“Maybe I do know you,” said Mrs Ogg. “O'course, if you just stole that horse, you just don't know how much trouble you're in.”
“I borrowed it. The owner is… my grandfather.”
Another pause, and it was disconcerting how those friendly little eyes could bore into yours like an auger.
“You'd better come in,” said Mrs Ogg.
The inside of the cottage was as clean and new as the outside. Things gleamed, and there were a lot of them to gleam. The place was a shrine to bad but enthusiastically painted china ornaments, which occupied every flat surface. What space was left was full of framed pictures. Two harassed-looking women were polishing and dusting.
“I got comp'ny,” said Mrs Ogg sternly, and the women left with such alacrity that the word “fled” might have been appropriate.
“My daughters-in-law,” said Mrs Ogg, sitting down in a plump armchair which, over the years, had shaped itself to fit her. “They like to help a poor old lady who's all alone in the world.”
Susan took in the pictures. If they were all family members, Mrs Ogg was head of an army. Mrs Ogg, unashamedly caught out in a flagrant lie, went on: “Sit down, girl, and say what's on your mind. There's tea brewing.”
“I want to know something.”
“Most people do,” said Mrs Ogg. “And they can go on wantin'.”
“I want to know about… a birth,” said Susan, persevering.
“Oh, yes? Well, I done hundreds of confinements. Thousands, prob'ly.”
“I imagine this one was difficult.”
“A lot of them are,” said Mrs Ogg.
“You'd remember this one. I don't know how it started, but I'd imagine that a stranger came knocking.”
“Oh?” Mrs Ogg's face became a wall. The black eyes stared out at Susan as if she was an invading army.
“You're not helping me, Mrs Ogg.”
“That's right. I ain't,” said Mrs Ogg. “I think I know about you, miss, but I don't care who you are, you see. You can go and get the other one, if you like. Don't think I ain't seen him, neither. I've been at plenty of deathbeds, too. But deathbeds is public, mostly, and birthbeds ain't. Not if the lady don't want them to be. So you get the other one, and I'll spit in his eye.”
“This is very important, Mrs Ogg.”
“You're right there,” said Mrs Ogg firmly.
“I can't say how long ago it was. It may have been last week, even. Time, that's the key.”
And there it was. Mrs Ogg was not a poker player, at least against someone like Susan. There was the tiniest flicker of the eyes.
Mrs Ogg's chair was rammed back in her effort to rise, but Susan got to the mantelpiece first and snatched what was there, hidden in plain view amongst the ornaments.
“You give that here!” shouted Mrs Ogg, as Susan held it out of her reach. She could feel the power in the thing. It seemed to pulse in her hand.
“Have you any idea what this is, Mrs Ogg?” she said, opening her hand to reveal the little glass bulbs.
“Yes, it's an eggtimer that don't work!” Mrs Ogg sat down hard in her overstuffed chair, so that her little legs rose off the floor for a moment.
“It looks to me like a day, Mrs Ogg. A day's worth of time.”
Mrs Ogg glanced at Susan, and then at the little hourglass in her hand.
“I reckoned there was something odd about it,” she said. “The sand don't go through when you tip it up, see?”
“That's because you don't need it to yet, Mrs Ogg.”
Nanny Ogg appeared to relax. Once again Susan reminded herself that she was dealing with a witch. They tended to keep up.
“I kept it 'cos it was a gift,” said the old lady. “And it looks so pretty, too. What do them letters round the edge say?”
Susan read the words etched on the metal base of the lifetimer: Tempus Redux. “‘Time Returned’,” she said.
“Ah, that'd be it,” said Mrs Ogg. “The man did say I'd be repaid for my time.”
“The man…?” said Susan gently.
Nanny Ogg glanced up, her eyes ablaze.
“Don't you try to take advantage of me just 'cos I'm moment'r'ly a bit flustered,” she snapped. “There's no way round Nanny Ogg!”
Susan looked at the woman, and this time not with the lazy eye. And there was, indeed, no way round Mrs Ogg. But there was another way, with Mrs Ogg. It went straight through the heart.
“A child needs to know his parents, Mrs Ogg,” she said. “Now more than ever. He needs to know who he really is. It's going to be hard for him, and I want to help him.”
“Why?”
“Because I wish someone had helped me,” said Susan.
“Yes, but there's rules to midwifery,” said Nanny Ogg. “You don't say what was said or what you saw. Not if the lady don't want you to.”
The witch wriggled awkwardly in her chair, her face going red. She wants to tell me, Susan knew. She's desperate to. But I've got to play it right, so she can square it with herself.
“I'm not asking for names, Mrs Ogg, because I expect you don't know them,” she went on.
“That's true.”
“But the child—”
“Look, miss, I'm not supposed to tell a living soul about—”
“If it helps, I'm not entirely certain that I am one,” said Susan. She watched Mrs Ogg for a while. “But I understand. There have to be rules, don't there? Thank you for your time.”
Susan stood up and put the preserved day back on the mantelpiece. Then she walked out of the cottage, shutting the door behind her. Binky was waiting by the gate. She mounted up, and it wasn't until then that she heard the door open.
“That's what he said,” said Mrs Ogg. “When he gave me the eggtimer. ‘Thank you for your time, Mrs Ogg,’ he said. You'd better come back in, my girl.”
Tick
Death found Pestilence in a hospice in Llamedos. Pestilence liked hospitals. There was always something for him to do.
Currently he was trying to remove the “Now Wash Your Hands” sign over a cracked basin. He looked up.
“Oh, it's you,” he said. “Soap? I'll give 'em soap!”
I SENT OUT THE CALL, said Death.
“Oh. Yes. Right. Yes,” said Pestilence, clearly embarrassed.
YOU'VE STILL GOT YOUR HORSE?
“Of course, but…”
YOU HAD A FINE HORSE.
“Look, Death… it's… look, it's not that I don't see your point, but—Excuse me…” Pestilence stepped aside as a white-robed nun, completely ignorant of the two Horsemen, passed between them. But he took the opportunity to breathe in her face.
“Just a mild flu,” he said, catching Death's expression.
SO WE CAN COUNT ON YOU, CAN WE?
“To ride out…”
YES.
“For the Big One…”
IT'S EXPECTED OF US.
“How many of the others have you got?”
YOU ARE THE FIRST.
“Er…”
Death sighed. Of course, there had been plenty of diseases, long before humans had been around. But humans had definitely created Pestilence. They had a genius for crowding together, for poking around in jungles, for siting the midden so handily next to the well. Pestilence was, therefore, part human, with all that this entailed. He was frightened.
I SEE, he said.
“The way you put it—”
YOU ARE AFRAID?
“I'll… think about it.”
YES. I AM SURE YOU WILL.
Tick
Quite a lot of brandy splashed into Mrs Ogg's mug. She waved the bottle vaguely at Susan, with an enquiring look.
“No, thank you.”
“Fair enough. Fair enough.” Nanny Ogg put the bottle aside and took a draught of the brandy as though it were beer.
“A man came knocking,” she said. “Three times he came, in my life. Last time was, oh, maybe ten days ago. Same man every time. He wanted a midwife—”
“Ten days ago?” said S
usan. “But the boy's at least sixt—” She stopped.
“Ah, you've got it,” said Mrs Ogg. “I could see you was bright. Time didn't matter to him. He wanted the best midwife. And it was, like, he'd found out about me but got the date wrong, just like you or me could knock on the wrong door. Can you understand what I mean?”
“More than you think,” said Susan.
“The third time”—another gulp at the brandy—“he was in a bit of a state,” said Mrs Ogg. “That's how I knew he was just a man, despite everything that happened after. It was because he was panicking, to tell you the truth. Pregnant fathers often panic. He was going on about me coming right away and how there was no time. He had all the time in the world, he just wasn't thinking properly, 'cos husbands never do when the time comes. They panic 'cos it ain't their world any more.”
“And what happened next?” said Susan.
“He took me in his, well, it was like one of them old chariots, he took me to…” Mrs Ogg hesitated. “I've seen a lot of strange things in my life, I'll have you know,” she said, as if preparing the ground for a revelation.
“I can believe it.”
“It was a castle made of glass.” Mrs Ogg gave Susan a look that dared her to disbelieve. Susan decided to hurry things up.
“Mrs Ogg, one of my earliest memories is of helping to feed the Pale Horse. You know? The one outside? The horse of Death? His name is Binky. So please don't keep stopping. There is practically no limit to the things I find normal.”
“There was a woman… well eventually there was a woman,” said the witch. “Can you imagine someone exploding into a million pieces? Yes, I expect you can. Well, imagine it happening the other way. There's a mist and it's all flying together and then, whoosh, there's a woman. Then, whoosh, back into a mist again. And all the time, this noise…” Mrs Ogg ran her finger round the edge of the brandy glass, making it hum.
“A woman kept… incarnating and then disappearing again? Why?”
“Because she was frightened, of course! First time, see?” Mrs Ogg grinned. “I person'ly never had any problems in that area, but I've been at a lot of births when it's all new to the girl and she'll be frightened as hell and when push comes to shove, if you take my meaning, old midwifery term, she'll be yellin' and swearin' at the father and I reckon that she'd give anything to be somewhere else. Well, this lady could be somewhere else. We'd have been in a real pickle if it wasn't for the man, as it turned out.”
“The man who brought you?”
“He was kind of foreign, you know? Like the Hub people. Bald as a coot. I remember thinking ‘You look like a young man, mister, but you look like you've been a young man for a long, long time if I'm any judge.’ Normally I wouldn't have any man there, but he sat and talked to her in his foreign lingo and sang her songs and little poems and soothed her and back she came, out of thin air, and I was ready and it was one, two, done. And then she was gone. Except that she was still there, I think. In the air.”
“What did she look like?” said Susan.
Mrs Ogg gave her a Look. “You've got to remember the view I got where I was sitting,” she said. “The kind of description I might give you ain't a thing anyone'd put on a poster, if you get my meaning. And no woman looks at her best at a time like that. She was young, she had dark hair…” Mrs Ogg refilled her brandy glass and this meant the pause went on for some time. “And she was old, too, if you're after the truth of it. Not old like me. I mean old.”
She stared at the fire. “Old like darkness and stars,” she said, to the flames.
“The boy was left outside the Thieves' Guild,” said Susan, to break the silence. “I suppose they thought that with gifts like that he'd be all right.”
“The boy? Hah. Tell me, miss… why are we talking about he?”
Tick
Lady LeJean was being strong.
She'd never realized how much humans were controlled by their bodies. The thing nagged night and day. It was always too hot, too cold, too empty, too full, too tired…
The key was discipline, she was sure. Auditors were immortal. If she couldn't tell her body what to do, she didn't deserve to have one. Bodies were a major human weakness.
Senses, too. The Auditors had hundreds of senses, since every possible phenomenon had to be witnessed and recorded. She could find only five available now. Five ought to be easy to deal with. But they were wired directly into the rest of the body! They didn't just submit information, they made demands!
She'd walked past a stall selling roasted meats and her mouth had started to drool! The sense of smell wanted the body to eat without consulting the brain! But that wasn't the worst of it! The brain itself did its own thinking!
That was the hardest part. The bag of soggy tissue behind the eyes worked away independently of its owner. It took in information from the senses, and checked it all against memory, and presented options. Sometimes the hidden parts of it even fought for control of the mouth! Humans weren't individuals, they were, each one, a committee!
Some of the other members of the committee were dark and red and entirely uncivilized. They had joined the brain before civilization; some of them had got aboard even before humanity. And the bit that did the joined-up thinking had to fight, in the darkness of the brain, to get the casting vote!
After little more than a couple of weeks as a human, the entity that was Lady LeJean was having real trouble.
Food, for example. Auditors did not eat. They recognized that feeble life forms had to consume one another to obtain energy and body-building material. The process was astonishingly inefficient, however, and her ladyship had tried assembling nutrients directly out of the air. This worked, but the process felt… What was the word? Oh, yes… creepy.
Besides, part of the brain didn't believe it was getting fed and insisted that it was hungry. Its incessant nagging interfered with her thought processes and so, despite everything, she'd had to face up to the whole, well, the whole orifices business.
The Auditors had known about these for a long time. The human body appeared to have up to eight of them. One didn't seem to work and the rest appeared to be multi-functional, although surprisingly there seemed to be only one thing that could be done by the ears.
Yesterday she'd tried a piece of dry toast.
It had been the single worst experience of her existence.
It had been the single most intense experience of her existence.
It had been something else, too. As far as she could understand the language, it had been enjoyable.
It seemed that the human sense of taste was quite different from the sense as employed by an Auditor. That was precise, measured, analytical. But the human sense of taste was like being hit in the mouth by the whole world. It had been half an hour of watching fireworks in her head before she remembered to swallow.
How did humans survive this?
She'd been fascinated by the art galleries. It was clear that some humans could present reality in a way that made it even more real, that spoke to the viewer, that seared the mind… but what could possibly transcend the knowledge that the genius of an artist had to poke alien substances into his face? Could it be that humans had got used to it? And that was only the start…
The sooner the clock was finished, the better. A species as crazy as this couldn't be allowed to survive. She was visiting the clockmaker and his ugly assistant every day now, giving them as much help as she dared, but they always seemed one vital step away from completion—
Amazing! She could even lie to herself! Because another voice in her head, which was part of the dark committee, said, “You're not helping, are you? You're stealing parts and twisting parts… and you go back every day because of the way he looks at you, don't you?”
Parts of the internal committee that were so old they didn't have voices, only direct control of the body, tried to interfere at this point. She tried in vain to put them out of her mind.
And now she had to face the other Auditors. The
y would be punctual.
She pulled herself together. Water had taken to running out of her eyes lately for no reason at all. She did the best she could with her hair, and made her way to the large drawing room.
Greyness was already filling the air. In this space, there was not room for too many Auditors, but that did not really matter. One could speak for all.
Lady LeJean found the corners of her mouth turned up automatically as nine of them appeared. Nine was three threes, and the Auditors liked threes. Two would keep an eye on the other one. Each two would keep an eye on each other one. They don't trust themselves, said one of the voices in her head. Another voice cut in: It's we, we don't trust ourselves. And she thought: Oh, yes. We, not they. I must remember I'm a we.
An Auditor said, Why is there no further progress?
The corners of the mouth turned down again.
“There have been minor problems of precision and alignment,” said Lady LeJean. She found that her hands were rubbing themselves together slowly, and wondered why. She hadn't told them to.
Auditors had never needed body language, so they didn't understand it.
One said, What is the nature of—?
But another one cut in with, Why are you dwelling in this building? The voice was tinted with suspicion.
“The body requires one to do things that cannot be done on the street,” said Lady LeJean, and, because she'd got to know something about Ankh-Morpork, she added, “at least, on many streets. Also, I believe the servant of the clockmaker is suspicious. I have allowed the body to yield to gravity, since that is what it was designed for. It is as well to give the appearance of humanity.”
One, and it was the same one, said, And what is the meaning of these?
It had noticed the paints and the easel. Lady LeJean wished fervently that she'd remembered to put them away.
The one said, You are making an image with pigments?
“Yes. Very badly, I am afraid.”
One said, For what reason?
“I wished to see how humans do it.”
One said, That is simple: the eye receives the input, the hand applies the pigment.
“That's what I thought, but it appears to be much more complex than that—”
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