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Terry Pratchett – Men at Arms

Throat had chosen today to give his new approach a try. He pushed his hot food barrow through streets broad and narrow, crying:

‘Sausages! Hot sausages! Inna bun! Meat pies! Get them while they’re hot!’

This was by way of a warm up. The chances of a human eating anything off Dibbler’s barrow unless it was stamped flat and pushed under the door after two weeks on a starvation diet was, by now, remote. He looked around conspiratorially – there were always trolls working in the docks – and took the cover off a fresh tray.

Now then, what was it? Oh, yes . . .

‘Dolomitic conglomerates! Get chore dolomitic conglomerates heeyar! Manganese nodules! Manganese nodules! Get them while they’re . . . uh . , . nodule-shaped.’ He hesitated a bit, and then rallied. ‘Pumice! Pumice! Tufa a dollar! Roast limestones—’

A few trolls wandered up to stare at him.

‘You, sir, you look . . . hungry,’ said Dibbler, grinning widely at the smallest troll. ‘Why not try our shale on a bun? Mmm-mmm! Taste that alluvial deposit, know what I mean?’

C. M. O. T. Dibbler had a number of bad points, but species prejudice was not one of them. He liked anyone who had money, regardless of the colour and shape of the hand that was proffering it. For Dibbler believed in a world where a sapient creature could walk tall, breathe free, pursue life, liberty and happiness, and step out towards the bright new dawn. If they could be persuaded to gobble something off Dibbler’s hot-food tray at the same time, this was all to the good.

The troll inspected the tray suspiciously, and lifted up a bun.

‘Urrh, yuk,’ he said, ‘it’s got all ammonites in it! Yuk!’

‘Pardon?’ said Dibbler.

‘Dis shale,’ said the troll, ‘is stale.’

‘Lovely and fresh! Just like mother used to hew!’

‘Yeah, and there’s bloody quartz all through dis granite,’ said another troll, towering over Dibbler. ‘Clogs the arteries, quartz.’

He slammed the rock back on the tray. The trolls ambled off, occasionally turning around to give Dibbler a suspicious look.

‘Stale? Stale! How can it be stale? It’s rockl’ shouted Dibbler after them He shrugged. Oh, well. The hallmark of a good businessman was knowing when to cut your losses.

He closed the lid of the tray, and opened another one.

‘Hole food! Hole food! Rat! Rat! Rat-onna-stick! Rat-in-a-bun! Get them while they’re dead! Get chore—’

There was a crash of glass above him, and Lance-Constable Cuddy landed head first in the tray.

‘There’s no need to rush, plenty for everyone,’ said Dibbler.

‘Pull me out,’ said Cuddy, in a muffled voice. ‘Or pass me the ketchup.’

Dibbler hauled on the dwarf’s boots. There was ice on them.

‘Just come down the mountain, have you?’

‘Where’s the man with the key to this warehouse?’

‘If you liked our rat, then why not try our fine selection of-‘

Cuddy’s axe appeared almost magically in his hand.

‘I’ll cut your knees off,’ he said.

‘GerhardtSockoftheButchers’Guildiswhoyouwant.’

‘Right.’

‘ Nowpleasetaketheaxeaway.’

Cuddy’s boots skidded on the cobbles as he hurried off.

Dibbler peered at the broken remains of the cart. His lips moved as he calculated.

‘Here!’ he shouted. ‘You owe – hey, you owe me for three rats!’

Lord Vetinari had felt slightly ashamed when he watched the door close behind Captain Vimes. He couldn’t work out why. Of course, it was hard on the man, but it was the only way . . .

He took a key from a cabinet by his desk and walked over to the wall. His hands touched a mark on the plaster that was apparently no different from a dozen other marks, but this one caused a section of wall to swing aside on well-oiled hinges.

No-one knew all the passages and tunnels hidden in the walls of the Palace; it was said that some of them went a lot further than that. And there were any amount of old cellars under the city. A man with a pick-axe and a sense of direction could go where he liked just by knocking down forgotten walls.

He walked down several narrow flights of steps and along a passage to a door, which he unlocked. It swung back on well-oiled hinges.

It was not, exactly, a dungeon; the room on the other side was quite airy and well lit by several large but high windows. It had a smell of wood shavings and glue.

‘Look out!’

The Patrician ducked.

Something batlike clicked and whirred over his head, circled erratically in the middle of the room, and then flew apart into a dozen jerking pieces.

‘Oh dear,’ said a mild voice. ‘Back to the drawing tablet. Good afternoon, your lordship.’

‘Good afternoon, Leonard,’ said the Patrician. ‘What was that?’

‘I call it a flapping-wing-flying-device,’ said Leonard da Quirm, getting down off his launching stepladder. ‘It works by gutta-percha strips twisted tightly together. But not very well, I’m afraid.’

Leonard of Quirm was not, in fact, all that old. He was one of those people who started looking venerable around the age of thirty, and would probably still look about the same at the age of ninety. He wasn’t exactly bald, either. His head had just grown up through his hair, rising like a mighty rock dome through heavy forest.

Inspirations sleet through the universe continuously. Their destination, as if they cared, is the right mind in the place at the right time. They hit the right neuron, there’s a chain reaction, and a little while later someone is blinking foolishly in the TV lights and wondering how the hell he came up with the idea of pre-sliced bread in the first place.

Leonard of Quirm knew about inspirations. One of his earliest inventions was an earthed metal nightcap, worn ini the hope that the damn things would stop leaving their white-hot trails across his tortured imagination. It seldom worked. He knew the shame of waking up to find the sheets covered with nocturnal sketches of unfamiliar siege engines and novel designs for apple-peeling machines.

The da Quirms had been quite rich and young Leonard had been to a great many schools, where he had absorbed a ragbag of information despite his habit of staring out of the window and sketching the flight of birds. Leonard was one of those unfortunate individuals whose fate it was to be fascinated by the world, the taste, shape and movement of it . . .

He fascinated Lord Vetinari as well, which is why he was still alive. Some things are so perfect of their type that they are hard to destroy. One of a kind is always special.

He was a model prisoner. Give him enough wood, wire, paint and above all give him paper and pencils, and he stayed put.

The Patrician moved a stack of drawings and sat down.

‘These are good,’ he said. ‘What are they?’

‘My cartoons,’ said Leonard.

‘This is a good one of the little boy with his kite stuck in a tree,’ said Lord Vetinari.

‘Thank you. May I make you some tea? I’m afraid I don’t see many people these days, apart from the man who oils the hinges.’

‘I’ve come to . . .’

The Patrician stopped and prodded at one of the drawings.

‘There’s a piece of yellow paper stuck to this one,’ he said, suspiciously. He pulled at it. It came away from the drawing with a faint sucking noise, and then stuck to his fingers. On the note, in Leonard’s crabby backward script, were the words: ‘krow ot smees sihT: omeM’.

‘Oh, I’m rather pleased with that,’ said Leonard. ‘I call it my “Handy-note-scribbling-piece-of-paper-with-glue-that-comes-unstuck-when-you-want”.’

The Patrician played with it for a while.

‘What’s the glue made of?’

‘Boiled slugs.’

The Patrician pulled the paper off one hand. It stuck to the other hand.

‘Is that what you came to see me about?’ said Leonard.

‘No. I came to talk to you,’ said Lord Vetinari, ‘about the gonne.’

‘Oh, dear. I’m very sorry.’

‘I am afraid it has . . . escaped.’

‘My goodness. I thought you said you’d done away with it.’

‘I gave it to the Assassins to destroy. After all, they pride themselves on the artistic quality of their work. They should be horrified at the idea of anyone having that sort of power. But the damn fools did not destroy it. They thought they could lock it away. And now they’ve lost it.’

‘They didn’t destroy it?’

‘Apparently not, the fools.’

And nor did you. I wonder why?’

‘1 . . . do you know, I don’t know?’

‘I should never have made it. It was merely an application of principles. Ballistics, you know. Simple aerodynamics. Chemical power. Some rather good alloying, although I say it myself. And I’m rather proud of the rifling idea. I had to make a quite complicated tool for that, you know. Milk? Sugar?’

‘No, thank you.’

‘People are searching for it, I trust?’

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Categories: Terry Pratchett
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