âHah, you expect me to believe that, do you?' said the dwarf.
It had been a long night. Ridcully turned and waved his hand at the wall. There was a crackle of octarine fire and the words âIOU 4 DOLERS' burned themselves into the stone.
âRight you are, no problem there,' said the dwarf, ducking back into the froth.
âI shouldn't think Mrs Whitlow is going to worry,' said the Lecturer in Recent Runes as they squelched through the night. âI saw her and some of the maids at the, er, concert. You know, the kitchen girls. Molly, Polly and, er, Dolly. They were, er, screaming.'
âI didn't think the music was
that
bad,' said Ridcully.
âNo, er, not in pain, er, I wouldn't say that,' said the Lecturer in Recent Runes, beginning to go red, âbut, er, when the young man was waggling his hips like thatâ'
âHe definitely looks elvish to me,' said Ridcully. ,
ââer, I think she threw some of her, er, under . . . things on to the stage.'
This silenced even Ridcully, at least for a while. Every wizard was suddenly busy with his own private thoughts.
âWhat, Mrs Whitlow?' the Chair of Indefinite Studies began.
âYes.'
âWhat, herâ?'
âI, er, think so.'
Ridcully had once seen Mrs Whitlow's washing line. He'd been impressed. He'd never believed there was so much pink elastic in the world.
âWhat, really herâ?' said the Dean, his voice sounding as though it was coming from a long way away.
âI'm, er, pretty sure.'
âSounds dangerous to me,' said Ridcully briskly. âCould do someone a serious injury. Now then, you lot, back to the University right now for cold baths all round.'
â
Really
herâ?' said the Chair of Indefinite Studies. Somehow, none of them felt able to leave the idea alone.
âMake yourself useful and find the Bursar,' snapped Ridcully. âAnd I'd have you lot up in front of the University authorities first thing in the morning, if it wasn't for the fact that you
are
the University authorities . . .'
Foul Ole Ron, professional maniac and one of Ankh-Morpork's most industrious beggars, blinked in the gloom. Lord Vetinari had excellent night vision. And, unfortunately, a well-developed sense of smell.
âAnd then what happened?' he said, trying to keep his face turned away from the beggar. Because the fact was that although in actual size Foul Ole Ron was a small hunched man in a huge grubby overcoat, in smell he filled the world.
In fact Foul Ole Ron was a physical schizophrenic. There was Foul Ole Ron, and there was the
smell
of Foul Ole Ron, which had obviously developed over the years to such an extent that it had a distinct personality. Anyone could have a smell that lingered long after they'd gone somewhere else, but the smell of Foul Ole Ron could actually arrive somewhere several minutes
before
he did, in order to spread out and get comfortable before he arrived. It had evolved into something so striking that it was no longer perceived with the nose, which shut down instantly in self-defence; people could tell that Foul Ole Ron was approaching by the way their ear wax started to melt.
âBuggrit, buggrit, wrong side out, I
told
'em, buggrem . . .'
The Patrician waited. With Foul Ole Ron you had to allow time for his wandering mind to get into the same vicinity as his tongue.
â. . . spyin' on me with magic, I
told
'em, bean soup, see here . . . and then everyone was dancing, you see, and then afterwards there were two of the wizards in the street and one of them was going on about catching the music in a box and Mr Dibbler was interested and then the coffee house exploded and they all went back to the University . . . buggrit, buggrit, buggrem, see if I don't.'
âThe coffee house exploded, did it?'
âFrothy coffee all over the place, yerronner . . . buggâ'
âYes, yes, and so on,' said the Patrician, waving a thin hand. âAnd that's all you can tell me?'
âWell . . . bugâ'
Foul Ole Ron caught the Patrician's eye and got a grip on himself. Even in his own highly individualized sanity he could tell when not to push his threadbare luck. His Smell wandered around the room, reading documents and examining the pictures.
âThey say,' he said, âthat he drives all the women mad.' He leaned forward. The Patrician leaned back. âThey say after he moved his hips like that . . . Mrs Whitlow threw her . . . wossnames . . . on to the stage.'
The Patrician raised an eyebrow.
â“Wossnames”?'
âYou know.' Foul Ole Ron moved his hands vaguely in the air.
âA pair of pillow cases? Two sacks of flour? Some very baggy trouâ oh. I see. My word. Were there any casualties?'
âDunno, yerronner. But there's something I
do
know.'
âYes?'
âUh . . . Cumbling Michael says yerronner sometimes pays for information . . . ?'
âYes, I know. I can't imagine how these rumours get about,' said the Patrician, getting up and opening a window. âI shall have to have something done about it.'
Once again, Foul Ole Ron reminded himself that while he was probably insane he definitely wasn't as mad as all that.
âOnly I got this, yerronner,' he said, pulling something out of the horrible recesses of his clothing. âIt says writing on it, yerronner.'
It was a poster, in glowing primary colours. It couldn't have been very old, but an hour or two as Foul Ole Ron's chest-warmer had aged it considerably. The Patrician unfolded it with a pair of tweezers.
âThem's the pictures of the music players,' said Foul Ole Ron helpfully, âand that's writing. And there's more writing there, look. Mr Dibbler had Chalky the troll run 'em off just now, but I nipped in after and threatened to breathe on everyone less'n they gives me one.'
âI'm sure that worked famously,' said the Patrician.
He lit a candle and read the poster carefully. In the presence of Foul Ole Ron, all candles burned with a blue edge to the flame.
â“Free Festival of Music with Rocks In It”,' he said.
âThat's where you don't have to pay to go in,' said Foul Ole Ron helpfully. âBuggrem, buggrit.'
Lord Vetinari read on.
âIn Hide Park. Next Wednesday. Well, well. A public open space, of course. I wonder if there'll be many people there?'
âLots, yerronner. There was hundreds couldn't get into the Cavern.'
âAnd the band looks like that, do they?' said Lord Vetinari. âScowling like that?'
âSweating, most of the time I saw 'em,' said Foul Ole Ron.
â“Bee There Orr Bee A Rectangular Thyng”,' said the Patrician. âThis is some sort of occult code, do you think?'
âCouldn't say, yerronner,' said Foul Ole Ron. âMy brain goes all slow when I'm thirsty.'
â“They Are Totallye Unable To Bee Seene! And A Longe Way Oute!”' said Lord Vetinari solemnly. He looked up. âOh, I
am
sorry,' he said. âI'm sure I can find someone to give you a cool refreshing drink . . .'
Foul Ole Ron coughed. It had sounded like a perfectly sincere offer but, somehow, he was suddenly not at all thirsty.
âDon't let me keep you, then. Thank you so very much,' said Lord Vetinari.
âEr . . .'
âYes?'
âEr . . . nothing . . .'
âVery good.'
When Ron had buggrit, buggrit, buggrem'd down the stairs, the Patrician tapped his pen thoughtfully on the paper and stared at the wall.
The pen kept bouncing on the word
Free
.
Finally he rang a small bell. A young clerk put his head around the door.
âAh, Drumknott,' said Lord Vetinari, âjust go and tell the head of the Musicians' Guild he wants a word with me, will you?'
âEr . . . Mr Clete is already in the waiting room, your lordship,' said the clerk.
âDoes he by any chance have some kind of poster with him?'
âYes, your lordship.'
âAnd is he very angry?'
âThis is very much the case, your lordship. It's about some festival. He
insists
you have it stopped.'
âDear me.'
âAnd he demands that you see him instantly.'
âAh. Then leave him for, say, twenty minutes, then show him up.'
âYes, your lordship. He keeps saying that he wants to know what you are doing about it.'
âGood. Then I can ask him the same question.'
The Patrician sat back.
Si non confectus, non reficiat
. That was the motto of the Vetinaris. Everything worked if you just let it happen.
He picked up a stack of sheet-music and began to listen to Salami's
Prelude to a Nocturne on a Theme by Bubbla
.
After a while he looked up.
âDon't hesitate to leave,' he snapped.
The Smell slunk away.
SQUEAK
!
âDon't be stupid! All I did was frighten them off. It's not as though I hurt them. What's the good of having the power if you can't use it?'
The Death of Rats put his nose in his paws. It was a
lot
easier, with rats.
22
C. M. O. T. Dibbler often did without sleep, too. He generally had to meet Chalky at night. Chalky was a large troll but tended to dry up and flake in daylight.
Other trolls looked down on him because he came from a sedimentary family and was therefore a very low-class troll indeed. He didn't mind. He was a very amiable character.
He did odd jobs for people who needed something unusual in a hurry and without entanglements and who had clinking money. And this job was pretty odd.
âJust boxes?' he said.
âWith lids,' said Dibbler. âLike this one I've made. And a bit of wire stretched inside.'
Some people would have said âWhy?' or âWhat for?' but Chalky didn't make his money like that. He picked up the box and turned it this way and that.
âHow many?' he said.
âJust ten to start with,' said Dibbler. âBut I think there'll be more later. Lots and lots more.'
âHow many's ten?' said the troll.
Dibbler held up both hands, fingers extended.
âI'll do them for two dollar,' said Chalky.
âYou want me to cut my own throat?'
âTwo dollar.'
âDollar each for these and a dollar-fifty for the next batch.'
âTwo dollar.'
âAll right, all right, two dollars each. That's ten dollars the lot, right?'
âRight.'
âAnd that's cutting my own throat.'
Chalky tossed the box aside. It bounced on the floor and the lid came off.
Some time later a small, greyish-brown mongrel dog, on the prowl for anything edible, limped into the workshop and sat peering into the box for a while.
Then it felt a bit of an idiot and wandered off.
Ridcully hammered on the door of the High Energy Magic Building as the city clocks were striking two. He was supporting Ponder Stibbons, who was asleep on his feet.
Ridcully was not a quick thinker. But he always got there eventually.
The door opened and Skazz's hair appeared.
âAre you facin' me?' said Ridcully.
âYes, Archchancellor.'
âLet us in, then, the dew's soaking through me boots.'
Ridcully looked around as he helped Ponder in.
âWish I knew what it was that keeps you lads working all hours,' he said. âI never found magic that interesting when I was a lad. Go and fetch some coffee for Mr Stibbons here, will you? And then get your friends.'
Skazz bustled off and Ridcully was left alone, except for the slumbering Ponder.
âWhat
is
it they do?' he said. He never really tried to find out.
Skazz had been working at a long bench by one wall.
At least he recognized the little wooden disc. There were small oblong stones ranged on it in a couple of concentric circles, and a candle lantern positioned on a swivelling arm so that it could be moved anywhere around the circumference.
It was a travelling computer for druids, a sort of portable stone circle, something they called a âkneetop'. The Bursar had sent off for one once. It had said For the Priest In a Hurry on the box. He'd never been able to make it work properly and now it was used as a doorstop. Ridcully couldn't see what they had to do with magic.
After all, it wasn't much more than a calendar and you could get a perfectly good calendar for 8p.
Rather more puzzling was the huge array of glass tubes behind it. That was where Skazz had been working; there was a litter of bent glassware and jars and bits of cardboard where the student had been sitting.
The tubing seemed to be alive.
Ridcully leaned forward.
It was full of ants.
They scuttled along the tubing and through complex little spirals in their thousands. In the silence of the room, their bodies made a faint, continuous rustling.
There was a slot level with the Archchancellor's eyes. The word âIn' was written on a piece of paper that had been pasted onto the glass.
And on the bench was an oblong of card which looked just the right shape to go in the slot. It had round holes punched in it.
There were two round holes, then a whole pattern of round holes, and then a further two holes. On it, in pencil, someone had scribbled â2 x 2'.