Something leapt from the body and whirred into his face. Two skeletal claws grabbed his ears and a bony muzzle jerked forward and hit him hard on the forehead. He screamed and ran for it.
The Death of Rats dropped to the ground again and scurried back to Albert. It patted his face, kicked him frantically a few times and then, in desperation, bit him on the nose.
Then it grabbed Albert's collar and tried to pull him out of the gutter, but there was a warning tinkle of glass.
The eye sockets turned madly towards the Drum's closed front door. Ossified whiskers bristled.
A moment later Hibiscus opened the door, if only to stop the thunderous knocking.
âI
said
we'reâ'
Something shot between his legs, paused momentarily to bite him on the ankle, and scuttled towards the back door, nose pressed firmly to the floor.
It was called Hide Park not because people could, but because a hide was once a measure of land capable of being ploughed by one man with three-and-one-half oxen on a wet Thursday, and the park was exactly this amount of land, and people in Ankh-Morpork stick to tradition and often to other things as well.
And it had trees, and grass, and a lake with actual fish in it. And, by one of those twists of civic history, it was a fairly safe place. People seldom got mugged in Hide Park. Muggers like somewhere safe to sunbathe, just like everyone else. It was, as it were, neutral territory.
And it was already filling up, even though there was nothing much to see except the workmen still hammering together a large stage by the lake. An area behind it had been walled off with strips of cheap sacking nailed to stakes. Occasionally excited people would try to get in and would be thrown into the lake by Chrysoprase's trolls.
Among the practising musicians Crash and his group were immediately noticeable, partly because Crash had his shirt off so that Jimbo could paint iodine on the wounds.
âI thought you were joking,' he growled.
âI did
say
it was in your bedroom,' said Scum.
âHow'm I going to play my guitar like this?' said Crash.
âYou can't play your guitar anyway,' said Noddy.
âI mean, look at my hand. Look at it.'
They looked at his hand. Jimbo's mum had put a glove on it after treating the wounds; they hadn't been very deep, because even a stupid leopard won't hang around anyone who wants to take its trousers off.
âA glove,' said Crash, in a terrible voice. âWhoever heard of a serious musician with a glove? How can I ever play my guitar with a glove on?'
âHow can you ever play your guitar anyway?'
âI don't know why I put up with you three,' said Crash. âYou're cramping my artistic development. I'm thinking of leaving and forming my own band.'
âNo you won't,' said Jimbo, âbecause you won't find anyone even worse than us. Let's face it. We're rubbish.'
He was voicing a hitherto unspoken yet shared thought. The other musicians around them were, it was true, quite bad. But that's all they were. Some of them had some minor musical talent; as for the rest, they merely couldn't play. They didn't have a drummer who missed the drums and a bass guitarist with the same natural rhythm as a traffic accident. And they'd generally settled on their name. They might be unimaginative names, like âA Big Troll and Some Other Trolls', or âDwarfs With Altitude', but at least they knew who they
were
.
âHow about “We're A Rubbish Band”?' said Noddy, sticking his hands in his pockets.
âWe may be rubbish,' snarled Crash, âbut we're Music With Rocks In rubbish.'
âWell, well, and how's it all going, then?' said Dibbler, pushing his way through the sacking. âIt won't be long now â what're
you
doing here?'
âWe're in the programme, Mr Dibbler,' said Crash meekly.
âHow can you be in the programme when I don't know what you're called?' said Dibbler, waving a hand irritably at one of the posters. âYour name up there, is it?'
âWe're probably where it says
Ande Supporting Bandes
,' said Noddy.
âWhat happened to your hand?' said Dibbler.
âMy trousers bit it,' said Crash, glowering at Scum. âHonest, Mr Dibbler, can't you give us one more chance?'
âWe'll see,' said Dibbler, and strode away.
He was feeling too cheerful to argue much. The sausages-in-a-bun were selling very fast, but they were just covering minor expenses. There were ways of making money out of Music With Rocks In that he'd never thought of . . . and C. M. O. T. Dibbler thought of money all the time.
For example, there were the shirts. They were of cotton so cheap and thin that it was practically invisible in a good light and tended to dissolve in the wash. He'd sold six hundred already! At five dollars each! All he had to do was buy them at ten for a dollar from Klatchian Wholesale Trading and pay Chalky half a dollar each to print them.
And Chalky, with un-troll-like initiative, had even printed off his own shirts. They said:
ChalKies
,
12 The Scours
Thyngs Done.
And people were
buying
them,
paying
money to advertise Chalky's workshop. Dibbler had never dreamed that the world could work like this. It was like watching sheep shear themselves. Whatever was causing this reversal of the laws of commercial practice he wanted in big lumps.
He'd already sold the idea to Plugger the shoemaker in New Cobblers
28
and a hundred shirts had just walked out of the shop, which was more than Plugger's merchandise usually did. People wanted clothes just because they had writing on!
He was making money. Thousands of dollars in a day! And a hundred music traps were lined up in front of the stage, ready to capture Buddy's voice. If it went on at this rate, in several billion years he'd be rich beyond his wildest dreams!
Long Live Music With Rocks In!
There was only one small cloud in this silver lining.
The Festival was due to start at noon. Dibbler had planned to put on a lot of the small, bad groups first â that is to say, all of them â and finish with The Band. So there was no reason to worry if they weren't here right now.
But they weren't here right now. Dibbler was worried.
A tiny dark figure quartered the shores of the Ankh, moving so fast as to be a blur. It zigzagged desperately back and forth, snuffling.
People didn't see it. But they saw the rats. Black, brown and grey, they were leaving the godowns and wharfs by the river, running over one another's backs in a determined attempt to get as far away as possible.
A haystack heaved, and gave birth to a Glod.
He rolled out on to the ground, and groaned. Fine rain was drifting over the landscape. Then he staggered upright, looked around at the rolling fields, and disappeared behind a hedge for the moment.
He trotted back a few seconds later, explored the haystack for a while until he found a part that was lumpier than normal, and kicked it repeatedly with his metal-topped boot.
âOw!'
âC flat,' said Glod. âGood morning, Cliff. Hello, world! I don't think I can stand life in the fast leyline, you know â the cabbages, the bad beer, all those rats pestering you all the timeâ'
Cliff crawled out.
âI must have had some bad ammonium chloride last night,' he said. âIs the top of my head still on?'
âYes.'
âPity.'
They hauled Asphalt out by his boots and brought him round by pounding him repeatedly.
âYou're our road manager,' said Glod. âYou're supposed to see no harm comes to us.'
âWell, I'm doing that, ain't I?' Asphalt muttered. âI'm not hitting you, Mr Glod. Where's Buddy?'
The three circled the haystack, prodding at bulges which turned out to be damp hay.
They found him on a small rise in the ground, not very far away. A few holly bushes grew there, carved into curves by the wind. He was sitting under one, guitar on his knees, rain plastering his hair to his face.
He was asleep, and soaking wet.
On his lap, the guitar played raindrops.
âHe's weird,' said Asphalt.
âNo,' said Glod. âHe's wound up by some strange compulsion which leads him through dark pathways.'
âYeah. Weird.'
The rain was slackening off. Cliff glanced at the sky.
âSun's high,' he said.
âOh, no!' said Asphalt. âHow long were you asleep?'
âSame as I am awake,' said Cliff.
âIt's almost noon. Where did I leave the horses? Has anyone seen the cart? Someone wake him up!'
A few minutes later they were back on the road.
âAn' you know what?' said Cliff. âWe left so quick last night I never did know if she turned up.'
âWhat was her name?' said Glod.
âDunno,' said the troll.
âOh, that's
real
love, that is,' said Glod.
âAin't you got any romance in your soul?' said Cliff.
âEyes crossed in a crowded room?' said Glod. âNo, not reallyâ'
They were pushed aside as Buddy leaned forward.
âShut up,' he said. The voice was low and contained no trace whatsoever of humour.
âWe were only joking,' said Glod.
âDon't.'
Asphalt concentrated on the road, aware of the general lack of amiability.
âI expect you're looking forward to the Festival, eh?' he said, after a while.
No one replied.
âI expect there'll be big crowds,' he said.
There was silence, except for the clatter of the hoofs and the rattle of the cart. They were in the hills now, where the road wound alongside a gorge. There wasn't even a river down there, except in the wettest season. It was a gloomy area. Asphalt felt that it was getting gloomier.
âI expect you'll really have fun,' he said, eventually.
âAsphalt?' said Glod.
âYes, Mr Glod?'
âWatch the road, will you?'
The Archchancellor polished his staff as he walked along. It was a particularly good one, six feet long and quite magical. Not that he used magic very much. In his experience, anything that couldn't be disposed of with a couple of whacks from six feet of oak was probably immune to magic as well.
âDon't you think we should have brought the senior wizards, sir?' said Ponder, struggling to keep up.
âI'm afraid that taking them along in their present frame of mind would only make whatever happensâ' Ridcully sought for a useful phrase, and settled for ââhappen worse. I've insisted they stay in college.'
âHow about Drongo and the others?' said Ponder hopefully.
âWould they be any good in the event of a thaumaturgical dimension rip of enormous proportions?' said Ridcully. âI remember poor old Mr Hong. One minute he was dishing up an order of double cod and mushy peas, the next . . .'
âKaboom?' said Ponder.
â“Kaboom”?' said Ridcully, forcing his way up the crowded street. âNot that I heard tell. More like “Aaaaerrrrscream-gristle-gristle-gristle-crack” and a shower of fried food. Big Mad Adrian and his friends any good when the chips are down?'
âUm. Probably not, Archchancellor.'
âCorrect. People shout and run about. That never did any good. A pocket full of decent spells and a well-charged staff will get you out of trouble nine times out of ten.'
âNine times out of ten?'
âCorrect.'
âHow many times have you had to rely on them, sir?'
âWell . . . there was Mr Hong . . . that business with the Thing in the Bursar's wardrobe . . . that dragon, you remember . . .' Ridcully's lips moved silently as he counted on his fingers. âNine times, so far.'
âIt worked every time, sir?'
âAbsolutely! So there's no need to worry. Gangway! Wizard comin' through.'
The city gates were open. Glod leaned forward as the cart rumbled in.
âDon't go straight to the park,' he said.
âBut we're late,' said Asphalt.
âThis won't take long. Go to the Street of Cunning Artificers first.'
âThat's right on the other side of the river!'
âIt's important. We've got to pick up something.'
People flocked the streets. This wasn't unusual, except that this time most of them were moving the same way.
âAnd you get down in the back of the cart,' said Glod to Buddy. âWe don't want young women trying to rip your clothes off, eh, Buddy . . . ?'
He turned. Buddy had gone to sleep again.
âSpeaking for myselfâ' Cliff began.
âYou've only got a loincloth,' said Glod.
âWell, they could grab it, couldn't they?'
The cart threaded its way through the streets until it turned into Cunning Artificers.
It was a street of tiny shops. In this street you could have anything made, repaired, crafted, rebuilt, copied or forged. Furnaces glowed in every doorway; smelters smoked in every backyard. Makers of intricate clockwork eggs worked alongside armourers. Carpenters worked next door to men who carved ivory into tiny shapes so delicate that they used grasshoppers' legs, cast in bronze, for saws. At least one in every four craftsmen was making tools to be used by the other three. Shops didn't just abut, they overlapped; if a carpenter had a big table to make he relied on the goodwill of his neighbours to make space, so that he'd be working at one end of it while two jewellers and a potter were using the other end as a bench. There were shops where you could drop in to be measured in the morning and pick up a complete suit of chain mail with an extra pair of pants in the afternoon.