Authors: Terry Pratchett
“And why are the golems burying themselves?”
“I ordered them to!”
“But they are immensely valuable!”
“Yes. So we should keep them safe, right?”
“But they belong to the city!”
“They were taking up a lot of room, don’t you think? I’m not claiming them, in any case!”
“They could do wonderful things for the city, couldn’t they?” More people were arriving now and gravitating toward the man in the golden suit, because he was always good value for money.
“Like embroil it in a war or create an army of beggars? My way’s better!”
“I’m sure you are going to tell us what it is!” shouted Sacharissa.
“I want to base the currency on them! I want to make them into money! Gold that guards itself! You can’t fake it!”
“You want to put us on the golem standard?”
“Certainly! Look at them! How much are they worth?” shouted Moist, as his horse reared very convincingly. “They could build canals and dam floods, level mountains and make roads! If we need them to, they will! And if we don’t, then they’ll help to make us rich by doing nothing! The dollar will be so sound you could bounce trolls off of it!”
The horse, with an astonishing grasp of public relations, reared again as Moist pointed at the laboring masses.
“That is value! That is worth! What is the worth of a gold coin compared to the dexterity of the hand that holds it?” He replayed that line in his head and added, “That would make a good headline on page one, don’t you think? And it’s Lipwig with a G!”
Sacharissa laughed. “Page one is already crowded! What’s going to happen to these things?”
“They’ll stay here until cool heads decide what to do next!”
“And what are they guarding the city from right now, exactly?”
“Stupidity!”
“One last thing, Moist. You are the only one who knows the secret of the golems, yes?”
“Inexplicably, this seems to be the case!”
“Why is this?”
“I suppose I’m just a very persuasive person!” This got another laugh.
“Who just happens to command a huge, unstoppable army? What demands are you going to make?”
“None! No, on second thought, a coffee would be nice! I didn’t have any breakfast!” That got a much bigger laugh from the crowd.
“And do you think the citizens should be glad it’s you in the saddle, as it were?”
“Hell, yes! Trust me!” said Moist, dismounting and lifting a reluctant Mr. Fusspot down from his perch.
“Well, you should know about that, Mr. Lipwig.” This got a round of applause. “You wouldn’t care to tell us what happened to the gold from the bank, would you?”
“’Es wearin’ it!” shouted a wag in the crowd, to cheering.
“Miss Cripslock, your cynicism is, as ever, a dagger to my heart!” said Moist. “I intended to get to the bottom of that today, but ‘best-laid plans’ and all that. I just don’t seem to be able to clear my desk!”
Even this got a laugh, and it wasn’t really very funny.
“Mr. Lipwig? I want you to come with me…”
Commander Vimes shoved his way through the crowd, with other watchmen materializing behind him.
“Am I under arrest?” said Moist.
“Hell, yes! You did leave the city!”
“I think he could successfully argue, Commander, that the city has come with him.”
All heads turned. A path cleared itself for Lord Vetinari, as paths do for men known to have dungeons in their basement. And Adora Belle hobbled past him, threw herself at Moist, and started beating on his chest, shouting: “How did you get through to them? How did you make them understand? Tell me or I’ll never promise to marry you again!”
“What are your intentions, Mr. Lipwig?” said Vetinari.
“I was planning to hand them over to the Golem Trust, sir,” said Moist, fending off Adora Belle as gently as possible.
“You were?”
“But not the golem horses, sir. I’ll bet they are faster than any flesh-and-blood creatures. There are nineteen of them, and if you’ll take my advice, sir, you’ll give one to the king of the dwarfs, because I imagine he’s a bit angry right now. It’s up to you what you do with the others. But I’d like to ask for half a dozen of them for the Post Offce. In the meantime, the rest of them will be safe under ground. I want them to be the basis of the currency, because—”
“Yes, I couldn’t help overhearing,” said Vetinari. “Well done, Mr. Lipwig, I can see you’ve been thinking about this. You have presented us with a sensible way forward, indeed. I have also been giving the situation much thought, and all that remains is for me—”
“Oh, no thanks are necessary—”
“—to say, ‘Arrest this man, Commander.’ Be so good as to handcuff him to a sturdy officer and put him in my coach.”
“What?” said Moist.
“What?” screamed Adora Belle.
“The directors of the Royal Bank are pressing charges of embezzlement against you and the chairman, Mr. Lipwig.” Vetinari reached down and picked up Mr. Fusspot by the scruff of his neck. The little dog swung gently back and forth in the Patrician’s grasp, wide eyes open wider in terror, his toy vibrating apologetically in his mouth.
“You can’t seriously blame him for anything,” Moist protested.
“Alas, he is the chairman, Mr. Lipwig. His pawprints are on the documents.”
“How can you do this to Moist after what’s just happened?” said Adora Belle. “Hasn’t he just saved the day?”
“Possibly, although I’m not sure whom he has saved it for. The law must be obeyed, Miss Dearheart. Even tyrants have to obey the law.” He paused, looking thoughtful, and continued, “No, I tell a lie, tyrants do not have to obey the law, obviously, but they do have to observe the niceties. At least, I do.”
“But he didn’t take—” Adora Belle began.
“Nine o’clock tomorrow, in the Great Hall,” said Vetinari. “I invite all interested parties to attend. We shall get to the bottom of this.” He raised his voice. “Are there any directors of the Royal Bank here? Ah, Mr. Lavish. Are you well?”
Cosmo Lavish, walking unsteadily, pushed his way through the crowd, supported on one side by a young man in a brown robe.
“You have had him arrested?” said Cosmo.
“One uncontested fact is that Mr. Lipwig, on behalf of Mr. Fusspot, did formally take responsibility for the gold.”
“Indeed he did,” said Cosmo, glaring at Moist.
“But in the circumstances I feel I should look into all aspects of the situation.”
“We are in agreement there,” said Cosmo.
“And to that end I am arranging for my clerks to enter the bank tonight and examine its records,” Vetinari went on.
“I cannot agree to your request,” said Cosmo.
“Fortuitously, it was not a request.” Lord Vetinari tucked Mr. Fusspot under his arm, and continued: “I have the chairman with me, you see. Commander Vimes, Mr. Lipwig into my coach, please. See that Miss Dearheart is escorted safely home, will you? We shall sort this out tomorrow.”
Vetinari looked at the tower of dust that now enveloped the industrious golems, and added, “We’ve all had a very busy day.”
O
UT IN THE BACK
alley behind the Pink PussyCat Club the insistent, pumping music was muffled but still pervasive.
Dark figures lurked…
“Mr. Hicks, sir?”
The head of the Department of Postmortem Communications paused in the act of drawing a complicated rune among the rather less complex everyday graffiti and looked up at the concerned face of his student.
“Yes? Barnsforth?”
“Is this exactly legal under college rules, sir?”
“Of course not! Think of what might happen if this sort of thing fell into the wrong hands! Hold the lantern higher, Goatly, we’re losing the light.”
“And whose hands would that be, sir?”
“Well, technically ours, as a matter of fact. But it’s perfectly all right if the council don’t find out. And they won’t, of course. They know better than to go around finding things out.”
“So it is illegal, technically?”
“Well now,” said Hicks, drawing a glyph which flamed blue for a moment, “who among us, when you get right down to it, can say what is right and what is wrong?”
“The college council, sir?” said Barnsforth.
Hicks threw down the chalk and straightened up.
“Now listen to me, you four! We are going to insorcise Flead, understand? To his eternal satisfaction and the not-inconsiderable good of the department, believe me! This is a difficult ritual but if you assist me you’ll be doctors of postmortem communication by the end of the term, understand? Straight A’s for the lot of you and, of course, the skull ring! Since you have so far managed to turn in one-third of an essay between you, I would say that is a bargain, wouldn’t you, Barnsforth?”
The student blinked in the force of the question, but natural talent came to his aid. He coughed in a curiously academic way, and said, “I think I understand you, sir. What we are doing here goes beyond mundane definitions of right and wrong, does it not? We serve a higher truth.”
“Well done, Barnsforth, you will go a long way. Everyone got that? Higher truth. Good! Now let’s decant the old bugger and get out of here before anyone catches us!”
A
TROLL OFFICER
in a coach is hard to ignore. He just looms. That was Vimes’s little joke, perhaps. Sergeant Detritus sat beside Moist, effectively clamping him into his seat. Lord Vetinari and Drumknott sat opposite, his lordship with his hands crossed on the silver-tipped cane and his chin resting on his hands. He watched Moist intently. Under Vetinari’s seat, Mr. Fusspot buzzed.
There was a rumor that the sword in the stick was made with the iron taken from the blood of a thousand men. It seemed a waste, thought Moist, when for a bit of extra work you could get enough to make a ploughshare. Who made up these things, anyway?
But with Vetinari, it seemed possible, if a bit messy.
“Look, if you let Cosmo—” he began.
“Pas devant le gendarme,” said Lord Vetinari.
“Dat mean no talkin’ in front o’ me,” Sergeant Detritus supplied helpfully.
“Then can we talk about angels?” said Moist, after a period of silence.
“No we can’t. Mr. Lipwig, you appear to be the only person able to command the biggest army since the days of the Empire. Do you think that is a good idea?”
“I didn’t want to! I just worked out how to do it!”
“You know, Mr. Lipwig, killing you right now would solve an incredibly large number of problems.”
“I didn’t intend this! Well…not exactly like this.”
“We didn’t intend the Empire. It just became a bad habit. So, Mr. Lipwig, now that you have your golems, what else do you intend to do with them?”
“Put one in to power every clacks tower. The donkey treadmills have never worked properly. The other cities can’t object to that. It will be a boon to ma—to peoplekind and the donkeys won’t object, I expect.”
“That will account for a few hundred, perhaps. And the rest?”
“I intend to turn them into gold, sir. And I think it will solve all our problems.”
Lord Vetinari raised a quizzical eyebrow. “All our problems?”
T
HE PAIN WAS
breaking through again, but somehow reassuring. He was becoming Vetinari, certainly. The pain was good. It was a good pain, concentrated, it helped him think.
Right now, Cosmo was thinking that Pucci really should have been strangled at birth, which family folklore said he had been trying to do. Everything about her was annoying. She was selfish, arrogant, greedy, vain, headstrong, and totally lacking in tact and the slightest amount of introspection.
Those were not, within the clan, considered to be drawbacks in a person; one could hardly stay rich if one bothered all the time about whether what one was doing was wrong or right. But Pucci thought she was beautiful, and that grated on his nerves. She did have good hair, that was true, but those high heels! She looked like a tethered balloon! The only reason she had any figure at all was because of the wonders of corsetry. And, while he’d heard that fat girls had lovely personalities, she just had a lot, and all of it was Lavish.
On the other hand, she was his age and at least had ambition and a wonderful gift for hatred. She wasn’t lazy like the rest of them. They spent their lives huddled around the money. They had no vision. Pucci was someone he could talk to. She saw things from a softer, female perspective.
“You should have Bent killed,” she said. “I’m sure he knows something. Let’s hang him from one of the bridges by his ankles. That’s what Granddaddy used to do. Why are you still wearing that glove?”
“He’s been a loyal servant of the bank,” said Cosmo, ignoring the last remark.
“Well? What’s that got to do with it? Is there still something wrong with your hand?”
“My hand is fine,” said Cosmo, as another red rose of pain bloomed all the way to his shoulder. I’m so close, he thought. So close! Vetinari thinks he has me, but I have him! Oh, yes! Nevertheless…perhaps it was time to start tidying up.
“I will send Cranberry to see Mr. Bent tonight,” he said. “The man is no further use now that I have Cribbins.”
“Good. And then Lipsbig will go to prison and we’ll get our bank back. You don’t look well, you know. You are very pale.”
“As pale as Vetinari?” said Cosmo, pointing at the painting.
“What? What are you talking about? Don’t be silly,” said Pucci. “And there’s a funny smell in here, too. Has something died?”
“My thoughts are unclouded. Tomorrow will be Vetinari’s last day as Patrician, I assure you.”
“You’re being silly again. And ever so sweaty, I might add,” said Pucci. “Honestly, it’s dripping off your chin. Pull yourself together!”
“I imagine the caterpillar feels it is dying when it begins to turn into a beautiful butterfly,” said Cosmo dreamily.
“What? What? Who knows? What’s that got to do with anything?” Pucci demanded. “That’s not how it works in any case, because, listen, this is very interesting: the caterpillar dies, right, and goes all mushy, and then a tiny bit of it, like a kidney or something, suddenly wakes up and eats the caterpillar soup, and that’s what comes out as the butterfly. It’s a wonder of nature. You’ve just got a touch of flu. Don’t be a big baby. I have a date. See you in the morning.”