid impersonation of someone being sick.
“I’ve decided to let you go,” said Eric. “It’s pretty pointless keeping you, isn’t it.”
“Absolutely.”
“You haven’t any powers at all?”
“Sorry. Dead failure.”
“You don’t look too demonic, come to think about it,” said Eric.
“They never do. You can’t trust them wossnames,” chortled the parrot. It lost its balance again. “Polly want a biscuit,” it said, upside down.
Rincewind spun around. “You stay out of this, beaky!”
There was a sound behind them, like the universe