'We don' have to, Mister Vimes! That is not the question! The question is, can you outswim the waterfall? See you later, Civilized!'
Vimes looked around. In the distance the river had a foreshortened look. When he concentrated, the inner ear of terror could hear a distant roaring.
He snatched the oars again and tried to row upstream and, yes, it was possible to make headway against the current. But he couldn't keep rowing faster than wolves could run, and taking on two at once on the shore, when they were ready and waiting for him, was not an option.
If he went over the falls now, he might get to the bottom before they did.
That wasn't a good sentence, however he tried it.
He took his hands off the oars and pulled in the mooring rope. If I make a couple of loops, he thought, I can strap the axe on to my back-
He had a mental picture of what could happen to a man who plunged into the cauldron below a waterfall with a sharp piece of metal attached to his body—
G OOD MORNING .
Vimes blinked. A tall dark robed figure was now sitting in the boat.
'Are you Death?'
I T'S THE SCYTHE, ISN'T IT? P EOPLE ALWAYS NOTICE THE SCYTHE.
'I'm going to die?'
P OSSIBLY.
'Possibly? You turn up when people are possibly going to die?'
O H, YES. I T'S QUITE THE NEW THING . I T'S BECAUSE OF THE UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE.
'What's that?'
I 'M NOT SURE.
'That's very helpful.'
I THINK IT MEANS PEOPLE MAY OR MAY NOT DIE. I HAVE TO SAY IT'S PLAYING HOB WITH MY SCHEDULE, BUT I TRY TO KEEP UP WITH MODERN THOUGHT.
The roar was a lot louder now. Vimes lay back in the boat and gripped the sides.
I'm talking to Death, he thought, to take my mind off things.
'Didn't I see you last month? I was chasing
Bigger-than-Small-Dave Dave along Peach Pie Street and I fell off that ledge?'
T HAT IS CORRECT.
'But I landed on that cart. I didn't die!'
B
UT YOU
'But I thought we all had some kind of hourglass thing that said
Now the roar was almost physical. Vimes redoubled his grip on the boat.
O H, YES. YOU DO , said Death.
'But we might not?'
N O. Y OU WILL. T HERE IS NO DOUBT ABOUT THAT.
'But you said—'
Y ES, IT IS A BIT HARD TO UNDERSTAND, ISN'T IT? A PPARENTLY THERE'S THIS THING CALLED THE TROUSERS OF TIME, WHICH IS QUITE ODD, BECAUSE TIME CERTAINLY DOESN'T—
The boat went over the waterfall.
Vimes had a thunderous sensation of pounding, thudding water, followed by the echoing ringing in his ears as he hit the pool below. He fought his way to what passed for the surface and felt the current take him, slam him into a rock and then roll him away in the white water.
He flailed blindly and caught another rock, his body swinging around into a pool of comparative calm. As he fought for breath he saw a grey shape leaping from stone to stone and then another dose of hell was unleashed as it landed, snarling, beside him.
He grabbed it desperately and hung on as it struggled to bite him. A paw flailed to gain purchase on the slippery stone and then, in sudden difficulties, responding automatically... it
It was as if the wolf shape became small and a man shape became bigger, in the same space, at the same time, with a moment of horrible distortion as the two forms passed through one another.
And then there was that moment he'd noticed before, a second of confusion—
It was just long enough to ram the man's head against the rock with every ounce of strength he could scrape together. Vimes thought he heard a crack.
Then he pushed himself back out into the current and let it carry him on, while he simply struggled to stay near the surface. There was blood in the water. He'd never killed someone with his bare hands before. Truth to tell, he'd never deliberately killed at all. There had been deaths, because when people are rolling down a roof and trying to strangle one another it's sheer luck who is on top when they hit the ground. But that was
His teeth were chattering and the bright sun made his eyes ache, but he felt... good.
He wanted to beat his chest and scream, in fact.
They'd been trying to kill him!
Make them stay wolves, said a little inner voice. The more time they spent on four legs the less bright they'd become.
A deeper voice, red and raw, from much, much further inside, said, Kill 'em all!
The rage was boiling up now, fighting against the chill.
His feet touched bottom.
The river was broadening here, into something wide enough to be called a lake. A wide ledge of ice had crept out from the bank, covered here and there with blown snow. Fog drifted across it, fog with a sulphurous smell.