The Wheel of Osheim

Page 130

“Really?” Taproot turned to peer at me as if I might be unwell. “A tiny me? Sounds like more witchcraft. I was trapped though, so you’ve been an enormous help. Now, if we could just get out of here—”

“You were in the Builder box, Taproot?” I made it a question.

“Yes, yes.” Somehow he slipped between me and Kara and reached the door.

“You’re a Builder,” Hennan said. The words managed to stop Taproot where physical obstruction had failed. He froze, one hand halfway to the button pad at the centre of the door.

“Don’t children have the strangest notions?” Taproot spun on a heel and faced us all, a wide smile on his narrow face.

“You were in Gholloth’s court when my grandmother was younger than Hennan, and you’re scarcely changed,” I said.

“I have a common type of face. People are always mistaking me for . . .” Taproot slumped, his animation vanishing mid-sentence. “Well, you caught me. Knowledge is power. What do you plan to do with your power, Prince Jalan?”

I opened my mouth but no words came. I’d thought I was the one asking the difficult questions.

“You sleep years away here?” Kara pointed to the glass-walled cubicle Taproot had emerged from.

“Decades, madam. Once I spent a century in stasis. But I like to get out and about most generations, even if it’s just for a week or two. In more interesting times I’ll spend a few years topside, even take up a job maybe.”

“To what end?” Snorri’s first words since Taproot came back to life.

“Ah, Master Snagason, good question.”

“And why,” I interrupted, “don’t you say ‘watch me’ any more?”

“A less good question, Prince Jalan, but still valid. Watch me!” A grin spasmed across his face. “An affectation. People remember such things long after they forget a face. It helps to adopt some quirk for each of my ventures into main time. If I stumble across some long-lived individual who has met me on a previous emergence they are more easily convinced that any resemblance is coincidental if the quirk has gone, replaced by something different.” Again the grin. “I do worry that I overplay them sometimes. In your great-great-grandfather’s employ I was an ear-puller. Watch me!” His hand came sharply to his ear and made a slow retreat, pulling the lobe between finger and thumb.

“To what end do you visit us?” Snorri repeated.

“Dogged! Dogged he is! Watch me!” Taproot spun to look up at the Northman. “I observe. I guide. I do what little I can to help. I wasn’t chosen for this task—fate’s fickle finger came to rest upon me on the Day of a Thousand Suns and I survived. I do what I can here and there . . .”

“And yet, when disaster threatens, here you are back in your hideyhole,” Kara said. “Did you think to sleep another hundred years and escape the second Ragnarok?”

Taproot’s hands began his reply ahead of his mouth, signing their disagreement into the air between them. “Madam, there will be no hiding to be had if the Wheel turns past omega. Time itself will burn.” He brushed at invisible nothings on the chest of his broad-collared shirt. “I came here to talk to the deepnet. Primitive, I know, but these days the mountain must go to Mohammed. When I tried to leave the upper door was jammed and the exterior sensors were dead. Satellite feed indicated an explosion of some sort. I hadn’t brought any food down with me so I had little choice other than to put out a distress call then go into stasis and wait to see if help came.” He spread his hands. “And here you are!”

“I understood about half of that,” I lied. “But the main thing seems to be: you’re a Builder and you’re going to save the world so I don’t have to go to Osheim. Right?”

“Would it were so, Prince Jalan.” Taproot’s eyes seemed drawn by the key in my hand. “My people didn’t prove themselves particularly adept at saving the world though, did they? The IKOL Project was ill-conceived and its ramifications were not fully understood. The technology required to reach the control room safely is no longer available, and once there decommissioning the project is essentially an impossible task. Even at the time it would not have been just a matter of switching a dial to ‘off’. With the transition so advanced it would require a whole new science to accomplish. The original staff might have succeeded given a decade of research. Maybe not even then. And they were the people who designed it, who understood the theory better than anyone on the planet.” He looked wistful, as if overburdened by memory.

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