“Now here,” said Carrot, “is the Beggars’ Guild. They’re the oldest of the Guilds. Not many people know that.”
“Is that so?”
“People think it’d be the Fools or the Assassins. Ask anyone. They’ll say ‘the oldest Guild in Ankh-Morpork is certainly the Fools’ Guild or the Assassins’ Guild.’ But they aren’t. They’re quite recent. But there’s been a Beggars’ Guild for centuries.”
“Really?” said Angua, weakly. In the last hour she’d learned more about Ankh-Morpork than any reasonable person wanted to know. She vaguely suspected that Carrot was trying to court her. But, instead of the usual flowers or chocolate, he seemed to be trying to gift-wrap a city.
And, despite all her better instincts, she was feeling jealous. Of a city! Ye gods, I’ve known him a couple of days!
It was the way he wore the place. You expected him any moment to break into the kind of song that has suspicious rhymes and phrases like “my kind of town” and “I wanna be a part of it” in it; the kind of song where people dance in the street and give the singer apples and join in and a dozen lowly matchgirls suddenly show amazing choreographical ability and everyone acts like cheery lovable citizens instead of the murderous, evil-minded, self-centered individuals they suspect themselves to be. But the point was that if Carrot had erupted into a song and dance, people
would
have joined in. Carrot could have jollied a circle of standing stones to form up behind him and do a rumba.
“There’s some very interesting old statuary in the main courtyard,” he said. “Including a very good one of Jimi, the God of Beggars. I’ll show you. They won’t mind.”
He rapped on the door.
“You don’t have to,” said Angua.
“It’s no trouble—”
The door opened.
Angua’s nostrils flared. There was a smell…
A beggar looked Carrot up and down. His mouth dropped open.
“It’s Cumbling Michael, isn’t it?” said Carrot, in his cheery way.
The door slammed.
“Well, that wasn’t very friendly,” said Carrot.
“Stinks, don’t it?” said a nasty little voice from somewhere behind Angua. While she was in no mood to acknowledge Gaspode, she found herself nodding. Although the beggars were an entire cocktail of odors the second biggest one was fear, and the biggest of all was blood. The scent of it made her want to scream.
There was a babble of voices behind the door, and it swung open again.
This time there was a whole crowd of beggars there. They were all staring at Carrot.
“All right, yer honor,” said the one hailed as Cumbling Michael, “we give in. How did you know?”
“How did we know wh—” Carrot began, but Angua nudged him.
“Someone’s been killed here,” she said.
“Who’s she?” said Cumbling Michael.
“Lance-Constable Angua is a man of the Watch,” said Carrot.
“Har, har,” said Gaspode.
“I must say you people are getting better,” said Cumbling Michael. “We only found the poor thing a few minutes ago.”
Angua could
feel
Carrot opening his mouth to say “Who?” She nudged him again.
“You’d better take us to him,” she said.
He turned out to be—
—for one thing, he turned out to be a she. In a rag-strewn room on the top floor.
Angua knelt beside the body. It was very clearly a body now. It certainly wasn’t a person. A person normally had more head on their shoulders.
“Why?” she said. “Who’d do such a thing?”
Carrot turned to the beggars clustered around the doorway.
“Who was she?”
“Lettice Knibbs,” said Cumbling Michael. “She was just the lady’s maid to Queen Molly.”
Angua glanced up at Carrot.
“Queen?”
“They sometimes call the head beggar king or queen,” said Carrot. He was breathing heavily.
Angua pulled the maid’s velvet cloak over the corpse.
“Just the maid,” she muttered.
There was a full-length mirror in the middle of the floor, or at least the frame of one. The glass was scattered like sequins around it.
So was the glass from a window pane.
Carrot kicked aside some shards. There was a groove in the floor, and something metallic embedded in it.
“Cumbling Michael, I need a nail and a length of string,” said Carrot, very slowly and carefully. His eyes never left the speck of metal. It was almost as if he expected it to do something.
“I don’t think—” the beggar began.
Carrot reached out without turning his head and picked him up by his grubby collar without apparent effort.
“A length of string,” he repeated, “and a nail.”
“Yes, Corporal Carrot.”
“And the rest of you, go away,” said Angua.
They goggled at her.
“Do it!” she shouted, clenching her fists. “And stop staring at her!”
The beggars vanished.
“It’ll take a while to get the string,” said Carrot, brushing aside some glass. “They’ll have to beg it off someone, you see.”
He drew his knife and started digging at the floorboards, with care. Eventually he excavated a metal slug, flattened slightly by its passage through the window, the mirror, the floorboards and certain parts of the late Lettice Knibbs that had never been designed to see daylight.
He turned it over and over in his hand.
“Angua?”
“Yes?”
“How did you know there was someone dead in here?”
“I…just had a feeling.”
The beggars returned, so unnerved that half a dozen of them were trying to carry one piece of string.
Carrot hammered the nail into the frame under the smashed pane to hold one end of the string. He stuck his knife in the groove and affixed the other end of the string to it. Then he lay down and sighted up the string.
“Good grief.”
“What is it?”
“It must have come from the roof of the operahouse.”
“Yes? So?”
“That’s more than two hundred yards away.”
“Yes?”
“The…thing went an inch into an oak floor.”
“Did you know the girl…at all?” said Angua, and felt embarrassed at asking.
“Not really.”
“I thought you knew everyone.”
“She was just someone I’d see around. The city’s full of people who you just see around.”
“Why do beggars need servants?”
“
You don’t think my hair gets like this by itself, dear, do you?
”
There was an apparition in the doorway. Its face was a mass of sores. There were warts, and
they
had warts, and
they
had hair on. It was possibly female, but it was hard to tell under the layers and layers of rags. The aforementioned hair looked as though it had been permed by a hurricane. With treacle on its fingers.
Then it straightened up.
“Oh. Corporal Carrot. Didn’t know it was you.”
The voice was normal now, no trace of whine or wheedle. The figure turned and brought her stick down hard on something in the corridor.
“Naughty boy, Dribbling Sidney! You could have told I it were Corporal Carrot!”
“Arrgh!”
The figure strode into the room.
“And who’s your ladyfriend, Mr. Carrot?”
“This is Lance-Constable Angua. Angua, this is Queen Molly of the Beggars.”
For once, Angua noted, someone wasn’t surprised to find a female in the Watch. Queen Molly nodded at her as one working woman to another. The Beggars’ Guild was an equal-opportunity non-employer.
“Good day to you. You couldn’t spare I ten thousand dollars for a small mansion, could you?”
“No.”
“Just asking.”
Queen Molly prodded at the gown.
“What was it, corporal?”
“I think it’s a new kind of weapon.”
“We heard the glass smash and there she was,” said Molly. “Why would anyone want to kill her?”
Carrot looked at the velvet cloak.
“Whose room is this?” he said.
“Mine. It’s my dressing room.”
“Then whoever did it wasn’t after her. He was after you, Molly. ‘Some in rags, and some in tags, and one in a velvet gown’…it’s in your Charter, isn’t it? Official dress of the chief beggar. She probably couldn’t resist seeing what it looked like on her. Right gown, right room. Wrong person.”
Molly put her hand to her mouth, risking instant poisoning.
“Assassination?”
Carrot shook his head. “That doesn’t sound right. They like to do it up close. It’s a caring profession,” he added, bitterly.
“What should I do?”
“Burying the poor thing would be a good start.” Carrot turned the metal slug over in his fingers. Then he sniffed it.
“Fireworks,” he said.
“Yes,” said Angua.
“And what are you going to do?” said Queen Molly. “You’re Watchmen, aren’t you? What’s happening? What are you going to do about it?”
Cuddy and Detritus were proceeding along Phedre Road. It was lined with tanneries and brick kilns and timber yards and was not generally considered a beauty spot which was why, Cuddy suspected, they’d been given it to patrol “to get to know the city”. It got them out of the way. Sergeant Colon thought they made the place look untidy.
There was no sound but the clink of his boots and the thump of Detritus’ knuckles on the ground.
Finally, Cuddy said: “I just want you to know that I don’t like being teamed up with you any more than you like being teamed up with me.”
“Right!”
“But if we’re going to have to make the best of it, there’d better be some changes, OK?”
“Like what?”
“Like it’s ridiculous you not even being able to count. I know trolls can count. Why can’t you?”
“Can count!”
“How many fingers am I holding up, then?”
Detritus squinted.
“Two?”
“OK.
Now
how many fingers am I holding up?”
“Two…and one more…”
“So two and one more is…?”
Detritus looked panicky. This was calculus territory.
“Two and one more is three.”
“Two and one more is three.”
“Now how many?”
“Two and two.”
“That’s
four
.”
“Four-er.”
“
Now
how many?”
Cuddy tried eight fingers.
“A twofour.”
Cuddy looked surprised. He’d expected “many”, or possibly “lots”.
“What’s a twofour?”
“A two and a two and a two and a two.”
Cuddy put his head on one side.
“Hmm,” he said. “OK. A twofour is what we call an
eight
.”
“Ate.”
“You know,” said Cuddy, subjecting the troll to a long critical stare, “you might not be as stupid as you look. This is not hard. Let’s think about this. I mean…
I’ll
think about this, and you can join in when you know the words.”
Vimes slammed the Watch House door behind him. Sergeant Colon looked up from his desk. He had a pleased expression.
“What’s been happening, Fred?”
Colon took a deep breath.
“Interesting stuff, captain. Me and Nobby did some
detectoring
up at the Fools’ Guild. I’ve writ it all down what we found out. It’s all here. A proper report.”
“Fine.”
“All written down, look. Properly. Punctuation and everything.”
“Well done.”
“It’s got commas and everything, look.”
“I’m sure I shall enjoy it, Fred.”
“And the—and Cuddy and Detritus have found out stuff, too. Cuddy’s done a report, too. But it’s not got so much punctuation as mine.”
“How long have I been asleep?”
“Six hours.”
Vimes tried to make mental space for all of this, and failed.
“I’ve got to get something inside me,” he said. “Some coffee or something. And then the world will somehow be better.”
Anyone strolling along Phedre Road might have seen a troll and a dwarf apparently shouting at one another in excitement.
“A two-thirtytwo, and eight, and a one!”
“See? How many bricks in that pile?”
Pause.
“A sixteen, an eight, a four, a one!”
“Remember what I said about dividing by eight-and-two?”
Longer pause.
“Two-enty-nine…?”
“Right!”
“Right!”
“You can get there!”
“I can get there!”
“You’re a natural at counting to two!”
“I’m a nat’ral at counting to two!”
“If you can count to two, you can count to anything!”
“If I can count to two, I can count to anything!”
“And then the world is your mollusc!”
“My mollusc! What’s a mollusc?”
Angua had to scurry to keep up with Carrot.
“Aren’t we going to look at the opera house?” she said.
“Later. Anyone up there’ll be long gone by the time we get there. We must tell the captain.”
“You think she was killed by the same thing as Hammerhock?”
“Yes.”
“There are…niner birds.”
“That’s right.”
“There are…one bridge.”
“Right.”
“There are…four-ten boats.”
“All right.”
“There are…one tousand. Three hundret. Six-ty. Four bricks.”
“OK.”
“There are—”
“I should give it a rest now. You don’t want to wear everything out by counting—”
“There are—one running man…”
“What? Where?”
Sham Harga’s coffee was like molten lead, but it had this in its favor: when you’d drunk it, there was this overwhelming feeling of relief that you’d got to the bottom of the cup.
“That,” said Vimes, “was a bloody awful cup of coffee, Sham.”
“Right,” said Harga.
“I mean I’ve drunk a lot of bad coffee in my time but that, that was like having a saw dragged across my tongue. How long’d it been boiling?”
“What’s today’s date?” said Harga, cleaning a glass. He was generally cleaning glasses. No one ever found out what happened to the clean ones.
“August the fifteenth.”
“What year?”
Sham Harga smiled, or at least moved various muscles around his mouth. Sham Harga had run a successful eatery for many years by always smiling, never extending credit, and realizing that most of his customers wanted meals properly balanced between the four food groups: sugar, starch, grease and burnt crunchy bits.
“I’d like a couple of eggs,” said Vimes, “with the yolks real hard but the whites so runny that they drip like treacle. And I want bacon, that special bacon all covered with bony nodules and dangling bits of fat. And a slice of fried bread. The kind that makes your arteries go clang just by looking at it.”