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Thief of Time

Thief of Time

Titel: Thief of Time Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Terry Pratchett
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and explained that it was an Igor and in very good shape for an Igor, thank you very much. The other he’d recognized as Dr. Hopkins of the Guild of Clockmakers, who was miraculously unharmed.
    Soto did not believe in miracles, however. He was also suspicious about the fact that the ruined house was full of oranges, that Dr. Hopkins was babbling about getting sunlight out of them, and that his sparkling little abacus was telling him that something enormous had happened.
    He decided to make a report and see what the boys at Oi Dong said.
    Soto picked up the bowl and set off through the network of alleys back to his base. He didn’t bother much about concealment now; Lu-Tze’s time in the city had been a process of accelerated education for many citizens of the lurking variety. The people of Ankh-Morpork knew all about Rule One.
    At least, they had known up until now. Three figures lurched out of the dark, and one of them swung a length of wood that would have connected with Soto’s head if he hadn’t ducked.
    He was used to this sort of thing, of course. There was always the occasional slow learner, but they presented no peril that a neat slice couldn’t handle.
    He straightened up, ready to ease his way out of there, and a thick lock of black hair fell onto his shoulder, slithered down his robe, and flopped onto the ground. It made barely a sound, but the expression on his face, as Soto looked down and then up at his attackers, made them draw back.
    He could see through the blood-red rage that they all wore stained gray clothes and looked even crazier than the usual alley people; they looked like accountants gone mad.
    One of them reached out toward the begging bowl.
    Everyone has a conditional clause in their life, some little unspoken addition to the rules like, “Except when I really need to,” or “Unless no one is looking,” or, indeed, “Unless the first one was nougat.” Soto had for centuries embraced a belief in the sanctity of all life and the ultimate uselessness of violence, but his personal conditional clause was, “But not the hair. No one touches the hair, okay?”
    Even so, everyone ought to have a chance.
    The attackers recoiled as he threw the bowl against the wall, where the hidden blades buried themselves in the woodwork.
    Then it began to tick.
    Soto ran back down the alley, skidded around the corner, and then shouted, “Duck!”
    Unfortunately for the Auditors, alas, he was just a tiny, tiny fraction of a second too late—
    Tick
    Lu-Tze was in his Garden of Five Surprises when the air sparkled and fragmented and swirled into a shape in front of him.
    He looked up from his ministrations to the yodeling stick insect, who’d been off its food.
    Lobsang stood on the path. The boy was wearing a black robe dotted with stars, which blew and rattled its rags around him on this windless morning as if he was standing in the center of a gale. Which, Lu-Tze supposed, he more or less was.
    “Back again, wonder boy?” said the sweeper.
    “In a way, I never leave,” said Lobsang. “Things have gone well with you?”
    “Don’t you know?”
    “I could. But part of me has to do this the traditional way.”
    “Well, the abbot is mighty suspicious and there’s some amazing rumors flying around the place. I didn’t say much. What do I know about anything? I’m just a sweeper.”
    With that, Lu-Tze turned his attention to the sick stick insect. He’d counted to four under his breath before Lobsang said: “Please? I have to know. I believe that the fifth surprise is you. Am I right?”
    Lu-Tze cocked his head. A low noise that he’d heard for so long that he never consciously heard it anymore had changed its tone.
    “The spinners are all winding out,” he said. “They know you’re here, lad.”
    “I shall not be here long, Sweeper. Please?”
    “You just want to know my little surprise?”
    “Yes. I know nearly everything else,” said Lobsang.
    “But you are Time. What I tell you in the future you’ll know now, right?”
    “But I’m partly human. I want to stay partly human. That means doing things the right way around. Please?”
    Lu-Tze sighed and looked for a while down the avenue of cherry blossom.
    “When the pupil can beat the master, there is nothing the master cannot tell him,” he said. “Remember?”
    “Yes.”
    “Very well. The Iron Dojo should be free.”
    Lobsang looked surprised.
    “Uh…the Iron Dojo…isn’t that the one with all the sharp spikes in the

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