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Hogfather - Terry Pratchett [2]

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beaten up by a gel,” said the man behind her. There was a swish of silk and a cloud of cigar smoke as the diners poured out into the hall.

Susan sighed again and went down the cellar stairs, while Twyla sat demurely at the top, hugging her knees.

A door opened and shut.

There was a short period of silence and then a terrifying scream. One woman fainted and a man dropped his cigar.

“You don’t have to worry, everything will be all right,” said Twyla calmly. “She always wins. Everything will be all right.”

There were thuds and clangs, and then a whirring noise, and finally a sort of bubbling.

Susan pushed open the door. The poker was bent at right angles. There was nervous applause.

“Ver’ well done,” said a guest. “Ver’ persykological. Clever idea, that, bendin’ the poker. And I expect you’re not afraid any more, eh, little girl?”

“No,” said Twyla.

“Ver’ persykological.”

“Susan says don’t get afraid, get angry,” said Twyla.

“Er, thank you, Susan,” said Mrs. Gaiter, now a trembling bouquet of nerves. “And, er, now, Sir Geoffrey, if you’d all like to come back into the parlor—I mean, the drawing room—”

The party went back up the hall. The last thing Susan heard before the door shut was “Dashed convincin’, the way she bent the poker like that—”

She waited.

“Have they all gone, Twyla?”

“Yes, Susan.”

“Good.” Susan went back into the cellar and emerged towing something large and hairy with eight legs. She managed to haul it up the steps and down the other passage to the back yard, where she kicked it out. It would evaporate before dawn.

“That’s what we do to monsters,” she said.

Twyla watched carefully.

“And now it’s bed for you, my girl,” said Susan, picking her up.

“C’n I have the poker in my room for the night?”

“All right.”

“It only kills monsters, doesn’t it…?” the child said sleepily, as Susan carried her upstairs.

“That’s right,” Susan said. “All kinds.”

She put the girl to bed next to her brother and leaned the poker against the toy cupboard.

The poker was made of some cheap metal with a brass knob on the end. She would, Susan reflected, give quite a lot to be able to use it on the children’s previous governess.

“G’night.”

“Good night.”

She went back to her own small bedroom and got back into bed, watching the curtains suspiciously.

It would be nice to think she’d imagined it. It would also be stupid to think that, too. But she’d been nearly normal for two years now, making her own way in the real world, never remembering the future at all…

Perhaps she had just dreamed things (but even dreams could be real…).

She tried to ignore the long thread of wax that suggested the candle had, just for a few seconds, streamed in the wind.

As Susan sought sleep, Lord Downey sat in his study catching up on the paperwork.

Lord Downey was an assassin. Or, rather, an Assassin. The capital letter was important. It separated those curs who went around murdering people for money from the gentlemen who were occasionally consulted by other gentlemen who wished to have removed, for a consideration, any inconvenient razor blades from the candyfloss of life.

The members of the Guild of Assassins considered themselves cultured men who enjoyed good music and food and literature. And they knew the value of human life. To a penny, in many cases.

Lord Downey’s study was oak paneled and well carpeted. The furniture was very old and quite worn, but the wear was the wear that comes only when very good furniture is carefully used over several centuries. It was matured furniture.

A log fire burned in the grate. In front of it a couple of dogs were sleeping in the tangled way of large hairy dogs everywhere.

Apart from the occasional doggy snore or the crackle of a shifting log, there were no other sounds but the scratching of Lord Downey’s pen and the ticking of the grandfather clock by the door…small, private noises which only served to define the silence.

At least, this was the case until someone cleared their throat.

The sound suggested very clearly that the purpose of the exercise was not to erase the presence of

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