Reaper Man - Terry Pratchett [69]
The wolf leapt.
“Lupine!” shouted Windle.
But from the days when the first cavemen rolled a slice of log down a hill, canines have also had a deep racial urge to chase anything on wheels. Lupine was already snapping at the trolley.
His jaws met on a wheel. There was a howl, a scream from the Librarian, and ape, wolf and wire basket ended up in a heap against the wall.
“Oh, the poor thing! Look at him!”
Ludmilla rushed across the floor and knelt down by the stricken wolf.
“It went right over his paws, look!”
“And he’s probably lost a couple of teeth,” said Windle. He helped the Librarian up. There was a red glow in the ape’s eyes. It had tried to steal his books. This was probably the best proof any wizard could require that the trolleys were brainless.
He reached down and wrenched the wheels off the trolley.
“Olé,” said Windle.
“Oook?”
“No, Not ‘with milk’,” said Windle.
Lupine was having his head cradled in Ludmilla’s lap. He had lost a tooth, and his fur was a mess. He opened one eye and fixed Windle with a conspiratorial yellow stare while his ears were stroked. There’s a lucky dog, thought Windle, who’s going to push his luck and hold up a paw and whine.
“Right,” said Windle. “Now, Librarian…you were about to help us, I think.”
“Poor brave dog,” said Ludmilla.
Lupine raised a paw pathetically, and whined.
Burdened by the screaming form of the Bursar, the other wire basket couldn’t get up to the speed of its departed comrade. One wheel also trailed uselessly. It canted recklessly from side to side and nearly fell over as it shot through the gates, moving sideways.
“I can see it clear! I can see it clear!” screamed the Dean.
“Don’t! You might hit the Bursar!” bellowed Ridcully. “You might damage University property!”
But the Dean couldn’t hear for the roar of unaccustomed testosterone. A searing green fireball struck the skewing trolley. The air was filled with flying wheels.
Ridcully took a deep breath.
“You stupid—!” he screamed.
The word he uttered was unfamiliar to those wizards who had not had his robust country up-bringing and knew nothing of the finer points of animal husbandry. But it plopped into existence a few inches from his face; it was fat, round, black and glossy, with horrible eyebrows. It blew him an insectile raspberry and flew up to join the little swarm of curses.
“What the hell was that?”
A smaller thing flashed into existence by his ear.
Ridcully snatched at his hat.
“Damn!”—the swarm increased by one—“Something just bit me!”
A squadron of newly-hatched Blasteds made a valiant bid for freedom. He swatted at them ineffectually.
“Get away, you b—” he began.
“Don’t say it!” said the Senior Wrangler. “Shut up!”
People never told the Archchancellor to shut up. Shutting up was something that happened to other people. He shut up out of shock.
“I mean, every time you swear it comes alive,” said the Senior Wrangler hurriedly. “Ghastly little winged things pop out of the air.”
“Bloody hellfire!” said the Archchancellor.
Pop. Pop.
The Bursar crawled dazed out of the tangled wreckage of the wire trolley. He found his pointy hat, dusted it off, tried it on, frowned, and took a wheel out of it. His colleagues didn’t seem to be paying him much attention.
He heard the Archchancellor say, “But I’ve always done it! Nothing wrong with a good swear, it keeps the blood flowing. Watch out, Dean, one of the bug—”
“Can’t you say something else?” shouted the Senior Wrangler, above the buzz and whine of the swarm.
“Like what?”
“Like…oh…like…darn.”
“Darn?”.
“Yes, or maybe poot.”
“Poot? You want me to say poot?”
The Bursar crept up to the group. Arguing over petty details at times of dimensional emergency was a familiar wizardly trait.
“Mrs. Whitlow the housekeeper always says ‘Sugar!’ when she drops something,” he volunteered.
The Archchancellor turned on him.
“She may say sugar,” he growled, “but what she means is shi