your prophecy, he has to be alive to preach Dissolution. You could have destroyed Theare. As it is, you have caused it to blur into a mass of cracks. Theare is too well organized to divide into two alternative worlds, as my world would. Instead, events have had to happen which could not have happened. Theare has cracked and warped, and you have all but brought about your own Dissolution.â
âWhat can we do?â Zond said, aghast.
âThereâs only one thing you can do,â Chrestomanci told him. âLet Thasper be. Let him preach Dissolution and stop trying to blow him up. That will bring about free will and a free future. Then either Theare will heal, or it will split, cleanly and painlessly, into two healthy new worlds.â
âSo we bring about our own downfall?â Zond asked mournfully.
âIt was always inevitable,â said Chrestomanci.
Zond sighed. âVery well. Thasper, son of Imperion, I reluctantly give you my blessing to go forth and preach Dissolution. Go in peace.â
Thasper bowed. Then he stood there silent a long time. He did not notice Imperion and Ock both trying to attract his attention. The newspaper report had talked of the Sage as full of anguish and self-doubt. Now he knew why. He looked at Chrestomanci, who was blowing his nose again. âHow can I preach Dissolution?â he said. âHow can I not believe in the gods when I have seen them for myself?â
âThatâs a question you certainly should be asking,â Chrestomanci croaked. âGo down to Theare and ask it.â Thasper nodded and turned to go. Chrestomanci leaned toward him and said, from behind his handkerchief, âAsk yourself this, too: can the gods catch flu? I think I may have given it to all of them. Find out and let me know, thereâs a good chap.â
THE MASTER
T his is the trouble with being a newly qualified vet. The call came at 5:50 A.M . I thought it was a manâs voice, though it was high for a man, and I didnât quite catch the nameâHarry Sanovit? Harrison Ovett? Anyway, he said it was urgent.
Accordingly, I found myself on the edge of a plain, facing a dark fir forest. It was about midmorning. The fir trees stood dark and evenly spaced, exhaling their crackling gummy scent, with vistas of trodden-looking pine needles beneath them. A wolfwood, I thought. I was sure that thought was right. The spacing of the trees was so regular that it suggested an artificial pinewood in the zoo, and there was a kind of humming, far down at the edges of the senses, as if machinery was at work sustaining a man-made environment here. The division between trees and plain was so sharp that I had some doubts that I would be able to enter the wood.
But I stepped inside with no difficulty. Under the trees it was cooler, more strongly scented, and full of an odd kind of depression, which made me sure that there was some sort of danger here. I walked on the carpet of needles cautiously, relaxed but intensely afraid. There seemed to be some kind of path winding between the straight boles, and I followed it into the heart of the wood. After a few turns, flies buzzed around something just off the path. Danger! pricked out all over my skin like sweat, but I went and looked all the same.
It was a young woman about my own age. From the flies and the freshness, I would have said she had been killed only hours ago. Her throat had been torn out. The expression on her half-averted face was of sheer terror. She had glorious red hair and was wearing what looked, improbably, to be evening dress.
I backed away, swallowing. As I backed, something came up beside me. I whirled around with a croak of terror.
âNo need to fear,â he said. âI am only the fool.â
He was very tall and thin and ungainly. His feet were in big, laced boots, jigging a silent, ingratiating dance on the pine needles, and the rest of his clothes were a dull brown and close-fitting. His huge