Lords and Ladies - Terry Pratchett [39]
“Well, well, well,” she said. “My word. My word. Three girls who want to be witches, am I right?” Her voice went falsetto. “‘Oh, please, Mrs. Ogg, we has seen the error of our ways, we want to learn proper witchcraft.’ Yes?”
“Yes. Something like that,” said Nanny. “But—”
“This is witchcraft,” said Granny Weatherwax. “It’s not…it’s not a game of conkers. Oh, deary, deary me.”
She walked along the very short row of trembling girls.
“What’s your name, girl?”
“Magenta Frottidge, ma’am.”
“I bet that’s not what your mum calls you?”
Magenta looked at her feet.
“She calls me Violet, ma’am.”
“Well, it’s a better color than magenta,” said Granny. “Want to be a bit mysterious, eh? Want to make folks feel you got a grip on the occult? Can you do magic? Your friend taught you anything, did she? Knock my hat off.”
“What, ma’am?”
Granny Weatherwax stood back, and turned around.
“Knock it off. I ain’t trying to stop you. Go on.”
Magenta-shading-to-Violet shaded to pink.
“Er…In ever got the hang of the psycho-thingy…”
“Oh, dear. Well, just let’s see what the rest can do…Who’re you, girl?”
“Amanita, ma’am.”
“Such a pretty name. Let’s see what you can do.”
Amanita looked around nervously.
“I, er, don’t think I can while you’re watching me—” she began.
“That’s a shame. What about you, on the end?”
“Agnes Nitt,” said Agnes, who was much faster on the uptake than the other two and saw that there was no point in pushing Perdita.
“Go on, then. Try.”
Agnes concentrated.
“Oh, deary, deary me,” said Granny. “And my hat’s still on. Show them, Gytha.”
Nanny Ogg sighed, picked up a piece of fallen branch, and hurled it at Granny’s hat. Granny caught the stick in mid-air.
“But, but—you said we had to use magic—” Amanita began.
“No, I didn’t,” said Granny.
“But anyone could have done that,” said Magenta.
“Yes, but that’s not the point,” said Granny. “The point is that you didn’t.” She smiled, which was unusual for her. “Look, I don’t want to be nasty to you. You’re young. The world’s full of things you could be doing. You don’t want to be witches. Not if you knew what it means. Now just go away. Go home. Don’t try the paranormal until you know what’s normal. Go on. Run along.”
“But that’s just trickery! That’s what Diamanda said! You just use words and trickery—” Magenta protested.
Granny raised a hand.
In the trees, the birds stopped singing.
“Gytha?”
Nanny Ogg gripped her own hat brim defensively.
“Esme, listen, this hat cost me two whole dollars—”
The boom echoed through the woods.
Bits of hat lining zigzagged gently out of the sky.
Granny pointed her finger at the girls, who tried to lean out of the way.
“Now,” she said, “why don’t you go and see to your friend? She was beat. She probably ain’t very happy. That’s no time to go leaving people.”
They still stared at her. Her finger seemed to fascinate them.
“I just asked you to go home. Perfectly reasonable voice. Do you want me to shout?”
They turned and ran.
Nanny Ogg glumly pushed her hand through the stricken hat brim.
“It took me ages to get that pig cure together,” she mumbled. “You need eight types of leaves. Willow leaves, tansy leaves, Old Man’s Trousers leaves…I was collecting ’em all day. It’s not as though leaves grow on trees—”
Granny Weatherwax watched the disappearing girls.
Nanny Ogg paused. Then she said: “Takes you back, eh? I remember when I was fifteen, standing in front of old Biddy Spective, and she said in that voice of hers, ‘You want to be a what?’ and I was that frightened I near widd—”
“I never stood in front of no one,” said Granny Weatherwax distantly. “I camped on old Nanny Gripes’ garden until she promised to tell me everything she knew. Hah. That took her a week and I had the afternoons free.”
“You mean you weren’t Chosen?”
“Me? No. I chose,” said Granny. The face she turned to Nanny Ogg was one she wouldn’t forget in a hurry, although she might try. “I chose, Gytha Ogg. And I want that you should know this right now. Whatever happens. I ain’t never regretted