Monstrous Regiment - Terry Pratchett [8]
“I promith you, your brain ith entirely thafe from me, Corporal,” said Igor. Polly started to laugh, and stopped when she realized absolutely no one else was doing so.
“Yeah, well, I met a sergeant who said an Igor put a man’s legs on backwards,” said Corporal Strappi. “What good’s that to a soldier, eh?”
“Could advance and retreat at the thame time?” said Igor levelly. “Thargent, I know all the thtorieth, and they are nothing but vile calumnieth. I theek only to therve my country. I do not want trouble.”
“Right,” said the sergeant. “Nor do we. Make your mark, and you’ve got to promise not to mess about with Corporal Strappi’s brain, right? Another signature? My word, I can see we’ve got ourselves a bleedin’ college of recruits today. Give him his cardboard shilling, Corporal.”
“Thank you,” said Igor. “And I would like to give the picture a wipe, if it’th all the thame to you.” He produced a small cloth.
“Wipe it?” said Strappi. “Is that allowed, Sergeant?”
“What do you want to wipe it for, mister?” said Jackrum.
“To remove the invithible demonth,” said Igor.
“I can’t see any invis—” Strappi began and stopped.
“Just let him, all right?” said Jackrum. “It’s one of their funny little ways.”
“Dun’t seem right,” muttered Strappi. “Practically treason…”
“Can’t see why it’d be wrong just to give the old girl a wash,” said the sergeant shortly. “Next. Oh…”
After carefully wiping the stained picture and giving it a perfunctory peck, Igor came and stood next to Polly, giving her a sheepish grin. But she was watching the next recruit.
He was short and quite slim, which was fairly usual in a country where it was rare to get enough food to make you fat. But he dressed in black and expensively, like an aristocrat; he even had a sword. The sergeant was, therefore, looking worried. Clearly a man could get into trouble talking wrong to a nob who might have important friends.
“You sure you’ve come to the right place, sir?” he said.
“Yes, Sergeant. I wish to enlist.”
Sergeant Jackrum shifted uneasily. “Yes, sir, but I’m sure a gentleman like you—”
“Are you going to enlist me or not, Sergeant?”
“Not usual for a gentleman to enlist as a common soldier, sir,” mumbled the sergeant.
“What you mean, Sergeant, is: is anyone after me? Is there a price on my head? And the answer is no.”
“How about a mob with pitchforks?” said Corporal Strappi. “He’s a bloody vampire, Sarge! Anyone can see that! He’s a Black Ribboner! Look, he’s got the badge!”
“Which says ‘Not One Drop,’” said the young man calmly. “Not one drop of human blood, Sergeant. A prohibition I have accepted for almost two years, thanks to the League of Temperance. Of course, if you have a personal objection, Sergeant, you only need to give it to me in writing.”
Which was quite a clever thing to say, Polly thought. Those clothes cost serious money. Most of the vampire families were highly nobby. You never knew who was connected to who…not just to who, in fact, but to whom. “Whoms” were likely to be far more trouble that your common, everyday “who.” The sergeant was looking down a mile of rough road.
“Got to move with the times, Corporal,” he said, deciding not to go there. “And we certainly need the men.”
“Yeah, but s’posin’ he wants to suck all my blood out in the middle of the night?” said Strappi.
“Well, he’ll just have to wait until Private Igor’s finished looking for your brain, won’t he?” snapped the sergeant. “Sign here, mister.”
The pen scratched on the paper. After a minute or two, the vampire turned the paper over and continued writing on the other side. Vampires had long names.
“But you can call me Maladict,” he said, dropping the pen back in the inkwell.
“Thank you very much, I must say, si—private. Give him the shilling, Corporal. Good job it’s not a silver one, eh? Haha!”
“Yes,” said Maladict. “It is.”
“Next!” said the sergeant. Polly watched as a farm boy, breeches held up with string, shuffled in front of the table and looked at the quill pen with the resentful perplexity of those confronted with new technology.
She turned back