Jingo - Terry Pratchett [84]
There weren’t any fish.
At a time like this Solid Jackson would have even been prepared to eat Curious Squid.
But the sea was empty. And it smelled wrong. It fizzed gently. Solid could see little bubbles breaking on the surface, which burst with a smell of sulfur and rotting eggs. He guessed that the rise of the land must have stirred up a lot of mud. It was bad enough at the bottom of a pond, all those frogs and bugs and things, and this was the sea—
He tried hard to reverse that train of thought, but it kept on rising from the depths like a…like a…
Why were there no fish? Oh, there’d been the storm last night, but generally you got better fishing in these parts after a storm because it…stirred…up…
The raft rocked.
He was beginning to think it might be a good idea to go home, but that’d mean leaving the land to the Klatchians, and that’d happen over his dead body.
The treacherous internal voice said: Funnily enough, they never found Mr. Hong’s body. Not most of the important bits, anyway.
“I think, think, I think we’ll be getting back now,” he said to his son.
“Oh, Dad,” said Les. “Another dinner of limpets and seaweed?”
“Nothing wrong with seaweed,” said Jackson. “It’s full of nourishing…seaweed. ’s got iron in it. Good for you, iron.”
“Why don’t we boil an anchor, then?”
“None of your lip, son.”
“The Klatchians have got bread,” said Les. “They brought flour with them. And they’ve got firewood.” This was a sore point with Jackson. Efforts to make seaweed combust had not been successful.
“Yeah, but you wouldn’t like their bread,” said Jackson. “It’s all flat and got no proper crust—”
A breeze blew the scent of baking over the water. It carried a hint of spices.
“They’re baking bread! On our property!”
“Well, they say it’s their—”
Jackson grabbed the piece of broken plank he used as an oar and began to scull furiously toward the shore. The fact that this only made the raft go round in circles added to his fury.
“They bloody move in right next to us and all we get is the stink of foreign food—”
“Why’s your mouth watering, Dad?”
“And how come they’ve got wood, may I ask?”
“I think the current takes the driftwood to their side of the island, Dad—”
“See? They’re stealing our driftwood! Our damn driftwood! Hah! Well, we’ll—”
“But I thought we agreed that the bit over there was theirs, and—”
Jackson had finally remembered how to propel a raft with one oar.
“That wasn’t an agreement,” he said, creating foam as the oar thrashed back and forth, “that was just an…an arrangement. It’s not as if they created the driftwood. It just turned up. Accident of geography. It is a natural resource, right? It don’t belong to anyone—”
The raft hit something which made a metallic sound. But they were still a hundred yards from the rocks.
Something else, long and bent at the end, rose up with a creaking noise. It twisted around until it pointed at Jackson.
“Excuse me,” it said, in a tinny yet polite voice, “but this is Leshp, isn’t it?”
Jackson made a sound in his throat.
“Only,” the thing went on, “the water’s a little cloudy and I thought we might have been going the wrong way for the last twenty minutes.”
“Leshp!” squeaked Jackson, in an unnaturally high-pitched voice.
“Ah, good. Thank you so much. Good day to you.”
The appendage sank slowly into the sea again. The last sounds from it, erupting on the surface in a cloud of bubbles, were, “…don’t forget to put the cork in—You’ve forgot to put the cor—”
The bubbles stopped.
After a while Les said, “Dad, what was—?”
“It wasn’t anything!” snapped his father. “That sort of thing doesn’t happen!”
The raft shot forward. You could have waterski’d behind it.
Another important thing about the Boat, thought Sergeant Colon gloomily as they slipped back into a blue twilight, was that you couldn’t bale out the bilges. It was the bilges.
He was pedaling with his feet in water and he was suffering simultaneously from claustrophobia