Wintersmith
wasn’t crying, which is not the same as, well, not crying. People walked around not crying all the time and didn’t think about it at all. But now, she did. She thought: I’m not crying….
It made sense. Of course it made sense. It was all Boffo! Every stick is a wand, every puddle is a crystal ball. No thing had any power that you didn’t put there. Shambles and skulls and wands were like…shovels and knives and spectacles. They were like…levers. With a lever you could lift a big rock, but the lever didn’t do any work.
“It has to be your choice,” said Granny. “I can’t make it for you. But it’s a small thing, and while you have it, it will be dangerous.”
“You know, I don’t think he wanted to hurt me. He was just upset,” said Tiffany.
“Really? Do you want to meet it upset again?”
Tiffany thought about that strange face. There had been the shape of a human there—more or less—but it was as if the Wintersmith had heard of the idea of being human but hadn’t found out how to do it yet.
“You think he’ll harm other people?” she asked.
“He is the Winter, child. It’s not all pretty snowflakes, is it?”
Tiffany held out her hand. “Give it back to me, please.”
Granny handed it over with a shrug.
It lay in Tiffany’s hand, on the strange white scar. It was the first thing she had ever been given that wasn’t useful, that wasn’t supposed to do something.
I don’t need this, she thought. My power comes from the Chalk. But is that what life’s going to be like? Nothing that you don’t need?
“We should tie it to something that’s light,” she said in a matter-of-fact voice. “Otherwise it will get caught on the bottom.”
After some rooting around in the grass near the bridge, she found a stick and wrapped the silver chain around it.
It was noon. Tiffany had invented the word noonlight because she liked the sound of it. Anyone could be a witch at midnight, she’d thought, but you’d have to be really good to be a witch by noonlight.
Good at being a witch, anyway, she thought now as she walked back onto the bridge. Not good at being a happy person.
She threw the necklace off the bridge.
She didn’t make a big thing of it. It would have been nice to say that the silver horse glittered in the light, seemed to hang in the air for a moment before falling the long fall. Perhaps it did, but Tiffany didn’t look.
“Good,” said Granny Weatherwax.
“Is it all over now?” said Tiffany.
“No! You danced into a story, girl, one that tells itself to the world every year. It’s the Story about ice and fire, Summer and Winter. You’ve made it wrong. You’ve got to stay to the end and make sure it turns out right. The horse is just buyin’ you time, that’s all.”
“How much time?”
“I don’t know. This hasn’t happened before. Time to think, at least. How are your feet?”
The Wintersmith was moving through the world without, in any human sense, moving at all. Wherever winter was, he was too.
He was trying to think. He’d never had to do this before, and it hurt. Up until now humans had just been parts of the world that moved around in strange ways and lit fires. Now he was spinning himself a mind, and everything was new.
A human…made of human stuff…that was what she had said.
Human stuff. He had to make himself of human stuff for the beloved. In the chill of morgues and the wreckage of ships, the Wintersmith rode the air searching for human stuff. And what was it? Dirt and water, mostly. Leave a human long enough and even the water would go, and there would be nothing but a few handfuls of dust that blew away in the wind.
So, since water did not think, all the work was being done by the dust.
The Wintersmith was logical, because ice was logical. Water was logical. Wind was logical. There were rules. So what a human was all about was…the right kind of dust!
And, while he was searching for it, he could show her how strong he was.
That evening Tiffany sat on the edge of her new bed, the clouds of sleep rising in her brain like thunderheads, and yawned and stared at her feet.
They were pink, and had five toes each. They were pretty good feet, considering.
Normally when people met you, they’d say things like “How are you?” Nanny Ogg had just said: “Come on in. How’s your feet?”
Suddenly everyone was interested in her feet. Of course, feet were important, but what did people expect to happen to them?
She swung
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher