“But you never pa—” Ptaclusp began, and then sagged.
“The penalties for not completing on time will, of course, be terrible,” said Dios. “The usual clause.”
Ptaclusp hadn’t the nerve left to argue. “Of course,” he said, utterly defeated. “It is an honor. Will your eminences excuse me? There are still some hours of daylight left.”
Teppic nodded.
“Thank you,” said the architect. “May your loins be truly fruitful. Saving your presence, Lord Dios.”
They heard him running down the steps outside.
“It will be magnificent. Too big, but—magnificent,” said Dios. He looked out between the pillars at the necropolic panorama on the far bank of the Djel.
“Magnificent,” he repeated. He winced once more at the stab of pain in his leg. Ah. He’d have to cross the river again tonight, no doubt of it. He’d been foolish, putting it off for days. But it would be unthinkable not to be in a position to serve the kingdom properly…
“Something wrong, Dios?” said Teppic.
“Sire?”
“You looked a bit pale, I thought.”
A look of panic flickered over Dios’s wrinkled features. He pulled himself upright.
“I assure you, sire, I am in the best of health. The best of health, sire!”
“You don’t think you’ve been overdoing it, do you?”
This time there was no mistaking the expression of terror.
“Overdoing what, sire?”
“You’re always bustling, Dios. First one up, last one to bed. You should take it easy.”
“I exist only to serve, sire,” said Dios, firmly. “I exist only to serve.”
Teppic joined him on the balcony. The early evening sun glowed on a man-made mountain range. This was only the central massif; the pyramids stretched from the delta all the way up to the second cataract, where the Djel disappeared into the mountains. And the pyramids occupied the best land, near the river. Even the farmers would have considered it sacrilegious to suggest anything different.
Some of the pyramids were small, and made of rough-hewn blocks that contrived to look far older than the mountains that fenced the valley from the high desert. After all, mountains had always been there. Words like “young” and “old” didn’t apply to them. But those first pyramids had been built by human beings, little bags of thinking water held up briefly by fragile accumulations of calcium, who had cut rocks into pieces and then painfully put them back together again in a better shape. They were
old
.
Over the millennia the fashions had fluctuated. Later pyramids were smooth and sharp, or flattened and tiled with mica. Even the steepest of them, Teppic mused, wouldn’t rate more than 1.0 on any edificeer’s scale, although some of the stelae and temples, which flocked around the base of the pyramids like tugboats around the dreadnoughts of eternity, could be worthy of attention.
Dreadnoughts of eternity, he thought, sailing ponderously through the mists of Time with every passenger traveling first class…
A few stars had been let out early. Teppic looked up at them. Perhaps, he thought, there is life somewhere else. On the stars, maybe. If it’s true that there are billions of universes stacked alongside one another, the thickness of a thought apart, then there must be people elsewhere.
But wherever they are, no matter how mightily they try, no matter how magnificent the effort, they surely can’t manage to be as godawfully stupid as us. I mean, we work at it. We were given a spark of it to start with, but over hundreds of thousands of years we’ve really improved on it.
He turned to Dios, feeling that he ought to repair a little bit of the damage.
“You can feel the age radiating off them, can’t you,” he said conversationally.
“Pardon, sire?”
“The pyramids, Dios. They’re so old.”
Dios glanced vaguely across the river. “Are they?” he said. “Yes, I suppose they are.”
“Will you get one?” said Teppic.
“A pyramid?” said Dios. “Sire, I have one already. It pleased one of your forebears to make provision for me.”
“That must have been a great honor,” said Teppic. Dios nodded graciously. The staterooms of forever were usually reserved for royalty.
“It is, of course, very small. Very plain. But it will suffice for my simple needs.”
“Will it?” said Teppic, yawning. “That’s nice. And now, if you don’t mind, I think I’ll turn in. It’s been a long day.”
Dios bowed as though he was hinged in the middle. Teppic had noticed that Dios had at least fifty finely-tuned ways of bowing, each one conveying subtle shades of meaning. This one looked like No. 3, I Am Your Humble Servant.
“And a very good day it was too, if I may say so, sire.”
Teppic was lost for words. “You thought so?” he said.
“The cloud effects at dawn were particularly effective.”
“They were? Oh. Do I have to do anything about the sunset?”
“Your majesty is pleased to joke,” said Dios. “Sunsets happen by themselves, sire. Haha.”
“Haha,” echoed Teppic.
Dios cracked his knuckles. “The trick is in the sunrise,” he said.
The crumbling scrolls of Knot said that the great orange sun was eaten every evening by the sky goddess, What, who saved one pip in time to grow a fresh sun for next morning. And Dios knew that this was so.
The
Book of Staying in The Pit
said that the sun was the Eye of Yay, toiling across the sky each day in His endless search for his toenails.
*
And Dios knew that this was so.
The secret rituals of the Smoking Mirror held that the sun was in fact a around hole in the spinning blue soap bubble of the goddess Nesh, opening into the fiery real world beyond, and the stars were the holes that the rain comes through. And Dios knew that this, also, was so.
Folk myth said the sun was a ball of fire which circled the world every day, and that the world itself was carried through the everlasting void on the back of an enormous turtle. And Dios also knew that this was so, although it gave him a bit of trouble.
And Dios knew that Net was the Supreme God, and that Fon was the Supreme God, and so were Hast, Set, Bin, Sot, Io, Dhek, and Ptooie; that Herpetine Triskeles alone ruled the world of the dead, and so did Syncope, and Silur the Catfish-Headed God, and Orexis-Nupt.
Dios was maximum high priest to a national religion that had fermented and accreted and bubbled for more than seven thousand years and never threw a god away in case it turned out to be useful. He knew that a great many mutually-contradictory things were all true. If they were not, then ritual and belief were as nothing, and if they were nothing, then the world did not exist. As a result of this sort of thinking, the priests of the Djel could give mindroom to a collection of ideas that would make even a quantum mechanic give in and hand back his toolbox.
Dios’s staff knocked echoes from the stones as he limped along in the darkness down little-frequented passages until he emerged on a small jetty. Untying the boat there, the high priest climbed in with difficulty, unshipped the oars and pushed himself out into the turbid waters of the dark Djel.
His hands and feet felt too cold. Foolish, foolish. He should have done this before.
The boat jerked slowly into midstream as full night rolled over the valley. On the far bank, in response to the ancient laws, the pyramids started to light the sky.
Lights also burned late in the house of Ptaclusp Associates, Necropolitan Builders to the Dynasties. The father and his twin sons were hunched over the huge wax designing tray, arguing.
“It’s not as if they ever
pay
,” said Ptaclusp IIa. “I mean it’s not just a case of not being able to, they don’t seem to have grasped the
idea
. At least dynasties like Tsort pay up within a hundred years or so. Why didn’t you—”
“We’ve built pyramids along the Djel for the last three thousand years,” said his father stiffly, “and we haven’t lost by it, have we? No, we haven’t. Because the other kingdoms look to the Djel, they say there’s a family that really knows its pyramids, conny-sewers, they say we’ll have what they’re having, if you please, with knobs on. Anyway, they’re real royalty,” he added, “not like some of the ones you get these days—here today, gone next millennium. They’re half gods, too. You don’t expect real royalty to pay its way. That’s one of the signs of real royalty, not having any money.”
“You don’t get more royal than them, then. You’d need a new word,” said IIa. “
We’re
nearly royal in that case.”
“You don’t understand business, my son. You think it’s all bookkeeping. Well, it isn’t.”
“
It’s a question of mass. And the power to weight ratio.
”
They both glared at Ptaclusp IIb, who was sitting staring at the sketches. He was turning his stylus over and over in his hands, which were trembling with barely-suppressed excitement.
“We’ll have to use granite for the lower slopes,” he said, talking to himself, “the limestone wouldn’t take it. Not with all the power flows. Which will be, whooeee, they’ll be big. I mean we’re not talking razor blades here. This thing could put an edge on a rolling pin.”
Ptaclusp rolled his eyes. He was only one generation into a dynasty and already it was trouble. One son a born accountant, the other in love with this new-fangled cosmic engineering. There hadn’t been any such thing when he was a lad, there was just architecture. You drew the plans, and then got in ten thousand lads on time-and-a-half and double bubble at weekends. They just had to pile the stuff up. You didn’t have to be
cosmic
about it.
Descendants! The gods had seen fit to give him one son who charged you for the amount of breath expended in saying “Good morning,” and another one who worshipped geometry and stayed up all night designing aqueducts. You scrimped and saved to send them to the best schools, and then they went and paid you back by getting educated.
“What are you talking about?” he snapped.
“The discharge alone…” IIb pulled his abacus toward him and rattled the pottery beads along the wires. “Let’s say we’re talking twice the height of the Executive model, which gives us a mass of…plus additional coded dimensions of occult significance as per spec…we couldn’t do this sort of thing even a hundred years ago, you realize, not with the primitive techniques we had then…” His finger became a blur.
IIa gave a snort and grabbed his own abacus.
“Limestone at two talents the ton…” he said. “Wear and tear on tools…masonry charges…demurrage…breakages…oh dear, oh dear…on-cost…black marble at replacement prices…”
Ptaclusp sighed. Two abaci rattling in tandem the whole day long, one changing the shape of the world and the other one deploring the cost. Whatever happened to the two bits of wood and a plumbline?
The last beads clicked against the stops.
“It’d be a whole quantum leap in pyramidology,” said IIb, sitting back with a messianic grin on his face.
“It’d be a whole kwa—” IIa began.
“Quantum,” said IIb, savoring the word.
“It’d be a whole
quantum
leap in bankruptcy,” said IIa. “They’d have to invent a new word for that too.”
“It’d be worth it as a loss leader,” said IIb.
“Sure enough. When it comes to making a loss, we’ll be in the lead,” said IIa sourly.
“It’d practically glow! In millennia to come people will look at it and say ‘That Ptaclusp, he knew his pyramids all right.’”
“They’ll call it Ptaclusp’s Folly, you mean!”
By now the brothers were both standing up, their noses a few inches apart.
“The trouble with you, sibling, is that you know the cost of everything and the value of nothing!”
“The trouble with
you
is—is—is that you don’t!”
“Mankind must strive ever upward!”
“Yes, on a sound financial footing, by Khuft!”
“The search for knowledge—”
“The search for probity—”
Ptaclusp left them to it and stood staring out at the yard, where, under the glow of torches, the staff were doing a feverish stocktaking.
It’d been a small business when father passed it on to him—just a yard full of blocks and various sphinxes, needles, steles and other stock items, and a thick stack of unpaid bills, most of them addressed to the palace and respectfully pointing out that our esteemed account presented nine hundred years ago appeared to have been overlooked and prompt settlement would oblige. But it had been fun in those days. There was just him, five thousand laborers, and Mrs. Ptaclusp doing the books.
You had to do pyramids, dad said. All the profit was in mastabas, small family tombs, memorial needles and general jobbing necropoli, but if you didn’t do pyramids, you didn’t do anything. The meanest garlic farmer, looking for something neat and long lasting with maybe some green marble chippings but within a budget, wouldn’t go to a man without a pyramid to his name.
So he’d done pyramids, and they’d been good ones, not like some you saw these days, with the wrong number of sides and walls you could put your foot through. And yes, somehow they’d gone from strength to strength.
To build the biggest pyramid ever…
In three months…
With terrible penalties if it wasn’t done on time. Dios hadn’t specified how terrible, but Ptaclusp knew his man and they probably involved crocodiles. They’d be pretty terrible, all right…
He stared at the flickering light on the long avenues of statues, including the one of bloody Hat the Vulture-Headed God of Unexpected Guests, bought on the off-chance years ago and turned down by the client owing to not being up to snuff in the beak department and unshiftable ever since even at a discount.
The biggest pyramid ever…
And after you’d knocked your pipes out seeing to it that the nobility had their tickets to eternity, were you allowed to turn your expertise homeward, i.e., a bijou pyramidette for self and Mrs. Ptaclusp, to ensure safe delivery into the Netherworld? Of course not. Even dad had only been allowed to have a mastaba, although it was one of the best on the river, he had to admit, that red-veined marble had been ordered all the way from Howonderland, a lot of people had asked for the same, it had been good for business, that’s how dad would have liked it…