Discworld 05 - Sourcery Read online

Page 5


  Rincewind found himself pulled relentlessly behind the bar. The landlord was sitting on his moneybags under the counter with two machetes crossed on his knees, enjoying a quiet drink. Occasionally the sound of breaking furniture would make him wince.

  The last thing Rincewind saw before he was dragged away was the Librarian. Despite looking like a hairy rubber sack full of water, the orangutan had the weight and reach of any man in the room and was currently sitting on a guard’s shoulders and trying, with reasonable success, to unscrew his head.

  Of more concern to Rincewind was the fact that he was being dragged upstairs.

  “My dear lady,” he said desperately. “What do you have in mind?”

  “Is there a way onto the roof?”

  “Yes. What’s in this box?”

  “Shhh!”

  She halted at a bend in the dingy corridor, reached into a belt pouch and scattered a handful of small metal objects on the floor behind them. Each one was made of four nails welded together so that, however the things fell, one was always pointing upwards.

  She looked critically at the nearest doorway.

  “You haven’t got about four feet of cheesewire on you, have you?” she said wistfully. She’d drawn another throwing knife and was throwing it up and catching it again.

  “I don’t think so,” said Rincewind weakly.

  “Pity. I’ve run out. Okay, come on.”

  “Why? I haven’t done anything!”

  She went to the nearest window, pushed open the shutters and paused with one leg over the sill.

  “Fine,” she said, over her shoulder. “Stay here and explain it to the guards.”

  “Why are they chasing you?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “Oh, come on! There must be a reason!”

  “Oh, there’s plenty of reasons. I just don’t know which one. Are you coming?”

  Rincewind hesitated. The Patrician’s personal guard was not known for its responsive approach to community policing, preferring to cut bits off instead. Among the things they took a dim view of was, well, basically, people being in the same universe. Running away from them was likely to be a capital offense.

  “I think maybe I’ll come along with you,” he said gallantly. “A girl can come to harm all alone in this city.”

  Freezing fog filled the streets of Ankh-Morpork. The flares of street traders made little yellow haloes in the smothering billows.

  The girl peered around a corner.

  “We’ve lost them,” she said. “Stop shaking. You’re safe now.”

  “What, you mean I’m all alone with a female homicidal maniac?” said Rincewind. “Fine.”

  She relaxed and laughed at him.

  “I was watching you,” she said. “An hour ago you were afraid that your future was going to be dull and uninteresting.”

  “I want it to be dull and uninteresting,” said Rincewind bitterly. “I’m afraid it’s going to be short.”

  “Turn your back,” she commanded, stepping into an alley.

  “Not on your life,” he said.

  “I’m going to take my clothes off.”

  Rincewind spun around, his face red. There was a rustling behind him, and a waft of scent. After a while she said, “You can look around now.”

  He didn’t.

  “You needn’t worry. I’ve put some more on.”

  He opened his eyes. The girl was wearing a demure white lace dress with fetchingly puffed sleeves. He opened his mouth. He realized with absolute clarity that up to now the trouble he had been in was simple, modest and nothing he couldn’t talk his way out of given a decent chance or, failing that, a running start. His brain started to send urgent messages to his sprinting muscles, but before they could get through she’d grabbed his arm again.

  “You really shouldn’t be so nervous,” she said sweetly. “Now, let’s have a look at this thing.”

  She pulled the lid off the round box in Rincewind’s unprotesting hands, and lifted out the Archchancellor’s hat.

  The octarines around its crown blazed in all eight colors of the spectrum, creating the kind of effects in the foggy alley that it would take a very clever special effects director and a whole battery of star filters to achieve by any non-magical means. As she raised it high in the air it created its own nebula of colors that very few people ever see in legal circumstances.

  Rincewind sank gently to his knees.

  She looked down at him, puzzled.

  “Legs given out?”

  “It’s—it’s the hat. The Archchancellor’s hat,” said Rincewind, hoarsely. His eyes narrowed. “You’ve stolen it!” he shouted, struggling back to his feet and grabbing for the sparkling brim.

  “It’s just a hat.”

  “Give it to me this minute! Women mustn’t touch it! It belongs to wizards!”

  “Why are you getting so worked up?” she said.

  Rincewind opened his mouth. Rincewind closed his mouth.

  He wanted to say: It’s the Archchancellor’s hat, don’t you understand? It’s worn by the head of all wizards, well, on the head of the head of all wizards, no, metaphorically it’s worn by all wizards, potentially, anyway, and it’s what every wizard aspires to, it’s the symbol of organized magic, it’s the pointy tip of the profession, it’s a symbol, it’s what it means to all wizards…

  And so on. Rincewind had been told about the hat on his first day at University, and it had sunk into his impressionable mind like a lead weight into a jelly. He wasn’t sure of much in the world, but he was certain that the Archchancellor’s hat was important. Maybe even wizards need a little magic in their lives.

  Rincewind, said the hat.

  He stared at the girl. “It spoke to me!”

  “Like a voice in your head?”

  “Yes!”

  “It did that to me, too.”

  “But it knew my name!”

  Of course we do, stupid fellow. We are supposed to be a magic hat after all.

  The hat’s voice wasn’t only clothy. It also had a strange choral effect, as if an awful lot of voices were talking at the same time, in almost perfect unison.

  Rincewind pulled himself together.

  “O great and wonderful hat,” he said pompously, “strike down this impudent girl who has had the audacity, nay, the—”

  Oh, do shut up. She stole us because we ordered her to. It was a near thing, too.

  “But she’s a—” Rincewind hesitated. “She’s of the female persuasion…” he muttered.

  So was your mother.

  “Yes, well, but she ran away before I was born,” Rincewind mumbled.

  Of all the disreputable taverns in all the city you could have walked into, you walked into his, complained the hat.

  “He was the only wizard I could find,” said the girl. “He looked the part. He had ‘Wizard’ written on his hat and everything.”

  Don’t believe everything you read. Too late now, anyway. We haven’t got much time.

  “Hold on, hold on,” said Rincewind urgently, “What’s going on? You wanted her to steal you? Why haven’t we got much time?” He pointed an accusing finger at the hat. “Anyway, you can’t go around letting yourself be stolen, you’re supposed to be on—on the Archchancellor’s head! The ceremony was tonight, I should have been there—”

  Something terrible is happening at the University. It is vital that we are not taken back, do you understand? You must take us to Klatch, where there is someone fit to wear me.

  “Why?” There was something very strange about the voice, Rincewind decided. It sounded impossible to disobey, as though it was solid destiny. If it told him to walk over a cliff, he thought, he’d be halfway down before it could occur to him to disobey.

  The death of all wizardry is at hand.

  Rincewind looked around guiltily.

  “Why?” he said.

  The world is going to end.

  “What, again?”

  I mean it, said the hat sulkily. T
he triumph of the Ice Giants, the Apocralypse, the Teatime of the Gods, the whole thing.

  “Can we stop it?”

  The future is uncertain on that point.

  Rincewind’s expression of determined terror faded slowly.

  “Is this a riddle?” he said.

  Perhaps it would be simpler if you just did what you’re told and didn’t try to understand things, said the hat. Young woman, you will put us back in our box. A great many people will shortly be looking for us.

  “Hey, hold on,” said Rincewind. “I’ve seen you around here for years and you never talked before.”

  I didn’t have anything that needed to be said.

  Rincewind nodded. That seemed reasonable.

  “Look, just shove it in its box, and let’s get going,” said the girl.

  “A bit more respect if you please, young lady,” said Rincewind haughtily. “That is the symbol of ancient wizardry you happen to be addressing.”

  “You carry it, then,” she said.

  “Hey, look,” said Rincewind, scrambling along after her as she swept down the alleys, crossed a narrow street and entered another alley between a couple of houses that leaned together so drunkenly that their upper storys actually touched. She stopped.

  “Well?” she snapped.

  “You’re the mystery thief, aren’t you?” he said, “Everyone’s been talking about you, how you’ve taken things even from locked rooms and everything. You’re different than I imagined…”

  “Oh?” she said coldly. “How?”

  “Well, you’re…shorter.”

  “Oh, come on.”

  The street cressets, not particularly common in this part of the city in any case, gave out altogether here. There was nothing but watchful darkness ahead.

  “I said come on,” she repeated. “What are you afraid of?”

  Rincewind took a deep breath. “Murderers, muggers, thieves, assassins, pickpockets, cutpurses, reevers, snigsmen, rapists and robbers,” he said. “That’s the Shades you’re going into!”*

  “Yes, but people won’t come looking for us in here,” she said.

  “Oh, they’ll come in all right, they just won’t come out,” said Rincewind. “Nor will we. I mean, a beautiful young woman like you…it doesn’t bear thinking about…I mean, some of the people in there…”

  “But I’ll have you to protect me,” she said.

  Rincewind thought he heard the sound of marching feet several streets away.

  “You know,” he sighed, “I knew you’d say that.”

  Down these mean streets a man must walk, he thought. And along some of them he will break into a run.

  It is so black in the Shades on this foggy spring night that it would be too dark to read about Rincewind’s progress through the eerie streets, so the descriptive passage will lift up above the level of the ornate rooftops, the forest of twisty chimneys, and admire the few twinkling stars that manage to pierce the swirling billows. It will try to ignore the sounds drifting up from below—the patter of feet, the rushes, the gristly noises, the groans, the muffled screams. It could be that some wild animal is pacing through the Shades after two weeks on a starvation diet.

  Somewhere near the center of the Shades—the district has never been adequately mapped—is a small courtyard. Here at least there are torches on the walls, but the light they throw is the light of the Shades themselves: mean, reddened, dark at the core.

  Rincewind staggered into the yard and hung onto the wall for support. The girl stepped into the ruddy light behind him, humming to herself.

  “Are you all right?” she said.

  “Nurrgh,” said Rincewind.

  “Sorry?”

  “Those men,” he bubbled, “I mean, the way you kicked his…when you grabbed them by the…when you stabbed that one right in…who are you?”

  “My name is Conina.”

  Rincewind looked at her blankly for some time.

  “Sorry,” he said, “doesn’t ring a bell.”

  “I haven’t been here long,” she said.

  “Yes, I didn’t think you were from around these parts,” he said. “I would have heard.”

  “I’ve taken lodgings here. Shall we go in?”

  Rincewind glanced up at the dingy pole just visible in the smoky light of the spitting torches. It indicated that the hostelry behind the small dark door was the Troll’s Head.

  It might be thought that the Mended Drum, scene of unseemly scuffles only an hour ago, was a seedy disreputable tavern. In fact it was a reputable disreputable tavern. Its customers had a certain rough-hewn respectability—they might murder each other in an easygoing way, as between equals, but they didn’t do it vindictively. A child could go in for a glass of lemonade and be certain of getting nothing worse than a clip around the ear when his mother heard his expanded vocabulary. On quiet nights, and when he was certain the Librarian wasn’t going to come in, the landlord was even known to put bowls of peanuts on the bar.

  The Troll’s Head was a cesspit of a different odor. Its customers, if they reformed, tidied themselves up and generally improved their image out of all recognition might, just might, aspire to be considered the utter dregs of humanity. And in the Shades, a dreg is a dreg.

  By the way, the thing on the pole isn’t a sign. When they decided to call the place the Troll’s Head, they didn’t mess about.

  Feeling sick, and clutching the grumbling hatbox to his chest, Rincewind stepped inside.

  Silence. It wrapped itself around them, nearly as thickly as the smoke of a dozen substances guaranteed to turn any normal brain to cheese. Suspicious eyes peered through the smog.

  A couple of dice clattered to a halt on a tabletop. They sounded very loud, and probably weren’t showing Rincewind’s lucky number.

  He was aware of the stares of several score of customers as he followed the demure and surprisingly small figure of Conina into the room. He looked sideways into the leering faces of men who would kill him sooner than think, and in fact would find it a great deal easier.

  Where a respectable tavern would have had a bar there was just a row of squat black bottles and a couple of big barrels on trestles against the wall.

  The silence tightened like a tourniquet. Any minute now, Rincewind thought.

  A big fat man wearing nothing but a fur vest and a leather loincloth pushed back his stool and lurched to his feet and winked evilly at his colleagues. When his mouth opened, it was like a hole with a hem.

  “Looking for a man, little lady?” he said.

  She looked up at him.

  “Please keep away.”

  A snake of laughter writhed around the room. Conina’s mouth snapped shut like a letterbox.

  “Ah,” the big man gurgled, “that’s right, I likes a girl with spirit—”

  Conina’s hand moved. It was a pale blur, stopping here and here: after a few seconds of disbelief the man gave a little grunt and folded up, very slowly.

  Rincewind shrank back as every other man in the room leaned forward. His instinct was to run, and he knew it was an instinct that would get him instantly killed. It was the Shades out there. Whatever was going to happen to him next was going to happen to him here. It was not a reassuring thought.

  A hand closed around his mouth. Two more grabbed the hatbox from his arms.

  Conina spun past him, lifting her skirt to place a neat foot on a target beside Rincewind’s waist. Someone whimpered in his ear and collapsed. As the girl pirouetted gracefully around she picked up two bottles, knocked out their bottoms on the shelf and landed with their jagged ends held out in front of her. Morpork daggers, they were called in the patois of the streets.

  In the face of them, the Troll’s Head’s clientele lost interest.

  “Someone got the hat,” Rincewind muttered through dry lips, “They slipped out of the back way.”

  She glared at him and made for the door. The Head’s crowd of customers parted automatically, like sharks recognizing another shark, and Rin
cewind darted anxiously after her before they came to any conclusion about him.

  They ran out into another alley and pounded down it. Rincewind tried to keep up with the girl; people following her tended to tread on sharp things, and he wasn’t sure she’d remember he was on her side, whatever side that was.

  A thin, half-hearted drizzle was falling. And at the end of the alley was a faint blue glow.

  “Wait!”

  The terror in Rincewind’s voice was enough to slow her down.

  “What’s wrong?”

  “Why’s he stopped?”

  “I’ll ask him,” said Conina, firmly.

  “Why’s he covered in snow?”

  She stopped and turned around, arms thrust into her sides, one foot tapping impatiently on the damp cobbles.

  “Rincewind, I’ve known you for an hour and I’m astonished you’ve lived even that long!”

  “Yes, but I have, haven’t I? I’ve got a sort of talent for it. Ask anyone. I’m an addict.”

  “Addicted to what?”

  “Life. I got hooked on it at an early age and I don’t want to give it up and take it from me, this doesn’t look right!”

  Conina looked back at the figure surrounded by the glowing blue aura. It seemed to be looking at something in its hands.

  Snow was settling on its shoulder like really bad dandruff. Terminal dandruff. Rincewind had an instinct for these things, and he had a deep suspicion that the man had gone where shampoo would be no help at all.

  They sidled along a glistening wall.

  “There’s something very strange about him,” she conceded.

  “You mean the way he’s got his own private blizzard?”

  “Doesn’t seem to upset him. He’s smiling.”

  “A frozen grin, I’d call it.”

  The man’s icicle-hung hands had been taking the lid off the box, and the glow from the hat’s octarines shone up into a pair of greedy eyes that were already heavily rimed with frost.

  “Know him?” said Conina.

  Rincewind shrugged. “I’ve seen him around,” he said. “He’s called Larry the Fox or Fezzy the Stoat or something. Some sort of rodent, anyway. He just steals things. He’s harmless.”

 

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