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Going Postal A Novel of Discworld ® Terry Pratchett Contents The Nine-Thousand-Year Prologue The One-Month Prologue Chapter 1 The Angel Chapter 2 The Post Office Chapter 3 Our Own Hand, Or None Chapter 4 A Sign Chapter 5 Lost in the Post Chapter 6 Little Pictures Chapter 7 Tomb of Words Chapter 7A Post Haste Chapter 9 Bonfire Chapter 10 The Burning of Words Chapter 11 Mission Statement Chapter 12 The Woodpecker Chapter 13 The Edge of the Envelope Chapter 14 Deliverance Epilogue —Some Time After About the Author Praise Other Books by Terry Pratchett Copyright About the Publisher The Nine-Thousand-Year Prologue T HE FLOTILLAS OF THE DEAD sailed around the world on underwater rivers. Very nearly nobody knew about them. But the theory is easy to understand. It runs: the sea is, after all, in many respects, only a wetter form of air. And it is known that air is heavier the lower you go and lighter the higher you fly. As a storm-tossed ship founders and sinks, therefore, it must reach a depth where the water below it is just viscous enough to stop its fall. In short, it stops sinking and ends up floating on an underwater surface, beyond the reach of the storms but far above the ocean floor. It’s calm there. Dead calm. Some stricken ships have rigging; some even have sails. Many still have crew, tangled in the rigging or lashed to the wheel. But the voyages still continue, aimlessly, with no harbor in sight, because there are currents under the ocean, and so the dead ships with their skeleton crews sail on around the world, over sunken cities and between drowned mountains, until rot and shipworms eat them away and they disintegrate. Sometimes an anchor drops, all the way to the dark, cold calmness of the abyssal plain, and disturbs the stillness of centuries by throwing up a cloud of silt. One nearly hit Anghammarad, where he sat watching the ships drift by, far overhead. He remembered it, because it was the only really interesting thing to happen in the last nine thousand years. The One-Month Prologue T HERE WAS THIS …disease that the clacksmen got. It was like the illness known as “calenture,” which sailors experienced when, after having been becalmed for weeks under a pitiless sun, they suddenly believed that the ship was surrounded by green fields—and stepped overboard. Sometimes the clacksmen thought they could fly. There was about eight miles between the big semaphore towers, and when you were at the top you were maybe a hundred and fifty feet above the plains. Work up there too long without a hat on, they said, and the tower you were on got taller, and the nearest tower got closer, and maybe you thought you could jump from one to another, or ride on the invisible messages sleeting between the towers, or perhaps you thought that you were a message. Perhaps, as some said, all this was nothing more than a disturbance in the brain caused by the wind in the rigging. No one knew for sure. People who step onto the air one hundred and fifty feet above the ground seldom have much to discuss afterwards. The tower shifted gently in the wind, but that was okay. There were lots of new designs in this tower. It stored the wind to power its mechanisms, it bent rather than broke, it acted more like a tree than a fortress. You could build most of it on the ground and raise it into place in an hour. It was a thing of grace and beauty. And it could send messages up to four times faster than the old towers, thanks to the new shutter system and the colored lights. At least, it would be able to, once they sorted out a few lingering problems… The young man climbed swiftly to the very top of the tower. For most of the way he was in clinging, gray morning mist, and then he was rising through glorious sunlight, the mist spreading below him, all the way to the horizon, like a sea. He paid the view no attention. He’d never dreamed of flying. He dreamed of mechanisms, of making things work better than they’d ever done before. Right now he wanted to find out what was making the new shutter array stick again. He oiled the sliders, checked the tension on the wires, and then swung himself out over fresh air to check the shutters themselves. It wasn’t what you were supposed to do, but every linesman knew it was the only way to get things done. Anyway, it was perfectly safe if you— There was a clink. He looked back and saw the snap-hook of his safety rope lying on the walkway, saw the shadow, felt the terrible pain in his fingers, heard the scream and dropped… …like an anchor. CHAPTER 1 The Angel In which our hero experiences Hope, the greatest gift * The bacon sandwich of regret * Somber reflections on capital punishment from the hangman * Famous last words * Our hero dies * Angels, conversations about * Inadvisability of misplaced offers regarding broomsticks * An unexpected ride * A world free of honest men * A man on the hop * There is always a choice T HEY SAY THAT the prospect of being hanged in the morning concentrates a man’s mind wonderfully; unfortunately, what the mind inevitably concentrates on is that, in the morning, it will be in a body that is going to be hanged. The man going to be hanged had been named Moist von Lipwig by doting if unwise parents, but he was not going to embarrass the name, insofar as that was still possible, by being hung under it. To the world in general, and particularly on that bit of it known as the death warrant, he was Alfred Spangler. And he took a more positive approach to the situation and had concentrated his mind on the prospect of not being hanged in the morning, and, most particularly, on the prospect of removing all the crumbling mortar from around a stone in his cell wall with a spoon. So far the work had taken him five weeks and reduced the spoon to something like a nail file. Fortunately, no one ever came to change the bedding here, or else they would have discovered the world’s heaviest mattress. It was a large and heavy stone that was currently the object of his attentions, and, at some point, a huge staple had been hammered into it as an anchor for manacles. Moist sat down facing the wall, gripped the iron ring in both hands, braced his legs against the stones on either side, and heaved. His shoulders caught fire, and a red mist filled his vision, but the block slid out with a faint and inappropriate tinkling noise. Moist managed to ease it away from the hole and peered inside. At the far end was another block, and the mortar around it looked suspiciously strong and fresh. Just in front of it was a new spoon. It was shiny. As he studied it, he heard the clapping behind him. He turned his head, tendons twanging a little riff of agony, and saw several of the wardens watching him through the bars. “Well done , Mr. Spangler!” said one of them. “Ron here owes me five dollars! I told him you were a sticker! ‘He’s a sticker,’ I said!” “You set this up, did you, Mr. Wilkinson?” said Moist weakly, watching the glint of light on the spoon. “Oh, not us, sir. Lord Vetinari’s orders. He insists that all condemned prisoners should be offered the prospect of freedom. ” “Freedom? But there’s a damn great stone through there!” “Yes, there is that, sir, yes, there is that,” said the warden. “It’s only the prospect , you see. Not actual free freedom as such. Hah, that’d be a bit daft, eh?” “I suppose so, yes,” said Moist. He didn’t say “you bastards. ” The wardens had treated him quite civilly these past six weeks, and he made a point of getting on with people. He was very, very good at it. People skills were part of his stock-in-trade; they were nearly the whole of it. Besides, these people had big sticks. So, speaking carefully, he added: “Some people might consider this cruel, Mr. Wilkinson. ” “Yes, sir, we asked him about that, sir, but he said no, it wasn’t. He said it provided”—his forehead wrinkled—“occ-you-pay-shun-all ther-rap-py, healthy exercise, prevented moping, and offered that greatest of all treasures, which is Hope, sir. ” “Hope,” muttered Moist glumly. “Not upset, are you, sir?” “Upset? Why should I be upset, Mr.
Wilkinson?” “Only the last bloke we had in this cell, he managed to get down that drain, sir. Very small man. Very agile. ” Moist looked at the little grid in the floor. He’d dismissed it out of hand. “Does it lead to the river?” he said. The warden grinned. “You’d think so, wouldn’t you? He was really upset when we fished him out. Nice to see you’ve entered into the spirit of the thing, sir. You’ve been an example to all of us, sir, the way you kept going. Stuffing all the dust in your mattress? Very clever, very tidy. Very neat. It’s really cheered us up, having you in here. By the way, Mrs. Wilkinson says thanks very much for the fruit basket. Very posh, it is. It’s got kumquats, even!” “Don’t mention it, Mr. Wilkinson. ” “The warden was a bit green about the kumquats, ’cos he only got dates in his, but I told him, sir, that fruit baskets is like life—until you’ve got the pineapple off of the top you never know what’s underneath. He says thank you, too. ” “Glad he liked it, Mr. Wilkinson,” said Moist absent-mindedly. Several of his former landladies had brought in presents for “the poor, confused boy,” and Moist always invested in generosity. A career like his was all about style, after all. “On that general subject, sir,” said Mr. Wilkinson, “me and the lads were wondering if you might like to unburden yourself, at this point in time, on the subject of the whereabouts of the place where the location of the spot is where, not to beat about the bush, you hid all that money you stole…?” The jail went silent. Even the cockroaches were listening. “No, I couldn’t do that, Mr. Wilkinson,” said Moist loudly, after a decent pause for dramatic effect. He tapped his jacket pocket, held up a finger, and winked. The warders grinned back. “We understand totally, sir. Now I’d get some rest if I was you, sir, ’cos we’re hanging you in half an hour,” said Mr. Wilkinson. “Hey, don’t I get breakfast?” “Breakfast isn’t until seven o’clock, sir,” said the warder reproachfully. “But, tell you what, I’ll do you a bacon sandwich. ’Cos it’s you , Mr. Spangler. ” A ND NOW IT WAS A FEW MINUTES before dawn and it was him being led down the short corridor and out into the little room under the scaffold. Moist realized he was looking at himself from a distance, as if part of himself was floating outside his body like a child’s balloon, ready, as it were, for him to let go of the string. The room was lit by light coming through cracks in the scaffold floor above, and, significantly, from around the edges of the large trapdoor. The hinges of said door were being carefully oiled by a man in a hood. He stopped when he saw the party had arrived and said, “Good morning, Mr. Spangler. ” He raised the hood helpfully. “It’s me, sir, Daniel ‘One Drop’ Trooper. I am your executioner for today, sir. Don’t you worry, sir. I’ve hanged dozens of people. We’ll soon have you out of here. ” “Is it true that if a man isn’t hanged after three attempts he’s reprieved, Dan?” said Moist, as the executioner carefully wiped his hands on a rag. “So I’ve heard, sir, so I’ve heard. But they don’t call me ‘One Drop’ for nothing, sir. And will sir be having the black bag today?” “Will it help?” “Some people think it makes them look more dashing, sir. And it stops that pop-eyed look. It’s more a crowd thing, really. Quite a big one out there this morning. Nice piece about you in the Times yesterday, I thought. All them people saying what a nice young man you were, and everything. Er…would you mind signing the rope beforehand, sir? I mean, I won’t have a chance to ask you afterwards, eh?” “ Signing the rope ?” said Moist. “Yessir,” said the hangman. “It’s sort of traditional. There’s a lot of people out there who buy old rope. Specialist collectors, you could say. A bit strange, but it takes all sorts, eh? Worth more signed, of course. ” He flourished a length of stout rope. “I’ve got a special pen that signs on rope. One signature every couple of inches? Straightforward signature, no dedication needed. Worth money to me, sir. I’d be very grateful. ” “So grateful that you won’t hang me, then?” said Moist, taking the pen. This got an appreciative laugh. Mr. Trooper watched him sign along the length, nodding happily. “Well done, sir, that’s my pension plan you’re signing there. Now…are we ready, everyone?” “Not me!” said Moist quickly, to another round of general amusement. “You’re a card, Mr. Spangler,” said Mr. Wilkinson. “It won’t be the same without you around, and that’s the truth. ” “Not for me, at any rate,” said Moist. This was, once again, treated like rapier wit. Moist sighed. “Do you really think all this deters crime, Mr. Trooper?” he said. “Well, in the generality of things I’d say it’s hard to tell, given that it’s hard to find evidence of crimes not committed,” said the hangman, giving the trapdoor a final rattle. “But in the specificality , sir, I’d say it’s very efficacious. ” “Meaning what?” said Moist. “Meaning I’ve never seen someone up here more’n once, sir. Shall we go?” There was a stir when they climbed up into the chilly morning air, followed by a few boos and even some applause. People were strange like that. Steal five dollars and you were a petty thief. Steal thousands of dollars and you were either a government or a hero. Moist stared ahead while the roll call of his crimes was read out. He couldn’t help feeling that it was so unfair. He’d never so much as tapped someone on the head. He’d never even broken down a door. He had picked locks on occasion, but he’d always locked them again behind him. Apart from all those repossessions, bankruptcies, and sudden insolvencies, what had he actually done that was bad , as such? He’d only been moving numbers around. “Nice crowd turned out today,” said Mr. Trooper, tossing the end of the rope over the beam and busying himself with knots. “Lot of press, too. What Gallows? covers ’em all, o’course, and there’s the Times and the Pseudopolis Herald , prob’ly because of that bank what collapsed there, and I heard there’s a man from the Sto Plains Dealer , too. Very good financial section, I always keep an eye on used-rope prices. Looks like a lot of people want to see you dead, sir. ” Moist was aware that a black coach had drawn up at the rear of the crowd. There was no coat of arms on the door, unless you were in on the secret, which was that Lord Vetinari’s coat of arms featured a sable shield. Black on black. You had to admit, the bastard had style— “Huh? What?” he said, in response to a nudge. “I asked if you have any last words, Mr. Spangler?” said the hangman. “It’s customary. I wonder if you might have thought of any?” “I wasn’t actually expecting to die,” said Moist. And that was it. He really hadn’t, until now. He’d been certain that something would turn up. “Good one, sir,” said Mr. Wilkinson. “We’ll go with that, shall we?” Moist narrowed his eyes. The curtain on a coach window had twitched. The coach door had opened. Hope, that greatest of all treasures, ventured a little glitter. “No, they’re not my actual last words,” he said. “Er…let me think…” A slight, clerklike figure was descending from the coach. “Er…it’s not as bad a thing I do now…er…” Aha, it all made some kind of sense now. Vetinari was out to scare him, that was it. That would be just like the man, from what Moist had heard. There was going to be a reprieve! “I…er…I…” Down below, the clerk was having difficulty getting through the press of people. “Do you mind speeding up a bit, Mr. Spangler?” said the hangman. “Fair’s fair, eh?” “I want to get it right,” said Moist haughtily, watching the clerk negotiate his way around a large troll. “Yes, but there’s a limit, sir,” said the hangman, annoyed at this breach of etiquette. “Otherwise you could go ah, er, um for days ! Short and sweet, sir, that’s the style. ” “Right, right,” said Moist. “Er…oh, look , see that man there? Waving at you?” The hangman glanced down at the clerk, who’d struggled to the front of the crowd. “I bring a message from Lord Vetinari!” the man shouted. “Right!” said Moist.
“He says to get on with it, it’s long past dawn!” said the clerk. “Oh,” said Moist, staring at the black coach. That damn Vetinari had a warder’s sense of humor, too. “Come on , Mr. Spangler, you don’t want me to get into trouble, do you?” said the hangman, patting him on the shoulder. “Just a few words, and then we can all get on with our lives. Present company excepted, obviously. ” So this was it. It was, in some strange way, rather liberating. You didn’t have to fear the worst that could happen anymore, because this was it, and it was nearly over. The warder had been right. What you had to do in this life was get past the pineapple, Moist told himself. It was big and sharp and knobbly, but there might be peaches underneath. It was a myth to live by and so, right now, totally useless. “In that case,” said Moist von Lipwig, “I commend my soul to any god that can find it. ” “Nice,” said the hangman, and pulled the lever. Alfred Spangler died. It was generally agreed that they had been good last words. “A H , M R. L IPWIG ,” said a distant voice, getting closer. “I see you are awake. And still alive, at the present time. ” There was a slight inflection to that last phrase, which told Moist that the length of the present time was entirely in the gift of the speaker. He opened his eyes. He was sitting in a comfortable chair. At a desk opposite him, sitting with his hands steepled reflectively in front of his pursed lips, was Lord Havelock Vetinari, under whose idiosyncratically despotic rule Ankh-Morpork had become the city where, for some reason, everyone wanted to live. An ancient animal sense also told Moist that other people were standing behind the comfortable chair, and that it could be extremely uncomfortable should he make any sudden movements. But they couldn’t be as terrible as the thin, black-robed man with the fussy little beard and the pianist’s hands, who was watching him. “Shall I tell you about angels, Mr. Lipwig?” said the Patrician pleasantly. “I know two interesting facts about them. ” Moist grunted. There were no obvious escape routes in front of him, and turning around was out of the question. His neck ached horribly. “Oh, yes. You were hanged,” said Vetinari. “A very precise science, hanging. Mr. Trooper is a master. The slippage and thickness of the rope, whether the knot is placed here rather than there , the relationship between weight and distance…oh, I’m sure the man could write a book. You were hanged to within half an inch of your life, I understand. Only an expert standing right next to you would have spotted that, and in this case the expert was our friend Mr. Trooper. No, Alfred Spangler is dead, Mr. Lipwig. Three hundred people would swear they saw him die. ” He leaned forward. “And so, appropriately, it is of angels I wish to talk to you now. ” Moist managed a grunt. “The first interesting thing about angels, Mr. Lipwig, is that sometimes, very rarely, at a point in a man’s career where he has made such a foul and tangled mess of his life that death appears to be the only sensible option, an angel appears to him, or, I should say, unto him, and offers him a chance to go back to the moment when it all went wrong, and this time do it right. Mr. Lipwig, I should like you to think of me as…an angel. ” Moist stared. He’d felt the snap of the rope, the choke of the noose! He’d seen the blackness welling up! He’d died ! “I’m offering you a job, Mr. Lipwig. Alfred Spangler is buried, but Mr. Lipwig has a future. It may, of course, be a very short one, if he is stupid. I am offering you a job, Mr. Lipwig. Work, for wages. I realize the concept may be unfamiliar. ” Only as a form of hell , Moist thought. “The job is that of postmaster general of the Ankh-Morpork Post Office. ” Moist continued to stare. “May I just add, Mr. Lipwig, that behind you there is a door. If at any time in this interview you feel you wish to leave, you have only to step through it and you will never hear from me again. ” Moist filed that under “Deeply Suspicious. ” “To continue: the job, Mr. Lipwig, involves the refurbishment and running of the city’s postal service, preparation of the international packets, maintenance of Post Office property, et cetera, et cetera—” “If you stick a broom up my arse I could probably sweep the floor, too,” said a voice. Moist realized it was his. His brain was a mess. It had come as a shock to him that the afterlife was this one. Lord Vetinari gave him a long, long look. “Well, if you wish,” he said, and turned to a hovering clerk. “Drumknott, does the housekeeper have a store cupboard on this floor, do you know?” “Oh, yes, my lord,” said the clerk. “Shall I—” “It was a joke!” Moist burst out. “Oh, I’m sorry, I hadn’t realized,” said Lord Vetinari, turning back to Moist. “Do tell me if you feel obliged to make another one, will you?” “Look,” said Moist, “I don’t know what’s happening here, but I don’t know anything about delivering post!” “Mr. Lipwig, this morning you had no experience at all of being dead, and yet but for my intervention you would nevertheless have turned out to be extremely good at it,” said Lord Vetinari sharply. “It just goes to show: you never know until you try. ” “But when you sentenced me—” Vetinari raised a pale hand. “Ah?” he said. Moist’s brain, at last aware that it needed to do some work here, stepped in and replied: “Er…when you…sentenced…Alfred Spangler—” “Well done. Do carry on. ” “—you said he was a natural-born criminal, a fraudster by vocation, a habitual liar, a perverted genius, and totally untrustworthy!” “Are you accepting my offer, Mr. Lipwig?” said Vetinari sharply. Moist looked at him. “Excuse me,” he said, standing up, “I’d just like to check something. ” There were two men dressed in black standing behind his chair. It wasn’t a particularly neat black, more the black worn by people who just don’t want little marks to show. They looked like clerks, until you met their eyes. They stood aside as Moist walked toward the door, which, as promised, was indeed there. He opened it very carefully. There was nothing beyond, and that included a floor. In the manner of one who is going to try all possibilities, he took the remnant of the spoon out of his pocket and let it drop. It was quite a long time before he heard the jingle. Then he went back and sat in the chair. “The prospect of freedom?” he said. “Exactly,” said Lord Vetinari. “There is always a choice. ” “You mean…I could choose certain death?” “A choice, nevertheless,” said Vetinari. “Or, perhaps, an alternative. You see, I believe in freedom, Mr. Lipwig. Not many people do, although they will, of course, protest otherwise. And no practical definition of freedom would be completely without the freedom to take the consequences. Indeed, it is the freedom upon which all the others are based. Now…will you take the job? No one will recognize you, I am sure. No one ever recognizes you, it would appear. ” Moist shrugged. “Oh, all right. Of course, I accept as natural-born criminal, habitual liar, fraudster, and totally untrustworthy perverted genius. ” “Capital! Welcome to government service!” said Lord Vetinari, extending his hand. “I pride myself on being able to pick the right man. The wage is twenty dollars a week and, I believe, the postmaster general has the use of a small apartment in the main building. I think there’s a hat, too. I shall require regular reports. Good day. ” He looked down at his paperwork. He looked up. “You appear to be still here, Postmaster General?” “And that’s it ?” said Moist, aghast. “One minute I’m being hanged, next minute you’re employing me?” “Let me see…yes, I think so. Oh, no. Of course. Drumknott, do give Mr. Lipwig his keys. ” The clerk stepped forward, handed Moist a huge, rusted key-ring full of keys, and proffered a clipboard. “Sign here, please, Postmaster General,” he said. Hold on a minute , Moist thought, this is only one city. It’s got gates. It’s completely surrounded by different directions to run. Does it matter what I sign? “Certainly,” he said, and scribbled his name.
“Your correct name, if you please,” said Lord Vetinari, not looking up from his desk. “What name did he sign, Drumknott?” The clerk craned his head. “Er…Ethel Snake, my lord, as far as I can make out. ” “ Do try to concentrate, Mr. Lipwig,” said Vetinari wearily, still apparently reading the paperwork. Moist signed again. After all, what would it matter in the long run? And it would certainly be a long run, if he couldn’t find a horse. “And that only leaves the matter of your parole officer,” said Lord Vetinari, still engrossed in the paper before him. “Parole officer?” “Yes. I’m not completely stupid, Mr. Lipwig. He will meet you outside the Post Office building in ten minutes. Good day. ” When Moist had left, Drumknott coughed politely and said, “Do you think he’ll turn up there, my lord?” “One must always consider the psychology of the individual,” said Vetinari, correcting the spelling on an official report. “That is what I do all the time and lamentably, Drumknott, you do not always do. That is why he has walked off with your pencil. ” A LWAYS MOVE FAST. You never know what’s catching you up. Ten minutes later, Moist von Lipwig was well outside the city. He’d bought a horse, which was a bit embarrassing, but speed had been of the essence and he’d only had time to grab one of his emergency stashes from its secret hiding place and pick up a skinny old screw from the Bargain Box in Hobson’s Livery Stable. At least it’d mean no irate citizen going to the Watch. No one had bothered him. No one looked at him twice; no one ever did. The city gates had indeed been wide open. The plains lay ahead of him, full of opportunity. And he was good at parlaying nothing into something. For example, at the first little town he came to he’d go to work on this old nag with a few simple techniques and ingredients that’d make it worth twice the price he paid for it, at least for about twenty minutes or until it rained. Twenty minutes would be enough time to sell it and, with any luck, pick up a better horse worth slightly more than the asking price. He’d do it again at the next town, and in three days, maybe four, he’d have a horse worth owning. But that would be just a sideshow, something to keep his hand in. He’d got three very nearly diamond rings sewn into the lining of his coat, a real one in a secret pocket in the sleeve, and a very nearly gold dollar sewn cunningly into the collar. These were, to him, what his saw and hammer are to a carpenter. They were primitive tools, but they’d put him back in the game. There is a saying, “You can’t fool an honest man,” which is much quoted by people who make a profitable living by fooling honest men. Moist never tried it, knowingly anyway. If you did fool an honest man, he tended to complain to the local Watch, and these days they were harder to buy off. Fooling dishonest men was a lot safer and, somehow, more sporting. And, of course, there were so many more of them. You hardly had to aim. Half an hour after arriving in the town of Hapley, where the big city was a tower of smoke on the horizon, he was sitting outside an inn, downcast, with nothing in the world but a genuine diamond ring worth a hundred dollars and a pressing need to get home to Genua, where his poor aged mother was dying of Gnats. Eleven minutes later, he was standing patiently outside a jeweler’s shop, inside which the jeweler was telling a sympathetic citizen that the ring the stranger was prepared to sell for twenty dollars was worth seventy-five (even jewelers have to make a living). And thirty-five minutes later, he was riding out on a better horse, with five dollars in his pocket, leaving behind a gloating, sympathetic citizen who, despite having been bright enough to watch Moist’s hands carefully, was about to go back to the jeweler to try to sell for seventy-five dollars a shiny brass ring with a glass stone that was worth fifty pence of anybody’s money. The world was blessedly free of honest men and wonderfully full of people who believed they could tell the difference between an honest man and a crook. He tapped his jacket pocket. The jailers had taken the map off him, of course, probably while he was busy being a dead man. It was a good map, and in studying it Mr. Wilkinson and his chums would learn a lot about decryption, geography, and devious cartography. They wouldn’t find in it the whereabouts of AM$150,000 in mixed currencies, though, because the map was a complete and complex fiction. However, Moist entertained a wonderful warm feeling inside to think that they would, for some time, possess that greatest of all treasures, which is Hope. Anyone who couldn’t simply remember where he stashed a great big fortune deserved to lose it, in Moist’s opinion. But, for now, he’d have to keep away from it, while having it to look forward to… Moist didn’t even bother to note the name of the next town. It had an inn, and that was enough. He took a room with a view over a disused alley, checked that the window opened easily, ate an adequate meal, and had an early night. Not bad at all , he thought. This morning he’d been on the scaffold with the actual noose around his actual neck; tonight he was back in business. All he needed to do now was grow a beard again, and keep away from Ankh-Morpork for six months. Or perhaps only three. Moist had a talent. He’d also acquired a lot of skills so completely that they were second nature. He’d learned to be personable, but something in his genetics made him unmemorable. He had the talent for not being noticed, for being a face in the crowd. People had difficulty describing him. He was…he was “about. ” He was about twenty, or about thirty. On Watch reports across the continent he was anywhere between, oh, about six feet two inches and five feet nine inches tall, hair all shades from mid-brown to blond, and his lack of distinguishing features included his entire face. He was about…average. What people remembered was the furniture, things like spectacles and mustaches, so he always carried a selection of both. They remembered names and mannerisms, too. He had hundreds of those. Oh, and they remembered that they’d been richer before they met him. At three in the morning, the door burst open. It was a real burst; bits of wood clattered off the wall. But Moist was already out of bed and diving for the window before the first of them hit the floor. It was an automatic reaction that owed nothing to thought. Besides, he’d checked before lying down, and there was a large water barrel outside that would break his fall. It wasn’t there now. Whoever had stolen it had not stolen the ground it stood on, however, and it broke Moist’s fall by twisting his ankle. He pulled himself up, keening softly in agony, and hopped along the alley, using the wall for support. The inn’s stables were around the back; all he had to do was pull himself up onto a horse, any horse— “Mr. Lipwig?” a big voice bellowed. Oh gods, it was a troll, it sounded like a troll, a big one, too, he didn’t know you got any down here, outside the cities— “You Can’t Run And You Can’t Hide, Mr. Lipwig!” Hold on, hold on, he hadn’t given his real name to anyone in this place, had he? But all this was background thinking. Someone was after him, therefore he would run. Or hop. He risked a look behind him when he reached the back gate to the stables. There was a red glow in his room. Surely they weren’t torching the place over a matter of a few dollars? How stupid! Everyone knew that if you got lumbered with a good fake you palmed it off onto some other sucker as soon as possible, didn’t they? There was no helping some people. His horse was alone in the stable, and seemed unimpressed to see him. He got the bridle on, while hopping on one foot. There was no point in bothering with a saddle. He knew how to ride without a saddle. Hell, once he’d ridden without pants, too, but luckily all the tar and feathers helped him stick to the horse. He was the world champion at leaving town in a hurry. He went to lead the horse out of the stall, and heard the clink.
He looked down and kicked some straw away. There was a bright yellow bar, joining two short lengths of chain with a yellow shackle attached, one for each leg. The only way this horse would go anywhere was by hopping, just like him. They’d clamped it. They’d bloody clamped it… “Oh, Mr. Lipppppwig!” the voice boomed out across the stable yard. “Do You Want To Know The Rules , Mr. Lipwig?” He looked around in desperation. There was nothing in here to use as a weapon, and in any case weapons made him nervous, which was why he’d never, ever carried one. Weapons raised the ante far too high. It was much better to rely on a gift for talking his way out of things, confusing the issue, and, if that failed, some well-soled shoes and a cry of “Look, what’s that over there?” But he had a definite feeling that while he could talk as much as he liked, out here no one was going to listen. As for speeding away, he’d just have to rely on hop. There was a yard broom and a wooden feed bucket in the corner. He stuck the head of the broom under his armpit to make a crutch, and grabbed the bucket handle as heavy footsteps thudded toward the stable door. When the door was pushed open, he swung the bucket as hard as he could, and felt it shatter. Splinters filled the air. A moment later, there was the thump of a heavy body hitting the ground. Moist hopped over it and plunged unsteadily into the dark. Something as tough and hard as a shackle snapped around his good ankle. He hung from the broom handle for a second, and then collapsed. “I Have Nothing But Good Feelings Toward You, Mr. Lipwig!” boomed the voice cheerfully. Moist groaned. The broom must have been kept as an ornament, because it certainly hadn’t been used much on the accumulations in the stable yard. On the positive side, this meant he had fallen into something soft. On the negative side, it meant that he had fallen into something soft. Someone grabbed a handful of his coat and lifted him bodily out of the muck. “Up We Get, Mr. Lipwig!” “It’s pronounced Lipvig, you moron,” he moaned. “A V, not a W!” “Up Ve Get, Mr. Lipvig!” said the booming voice as his broom/crutch was pushed under his arm. “What the hell are you?” Lipwig managed. “I Am Your Parole Officer, Mr. Lipvig!” Moist managed to turn around, and looked up, and then up again, into a gingerbread man’s face with two glowing red eyes in it. When it spoke, its mouth was a glimpse into an inferno. “A golem? You’re a damn golem ?” The thing picked him up in one hand and slung him over its shoulder. It ducked into the stables and Moist, upside down with his nose pressed against the terra-cotta of the creature’s body, realized that it was picking up his horse in its other hand. There was a brief whinny. “Ve Must Make Haste, Mr. Lipvig! You Are Due In Front Of Lord Vetinari At Eight O’clock! And At Vork By Nine!” Moist groaned. “A H , M R. L IPWIG. Regrettably, we meet again,” said Lord Vetinari. It was eight o’clock in the morning. Moist was swaying. His ankle felt better, but it was the only part of him that did. “It walked all night!” he said. “All damn night! Carrying a horse as well!” “Do sit down , Mr. Lipwig,” said Vetinari, looking up from the table and gesturing wearily to the chair. “By the way, ‘it’ is a ‘he. ’ An honorific in this case, clearly, but I have great hopes of Mr. Pump. ” Moist saw the glow on the walls as, behind him, the golem smiled. Vetinari looked down at the table again, and seemed to lose interest in Moist for a moment. A slab of stone occupied most of the table. Little carvings of dwarfs and trolls covered it. It looked like some kind of game. “ Mr. Pump?” said Moist. “Hmm?” said Vetinari, moving his head to look at the board from a slightly different viewpoint. Moist leaned toward the Patrician and jerked a thumb in the direction of the golem. “ That ,” he said, “is Mr. Pump?” “No,” said Lord Vetinari, leaning forward likewise and suddenly, completely and disconcertingly, focusing on Moist. “ He… is Mr. Pump. Mr. Pump is a government official. Mr. Pump does not sleep. Mr. Pump does not eat. And Mr. Pump, Postmaster General, does not stop. ” “And that means what, exactly?” “It means that if you are thinking of, say, finding a ship headed for Fourecks, on the basis that Mr. Pump is big and heavy and travels only at walking pace, Mr. Pump will follow you. You have to sleep. Mr. Pump does not. Mr. Pump does not breathe. The deep abyssal plains of the oceans present no barrier to Mr. Pump. Four miles an hour is six hundred and seventy-two miles a week. It all adds up. And when Mr. Pump catches you—” “Ah, now,” said Moist, holding up a finger. “Let me stop you there. I know golems are not allowed to hurt people!” Lord Vetinari raised his eyebrows. “Good heavens, wherever did you hear that?” “It’s written on…something inside their heads! A scroll, or something. Isn’t it?” said Moist, uncertainty rising. “Oh, dear. ” The Patrician sighed. “Mr. Pump, just break one of Mr. Lipwig’s fingers, will you? Neatly, if you please. ” “Yes, Your Lordship. ” The golem lumbered forward. “Hey! No! What?” Moist waved his hands wildly and knocked game pieces tumbling. “Wait! Wait! There’s a rule ! A golem mustn’t harm a human being or allow a human being to come to harm!” Lord Vetinari raised a finger. “Just wait one moment, please, Mr. Pump. Very well, Mr. Lipwig, can you remember the next bit?” “The next bit? What next bit?” said Moist. “There isn’t a next bit!” Lord Vetinari raised an eyebrow. “Mr. Pump?” he said “—‘Unless Ordered To Do So By Duly Constituted Authority,’” said the golem. “I’ve never heard that bit before!” said Moist. “Haven’t you?” said Lord Vetinari, in apparent surprise. “I can’t imagine who would fail to include it. A hammer can hardly be allowed to refuse to hit the nail on the head, nor a saw make moral judgments about the nature of the timber. In any case, I employ Mr. Trooper the hangman, who of course you have met, and the City Watch, the regiments, and, from time to time…other specialists, who are fully entitled to kill in their own defense or in protection of the city and its interests. ” Vetinari started to pick up the fallen pieces and replace them delicately on the slab. “Why should Mr. Pump be any different just because he is made of clay? Ultimately, so are we all. Mr. Pump will accompany you to your place of work. The fiction will be that he is your bodyguard, as befits a senior government official. We alone will know that he has…additional instructions. Golems are highly moral creatures by nature, Mr. Lipwig, but you may find their morality a shade…old-fashioned?” “Additional instructions?” said Moist. “And would you mind telling me exactly what his additional instructions are?” “Yes. ” The Patrician blew a speck of dust off a little stone troll and put it on its square. “And—?” said Moist, after a pause. Vetinari sighed. “Yes, I would mind telling you exactly what they are. You have no rights in this matter. We have impounded your horse, by the way, since it was used in the committal of a crime. ” “This is cruel and unusual punishment!” said Moist. “Indeed?” said Vetinari. “I offer you a light desk job, comparative freedom of movement, working in the fresh air…no, I feel that my offer might well be unusual but…cruel? I think not. However, I believe down the cellars we do have some ancient punishments which are extremely cruel and in many cases quite unusual, if you would like to try them for the purposes of comparison. And, of course, there is always the option of dancing the sisal two-step. ” “The what?” said Moist. Drumknott leaned down and whispered something in his master’s ear. “Oh, I apologize,” said Vetinari. “I meant, of course, the hemp fandango. It is your choice, Mr. Lipwig. There is always a choice, Mr. Lipwig. Oh, and by the way…do you know the second interesting thing about angels?” “What angels?” said Moist, angry and bewildered. “Oh dear, people just don’t pay attention,” said Vetinari.
“Remember? The first interesting thing about angels? I told you yesterday? I expect you were thinking about something else. The second interesting thing about angels, Mr. Lipwig, is that you only ever get one. ” CHAPTER 2 The Post Office In which we meet the staff • Glom of Nit • Dissertation on rhyming slang • “You should have been there!” • The dead letters • A golem’s life • Book of Regulations T HERE WAS ALWAYS an angle. There was always a price. There was always a way. And look at it like this , Moist thought: Certain death had been replaced with uncertain death, and that’s an improvement, isn’t it? He was free to walk around…well, hobble, at the moment. And it was just possible that somewhere in all this was a profit. Well, it could happen. He was good at seeing opportunities where other people saw barren ground. So there was no harm in playing it straight for a few days, yes? It’d give his foot a chance to get better, he could spy out the situation, he could make plans. He might even find out how indestructible golems were. After all, they were made of pottery, weren’t they? Things could get broken, maybe. Moist von Lipwig raised his eyes and examined his future. The Ankh-Morpork Central Post Office had a gaunt frontage. It was a building designed for a purpose. It was, therefore, more or less, a big box to employ people in, with two wings at the rear, which enclosed the big stable yard. Some cheap pillars had been sliced in half and stuck on the outside, some niches had been carved for some miscellaneous stone nymphs, some stone urns had been ranged along the parapet, and thus Architecture had been created. In appreciation of the thought that had gone into this, the good citizens, or more probably their kids, had covered the walls to a height of six feet with graffiti in many exciting colors. In a band all along the top of the frontage, staining the stone in greens and browns, some words had been set in letters of bronze: “‘NEITHER RAIN NOR SNOW NOR GLO M OF NI T CAN STAY THESE MES ENGERS ABO T THEIR DUTY,’” Moist read aloud. “What the hell does that mean?” “The Post Office Was Once A Proud Institution,” said Mr. Pump. “And that stuff?” Moist pointed. On a board much further down the building, in peeling paint, were the less heroic words: DONT ARSK US ABOUT: rocks troll’s with sticks All sorts of dragons Mrs. Cake Huje green things with teeth Any kinds of black dogs with orange eyebrows Rains of spaniel’s. fog. Mrs. Cake “I Said It Was A Proud Institution,” the golem rumbled. “Who’s Mrs. Cake?” “I Regret I Cannot Assist You There, Mr. Lipvig. ” “They seem pretty frightened of her. ” “So It Appears, Mr. Lipvig. ” Moist looked around at this busy junction in this busy city. People weren’t paying any attention to him, although the golem was getting casual glances that didn’t appear very friendly. This was all too strange. He’d been—what, fourteen?—when he’d last used his real name. And heavens knew how long since he’d gone out without some easily removable distinguishing marks. He felt naked. Naked and unnoticed. To the interest of no one whatsoever, he walked up the stained steps and turned the key in the lock. To his surprise, it moved easily, and the paint-spattered doors swung open without a creak. There was a rhythmic, hollow noise behind Moist. Mr. Pump was clapping his hands. “Well Done, Mr. Lipvig. Your First Step In A Career Of Benefit Both To Yourself And The Well-being Of The City!” “Yeah, right,” muttered Moist. He stepped into the huge, dark lobby, which was lit only dimly by a big but grimy dome in the ceiling; it could never be more than twilight in here, even at noon. The graffiti artists had been at work here, too. In the gloom he could see a long, broken counter, with doors and pigeonholes behind it. Real pigeonholes. Pigeons were nesting in the pigeonholes. The sour, salty smell of old guano filled the air, and, as marble tiles rang under Moist’s feet, several hundred pigeons took off frantically and spiraled up toward a broken pane in the roof. “Oh shit,” he said. “Bad Language Is Discouraged, Mr. Lipvig,” said Mr. Pump behind him. “Why? It’s written on the walls! Anyway, it was a description , Mr. Pump! Guano! There must be tons of the stuff!” Moist heard his own voice echo back from the distant walls. “When was this place last open?” “Twenty years ago, Postmaster!” Moist looked around. “Who said that?” he said. The voice seemed to have come from everywhere. There was the sound of shuffling and the click-click of a walking stick, and a bent, elderly figure appeared in the gray, dead, dusty air. “Groat, sir,” it wheezed. “Junior Postman Groat, sir. At your service, sir. One word from you, sir, and I will leap , sir, leap into action, sir. ” The figure stopped to cough long and hard, making a noise like a wall being hit repeatedly with a bag of rocks. Moist saw that it had a beard of the short, bristled type, which suggested that its owner had been interrupted halfway through eating a hedgehog. “ Junior Postman Groat?” he said. “Indeedy, sir. The reason being, no one’s ever bin here long enough to promote me, sir. Should be Senior Postman Groat, sir,” the old man added meaningfully, and once again coughed volcanically. “ Ex-postman Groat” sounds more like it , Moist thought. Aloud he said, “And you work here, do you?” “Aye, sir, that we do, sir. It’s just me and the boy now, sir. He’s keen, sir. We keeps the place clean, sir. All according to Regulations. ” Moist couldn’t stop staring. Mr. Groat wore a toupee. There may actually be a man somewhere on whom a toupee works, but whoever that man might be, Mr. Groat was not he. It was chestnut brown, the wrong size, the wrong shape, the wrong style, and, all in all, wrong. “Ah, I see you’re admirin’ my hair, sir,” said Groat proudly, as the toupee spun gently. “It’s all mine, you know, not a prunes. ” “Er…prunes?” said Moist. “Sorry, sir, shouldn’t have used slang. Prunes as in ‘syrup of prunes,’ sir. Dimwell slang. * Syrup of prunes: wig. Not many men o’ my age got all their own hair, I expect that’s what you’re thinking. It’s clean living that does it, inside and out. ” Moist looked around at the fetid air and the receding mounds of guano. “Well done,” he muttered. “Well, Mr. Groat, do I have an office? Or something?” For a moment, the visible face above the ragged beard was that of a rabbit in a headlight. “Oh, yes, sir, tech’n’ly ,” said the old man, quickly. “But we don’t go in there anymore, sir, oh no, ’cos of the floor. Very unsafe, sir. ’Cos of the floor. Could give way any minute, sir. We uses the staff locker room, sir. If you’d care to follow me, sir?” Moist nearly burst out laughing. “Fine,” he said. He turned to the golem. “Er…Mr. Pump?” “Yes, Mr. Lipvig?” said the golem. “Are you allowed to assist me in any way, or do you just wait around until it’s time to hit me on the head?” “There Is No Need For Hurtful Remarks, Sir. I Am Allowed To Render Appropriate Assistance. ” “So could you clean out the pigeon shit and let a bit of light in?” “Certainly, Mr. Lipvig. ” “You can ?” “A Golem Does Not Shy Away From Work, Mr. Lipvig. I Will Locate A Shovel. ” Pump set off toward the distant counter, and the bearded junior postman panicked. “No!” he squeaked, lurching after the golem. “It’s really not a good idea to touch them heaps!” “Floors liable to collapse, Mr. Groat?” said Moist cheerfully. Groat looked from Moist to the golem, and back again. His mouth opened and shut as his brain sought for words. Then he sighed. “You’d better come down to the locker room, then. Step this way, gentlemen. ” M OIST BECAME AWARE of the smell of Mr. Groat as he followed the old man. It wasn’t a bad smell, as such, just…odd. It was vaguely chemical, coupled with the eye-stinging aroma of every type of throat medicine you’ve ever swallowed, and with just a hint of old potatoes. The locker room turned out to be down some steps into the basement, where, presumably, the floors couldn’t collapse because there was nothing to collapse into. It was long and narrow.
At one end was a monstrous oven, which, Moist learned later, had once been part of some kind of heating system, the Post Office having been a very advanced building for its time. Now a small round stove, glowing almost cherry-red at the base, had been installed alongside it. There was a huge black kettle on it. The air indicated the presence of socks, cheap coal, and no ventilation; some battered wooden lockers were ranged along one wall, the painted names flaking off. Light got in, eventually, via grimy windows up near the ceiling. Whatever the original purpose of the room, though, it was now the place where two people lived; two people who got along but, nevertheless, had a clear sense of mine and thine. The space was divided into two, with a narrow bed at either end. The dividing line was painted on the floor, up the walls, and across the ceiling. My half, your half. So long as we remember that, the line indicated, there won’t be any more…trouble. In the middle, so that it bestrode the boundary line, was a table. A couple of mugs and two tin plates were carefully arranged at either end. There was a salt pot in the middle of the table. At the salt pot, the line turned into a little circle to encompass it in its own demilitarized zone. One half of the narrow room contained an overlarge and untidy bench, piled with jars, bottles, and old papers; it looked like the work space of a chemist who made it up as he went along, or until it exploded. The other had an old card table, on which small boxes and rolls of black felt had been stacked with slightly worrying precision. There, on a stand, was also the largest magnifying glass Moist had ever seen. That side of the room had been swept clean, the other was a mess that threatened to encroach over the Line. Unless one of the scraps of paper from the grubbier side was a funny shape, it seemed that somebody, with care and precision and presumably a razor blade, had cut off that corner of it that had gone too far. A young man stood in the middle of the clean half of the floor. He’d obviously been waiting for Moist, just like Groat, but he hadn’t mastered the art of standing to attention or, rather, had only partly understood it. His right side stood considerably more to attention than his left side, and, as a result of this, he was standing like a banana. Nevertheless, with his huge, nervous grin and big, gleaming eyes he radiated keenness, quite possibly beyond the boundaries of sanity. There was a definite sense that at any moment he would bite. And he wore a blue cotton shirt on which someone had printed ASK ME ABOUT PINS ! “Er…” said Moist. “Apprentice Postman Stanley,” mumbled Groat. “Orphan, sir. Very sad. Came to us from the Siblings of Offler charity home, sir. Both parents passed away of the Gnats on their farm out in the wilds, sir, and he was raised by peas. ” “Surely you mean on peas, Mr. Groat?” “ By peas, sir. Very unusual case. A good lad if he doesn’t get upset, but he tends to twist toward the sun, sir, if you get my meaning. ” “Er…perhaps,” said Moist. He turned hurriedly to Stanley. “So you know something about pins, do you?” he said in what he hoped was a jovial voice. “Nossir!” said Stanley. He all but saluted. “But your shirt says—” “I know everything about pins, sir,” said Stanley. “Everything there is to know!” “Well, that’s, er—” Moist began. “Every single fact about pins, sir,” Stanley went on. “There’s not a thing I don’t know about pins. Ask me anything about pins, sir. Anything you like at all. Go on, sir!” “Well…” Moist floundered, but years of practice came to his aid. “I wonder how many pins were made in this city last ye—” He stopped. A change had come across Stanley’s face; it smoothed out, lost the vague sense that its owner was about to attempt to gnaw your ear off. “Last year the combined workshops (or ‘pinneries’) of Ankh-Morpork turned out twenty-seven million, eight hundred and eighty thousand, nine hundred and seventy-eight pins,” said Stanley, staring into a pin-filled, private universe. “That includes wax-headed, steels, brassers, silver-headed (and full silver), extra large, machine- and handmade, reflexed and novelty, but not lapel pins, which should not be grouped with the true pins at all, since they are technically known as ‘sports’ or ‘blazons,’ sir—” “Ah yes, I think I once saw a magazine or something,” said Moist desperately. “It was called, er… Pins Monthly ?” “Oh dear,” said Groat behind him. Stanley’s face contorted in something that looked like a cat’s bottom with a nose. “That’s for hobbyists ,” he hissed. “They’re not true ‘pinheads’! They don’t care about pins! Oh, they say so, but they have a whole page of needles every month now. Needles? Anyone could collect needles! They’re only pins with holes in! Anyway, what about Popular Needles ? But they just don’t want to know!” “Stanley is editor of Total Pins ,” Groat whispered behind Moist. “I don’t think I saw that one—” Moist began. “Stanley, go and help Mr. Lipwig’s assistant find a shovel, will you?” said Groat, raising his voice. “Then go and sort your pins again until you feel better. Mr. Lipwig doesn’t want to see one of your Little Moments. ” He gave Moist a blank look. “—they had an article last month about pincushions ,” muttered Stanley, stamping out of the room. The golem followed him. “He’s a good lad,” said Groat when they were gone. “Just a bit cup-and-plate in the head. Leave him alone with his pins and he’s no trouble at all. Gets a bit…intense at times, that’s all. Oh, and on that subject, there’s the third member of our jolly little team, sir—” A large black-and-white cat had walked into the room. It paid no attention to Moist or Groat, but progressed slowly across the floor toward a battered and unraveling basket. Moist was in the way. The cat continued until its head butted gently against Moist’s leg, and stopped. “That’s Mr. Tiddles, sir,” said Groat. “ Tiddles? ” said Moist. “You mean that really is a cat’s name? I thought it was just a joke. ” “Not so much a name, sir, more of a description,” said Groat. “You’d better move, sir, otherwise he’ll just stand there all day. Twenty years old, he is, and a bit set in his ways. ” Moist stepped aside. Unperturbed, the cat continued to the basket, where it curled up. “Is he blind?” said Moist. “No, sir. He has his routine and he sticks to it, sir, sticks to it to the very second. Very patient, for a cat. Doesn’t like the furniture being moved. You’ll get used to him. ” Not knowing what to say, but feeling that he should say something, Moist nodded toward the array of bottles on Groat’s desk. “You dabble in alchemy, Mr. Groat?” he said. “Nossir! I practice nat’ral medicine!” said Groat proudly. “Don’t believe in doctors, sir! Never a day’s illness in my life, sir!” He thumped his chest, making a thlap noise not normally associated with living tissue. “Flannelette, goose grease, and hot bread puddin’, sir! Nothing like it for protecting your tubes against the noxious effluviences! I puts a fresh layer on ever week, sir, and you won’t find a sneeze passing my nose, sir. Very healthful, very natural!” “Er…good,” said Moist. “Worst of ’em all is soap, sir,” said Groat, lowering his voice. “Terrible stuff, sir, washes away the beneficent humors. Leave things be, I say! Keep the tubes running, put sulfur in your socks, and pay attention to your chest protector, and you can laugh at anything! Now, sir, I’m sure a young man like yourself will be worrying about the state of his—” “What’s this do?” said Moist hurriedly, picking up a pot of greenish goo. “That, sir? Wart cure. Wonderful stuff. Very natural, not like the stuff a doctor’d give you. ” Moist sniffed at the pot. “What’s it made of?” “Arsenic, sir,” said Groat calmly. “ Arsenic? ” “Very natural, sir,” said Groat. “And green. ” So , Moist thought, as he put the pot back with extreme care, inside the Post Office normality clearly does not have a one-to-one relationship with the outside world. I might miss the cues.
He decided that the role of keen but bewildered manager was the one to play here. Besides, apart from the “keen” aspect, it didn’t need any effort. “Can you help me, Mr. Groat?” he said. “I don’t know anything about the post!” “Well, sir…what did you used to do?” Rob. Trick. Forge. Embezzle. But never—and this was important—using any kind of violence. Never. Moist had always been very careful about that. He tried not to sneak, either, if he could avoid it. Being caught at one A. M. in a bank’s deposit vault while wearing a black suit with lots of little pockets in it could be considered suspicious, so why do it? With careful planning, the right suit, the right papers, and, above all, the right manner, you could walk into the place at midday, and the manager would hold the door open for you when you left. Palming rings and exploiting the cupidity of the rural stupid was just a way of keeping his hand in. It was the face, that was what it was. He had an honest face. And he loved those people who looked him firmly in the eye to see his inner self, because he had a whole set of inner selves, one for every occasion. As for firm handshakes, practice had given him one to which you could moor boats. It was people skills, that was what it was. Special people skills. Before you could sell glass as diamonds you had to make people really want to see diamonds. That was THE trick, the trick of all tricks. You changed the way people saw the world. You let them see it the way THEY wanted it to be… How the hell had Vetinari known his name? The man had cracked von Lipwig like an egg! And the Watch here were…demonic! As for setting a golem on a man… “I was a clerk,” said Moist. “What, paperwork, that sort of thing?” said Groat, looking at him intently. “Yes, pretty much all paperwork. ” That was honest, if you included playing cards, checks, letters of accreditation, bank drafts, and deeds. “Oh, another one,” said Groat. “Well, there’s not a lot to do. We can shove up and make room for you in here, no problem. ” “But I am supposed to make it work again like it used to, Mr. Groat. ” “Yeah, right,” said the old man. “You just come along with me, then, Mr. Lipwig. I reckon there’s one or two thing you ain’t bin tole!” He led the way out, back into the dingy main hall, a little trail of yellow powder leaking from his boots. “My dad used to bring me here when I were a lad,” he said. “A lot of families were Post Office families in those days. They had them big glass drippy tinkling things up in the ceiling, right? For lights?” “Chandeliers?” Moist suggested. “Yep, prob’ly,” said Groat. “Two of ’em. And there was brass an’ copper everywhere, polished up like gold. There was balconies, sir, all round the big hall on every floor, made of iron, like lace! And all the counters was of rare wood, my dad said. And people? This place was packed! The doors never stopped swinging! Even at night…oh, at night , sir, out in the big backyard, you should’ve been there! The lights! The coaches, coming and going, the horses steamin’…oh, sir, you should’ve seen it, sir! The men running the teams out…they had this thing, sir, this device, you could get a coach in and out of the yard in one minute, sir, one minute ! The bustle, sir, the bustle and fuss! They said you could come here from Dolly Sisters or even down in the Shambles, and post a letter to yourself, and you’d have to run like the blazes, sir, the very blazes , sir, to beat the postman to your door! And the uniforms, sir, royal blue with brass buttons! You should’ve seen them! And—” Moist looked over the babbling man’s shoulders to the nearest mountain of pigeon guano, where Mr. Pump had paused in his digging. The golem had been prodding at the fetid, horrible mess and, as Moist watched him, he straightened up and headed toward them with something in his hand. “—and when the big coaches came in, sir, all the way from the mountains, you could hear the horns miles away! You should’ve heard them, sir! And if any bandits tried anything, there was men we had, who’d go out and—” “Yes, Mr. Pump?” said Moist, halting Groat in midhistory. “A Surprising Discovery, Postmaster. The Mounds Are Not, As I Surmised, Made Of Pigeon Dung. No Pigeons Could Achieve That Amount In Thousands of Years, Sir. ” “Well, what are they made of, then?” “Letters, Sir,” said the golem. Moist looked down at Groat, who shifted uneasily. “Ah, yes,” said the old man. “I was coming to that. ” L ETTERS … …there was no end to them. They filled every room of the building and spilled out into the corridors. It was technically true that the postmaster’s office was unusable because of the state of the floor; it was twelve feet deep in letters. Whole corridors were blocked off with them. Cupboards had been stuffed full of them; to open a door incautiously was to be buried in an avalanche of yellowing envelopes. Floorboards bulged suspiciously upwards. Through cracks in the sagging ceiling plaster, paper protruded. The sorting room, almost as big as the main hall, had drifts reaching to twenty feet in places. Here and there, filing cabinets rose out of the paper sea like icebergs. After half an hour of exploration Moist wanted a bath. It was like walking through desert tombs. He felt he was choking on the smell of old paper, he felt as though his throat was filled with yellow dust. “I was told I had an apartment here,” he croaked. “Yes, sir,” said Groat. “Me and the lad had a look for it the other day. I heard that it was the other side of your office. So the lad went in on the end of a rope, sir. He said he felt a door, sir, but he’d sunk six feet under the mail by then and he was suffering, sir, suffering… so I pulled him out. ” “The whole place is full of undelivered mail?” They were back in the locker room. Groat had topped up the black kettle from a pan of water, and it was steaming. At the far end of the room, sitting at a neat little table by the stove, Stanley was counting his pins. “Pretty much, sir, except in the basements and the stables,” said the old man, washing a couple of tin mugs in a bowl of not very clean water. “You mean even the postm— my office is full of old mail but they never filled the basements? Where’s the sense in that?” “Oh, you couldn’t use the basements, sir, oh, not the basements,” said Groat, looking shocked. “It’s far too damp down here. The letters’d be destroyed in no time. ” “Destroyed,” said Moist flatly. “Nothing like damp for destroying things, sir,” said Groat, nodding sagely. “Destroying mail from dead people to dead people,” said Moist in the same flat voice. “We don’t know that, sir,” said the old man. “I mean, we’re got no actual proof. ” “Well, no. After all, some of those envelopes are only a hundred years old!” said Moist. He had a headache from the dust and a sore throat from the dryness, and there was something about the old man that was grating on his raw nerves. He was keeping something back. “That’s no time at all to some people. I bet the zombie and vampire population are still waiting by the letterbox every day, right?” “No need to be like that, sir,” said Groat levelly. “No need to be like that. You can’t destroy the mails. You just can’t do it, sir. That’s Tampering With The Mail, sir. That’s not just a crime, sir. That’s a, a—” “Sin?” said Moist. “Oh, worse’n a sin ,” said Groat, almost sneering. “For sins you’re only in trouble with a god, but in my day, if you interfered with the mail, you’d be up against Chief Postal Inspector Rumbelow. Hah! And there’s a big difference. Gods forgive. ” Moist searched for sanity in the wrinkled face opposite him. The unkempt beard was streaked with different colors, either of dirt, tea, or random celestial pigment. Like some hermit , he thought. Only a hermit could wear a wig like that. “Sorry?” he said. “And you mean that shoving someone’s letter under the floorboards for a hundred years isn’t tampering with it?” Groat suddenly looked wretched. The beard quivered.
Then he started to cough, great, hacking, wooden, crackling lumps of cough that made the jars shake and caused a yellow mist to rise from his trouser bottoms. “’Scuse me a moment, sir,” he wheezed between hacks, and fumbled in his pocket for a scratched and battered tin. “You suck at all, sir?” he said, tears rolling down his cheeks. He proffered the tin to Moist. “They’re Number Threes, sir. Very mild. I make ’em meself, sir. Nat’ral remedies from nat’ral ingredients, that’s my style, sir. Got to keep the tubes clear, sir, otherwise they turn against you. ” Moist took a large, violet lozenge from the box and sniffed it. It smelled faintly of aniseed. “Thank you, Mr. Groat,” he said, but in case this counted as an attempt at bribery, he added sternly, “The mail, Mr. Groat? Sticking undelivered mail wherever there’s a space isn’t tampering with it?” “That’s more… delaying the mail, sir. Just, er…slowing it down. A bit. It’s not like there’s any intention of never delivering it, sir. ” Moist stared at the worried expression. He felt that sense of shifting ground you experience when you realize that you’re dealing with someone whose world is connected with your own only by their fingertips. Not a hermit , he thought, but more like a shipwrecked mariner, living in this dry desert island of a building while the world outside moves on and all sanity evaporates. “Mr. Groat, I don’t want to, you know, upset you or anything, but there’s thousands of letters out there under a thick layer of pigeon guano…” he said slowly. “Actually, on that score, sir, things aren’t as bad as they seem,” said Groat, and paused to suck noisily on his natural cough lozenge. “It’s very dry stuff, pigeon doins, and forms quite a hard protective crust on the envelopes…” “Why are they all here , Mr. Groat?” said Moist. People skills, he remembered. You’re not allowed to shake him. The junior postman avoided his gaze. “Well, you know how it is…” he tried. “No, Mr. Groat. I don’t think I do. ” “Well…maybe a man’s busy, got a full round, maybe it’s Hogswatch, lots of cards, see? and the inspector is after him about his timekeeping, and so maybe he just shoves half a bag of letters somewhere safe…but he will deliver ’em, right? I mean, it’s not his fault if they keeps pushing, sir, pushing him all the time. Then it’s tomorrow and he’s got an even bigger bag, ’cos they’re pushing all the time, so he reckons, I’ll just drop a few off today, too, ’cos it’s my day off on Thursday and I can catch up then, but you see by Thursday he’s behind by more’n a day’s work because they keeps on pushing , and he’s tired anyway, tired as a dog, so then he says to himself, got some leave coming up soon, but he gets his leave and by then—well, it all got very nasty toward the end. There was…unpleasantness. We’d gone too far, sir, that’s what it was, we’d tried too hard. Sometimes things smash so bad it’s better to leave it alone than try to pick up the pieces. I mean, where would you start?” “I think I get the picture,” said Moist. You’re lying, Mr. Groat. You’re lying by omission. You’re not telling me everything. And what you’re not telling me is very important, isn’t it? I’ve turned lying into an art, Mr. Groat, and you’re just a talented amateur. Groat’s face, unaware of the internal monologue, managed a smile. “But the trouble is—what’s your first name, Mr. Groat?” Moist asked. “Tolliver, sir. ” “Nice name…the thing is , Tolliver, that the picture I see in your description is what I might refer to for the purposes of the analogy a cameo , whereas all this ”—Moist waved his hand to include the building and everything it contained—“is a full-sized triptych showing scenes from history, the creation of the world, and the disposition of the gods, with a matching chapel ceiling portraying the glorious firmament and a sketch of a lady with a weird smile thrown in for good measure! Tolliver, I think you are not being frank with me. ” “Sorry about that, sir,” said Groat, eyeing him with a sort of nervous defiance. “I could have you sacked, you know,” said Moist, knowing that this was a stupid thing to say. “You could, sir, you could try doin’ that,” said Groat quietly and slowly. “But I’m all you got, apart from the lad. And you don’t know nuffin’ about the Post Office, sir. You don’t know nuffin’ about the Regulations, neither. I’m the only one that knows what needs doing around here. You wouldn’t last five minutes without me, sir. You wouldn’t even see that the inkwells get filled every day!” “Inkwells? Filling inkwells?” said Moist. “This is just an old building full of, of, of dead paper! We have no customers !” “Got to keep the inkwells filled, sir. Post Office Regulations,” said Groat in a steely voice. “Got to follow Regulations, sir. ” “For what? It appears we don’t accept any mail or deliver any mail! We just sit here!” “No, sir, we don’t just sit here,” said Groat patiently. “We follow the Post Office Regulations. Fill the inkwells, polish the brass—” “You don’t sweep up the pigeon shit!” “Oddly enough, that’s not in the Regulations, sir,” said the old man. “Truth is, sir, no one wants us anymore. It’s all the clacks now, the damn clacks, clack, clack, clack. Everyone’s got a clacks tower now, sir. That’s the fashion. Fast as the speed of light, they say. Ha! It’s got no soul, sir, no heart. I hates ’em. But we’re ready, sir. If there was any mail, we’d deal with it, sir. We’d spring into action, sir, spring into action. But there ain’t. ” “Of course there isn’t! It’s clearly sunk into this town long ago that you might as well throw your letters away as give them to the Post Office!” “No, sir, wrong again. They’re all kept, sir. That’s what we do, sir. We keep things as they are. We try not to disturb things, sir,” said Groat quietly. “We try not to disturb anything. ” The way he said it made Moist hesitate. “What kind of anything?” he said. “Oh, nothing, sir. We just…go carefully. ” Moist looked around the room. Did it appear smaller? Did the shadows deepen and lengthen? Was there a sudden cold sensation in the air? No, there wasn’t. But an opportunity had definitely been missed, Moist felt. The hairs on the back of his neck were rising. Moist had heard that this was because men had been made out of monkeys, and it meant that there was a tiger behind you. In fact Mr. Pump was behind him, just standing there, eyes burning more brightly than any tiger had ever managed. This was worse. Tigers couldn’t follow you across the sea, and they had to sleep. He gave up. Mr. Groat was in some strange, musty little world of his own. “Do you call this a life?” he said. For the first time in this conversation. Mr. Groat looked him squarely in the eye. “Much better than a death, sir,” he said. M R. P UMP followed Moist across the main hall and out of the main doors, at which point Moist turned on him. “All right, what are the rules here?” he demanded. “Are you going to follow me everywhere ? You know I can’t run!” “You Are Allowed Autonomous Movement Within The City And Environs,” the golem rumbled. “But Until You Are Settled In, I Am Also Instructed To Accompany You For Your Own Protection. ” “Against who? Someone annoyed that their great-grandaddy’s mail didn’t turn up?” “I Couldn’t Say, Sir. ” “I need some fresh air. What happened in there? Why is it so…creepy? What happened to the Post Office?” “I Couldn’t Say, Sir,” said Mr. Pump placidly. “You don’t know? But it’s your city,” said Moist sarcastically. “Have you been stuck at the bottom of a hole in the ground for the last hundred years?” “No, Mr. Lipvig,” said the golem. “Well, why can’t—” Moist began. “It Was Two Hundred And Forty Years, Mr. Lipvig,” said the golem. “What was?” “The Time I Spent At The Bottom Of The Hole In The Ground, Mr. Lipvig. ” “What are you talking about?” said Moist. “Why, The Time I Spent At The Bottom Of The Hole In The Ground, Mr. Lipvig. Pump Is Not My Name, Mr. Lipvig. It Is My Description. Pump. Pump 19, To Be Precise. I Stood In The Bottom Of A Hole A Hundred Feet Deep And Pumped Water.
For Two Hundred And Forty Years, Mr. Lipvig. But Now I Am Ambulating In The Sunlight. This Is Better, Mr. Lipvig. This Is Better!” T HAT NIGHT , Moist lay staring at the ceiling. It was three feet from him. Hanging from it, a little distance away, was a candle in a safety lantern. Stanley had been insistent about that, and no wonder. This place would go up like a bomb. It was the boy who’d showed him up here; Groat was sulking somewhere. He’d been right, damn him. He needed Groat. Groat practically was the Post Office. It had been a long day, and Moist hadn’t slept well last night, what with being upside down over Mr. Pump’s shoulder and occasionally kicked by the frantic horse. He didn’t want to sleep here, either, heavens knew, but he didn’t have lodgings he could use anymore, and they were at a premium in this hive of a city in any case. The locker room did not appeal, no, not at all. So he’d simply scrambled onto the pile of dead letters in what was, in theory, his office. It was no great hardship. A man of affairs such as he had to learn to sleep in all kinds of situations, often while mobs were looking for him a wall’s thickness away. At least the heaps of letters were dry and warm and weren’t carrying edged weapons. Paper crackled underneath him as he tried to get comfortable. Idly, he picked up a letter at random; it was addressed to someone called Antimony Parker at 1 Lobbin Clout, and on the back, in capitals, it said S. W. A. L. K. He eased it open with a fingernail; the paper inside all but crumbled at his touch. My Very Dearest Timony , Yes! Why should a Woman, Sensible to the Great Honour that a Man is Doing her, play the Coy Minx at such a time!! I know you have spoken to Papa, and of course I consent to becoming the Wife of the Kindest, Most Wonderful— Moist glanced at the date on the letter. It had been written forty-one years ago. He was not, as a rule, given to introspection, it being a major drawback in his line of work, but he couldn’t help wondering if—he glanced back at the letter—“Your loving Agnathea” had ever married Antimony, or whether the romance had died right here, in this graveyard of paper. He shivered and tucked the envelope into his jacket. He’d have to ask Groat what S. W. A. L. K. meant. “Mr. Pump!” he shouted. There was a faint rumble from the corner of the room where the golem stood, waist-deep in mail. “Yes, Mr. Lipvig?” “Is there no way you can shut your eyes? I can’t sleep with two red glowing eyes watching me. It’s a…well, it’s a childhood thing. ” “Sorry, Mr. Lipvig. I Could Turn My Back. ” “That won’t work. I’d still know they’re there. Anyway, the glow reflects off the wall. Look, where would I run to?” The golem gave this some thought. “I Will Go And Stand In The Corridor, Mr. Lipvig,” he decided, and began to wade toward the door. “You do that,” said Moist. “And in the morning I want you to find my bedroom, okay? Some of the offices still have space near the ceiling, you can move the letters into there. ” “Mr. Groat Does Not Like The Mail To Be Moved, Mr. Lipvig,” the golem rumbled. “Mr. Groat is not the postmaster, Mr. Pump. I am. ” Good gods, the madness is catching , Moist thought as the glow of the golem’s eyes disappeared into darkness outside. I’m not the postmaster, I’m some poor bastard who’s the victim of some stupid…experiment. What a place! What a situation! What kind of man would put a known criminal in charge of a major branch of government? Apart from, say, the average voter. He tried to find the angle, the way out…but all the time a conversation kept bouncing off the insides of his brain. Imagine a hole, a hundred feet deep and full of water. Imagine the darkness. Imagine, at the bottom of the hole, a figure roughly of human shape, turning in that swirling darkness a massive handle once every eight seconds. Pump…Pump…Pump… For two hundred and forty years. “You didn’t mind?” Moist had asked. “ You Mean Did I Harbor Resentment, Mr. Lipvig? But I Was Doing Useful And Necessary Work! Besides, There Was Much For Me To Think About. ” “ At the bottom of a hundred feet of dirty water? What the hell did you find to think about? ” “ Pumping, Mr. Lipvig. ” And then, the golem said, had come cessation, and dim light, a lowering of levels, a locking of chains, movement upwards, emergence into a world of light and color…and other golems. Moist knew something about golems. They used to be baked out of clay, thousands of years ago, and brought to life by some kind of scroll put inside their heads, and they never wore out and they worked, all the time. You saw them pushing brooms, or doing heavy work in timber yards and foundries. Most of them you never saw at all. They made the hidden wheels go round, down in the dark. And that was more or less the limit of his interest in them. They were, almost by definition, honest. But now the golems were freeing themselves. It was the quietest, most socially responsible revolution in history. They were property, and so they saved up and bought themselves. Mr. Pump was buying his freedom by seriously limiting the freedom of Moist. A man could get quite upset about that. Surely that wasn’t how freedom was supposed to work? Ye gods , thought Moist, back in the here-and-now, no wonder Groat sucked cough sweets all the time, the dust in this place could choke you! He rummaged in his pocket and pulled out the diamond-shaped cough lozenge the old man had given him. It looked harmless enough. One minute later, after Mr. Pump had lurched into the room and slapped him heavily on the back, the steaming lozenge was stuck to the wall on the far side of the room, where, by morning, it had dissolved quite a lot of the plaster. M R. G ROAT took a measured spoonful of tincture of rhubarb and cayenne pepper, to keep the tubes open, and checked that he still had the dead mole around his neck, to ward off any sudden attack of doctors. Everyone knew doctors made you ill, it stood to reason. Nature’s remedies were the trick every time, not some hellish potion made of gods knew what. He smacked his lips appreciatively. He’d put fresh sulfur in his socks tonight, too, and he could feel it doing him good. Two candle lanterns glowed in the velvet, papery darkness of the main sorting office. The light was shining through the outer glass, filled with water so that the candle would go out if it was dropped; it made the lanterns look like the lights of some abyssal fish from the squidy, iron-hard depths. There was a little glugging noise in the dark. Groat corked his bottle of elixir and got on with business. “Be the inkwells filled, Apprentice Postman Stanley?” Groat intoned. “Aye, Junior Postman Groat, full to a depth of one-third of one inch from the top as per Post Office Counter Regulations, Daily Observances, Rule C18,” said Stanley. There was a rustle as Groat turned the pages of a huge book on the lectern in front of him. “Can I see the picture, Mr. Groat?” said Stanley eagerly. Groat smiled. It had become part of the ceremony, and he gave the reply he gave every time. “Very well, but this is the last time. It’s not good to look too often on the face of a god,” he said. “Or any other part. ” “But you said there used to be a gold statue of him in the big hall, Mr. Groat. People must’ve looked on it all the time. ” Groat hesitated. But Stanley was a growing lad. He’d have to know sooner or later. “Mind you, I don’t reckon people used to look at the face much,” he said. “They looked more at the…wings. ” “On his hat and his ankles,” said Stanley. “So he could fly the messages at the speed of…messages. ” A little bead of sweat dripped off Groat’s forehead. “Mostly on his hat and ankles, yes,” he said. “Er…but not only there. ” Stanley peered at the picture. “Oh yes, I never noticed them before. He’s got wings on—” “The fig leaf,” said Groat quickly. “That’s what we call it. ” “Why’s he got a leaf there?” said Stanley. “Oh, they all had ’em in the olden days, ’cos of being Classical,” said Groat, relieved to be shifting away from the heart of the matter. “It’s a fig leaf.
Off a fig tree. ” “Har har, the joke’s on them, there’s no fig trees round here!” said Stanley in the manner of one exposing the flaw in a long-held dogma. “Yes, lad, very good, but it was a tin one anyway,” said Groat with patience. “And the wings?” said the boy. “We-ell, I ’spose they thought that the more wings the better,” said Groat. “Yes, but ’sposing his hat wings and his ankle wings stopped working, he’d be held up by—” “Stanley! It’s just a statue! Don’t get excited! Calm down! You don’t want to upset… them. ” Stanley hung his head. “They’ve been…whispering to me again, Mr. Groat,” he confided in a low voice. “Yes, Stanley. They whisper to me, too. ” “I remember ’em last time, talking in the night, Mr. Groat,” said Stanley, his voice trembling. “I shut my eyes and I kept seeing the writin’…” “Yes, Stanley. Don’t worry about it. Try not to think about it. It’s Mr. Lipstick’s fault, stirring them up. Leave well alone, I say. They never listen, and then what happens? They find out the hard way. ” “It seems like only yesterday, those watchmen drawing that chalk outline round Mr. Mutable,” said Stanley, beginning to tremble. “ He found out the hard way!” “Calm down now, calm down,” said Groat, patting him gently on the shoulder. “You’ll set ’em off. Think about pins. ” “But it’s a cruel shame, Mr. Groat, them never being alive long enough to make you senior postman!” Groat sniffed. “Oh, that’s enough of that. That’s not important, Stanley,” he said, his face like thunder. “Yes, Mr. Groat, but you’re an old, old man and you’re still only a junior postman—” Stanley persisted. “I said that’s enough , Stanley! Now, just raise that lamp again, will you? Good. That’s better. I’ll read a page of the Regulations, that always quietens them down. ” Groat cleared his throat. “I shall now read from the Book of Regulations, Delivery Times (Metropolitan) (Sundays and Octadays excepted),” he announced to the air. “As follows: “‘The hours by which letters should be put into the receiving houses in town for each delivery within the city walls of Ankh-Morpork are as the following: Overnight by eight o’clock in the evening, for the first delivery. Morning by eight o’clock, for the second delivery. Morning by ten o’clock, for the third delivery. Morning by twelve o’clock, for the fourth delivery. Afternoon by two o’clock, for the fifth delivery. Afternoon by four o’clock, for the sixth delivery. Afternoon by six o’clock, for the seventh delivery. ’ These are the hours, and I have read them. ” Groat hung his head for a moment, and then closed the book with a snap. “Why are we doing this, Mr. Groat?” said Stanley meekly. “’Cos of hub-riss,” said Mr. Groat. “That’s what it was. Hub-riss killed the Post Office. Hub-riss and greed and Bloody Stupid Johnson and the New Pie. ” “A pie, Mr. Groat? How could a pie—” “Don’t ask, Stanley. It gets complicated and there’s nothing in it about pins. ” They put out the candles and left. When they were gone, a faint whispering started. CHAPTER 3 Our Own Hand, Or None In which our hero discovers the world of pins • The greengrocer’s apos’trophe • S. W. A. L. K. • The path of fate • The golem lady • The business of business and the nature of freedom once again discussed • Clerk Brian shows enthusiasm “R ISE A ND S HINE , Mr. Lipvig. Your Second Day As Postmaster!” Moist opened one crusted eye and glared at the golem. “Oh, so you’re an alarm clock, too?” he said. “Aargh, my tongue. It feels like it was caught in a mousetrap. ” He half crawled, half rolled across the bed of letters and managed to stand up just outside the door. “I need new clothes,” he said. “And food. And a toothbrush. I’m going out, Mr. Pump. You are to stay here. Do something. Tidy the place up. Get rid of the graffiti on the walls, will you? At least we can make the place look clean!” “Anything You Say, Mr. Lipvig. ” “Right!” said Moist, and strode off, at least for one stride, and then yelped. “Be Careful Of Your Ankle, Mr. Lipwig,” said Mr. Pump. “And another thing!” said Moist, hopping on one leg. “ How can you follow me? How can you possibly know where I am?” “Karmic Signature, Mr. Lipvig,” said the golem. “And that means what, exactly?” Moist demanded. “It Means I Know Exactly Where You Are, Mr. Lipvig. ” The pottery face was impassive. Moist gave up. He limped out into what, for this city, was a fresh new morning. There had been a touch of frost overnight, just enough to put some zest into the air and give him an appetite. The leg still hurt, but at least he didn’t need the crutch today. Here was Moist von Lipwig walking through the city. He’d never done that before. The late Alfred Spangler had, and so had Mundo Smith and Edwin Streep and half a dozen other personas that he’d donned and discarded. Oh, he’d been Moist inside (what a name, yes, he’d heard every possible joke…) but they had been on the outside, between him and the world. Edwin Streep had been a work of art. He’d been a lack-of-confidence trickster, and needed to be noticed. He was so patently, obviously bad at running a bent Find the Lady game and other street scams that people positively queued up to trick the dumb trickster and walked away grinning…right up to the moment when they tried to spend the coins they’d scooped up so quickly. There’s a secret art to forgery, and Moist had discovered it: in a hurry, or when excited, people will complete the forgery by their own cupidity. They’ll be so keen to snatch the money from the obvious idiot that their own eyes filled in all the little details that weren’t quite there on the coins they so quickly pocketed. All you needed to do was hint at them. But that was just for starters. Some customers never even discovered that they’d put fake coins in their purse, thus revealing to the incompetent Streep in which pocket they kept it. Later on they learned that Streep might be rubbish with a deck of cards but also that his lack was more than made up for by his exceptional skill as a pickpocket. Now Moist felt like a peeled prawn. He felt as though he’d stepped out naked. And yet, still, no one was taking any notice. There were no cries of “Hey, you!”, no shouts of “That’s him!” He was just another face in the crowd. It was a strange new feeling. He’d never really had to be himself before. He celebrated by buying a street directory from the Guild of Merchants, and had a coffee and a bacon sandwich while he thumbed, greasily, through it for the list of bars. He didn’t find what he was looking for there, but he did find it in the list of hairdressers, and grinned when he did so. It was nice to be right. He also found a mention of Dave’s Pin Exchange, up in Dolly Sisters, in an alley between a house of negotiable affection and a massage parlor. It bought and sold pins to pin fanciers. Moist finished his coffee with a look on his face that those who knew him well—a group consisting, in fact, of absolutely nobody—would have recognized as the formation of a plan. Ultimately, everything was all about people. If he was going to be staying here for a while, he’d make himself comfortable. He went for a walk to the self-styled “Home of Acuphilia!!!!!” It was like lifting an unregarded stone and finding a whole new world. Dave’s Pin Exchange was the kind of small shop where the owner knows every single one of his customers by name. It was a wonderful world, the world of pins. It was a hobby that could last you a lifetime. Moist knew this because he expended one dollar on Pins by J. Lanugo Owlsbury, apparently the last word on the subject. Everyone had their funny little ways, Moist conceded, but he wasn’t entirely at home among people who, if they saw a pinup, would pay attention to the pins. Some of the customers browsing the book racks ( Misdraws, Double Pointers, and Flaws, Pins of Uberwald and Genua, First Steps in Pins, Adventures in Acuphilia… ) and staring covetously at the rack of pins laid out under glass, had an intensity of expression that frightened him. They looked a bit like Stanley. They were all male. Clearly, women weren’t natural “pinheads.
” He found Total Pins on the bottom rack. It had a smudgy, home-produced look, and the print was small and dense and lacked such subtleties as paragraphs and, in many cases, punctuation. The common comma had looked at Stanley’s expression and decided not to disturb him. When Moist put the little magazine onto the counter, the shop’s owner, a huge bearded man with dreadlocks, a pin through his nose, a beer belly belonging to three other people, and the words DEATH OR PINS tattooed on a bicep, picked it up and tossed it back down dismissively. “Sure about that, sir?” he said. “We’ve got Pins Monthly, New Pins, Practical Pins, Modern Pins, Pins Extra, Pins International, Talking Pins, Pins World, World Pins, World of Pins, Pins and Pinneries… ” Moist’s attention wandered off for a while but came back in time to catch “ The Acuphile Digest, Extreme Pins , Stifte!, that’s from Uberwald, very good if you collect foreign pins, Beginning Pins , that’s a part-work, sir, with a new pin every week, Pin Times and”—here the big man winked—“ Back Alley Pins. ” “I noticed that one,” said Moist. “It has lots of pictures of young women in leather. ” “Yes, sir. But, to be fair, they’re generally holding pins. So, then…it’s still Total Pins for you, is it?” he added, as if giving a fool one last chance to repent his folly. “Yes,” said Moist. “What’s wrong with it?” “Oh, nothing. Nothing at all. ” Dave scratched his stomach thoughtfully. “It’s just that the editor is a bit…a bit…” “A bit what?” said Moist. “Well, we think he’s a bit weird about pins, to tell you the truth. ” Moist looked around the shop. “Really?” he said. M OIST WENT to a nearby café and leafed through the book. One of the skills of his previous life was an ability to pick up just enough about anything to sound like an expert, at least to nonexperts. Then he returned to the shop. Everyone had their levers. Often it was greed. Greed was a reliable old standby. Sometimes it was pride. That was Groat’s lever. He desperately wanted promotion; you could see it in his eyes. Find the lever, and then it was plain sailing. Stanley, now, Stanley…would be easy. Big Dave was examining a pin under a microscope when Moist returned to the shop. The rush hour for pin-buying must have been nearly over, because there were only a few laggards ogling the pins under glass, or thumbing through the racks. Moist sidled over to the counter and coughed. “Yes, sir?” said Big Dave, looking up from his work. “Back again, eh? They get to you, don’t they? Seen anything you like?” “A packet of pre-perforated pin papers and a ten-penny lucky-dip bag, please,” said Moist loudly. The other customers looked up for a moment as Dave pulled the packets off their rack, and then looked down again. Moist leaned over the counter. “I was wondering,” he whispered hoarsely, “if you’d got anything a bit…you know…sharper?” The big man gave him a carefully blank look. “How d’you mean, sharper?” he said. “You know,” said Moist. He cleared his throat. “More…pointed. ” The door clicked shut as the last of the customers, sated enough on pins for one day, stepped out. Dave watched them go and then turned his attention back to Moist. “A bit of a connoisseur, are we, sir?” he said, winking. “A serious student,” said Moist. “Most of the stuff here, well…” “I don’t touch nails,” said Dave sharply. “Won’t have ’em in the shop! I’ve got a reputation to think about! Little kids come in here, you know!” “Oh no! Strictly pins, that’s me!” said Moist hastily. “Good,” said Dave, relaxing. “As it happens, I might have one or two items for the genuine collector. ” He nodded toward a beaded curtain at the back of the shop. “Can’t put everything on display, not with youngsters around, you know how it is…” Moist followed him through the clashing curtain and into the crowded little room behind, where Dave, after looking around conspiratorially, pulled a small black box off a shelf and flipped it open under Moist’s nose. “Not something you find every day, eh?” said Dave. Gosh, it’s a pin , thought Moist, but said “Wow!” in a tone of well-crafted genuine surprise. A few minutes later, he stepped out of the shop, fighting an impulse to turn his collar up. That was the problem with certain kinds of insanity. They could strike at any time. After all, he’d just spent AM$70 on a damn pin ! He stared at the little packets in his hand and sighed. As he carefully put them in his jacket pocket, his hand touched something papery. Oh, yes. The S. W. A. L. K. letter. He was about to shove it back when his eye caught sight of the ancient street sign opposite: LOBBIN CLOUT. And as his gaze moved down, it also saw, over the first shop in the narrow street, NO. 1 A. PARKER & SON’S GREENGROCER’S HIGH CLAS’S FRUIT AND VEGETABLE’S Well, why not deliver it? Hah! He was the postmaster, wasn’t he? What harm could it do? He slipped into the shop. A middle-aged man was introducing fresh carrots—or possibly carrot’s—into the life of a bulky woman with a big shopping bag and hairy warts. “Mr. Antimony Parker?” said Moist urgently. “Be with you in jus’t one moment, s’ir, I’m ju’st—” the man began. “I just need to know if you are Mr. Antimony Parker, that’s all,” said Moist. The woman turned to glare at the intruder, and Moist gave her a smile so winning that she blushed and wished just for a moment she’d worn makeup today. “That’s Father,” said the greengrocer. “He’s out the back, tackling a difficult cabbage—” “This is his,” said Moist. “Postal delivery. ” He put the envelope on the counter and walked quickly out of the shop. Shopkeeper and customer stared down at the pink envelope. “S. ’W. A. L. K?” said Mr. Parker. “Ooh, that takes me back, Mr. Parker,” said the woman. “In my day we used to put that on our letters when we were courting. Didn’t you? Sealed With A Loving Kiss. There was S. W. A. L. K. , and L. A. N. C. R. E. and…” she lowered her voice and giggled, “K. L. A. T. C. H. , of course. Remember?” “All that pas’sed me by, Mrs. Goodbody,” said the greengrocer stiffly. “And if it mean’s young men are s’ending our dad pink envelope’s with s’walk on them, I’m thankful for that. Modern time’s, eh?” He turned and raised his voice. “Father!” W ELL , that was a good deed for the day , Moist thought. Or a deed, in any case. It looked as though Mr. Parker had managed to acquire some sons, one way or another. Still, it was…odd to think of all those letters heaped in that old building. You could imagine them as little packets of history. Deliver them, and history went one way. But if you dropped them in the gap between the floorboards, it went the other. Ha. He shook his head. As if one tiny choice by someone unimportant could make that much difference! History had to be a bit tougher than that. It all sprang back eventually, didn’t it? He was sure he’d read something about that, somewhere. If it wasn’t like that, no one would ever dare do anything. He stood in the little square where eight roads met, and chose to go home via Market Street. It was as good a way as any other. W HEN HE WAS SURE that both Stanley and the golem were busy on the mail mountains, Mr. Groat crept away through the labyrinth of corridors. Bundles of letters were stacked so high and tight that it was all he could do to squeeze through, but at last he reached the shaft of the old hydraulic elevator, long disused. The shaft had been filled up with letters. However, the engineer’s ladder was still clear, and that at least went up to the roof. Of course, there was the fire escape outside, but that was outside , and Groat was not overkeen on going outside at the best of times. He inhabited the Post Office like a very small snail in a very large shell. He was used to gloom. Now, slowly and painfully, his legs shaking, he climbed up through the floors of mail and forced open the trapdoor at the top. He blinked and shuddered in the unfamiliar sunlight, and hauled himself out onto the flat roof.
He’d never really liked doing this, but what else could he have done? Stanley ate like a bird and Groat mostly got by on tea and biscuits, but it all cost money, even if you went round the markets just as they closed up, and somewhere in the past, decades ago, the pay had stopped arriving. Groat had been too frightened to go up to the palace to find out why. He was afraid that if he asked for money he’d be sacked. So he’d taken to renting out the old pigeon loft. Where was the harm in that? All the pigeons had joined their feral brethren years ago, and a decent shed was not to be sneezed at in this city, even if it did whiff a bit. There was an outside fire escape and everything. It was a little palace, compared to most lodgings. Besides, these lads didn’t mind the smell, they said. They were pigeon-fanciers. Groat wasn’t sure what that entailed, except that they had to use a little clacks tower to fancy them properly. But they paid up, that was the important thing. He skirted the big rainwater tank for the defunct elevator and sidled around the rooftops to the shed, where he knocked politely. “It’s me, lads. Just come about the rent,” he said. The door was opened and he heard a snatch of conversation: “—the linkages won’t stand it for more than thirty seconds—” “Oh, Mr. Groat, come on in,” said the man who opened the door. This was Mr. Carlton, the one with the beard a dwarf would be proud of—no, two dwarfs would be proud of. He seemed more sensible than the other two, although this was not hard. Groat removed his hat. “Come about the rent, sir,” he repeated, peering around the man. “Got a bit o’ news, too. Just thought I’d better mention, lads, we’ve got a new postmaster,” said Groat. “If you could be a bit careful for a while? A nod’s as good as a wink, eh?” “How long’s this one going to last, then?” said a man who was sitting on the floor, working on a big metal drum full of what, to Mr. Groat, appeared to be very complicated clockwork. “You’ll push him off the roof by Saturday, right?” “Now, now, Mr. Winton, there’s no call to make fun of me like that,” said Groat nervously. “Once he’s been here a few weeks and got settled in, I’ll kind of… hint that you’re here, all right? Pigeons getting on okay, are they?” He peered around the loft. Only one pigeon was visible, hunched up high in a corner. “They’re out for exercise right now,” said Winton. “Ah, right, that’d be it, then,” said Groat. “Anyway, we’re a bit more interested in woodpeckers at the moment,” said Winton, pulling a bent metal bar out of the drum. “See, Alex? I told you, it’s bent. And two gears are stripped bare…” “Woodpeckers?” said Groat. There was a certain lowering of the temperature, as if he’d said the wrong thing. “That’s right, woodpeckers,” said a third voice. “Woodpeckers, Mr. Emery?” The third pigeon-fancier made Groat nervous. It was the way his eyes were always on the move, like he was trying to see everything all at once. And he was always holding a tube with smoke coming out of it, or another piece of machinery. They all seemed very interested in tubes and cogwheels, if it came to that. Oddly enough, Groat had never seen them holding a pigeon. He didn’t know how pigeons were fancied, but he’d assumed that it had to be close up. “Yes, woodpeckers,” said the man, while the tube in his hand changed color from red to blue. “Because”—and here he appeared to stop and think for a moment—“we’re seeing if they can be taught to…oh, yes, tap out the message when they get there, see? Much better than messenger pigeons. ” “Why?” said Groat. Mr. Emery stared at the whole world for a moment. “Because…they can deliver messages in the dark?” he said. “Well done,” murmured the man dismantling the drum. “Ah, could be a lifesaver, I can see that,” said Groat. “Can’t see it beating the clacks, though!” “That’s what we want to find out,” said Winton. “But we’d be very grateful if you didn’t tell anyone about this,” said Carlton quickly. “Here’s your three dollars, Mr. Groat. We wouldn’t want other people stealing our idea, you see. ” “Lips are sealed, lads,” said Groat. “Don’t you worry about it. You can rely on Groat. ” Carlton was holding the door open. “We know we can. Good-bye, Mr. Groat. ” Groat heard the door shut behind him as he walked back across the roof. Inside the shed, there seemed to be an argument starting; he heard someone say, “What did you have to go and tell him that for?” That was a bit hurtful, someone thinking that he couldn’t be trusted. And, as he eased his way down the long ladder, Groat wondered if he ought to have pointed out that woodpeckers wouldn’t fly in the dark. It was amazing that bright lads like them hadn’t spotted this flaw. They were, he thought, a bit gullible. A HUNDRED FEET DOWN and a quarter of a mile away as the woodpecker flies during daylight, Moist followed the path of destiny. Currently, it was leading him through a neighborhood that was on the downside of whatever curve you hoped you’d bought your property on the upside of. Graffiti and garbage were everywhere here. They were everywhere in the city, if it came to that, but elsewhere the garbage was better quality, and the graffiti was close to being correctly spelled. The whole area was waiting for something to happen, like a really bad fire. And then he saw it. It was one of those hopeless little shopfronts that house enterprises with a lifetime measured in days, like Giant Clearance Sale!!! of socks with two heels each, tights with three legs, and shirts with one sleeve, four feet long. The window was boarded over, but just visible behind the graffiti above it were the words THE GOLEM TRUST. Moist pushed open the door. Glass crunched under his feet. A voice said, “Hands where I can see them, mister!” He raised his hands cautiously, while peering into the gloom. There was definitely a crossbow being wielded by a dim figure. Such light as had managed to get around the boards glinted off the tip of the bolt. “Oh,” said the voice in the dark, as if mildly annoyed that there was no excuse to shoot anybody. “All right, then. We had visitors last night. ” “The window?” said Moist. “It happens about once a month. I was just sweeping it up. ” There was the scratch of a match, and a lamp was lit. “They don’t generally attack the golems themselves, not now there’s free ones around. But glass doesn’t fight back. ” The lamp was turned up, revealing a tall young woman in a tight, gray woolen dress, with coal-black hair plastered down and forced into a tight bun at the back so that she looked like a peg doll. There was a slight redness to her eyes that suggested she had been crying. “You’re lucky to have caught me,” she said. “I’d only come in to make sure nothing’s been taken. Are you here to sell or to hire? You can put your hands down now,” she added, placing the crossbow under the counter. “Sell or hire?” said Moist, lowering his hands with care. “A golem,” she said in a talking-to-the-hard-of-thinking voice. “We are the Go-lem Trust. We buy or hire go-lems. Do you want to sell a go-lem or hire a go-lem?” “Nei-ther,” said Moist. “I’ve got a go-lem. I mean, one is working for me. ” “Really? Where?” said the woman. “And we can probably speed up a little, I think. ” “At the Post Office. ” “Oh, Pump 19,” said the woman. “He said it was government service. ” “We call him Mister Pump,” said Moist primly. “Really? And do you get a wonderful, warm, charitable feeling when you do?” “Pardon? What?” said Moist, bewildered. He wasn’t sure if she was managing the trick of laughing at him behind her frown. The woman sighed. “Sorry, I’m a bit snappish this morning. A brick landing on your desk does this to you. Let’s just say they don’t see the world in the same way as we do, okay? They’ve got feelings, in their own way, but they’re not like ours. Anyway…how can I help you, Mr…. ?” “Von Lipwig,” said Moist, and added, “ Moist von Lipwig,” to get the worst over with. But the woman didn’t even smile.
“Lipwig, small town in Near Uberwald,” she said, picking up a brick from the broken glass and debris on her desk, regarding it critically, and then turning to the ancient filing cabinet behind her and filing it under B. “Chief export: its famous dogs, of course. Second most important export: its beer, except during the two weeks of Sektoberfest, when it exports…secondhand beer, probably?” “I don’t know, we left when I was a kid,” said Moist. “As far as I’m concerned, it’s just a funny name. ” “Try Adora Belle Dearheart sometime,” said the woman. “Ah. That’s not a funny name,” said Moist. “Quite,” said Adora Belle Dearheart. “I now have no sense of humor whatsoever. Well, now that we’ve been appropriately human toward one another, what exactly was it you wanted?” “Look, Vetinari has sort of lumbered me with Mr. —with Pump 19 as an…an assistant, but I don’t know how to treat”—Moist sought in the woman’s eyes for some clue as to the politically correct term, and plumped for—“him. ” “Huh? Just treat him normally. ” “You mean normally for a human being, or normally for a pottery man filled with fire?” To Moist’s astonishment, Adora Belle Dearheart took a pack of cigarettes out of a desk drawer and lit one. She mistook his expression and proffered the pack. “No, thanks,” he said, waving it away. Apart from the occasional old lady with a pipe, he’d never seen a woman smoke before. It was…strangely attractive, especially since, as it turned out, she smoked a cigarette as if she had a grudge against it, sucking the smoke down and blowing it out almost immediately. “You’re getting hung up about it all, right?” she said. When Ms. Dearheart wasn’t smoking, she held the cigarette at shoulder height, the elbow of her left arm cupped in her right hand. There was a definite feel about Adora Belle Dearheart that a lid was only barely holding down an entire womanful of anger. “Yes! I mean—” Moist began. “Hah! It’s just like the Campaign for Equal Heights and all that patronizing stuff they spout about dwarfs and why we shouldn’t use terms like ‘small talk’ and ‘feeling small. ’ Golems don’t have any of our baggage about ‘who am I, why am I here,’ okay? Because they know. They were made to be tools, to be property, to work. Work is what they do. In a way, it’s what they are. End of existential angst. ” Ms. Dearheart inhaled and then blew out the smoke in one nervous movement. “And then stupid people go around calling them ‘persons of clay’ and ‘Mr. Spanner’ and so on, which they find rather strange. They understand about free will. They also understand that they don’t have it. Mind you, once a golem owns himself, it’s a different matter. ” “Own? How does property own itself?” said Moist. “You said they were—” “They save up and buy themselves, of course! Freehold is the only path to freedom they’ll accept. Actually, what happens is that the free golems support the Trust, the Trust buys golems whenever it can, and the new golems then buy themselves from the Trust at cost. It’s working well. The free golems earn 24-8 and there’s more and more of them. They don’t eat, sleep, wear clothes, or understand the concept of leisure. The occasional tube of ceramic cement doesn’t cost much. They’re buying more golems every month now, and paying my wages and the iniquitous rent the landlord of this dump is charging because he knows he’s renting to golems. They never complain, you know. They pay whatever’s asked. They’re so patient it could drive you nuts. ” Tube of ceramic cement , thought Moist. He tried to fix that thought in case it came in useful, but some mental processes were fully occupied with the growing realization of how well some women could look in a severely plain dress. “Surely they can’t be damaged, can they?” he managed. “Certainly they can! A sledgehammer on the right spot would really mess one up. Owned golems will just stand there and take it. But the Trust golems are allowed to defend themselves, and when someone weighing a ton snatches a hammer out of your hand you have to let go really quickly. ” “I think Mr. Pump is allowed to hit people,” said Moist. “Quite possibly. A lot of the frees are against that, but others say a tool can’t be blamed for the use to which it’s put,” said Ms. Dearheart. “They debate it a lot. For days and days. ” No rings on her fingers, Moist noted. What kind of attractive girl works for a bunch of clay men? “This is all fascinating ,” he said. “Where can I find out more?” “We do a pamphlet,” said almost-certainly-Miss Dearheart, pulling open a drawer and flipping a thin booklet onto the desk. “It’s five pence. ” The title on the cover was Common Clay. Moist put down a dollar. “Keep the change,” he said. “No!” said Miss Dearheart, fumbling for coins in the drawer. “Didn’t you read what it said over the door?” “Yes. It said ‘SmasH The Barstuds,’” said Moist. Miss Dearheart put a hand to her forehead wearily. “Oh, yes. The painter hasn’t been yet. But underneath that…look, it’s on the back of the pamphlet…” , Moist read, or at least looked at. “It’s one of their own languages,” she said. “It’s all a bit…mystic. Said to be spoken by angels. It translates as ‘By Our Own Hand, Or None. ’ They’re fiercely independent. You’ve no idea. ” She admires them , Moist thought. Whoo-ee. And…angels? “Well, thank you,” said Moist. “I’d better be going. I’ll definitely…well, thank you, anyway. ” “What are you doing at the Post Office, Mr. von Lipwig?” said the woman as he opened the door. “Call me Moist,” said Moist, and a bit of his inner self shuddered. “I’m the new postmaster. ” “No kidding?” said Miss Dearheart. “Then I’m glad you’ve got Pump 19 with you. The last few postmasters didn’t last long, I gather. ” “I think I heard something about that,” said Moist cheerfully. “It sounds as though things were pretty bad in the olden days. ” Miss Dearheart’s brow wrinkled. “Olden days?” she said. “Last month was olden days ?” L ORD V ETINARI stood looking out of his window. His office once had a wonderful view of the city and, technically, it still did, although now the roofline was a forest of clacks towers, winking and twinkling in the sunlight. On the Tump, the old castle mound across the river, the big tower—one end of the Grand Trunk that wound more than two thousand miles across the continent to Genua—glittered with semaphore. It was good to see the lifeblood of trade and commerce and diplomacy pumping so steadily, especially when you employed clerks who were exceptionally good at decryption. White and black by day, light and dark by night, the shutters stopped only for fog and snow. At least, until the last few months. He sighed and went back to his desk. There was a file open. It contained a report from Commander Vimes of the City Watch, with a lot of exclamation marks. It contained a more measured report from Clerk Alfred, and Lord Vetinari had circled the section titled “The Smoking Gnu. ” There was a gentle knock at the door and the clerk Drumknott came in like a ghost. “The gentlemen from the Grand Trunk semaphore company are all here now, sir,” he said. He laid down several sheets of paper covered in tiny, intricate lines. Vetinari gave the shorthand a cursory glance. “Idle chitchat?” he said. “Yes, my lord. One might say excessively so. But I am certain that the mouth of the speaking tube is quite invisible in the plaster work, my lord. It’s hidden in a gilt cherub most cunningly, sir. Clerk Brian has built it into its cornucopia, which apparently collects more sounds and can be swiveled to face whoever—” “One does not have to see something to know that it is there, Drumknott. ” Vetinari tapped the paper. “These are not stupid men. Well, some of them, at least. You have the files?” Drumknott’s pale face bore for a moment the pained expression of a man forced to betray the high principles of filing. “In a manner of speaking, my lord. We really have nothing substantial about any of the allegations, we really haven’t. We’re running a Concludium in the Long Gallery, but it’s all hearsay, sir, it really is.
There’s…hints, here and there, but really we need something more solid…” “There will be an opportunity,” said Vetinari. Being an absolute ruler today was not as simple as people thought. At least, it was not simple if your ambitions included being an absolute ruler tomorrow. There were subtleties. Oh, you could order men to smash down doors and drag people off to dungeons without trial, but too much of that sort of thing was bad for business, habit-forming, style-lacking, and very, very dangerous for your health. A thinking tyrant, it seemed to Vetinari, had a much harder job than a ruler raised to power by some idiot vote-yourself-rich system like democracy. At least he could tell the people he was their fault. “—we would not normally have started individual folders at this time,” Drumknott was agonizing. “You see, I’d merely have referenced them on the daily—” “Your concern is, as ever, exemplary,” said Vetinari. “I see, however, that you have prepared some folders. ” “Yes, my lord. I have bulked some of them out with copies of Clerk Harold’s analysis of pig production in Genua, sir. ” Drumknott looked unhappy as he handed over the cardboard folders. Deliberate misfiling ran fingernails down the blackboard of his very soul. “Very good,” said Vetinari. He placed them on his desk, pulled another folder out of a desk drawer to place on top of them, and moved some other papers to cover the small pile. “Now please show our visitors in. ” “Mr. Slant is with them, my lord,” said the clerk. Vetinari smiled his mirthless smile. “How surprising. ” “And Mr. Reacher Gilt,” Drumknott added, watching his master carefully. “Of course,” said Vetinari. When the directors filed in a few minutes later, the conference table at one end of the room was clear and gleaming, except for a paper pad and the pile of files. Vetinari himself was standing at the window again. “Ah, gentlemen. So kind of you to come for this little chat,” he said. “I was enjoying the view. ” He turned around sharply and confronted a row of puzzled faces, except for two. One was gray and belonged to Mr. Slant, who was the most renowned, expensive, and certainly the oldest lawyer in the city. He had been a zombie for many years, although apparently the change in habits between life and death had not been marked. The other face belonged to a man with one eye and one black eyepatch, and it smiled like a tiger. “It’s particularly refreshing to see the Grand Trunk back in operation,” said Vetinari, ignoring that face. “I believe it was shut down all day yesterday. I was only thinking to myself that it was such a shame, the Grand Trunk being so vital to us all, and so regrettable that there’s only one of it. Sadly, I understand the backers of the New Trunk are now in disarray, which, of course, leaves the Grand Trunk operating in solitary splendor and your company, gentlemen, unchallenged. Oh, what am I thinking of? Do be seated, gentlemen. ” He gave Mr. Slant another friendly smile as he took his seat. “I don’t believe I know all these gentlemen,” he said. Mr. Slant sighed. “My lord, let me present Mr. Greenyham of Ankh-Sto Associates, who is the Grand Trunk Company’s treasurer, Mr. Nutmeg of Sto Plains Holdings, Mr. Horsefry of the Ankh-Morpork Mercantile Credit Bank, Mr. Stowley of Ankh Futures (Financial Advisers), and Mr. Gilt—” “—all by himself,” said the one-eyed man calmly. “Ah, Mr. Reacher Gilt,” said Vetinari, looking directly at him. “I’m so… pleased to meet you at last. ” “You don’t come to my parties, my lord,” said Gilt. “Do excuse me. Affairs of state take up so much of my time,” said Lord Vetinari brusquely. “We should all make time to unwind, my lord. All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy, as they say. ” Several of the assembly paused in their breathing when they heard this, but Vetinari merely looked blank. “Interesting,” he said. He riffled through the files and opened one of them. “Now, my staff have prepared some notes for me, from information publicly available down at the Barbican,” he said to the lawyer. “Directorships, for example. Of course, the mysterious world of finance is a closed, aha, ledger to me, but it seems to me that some of your clients work, as it were, for each other?” “Yes, my lord?” said Slant. “Is that normal?” “Oh, it is quite common for people with particular expertise to be on the board of several companies, my lord. ” “Even if the companies are rivals?” said Vetinari. There were smiles from around the table. Most of the financiers settled a little more easily in their chairs. The man was clearly a fool about business matters. What did he know about compound interest, eh? He’d been classically educated. And then they remembered that his education had been at the Assassins’ Guild School, and stopped smiling. But Mr. Gilt stared intently at Vetinari. “There are ways—extremely honorable ways—of assuring confidentiality and avoiding conflicts of interest, my lord,” said Mr. Slant. “Ah, this would be…what is it now…the glass ceiling?” said Lord Vetinari brightly. “No, my lord. That is something else. I believe you may be thinking about the ‘Agatean Wall,’” said Mr. Slant smoothly. “This carefully and successfully ensures that there will be no breach of confidentiality should, for example, one part of an organization come into possession of privileged information which could conceivably be used by another department for unethical gain. ” “This is fascinating! How does it work, exactly?” said Vetinari. “People agree not to do it,” said Mr. Slant. “I’m sorry? I thought you said there is a wall—” said Vetinari. “That’s just a name, my lord. For agreeing not to do it. ” “Ah? And they do? How wonderful. Even though in this case the invisible wall must pass through the middle of their brains?” “We have a Code of Conduct, you know!” said a voice. All eyes except those belonging to Mr. Slant turned to the speaker, who had been fidgeting in his chair. Mr. Slant was a longtime student of the Patrician and knew that when he appeared to be a confused civil servant asking innocent questions, it was time to watch him closely. “I’m very glad to hear it, Mr. …?” Vetinari began. “Crispin Horsefry, my lord, and I don’t like the tone of your questioning!” For a moment it seemed that even the chairs themselves edged away from him. Mr. Horsefry was a youngish man, not simply running to fat but vaulting, leaping, and diving toward obesity. He had acquired, at thirty, an impressive selection of chins, and now they wobbled with angry pride. * “I do have a number of other tones,” said Lord Vetinari calmly. Mr. Horsefry looked around at his colleagues, who were somehow, suddenly, on the distant horizon. “I just wanted to make it clear that we’ve done nothing wrong,” he muttered. “That’s all. There is a Code of Conduct. ” “I’m sure I’ve not suggested that you have done anything wrong,” said Lord Vetinari. “However, I shall make a note of what you tell me. ” He pulled a sheet of paper toward him and wrote, in a careful copperplate hand: “Code of Conduct. ” The shifting of the paper exposed a file marked “Embezzlement. ” The title was, of course, upside down to the rest of the group and, since presumably it was not intended to be read by them, they read it. Horsefry even twisted his head for a better view. “However,” Vetinari went on, “since the question of wrongdoing had been raised by Mr. Horsefry,” and he gave the young man a brief smile, “I am sure you are aware of talk suggesting a conspiracy among yourselves to keep rates high and competition nonexistent. ” The sentence came out fast and smooth, like a snake’s tongue, and the swift flick on the end of it was: “And, indeed, some rumors about the death of young Mr. Dearheart last month. ” A stir among the semicircle of men said that the shoe had been dropped. It wasn’t a welcome shoe, but it was a shoe they had been expecting and it had just gone thud. “An actionable falsehood,” said Slant. “On the contrary, Mr.
Slant,” said Vetinari, “merely mentioning to you the existence of a rumor is not actionable, as I am sure you are aware. ” “There is no proof that we had anything to do with the boy’s murder,” snapped Horsefry. “Ah, so you too have heard people saying he was murdered?” said Vetinari, his eyes on Reacher Gilt’s face. “These rumors just fly around, don’t they…” “My lord, people talk,” said Slant wearily. “But the facts are that Mr. Dearheart was alone in the tower. No one else went up or down. His safety line was apparently not clipped to anything. It was an accident, such as happens often. Yes, we know people say his fingers were broken, but with a fall of that distance, hitting the tower on the way, can that really be surprising? Alas, the Grand Trunk Company is not popular at the moment and so these scurrilous and baseless accusations are made. As Mr. Horsefry pointed out, there is no evidence whatsoever that what happened was anything more than a tragic accident. And, if I may speak frankly, what exactly is the purpose of calling us here? My clients are busy men. ” Vetinari leaned back, closed his eyes, and placed his fingers together. “Let us consider a situation in which some keen and highly inventive men devise a remarkable system of communication,” he said. “What they have is a kind of passionate ingenuity, in large amounts. What they don’t have is money. They are not used to money. So they meet some…people, who introduce them to other people, friendly people, who for, oh, a forty-percent stake in the enterprise give them the much-needed cash and, very important, much fatherly advice and an introduction to a really good firm of accountants. And so they proceed, and soon money is coming in and money is going out but somehow, they learn, they’re not quite as financially stable as they think, and really do need more money. Well, this is all fine, because it’s clear to all that the basic enterprise is going to be a money tree one day, and does it matter if they sign over another fifteen percent? It’s just money. It’s not important in the way that shutter mechanisms are, is it? And then they find out that yes , it is. It is everything. Suddenly the world’s turned upside down, suddenly those nice people aren’t so friendly anymore, suddenly it turns out that those bits of paper they signed in a hurry—were advised to sign by people who smiled all the time—mean that they don’t actually own anything at all, not patents, not property, nothing. Not even the contents of their own heads, indeed. Even any ideas they have now don’t belong to them, apparently. And somehow they’re still in trouble about money. Well, some run and some hide and some try to fight, which is foolish in the extreme, because it turns out that everything is legal, it really is. Some accept low-level jobs in the enterprise, because one has to live and in any case the enterprise even owns their dreams at night. And yet actual illegality, it would appear, has not taken place. Business is business. ” Lord Vetinari opened his eyes. The men around the table were staring at him. “Just thinking aloud,” he said. “I am sure you will point out that this is not the business of the government. I know Mr. Gilt will. However, I note that since you acquired the Grand Trunk at a fraction of its value, breakdowns are increasing, the speed of messages has slowed down, and the cost to customers has risen. Last week the Grand Trunk was closed for almost three days. We could not even talk to Sto Lat! Hardly ‘As Fast as Light,’ gentlemen. ” “That was for essential maintenance,” Mr. Slant began. “No, it was for repairs,” snapped Vetinari. “Under the previous management the system shut down for an hour every day. That was for maintenance. Now the towers run until they break down. What do you think you are doing, gentlemen?” “That, my lord, and with respect, is none of your business. ” Lord Vetinari smiled. For the first time that morning, it was a smile of genuine pleasure. “Ah, Mr. Reacher Gilt, I was wondering when we’d hear from you. You have been so uncharacteristically silent. I read your recent article in the Times with great interest. You are passionate about freedom, I gather. You used the word ‘tyranny’ three times and the word ‘tyrant’ once. ” “Don’t patronize me, my lord,” said Gilt. “We own the Trunk. It is our property. You understand that? Property is the foundation of freedom. Oh, customers complain about the service and the cost, but customers always complain about such things. We have no shortage of customers at whatever cost. Before the semaphore, news from Genua took months to get here, now it takes less than a day. It is affordable magic. We are answerable to our shareholders, my lord. Not, with respect, to you. It is not your business. It is our business, and we will run it according to the market. I hope there are no tyrannies here. This is, with respect, a free city. ” “Such a lot of respect is gratifying,” said the Patrician. “But the only choice your customers have is between you and nothing. ” “Exactly,” said Reacher Gilt calmly. “There is always a choice. They can ride a horse a few thousand miles, or they can wait patiently until we can send their message. ” Vetinari gave him a smile that lasted as long as a lightning flash. “Or fund and build another system,” he said. “Although I note that every other company that has lately tried to run a clacks system in opposition has failed quite quickly, sometimes in distressing circumstances. Falls from the tops of clacks towers, and so on. ” “Accidents do happen. It is most unfortunate,” said Mr. Slant stiffly. “Most unfortunate,” Vetinari echoed. He pulled the paper toward him, dislodging the files slightly, so that a few names were visible, and wrote “Most unfortunate. ” “Well, I believe that covers everything,” he said. “In fact, the purpose of this meeting was to tell you formally that I am, at last, reopening the Post Office as planned. This is just a courtesy announcement, but I felt I should let you know, because you are, after all, in the same business. I believe the recent string of accidents is now at an—” Reacher Gilt chuckled. “Sorry, my lord? Did I understand you correctly? You really intend to continue with this folly, in the face of everything? The Post Office? When we all know that it was a lumbering, smug, overstaffed, overweight monster of a place? It barely earned its keep! It was the very essence and exemplar of public enterprise!” “It never made much of a profit, it is true, but in the business areas of this city there were seven deliveries a day,” said Vetinari, cold as the depths of the sea. “Hah! Not at the end!” said Mr. Horsefry. “It was bloody useless!” “Indeed. A classic example of a corroded government organization dragging on the public purse,” Gilt added. “Too true!” said Mr. Horsefry. “They used to say that if you wanted to get rid of a dead body you should take it to the Post Office and it’d never be seen again!” “And was it?” said Lord Vetinari, raising an eyebrow. “Was what?” “Was it seen again?” There was a sudden hunted look in Mr. Horsefry’s eyes. “What? How would I know?” “Oh, I see,” said Lord Vetinari. “It was a joke. Ah, well. ” He shuffled the papers. “Unfortunately, the Post Office came to be seen not as a system for moving the mail efficiently, to the benefit and profit of all, but as a moneybox. And so it collapsed, losing both mail and money. A lesson for us all, perhaps. Anyway, I have high hopes of Mr. Lipwig, a young man full of fresh ideas. A good head for heights, too, although I imagine he will not be climbing any towers. ” “I do hope this resurrection will not prove to be a drain on our taxes,” said Mr. Slant. “I assure you, Mr. Slant, that apart from the modest sum necessary to, as it were, prime the pump, the postal service will be self-supporting as, indeed, it used to be. We cannot have a drag on the public purse, can we? And now, gentlemen, I am conscious that I am keeping you from your very important business. I do trust that the Trunk will be back in commission very shortly.
” As they stood up, Reacher Gilt leaned across the table and said: “May I congratulate you, my lord?” “I am delighted that you feel inclined to congratulate me on anything, Mr. Gilt,” said Vetinari. “To what do we owe this unique occurrence?” “This, my lord,” said Gilt, gesturing to the little side table on which had been set the rough-hewn piece of stone. “Is this not an original Hnaflbaflsniflwhifltafl slab? Llamedos bluestone, isn’t it? And the pieces look like basalt, which is the very devil to carve. A valuable antique, I think. ” “It was a present to me from the Low King of the Dwarfs,” said Vetinari. “It is, indeed, very old. ” “And you have a game in progress, I see. You’re playing the dwarf side, yes?” “Yes. I play by clacks against an old friend in Uberwald,” said Vetinari. “Happily for me, your breakdown yesterday has given me an extra day to think of my next move. ” Their eyes met. Reacher Gilt laughed hugely. Vetinari smiled. The other men, who badly needed to laugh, laughed, too. See, we’re all friends, we’re like colleagues really, nothing bad is going to happen. The laughter died away, a little uneasily. Gilt and Vetinari maintained smiles, maintained eye contact. “We should play a game,” said Gilt. “I have a rather nice board myself. I play the troll side, for preference. ” “Ruthless, initially outnumbered, inevitably defeated in the hands of the careless player?” said Vetinari. “Indeed. Just as the dwarfs rely on guile, feint, and swift changes of position. A man can learn all of an opponent’s weaknesses on that board,” said Gilt. “Really?” said Vetinari, raising his eyebrows. “Should he not be trying to learn his own?” “Oh, that’s just Thud! That’s easy !” yapped a voice. Both men turned to look at Horsefry, who had been made perky by sheer relief. “I used to play it when I was a kid,” he burbled. “It’s boring. The dwarfs always win!” Gilt and Vetinari shared a look. It said: While I loathe you and every aspect of your personal philosophy to a depth unplummable by any line, I’ll credit you at least with not being Crispin Horsefry. “Appearances are deceptive, Crispin,” said Gilt jovially. “A troll player need never lose, if he puts his mind to it. ” “I know I once got a dwarf stuck up my nose and Mummy had to get it out with a hairpin,” said Horsefry, as if this was a source of immense pride. Gilt put his arm around the man’s shoulders. “That’s very interesting, Crispin,” he said. “Do you think it’s likely to happen again?” Vetinari stood at the window after they had left, watching the city below. After a few minutes, Drumknott drifted in. “There was a brief exchange in the anteroom, my lord,” he said. Vetinari didn’t turn around but held up a hand. “Let me see…I imagine one of them started saying something like ‘Do you think he—’ and Slant very quickly shushed him? Mr. Horsefry, I suspect. ” Drumknott glanced at the paper in his hand. “Almost to the word, my lord. ” “It takes no great leap of the imagination,” sighed Lord Vetinari. “Dear Dr. Slant. He’s so…dependable. Sometimes I really think that if he was not already a zombie it would be necessary to have him turned into one. ” “Shall I order a No. 1 Investigation on Mr. Gilt, my lord?” “Good heavens, no. He is far too clever. Order it on Mr. Horsefry. ” “Really, sir? But you did say yesterday that you believed him to be no more than a greedy fool. ” “A nervous fool, which is useful. He’s a venal coward and a glutton. I’ve watched him sit down to a meal of pot-au-feu with white beans, and that was an impressive sight, Drumknott, which I will not easily forget. The sauce went everywhere. Those pink shirts he wears cost more than a hundred dollars, too. Oh, he acquires other people’s money, in a safe and secret and not very clever way. Send…yes, send Clerk Brian. ” “Brian, sir?” said Drumknott. “Are you sure? He’s wonderful at devices, but quite inept on the street. He’ll be seen. ” “Yes, Drumknott. I know. I would like Mr. Horsefry to become a little… more nervous. ” “Ah, I see, sir. ” Vetinari turned around. “Tell me, Drumknott,” he said, “would you say I’m a tyrant?” “Most certainly not, my lord,” said Drumknott, tidying the desk. “But of course that’s the problem, is it not? Who will tell the tyrant he is a tyrant?” “That’s a tricky one, my lord, certainly,” said Drumknott, squaring up the files. “In his Thoughts , which I have always considered to fare badly in translation, Bouffant says that intervening in order to prevent a murder is to curtail the freedom of the murderer and yet that freedom, by definition, is natural and universal, without condition,” said Vetinari. “You may recall his famous dictum: ‘If any man is not free, then I, too, am a small pie made of chicken,’ which has led to a considerable amount of debate. Thus we might consider, for example, that taking a bottle from a man killing himself with drink is a charitable, nay, praiseworthy act, and yet freedom is curtailed once more. Mr. Gilt has studied his Bouffant but, I fear, failed to understand him. Freedom may be mankind’s natural state, but so is sitting in a tree eating your dinner while it is still wriggling. On the other hand, Freidegger, in Modal Contextities , claims that all freedom is limited, artificial, and therefore illusory, a shared hallucination at best. No sane mortal is truly free, because true freedom is so terrible that only the mad or the divine can face it with open eyes. It overwhelms the soul, very much like the state he elsewhere describes as Vonallesvolkommenunverstandlichdasdaskeit. What position would you take here, Drumknott?” “I’ve always thought, my lord, that what the world really needs are filing boxes which are not so flimsy,” said Drumknott, after a moment’s pause. “Hmm,” said Lord Vetinari. “A point to think about, certainly. ” He stopped. On the carved decorations over the room’s fireplace, a small cherub began to turn with a faint squeaking noise. Vetinari raised an eyebrow at Drumknott. “I shall have a word with Clerk Brian immediately, my lord,” said the clerk. “Good. Tell him it’s time he got out into the fresh air more…” CHAPTER 4 A Sign Dark clerks and dead postmasters • A werewolf in the Watch • The wonderful pin • Mr. Lipwig reads letters that are not there • Hugo the hairdresser is surprised • Mr. Parker buys fripperies • The nature of social untruths • Princess in the tower • “A man is not dead while his name is still spoken. ” “N OW T HEN , Mr. Lipwig, What Good Will Violence Do?” Mr. Pump rumbled. He rocked on his huge feet as Moist struggled in his grip. Groat and Stanley were huddled at the far end of the locker room. One of Mr. Groat’s natural remedies was bubbling over onto the floor, where the boards were staining purple. “They were all accidents, Mr. Lipwig! All accidents!” Groat babbled. “The Watch was all over the place by the fourth one! They were all accidents, they said!” “Oh, yes !” screamed Moist. “Four in five weeks, eh? I bet that happens all the time around here! Ye gods, I’ve been done up good and brown! I’m dead, right? Just not lying down yet! Vetinari? There’s a man who knows how to save the price of a rope! I’m done for!” “You’ll feel better for a nice cup o’ bismuth-and-brimstone tea, sir,” Groat quavered. “I’ve got the kettle boiling—” “A cup of tea is not going to be sufficient!” Moist got a grip on himself, or at least began to act as if he had, and took a deep, theatrical breath. “Okay, okay, Mr. Pump, you can let go now. ” The golem released his grip. Moist straightened up. “Well, Mr. Groat?” he said. “Looks like you’re genuine after all, then,” the old man said. “One of the dark clerks wouldn’t have gone bursar like that. We thought you was one of his lordship’s special gentlemen, see. ” Groat fussed around the kettle. “No offense, but you’ve got a bit more color than the average pen-pusher. ” “Dark clerks?” said Moist, and then recollection dawned. “Oh…do you mean those stocky little men in black suits and bowler hats?” “The very same. Scholarship boys at the Assassins’ Guild, some of ’em.
I heard that they can do some nasty things when they’ve a mind. ” “I thought you called them penpushers?” “Yeah, but I didn’t say where, heehee. ” Groat caught Moist’s expression and coughed. “Sorry, didn’t mean it, just my little joke. We reckon the last new postmaster we had, Mr. Whobblebury, he was a dark clerk. Can’t hardly blame him, with a name like that. He was always snooping around. ” “And why do you think that was?” said Moist. “Well, Mr. Mutable, he was the first, decent chap, he fell down into the big hall from the fifth floor, smack, sir, smack onto the marble. Head first. It was a bit…splashy, sir. ” Moist glanced at Stanley, who was starting to tremble. “Then there was Mr. Sideburn. He fell down the back stairs and broke his neck, sir. Excuse me, sir, it’s 11:43. ” Groat walked over to the door and opened it, Tiddles walked through, Groat shut the door again. “At three in the morning, it was. Right down five flights. Broke just about every bone you could break, sir. ” “You mean he was wandering around without a light?” “Dunno, sir. But I know about the stairs. The stairs have lamps burning all night, sir. Stanley fills them every day, regular as Tiddles. ” “Use those stairs a lot, then, do you?” said Moist. “Never, sir, except for the lamps. Nearly everywhere on that side is bunged up with mail. But it’s a Post Office Regulation, sir. ” “And the next man?” said Moist, a little hoarsely. “Another accidental fall?” “Oh, no, sir. Mr. Ignavia, that was his name. They said it was his heart. He was just lyin’ dead on the fifth floor, dead as a doorknob, face all contorted like he’d seen a ghost. Natural causes, they said. Werrrl, the Watch was all over the place by then, you may depend on it. No one had been near him, they said, and there was not a mark on him. Surprised you didn’t know about all this, sir. It was in the paper. ” Except you don’t get much chance to keep up with the news in a condemned cell , Moist thought. “Oh yes?” he said. “And how would they know no one had been near him?” Groat leaned forward and lowered his voice conspiratorially. “Everyone knows there’s a werewolf in the Watch, and one of them could bloody nearly smell what color clothes someone was wearing. ” “A werewolf,” said Moist flatly. “Yes. Anyway, the one before him—” “A werewolf. ” “That’s what I said, sir,” said Groat. “A damn werewolf. ” “Takes all sorts to make a world, sir. Anyway—” “A werewolf. ” Moist awoke from the horror. “And they don’t tell visitors?” “Now, how’d they do that, sir?” said Groat in a kindly voice. “Put it on a sign outside? ‘Welcome to Ankh-Morpork, We Have a Werewolf,’ sir? The Watch’s got loads of dwarfs and trolls and a golem—a free golem, savin’ your presence, Mr. Pump—and a couple of gnomes and a zombie…even a Nobbs. ” “Nobbs? What’s a Nobbs?” “Corporal Nobby Nobbs, sir. Not met him yet? They say he’s got an official chitty saying he’s human, and who needs one of those, eh? Fortunately there’s only one of him, so he can’t breed. Anyway, we’ve got a bit of everything, sir. Very cosmopolitan. You don’t like werewolves?” They know who you are by your smell , thought Moist. They’re as bright as a human and can track you better than any wolf. They can follow a trail that’s days old, even if you cover yourself with scent— especially if you cover yourself with scent. Oh, there’re ways around, if you know there is going to be a werewolf on your tail. No wonder they caught up with me. There should be a law! “Not a lot,” he said aloud, and glanced at Stanley again. It was useful to watch Stanley when Groat was talking. Now the boy had his eyes turned up so much that they were practically all whites. “And Mr. Whobblebury?” he said. “He was investigating for Vetinari, eh? What happened to him?” Stanley was shaking like a bush in a high wind. “Er, you did get given the big key-ring, sir?” Groat inquired, his voice trembling with innocence. “Yes, of course. ” “I bet there is one key missing,” said Groat. “The Watch took it. It was the only one. Some doors ought to stay closed, sir. It’s all over and done with, sir. Mr. Whobblebury died of an industrial accident, they said. Nobody near him. You don’t want to go there, sir. Sometimes things get so broke it’s best to walk away, sir. ” “I can’t,” said Moist. “I am the postmaster general. And this is my building, isn’t it? I’ll decide where I go, Junior Postman Groat. ” Stanley shut his eyes. “Yes, sir,” said Groat, as if talking to a child. “But you don’t want to go there , sir. ” “His head was all over the wall! ” Stanley quavered. “Oh dear, now you’ve set him off, sir,” said Groat, scuttling across to the boy. “It’s all right, lad, I’ll just get you your pills—” “What’s the most expensive pin ever made commercially, Stanley?” said Moist quickly. It was like pulling a lever. Stanley’s expression went from agonized grief to scholarly cogitation in an instant. “Commercially? Leaving aside those special pins made for exhibitions and trade shows, including the Great Pin of 1899, then probably it is the No. 3 Broad-headed ‘Chicken’ Extra Longs made for the lace-making market by the noted pinner Josiah Doldrum, I would say. They were hand-drawn and had his trademark silver head with a microscopic engraving of a cockerel. It’s believed that fewer than a hundred were made before his death, sir. According to Hubert Spider’s Pin Catalogue , examples can fetch between fifty and sixty-five dollars, depending on condition. A No. 3 Broad-headed Extra Long would grace any true pinhead’s collection. ” “Only…I spotted this in the street,” said Moist, extracting one of that morning’s purchases from his lapel. “I was walking down Market Street and there it was, between two cobblestones. I thought it looked unusual. For a pin. ” Stanley pushed away the fussing Groat and carefully took the pin from Moist’s fingers. A very large magnifying glass appeared as if by magic in his other hand. The room held its breath as the pin was subjected to serious scrutiny. Then Stanley looked up at Moist in amazement. “You knew ?” he said. “And you spotted this in the street ? I thought you didn’t know anything about pins!” “Oh, not really, but I dabbled a bit as a boy,” said Moist, waving a hand deprecatingly to suggest that he had been too foolish to turn a schoolboy hobby into a lifetime’s obsession. “You know…a few of the old brass Imperials, one or two oddities, like an unbroken pair or a double-header, the occasional cheap packet of mixed pins on approval—” Thank the gods , he thought, for the skill of speed-reading. “Oh, there’s never anything worthwhile in those,” said Stanley, and slid again into the voice of the academic: “While most ‘pinheads’ do indeed begin with a casually acquired flashy novelty pin, followed by the contents of their grandmothers’ pincushion, haha, the path to a truly worthwhile collection lies not in the simple disbursement of money in the nearest pin emporium, oh no. Any dilettante can become ‘kingpin’ with enough expenditure, but for the true ‘pinhead’ the real pleasure is in the joy of the chase, the pin fairs, the house clearances, and, who knows, a casual glint in the gutter that turns out to be a well-preserved Doublefast or an unbroken two-pointer. Well is it said: ‘See a pin and pick it up, and all day long you’ll have a pin. ’” Moist nearly applauded. It was word for word what J. Lanugo Owlsbury had written in the introduction to his work. And, much more important, he now had an unshakable friend in Stanley. That was to say, his darker regions added, Stanley was friends with him. The boy, all panic subsumed by the joy of pins, was holding the pin up to the light. “Magnificent,” he breathed, all terrors fled. “Clean as a new pin! I have a place ready and waiting for this in my pin folder, sir!” “Yes, I thought you might. ” His head was all over the wall… Somewhere there was a locked door, and Moist didn’t have the key. Four of his predecessors had predeceased in this very building. And there was no escape. Being postmaster general was a job for life—one way or the other.
That was why Vetinari had put him here. He needed a man who couldn’t walk away, and who was incidentally completely expendable. It didn’t matter if Moist von Lipwig died. He was already dead. And then he tried not to think about Mr. Pump. How many other golems had worked their way to freedom in the service of the city? Had there been a Mr. Saw, fresh from a hundred years in a pit of sawdust? Or Mr. Shovel? Mr. Axe, maybe? And had there been one here when the last poor guy had found the key or a good lockpick, and was about to open it when behind him someone called maybe Mr. Hammer, yes, oh gods, yes , raised his first for one sudden, terminal blow? No one had been near him? But they weren’t people, were they…they were tools. It’d be an industrial accident. His head was all over the wall… I’m going to find out about this. I have to, otherwise it’ll lie in wait for me. And everyone will tell me lies. But I am the fibbermeister. “Hmm?” he said, aware that he’d missed something. “I said, could I go and put this in my collection, Postmaster?” said Stanley. “What? Oh. Yes. Fine. Yes. Give it a really good polish, too. ” As the boy gangled off to his end of the locker room—and he did gangle—Moist caught Groat looking at him shrewdly. “Well done, Mr. Lipwig,” he said. “Well done. ” “Thank you, Mr. Groat. ” “Good eyesight you’ve got there,” the old man went on. “Well, the light was shining off it—” “Nah, I meant to see cobbles in Market Street, it being all brick paving up there. ” Moist returned his blank stare with one ever blanker. “Bricks, cobbles, who cares?” he said. “Yeah, right. Not important, really,” said Groat. “And now,” said Moist, feeling the need for some fresh air, “there’s a little errand I have to run. I’d like you to come with me, Mr. Groat. Can you find a crowbar anywhere? Bring it, please. And I’ll need you, too, Mr. Pump. ” Werewolves and golems, golems and werewolves , Moist thought. I’m stuck here. I might as well take it seriously. I will show them a sign. “T HERE’S A LITTLE HABIT I have,” said Moist, as he led the way through the streets. “It’s to do with signs. ” “Signs, sir?” said Groat, trying to keep close to the walls. “Yes, Junior Postman Groat, signs,” said Moist, noticing the way the man winced at “Junior. ” “Particularly signs with missing letters. When I see one, I automatically read what the missing letters say. ” “And how can you do that, sir, when they’re missing?” said Groat. Ah, so there’s a clue as to why you’re still sitting in a rundown old building making tea from rocks and weeds all day , Moist thought. Aloud he said: “It’s a knack. Now, I could be wrong, of course, but—ah, we turn left here…” This was quite a busy street, and the shop was in front of them. It was everything that Moist had hoped. “Voilà,” he said and, remembering his audience, he added: “That is to say, there we have it. ” “It’s a barber’s shop,” said Groat uncertainly. “For ladies. ” “Ah, you’re a man of the world, Tolliver, there’s no fooling you,” said Moist. “And the name over the window, in those large, blue-green letters, is…?” “HUGOS,” said Groat. “And?” “Yes, HUGO’S,” said Moist. “No apostrophe present, in fact, and the reason for this is…you could work with me a little here, perhaps…?” “Er…” Groat stared frantically at the letters, defying them to reveal their meaning. “Close enough,” said Moist. “There is no apostrophe there because there was and is no apostrophe on the uplifting slogan that adorns our beloved Post Office, Mr. Groat. ” He waited for light to dawn. “Those big metal letters were stolen from our facade, Mr. Groat. I mean, the front of the building. They’re the reason for GLOM OF NIT, Mr. Groat. ” It took a little time for Mr. Groat’s mental sunrise to take place, but Moist was ready when it did. “No, no, no!” he said, grabbing the old man’s greasy collar as he lurched forward, and almost pulling Groat off his feet. “That’s not how we deal with this, is it?” “That’s Post Office property! That’s worse’n stealing, that is! That’s treason!” Groat yelled. “Quite so,” said Moist. “Mr. Pump, if you would just hold on to our friend here, I will go and…discuss the matter. ” Moist handed over the furious junior postman and brushed himself off. He looked a bit rumpled but it would have to do. “What are you going to do, then?” said Groat. Moist smiled his sunshine smile. “Something I’m good at, Mr. Groat. I’m going to talk to people. ” Moist crossed the road and opened the shop door. The bell jangled. Inside the hairdresser’s shop was an array of little booths, and the air smelled sweet and cloying and, somehow, pink; right by the door was a little desk with a big, open diary. There were lots of flowers around, and the young woman at the desk gave him a haughty look that was going to cost her employer a lot of money. She was waiting for him to speak. Moist put on a grave expression, leaned down, and said in a voice that had all the characteristics of a whisper but also seemed to be able to carry quite a long way: “Can I see Mr. Hugo, please? It is very important. ” “On what business would that be?” “Well…it’s a little delicate…” said Moist. He could see the tops of permed heads turning. “But you can tell him it’s good news. ” “Well, if it’s good news—” “Tell him I think I can persuade Lord Vetinari that this can be settled without charges being brought. Probably,” said Moist, lowering his voice just enough to increase the curiosity of the customers while not so much as to be inaudible. The woman stared at him in horror. “You can? Er…” She groped for an ornate speaking tube, but Moist took it gently from her hand, whistled expertly down it, lifted it to his ear, and flashed her a smile. “Thank you,” he said. For what did not matter; smile, say the right kind of words in the right kind of voice, and always, always radiate confidence like a supernova. A voice in his ear, faint as a spider trapped in a matchbox, said: “Scitich wabble nabnab?” “Hugo?” said Moist. “It’s good of you to make time for me. It’s Moist, Moist von Lipwig. Postmaster General. ” He glanced at the speaking tube. It disappeared into the ceiling. “So kind of you to assist us, Hugo. It’s these missing letters. Five missing letters, to be exact. ” “Scrik? Shabadatwik? Scritch vit bottofix!” “Don’t really carry that kind of thing, Hugo, but if you’d care to look out of your window you’ll see my personal assistant, Mr. Pump. He’s standing on the other side of the street. ” And he’s eight feet tall and carrying a huge crowbar , Moist added mentally. He winked at the lady sitting at the desk, who was watching him in a kind of awe. You had to keep people skills polished at all times. He heard the muffled expletive through the floor. Via the speaking tube it became “Vugrs nickbibble!” “Yes,” said Moist, “perhaps I should come up and speak to you directly—” T EN MINUTES LATER Moist crossed the road with care and smiled at his staff. “Mr. Pump, if you would be so good as to step over there and pry out our letters, please?” he said. “Try not to damage anything. Mr. Hugo has been very cooperative. And Tolliver, you’ve lived here a long time, haven’t you? You’ll know where to hire men with ropes, steeplejacks, that sort of thing? I want those letters back on our building by midday, okay?” “That’ll cost a lot of money, Mr. Lipwig,” said Groat, staring at him in amazement. Moist pulled a bag out of his pocket and jingled it. “One hundred dollars should more than cover it,” he said. “Mr. Hugo was very apologetic and very, very inclined to be helpful. Says he bought them years ago off a man in a pub and is only too happy to pay for them to be returned. It’s amazing how nice people can be, if approached in the right way. ” There was a clang from the other side of the street. Mr. Pump had already removed the H, without any apparent effort. Speak softly and employ a huge man with a crowbar , thought Moist. This might be bearable after all. T HE WEAK SUNLIGHT glinted on the S as it was swung into position. There was quite a crowd.
People in Ankh-Morpork always paid attention to people on rooftops, in case there was a chance of an interesting suicide. There was a cheer, just on general principles, when the last letter was hammered back into place. Four dead men , Moist thought, looking up at the roof. I wonder if the Watch would talk to me? Do they know about me? Do they think I’m dead? Do I want to speak to policemen? No! Damn! The only way I can get out of this is by running forward, not going back. Bloody, bloody Vetinari , he thought. But there’s a way to win. He could make money! He was part of the government, wasn’t he? Governments took money off people. That’s what they were for. He had people skills, didn’t he? He could persuade people that brass was gold that had got a bit tarnished, that glass was diamond, that tomorrow there was going to be free beer. He’d outfox them all! He wouldn’t try to escape, not yet! If a golem could buy its freedom, then so could he! He’d buckle down and bustle and look busy and he’d send all the bills to Vetinari, because this was government work ! How could the man object? And if Moist von Lipwig couldn’t cream a little somethi—a big something off the top, and the bottom, and maybe a little off the sides, then he didn’t deserve to! And then, when it was all going well and the cash was rolling in…well, then there’d be time to make plans for the big one. Enough money bought a lot of men with sledgehammers. The workmen pulled themselves back onto the flat roof. There was another ragged cheer from a crowd that reckoned it hadn’t been bad entertainment even if no one had fallen off. “What do you think, Mr. Groat?” he said. “Looks nice, sir, looks nice,” said Groat, as the crowd dispersed and they walked back to the Post Office building. “Not disturbing anything, then?” said Moist. Groat patted the surprised Moist on the arm. “I don’t know why his lordship sent you, sir, really I don’t,” he whispered. “You mean well, I can see. But take my advice, sir, and get out of here. ” Moist glanced toward the building’s doors. Mr. Pump was standing beside them. Just standing, with his arms hanging down. The fire in his eyes was a banked glow. “I can’t do that,” he said. “Nice of you to say so, sir, but this place isn’t for a young man with a future,” said Groat. “Now, Stanley, he’s all right if he’s got his pins, but you, sir, you could go far. ” “No-o, I don’t think I can,” said Moist. “Honestly. My place, Mr. Groat, is here. ” “Gods bless you for saying that, sir, gods bless you,” said Groat. Tears were beginning to roll down his face. “We used to be heroes,” he said. “People wanted us. Everyone watched out for us. Everyone knew us. This was a great place, once. Once, we were postmen. ” “Mister!” Moist turned. Three people were hurrying toward him, and he had to quell an automatic urge to turn and run, especially when one of them shouted, “Yes, that’s him!” He recognized the greengrocer from this morning. An elderly couple were trailing behind him. The older man, who had the determined face and upright bearing of one who subdued cabbages daily, stopped an inch in front of Moist and bellowed: “Are you the po’stman, young man?” “Yes, sir, I suppose I am,” said Moist. “How can I—” “You delivered me this’ letter from Aggie here! I’m Antimony Parker!” the man roared. “Now, there’s s’ome people’d say it wa’s a little bit on the late side!” “Oh,” said Moist. “Well, I—” “That took a bit of nerve, young man!” “I’m very sorry that—” Moist began. People skills weren’t much good in the face of Mr. Parker. He was one of the impervious people, whose grasp of volume control was about as good as his understanding of personal space. “S’orry?” Parker shouted. “What’ve you got to be s’orry about? Not your fault, lad. You weren’t even born! More fool me for thinking she didn’t care, eh? Hah, I wa’s so downhearted, lad, I went right out and joined the…” His red face wrinkled. “You know…camel’s, funny hat’s, sand, where you go to forget—” “The Klatchian Foreign Legion?” said Moist. “That wa’s it! And when I came back I met Sadie, and Aggie had met her Frederick, and we both got ’settled and forgot the other one was alive and then blow me down if this letter didn’t arrive from Aggie! Me and my lad have s’pent half the morning tracking her down! And to cut a long s’tory short, lad, we’re getting married Sat’day! ’Co’s of you, boy!” Mr. Parker was one of those men who turned into teak with age. When he slapped Moist on the back it was like being hit with a chair. “Won’t Frederick and Sadie object—” Moist wheezed. “I doubt it! Frederick pas’sed away ten years ago and Sadie’s been buried up in S’mall God’s for the last five!” Mr. Parker bellowed cheerfully. “And we were s’orry to see them go but, as Aggie say’s, it was all meant to be and you wa’s sent by a higher power. And I say it took a man with real backbone to come and deliver that letter after all thi’s time. There’s many that would have tos’sed it aside like it was of no account! You’d do me and the future second Mrs. Parker a great favor if you wa’s to be a guest of honor at our wedding, and I for one won’t take no for an ans’wer! I’m Grandma’ster of the Guild of Merchant’s this year, too! We might not be pos’h like the Assassins of the Alchemists but there’s a lot of u’s and I shall put in a word on your behalf, you can depend on that! My lad George here will be down later on with the invitation’s for you to deliver, now you’re back in busines’s! It will be a great honor for me, my boy, if you would s’hake me by the hand…” He thrust out a huge hand. Moist took it, and old habits died hard. Firm grip, steady gaze… “Ah, you’re an honest man, all right,” said Parker. “I’m never mis’taken!” He clapped his hand on Moist’s shoulder, causing a knee joint to crunch. “What’s your name, lad?” “Lipwig, sir. Moist von Lipwig,” Moist said. He was afraid he’d gone deaf in one ear. “A von, eh,” said Parker. “Well, you’re doing damn well for a foreigner, and I don’t care who know’s it! Got to be going now, Aggie want’s to buy fripperie’s!” The woman came up to Moist, stood on tiptoe, and kissed him on the cheek. “And I know a good man when I see one,” she said. “Do you have a young lady?” “What? No! Not at all! Er…no!” said Moist. “I’m sure you shall,” she said, smiling sweetly. “And while we’re very grateful to you, I would advise you to propose in person. We do so much look forward to seeing you on Saturday!” Moist watched her scurry away after her long-lost swain. “You delivered a letter?” said Groat, horrified. “Yes, Mr. Groat. I didn’t mean to, but I just happened to be—” “You took one of the old letters and you delivered it?” said Groat, as if the concept was something he could not fit into his head— His head was all over the wall… Moist blinked. “We are supposed to deliver the mail, man! That’s our job! Remember?” “You delivered a letter…” breathed Groat. “What was the date on it?” “I can’t remember! More than forty years ago?” “What was it like? Was it in good condition?” Groat insisted. Moist glared at the little postman. A small crowd was forming around them, as was the Ankh-Morpork way. “It was a forty-year-old letter in a cheap envelope!” he snarled. “And that’s what it looked like! It never got delivered and it upset the lives of two people. I delivered it and it’s made two people very happy. What is the problem , Mr. Groat— Yes, what is it?” This was to a woman who was tugging at this sleeve. “I said is it true you’re opening the old place again?” she repeated. “My grandad used to work there!” “Well done him,” said Moist. “He said there was a curse!” said the woman, as if the idea was rather pleasing. “Really?” said Moist. “Well, I could do with a good curse right now, as a matter of fact. ” “It lives under the floor and drives you maaad!” she went on, enjoying the syllable so much that she seemed loath to let it go. “Maaad!” “Really,” said Moist. “Well, we do not believe in going crazy in the postal service, do we, Mr. Gro—” He stopped. Mr. Groat had the expression of one who did believe in going crazy.
“You daft old woman!” Groat yelled. “What did you have to tell him that for?” “Mr. Groat!” snapped Moist. “I wish to speak to you inside!” He grabbed the old man by the shoulder and very nearly carried him through the amused crowd, dragged him into the building and slammed the door. “I’ve had enough of this!” he said. “Enough of dark comments and mutterings, do you understand? What’s going on here? What went on here? You tell me right now or—” The little man’s eyes were full of fear. This is not me , Moist thought. This is not the way. People skills, eh? “You tell me right now, Senior Postman Groat!” he snapped. The old man’s eyes widened. “Senior postman?” “I am the postmaster in this vicinity, yes?” said Moist. “That means I can promote, yes? Senior postman, indeed. On probation, of course. Now, will you tell me what—” “Don’t you hurt Mr. Groat, sir!” said a ringing voice behind Moist. Groat looked past Moist into the gloom and said: “It’s all right, Stanley, there’s no need for that, we don’t want a Little Moment. ” To Moist he whispered: “Best you put me down gently, sir… ” Moist did so, with exaggerated care, and turned around. The boy was standing behind him with a glazed look on his face and the big kettle raised. “You mustn’t hurt Mr. Groat, sir,” he said hoarsely. Moist pulled a pin out of his lapel. “Of course not, Stanley. By the way, is this a genuine Clayfeather Medium Sharp?” Stanley dropped the kettle, suddenly oblivious to everything but the inch of silvery steel between Moist’s fingers. One hand was already pulling out his magnifying glass. “Let me see, let me see,” he said in a level, thoughtful voice. “Oh, yes. Ha. No, sorry. It’s an easy mistake to make. Look at the marks on the shoulder, here. See? And the head was never coiled. This is machine-made. Probably by one of the Happily Brothers. Short run, I imagine. Hasn’t got their sigil, though. Could have been done by a creative apprentice. Not worth much, I’m afraid, unless you find someone who specializes in the minutia of the Happily Pinnery. ” “I’ll, er, just make a cup of tea, shall I?” said Groat, picking up the kettle as it rolled backwards and forwards on the floor. “Well done again, Mr. Moist. Er… Senior Postman Groat, right?” “Off you go with, yes, probationary Senior Postman Groat, Stanley,” said Moist as kindly as he could manage. He looked up and added sharply: “I just want to talk to Mr. Pump here. ” Stanley looked around at the golem, who was right behind him. It was astonishing how quietly a golem could move; he’d crossed the floor like a shadow and now stood with one still fist raised like the wrath of gods. “Oh, I didn’t see you standing there, Mr. Pump,” said Stanley cheerfully. “Why is your hand up?” The holes in the golem’s face bathed the boy in red light. “I…Wanted To Ask The Postmaster A Question?” said the golem slowly. “Oh. All right,” said Stanley, as if he hadn’t been about to brain Moist a moment before. “Do you want your pin back, Mr. Moist?” he added, and when Moist waved him away he went on, “All right, I’ll put it in next month’s charity pin auction. ” When the door had shut behind him, Moist looked up at the golem’s impassive face. “You lied to him. Are you allowed to lie, Mr. Pump?” he said. “And you can lower that arm, by the way. ” “I Have Been Instructed As To The Nature Of Social Untruths, Yes. ” “You were going to smash his brains out!” said Moist. “I Would Have Endeavored Not To,” the golem rumbled. “However, I Cannot Allow You To Come To Inappropriate Harm. It Was A Heavy Kettle. ” “You can’t do that, you idiot!” said Moist, who’d noticed the use of “inappropriate. ” “I Should Have Let Him Kill You?” said the golem. “It Would Not Have Been His Fault. His Head Is Not Right. ” “It’d be even less right if you walloped it. Look, I sorted it out!” “Yes,” Pump said. “You Have A Talent. It Is A Pity You Misuse It. ” “Do you understand anything I’m saying?” shouted Moist. “You can’t just go around killing people!” “Why Not? You Do. ” The golem lowered his arm. “What?” Moist. “I do not! Who told you that?” “I Worked It Out. You Have Killed Two Point Three Three Eight People,” said the golem calmly. “I have never laid a finger on anyone in my life, Mr. Pump. I may be—all the things you know I am, but I am not a killer! I have never so much as drawn a sword!” “No, You Have Not. But You Have Stolen, Embezzled, Defrauded, And Swindled Without Discrimination, Mr. Lipvig. You Have Ruined Businesses And Destroyed Jobs. When Banks Fail, It Is Seldom Bankers Who Starve. Your Actions Have Taken Money From Those Who Had Little Enough To Begin With. In A Myriad Small Ways You Have Hastened The Deaths Of Many. You Did Not Know Them. You Did Not See Them Bleed. But You Snatched Bread From Their Mouths And Tore Clothes From Their Backs. For Sport, Mr. Lipvig. For Sport. For The Joy Of The Game. ” Moist’s mouth had dropped open. It shut. It opened again. It shut again. You can never find repartee when you need it. “You’re nothing but a walking flowerpot, Pump 19,” he snapped. “Where did that come from?” “I Have Read The Details Of Your Many Crimes, Mr. Lipvig. And Pumping Water Teaches One The Value Of Rational Thought. You Took From Others Because You Were Clever And They Were Stupid. ” “Hold on, most of the time they thought they were swindling me!” “You Set Out To Trap Them, Mr. Lipvig,” said Mr. Pump. Moist went to prod the golem meaningfully, but decided against it just in time. A man could break a finger that way. “Well, think about this,” he said. “I’m paying for all that! I was nearly hanged, godsdamit!” “Yes. But Even Now You Harbor Thoughts Of Escape, Of Somehow Turning The Situation To Your Advantage. They Say The Leopard Does Not Change His Shorts. ” “But you have to obey my orders, yes?” snarled Moist. “Yes. ” “Then screw your damn head off!” For a moment the red eyes flickered. When Pump spoke next, it was in the voice of Lord Vetinari: “Ah, Lipwig. Despite everything, you do not pay attention. Mr. Pump cannot be instructed to destroy himself. I would have thought you at least could have worked this out. If you instruct him to do so again, punitive action will be taken. ” The golem blinked again. “How did you—” Moist began. “I Have Perfect Recall Of Legal Verbal Instructions,” said the golem in his normal rumbling tone. “I Surmise That Lord Vetinari, Mindful Of Your Way Of Thinking, Left That Message Because—” “I meant the voice! ” “ Perfect Recall, Mr. Lipvig,” Pump replied. “I Can Speak With All The Voices Of Men. ” “Really? How nice for you. ” Moist stared up at Mr. Pump. There was never any animation in that face. There was a nose, of sorts, but it was just a lump in the clay. The mouth moved when he spoke, and the gods knew how baked clay could move like that—indeed, they probably did know. The eyes never closed, they merely dimmed. “Can you really read my thoughts?” he said. “No, I Merely Extrapolate From Past Behavior. ” “Well—” Moist said, once again stuck for words. He glared up at the expressionless face that nevertheless contrived to be disapproving. He was used to looks of anger, indignation, and hatred. They were part of the job. But what was a golem? Just…dirt. Fired earth. People looking at you as though you were less than the dust beneath their feet was one thing, but it was strangely unpleasant when even the dust did that, too. “—don’t,” he finished lamely. “Go and…work. Yes! Go on! That’s what you do! That’s what you’re for!” I T WAS CALLED the lucky clacks tower, Tower 181. It was close enough to the town of Bonk for a man to be able to go and get a hot bath and a good bed on his days off, but since this was Uberwald there wasn’t too much local traffic and—this was important—it was way, way up in the mountains and management didn’t like to go that far. In the good old days of last year, when the Hour of the Dead took place every night, it was a happy tower, because both the up-line and the down-line got the Hour at the same time, so there was an extra pair of hands for maintenance.
Now Tower 181 did maintenance on the fly or not at all, just like all the others, but it was still, proverbially, a good tower to man. Mostly man, anyway. Back down on the plains it was a standing joke that 181 was staffed by vampires and werewolves. In fact, like a lot of towers, it was often manned by kids. Everyone knew it happened. Actually, the new management probably didn’t, but wouldn’t have done anything about it if they found out, apart from carefully forgetting that they’d known. Kids didn’t need to be paid. The—mostly—young men on the towers worked hard in all weather for just enough money. They were loners, hard dreamers, fugitives from the law that the law had forgotten, or just from everybody else. They had a special kind of directed madness; they said the rattle of the clacks got into your head and your thoughts beat time with it, so sooner or later you could tell what messages were going through by listening to the rattle of the shutters. In their towers, they drank hot tea out of strange tin mugs, much wider at the bottom, so that they didn’t fall over when gales banged into the tower. On leave, they drank alcohol out of anything. And they talked a gibberish of their own, of donkey and nondonkey, system overhead and packet space, of drumming it and hotfooting, of a 181 (which was good) or flock (which was bad) or totally flocked (really not good at all) and plug-code and hog-code and jacquard… And they liked kids, who reminded them of the ones they left behind or would never have, and kids loved the towers. They’d come and hang around and do odd jobs and maybe pick up the craft of semaphore just by watching. They tended to be bright, they mastered the keyboard and levers as if by magic, they usually had good eyesight, and what they were doing, most of them, was running away from home without actually leaving. Because, up on the towers, you might believe you could see to the rim of the world. You could certainly see several other towers, on a good, clear day. You pretended that you, too, could read messages by listening to the rattle of the shutters, while under your fingers flowed the names of faraway places you’d never see but, on the tower, were somehow connected to… She was known as Princess to the men on Tower 181, although she was really Alice. She was thirteen, could run a line for hours on end without needing help, and later on had an interesting career which…but anyway, she remembered this one conversation, on this day, because it was strange. Not all the signals were messages. Some were instructions to towers. Some, as you operated your levers to follow the distant signal, made things happen in your own tower. Princess knew all about this. A lot of what traveled on the Grand Trunk was called the Overhead. It was instructions to towers, reports, messages about messages, even chatter between operators, although this was strictly forbidden these days. It was all in code. It was very rare you got Plain in the Overhead. But now: “There it goes again,” she said. “It must be wrong. It’s got no origin code and no address. It’s Overhead, but it’s in Plain. ” On the other side of the tower, sitting in a seat facing the opposite direction, because he was operating the upline, was Roger, who was seventeen and already working for his tower-master certificate. His hand didn’t stop moving as he said: “What did it say?” “There was GNU, and I know that’s a code, and then just a name. It was John Dearheart. Was it a—” “You sent it on?” said Grandad. Grandad had been hunched in the corner, repairing a shutter box in this cramped shed halfway up the tower. Grandad was the tower-master and had been everywhere and knew everything. Everyone called him Grandad. He was twenty-six. He was always doing something in the tower when she was working the line, even though there was always a boy in the other chair. She didn’t work out why until later. “Yes, because it was a G code,” said Princess. “Then you did right. Don’t worry about it. ” “Yes, but I’ve sent that name before. Several times. Up-line and down-line. Just a name, no message or anything!” She had a sense that something was wrong, but she went on: “I know a U at the end means it has to be turned around at the end of the line, and an N means Not Logged. ” This was showing off, but she’d spent hours reading the cypher book. “So it’s just a name, going up and down all the time! Where’s the sense in that?” Something was really wrong. Roger was still working his line, but he was staring ahead with a thunderous expression. Then Grandad said: “Very clever, Princess. You’re dead right. ” “Hah!” said Roger. “I’m sorry if I did something wrong,” said the girl meekly. “I just thought it was strange. Who’s John Dearheart?” “He…fell off a tower,” said Grandad. “Hah!” said Roger, working his shutters as if he suddenly hated them. “He’s dead ?” said Princess. “Well, some people say—” Roger began. “Roger!” snapped Grandad. It sounded like a warning. “I know about Sending Home,” said Princess. “And I know the souls of dead linesmen stay on the Trunk. ” “Who told you that?” said Grandad. Princess was bright enough to know that someone would get into trouble if she was too specific. “Oh, I just heard it,” she said airily. “Somewhere. ” “Someone was trying to scare you,” said Grandad, looking at Roger’s reddening ears. It hadn’t sounded scary to Princess. If you had to be dead, it seemed a lot better to spend your time flying between the towers than lying underground. But she was bright enough, too, to know when to drop a subject. It was Grandad who spoke next, after a long pause broken only by the squeaking of the new shutter bars. When he did speak, it was as if something was on his mind. “We keep that name moving in the Overhead,” he said, and it seemed to Princess that the wind in the shutter arrays above her blew more forlornly, and the everlasting clicking of the shutters grew more urgent. “He’d never have wanted to go home. He was a real linesman. His name is in the code, in the wind, in the rigging, and the shutters. Haven’t you ever heard the saying ‘Man’s not dead while his name is still spoken’?” CHAPTER 5 Lost in the Post In which Stanley experiences the joy of sacks • Mr. Groat’s ancestral fears • Horsefry is worried • Reacher Gilt, a man of society • The stairway of letters • Mailslide! • Mr. Lipwig sees it • Hoodwinked • The Postman’s Walk • The hat S TANLEY POLISHED his pins. He did so with a look of beatific concentration, like a man dreaming with his eyes open. The collection sparkled on the folded strips of brown paper and the rolls of black felt that made up the landscape of the true pinhead’s world. Beside him was his large desktop magnifying glass and, by his feet, a sack of miscellaneous pins bought last week from a retiring needlewoman. He was putting off the moment of opening it, to savor it all the more. Of course, it’d almost certainly turn out to be full of everyday brassers, with maybe the occasional flathead or line flaw, but the thing was, you never knew. That was the joy of sacks. You never knew. Noncollectors were woefully unconcerned about pins, treating them as if they were no more that thin, pointy bits of metal for sticking things to other things. Many a wonderful pin of great worth had been found in a sack of brassers. And now he had a No. 3 Broad-headed “Chicken” Extra Long, thanks to kind Mr. Lipwig. The world shone like the pins so neatly ranged on the felt rolled out in front of him. He might smell faintly of cheese, and have athlete’s foot extending to the knee, but just now Stanley soared through glittering skies on wings of silver. Groat sat by the stove, chewing his fingernails and muttering to himself. Stanley paid no attention, since pins were not the subject. “—appointed, right? Never mind what The Order says! He can promote anyone, right? That means I get the extra gold button on m’sleeve and the pay, right? None of the others called me Senior Postman! And when all’s said and done, he delivered a letter.
Had the letter, saw the address, delivered it, just like that! Maybe he has got postman’s blood! And he got them metal letters put back! Letters again, see? That’s a sign, sure enough. Hah, he can read words that ain’t there!” Groat spat out a fragment of fingernail, and frowned. “But…then he’ll want to know about the New Pie. Oh yeah. But…it’d be like scratching at a scab. Could be bad. Very bad. But…hah, the way he got them letters back for us…very good. Maybe it’s true that one day we’ll get a true Postmaster again, just like they say. ‘Yea, he will tread the Abandoned Roller Skates beneath his Boots, and Lo! the Dogs of the World will Break their Teeth upon Him. ’ And he did show us a sign, right? Okay, it was over a posh haircut shop for ladies, but it was a sign, you can’t argue with that. I mean, if it was obvious , anyone could show it to us. ” Another sliver of fingernail hit the side of the glowing stove, where it sizzled. “And I ain’t getting any younger, that’s a fact. Probationary, though, that’s not good, that’s not good. What’d happen if I popped my clogs tomorrow, eh? I’d stand there before my forefathers, and they’d say, ‘Art thou Senior Postal Inspector Groat?’ and I’d say no, and they’d say, ‘Art thou then Postal Inspector Groat?’ and I’d say not as such, and they’d say, ‘Then surely thou art Senior Postman Groat?’ and I’d say not in point of fact, and they’d say, ‘Stone the crows, Tolliver, are you telling us you never got further than Junior Postman, what kind of Groat are you?’ and my face will be red and I will be knee-deep in the ignominy. Dun’t matter that I’ve been runnin’ this place for years , oh no. You got to have that gold button!” He stared at the fire, and somewhere in his matted beard a smile struggled to get out. “He can try walking the Walk,” he said. “No one can argue if he walks the Walk. An’ then I can tell him everything! So it’ll be all right! An’ if he don’t walk to the end, then he ain’t postmaster material anyway! Stanley? Stanley! ” Stanley awoke from a dream of pins. “Yes, Mr. Groat?” “Got a few errands for you to run, lad. ” And if he ain’t postmaster material , Groat added in the privacy of his creaking brain, I’ll die a junior postman… I T WAS HARD to knock at a door while trying desperately not to make a sound, and in the end Crispin Horsefry gave up on the second aim and just swung on the doorknocker. The sound echoed through the empty street, but no one came to the window. No one in this select street would have come to the window even if a murder was going on. At least in the poorer districts people would have come out to watch, or join in. The door opened. “Good evening, thur—” Horsefry pushed past the stumpy figure and into the dark hallway, waving frantically to the servant to close the door. “Shut it, man, shut it! I may have been followed—good grief, you’re an Igor aren’t you? Gilt can afford an Igor?” “Well done, thur!” said the Igor. He peered out into the early-evening darkness. “All clear, thur. ” “Shut the door, for gods’ sakes!” moaned Horsefry. “I must see Mr. Gilt!” “The marthter isth having one of hith little thoireeth, thur,” said Igor. “I will thee if he can be dithturbed. ” “Are any of the others here? Have they—what’s a thwawreath?” “A little get-together, thur,” said Igor, sniffing. The man reeked of drink. “A soiree?” “Exactly tho, thur,” said Igor impassively. “May I take your highly notitheable, long, hooded cloak, thur? And be tho kind ath to follow me into the withdrawing room…” And suddenly Horsefry was alone in a big room full of shadows and candlelight and staring eyes, with the door closing behind him. The eyes belonged to the portraits in the big, dusty frames that filled the walls, edge to edge. Rumor was that Gilt had bought them outright, and not only the pictures; it was said that he bought all the rights in the long-dead as well, deed-polled their names, and thus equipped himself with a proud pedigree overnight. That was slightly worrying, even for Horsefry; everyone lied about their ancestors, and that was fair enough. Buying them was slightly disconcerting, but this dark, original stylishness was so very Reacher Gilt. A lot of rumors had begun concerning Reacher Gilt, just as soon as people had noticed him and started asking, “Who is Reacher Gilt? What kind of a name is Reacher, anyway?” He threw big parties, that was certain. They were the kind of parties that entered urban mythology (was it true about the chopped liver? Were you there? What about the time when he brought in a troll stripper and three people jumped out of the window? Were you there? And that story about the bowl of sweets? Were you there? Did you see it? Was is true? Were you there? ). Half of Ankh-Morpork had been, apparently, drifting from table to buffet to dance floor to gaming tables, every guest seemingly followed by a silent and obliging waiter with a laden drinks tray. Some said he owned a gold mine, others swore that he was a pirate. And he certainly looked like a pirate, with his long, curly black hair, pointed beard, and eyepatch. He was even said to have a parrot. Certainly the piracy rumor might explain the apparently bottomless fortune and the fact that no one, absolutely no one, knew anything about him prior to his arrival in the city. Perhaps he’d sold his past, people joked, just like he’d bought himself a new one. He was certainly piratical in his business dealings, Horsefry knew. Some of the things— “ Twelve and a half percent! Twelve and a half percent! ” When he was sure that he hadn’t in fact had the heart attack he had been expecting all day, Horsefry crossed the room, swaying just like a man who’s had a little drink or two to steady his nerves, and lifted the dark-red cloth that, it turned out, concealed the parrot cage. The bird was, in fact, a cockatoo, and it danced frantically up and down on its perch. “ Twelve and a half percent! Twelve and a half percent! ” Horsefry grinned. “Ah, you’ve met Alphonse,” said Reacher Gilt. “And to what do I owe this unexpected pleasure, Crispin?” The door swung slowly behind him into its felt-lined frame, shutting out the sound of distant music. Horsefry turned, the brief moment of amusement evaporating instantly into the fearful turmoil of his soul. Gilt, one hand in the pocket of a beautiful smoking jacket, gave him a quizzical look. “I’m being spied on, Reacher!” Horsefry burst out. “Vetinari sent one of—” “Please! Sit down, Crispin. I think you require a large brandy. ” He wrinkled his nose. “Another large brandy, should I say?” “I wouldn’t say no! Had to have a little snifter, you know, just to calm m’nerves! What a day I’ve had!” Horsefry plumped down into a leather armchair. “Did you know there was a watchman on duty outside the bank almost all afternoon?” “A fat man? A sergeant?” said Gilt, handing him a glass. “Fat, yes. I didn’t notice his rank. ” Horsefry sniffed. “I’ve never had anything to do with the Watch. ” “I, on the other hand, have,” said Gilt, wincing to see very fine brandy drunk in the way Horsefry was drinking it. “And I gather that Sergeant Colon is in the habit of loitering near large buildings in case they are stolen, but in fact simply because he enjoys a quiet smoke out of the wind. He is a clown, and not to be feared. ” “Yes, but this morning one of the revenue officers came to see that old fool Cheeseborough—” “Is that unusual, Crispin?” said Gilt soothingly. “Let me top up your glass there…” “Well, they come once or twice a month—” Horsefry conceded, thrusting out the empty brandy glass. “But—” “Not unusual, then. You’re shying at flies, my dear Crispin. ” “Vetinari is spying on me!” Horsefry burst out. “There was a man in black spying on the house this evening! I heard a noise and I looked out and I could see him standing in the corner of the garden!” “A thief, perhaps?” “No, I’m fully paid up with the Guild! I’m sure someone was in the house this afternoon, too.

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