Feet of Clay (26 page)

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Authors: Terry Pratchett

BOOK: Feet of Clay
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‘Yes, sir. A skirt, sir. A leather one, sir.’

Carrot tried to find a suitable response and had to resort to: ‘Oh.’

‘I’ll come with you,’ said Angua. ‘Cheri can keep an eye on the desk.’

‘A … kilt,’ said Carrot. ‘Oh. Well, er … just keep an eye on things. We won’t be long. And … er … just keep behind the desk, all right?’

‘Come
on
,’ said Angua.

When they were out in the fog Carrot said, ‘Do you think there’s something a bit …
odd
about Littlebottom?’

‘Seems like a perfectly ordinary female to me,’ said Angua.


Female?
He
told
you he was female?’

‘She,’ Angua corrected. ‘This is Ankh-Morpork, you know. We’ve got extra pronouns here.’

She could smell his bewilderment. Of course, everyone knew that, somewhere down under all those layers of leather and chain mail, dwarfs came in enough different types to ensure the future production of more dwarfs, but it was not a subject that dwarfs discussed other than at those essential points in a courtship when embarrassment might otherwise arise.

‘Well, I would have thought she’d have the decency to keep it to herself,’ Carrot said finally. ‘I mean, I’ve nothing against females. I’m pretty certain my stepmother is one. But I don’t think it’s very clever, you know, to go around drawing attention to the fact.’

‘Carrot, I think you’ve got something wrong with your head,’ said Angua.

‘What?’

‘I think you may have got it stuck up your bum. I mean, good
grief
! A bit of make-up and a dress and you’re acting as though she’d become Miss Va Va Voom and started dancing on tables down at the Skunk Club!’

There were a few seconds of shocked silence while they
both
considered the image of a dwarfish strip-tease dancer. Both minds rebelled.

‘Anyway,’ said Angua, ‘if people can’t be themselves in Ankh-Morpork, where can they?’

‘There’ll be trouble when the other dwarfs notice,’ said Carrot. ‘I could almost see his knees.
Her
knees.’

‘Everyone’s got knees.’

‘Perhaps, but it’s asking for trouble to flaunt them. I mean,
I’m
used to knees. I can look at knees and think, “Oh, yes, knees, they’re just hinges in your legs”, but some of the lads—’

Angua sniffed. ‘He turned left here. Some of the lads
what
?’

‘Well … I don’t know how they’ll react, that’s all. You shouldn’t have encouraged her. I mean, of course there’s female dwarfs but … I mean, they have the decency not to show it.’

He heard Angua gasp. Her voice sounded rather far away when she said, ‘Carrot, you know I’ve always respected your attitude to the citizens of Ankh-Morpork.’

‘Yes?’

‘I’ve been impressed by the way you really seem to be blind to things like shape and colour.’

‘Yes?’

‘And you always seem to care for people.’

‘Yes?’

‘And you know that I feel considerable affection for you.’

‘Yes?’

‘It’s just that, sometimes …’

‘Yes?’

‘I really, really,
really
wonder why.’

Carriages were thickly parked outside Lady Selachii’s mansion when Corporal Nobbs strolled up the drive. He knocked on the door.

A footman opened it. ‘Servants’ entrance,’ said the footman, and made to shut the door again.

But Nobby’s outstretched foot had been ready for this. ‘Read these,’ he said, thrusting two bits of paper at him.

The first one read:

I, after hearing evidence from a number of experts, including Mrs Slipdry the midwife, certify that the balance of probability is that the bearer of this document, C. W. St John Nobbs, is a human being.

Signed, Lord Vetinari.

The other was the letter from Dragon King of Arms.

The footman’s eyes widened. ‘Oh, I am terribly sorry, your lordship,’ he said. He stared again at
Corporal
Nobbs. Nobby was clean-shaven – at least, the last time he’d shaved he’d been clean-shaven – but his face had so many minor topological features it looked like a very bad example of slash-and-burn agriculture.

‘Oh, dear,’ added the footman. He pulled himself together. ‘The other visitors normally just have cards.’

Nobby produced a battered deck. ‘I’m probably busy hobnobbing right now,’ he said. ‘But I’m game for a few rounds of Cripple Mr Onion afterwards, if you like.’

The footman looked him up and down. He didn’t get out much. He’d heard rumours – who hadn’t? – that working in the Watch was the rightful king of Ankh-Morpork. He’d have to admit that, if you wanted to hide a secret heir to the throne, you couldn’t possibly hide him more carefully than under the face of C. W. St J. Nobbs.

On the other hand … the footman was something of an historian, and knew that in its long history even the throne itself had been occupied by creatures who had been hunchbacked, one-eyed, knuckle-dragging and as ugly as sin. On that basis Nobby was as royal as they came. If, technically, he wasn’t hunchbacked, this was only because he was hunched front and sides, too. There might be a time, the footman thought, when it paid to hitch your wagon to a star, even if said star was a red dwarf.

‘You’ve never been to one of these affairs before, m’lord?’ he said.

‘First time,’ said Nobby.

‘I’m sure your lordship’s blood will rise to the occasion,’ said the footman weakly.

I’ll have to go
, Angua thought as they hurried through the fog.
I can’t go on living from month to month
.

It’s not that he’s not likeable. You couldn’t wish to meet a more caring man
.

That’s just it. He cares for everyone. He cares about everything. He cares indiscriminately. He knows everything about everyone because everyone interests him, and the caring is all general and never personal. He doesn’t think personal is the same as important
.

If only he had some decent human quality, like selfishness
.

I’m sure he doesn’t think about it that way, but you can
tell
the werewolf thing is upsetting him underneath. He cares about the things people say behind my back, and he doesn’t know how to deal with them
.

What was it those dwarfs said the other day? One said something like, ‘She feels the need,’ and the other one said, ‘Yeah, the need to feed.’ I saw his expression. I can handle that sort of thing … well, most of the time … but
he
can’t. If only he’d thump someone. It wouldn’t do any good but at least he’d feel better
.

It’s going to get worse. At best I’m going to get caught in someone’s chicken-house, and then the midden is
really
going to hit the windmill. Or I’ll get caught in someone’s room

She tried to shut out the thought but it didn’t
work
. You could only
control
the werewolf, you couldn’t
tame
it.

It’s the city. Too many people, too many smells

Maybe it would work if we were just alone somewhere, but if I said, ‘It’s me or the city,’ he wouldn’t even see there was a choice
.

Sooner or later, I’ve got to go home. It’s the best thing for him
.

Vimes walked back through the damp night. He knew he was too angry to think properly.

He’d got nowhere, and he’d travelled a long way to get there. He’d got a cartload of facts and he’d done all the right logical things, and to someone, somewhere, he must look like a fool.

He probably looked like a fool to Carrot already. He’d kept coming up with bright ideas – proper
policeman
’s ideas – and each one had turned out to be a joke. He’d bullied and shouted and done all the proper things, and none of it had worked. They hadn’t found a thing. They’d merely increased their amount of ignorance.

The ghost of old Mrs Easy rose up in his inner vision. He couldn’t remember much about her. He’d been just another snotty kid in a crowd of snotty kids, and she’d been just another worried face somewhere on top of a pinny. One of Cockbill Street’s people. She’d taken in needlework to make ends meet and kept up appearances and, like everyone else in the street, had crept through life never asking for anything and getting even less.

What else
could
he have done? They’d practically scraped the damn wallpaper off the wal—

He stopped.

There was the same wallpaper in both rooms. In every room on that floor. That horrible green wallpaper.

But … no, that couldn’t be it. Vetinari had slept in that room for years, if he slept at all. You can’t sneak in and redecorate without someone noticing.

In front of him, the fog rolled aside. He caught a glimpse of a candlelit room in a nearby building before the cloud flowed back.

The fog. Yes. Dampness. Creeping in, brushing against the wallpaper. The old, dusty, musty wallpaper …

Would Cheery have tested the wallpaper? After all, in a way you didn’t actually
see
it. It wasn’t
in
the room because it was defining what the room was. Could you actually be poisoned by the
walls
?

He hardly dared think the thought. If he let his mind
settle
on the suspicion it’d twist and fly away, like all the others.

But … this was it, said his secret soul. All the messing around with suspects and Clues … that was just something to keep the body amused while the back of the brain toiled away. Every real copper knew you didn’t go around looking for Clues so that you could find out Who Done It. No, you started out with a pretty good idea of Who Done It. That way, you knew what Clues to look for.

He wasn’t going to have another day of bafflement interspersed with desperately bright ideas,
was
he? It was bad enough looking at Corporal Littlebottom’s expression, which seemed to be getting a little more colourful every time he saw it.

He’d said, ‘Ah, arsenic’s a metal, right, so maybe the
cutlery
has been made of it?’ He wouldn’t forget the look on the dwarf’s face as Cheery tried to explain that, yes, it might be possible to do that, provided you were sure that no one would notice the way it dissolved in the soup almost instantly.

This
time he was going to think first.

‘The Earl of Ankh, Corporal the Rt. Hon. Lord C. W. St J. Nobbs!’

The buzz of conversation stopped. Heads turned. Somewhere in the crowd someone started to laugh and was hurriedly shushed into silence by their neighbours.

Lady Selachii came forward. She was a tall, angular woman, with the sharp features and aquiline nose that were the hallmarks of the family. The impression was that an axe was being thrown at you.

Then she curtsied.

There were gasps of surprise around her, but she glared at the assembled guests and there was a smattering of bows and curtsies. Somewhere at the back of the room someone started to say, ‘But the man’s an absolute oik—’ and was cut off.

‘Has someone dropped something?’ said Nobby nervously. ‘I’ll help you look, if you like.’

The footman appeared at his elbow, bearing a tray. ‘A drink, m’lord?’ he said.

‘Yeah, okay, a pint of Winkles,’ said Nobby.

Jaws fell. But Lady Selachii’s rose to the occasion. ‘Winkles?’ she said.

‘A type of beer, your ladyship,’ said the footman.

Her ladyship hesitated only a moment. ‘I believe the butler drinks beer,’ she said. ‘See to it, man. And I’ll have a pint of Winkles, too. What a
novel
idea.’

This caused a certain effect among those guests who knew on which side of the biscuit their pâté was spread.

‘Indeed! Capital suggestion! A pint of Winkles here, too!’

‘Hawhaw! Gweat! Winkles for me!’

‘Winkles all round!’


But the man’s an absolute ti
—’


Shut up!

Vimes crossed the Brass Bridge with care, counting the hippos. There was a ninth shape, but it was leaning against the parapet and muttering to itself in a familiar and, to Vimes at least, an unmenacing way. Faint air movements wafted towards him a smell that out-smelled even the river. It proclaimed that ahead of Vimes was a ding-a-ling so big he’d been upgraded to a clang-a-lang.

‘… Buggrit buggrit I
told
’em, stand it up and pull the end orf! Millennium hand and shrimp! I
told
’em, sez I, and would they poke …’

‘Evening, Ron,’ said Vimes, without even bothering to look at the figure.

Foul Ole Ron fell into step behind him. ‘Buggrit they done me out of it so they did …’

‘Yes, Ron,’ said Vimes.

‘… And shrimp … buggrit, say I, bread it on the butter side … Queen Molly says to watch your back, mister.’

‘What was that?’

‘… Sowter fry it!’ said Foul Ole Ron innocently. ‘Trouser the lot of ’em, they did me out of it, them and their big weasel!’

The beggar lurched around and, filthy coat dragging its hems along the ground, limped away into the fog. His little dog trotted along in front of him.

There was pandemonium in the servants’ hall.

‘Winkles’ Old Peculiar?’ said the butler.

‘Another one hundred and four pints!’ said the footman.

The butler shrugged. ‘Harry, Sid, Rob and Jeffrey … two trays apiece and double down to the King’s Head again right now! What else is he doing?’

‘Well, they’re supposed to be having a poetry reading but
he’s
telling ’em jokes …’

‘Anecdotes?’

‘Not exactly.’

It was amazing how it could drizzle and fog at the same time. Wind was blowing both through the open window, and Vimes was forced to shut it. He lit the candles by his desk and opened his notebook.

Probably he should use the demonic organizer, but he liked to see things written down fair and square. He could think better when he wrote things down.

He wrote ‘Arsenic’, and drew a big circle round it. Around the circle he wrote: ‘Fr. Tubelcek’s fingernails’ and ‘Rats and ‘Vetinari’ and ‘Mrs Easy’. Lower down the page he wrote: ‘Golems’, and drew a second circle. Around that one he wrote: ‘Fr. Tubelcek?’ and ‘Mr Hopkinson?’. After some thought he wrote down: ‘Stolen clay’ and ‘Grog’.

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