After a while Conina got a fire going, and the bonedry, salt-saturated wood sent blue and green flames roaring up under a fountain of sparks. The wizard went and sat in the dancing shadows, his back against a pile of whitened wood, wrapped in a cloud of such impenetrable gloom that even Creosote stopped complaining of thirst and shut up.
Conina woke up after midnight. There was a crescent moon on the horizon and a thin, chilly mist covered the sand. Creosote was snoring on his back. Nijel, who was theoretically on guard, was sound asleep.
Conina lay perfectly still, every sense seeking out the thing that had awoken her.
Finally she heard it again. It was a tiny, diffident clinking noise, barely audible above the muted slurp of the sea.
She got up, or rather, she slid into the vertical as bonelessly as a jellyfish, and flicked Nijel's sword out of his unresisting hand. Then she sidled through the mist without causing so much as an extra swirl.
The fire sank down further into its bed of ash. After a while Conina came back, and shook the other two awake.
âWarrizit?'
âI think you ought to see this,' she hissed. âI think it could be important.'
âI just shut my eyes for a secondâ' Nijel protested.
âNever mind about that. Come on.'
Creosote squinted around the impromptu campsite.
âWhere's the wizard fellow?'
âYou'll see. And don't make a noise. It could be dangerous.'
They stumbled after her knee-deep in vapour, towards the sea.
Eventually Nijel said, âWhy dangerousâ'
âShh! Did you hear it?'
Nijel listened.
âLike a sort of ringing noise?'
âWatch . . .'
Rincewind walked jerkily up the beach, carrying a large round rock in both hands. He walked past them without a word, his eyes staring straight ahead.
They followed him along the cold beach until he reached a bare area between the dunes, where he stopped and, still moving with all the grace of a clothes horse, dropped the rock. It made a clinking noise.
There was a wide circle of other stones. Very few of them had actually stayed on top of another one.
The three of them crouched down and watched him.
âIs he asleep?' said Creosote.
Conina nodded.
âWhat's he trying to do?'
âI think he's trying to build a tower.'
Rincewind lurched back into the ring of stones and, with great care, placed another rock on empty air. It fell down.
âHe's not very good at it, is he,' said Nijel.
âIt is very sad,' said Creosote.
âMaybe we ought to wake him up,' said Conina. âOnly I heard that if you wake up sleepwalkers their legs fall off, or something. What do you think?'
âCould be risky, with wizards,' said Nijel.
They tried to make themselves comfortable on the chilly sand.
âIt's rather pathetic, isn't it?' said Creosote. âIt's not as if he's really a proper wizard.'
Conina and Nijel tried to avoid one another's gaze. Finally the boy coughed, and said, âI'm not exactly a barbarian hero, you know. You may have noticed.'
They watched the toiling figure of Rincewind for a while, and then Conina said, âIf it comes to that, I think I lack a certain something when it comes to hairdressing.'
They both stared fixedly at the sleepwalker, busy with their own thoughts and red with mutual embarrassment.
Creosote cleared his throat.
âIf it makes anyone feel better,' he said, âI sometimes perceive that my poetry leaves a lot to be desired.'
Rincewind carefully tried to balance a large rock on a small pebble. It fell off, but he appeared to be happy with the result.
âSpeaking as a poet,' said Conina carefully, âwhat would you say about this situation?'
Creosote shifted uneasily. âFunny old thing, life,' he said.
âPretty apt.'
Nijel lay back and looked up at the hazy stars. Then he sat bolt upright.
âDid you see that?' he demanded.
âWhat?'
âIt was a sort of flash, a kind ofâ'
The hubward horizon exploded into a silent flower of colour, which expanded rapidly through all the hues of the conventional spectrum before flashing into brilliant octarine. It etched itself on their eyeballs before fading away.
After a while there was a distant rumble.
âSome sort of magical weapon,' said Conina, blinking. A gust of warm wind picked up the mist and streamed it past them.
âBlow this,' said Nijel, getting to his feet. âI'm going to wake him up, even if it means we end up carrying him.'
He reached out for Rincewind's shoulder just as something went past very high overhead, making a noise like a flock of geese on nitrous oxide. It disappeared into the desert behind them. Then there was a sound that would have set false teeth on edge, a flash of green light, and a thump.
âI'll wake him up,' said Conina. âYou get the carpet.'
She clambered over the ring of rocks and took the sleeping wizard gently by the arm, and this would have been a textbook way of waking a somnambulist if Rincewind hadn't dropped the rock he was carrying on his foot.
He opened his eyes.
âWhere am I?' he said.
âOn the beach. You've been . . . er . . . dreaming.'
Rincewind blinked at the mist, the sky, the circle of stones, Conina, the circle of stones again, and finally back at the sky.
âWhat's been happening?' he said.
âSome sort of magical fireworks.'
âOh. It's started, then.'
He lurched unsteadily out of the circle, in a way that suggested to Conina that perhaps he wasn't quite awake yet, and staggered back towards the remains of the fire. He walked a few steps and then appeared to remember something.
He looked down at his foot, and said, âOw.'
He'd almost reached the fire when the blast from the last spell reached them. It had been aimed at the tower in Al Khali, which was twenty miles away, and by now the wavefront was extremely diffuse. It was hardly affecting the nature of things as it surged over the dunes with a faint sucking noise; the fire burned red and green for a second, one of Nijel's sandals turned into a small and irritated badger, and a pigeon flew out of the Seriph's turban.
Then it was past and boiling out over the sea.
âWhat was
that
?' said Nijel. He kicked the badger, who was sniffing at his foot.
âHmm?' said Rincewind.
â
That!
'
âOh, that,' said Rincewind. âJust the backwash of a spell. They probably hit the tower in Al Khali.'
âIt must have been pretty big to affect us here.'
âIt probably was.'
âHey, that was my palace,' said Creosote weakly. âI mean, I know it was a lot, but it was all I had.'
âSorry.'
âBut there were people in the city!'
âThey're probably all right,' said Rincewind.
âGood.'
âWhatever they are.'
âWhat?'
Conina grabbed his arm. âDon't shout at him,' she said. âHe's not himself.'
âAh,' said Creosote dourly, âan improvement.'
âI say, that's a bit unfair,' Nijel protested. âI mean, he got me out of the snake pit and, well, he knows a lotâ'
âYes, wizards are good at getting you out of the sort of trouble that only wizards can get you into,' said Creosote. âThen they expect you to thank them.'
âOh, I thinkâ'
âIt's got to be said,' said Creosote, waving his hands irritably. He was briefly illuminated by the passage of another spell across the tormented sky.
âLook at that!' he snapped. âOh, he
means
well. They all mean well. They probably all think the Disc would be a better place if they were in charge. Take it from me, there's nothing more terrible than someone out to do the world a favour. Wizards! When all's said and done, what good are they? I mean, can you name me something worthwhile any wizard's done?'
âI think that's a bit cruel,' said Conina, but with an edge in her voice that suggested that she could be open to persuasion on the subject.
âWell, they make me sick,' muttered Creosote, who was feeling acutely sober and didn't like it much.
âI think we'll all feel better if we try to get a bit more sleep,' said Nijel diplomatically. âThings always look better by daylight. Nearly always, anyway.'
âMy mouth feels all horrible, too,' muttered Creosote, determined to cling on to the remnant of his anger.
Conina turned back to the fire, and became aware of a gap in the scenery. It was Rincewind-shaped.
âHe's gone!'
In fact Rincewind was already half a mile out over the dark sea, squatting on the carpet like an angry buddha, his mind a soup of rage, humiliation and fury, with a side order of outrage.
He hadn't wanted much, ever. He'd stuck with wizardry even though he wasn't any good at it, he'd always done his best, and now the whole world was conspiring against him. Well, he'd show them. Precisely who âthey' were and what they were going to be shown was merely a matter of detail.
He reached up and touched his hat for reassurance, even as it lost its last few sequins in the slipstream.
The Luggage was having problems of its own.
The area around the tower of Al Khali, under the relentless magical bombardment, was already drifting beyond that reality horizon where time, space and matter lose their separate identities and start wearing one another's clothes. It was quite impossible to describe.
Here is what it looked like.
It looked like a piano sounds shortly after being dropped down a well. It tasted yellow, and felt Paisley. It smelled like a total eclipse of the moon. Of course, nearer to the tower it got
really
weird.
Expecting anything unprotected to survive in that would be like expecting snow on a supernova. Fortunately the Luggage didn't know this, and slid through the maelstrom with raw magic crystallising on its lid and hinges. It was in a foul mood but, again, there was nothing very unusual about this, except that the crackling fury earthing itself spectacularly all over the Luggage in a multi-coloured corona gave it the appearance of an early and very angry amphibian crawling out of a burning swamp.
It was hot and stuffy inside the tower. There were no internal floors, just a series of walkways around the walls. They were lined with wizards, and the central space was a column of octarine light that creaked loudly as they poured their power into it. At its base stood Abrim, the octarine gems on the hat blazing so brightly that they looked more like holes cut through into a different universe where, in defiance of probability, they had come out inside a sun.
The vizier stood with his hands out, fingers splayed, eyes shut, mouth a thin line of concentration, balancing the forces. Usually a wizard could control power only to the extent of his own physical capability, but Abrim was learning fast.
You made yourself the pinch in the hourglass, the fulcrum on the balance, the roll around the sausage.
Do it right and you
were
the power, it was part of you and you were capable ofâ
Has it been pointed out that his feet were several inches off the ground? His feet were several inches off the ground.
Abrim was pulling together the potency for a spell that would soar away into the sky and beset the Ankh tower with a thousand screaming demons when there came a thunderous knock at the door.
There is a mantra to be said on these occasions. It doesn't matter if the door is a tent flap, a scrap of hide on a wind-blown yurt, three inches of solid oak with great iron nails in or a rectangle of chipboard with mahogany veneer, a small light over it made of horrible bits of coloured glass and a bellpush that plays a choice of twenty popular melodies that no music lover would want to listen to even after five years' sensory deprivation.
One wizard turned to another and duly said: âI wonder who that can be at this time of night?'
There was another series of thumps on the woodwork.
âThere can't be anyone alive out there,' said the other wizard, and he said it nervously, because if you ruled out the possibility of it being anyone alive that always left the suspicion that perhaps it was someone dead.
This time the banging rattled the hinges.
âOne of us had better go out,' said the first wizard.
âGood man.'
âAh. Oh. Right.'
He set off slowly down the short, arched passage.
âI'll just go and see who it is, then?' he said.
âFirst class.'
It was a strange figure that made its hesitant way to the door. Ordinary robes weren't sufficient protection in the high-energy field inside the tower, and over his brocade and velvet the wizard wore a thick, padded overall stuffed with rowan shavings and embroidered with industrial-grade sigils. He'd affixed a smoked glass visor to his pointy hat and his gauntlets, which were extremely big, suggested that he was a wicket keeper in a game of cricket played at supersonic speeds. The actinic flashes and pulsations from the great work in the main hall cast harsh shadows around him as he fumbled for the bolts.
He pulled down the visor and opened the door a fraction.
âWe don't want anyâ' he began, and ought to have chosen his words better, because they were his epitaph.
It was some time before his colleague noticed his continued absence, and wandered down the passage to find him. The door had been thrown wide open, the thaumatic inferno outside roaring against the web of spells that held it in check. In fact the door hadn't been pushed
completely
back; he pulled it aside to see why, and gave a little whimper.
There was a noise behind him. He turned around.
âWhaâ' he began, which is a pretty poor syllable on which to end a life.
High over the Circle Sea Rincewind was feeling a bit of an idiot.