Jingo d-21

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Jingo d-21 Page 28

by Terry Pratchett


  “Er—” said Colon.

  “We have plenty of donkeys,” said Lord Vetinari. There was general laughter, most of it directed at Colon.

  One of the men pointed to the dim interior of the minaret.

  “Look… see?”

  “A very narrow, winding staircase,” said the Patrician. “So…?”

  “There's nowhere to turn at the top, right? Oh, any fool can get a donkey up a minaret. But have you ever tried getting an animal to go backwards down a narrow staircase in the dark? Can't be done.”

  “There's something about a rising staircase,” said someone else. “It attracts donkeys. They think there's something at the top.”

  “We had to push the last one off, didn't we?” said one of the guards.

  “Right. It splashed,” said his comrade in arms.

  “No one is pushing Valerie off'f anything,” snarled Beti. “Any one of you tries anything like that and, s'welp me, you'll feel the wrong end of—” He stopped, and a wide horrible grin appeared behind the veil. “I mean, I'll give you a great big soppy kiss.”

  Several men at the back of the crowd took to their heels.

  “There's no need to get nasty,” said the guard.

  “I mean it!” said Beti, advancing.

  The cowering guard cringed. “Can't you do anything with her, sirs?”

  “Us?” said Lord Vetinari. “'fraid not. Oh dear… it's going to be like that business in Djelibeybi all over again, Al.”

  “Oh dear,” said Colon, mugging loyally. The crowd, or at least that part that thought itself sufficiently far away from Beti, started to grin. This was street theatre.

  “I don't know if they ever got that man down off the flagpole,” Vetinari went on.

  “Oh, most of 'im, they did,” said Colon.

  “Tell you what, tell you what,” said the guard hurriedly, “suppose we get a rope round it—”

  “—her—” Beti growled.

  “Her, right, and then—”

  “You'd need at least three men up there and there ain't no room!”

  “Sir, I've got an idea,” whispered one of the guards.

  “I should make it quick,” said Colon. “'cos there's no stopping Beti once she gets going.”

  The guards held a whispered argument.

  “We'd get into trouble if we do that! You know all that stuff we were told about the war effort! That's why they were all confiscated!”

  “No one will miss it for five minutes!”

  “Yeah, but you want to tell the prince we lost one?”

  “All right, but do you want to explain to her?”

  They both looked at Beti. “And they're easy to steer, after all,” one whispered.

  “Valerie?” said Sergeant Colon.

  “There is a problem?” Beti demanded.

  “No! No. It's a fine name for a donkey, N— Beti.”

  “No one is to do anything,” said one of the guards. “We will return.”

  “What was all that about?” said Colon, watching them go.

  “Oh, they've probably gone to get a carpet,” said someone.

  “Very nice, but I don't see how that'd help,” said Bets.

  “A flying one.”

  “Oh, right,” said Colon. “They've got one of those up at the University—”

  “Ur has a university?”

  “Oh, indeed,” said the Patrician. “How do you think Al learned what a donkey looks like?”

  Once again, laughter dispelled doubt. Colon grinned uncertainly.

  “I'm really getting good at this stupid idiot stuff, aren't I?” he said. “It just sort of happens!”

  “Marvellous,” said Lord Vetinari.

  There was another angry braying from far above.

  “Trouble is, they're all locked up because of the war effort,” said someone behind them.

  A piece of mud brick shattered on the ground nearby.

  “The way it's thrashing around up there, it's going to fall off anyway.”

  “Perhaps I should persuade her to come down,” said the Patrician.

  “Can't be done, offendi. You can't get past on the stairs, you can't turn it round, and it won't come down backwards.”

  “I shall consider the situation,” said the Patrician.

  He ambled back into the tavern for a moment, and returned. They saw him enter the door and they heard him climbing the staircase.

  “Should be good,” said a man behind Colon.

  After a while the braying stopped.

  “Can't turn round, see. Far too narrow,” said the elevated-donkey expert. “Can't turn round, won't go backwards. Well-known fact.”

  “There's always a know-all, right, Beti?” said Colon.

  “Yeah. Always.”

  The tower was full of silence. Several members of the crowd found their attention drawn to it.

  “I mean, if you could get three or four men up the stairs, which you can't, you could sort of move it a leg at a time, if you didn't mind being kicked and bitten to death…”

  “All right, all right, back away from the tower, will you?”

  The guards were back. One of them was carrying a rolled-up carpet.

  “All right, all right, give us room—”

  “I can hear hooves,” said someone.

  “Oh, yeah, like our friend in the fez is getting the donkey down the stairs?”

  “Hang on, I can hear them too,” said Colon.

  Now all eyes stared at the door.

  Lord Vetinari emerged, holding a length of rope.

  The voice behind Colon said, “All right, it's just a bit of rope. He was probably banging a couple of coconut shells together.”

  “You mean, ones that he found in the minaret?”

  “He had them with him, obviously.”

  “You mean, he carries coconut shells around?”

  “You can't turn a donkey round in— all right, that's a fake donkey head…”

  “It's moving its ears!”

  “On a string, on a string — all right, it's a donkey, OK, but it's not the same donkey. It's one he had in a hidden pocket… well, no need to look at me like that. I've seen them do it with doves…”

  Then even the unbeliever fell silent.

  “Donkey, minaret,” said Lord Vetinari. “Minaret, donkey.”{84}

  “Just like that?” said a guard. “How did you do it? It was a trick, right?”

  “Of course it was a trick,” said Lord Vetinari.

  “I knew it was just a trick.”

  “That's right, it was just a trick,” said Lord Vetinari.

  “So… how did you do it, then?”

  “You mean you can't spot it?”

  The crowd craned to see.

  “Er… you had an inflatable donkey—”

  “Can you think of any reason why I should go around with an inflatable donkey?”

  “Well, you—”

  “One that you wouldn't mind explaining to your own dear mother?”

  “If you're going to put it like that—”

  “'s easy,” said Al-jibla. “There's a secret compartment in the minaret. Must be.”

  “No, you've got it all wrong, it's just an illusion of a donkey… Well, all right, it's a good illusion…”

  By now half the people were around the donkey and the others were clustered in the doorway of the minaret, looking for secret panels.

  “I think, Al and Beti, this is where we walk away,” said Lord Vetinari, behind Colon. “Just down this little alley here. And when we turn that corner, we run.”

  “What've we got to run for?” said Beti.

  “Because I've just picked up the magic carpet.”

  Vimes was already lost. Oh, there was the sun, but that was just a direction. He could feel it on the side of his face.

  And the camel rocked from side to side. There was no real way of judging distance, except by haemorrhoids.

  I'm blindfolded on the back of a camel ridden by a D'reg, who everyone says
are the most untrustworthy people in the world. But I'm almost positive he's not going to kill me.

  “So,” he said, as he rocked gently from side to side, “you may as well tell me. Why 71-hour Ahmed?”

  “He killed a man,” said Jabbar.

  “And D'regs object to a little thing like that?”

  “In the man's own tent! When he had been his guest for nearly tree dace! If he had but waited an hour—”

  “Oh, I see. Definitely bad manners. Had the man done anything to deserve it?”

  “Nothing! Although…”

  “Yes?”

  “The man had killed El-Ysa.” The D'reg's tone suggested that this wasn't much of a mitigating circumstance, but that it ought to be mentioned out of completeness.

  “Who was she?”

  “El-Ysa was a village. He poisoned a well. There had been a dispute over religion,” he added. “One thing led to another… but even so, to break the tradition of hospitality…”

  “Yes, I can see that's a terrible thing. Almost… impolite.”

  “The hour was important. Some things should not be done.”

  “You're right there, at least.”

  By mid-afternoon Jabbar let him take off the blindfold. Wind-carved heaps of black rock stood out of the sand. Vimes thought it was the most desolate place he'd ever seen.

  “They say once it was green,” said Jabbar. “A well watered land.”

  “What happened?”

  “The wind changed.”

  At sunset they reached a wadi between more windscoured rocks, and it was only the length of the shadows, deepening the shallow indentations, that began to give them back an ancient shape.

  “They're buildings, aren't they?” said Vimes.

  “There was a city here, a long time ago. Did you not know?”

  “Why should I know?”

  “Your people built it. It was called Tacticum. After a warrior of yours.”

  Vimes looked at the crumbled walls and fallen pillars.

  “He had a city named after him…”{85} he said to no-one in particular.

  Jabbar nudged him. “Ahmed is watching you,” he said.

  “I can't see him anywhere.”

  “Of course. Get down. And I hope we meet again in whatever is your paradise.”

  “Right, right…”

  Jabbar turned the camel round. It left much faster than it had arrived.

  Vimes sat on a rock for a while. There was no sound but the hissing of the wind in the rocks and the cry of some bird, far away.

  He thought he could hear his own heart beating.

  “Bingeley… bingeley… beep…” The Dis-organizer sounded worried and uncertain.

  Vimes sighed. “Yes? Appointment with 71-hour Ahmed, eh?”

  “Er… no…” said the demon. “Er… Klatchian fleet sighted… er…”

  “Ships of the desert, eh?”

  “Er… beep… error code 746, divergent temporal instability…”

  Vimes shook the box. “Something wrong with you?” he demanded. “You're still giving me someone else's appointments, you idiot box!”

  “Er… the appointments are correct for Commander Samuel Vimes…”

  “That's me!”

  “Which one of you?” said the demon.

  “What?”

  “…beep…”

  It refused to say more. Vimes considered throwing it away, but Sybil would be hurt if she found out. He thrust it back into his pocket and tried to concentrate on the scenery again.

  His seat might have been part of a pillar once. Vimes saw other pieces some way away, and then realized that a heap of apparent rubble was a fallen wall. He followed this, his footsteps echoing off the cliffs, and realized that he was walking between old buildings, or where buildings had been. Here was the wreck of some stairs, there the stump of a pillar.

  One was a little higher than the others. He pulled himself up and found, on its flat top, two huge feet. A statue must have stood here. It probably stood, if Vimes knew anything about statues, in some kind of noble attitude. Now it had gone, and there were just feet, broken off at the ankles.{86} They weren't exceptionally noble.

  As he lowered himself again he saw, protected because this side was out of the wind, some lettering carved deeply into the plinth. He tried to make it out in the fading light:

  “AB HOC POSSUM VIDERE DOMUM TUUM”

  Well… “domum tuum” was “your house”, wasn't it? …and “videre” was “I see”…

  “What?” he said aloud. “‘I can see your house from up here?’ What kind of a noble sentiment is that?”

  “I believe it was meant to be a boast and a threat, Sir Samuel,” said 71-hour Ahmed. “Somewhat typical of Ankh-Morpork, I've always thought.”

  Vimes stood very still. The voice had been right behind him.

  And it was Ahmed's voice. But it lacked that hint of camel spit and gravel that it had possessed in Ankh-Morpork. Now it was the drawl of a gentleman.

  “It's the echoes here,” Ahmed went on. “I could be anywhere. I could have a crossbow aimed at you right now.”

  “You won't fire it, though. We've both got too much at stake.”

  “Oh, there is honour among thieves, is there?”

  “I don't know,” said Vimes. Oh, well… time to see if he was dead right or just dead. “Is there honour among policemen?”

  Sergeant Colon's eyes went big.

  “Swing my weight to one side?” he said.

  “That's how magic carpets are steered,” said Lord Vetinari calmly.

  “Yes, but supposing I swing myself off?”

  “We'll have a lot more room,” said Beti unfeelingly. “C'mon, sarge, you know how to throw your weight around.”

  “I ain't throwing my weight anywhere,” said Colon firmly. He was lying full length on the carpet, both hands gripping it as hard as possible. “It's not natural, just a bit of broadloom between you and certain splash.”

  The Patrician looked down. “We're not over water, sergeant.”

  “I know what I meant, sir!”

  “Can we slow down a bit?” said Beti. “The breeze is invading my privacy, if you get my drift.”

  Lord Vetinari sighed. “We're not going very fast as it is. I suspect this is a very old carpet.”

  “There's a frayed bit here,” said Beti.

  “Shut up,” said Colon.

  “Look, I can poke my finger right through—”

  “Shut up.”

  “Notice how it kind of wobbles when you move?”

  “Shut up.”

  “Here, look, those palm trees down there look really small.”

  “Nobby, you're scared of heights,” said Colon. “I know you're scared of heights.”

  “That's sexual stereotyping!”

  “No, it's not!”

  “Yes, it is! You'll be expecting me to break my ankle a lot and scream all the time next! It's my job to prove to you that a woman can be as good as a man!”

  “Practically identical in your case, Nobby. You've caught too much sun, that's what it is. You are not female, Nobby!”

  Beti sniffed. “That's just the sort of sexist remark I'd expect from you.”

  “Well, you're not!”

  “It's the principle of the thing.”

  “Well, at least we now have transport,” said Lord Vetinari, his tone suggesting that the show was over. “Unfortunately, I had no time to find out where the army is.”

  “Ah! I can help you there, sir!” Colon tried to salute, and then made a grab for the carpet again. “I found out by cunning, sir!”

  “Really?”

  “Yessir! It's at a place called… er… En al Sams la Laisa, sir.”

  The carpet drifted onwards for a moment, in silence.

  “‘The Place where the Sun Shineth Not’?” said the Patrician.

  There was more silence. Colon was trying not to look at anyone.

  “Is there a somewhere called Gebra?” said Nobby, sulkily.
<
br />   “Yes, Be— corporal. There is.”

  “They've gone there. Of course, you've only got a woman's word for it.”

  “Well done, corporal. We shall head up the coast.”

  Lord Vetinari relaxed. In a busy and complex life he'd never met people quite like Nobby and Colon. They talked all the time yet there was something almost… restful about them.

  He watched the dusty horizon carefully as the ancient carpet curved around. Under his arm was the metal cylinder Leonard had made for him.

  Drastic times required drastic measures.

  “Sir?” said Colon, his voice muffled by the carpet.

  “Yes, sergeant?”

  “I've got to know… How did you… you know… get the donkey down?”

  “Persuasion, sergeant.”

  “What? Just talking?”

  “Yes, sergeant. Persuasion. And, admittedly, a sharp stick.”

  “Ah! I knew—”

  “The trick of getting donkeys down from minarets,” said the Patrician, as the desert unwound below them, “is always to find that part of the donkey which seriously wishes to get down.”

  The wind had settled. The bird up on the cliffs had shut down for the night. All Vimes could hear was the sizzle of the little desert creatures.

  Then Ahmed's voice said: “I am genuinely impressed, Sir Samuel.”

  Vimes took a deep breath. “You know, you really fooled me,” he said. “‘May your loins be full of fruit.’ That was a good one. I really thought you were just—” He stopped. But Ahmed continued:

  “—just another camel-driver with a towel on his head? Oh, dear. And you'd been doing so well up to now, Sir Samuel. The Prince was very impressed.”

  “Oh, come on. You were all but making suggestive comments about melons. What was I supposed to think?”

  “Don't fret, Sir Samuel. I consider it all a compliment. You can turn round. I wouldn't dream of harming you unless you do something… foolish.”

  Vimes turned. He could just make out a shape in the afterglow.

  “You were admiring this place,” said Ahmed. “Tacticus's men had it built when he tried to conquer Klatch. It's not really a city by today's standards, of course. It was really just making a point. ‘Here we are and here we stay,’ as it were. And then the wind changed.”

  “You murdered Snowy Slopes, didn't you?”

 

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