Authors: Terry Pratchett
âIzzy wizzy wazzy, den.'
âThat other man brought him out here to save him!' shouted Magrat. âHe wanted us to keep him safe! It's obvious! It's destiny!'
âOh,
obvious
,' said Granny. âI'll grant you it's
obvious
. Trouble is, just because things are obvious doesn't mean they're true.'
She weighed the crown in her hands. It felt very heavy, in a way that went beyond mere pounds and ounces.
âYes, but the point isâ' Magrat began.
âThe point is,' said Granny, âthat people are going to come looking. Serious people. Serious looking. Pull-down-the-walls and burn-off-the-thatch looking. Andâ'
âHowsa boy, den?'
ââ
And
, Gytha, I'm sure we'll all be a
lot
happier if you'd stop gurgling like that!' Granny snapped. She could feel her nerves coming on. Her nerves always played up when she was unsure about things. Besides, they had retired to Magrat's cottage, and the decor was getting to her, because Magrat believed in Nature's wisdom and elves and the healing power of colours and the cycle of the seasons and a lot of other things Granny Weatherwax didn't have any truck with.
âYou're not after telling me how to look after a child,' snapped Nanny Ogg mildly. âAnd me with fifteen of my own?'
âI'm just saying that we ought to think about it,' said Granny.
The other two watched her for some time.
âWell?' said Magrat.
Granny's fingers drummed on the edge of the crown. She frowned.
âFirst, we've got to take him away from here,' she said, and held up a hand. âNo, Gytha, I'm sure your cottage is ideal and everything, but it's not safe. He's got to be somewhere away from here, a long way away, where no-one knows who he is. And then there's this.' She tossed the crown from hand to hand.
âOh, that's easy,' said Magrat. âI mean, you just hide it under a stone or something. That's easy. Much easier than babies.'
âIt ain't,' said Granny. âThe reason being, the country's full of babies and they all look the same, but I don't reckon there's many crowns. They have this way of being found, anyway. They kind of call out to people's minds. If you bunged it under a stone up
here, in a week's time it'd get itself discovered by accident. You mark my words.'
âIt's true, is that,' said Nanny Ogg, earnestly. âHow many times have you thrown a magic ring into the deepest depths of the ocean and then, when you get home and have a nice bit of turbot for your tea, there it is?'
They considered this in silence.
âNever,' said Granny irritably. âAnd nor have you. Anyway, he might want it back. If it's rightfully his, that is. Kings set a lot of store by crowns. Really, Gytha, sometimes you say the mostâ'
âI'll just make some tea, shall I?' said Magrat brightly, and disappeared into the scullery.
The two elderly witches sat on either side of the table in polite and prickly silence. Finally Nanny Ogg said, âShe done it up nice, hasn't she? Flowers and everything. What are them things on the walls?'
âSigils,' said Granny sourly. âOr some such.'
âFancy,' said Nanny Ogg, politely. âAnd all them robes and wands and things too.'
â
Modern
,' said Granny Weatherwax, with a sniff. âWhen I was a gel, we had a lump of wax and a couple of pins and had to be content. We had to make our
own
enchantment in them days.'
âAh, well, we've all passed a lot of water since then,' said Nanny Ogg sagely. She gave the baby a comforting jiggle.
Granny Weatherwax sniffed. Nanny Ogg had been married three times and ruled a tribe of children and grandchildren all over the kingdom. Certainly, it was not actually
forbidden
for witches to get married. Granny had to concede that, but reluctantly. Very
reluctantly. She sniffed again, disapprovingly; this was a mistake.
âWhat's that smell?' she snapped.
âAh,' said Nanny Ogg, carefully repositioning the baby. âI expect I'll just go and see if Magrat has any clean rags, shall I?'
And now Granny was left alone. She felt embarrassed, as one always does when left alone in someone else's room, and fought the urge to get up and inspect the books on the shelf over the sideboard or examine the mantelpiece for dust. She turned the crown round and round in her hands. Again, it gave the impression of being bigger and heavier than it actually was.
She caught sight of the mirror over the mantelpiece and looked down at the crown. It was tempting. It was practically begging her to try it for size. Well, and why not? She made sure that the others weren't around and then, in one movement, whipped off her hat and placed the crown on her head.
It seemed to fit. Granny drew herself up proudly, and waved a hand imperiously in the general direction of the hearth.
âJolly well do this,' she said. She beckoned arrogantly at the grandfather clock. âChop his head off, what ho,' she commanded. She smiled grimly.
And froze as she heard the screams, and the thunder of horses, and the deadly whisper of arrows and the damp, solid sound of spears in flesh. Charge after charge echoed across her skull. Sword met shield, or sword, or bone â relentlessly. Years streamed across her mind in the space of a second. There were times when she lay among the dead, or hanging from the branch of a tree; but always there were hands that
would pick her up again, and place her on a velvet cushion . . .
Granny very carefully lifted the crown off her head â it was an effort, it didn't like it much â and laid it on the table.
âSo that's being a king for you, is it?' she said softly. âI wonder why they all want the job?'
âDo you take sugar?' said Magrat, behind her.
âYou'd have to be a born fool to be a king,' said Granny.
âSorry?'
Granny turned. âDidn't see you come in,' she said. âWhat was it you said?'
âSugar in your tea?'
âThree spoons,' said Granny promptly. It was one of the few sorrows of Granny Weatherwax's life that, despite all her efforts, she'd arrived at the peak of her career with a complexion like a rosy apple and all her teeth. No amount of charms could persuade a wart to take root on her handsome if slightly equine features, and vast intakes of sugar only served to give her boundless energy. A wizard she'd consulted had explained it was on account of her having a metabolism, which at least allowed her to feel vaguely superior to Nanny Ogg, who she suspected had never even seen one.
Magrat dutifully dug out three heaped ones. It would be nice, she thought wistfully, if someone could say âthank you' occasionally.
She became aware that the crown was staring at her.
âYou can feel it, can you?' said Granny. âI said, didn't I? Crowns call out!'
âIt's horrible.'
âNo, no. It's just being what it is. It can't help it.'
âBut it's magic!'
âIt's just being what it is,' Granny repeated.
âIt's trying to get me to try it on,' said Magrat, her hand hovering.
âIt does that, yes.'
âBut I shall be strong,' said Magrat.
âSo I should think,' said Granny, her expression suddenly curiously wooden. âWhat's Gytha doing?'
âShe's giving the baby a wash in the sink,' said Magrat vaguely. âHow can we hide something like this? What'd happen if we buried it really deeply somewhere?'
âA badger'd dig it up,' said Granny wearily. âOr someone'd go prospecting for gold or something. Or a tree'd tangle its roots around it and then be blown over in a storm, and then someone'd pick it up and put it onâ'
âUnless they were as strong-minded as us,' Magrat pointed out.
âUnless that, of course,' said Granny, staring at her fingernails. âThough the thing with crowns is, it isn't the putting them on that's the problem, it's the taking them off.'
Magrat picked it up and turned it over in her hands.
âIt's not as though it even looks much like a crown,' she said.
âYou've seen a lot, I expect,' said Granny. âYou'd be an expert on them, naturally.'
âSeen a fair few. They've got a lot more jewels on them, and cloth bits in the middle,' said Magrat defiantly. âThis is just a thin little thingâ'
âMagrat Garlick!'
âI have. When I was being trained up by Goodie Whemperâ'
ââmaysherestinpeaceâ'
ââmaysherestinpeace, she used to take me over to Razorback or into Lancre whenever the strolling players were in town. She was very keen on the theatre. They've got more crowns than you can shake a stick at although, mindâ' she paused â âGoodie did say they're made of tin and paper and stuff. And just glass for the jewels. But they look more realler than this one. Do you think that's strange?'
âThings that try to look like things often do look more like things than things. Well-known fact,' said Granny. âBut I don't hold with encouraging it. What do they stroll about playing, then, in these crowns?'
âYou don't know about the theatre?' said Magrat.
Granny Weatherwax, who never declared her ignorance of anything, didn't hesitate. âOh, yes,' she said. âIt's one of
them
style of things, then, is it?'
âGoodie Whemper said it held a mirror up to life,' said Magrat. âShe said it always cheered her up.'
âI expect it would,' said Granny, striking out. âPlayed properly, at any rate. Good people, are they, these theatre players?'
âI think so.'
âAnd they stroll around the country, you say?' said Granny thoughtfully, looking towards the scullery door.
âAll over the place. There's a troupe in Lancre now, I heard. I haven't been because, you know.' Magrat looked down. “Tis not right, a woman going into such places by herself.'
Granny nodded. She thoroughly approved of such sentiments so long as there was, of course, no suggestion that they applied to her.
She drummed her fingers on Magrat's tablecloth.
âRight,' she said. âAnd why not? Go and tell Gytha to wrap the baby up well. It's a long time since I heard a theatre played properly.'
Magrat was entranced, as usual. The theatre was no more than some lengths of painted sacking, a plank stage laid over a few barrels, and half a dozen benches set out in the village square. But at the same time it had also managed to become The Castle, Another Part of the Castle, The Same Part A Little Later, The Battlefield and now it was A Road Outside the City. The afternoon would have been perfect if it wasn't for Granny Weatherwax.
After several piercing glares at the three-man orchestra to see if she could work out which instrument the theatre was, the old witch had finally paid attention to the stage, and it was beginning to become apparent to Magrat that there were certain fundamental aspects of the theatre that Granny had not yet grasped.
She was currently bouncing up and down on her stool with rage.
âHe's killed him,' she hissed. âWhy isn't anyone doing anything about it? He's killed him! And right up there in front of everyone!'
Magrat held on desperately to her colleague's arm as she struggled to get to her feet.
âIt's all right,' she whispered. âHe's not dead!'
âAre you calling me a liar, my girl?' snapped Granny. âI saw it all!'
âLook, Granny, it's not really real, d'you see?'
Granny Weatherwax subsided a little, but still grumbled under her breath. She was beginning to feel that things were trying to make a fool of her.
Up on the stage a man in a sheet was giving a spirited monologue. Granny listened intently for some minutes, and then nudged Magrat in the ribs.
âWhat's he on about now?' she demanded.
âHe's saying how sorry he was that the other man's dead,' said Magrat, and in an attempt to change the subject added hurriedly, âThere's a lot of crowns, isn't there?'
Granny was not to be distracted. âWhat'd he go and kill him for, then?' she said.
âWell, it's a bit complicatedâ' said Magrat, weakly.
âIt's shameful!' snapped Granny. âAnd the poor dead thing still lying there!'
Magrat gave an imploring look to Nanny Ogg, who was masticating an apple and studying the stage with the glare of a research scientist.
âI
reckon
,' she said slowly, âI reckon it's all just pretendin'. Look, he's still breathing.'
The rest of the audience, who by now had already decided that this commentary was all part of the play, stared as one man at the corpse. It blushed.
âAnd look at his boots, too,' said Nanny critically. âA real king'd be ashamed of boots like that.'
The corpse tried to shuffle its feet behind a cardboard bush.
Granny, feeling in some obscure way that they had scored a minor triumph over the purveyors of untruth and artifice, helped herself to an apple from the bag and began to take a fresh interest. Magrat's nerves started to unknot, and she began to settle down to enjoy the play. But not, as it turned out, for very long. Her willing suspension of disbelief was interrupted by a voice saying:
âWhat's this bit?'
Magrat sighed. âWell,' she hazarded, â
he
thinks that
he
is the prince, but
he's
really the other king's daughter, dressed up as a man.'
Granny subjected the actor to a long analytical stare.
âHe
is
a man,' she said. âIn a straw wig. Making his voice squeaky.'
Magrat shuddered. She knew a little about the conventions of the theatre. She had been dreading this bit. Granny Weatherwax had Views.
âYes, but,' she said wretchedly, âit's the Theatre, see. All the women are played by men.'
âWhy?'