Interesting Times Read online

Page 10

Page 10

 

  He even admired their adequate treachery. No-one could fail to realize that Lord Hong would be the next Emperor, but when it came to it they would nevertheless contest the throne. At least, officially. In fact, each warlord had privately pledged his personal support to Lord Hong, being adequately bright to know what was likely to happen if he didnt. There would still have to be a battle, of course, for customs sake. But Lord Hong had a place in his heart for any leader who would sell his own men. Know your enemy. Lord Hong had decided to find a worthwhile one. So Lord Hong had seen to it that he got books and news from Ankh-Morpork. There were ways. He had his spies. At the moment Ankh-Morpork didnt know it was the enemy, and that was the best kind of enemy to have. And he had been amazed, and then intrigued, and finally lost in admiration for what he saw . . . I should have been born there, he thought as he watched the other members of the Serene Council. Oh, for a game of chess with someone like Lord Vetinari. No doubt he would carefully watch the board for three hours before he even made his first move . . . Lord Hong turned to the Serene Councils minutes eunuch. Can we get on? he said. The man licked his brush nervously. Nearly finished, o lord, he said. Lord Hong sighed. Damn calligraphy! There would be changes! A written language of seven thousand letters and it took all day to write a thirteen-syllable poem about a white pony trotting through wild hyacinths. And that was fine and beautiful, he had to concede, and no-one did it better than Lord Hong. But Ankh-Morpork had an alphabet of twenty-six unexpressive, ugly, crude letters, suitable only for peasants and artisans . . . and had produced poems and plays that left white-hot trails across the soul. And you could also use it to write the bloody minutes of a five-minute meeting in less than a day. How far have you got? he said. The eunuch coughed politely. “How softly the bloom of the apric—” he began. Yes, yes, yes, said Lord Hong. Could we on this occasion dispense with the poetic framework, please.

  Uh. “The minutes of the last meeting were duly signed. ”

  Is that all?

  Uh . . . you see, I have to finish painting the petals on—

  I wish this council to be concluded by this evening. Go away. The eunuch looked anxiously around the table, grabbed his scrolls and brushes and scuttled out. Good, said Lord Hong. He nodded at the other warlords. He saved a special friendly nod for Lord Tang. Lord Hong had prodded the thought with some intrigued interest, but it really did seem that Lord Tang was a man of honour. It was a rather cowed and crabbed honour, but it was definitely in there somewhere, and would have to be dealt with. It would be better in any case, my lords, if we spoke in private, he said. On the matter of the rebels. Disturbing intelligence has reached me of their activities. Lord McSweeney nodded. I have seen to it that thirty rebels in Sum Dim have been executed, he said. As an example. As an example of the mindlessness of Lord McSweeney, thought Lord Hong. To his certain knowledge, and none had better knowledge than he, there had not even been a cadre of the Red Army in Sum Dim. But, almost certainly, there was one now. It was really too easy. The other warlords also made small but proud speeches about their efforts to turn barely noticeable unrest into bloody revolution, although they hadnt managed to see it like that. They were nervous, under the bravado, like sheep-dogs whod had a glimpse of a world where the sheep did not run. Lord Hong cherished the nervousness. He intended to use it, by and by. He smiled and smiled. Finally he said: However, my lords, despite your sterling efforts the situation remains grave. I have infomation that a very senior wizard from Ankh-Morpork has arrived to assist the rebels here in Hunghung, and that there is a plot to overthrow the good organization of the celestial world and assassin-ate the Emperor, may he live for ten thousand years. I must naturally assume that the foreign devils are be-hind this.

  I know nothing of this! snapped Lord Tang. My dear Lord Tang. I was not suggesting that you should, said Lord Hong. I meant— Lord Tang began. Your devotion to the Emperor is unquestioned, Lord Hong continued, as smoothly as a knife through warm butter. It is true that there is almost certainly someone highly placed assisting these people, but not one shred of evidence points to you,

  I should hope not!

  Indeed. The Lords Fang and McSweeney moved very slightly away from Lord Tang.

  How can we have let this happen? said Lord Fang. Certainly it is true that people, foolish deranged people, have sometimes ventured out beyond the Wall. But to let one come back—

  I am afraid the Grand Vizier at the time was a man of changeable humours, said Lord Hong. He thought it would be interesting to see what intelligence was brought back.

  Intelligence? said Lord Fang. This city of Ank . . . More . . . Pork is an abomination! Mere anarchy! There appear to be no nobles of consequence and the society is that of a termite nest! It would be better for us, my lords, if it was wiped from the face of the world!

  Your incisive comments are duly noted, Lord Fang, said Lord Hong, while part of him rolled on the floor laughing. In any event, he went on, I shall see that extra guards are posted in the Emperors chambers However all this trouble began, we must see that it ends here. He watched them watching him. They think I want to rule the Empire, he thought. So theyre all - except for Lord Tang, rebel fellow traveller as he will undoubtedly prove to be - working out how this will be to their advantage . . . He dismissed them, and retired to his chambers. It was a fact that the ghosts and devils who lived beyond the Wall had no grasp of culture and certainly no concept of books, and being in possession of such a patently impossible object was punishable by eventual death. And confiscation. Lord Hong had built up quite a library. He had even acquired maps. And more than maps. There was a box he kept locked, in the room with the full-length mirror . . . Not now. Later on . . . Ankh-Morpork! Even the name sounded rich. All he needed was a year. The dreadful scourge of the rebellion would allow him to wield the kind of powers that even the maddest Emperor had not dreamed of. And then it would be unthinkable not to build a vengeful fleet to wreak terror on the foreign devils. Thank you, Lord Fang. Your point is duly noted. As if it mattered who was Emperor! The Empire was possibly a bonus, to be acquired later, perhaps, in passing. Let him just have Ankh-Morpork, with its busy dwarfs and its grasp, above all, of machinery. Look at the Barking Dogs. Half the time they blew up. They were inaccurate. The principle was sound but the execution was terrible, especially when they blew up. It had come as a revelation to Lord Hong when he looked at the problem the Ankh-Morpork way and realized that it might just possibly be better to give the job of Auspicious Dog-maker to some peasant with a fair idea about metal and explosive earths than to some clerk whod got the highest marks in an examination to find the best poem about iron. In Ankh-Morpork people did things.

  Let him just walk down Broadway as owner, and eat the pies of the famous Mr Dibbler. Let him play one game of chess against Lord Vetinari. Of course, it would mean leaving the man one arm. He was shaking with excitement. Not later . . . now. His fingers reached for the secret key on its chain around his neck. It was barely a track. Rabbits would have walked right past it. And youd have sworn there was a sheer, passless rock wall until you found the gap. Once you did find it, it was hardly worth the bother. It led to a long gully with a few natural caves in it, and a bit of grass, and a spring. And, as it turned out, Cohens gang. Except that he called it a horde. They were sitting in the sun, complaining about how it wasnt as warm as it used to be. Im back then, lads, said Cohen. Been away, have you?

  Whut? Whuts he say?

  He said HES BACK.

  Black what? Cohen beamed at Rincewind. I brought em with me, he said. Like I said, no future in going it alone these days.

  Er, said Rincewind, after surveying the little scene, are any of these men under eighty years old?

  Stand up, Boy Willie, said Cohen. A dehydrated man only marginally less wrinkled than the others got to his feet. It was his feet that were particularly noticeable. He wore boots with extremely thick soles. Sos me feet touch the ground, he said. Dont they . . . er . . . touch the gr
ound in ordinary boots?

  Nope. Orthopaedic problem, see. Like . . . you know how a lot of peopleve got one leg shorter than the other? Funny thing, with me its—

  Dont tell me, said Rincewind. Sometimes I get these amazing flashes . . . Both legs are shorter than the other, right?

  Amazing. O course, I can see youre a wizard, said Boy Willie. Youd know about this sort of thing. Rincewind gave the next member of the Horde a bright mad smile. It was almost certainly a human being, because wizened little monkeys didnt usually go around in a wheelchair while wearing a helmet with horns on it. It grimaced at Rincewind. This is—

  Whut? Whut?

  Mad Hamish, said Cohen. Whut? Whozee?

  I bet that wheelchair terrifies them, said Rincewind. Especially the blades.

  We had the devil of a job getting it over the wall, Cohen conceded. But youd be amazed at his turn of speed.

  Whut?

  And this is Truckle the Uncivil.

  Sod off, wizard. Rincewind beamed at Exhibit B. Those walking sticks . . . Fascinating! Very impressive the way youve got LOVE and HATE written on them. Cohen smiled proprietorially. Truckle used to be reckoned one of the biggest badasses in the world, he said. Really? Him?

  But its amazing what you can do with a herbal suppository.

  Up yours, mister, said Truckle. Rincewind blinked. Er. Can I have a word, Cohen? He drew the ancient barbarian aside. I dont want to seem to be making trouble here, he said, but it doesnt strike you, does it, that these men are a bit, well, past their sell-by date? A little, not to put too fine a point on it, old?

  Whut? Whutzeesayin?

  He says ITS COLD.

  Whut?

  Whatre you saying? Theres nearly five hundred years of concentrated barbarian hero experience in em, said Cohen. Five hundred years experience in a fighting unit is good, said Rincewind. Its good. But it should be spread over more than one person. I mean, what are you expecting them to do? Fall over on people?

  Nothin wrong with em, said Cohen, indicating a frail man who was staring intently at a large block of teak. Look at ole Caleb the Ripper over there. See? Killed moren four hundred men with his bare hands. Eighty-five now and but for the dust hes marvellous.

  What the hell is he doing?

  Ah, see, theyre into bare-handed combat here. Very big thing, unarmed combat, on account of most people not being allowed weapons. So Caleb reckons hes on to a good thing. See that big lump of teak? Its amazin. He just gives this bloodcurdlin shout and—

  Cohen, theyre all very old men.

  Theyre the cream! Rincewind sighed. Cohen, theyre the cheese. Whyve you brought them all the way here?

  Gonna help me steal something, said Cohen. What? A jewel or something?

  S something, said Cohen, sulkily.

  S in Hung-hung.

  Really? My word, said Rincewind. And theres a lot of people in Hunghung, I expect?

  About half a million, said Cohen. Lots of guards, no doubt?

  About forty thousand, I heard. About three-quarters of a million if you count all the armies.

  Right, said Rincewind. So, with these half-dozen old men—

 

    Feet of Clay Read onlineFeet of ClayThe Color of Magic Read onlineThe Color of MagicThud! Read onlineThud!Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch Read onlineGood Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, WitchI Shall Wear Midnight Read onlineI Shall Wear MidnightMort Read onlineMortRaising Steam Read onlineRaising SteamGuards! Guards! Read onlineGuards! Guards!Equal Rites Read onlineEqual RitesA Hat Full of Sky Read onlineA Hat Full of SkyThe Light Fantastic Read onlineThe Light FantasticMrs Bradshaw's Handbook Read onlineMrs Bradshaw's HandbookWyrd Sisters Read onlineWyrd SistersSoul Music Read onlineSoul MusicSmall Gods Read onlineSmall GodsSourcery Read onlineSourceryReaper Man Read onlineReaper ManNight Watch Read onlineNight WatchLords and Ladies Read onlineLords and LadiesThe Fifth Elephant Read onlineThe Fifth ElephantMonstrous Regiment Read onlineMonstrous RegimentThe Truth Read onlineThe TruthWitches Abroad Read onlineWitches AbroadEric Read onlineEricGoing Postal Read onlineGoing PostalMen at Arms Read onlineMen at ArmsJingo Read onlineJingoThe Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents Read onlineThe Amazing Maurice and His Educated RodentsThe Wee Free Men Read onlineThe Wee Free MenPyramids Read onlinePyramidsWintersmith Read onlineWintersmithMoving Pictures Read onlineMoving PicturesCarpe Jugulum Read onlineCarpe JugulumInteresting Times Read onlineInteresting TimesMaskerade Read onlineMaskeradeMaking Money Read onlineMaking MoneyThe Shepherd's Crown Read onlineThe Shepherd's CrownHogfather Read onlineHogfatherTroll Bridge Read onlineTroll BridgeThe Last Continent Read onlineThe Last ContinentThe Sea and Little Fishes Read onlineThe Sea and Little FishesSnuff Read onlineSnuffUnseen Academicals Read onlineUnseen AcademicalsGuards! Guards! tds-8 Read onlineGuards! Guards! tds-8Jingo d-21 Read onlineJingo d-21Turtle Recall: The Discworld Companion ... So Far Read onlineTurtle Recall: The Discworld Companion ... So FarThe Fifth Elephant d-24 Read onlineThe Fifth Elephant d-24Discworld 39 - Snuff Read onlineDiscworld 39 - SnuffThe Long War Read onlineThe Long WarOnly You Can Save Mankind Read onlineOnly You Can Save MankindThe Science of Discworld III - Darwin's Watch tsod-3 Read onlineThe Science of Discworld III - Darwin's Watch tsod-3A Blink of the Screen: Collected Short Fiction Read onlineA Blink of the Screen: Collected Short FictionUnseen Academicals d-37 Read onlineUnseen Academicals d-37Wings Read onlineWingsMaking Money d-36 Read onlineMaking Money d-36A Blink of the Screen Read onlineA Blink of the ScreenJohnny and the Bomb Read onlineJohnny and the BombDodger Read onlineDodgerStrata Read onlineStrataDiscworld 02 - The Light Fantastic Read onlineDiscworld 02 - The Light FantasticThe Folklore of Discworld Read onlineThe Folklore of DiscworldThe Science of Discworld Read onlineThe Science of DiscworldThe Unadulterated Cat Read onlineThe Unadulterated CatRaising Steam: (Discworld novel 40) (Discworld Novels) Read onlineRaising Steam: (Discworld novel 40) (Discworld Novels)The World of Poo Read onlineThe World of PooDiscworld 05 - Sourcery Read onlineDiscworld 05 - SourceryThe Witch's Vacuum Cleaner: And Other Stories Read onlineThe Witch's Vacuum Cleaner: And Other StoriesThe Science of Discworld II - The Globe tsod-2 Read onlineThe Science of Discworld II - The Globe tsod-2Small Gods: Discworld Novel, A Read onlineSmall Gods: Discworld Novel, AMen at Arms tds-15 Read onlineMen at Arms tds-15Tama Princes of Mercury Read onlineTama Princes of MercuryThe Last Hero (the discworld series) Read onlineThe Last Hero (the discworld series)The Long Utopia Read onlineThe Long UtopiaDiscworld 03 - Equal Rites Read onlineDiscworld 03 - Equal RitesTerry Pratchett - The Science of Discworld Read onlineTerry Pratchett - The Science of DiscworldThe Long Earth Read onlineThe Long EarthThe Carpet People Read onlineThe Carpet PeopleThe Sea and Little Fishes (discworld) Read onlineThe Sea and Little Fishes (discworld)The Colour of Magic Read onlineThe Colour of MagicDiscworld 16 - Soul Music Read onlineDiscworld 16 - Soul MusicThe Long Cosmos Read onlineThe Long CosmosThe Dark Side of the Sun Read onlineThe Dark Side of the SunMonstrous Regiment tds-28 Read onlineMonstrous Regiment tds-28The Bromeliad 3 - Wings Read onlineThe Bromeliad 3 - WingsDragons at Crumbling Castle: And Other Stories Read onlineDragons at Crumbling Castle: And Other StoriesNight Watch tds-27 Read onlineNight Watch tds-27The Science of Discworld I tsod-1 Read onlineThe Science of Discworld I tsod-1The Bromeliad 1 - Truckers Read onlineThe Bromeliad 1 - TruckersThe Science of Discworld Revised Edition Read onlineThe Science of Discworld Revised EditionThe Abominable Snowman Read onlineThe Abominable SnowmanFather Christmas’s Fake Beard Read onlineFather Christmas’s Fake BeardThe Bromeliad Trilogy Read onlineThe Bromeliad TrilogyA Slip of the Keyboard Read onlineA Slip of the KeyboardThe Wee Free Men d(-2 Read onlineThe Wee Free Men d(-2Johnny and the Dead Read onlineJohnny and the DeadMrs Bradshaw's Handbook (Discworld Novels) Read onlineMrs Bradshaw's Handbook (Discworld Novels)Truckers Read onlineTruckersThe Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents d(-1 Read onlineThe Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents d(-1Diggers Read onlineDiggersThief of Time tds-26 Read onlineThief of Time tds-26Science of Discworld III Read onlineScience of Discworld IIIDragons at Crumbling Castle Read onlineDragons at Crumbling CastleNation Read onlineNationDarwin's Watch Read onlineDarwin's WatchInteresting Times d-17 Read onlineInteresting Times d-17The Bromeliad 2 - Diggers Read onlineThe Bromeliad 2 - DiggersThe Science of Discworld II Read onlineThe Science of Discworld II