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'How dare you insult!' screamed the monk. 'Back to the kitchens with you, sweeper!' Cowering behind Lu-Tze, Lobsang realized that the entire dojo had stopped to watch this. One or two of the monks were whispering to one another. The man in the brown robe of the dojo master was watching impassively from his chair, with his chin on his hand. With great and patient and infuriating delicacy, like a samurai arranging flowers, Lu-Tze marshalled the shreds of tobacco in the flimsy cigarette paper.

'No, I reckon I'll go out of that door over there, if you don't mind,' he said. 'Impudence! Then you are ready to fight, enemy of dust?' The man leapt back and raised his hands to form the Combat of the Hake. He spun round and planted a kick on a heavy leather sack, hitting it so hard that its supporting chain broke. Then he was back to face Lu-Tze, hands held in the Advancement of the Snake. 'Ai! Shao! Hai-eee-' he began. The dojo master stood up. 'Hold!' he commanded. 'Do you not want to know the name of the man you are about to destroy?' The fighter held his stance, glaring at Lu-Tze. 'I don't need to know name of sweeper,' he said. Lu-Tze rolled the cigarette into a skinny cylinder and winked at the angry man, which only stoked the anger. 'It is always wise to know the name of a sweeper, boy,' said the dojo master. 'And my question was not addressed to you.' Tick Jeremy stared at his bed sheets. They were covered in writing. His own writing. It trailed across the pillow and onto the wall. There were sketches, too, scored deeply into the plaster. He found his pencil under the bed. He'd even sharpened it. In his sleep, he'd sharpened a pencil! And by the look of it he'd been writing and drawing for hours. Trying to draw a dream. With, down one side of his eiderdown, a list of parts. It had all made absolute sense when he'd seen it, like a hammer or a stick or Wheelbright's Gravity Escapement. It had been like meeting an old friend. And now... He stared at the scrawled lines. He had been writing so fast he'd ignored punctuation and some of the letters, too. But he could see some sense in there. He'd heard of this sort of thing. Great inventions sometimes did arise from dreams and daydreams. Didn't Hepzibah Whitlow have the idea of the adjustable pendulum clock as a result of his work as the public hangman? Didn't Wilframe Balderton always say that the idea for the Fish Tail Escapement came after he'd eaten too much lobster? Yes, it had all been so clear in the dream. By daylight, it needed a bit more work. There was a clatter of dishes from the little kitchen behind his workshop. He hurried down, dragging the sheet behind him.

'I usually have-' he began. 'Toatht, thur,' said Igor, turning away from the range. 'Lightly browned, I thuthpect.'

got glaciation,' said Lu-Tze, ignoring this. 'At last. See, master? It's only an inch long, but already it's carving its own little valley. Magnificent, isn't it?'

'Yes, yes, very good,' said the novice, being kind to an underling. 'Isn't this the garden of Lu- Tze?'

'You mean, Lu-Tze who is famous for his bonsai mountains?' The novice looked from the line of plates to the little wrinkled smiling man. 'You are Lu-Tze? But you're just a sweeper! I've seen you cleaning out the dormitories! I've seen people kick you!' Lu-Tze, apparently not hearing this, picked up a plate about a foot across on which a small cinder cone was smoking. 'What do you think of this, master?' he said. 'Volcanic. And it is bloody hard to do, excuse my Klatchian.' The novice took a step forward, and leaned down and looked directly into the sweeper's eyes. Lu-Tze was not often disconcerted, but he was now. 'You are Lu-Tze?'

'Yes, lad. I am Lu-Tze.'

The novice took a deep breath and thrust out a skinny arm. It was holding a small scroll. 'From the abbot... er, venerable one!' The scroll wobbled in the nervous hand. 'Most people call me Lu-Tze, lad. Or “Sweeper”. Until they get to know me better, some call me “Get out of the way”,' said Lu-Tze, carefully wrapping up his tools. 'I've never been very venerable, except in cases of bad spelling.' He looked around the saucers for the miniature shovel he used for glacial work, and couldn't see it anywhere. Surely he'd put it down just a moment ago? The novice was watching him with an expression of awe mixed with residual suspicion. A reputation like Lu-Tze's got around. This was the man who had - well, who had done practically everything, if you listened to the rumours. But he didn't look as though he had. He was just a little bald man with a wispy beard and a faint, amiable smile. Lu-Tze patted the young man on the shoulder in an effort to put him at his ease. 'Let us see what the abbot wants,' he said, unrolling the rice paper. 'Oh. You are to take me to see him, it says here.' A look of panic froze the novice's face. 'What? How can I do that? Novices aren't allowed inside the Inner Temple!'

'Really? In that case, let me take you, to take me, to see him,' said Lu-Tze. 'You are allowed into the Inner Temple?' said the novice, and then put his hand over his mouth. 'But you're just a swee- Oh...'

'That's right! Not even a proper monk, let alone a dong,' said the sweeper cheerfully. 'Amazing, isn't it?'

'But people talk about you as if you were as high as the abbot!'

'Oh, dear me, no,' said Lu-Tze. 'I'm nothing like as holy. Never really got a grip on the cosmic harmony.'

'But you've done all those incredible-'

'Oh, I didn't say I'm not good at what I do,' said Lu-Tz:e, ambling away with his broom over his shoulder. 'Just not holy. Shall we go?'

'Er ... Lu-Tze?' said the novice, as they walked along the ancient brick path. 'Yes?'

'Why is this called the Garden of Five Surprises?'

'What was your name back in the world, hasty young man?' said Lu-Tze. 'Newgate. Newgate Ludd, ven-' Lu-Tze held up a warning finger. 'Ah?'

'Sweeper, I mean.'

'Ludd, eh? Ankh-Morpork lad?'

'Yes, Sweeper,' said the boy. The suddenly dejected tones suggested he knew what was coming next. 'Raised by the Thieves' Guild? One of “Ludd's Lads”?' The boy formerly known as Newgate looked the old man in the eye and, when he replied, it was in the singsong voice of someone who'd answered the question too many times. 'Yes, Sweeper. Yes, I was a foundling. Yes, we get called Ludd's Lads and Lasses after one of the founders of the Guild. Yes, that's my adopted surname. Yes, it was a good life and sometimes I wish I still had it.' Lu-Tze appeared not to hear this. 'Who sent you here?'

'A monk called Soto discovered me. He said I had talent.'

'Marco? The one with all the hair?'

'That's right. Only I thought the rule was that all monks were shaved.'

'Oh, Soto says he is bald under the hair,' said Lu-Tze. 'He says the hair is a separate creature that just happens to live on him. They gave him a field posting really quickly after he came up with that one. Hard-working fellow, mark you, and friendly as anything provided you don't touch his hair. Important lesson there: you don't survive in the field by obeying all the rules, including those relating to mental processes. And what name were you given when you were enrolled?'

'Lobsang, ven- uh, Sweeper.'

'Lobsang Ludd?'

'Er... yes, Sweeper.'

'Amazing. So, Lobsang Ludd, you tried to count my surprises, did you? Everybody does. Surprise is the nature of Time, and five is the number of Surprise.'

'Yes, Sweeper. I found the little bridge that tilts and throws you into the carp pool...'

'Good. Good.'


Tags: Terry Pratchett Discworld Fantasy