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Pyramids

Pyramids

Titel: Pyramids Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Terry Pratchett
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him.
    “Suppose one of them had dropped it?” she snapped.
    “But…but…” He swallowed. “It’s not possible, is it? Not really? We all must have eaten something, or been out in the sun too long, or something. Because, I mean, everyone knows that the gods aren’t…I mean, the sun is a big flaming ball of gas, isn’t it, that goes around the whole world every day, and, and, and the gods…well, you know, there’s a very real need in people to believe , don’t get me wrong here—”
    Koomi, even with his head buzzing with thoughts of perfidy, was quicker on the uptake than his colleagues.
    “Get him, lads!” he shouted.
    Four priests grabbed the luckless cutlery worshipper by his arms and legs and gave him a high-speed run across the stones to the edge of the balcony, over the parapet and into the mud-colored waters of the Djel.
    He surfaced, spluttering.
    “What did you go and do that for?” he demanded. “You all know I’m right. None of you really—”
    The waters of the Djel opened a lazy jaw, and he vanished, just as the huge winged shape of Scrab buzzed threateningly over the palace and whirred off toward the mountains.
    Koomi mopped his forehead.
    “Bit of a close shave there,” he said. His colleagues nodded, staring at the fading ripples. Suddenly, Djelibeybi was no place for honest doubt. Honest doubt could get you seriously picked up and your arms and legs torn off.
    “Er,” said one of them. “Cephut’s going to be a bit upset, though, isn’t he?”
    “All hail Cephut,” they chorused. Just in case.
    “Don’t see why,” grumbled an elderly priest at the back of the crowd. “Bloody knife and fork artist.”
    They grabbed him, still protesting, and hurled him into the river.
    “All hail—” They paused. “Who was he high priest of, anyway?”
    “Bunu, the Goat-headed God of Goats? Wasn’t he?”
    “All hail Bunu, probably,” they chorused, as the sacred crocodiles homed in like submarines.
    Koomi raised his hands, imploring. It is said that the hour brings forth the man. He was the kind of man that is brought forth by devious and unpleasant hours, and underneath his bald head certain conclusions were beginning to unfold, like things imprisoned for years inside stones. He wasn’t yet sure what they were, but they were broadly on the subject of gods, the new age, the need for a firm hand on the helm, and possibly the inserting of Dios into the nearest crocodile. The mere thought filled him with forbidden delight.
    “Brethren!” he cried.
    “Excuse me ,” said the priestess of Sarduk.
    “And sistren—”
    “Thank you .”
    “—let us rejoice!” The assembled priests stood in total silence. This was a radical approach which had not hitherto occurred to them. And Koomi looked at their upturned faces and felt a thrill the like of which he had never experienced before. They were frightened out of their wits, and they were expecting him— him —to tell them what to do.
    “Yea!” he said. “And, indeed, verily, the hour of the gods—”
    “— and goddesses—”
    “—yes, and goddesses, is at hand. Er.”
    What next? What, when you got right down to it, was he going to tell them to do? And then he thought: it doesn’t matter. Provided I sound confident enough. Old Dios always drove them, he never tried to lead them. Without him they’re wandering around like sheep.
    “And, brethren—and sistren, of course—we must ask ourselves, we must ask ourselves, we, er, yes.” His voice waxed again with new confidence. “Yes, we must ask ourselves why the gods are at hand. And without doubt it is because we have not been assiduous enough in our worship, we have, er, we have lusted after graven idols.”
    The priests exchanged glances. Had they? How did you do it, actually?
    “And, yes, and what about sacrifices? Time was when a sacrifice was a sacrifice, not some messing around with a chicken and flowers.”
    This caused some coughing in the audience.
    “Are we talking maidens here?” said one of the priests uncertainly.
    “ Ahem .”
    “And inexperienced young men too, certainly,” he said quickly. Sarduk was one of the older goddesses, whose female worshippers got up to no good in sacred groves; the thought of her wandering around the landscape somewhere, bloody to the elbows, made the eyes water.
    Koomi’s heart thumped. “Well, why not?” he said. “Things were better then, weren’t they?”
    “But, er, I thought we stopped all that sort of

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