Making Money - Terry Pratchett [68]
“Come for a pris’ner,” Moist complained. “An’ I been standing in the rain for five minutes!”
“And you shall continue to do so, my son, oh, yes indeed, until I’m ready. Show me the docket!”
“Says here Jenkins, Owlswick,” said Moist.
“Let me see it, then!”
“They said I has to hand it over when you give me the pris’ner,” said Moist, a model of stolid insistence.
“Oh, we have a lawyer here, do we? All right, Abe, let my learned friend in.”
The little hatch slid back and, after some more clanking, a wicket door opened. Moist stepped through.
“Have I seen you before?” said Bellyster, his head on one side.
“Only started last week,” said Moist. Behind him, the gate was locked again. The slamming of the bolts echoed in his head.
“Why’s there only one of you?” Bellyster demanded.
“Don’t know, sir. You’d have to ask my mum and dad.”
“Don’t you be funny with me! There should be two on escort duty!”
Moist gave a wet and weary shrug of pure disinterest.
“Should there? Don’t ask me. They just told me he’s a little piece of piss who’ll be no trouble. You can check if you like. I heard the palace wants to see him right away.”
The palace. That changed the gleam in the warden’s nasty little eyes. A sensible man didn’t get in the way of the palace. And sending out some dim newbie to do a thankless task on a wild night like this made sense; it was exactly what Bellyster would have done.
He held out his hand and demanded: “Docket!”
Moist handed over the flimsy paper. The man read it, lips perceptibly moving, clearly willing it to be wrong in some way. There’d be no problem there, however much the man glared; Moist had pocketed a handful of the forms while Mr. Spools was making him a cup of coffee.
“He’s goin’ to hang in the morning,” Bellyster said, holding the sheet up to the lantern. “What d’they want him for now?”
“Dunno,” said Moist. “Get a move on, will you? I’m on my break in ten minutes.”
The warden leaned forward. “Just for that, friend, I will go and check. Just one escort? Can’t be too careful, can I? Enjoy the rain.”
Oh…kay, thought Moist. All going according to plan. He’ll be ten minutes having a nice cup of tea, just to teach me a lesson, five minutes to find out the clacks isn’t working, about one second to decide that he’d be blowed if he was going to sort out the fault on a night like this, another second to think: the paperwork was okay, he’d checked for the watermark, and that was the main thing…call it twenty minutes, give or take.
Of course, he could be wrong. Anything could happen. Bellyster could be rounding up a couple of his mates right now, or maybe he’d get someone to run out the back way and find a real copper. The future was uncertain. Exposure could be a few seconds away.
It didn’t get any better than this.
Bellyster left it for twenty-two minutes. Footsteps approached, slowly, and Jenkins appeared, tottering under the weight of the irons, with Bellyster prodding him occasionally with his stick. There was no way the little man could have gone any faster, but he was going to get prodded anyway.
“I don’t think I’m going to need the shackles,” said Moist quickly.
“You ain’t getting ’em,” said the warden. “The reason bein’, you buggers never bring ’em back!”
“Okay,” said Moist. “C’mon, it’s freezing out here.”
Bellyster grunted. He was not a happy man. He bent down, unlocked the shackles, and stood up with his hand once again on the man’s shoulder. His other hand thrust out, holding a clipboard.
“Sign!” he commanded. Moist did.
And then came the magic bit. It was why the paperwork was so important in the greasy world of turnkeys, thief-takers, and bang-beggars, because what really mattered at any one moment was habeas corpus: whose hand is on the collar? Who is responsible for this corpus?
Moist had been through this before as the body in question, and knew the drill. The prisoner