Jingo (20 page)

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Authors: Terry Pratchett

Tags: #Fantasy:Humour

BOOK: Jingo
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“He says I’ve got to apologize,” said Janil sullenly. “I’m sorry.”

“So am I,” said Carrot.

The boy’s father gave him that complicated shrug used by adults in a situation involving adolescents.

“You’ll be back, I know it,” said Carrot.

“We shall see.”

They went down the quay toward a waiting boat. It was a Klatchian ship. People lined the rails, people who were getting out with what they could carry before they could only get out with what they wore. The watchmen found themselves under hostile scrutiny.

“Surely Rust isn’t already forcing Klatchians out of their homes?” said Angua.

“We can tell which way the wind is blowing,” said Goriff calmly.

Carrot sniffed the salt air. “It’s blowing from Klatch,” he said.

“For you, perhaps,” said Goriff.

A whip cracked behind them and they stood aside as several coaches rumbled by. A blind at the window was pulled aside momentarily. Carrot caught a brief glimpse of a face, all gold teeth and black beard, before the cloth twitched back.

“That’s
him
, isn’t it?”

There was a faint grunt from Angua. She had her eyes closed, as she always did when she was letting her nose do the seeing…

“Cloves,” she murmured, and then grabbed Carrot’s arm.


Don’t
run after it! There’s armed men on that ship! What will they think when they see a soldier running toward them?”

“I’m not a soldier!”

“How long do you think they’ll spend working out the difference?”

The coach pushed through the press of people on the dock. The crowd surged back around it.

“There’s boxes being unloaded—I can’t quite see…” said Carrot, shading his eyes. “Look, I’m sure they’ll understand if—”

71-hour Ahmed stepped out on to the dock and looked back toward the watchmen. There was a momentary sparkle as he grinned. They saw his hand reach over his shoulder and come back holding the curved sword.

“I can’t just let him get away,” said Carrot. “He’s a suspect! Look, he’s laughing at us!”

“With diplomatic impunity,” said Angua. “But there’s a lot of armed men down there.”

“My strength is as the strength of ten because my heart is pure,” said Carrot.

“Really? Well, there’s eleven of them.”

71-hour Ahmed threw his sword in the air. It spun a couple of times, making a
whum-whum
noise, and then his hand shot out and caught it by the handle as it fell.

“That’s what Mr. Vimes was doing,” said Carrot, through gritted teeth. “Now he’s taunting us—”

“You will be killed if you go on the ship,” said Goriff behind him. “I know that man.”

“You do? How?”

“He is feared in the whole of Klatch. That is 71-hour Ahmed!”

“Yes,
why
is—”

“You haven’t heard of him? And he is a D’reg!” Mrs. Goriff pulled at her husband’s arm.

“Dreg?” said Angua.

“A warlike desert tribe,” said Carrot. “Very fierce. Honorable, though. They say that if a D’reg is your friend he’s your friend for the rest of your life.”

“And if he’s
not
your friend?”

“That’s about five seconds.”

He drew his sword. “Nevertheless,” he added, “we can’t let—”

“I have said too much. We must go,” said Goriff. The family picked up their bundles.

“Look, there might be another way to find out about him,” said Angua. She pointed at the carriage.

A couple of lean, long-haired and extremely graceful dogs had been let out and were straining at their leashes as they led the way up the gangplank.

“Klatchistan hunting dogs,” she said. “The Klatchian nobility are very keen on them, I understand.”

“They look a bit like—” Carrot began, and then the penny dropped. “No, I can’t let you go on there by yourself,” he said. “Something would go wrong.”

“I stand a much better chance than you would, believe me,” said Angua quickly. “They won’t be leaving until the tide changes, in any case.”

“It’s too dangerous.”

“Well, they
are
supposed to be our enemies.”

“I meant for
you
!”

“Why?” said Angua. “I’ve never heard of werewolves in Klatch, so they probably don’t know how to deal with us.”

She undid the little leather collar that held her badge and handed it to Carrot.

“Don’t
worry
,” she said. “If the worst comes to the worst, I’ll dive overboard.”

“Into the
river
?”

“Even the river Ankh can’t kill a werewolf.” Angua glanced at the turgid water. “Probably, anyway.”

Sergeant Colon and Corporal Nobbs had gone on patrol. They weren’t sure why they were patrolling, and what they were supposed to do if they saw a crime, although many years of training had enabled them not to see some quite large crimes. But they were creatures of habit. They were watchmen, so they patrolled. They didn’t patrol with a purpose. They patrolled, as it were, in pure essence. Nobby’s progress wasn’t helped by the large, leather-bound book in his arms.

“A war’d do this place good,” said Sergeant Colon, after a while. “Put some backbone in people. Everything’s gone all to pot these days.”

“Not like when we were kids, sarge.”

“Not like when we were kids indeed, Nobby.”

“People trusted one another in them days, didn’t they, sarge?”

“People trusted one another, Nobby.”

“Yes, sarge. I know. And people didn’t have to lock their doors, did they?”

“That’s right, Nobby. And people were always ready to help. They were always in and out of one another’s houses.”

“’sright, sarge,” said Nobby vehemently. “I know no one ever locked their houses down
our
street.”

“That’s what I’m talking about. That’s my point.”

“It was ’cos the bastards even used to steal the locks.”

Colon considered the truth of this.

“Yes, but at least it was each other’s stuff they were nicking, Nobby. It’s not like they was
foreigners
.”

“Right.”

They strolled on for a while, each entangled in his own thoughts.

“Sarge?”

“Yes, Nobby?”

“Where’s Nubilia?”

“Nubilia?”

“It’s got to be a place, I reckon. Pretty warm there, I think.”

“Ah,
Nubilia
,” said Colon. He invented desperately. “Right. Yes. It’s one of them Klatchian places. Yeah. Got lots of sand. And mountains. Exports dates. Why’d you want to know?”

“Oh…no reason.”

“Nobby?”

“Yes, sarge?”

“Why are you carrying that huge book?”

“Hah, clever idea, sarge. I saw what you said about that book of your great-grandad, so if there’s any fighting I got this one off’f Washpot. It’s
The Book of Om
. Five inches thick.”

“It’s a bit big for a pocket, Nobby. It’s a bit big for a
cart
, to be honest.”

“I thought I could make sort of braces to carry it. I reckon even a longbow could only get an arrow as far as the Apocrypha.”

A familiar creak made them look up.

A Klatchian’s head was swinging in the breeze.

“Fancy a pint?” said Sergeant Colon. “Big Anjie brews up some that’s a treat.”

“Better not, sarge. Mr. Vimes is in a bit of a mood.”

Colon sighed. “You’re right.”

Nobby looked up at the head again. It was wooden. It had been repainted many times over the centuries. The Klatchian was smiling very happily for someone who’d never have to buy a shirt ever again.

“The Klatchian’s Head. My grandad said
his
grandad remembered when it was still the real one,” Colon said. “Of course, it was about the size of a walnut by then.”

“Bit…nasty, sticking up a bloke’s head for a pub sign,” said Nobby.


No
, Nobby. Spoils of war, right? Some bloke came back from one of the wars with a souvenir, stuck it on a pole and opened a pub. The Klatchian’s Head. Teach ’em not to do it again.”

“I used to get into enough trouble just for nicking boots,” said Nobby.

“More robust times, Nobby.”

“You ever
met
a Klatchian, sarge?” said Nobby, as they began to pace the length of the quiet street. “I mean one of the wild ones.”

“Well, no…but you know what? They’re allowed three wives! That’s criminal, that is.”

“Yeah, ’cos here’s me and I ain’t got one,” said Nobby.

“And they eat funny grub. Curry and that.”

Nobby gave this some thought. “Like…we do, when we’re on late duty.”

“Weelll, yerss—but they don’t do it properly—”

“You mean runny ear-wax yellow with peas and currants in, like your mum used to do?”

“Right! You poke around as much as you like in a Klatchian curry and you won’t find a single
piece
of swede.”

“And I heard where they eat sheep’s eyeballs, too,” said Nobby, international gastra-gnome.

“Right again.”

“Not decent ordinary stuff like lambs’ fry or sweetbreads, then?”

“That’s…right.”

Colon felt that he was being got at in some way.

“Look, Nobby, when all’s said and done they ain’t the right color, and there’s an end to it.”

“Good job you found out, Fred!” said Nobby, so cheerfully that Sergeant Colon was almost sure that he meant it.

“Well, it’s obvious,” he conceded.

“Er…what
is
the right color?” said Nobby.

“White, of course!”

“Not brick-red, then? ’Cos
you
—”

“Are you winding me up, Corporal Nobbs?”

“’Course not, sarge. So…what color am I?”

That caused Sergeant Colon to think. You could have found, somewhere on Corporal Nobbs, a shade appropriate to every climate on the disc and a few found only in specialist medical books.

“White’s…white’s a state of, you know…
mind
,” he said. “It’s like…doing an honest day’s work for an honest day’s pay, that sort of thing. And washing regular.”

“Not lazing around, sort of thing.”

“Right.”

“Or…like…working all hours like Goriff does.”

“Nobby—”

“And you never see those kids of his with dirty clo—”

“Nobby, you’re just trying to get me going, right? You
know
we’re better’n Klatchians. Otherwise, what’s the point? Anyway, if we’re going to fight ’em, you could get locked up for going around talking treachery.”

“Are you going to fight them, Fred?”

Fred Colon scratched his chin. “Well, as a hexperienced milit’ry man, I suppose I’ll have to…”

“What’re you going to do? Join a regiment and go to the front?”

“We-ell…my fore-tay lies in training, so I reckon I’d better stay here and train up the new recruits.”

“Here at the back, you might say.”

“We all have to do our bit, Nobby. If it was down to me I’d be out there like a shot to give Johnny Klatchian a taste of cold steel.”

“Their razor-sharp swords wouldn’t worry you, then?”

“I should laugh at them with scorn, Nobby.”

“But s’posing the Klatchians attack here? Then
you’ll
be at the front, and the front will be at the back.”

“I’ll sort of try for a posting in the middle…”

“The middle of the front or—”


Gentlemen
?”

They looked round to find that they had been followed by a man of medium height but with an extraordinary head. It wasn’t that he had gone bald. He had quite a lot of hair, which was long and curly and reached almost to his shoulders, and his beard was large enough to conceal a small chicken. But his head had simply risen through his hair, like a kind of intrusive dome.

He gave them a friendly smile.

“Am I by any chance addressing the heroic Sergeant Colon and the—” The man looked at Nobby. Expressions of amazement, dread, interest and charity passed across his otherwise sunny countenance like storm-driven clouds. “And
the
Corporal Nobbs?” he finished.

“That is us, citizen,” said Colon.

“Ah, good. I was very specifically told to find you. It’s quite amazing, you know. No one had even broken into the boathouse, although I must say I did design the locks rather well. And all I’ve had to do is replace the leatherwork around the joints and grease it up…oh, do excuse me, I’ve got rather ahead of myself. Now…there was a message I had to give you…What was it now?…Something about your hands…” He reached down into the large canvas bag by his feet and pulled out a long tube, which he handed to Nobby.

“I do apologize about this,” he said, producing a smaller tube and handing it to Colon. “I had to do things in such a hurry, there really was no time to finish it off properly, and frankly the materials are not very good—”

Colon looked at his tube. It was pointed at one end.

“This is a firework rocket,” he said. “Look, it’s got ‘A riot of colored balls and stars’ on it…”

“Yes, I do
so
apologize,” said the man, lifting a complex little arrangement of wood and metal out of the bag. “May I have the tube back, corporal?” He took it and screwed the arrangement on to one end. “Thank you…yes, I’m afraid that without my lathe and, indeed, my forge, I really have had to make do with what I could find lying around…Could I have the rocket back, please? Thank you.”

“They don’t go properly without a stick,” said Nobby.

“Oh, in fact they do,” said the man. “Just not very accurately.”

He raised the tube to shoulder height and peered into a small wire grid.

“That seems about right,” he said.

“And they don’t go along,” said Nobby. “They just go up.”

“A common misconception,” said Leonard of Quirm, turning to face them.

Colon could see the tip of the rocket in the depths of the tube, and had a sudden image of stars and balls.

“Now, apparently you two have to step into this alley here and come with me,” said Leonard. “I’m very sorry about this, but his lordship has explained to me at great length how the needs of society as a whole may have to overrule the rights of a particular individual. Oh, and I’ve just remembered. You have to put your hands up.”

Sand had been spilled across the big table in the Rats Chamber.

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