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Truckers

Terry Pratchett




  TERRY

  PRATCHETT

  TRUCKERS

  DEDICATION

  Another one for Rhianna

  CONTENTS

  Cover

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Concerning Nomes and Time

  Epigraph

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  Excerpt from The Bromeliad Trilogy: Diggers

  About the Author

  Other Works

  Credits

  Copyright

  Back Ad

  About the Publisher

  CONCERNING NOMES AND TIME

  NOMES ARE SMALL. On the whole, small creatures don’t live for a long time. But perhaps they do live fast.

  Let me explain.

  One of the shortest-lived creatures on the planet Earth is the adult common mayfly. It lasts for one day. The longest-living things are bristlecone pine trees, at 4,700 years and still counting.

  This may seem tough on mayflies. But the important thing is not how long your life is but how long it seems.

  To a mayfly, a single hour may last as long as a century. Perhaps old mayflies sit around complaining about how life this minute isn’t a patch on the good old minutes of long ago, when the world was young and the sun seemed so much brighter and larvae showed you a bit of respect. Whereas the trees, which are not famous for their quick reactions, may just have time to notice the way the sky keeps flickering before the dry rot and woodworm set in.

  It’s all a sort of relativity. The faster you live, the more time stretches out. To a nome, a year lasts as long as ten years do to a human. Remember it. Don’t let it concern you. They don’t. They don’t even know.

  EPIGRAPH

  In the beginning . . .

  I. There was the Site.

  II. And Arnold Bros (est. 1905) Moved upon the face of the Site, and Saw that it had Potential.

  III. For it was In the High Street.

  IV. Yea, it was also Handy for the Buses.

  V. And Arnold Bros (est. 1905) said, Let there be a Store, And Let it be a Store such as the World has not Seen hitherto;

  VI. Let the length of it be from Palmer Street even unto the Fish Market, and the Width of It, from the High Street right back to Disraeli Road;

  VII. Let it be High even Unto Five Stories plus Basement, And bright with Lifts; let there be the Eternal Fires of the Boiler Room in the subbasement and, above all other floors, let there be Customer Accounts to Order All Things;

  VIII. For this must be what all shall Know of Arnold Bros (est. 1905): All Things Under One Roof. And it shall be callèd: the Store of Arnold Bros (est. 1905).

  IX. And Thus it Was.

  X. And Arnold Bros (est. 1905) divided the Store into Departments, of Ironmongery, Corsetry, Modes and others After their Kind, and Created Humans to fill them with All Things saying, Yea, All Things Are Here. And Arnold Bros (est. 1905) said, Let there be Trucks, and Let their Colors be Red and Gold, and Let them Go Forth so that All May Know Arnold Bros (est. 1905), By Appointment, delivers All Things;

  XI. Let there be Santa’s Grottoes and Winter Sales and Summer Bargains and Back-to-School Week and All Commodities in their Season;

  XII. And into the Store came the Nomes, that it would be their Place, for Ever and Ever.

  From The Book of Nome, Basements v. I–XII

  1

  THIS IS THE story of the Going Home.

  This is the story of the Critical Path.

  This is the story of the truck roaring through the sleeping city and out into the country lanes, smashing through streetlamps and swinging from side to side and shattering shop windows and rolling to a halt when the police chased it. And when the baffled men went back to their car to report Listen, will you, listen? There isn’t anyone driving it!, it became the story of the truck that started up again, rolled away from the astonished men, and vanished into the night.

  But the story didn’t end there.

  It didn’t start there, either.

  The sky rained dismal. It rained humdrum. It rained the kind of rain that is so much wetter than normal rain, the kind of rain that comes down in big drops and splats, the kind of rain that is merely an upright sea with slots in it.

  It rained a tattoo on the old hamburger boxes and french fries wrappers in the wire basket that was giving Masklin a temporary hiding place.

  Look at him. Wet. Cold. Extremely worried. And four inches high.

  The litter bin was usually a good hunting ground, even in winter. There were often a few cold fries, sometimes even a chicken bone. Once or twice there had been a rat, too. It had been a really good day when there had last been a rat—it had kept them going for a week. The trouble was that you could get pretty fed up with rat by the third day. By the third mouthful, come to that.

  Masklin scanned the parking lot.

  And here it came, right on time, crashing through the puddles and pulling up with a hiss of brakes.

  He’d watched this truck arrive every Tuesday and Thursday morning for the last four weeks. He timed the driver’s stop carefully.

  They had exactly three minutes. To someone the size of a nome, that’s more than half an hour.

  He scrambled down through the greasy paper, dropped out of the bottom of the bin, and ran for the bushes at the edge of the lot, where Grimma and the old folk were waiting.

  “It’s here!” he said. “Come on!”

  They got to their feet, groaning and grumbling. He’d taken them through this dozens of times. He knew it wasn’t any good shouting. They just got upset and confused, and then they’d grumble some more. They grumbled about cold fries, even when Grimma warmed them up. They moaned about rat. He’d seriously thought about leaving alone, but he couldn’t bring himself to do it. They needed him. They needed someone to grumble at.

  But they were too slow. He felt like bursting into tears.

  He turned to Grimma instead.

  “Come on,” he said. “Give them a prod or something. They’ll never get moving!”

  She patted his hand.

  “They’re frightened,” she said. “You go on. I’ll bring them out.”

  There wasn’t time to argue. Masklin ran back across the soaking mud of the lot, unslinging the rope and grapnel. It had taken him a week to make the hook out of a bit of wire teased off a fence, and he’d spent days practicing; he was already swinging it around his head as he reached the truck’s wheel.

  The hook caught the tarpaulin high above him at the second try. He tested it once or twice and then, his feet scrabbling for a grip on the tire, pulled himself up.

  He’d done it before. Oh, he’d done it three or four times. He scrambled under the heavy tarpaulin and into the darkness beyond, pulling out more line and tying it as tightly as possible around one of the ropes that were as thick as his arm.

  Then he slid back to the edge, and thank goodness, Grimma was herding the old people across the gravel. He could hear them complaining about the puddles.

  Masklin jumped up and down with impatience.

  It seemed to take hours. He explained it to them millions of times, but people hadn’t been pulled up onto the backs of trucks when they were children and they didn’t see why they should start now. Old Granny Morkie insisted that all the men look the other way so that they wouldn’t see up her skirts, for example, and old Torrit whimpered so much that Masklin had to lower him again so that Grimma could blindfold him. It wasn’t so bad after he’d hauled the first few up, because they were able to help on the rope, but time still stretched out.
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  He pulled Grimma up last. She was light. They were all light, if it came to that. You didn’t get rat every day.

  It was amazing. They were all on board. He’d worked with an ear cocked for the sound of footsteps on gravel and the slamming of the driver’s door, and it hadn’t happened.

  “Right,” he said, shaking with the effort. “That’s it, then. Now if we just go—”

  “I dropped the Thing,” said old Torrit. “The Thing. I dropped it, d’you see? I dropped it down by the wheel when she was blindfoldin’ me. You go and get it, boy.”

  Masklin looked at him in horror. Then he poked his head out from under the tarpaulin, and yes, there it was, far below. A tiny black cube on the ground.

  The Thing.

  It was lying in a puddle, although that wouldn’t affect it. Nothing touched the Thing. It wouldn’t even burn.

  And then he heard the sound of slow footsteps on the gravel.

  “There’s no time,” he whispered. “There really is no time.”

  “We can’t go without it,” said Grimma.

  “Of course we can. It’s just a, a thing. We won’t need the wretched object where we’re going.”

  He felt guilty as soon as he’d said it, amazed at his own lips for uttering such words. Grimma looked horrified. Granny Morkie drew herself up to her full, quivering height.

  “May you be forgiven!” she barked. “What a terrible thing to say! You tell him, Torrit.” She nudged Torrit in the ribs.

  “If we ain’t taking the Thing, I ain’t going,” said Torrit sulkily. “It’s not—”

  “That’s your leader talkin’ to you,” interrupted Granny Morkie. “So you do what you’re told. Leave it behind, indeed! It wouldn’t be decent. It wouldn’t be right. So you go and get it, this minute.”

  Masklin stared wordlessly down at the soaking mud and then, with a desperate motion, threw the line over the edge and slid down it.

  It was raining harder now, with a touch of sleet. The wind whipped at him as he dropped past the great arc of the wheel and landed heavily in the puddle. He reached out and scooped up the Thing—

  And the truck started to move.

  First there was a roar, so loud that it went beyond sound and became a solid wall of noise. Then there was a blast of stinking air and a vibration that shook the ground.

  He pulled sharply on the line and yelled at them to pull him up, and realized that even he couldn’t hear his own voice. But Grimma or someone must have got the idea because, just as the big wheel began to turn, the rope tightened and he felt his feet lifted off the mud.

  He bounced and spun back and forth as, with painful slowness, they pulled him past the wheel. It turned only a few inches away from him, a black, chilly blur, and all the time the hammering sound battered at his head.

  I’m not scared, he told himself. This is much worse than anything I’ve ever faced, and it’s not frightening. It’s too terrible to be frightening.

  He felt as though he were in a tiny, warm cocoon, away from all the noise and the wind. I’m going to die, he thought, just because of this Thing that has never helped us at all, something that’s just a lump of stuff, and now I’m going to die and go to the Heavens. I wonder if old Torrit is right about what happens when you die. It seems a bit severe to have to die to find out. I’ve looked at the sky every night for years, and I’ve never seen any nomes up there. . . .

  But it didn’t really matter, it was all outside him, it wasn’t real—

  Hands reached down and caught him under the arms and dragged him into the booming space under the tarpaulin and, with some difficulty, pried the Thing out of his grip.

  Behind the speeding truck, fresh curtains of gray rain dragged across the empty fields.

  And, across the whole country, there were no more nomes.

  There had been plenty of them, in the days when it didn’t seem to rain so much. Masklin could remember at least forty. But then the highway had come; the stream was put in pipes underground, and the nearest hedges were dug up. Nomes had always lived in the corners of the world, and suddenly there weren’t too many corners anymore.

  The numbers started going down. A lot of this was due to natural causes, and when you’re four inches high natural causes can be anything with teeth and speed and hunger. Then Pyrrince, who was by way of being the most adventurous, led a desperate expedition across the highway one night, to investigate the woods on the other side. They never came back. Some said it was hawks, some said it was a truck. Some even said they’d made it halfway and were marooned on the central reservation between endless swishing lines of cars.

  Then the cafe had been built a little farther along the road. It had been a sort of improvement. It depended how you looked at it. If cold leftover fries and scraps of gray chicken were food, then there was suddenly enough for everyone.

  And then it was spring, and Masklin looked around and found that there were just ten of them left, and eight of those were too old to get about much. Old Torrit was nearly ten.

  It had been a dreadful summer. Grimma organized those who could still get about into midnight raids on the litter bins, and Masklin tried to hunt.

  Hunting by yourself was like dying a bit at a time. Most of the things you were hunting were also hunting you. And even if you were lucky and made a kill, how did you get it home? It had taken two days with the rat, including sitting out at night to fight off other creatures. Ten strong hunters could do anything—rob bees’ nests, trap mice, catch moles, anything—but one hunter by himself, with no one to watch his back in the long grass, was simply the next meal for everything with talons and claws.

  To get enough to eat, you needed lots of healthy hunters. But to get lots of healthy hunters, you needed enough to eat.

  “It’ll be all right in the autumn,” said Grimma, bandaging his arm where a stoat had caught it. “There’ll be mushrooms and berries and nuts and everything.”

  Well, there hadn’t been any mushrooms, and it rained so much that most of the berries rotted before they ripened. There were plenty of nuts, though. The nearest hazel tree was half a day’s journey away. Masklin could carry a dozen nuts if he smashed them out of their shells and dragged them back in a paper bag from the bin. It took a whole day to do it, risking hawks all the way, and it was just enough food for a day as well.

  And then the back of the burrow fell in, because of all the rain. It was almost pleasant to get out, then. It was better than listening to the grumbling about him not doing essential repairs. Oh, and there was the fire. You needed a fire at the burrow mouth, both for cooking and for keeping away night prowlers. Granny Morkie went to sleep one day and let it go out. Even she had the decency to be embarrassed.

  When Masklin came back that night, he looked at the heap of dead ashes for a long time and then stuck his spear in the ground and burst out laughing, and went on laughing until he started to cry. He couldn’t face the rest of them. He had to go and sit outside where, presently, Grimma brought him a shellful of nettle tea. Cold nettle tea.

  “They’re all very upset about it,” she volunteered.

  Masklin gave a hollow laugh. “Oh, yes, I can tell,” he said. “I’ve heard them: ‘You ought to bring back another cigarette-end, boy, I’m right out of tobacco,’ and ‘We never have fish these days; you might find the time to go down to the river,’ and ‘Self, self, self, that’s all you young people think about, in my day—’”

  Grimma sighed. “They do their best,” she said. “It’s just that they don’t realize. There were hundreds of us when they were young.”

  “It’s going to take days to get that fire lit,” said Masklin. They had a spectacle lens; it needed a very sunny day to work.

  He poked aimlessly in the mud by his feet.

  “I’ve had enough,” he said quietly. “I’m going to leave.”

  “But we need you!”

  “I need me, too. I mean, what kind of life is this?”

  “But they’ll die if you go away!”<
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  “They’ll die anyway,” said Masklin.

  “That’s a wicked thing to say!”

  “Well, it’s true. Everyone dies anyway. We’ll die anyway. Look at you. You spend your whole time washing and tidying up and cooking and chasing after them. You’re nearly three! It’s about time you had a life of your own.”

  “Granny Morkie was very kind to me when I was small,” said Grimma defensively. “You’ll be old one day.”

  “You think? And who will be working their fingers to the bone to look after me?”

  Masklin found himself getting angrier and angrier. He was certain he was in the right. But it felt as if he was in the wrong, which made it worse.

  He’d thought about this for a long time, and it had always left him feeling angry and awkward. All the clever ones and the bold ones and the brave ones had gone long ago, one way or the other. Good old Masklin, they’d said, stout chap, you look after the old folk and we’ll be back before you know it, just as soon as we’ve found a better place. Every time good old Masklin thought about this, he got indignant with them for going and with himself for staying. He always gave in, that was his trouble. He knew it. Whatever he promised himself at the start, he always took the way of least resistance.

  Grimma was glaring at him.

  He shrugged.

  “All right, all right, so they can come with us,” he said.

  “You know they won’t go,” she said. “They’re too old. They all grew up around here. They like it here.”

  “They like it here when there’s us around to wait on them,” muttered Masklin.

  They left it at that. There were nuts for dinner. Masklin’s had a maggot in it.