Thud! - Terry Pratchett [63]
“Oh, hello…Andy,” he said. “I think—”
“Captain Carrot’s had a word with me,” said Special Constable Hancock, giving him a huge wink. “I’ll see to it!”
“Oh, good,” said Vimes, horribly aware that he’d put himself in a tricky position vis-à-vis suggesting that maybe one sword might be enough. The man was going to do them a favor, after all. “Er…You’ll be up against the trolls, at least to start with,” he said. “Just remember that there’s our people around you, will you? Remember Special Constable Piggle, eh?”
“But, in fairness, it was a clean cut, sir!” said Hancock. “Igor said he’d never done such an easy reattachment!”
“Nevertheless, it’s truncheons only tonight, Andy, unless I give any other order, okay?”
“Understood, Commander Vimes. I’ve just got a new truncheon, as a matter of fact.”
Some sixth sense made Vimes say: “Oh, really? May I see?”
“Right here, sir.” Hancock pulled out what looked to Vimes like two truncheons, joined together with a length of chain.
“They’re Agatean numknuts, sir. No sharp edges at all.”
Vimes gave them an experimental swing and hit his own elbow. He handed them back quickly. “Rather you than me, lad. Still, I suppose they’ll make a troll stop and think.”
Mr. Pessimal was staring in horror, not least because wayward wood had just missed him.
“Oh, this is Mr. Pessimal, Andy,” said Vimes. “He’s finding out how we do things. Mr. Hancock is one of our…keenest Special constables, Mr. Pessimal.”
“Nice to met you, Mr. Pessimal!” said Hancock. “If you need any weapons catalogs, I’m your man!”
Vimes moved on quickly, just in case the man drew those swords again, and ran up against a slightly more reassuring figure.
“And here we have Mr. Boggis,” he said. “Good to see you. Mr. Boggis is president of the Guild of Thieves, Mr. Pessimal.”
Mr. Boggis saluted proudly. He had accepted a chain-mail jacket from Fred, but no power in the world would have parted him from his brown bowler hat. Any power nevertheless inclined to try would in any case have to contend with the narrow-eyed, stony-jawed men on either side of him, who had eschewed any weapons or armor. One of them was cleaning his fingernails with a cutthroat razor. In a strange but very definite way, they looked much more dangerous even than Special Constable Hancock.
“And also Vinnie ‘No Ears’ Ludd and Harry ‘Can’t Remember His Nickname’ Jones, I see,” Vimes went on. “You’ve brought your bodyguards, Mr. Boggis?”
“Vinnie and Harry like to get out in the fresh air, Mister Vimes,” said Mr. Boggis. “And I see you’ve got your own bodyguard, then?” He beamed down on A. E. Pessimal and then grinned at Vimes. “You have to watch them little bantam fighters, Mister Vimes, they can have the nose off your face quicker’n wink. I can tell a killing cove when I see one, eh? Best of luck to you, Mr. Pessimal!”
Vimes bustled the astonished man away before Mr. Boggis was killed on the spot by the God of Overacting, and almost walked into the one Special who could be guaranteed not to talk too much.
“And here, Mr. Pessimal, here we have the university Librarian,” he said, “Good man in a melee, eh?”
“But that—that’s not a man! That’s an orangutan, Pongo Pongo, native of BhangBhangduc and nearby islands!”
“Ook!” said the Librarian, patting A. E. Pessimal on the head and handing him a banana skin.
“Well done, A. E.!” said Vimes. “Not many people get that right!”
And so Vimes dragged the inspector back through the crowd of damp, armored men, introducing him right and left. Then he pushed him into a corner and, to faint stunned protestations, dragged the mail shirt over his head.
“You stick close behind me, Mr. Pessimal,” he said as the man tried to move. “It could get a bit sticky later on. The trolls are up in the plaza and the dwarfs are down in the square, and both of ’em are drinking up enough courage to have a good scrap. That’s why we’ll be lining up in the Cham, right between ’em, the thin brown streak, haha. The dwarfs favor battle-axes, the trolls go in for clubs. Our weapon of first resort