Lu-Tze waved a cautionary hand at Susan. Lobsang's mind was already on the way to somewhere else, and now she wondered how large a space it was occupying. His eyes were closed.
“The… spinners that axe left… Can you move the jumpers?” he said.
“I can show the ladies how to,” said Lu-Tze.
“Are there not monks who know how to do this?” said Unity.
“It would take too long. I am an apprentice to a sweeper. They would run around asking questions,” said Lobsang. “You will not.”
“He's got a point right enough,” said Lu-Tze. “People will start saying ‘What is the meaning of this?’ and ‘Bikkit!’, and we'll never get anything done.”
Lobsang looked down at the bobbins and then across at Susan.
“Imagine… that there is a jigsaw, all in pieces. But… I am very good at spotting edges and shapes.
“Yes. I think so.”
“Good. Everything I have just said is nonsense. It bears no resemblance to the truth of the matter in any way at all. But it is a lie that you can… understand, I think. And then, afterwards—”
“You're going to go, aren't you,” said Susan. It was not a question.
“I will not have enough power to stay,” said Lobsang.
“You need power to stay human?” said Susan. She hadn't been aware of the rise of her heart, but now it was sinking.
“Yes. Even trying to
Lobsang stared into the air above the little wooden bobbins. Things twinkled. There were complex curves and spirals, brilliant against the blackness.
It was like looking at a clock in pieces, with every wheel and spring carefully laid out in the dark in front of him. Dismantled, controllable, every part of it understood… but a number of small but important things had gone
“You've only got about a third of the spinners,” came the voice of Lu-Tze. “The rest are smashed.”
Lobsang couldn't see him. There was only the glittering show before his eyes.
“That… is true, but
Susan looked around at the sudden grinding noise and saw row after row of columns rising out of the dust and debris. They stood like lines of soldiers, rubble cascading from them.
“Good trick!” Lu-Tze shouted to Susan's ear, above the thunder. “Feeding time into the spinners themselves! Theoretically possible, but we never managed to do it!”
“Do you know what he's actually going to
“Yeah! Snatch the extra time out of bits of history that are too far ahead and shove it into the bits that have fallen behind!”
“Sounds simple!”
“Just one problem!”
“What?”
“Can't do it! Losses!” Lu-Tze snapped his fingers, trying to explain time dynamics to a non-initiate. “Friction! Divergence! All sorts of stuff! You can't
There was a sudden bright blue glow around Lobsang. It flickered over the board, and then snapped across the air to form arcs of light leading to all the Procrastinators. It crawled between the carved symbols and clung to them in a thickening layer, like cotton winding on a reel.
Lu-Tze looked at the whirling light and the shadow within it, almost lost against the glow.
“—at least,” he added, “until now.”
The spinners wound up to their working speed and then went faster, under the lash of the light. It poured across the cavern in a solid, unending stream.
Flames licked around the bottom of the nearest cylinder. The base was glowing, and the noise from its stone bearing was joining a rising, cavern-filling scream of stone in distress.
Lu-Tze shook his head. “You, Susan, buckets of water from the wells! You, Miss Unity, you follow her with the grease pails!”
“And what are you going to do?” said Susan, grabbing two buckets.
“I'm going to worry like hell and that's not an easy job, believe me!”
Steam built up then, and there was a smell of burning butter. There was no time for anything but to run from the wells to the nearest spitting bearing and back, and there was not enough time even for that.