Discworld 16 - Soul Music

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Discworld 16 - Soul Music Page 12

by Terry Pratchett


  It was the Bursar, standing in the doorway. A large red-faced man was behind him, craning over his shoulder.

  “What is it, Bursar?”

  “Erm, this gentleman has got a—”

  “It’s about your monkey,” said the man.

  Ridcully brightened up.

  “Oh, yes?”

  “Apparently, erm, he sto—removed some wheels from this gentleman’s carriage,” said the Bursar, who was on the depressive side of his mental cycle.

  “You sure it was the Librarian?” said the Archchancellor.

  “Fat, red hair, says ‘ook’ a lot?”

  “That’s him. Oh, dear. I wonder why he did that?” said Ridcully. “Still, you know what they say…a five-hundred-pound gorilla can sleep where he likes.”

  “But a three-hundred-pound monkey can give me my bloody wheels back,” said the man, unmoved. “If I don’t get my wheels back, there’s going to be trouble.”

  “Trouble?” said Ridcully.

  “Yeah. And don’t think you can scare me. Wizards don’t scare me. Everyone knows there’s a rule that you mustn’t use magic against civilians.” The man thrust his face close to Ridcully and raised a fist.

  Ridcully snapped his fingers. There was an inrush of air, and a croak.

  “I’ve always thought of it more as a guideline,” he said, mildly. “Bursar, go and put this frog in the flower bed and when he becomes his old self give him ten dollars. Ten dollars would be all right, wouldn’t it?”

  “Croak,” said the frog hastily.

  “Good. And now will someone tell me what’s going on?”

  There was a series of crashes from downstairs.

  “Why do I think,” said Ridcully, to the world in general, “that this isn’t going to be the answer?”

  The servants had been laying the tables for lunch. This generally took some time. Since wizards took their meals seriously, and left a lot of mess, the tables were in a permanent state of being laid, cleaned, or occupied. Place settings alone took a lot of time. Each wizard required nine knives, thirteen forks, twelve spoons, and one rammer, quite apart from all the wineglasses.

  Wizards often turned up in ample time for the next meal. In fact they were often there in good time to have second helpings of the previous one.

  A wizard was sitting there now.

  “That’s Recent Runes, ain’t it?” said Ridcully.

  He had a knife in each hand. He also had the salt, pepper, and mustard pots in front of him. And the cake stand. And a couple of tureen covers. All of which he was hitting vigorously with the knives.

  “What’s he doing that for?” said Ridcully. “And, Dean, will you stop tapping your feet?”

  “Well, it’s catchy,” said the Dean.

  “It’s catching,” said Ridcully.

  The Lecturer in Recent Runes was frowning in concentration. Forks jangled across the woodwork. A spoon caught a glancing blow, pinwheeled through the air, and hit the Bursar on the ear.

  “What the hells does he think he’s doing?”

  “That really hurt!”

  The wizards clustered around the Lecturer in Recent Runes. He paid them no attention whatsoever. Sweat poured down his beard.

  “He just broke the cruet,” said Ridcully.

  “It’s going to smart for hours.”

  “Ah, yes, he’s as hot as mustard,” said the Dean.

  “I’d take that with a pinch of salt,” said the Senior Wrangler.

  Ridcully straightened up. He raised a hand.

  “Now, someone’s about to say something like ‘I hope the Watch don’t ketchup with him,’ aren’t you?” he said. “Or ‘That’s a bit of a sauce’ or I bet you’re all trying to think of somethin’ silly to say about pepper. I’d just like to know what’s the difference between this faculty and a bunch of pea-brained idiots.”

  “Hahaha,” said the Bursar nervously, still rubbing his ear.

  “It wasn’t a rhetorical question.” Ridcully snatched the knives out of the Lecturer’s hands. The man went on beating the air for a moment and then appeared to wake up.

  “Oh, hello, Archchancellor. Is there a problem?”

  “What were you doing?”

  The Lecturer looked down at the table.

  “He was syncopating,” said the Dean.

  “I never was!”

  Ridcully frowned. He was a thick-skinned, single-minded man with the tact of a sledgehammer and about the same sense of humor, but he was not stupid. And he knew that wizards were like weather vanes, or the canaries that miners used to detect pockets of gas. They were by their nature tuned to an occult frequency. If there was anything strange happening, it tended to happen to wizards first. They turned, as it were, to face it. Or dropped off their perch.

  “Why’s everyone suddenly so musical?” he said. “Using the term in its loosest sense, of course.” He looked at the assembled wizardry. And then down toward the floor.

  “You’ve all got crépe on your shoes!”

  The wizards looked at their feet with some surprise.

  “My word, I thought I was a bit taller,” said the Senior Wrangler. “I put it down to the celery diet.” *

  “Proper footwear for a wizard is pointy shoes or good stout boots,” said Ridcully. “When one’s footwear turns creepy, something’s amiss.”

  “It’s crepe,” said the Dean. “It’s got a little pointy thingy over the—”

  Ridcully breathed heavily.

  “When your boots change by themselves—” he growled.

  “There’s magic afoot?”

  “Haha, good one, Senior Wrangler,” said the Dean.

  “I want to know what’s going on,” said Ridcully, in a low and level voice. “And if you don’t all shut up, there will be trouble.”

  He reached into the pockets of his robe and, after a few false starts, produced a pocket thaumometer. He held it up. There was always a high level of background magic in the University, but the little needle was on the “Normal” mark. On average, anyway. It was ticking backward and forward across it like a metronome.

  Ridcully held it up so they could all see.

  “What’s this?” he said.

  “Four-four time?” said the Dean.

  “Music ain’t magic,” said Ridcully. “Don’t be daft. Music’s just twanging and banging and—”

  He stopped.

  “Has anyone got anything they should be telling me?”

  The wizards shuffled their blue-suede feet nervously.

  “Well,” said the Senior Wrangler, “it is a fact that last night, er, I, that is to say, some of us, happened to be passing by the Mended Drum—”

  “Bona-Fide Travelers,” said the Lecturer in Recent Runes. “It’s allowable for Bona-Fide Travelers to get a Drink at Licensed Premises at any Hour of Day or Night. City statute, you know.”

  “Where were you traveling from, then?” Ridcully demanded.

  “The Bunch of Grapes.”

  “That’s just around the corner.”

  “Yes, but we were…tired.”

  “All right, all right,” said Ridcully, in the voice of a man who knows that pulling at a thread any more will cause the whole vest to unravel. “The Librarian was with you?”

  “Oh, yes.”

  “Go on.”

  “Well, there was this music—”

  “Sort of twangy,” said the Senior Wrangler.

  “Melody led,” said the Dean.

  “It was…”

  “…sort of…”

  “…in a way it…”

  “…kind of gets under your skin and makes you feel fizzy,” said the Dean. “Incidentally, has anyone got any black paint? I’ve looked everywhere.”

  “Under your skin,” murmured Ridcully. He scratched his chin. “Oh, dear. One of those. Stuff leakin’ into the universe again, eh? Influences coming from Outside, yes? Remember what happened when Mr. Hong opened his take-away fish bar on the site of the old temple in Dagon Street? And then there
was those moving pictures. I was against them from the start. And those wire things on wheels. This universe has more damn holes in it than a Quirm cheese. Well, at—”

  “Lancre cheese,” said the Senior Wrangler helpfully. “That’s the one with the holes. Quirm is the one with the blue veins.”

  Ridcully gave him a look.

  “Actually, it didn’t feel magical,” said the Dean. He sighed. He was seventy-two. It had made him feel that he was seventeen again. He couldn’t remember having been seventeen; it was something that must have happened to him while he was busy. But it made him feel like he imagined it felt like when you were seventeen, which was like having a permanent red-hot vest on under your skin.

  He wanted to hear it again.

  “I think they’re going to have it again tonight,” he ventured. “We could, er, go along and listen. In order to learn more about it, in case it’s a threat to society,” he added virtuously.

  “That’s right, Dean,” said the Lecturer in Recent Runes. “It’s our civic duty. We’re the city’s first line of supernatural defense. Supposing ghastly creatures started coming out of the air?”

  “What about it?” said the Chair of Indefinite Studies.

  “Well, we’d be there.”

  “Yes? That’s good, is it?”

  Ridcully glared at his wizards. Two of them were surreptitiously tapping their feet. And several of them appeared to be twitching, very gently. The Bursar twitched gently all the time, of course, but that was only his way.

  Like canaries, he thought. Or lightning conductors.

  “All right,” he said reluctantly. “We’ll go. But we won’t draw attention to ourselves.”

  “Certainly, Archchancellor.”

  “And everyone’s to buy their own drink.”

  “Oh.”

  Corporal (possibly) Cotton saluted in front of the fort’s sergeant, who was trying to shave.

  “It’s the new recruit, sir,” he said. “He won’t obey orders.”

  The sergeant nodded, and then looked blankly at something in his own hand.

  “Razor, sir,” said the corporal, helpfully. “He just keeps on saying things like IT’S NOT HAPPENING YET.”

  “Have you tried burying him up to the neck in the sand? That usually works.”

  “It’s a bit…um…thing…nasty to people…had it a moment ago…” The corporal snapped his fingers. “Thing. Cruel. That’s it. We don’t give people…the Pit…these days.”

  “This is the…” the sergeant glanced at the palm of his left hand, where there were several lines of writing, “the Foreign Legion.”

  “Yessir. All right, sir. He’s weird. He just sits there all the time. We call him Beau Nidle, sir.”

  The sergeant peered bemusedly at the mirror.

  “It’s your face, sir,” said the corporal.

  Susan stared at herself critically.

  Susan…it wasn’t a good name, was it? It wasn’t a truly bad name, it wasn’t like poor Iodine in the fourth form, or Nigella, a name which meant “oops, we wanted a boy.” But it was dull. Susan. Sue. Good old Sue. It was a name that made sandwiches, kept its head in difficult circumstances, and could reliably look after other people’s children.

  It was a name used by no queens or goddesses anywhere.

  And you couldn’t do much even with the spelling. You could turn it into Suzi, and it sounded as though you danced on tables for a living. You could put in a Z and a couple of Ns and an E, but it still looked like a name with extensions built on. It was as bad as Sara, a name that cried out for a prosthetic H.

  Well, at least she could do something about the way she looked.

  It was the robe. It might be traditional but…she wasn’t. The alternative was her school uniform or one of her mother’s pink creations. The baggy dress of the Quirm College for Young Ladies was a proud one and, in the mind of Miss Butts at least, proof against all the temptations of the flesh…but it lacked a certain panache as costume for the Ultimate Reality. And pink was not even to be thought of.

  For the first time in the history of the universe, a Death wondered about what to wear.

  “Hold on,” she said, to her reflection. “Here… I can create things, can’t I?”

  She held out her hand and thought: cup. A cup appeared. It had a skull-and-bones pattern around the rim.

  “Ah,” said Susan. “I suppose a pattern of roses is out of the question? Probably not right for the ambience, I expect.”

  She put the cup on the dressing table and tapped it. It went plink in a solid sort of way.

  “Well, then,” she said to her reflection, “I don’t want something soppy and posey. No silly black lace or anything worn by idiots who write poetry in their rooms and dress like vampires and are vegetarians really.”

  The images of clothes floated across her reflection. It was clear that black was the only option, but she settled on something practical and without frills. She put her head on one side critically.

  “Well, maybe a bit of lace,” she said. “And…perhaps a bit more…bodice.”

  She nodded at her reflection in the mirror. Certainly it was a dress that no Susan would ever wear, although she suspected that there was a basic Susanness about her which would permeate it after a while.

  “It’s a good job you’re here,” she said, “or I’d go totally mad. Haha.”

  Then she went to see her grandf…Death.

  There was one place he had to be.

  Glod wandered quietly into the University Library. Dwarfs respected learning, provided they didn’t have to experience it.

  He tugged at the robe of a passing young wizard.

  “There’s a monkey runs this place, right?” he said. “Big fat hairy monkey, hands a couple of octaves wide?”

  The wizard, a pasty-faced postgraduate student, looked down at Glod with the disdainful air a certain type of person always reserved for dwarfs.

  It wasn’t much fun being a student in Unseen University. You had to find your pleasures where you could. He grinned a big, wide innocent grin.

  “Why, yes,” he said. “I do believe right at this moment he’s in his workroom in the basement. But you have to be very careful how you address him.”

  “Is that so?” said Glod.

  “Yes, you have to be sure to say, ‘Do you want a peanut, Mr¨Monkey?’” said the student wizard. He signaled a couple of his colleagues. “That’s so, isn’t it? He has to say Mister Monkey.”

  “Oh, yes indeedy,” said a student. “Actually, if you don’t want him to get annoyed, it’s best to be on the safe side and scratch under your arms. That puts him at his ease.”

  “And go ugh-ugh-ugh,” said a third student. “He likes that.”

  “Well, thank you very much,” said Glod. “Which way do I go?”

  “We’ll show you,” said the first student.

  “That’s so very kind.”

  “Don’t mention it. Only too glad to help.”

  The three wizards led Glod down a flight of steps and into a tunnel. Light filtered down through the occasional pane of green glass set in the floor above. Every so often Glod heard a snigger behind him.

  The Librarian was squatting down on the floor in a long, high cellar. Miscellaneous items had been scattered on the floor in front of him; there was a cart wheel, odd bits of wood and bone, and various pipes, rods, and lengths of wire that somehow suggested that, around the city, people were puzzling over broken pumps and fences with holes in them. The Librarian was chewing the end of a piece of pipe and looking intently at the heap.

  “That’s him,” said one of the wizards, giving Glod a push.

  The dwarf shuffled forward. There was another outburst of muffled giggling behind him.

  He tapped the Librarian on the shoulder.

  “Excuse me—”

  “Ook?”

  “Those guys just called you a monkey,” said Glod, jerking a thumb in the direction of the door. “I’d make them say ‘sorry,’ if I was you.


  There was a creaking, metallic noise, followed very closely by a scuffling outside as the wizards trampled one another in their effort to get away.

  The Librarian had bent the pipe into a U-shape, apparently without effort.

  Glod went to the door and looked out. There was a pointy hat on the flagstones, trampled flat.

  “That was fun,” he said. “If I’d just asked them where the Librarian was, they’d have said bugger off, you dwarf. You have to know how to deal with people in this game.”

  He came back and sat down beside the Librarian. The ape put a smaller bend in the pipe.

  “What’re you making?” said Glod.

  “Oook-oook-OOK!”

  “My cousin Modo is the gardener here,” said Glod. “He says you’re a mean keyboard player.” He stared at the hands, busy in their pipe bending. They were big. And of course there were four of them. “He was certainly partly right,” he added.

  The ape picked up a length of driftwood and tasted it.

  “We thought you might like to play pianoforte with us at the Drum tonight,” said Glod. “Me and Cliff and Buddy, that is.”

  The Librarian rolled a brown eye toward him, then picked up a piece of wood, gripped one end, and began to strum.

  “Ook?”

  “That’s right,” said Glod. “The boy with the guitar.”

  “Eeek.”

  The Librarian did a back somersault.

  “Oookoook-ooka-ooka-OOOka-OOK!”

  “I can see you’re in the swing of it already,” said Glod.

  Susan saddled the horse and mounted up.

  Beyond Death’s garden were fields of corn, their golden sheen the only color in the landscape. Death might not have been any good at grass (black) and apple trees (gloss black on black), but all the depth of color he hadn’t put elsewhere he’d put in the fields. They rippled as if in the wind, except that there wasn’t any wind.

  Susan couldn’t imagine why he’d done it.

  There was a path, though. It led across the fields for half a mile or so, then disappeared abruptly. It looked as though somebody walked out here occasionally and just stood, looking around.

  Binky followed the path and stopped at the end. Then he turned, managing not to disturb a single ear.

 

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