Pyramids
Teppicymon XXVII opened his eyes. It’s bloody dark in here, he thought.
And he realized that he could hear his own heart beating, but muffled, and some way off.
And then he remembered.
He was alive. He was alive again . And, this time, he was in bits.
Somehow, he’d assumed that you got assembled again once you got to the Netherworld, like one of Grinjer’s kits.
Get a grip on yourself, man, he thought.
It’s up to you to pull yourself together.
Right, he thought. There were at least six jars. So my eyes are in one of them. Getting the lid off would be favorite, so we can see what we’re at.
That’s going to involve arms and legs and fingers.
This is going to be really tricky.
He reached out, tentatively, with stiff joints, and located something heavy. It felt as though it might give, so he moved his other arm into position, with a great deal of awkwardness, and pushed.
There was a distant thump, and a definite feeling of openness above him. He sat up, creaking all the way.
The sides of the ceremonial casket still hemmed him in, but to his surprise he found that one slow arm movement brushed them out of the way like paper. Must be all the pickle and stuffing, he thought. Gives you a bit of weight.
He felt his way to the edge of the slab, lowered his heavy legs to the ground and, after a pause out of habit to wheeze a bit, took the first tottering lurch of the newly un-dead.
It is astonishingly difficult to walk with legs full of straw when the brain doing the directing is in a pot ten feet away, but he made it as far as the wall and felt his way along it until a crash indicated that he’d reached the shelf of jars. He fumbled the lids of the first one and dipped his hand gently inside.
It must be brains, he thought manically, because semolina doesn’t squidge like that. I’ve collected my own thoughts, haha.
He tried one or two more jars until an explosion of daylight told him he’d found the one with his eyes in it. He watched his own bandaged hand reach down, growing gigantic, and scoop them up carefully.
That seems to be the important bits, he thought. The rest can wait until later. Maybe when I need to eat something, and so forth.
He turned around, and realized that he was not alone. Dil and Gern were watching him. To squeeze any further into the far corner of the room, they would have needed triangular backbones.
“Ah. Ho there, good people,” said the king, aware that his voice was a little hollow. “I know so much about you, I’d like to shake you by the hand.” He looked down. “Only they’re rather full at the moment,” he added.
“Gkkk,” said Gern.
“You couldn’t do a bit of reassembly, could you?” said the king, turning to Dil. “Your stitches seem to be holding up nicely, by the way. Well done, that man.”
Professional pride broke through the barrier of Dil’s terror.
“You’re alive?” he said.
“That was the general idea, wasn’t it?” said the king.
Dil nodded. Certainly it was. He’d always believed it to be true. He’d just never expected it ever actually to happen. But it had, and the first words, well, nearly the first words that had been said were in praise of his needlework. His chest swelled. No one else in the Guild had ever been congratulated on their work by a recipient.
“There,” he said to Gern, whose shoulderblades were making a spirited attempt to dig their way through the wall. “Hear what has been said to your master.”
The king paused. It was beginning to dawn on him that things weren’t quite right here. Of course the Netherworld was like this world, only better, and no doubt there were plenty of servants and so forth. But it seemed altogether far too much like this world. He was pretty sure that Dil and Gern shouldn’t be in it yet. Anyway, he’d always understood that the common people had their own Netherworld, where they would be more at ease and could mingle with their own kind and wouldn’t feel awkward and socially out of place.
“I say,” he said. “I may have missed a bit here. You’re not dead, are you?”
Dil didn’t answer immediately. Some of the things he’d seen so far today had made him a bit uncertain on the subject. In the end, though, he was forced to admit that he probably was alive.
“Then what’s happening?” said the king.
“We don’t know, O king,” said Dil. “Really we don’t. It’s all come true, O font of waters!”
“What
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