A Hat Full of Sky by Terry Pratchett

them, were much more comfortable and really easy to walk in. They had been walking

since long before Tiffany was born, and knew how to do it.

‘And are we going to see any . . . little men today?’ Miss Tick went on, once they were

walking again.

‘I don’t know, Miss Tick,’ said Tiffany. ‘I told them

a month ago I was leaving. They’re very busy at this time of year. But there’s always one

or two of them watching me.’

Miss Tick looked around quickly. ‘I can’t see anything,’ she said. ‘Or hear anything.’

‘No, that’s how you can tell they’re there,’ said Tiffany. ‘It’s always a bit quieter if

they’re watching me. But they won’t show themselves while you’re with me. They’re a

bit frightened of hags – that’s their word for witches,’ she added quickly. ‘It’s

nothing personal.’

Miss Tick sighed. ‘When I was a little girl I’d have loved to see the pictsies,’ she said. ‘I

used to put out little saucers of milk. Of course, later on I realized that wasn’t quite the

thing to do.’

‘No, you should have used strong licker,’ said Tiffany.

She glanced at the hedge and thought she saw, just for the snap of a second, a flash of

red hair. And she smiled, a little nervously.

Tiffany had been, if only for a few days, the nearest a human being can be to a queen

of the fairies. Admittedly, she’d been called a kelda rather than a queen, and the

Nac Mac Feegle should only be called fairies to their face if you were looking

for a fight. On the other hand the Nac Mac Feegle were always looking for a fight, in

a cheerful sort of way, and when they had no one to fight they fought one another,

and if one was all by himself

he’d kick his own nose just to keep in practice.

Technically, they had lived in Fairyland, but had been thrown out, probably for

being drunk. And now, because if you’d ever been their kelda they never forgot you .

. .

. . . they were always there.

There was always one somewhere on the farm, or circling on a buzzard high over the

chalk downs. And they watched her, to help and protect her, whether she wanted them

to or not. Tiffany had been as polite as possible about this. She’d hidden her diary right at

the back of a drawer and blocked up the cracks in the privy with wadded paper, and

done her best with the gaps in her bedroom floorboards, too. They were little men, after

all. She was sure they tried to remain unseen so as not to disturb her, but she’d got very

good at spotting them.

They granted wishes – not the magical fairytale three wishes, the ones that always go

wrong in the end, but ordinary, everyday ones. The Nac Mac Feegle were immensely

strong and fearless and incredibly fast, but they weren’t good at understanding that

what people said often wasn’t what they meant. One day, in the dairy, Tiffany had said, 1 wish I had a sharper knife to cut this cheese,’ and her mother’s sharpest knife was

quivering in the table beside her almost before she’d got the words out.

‘I wish this rain would clear up’ was probably OK, because the Feegles couldn’t do

actual magic, but she had learned to be careful not to wish for anything

that might be achievable by some small, determined, strong, fearless and fast men who

were also not above giving someone a good kicking if they felt like it.

Wishes needed thought. She was never likely to say, out loud, ‘I wish that I could

marry a handsome prince,’ but knowing that if you did you’d probably open the door to

find a stunned prince, a tied-up priest and a Nac Mac Feegle grinning cheerfully and

ready to act as Best Man definitely made you watch what you said. But they could be

helpful, in a haphazard way, and she’d taken to leaving out for them things that the

family didn’t need but might be useful to little people, like tiny mustard spoons, pins, a

soup bowl that would make a nice bath for a Feegle and, in case they didn’t get the

message, some soap. They didn’t steal the soap.

Her last visit to the ancient burial mound high on the chalk down where the pictsies

lived had been to attend the wedding of Rob Anybody, the Big Man of the clan, to

Jeannie of the Long Lake. She was going to be the new kelda and spend most of the rest

of her life in the mound, having babies like a queen bee.

Feegles from other clans had all turned up for the celebration, because if there’s one

thing a Feegle likes more than a party, it’s a bigger party, and if there’s anything better

than a bigger party, it’s a bigger party with someone else paying for the drink. To be

honest, Tiffany had felt a bit out of place, being ten times as tall as the next tallest person

there, but she’d

been treated very well and Rob Anybody had made a long speech about her, calling her

‘our fine big wee young hag’ before falling face first into the pudding. It had all been

very hot, and very loud, but she’d joined in the cheer when Jeannie had carried Rob

Anybody over a tiny broomstick that had been laid on the floor. Traditionally, both the

bride and the groom should jump over the broomstick but, equally traditionally, no self-

respecting Feegle would be sober on his wedding day.

She’d been warned that it would be a good idea to leave then, because of the

traditional fight between the bride’s clan and the groom’s clan, which could take until

Friday.

Tiffany had bowed to Jeannie, because that’s what hags did, and had a good look at

her. She was small and sweet and very pretty. She also had a glint in her eye and a

certain proud lift to her chin. Nac Mac Feegle girls were very rare and they grew up

knowing they were going to be keldas one day, and Tiffany had a definite feeling that Rob

Anybody was going to find married life trickier than he thought.

She was going to be sorry to leave them behind, but not terribly sorry. They were

nice in a way but they could, after a while, get on your nerves. Anyway, she was

eleven now, and had a feeling that after a certain age you shouldn’t slide down holes in

the ground to talk to little men.

Besides, the look that Jeannie had given her, just for a moment, had been pure

poison. Tiffany had

read its meaning without having to try. Tiffany had been the kelda of the clan, even if it

was only for a short time. She had also been engaged to be married to Rob Anybody,

even if that had only been a sort of political trick. Jeannie knew all that. And the look

had said: He is mine. This place is mine. I do not want you here! Keep out!

A pool of silence followed Tiffany and Miss Tick down the lane, since the usual things

that rustle in hedges tended to keep very quiet when the Nac Mac Feegle were around.

They reached the little village green and sat down to wait for the carrier’s cart that

went just a bit faster than walking pace and would take five hours to get to the village of

Twoshirts, where – Tiffany’s parents thought – they’d get the big coach that ran all the

way to the distant mountains and beyond.

Tiffany could actually see it coming up the road when she heard the hoofbeats across

the green. She turned, and her heart seemed to leap and sink at the same time.

It was Roland, the Baron’s son, on a fine black horse. He leaped down before the

horse had stopped, and then stood there looking embarrassed.

‘Ah, I see a very fine and interesting example of a . . . a . . . a big stone over there,’

said Miss Tick in a sticky-sweet voice. I’ll just go and have a look at it, shall I?’

Tiffany could have pinched her for that.

‘Er, you’re going, then,’ said Roland as Miss Tick hurried away.

‘Yes,’ said Tiffany.

Roland looked as though he was going to explode with nervousness.

1 got this for you,’ he said. ‘I had it made by a man, er, over in Yelp.’ He held

out a package wrapped in soft paper.

Tiffany took it and put it carefully in her pocket.

Thank you,’ she said, and dropped a small curtsy. Strictly speaking that’s what you had

to do when you met a nobleman, but it just made Roland blush and stutter.

‘O-open it later on,’ said Roland. ‘Er, I hope you’ll like it.’

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