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Guards! Guards!

Guards! Guards!

Titel: Guards! Guards! Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Terry Pratchett
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that its needle point was a foot from the Patrician’s thin chest.
    “So it’s back to the cells for you,” he said. “And this time I’ll make sure you stay there. Guards! Guards!”
    There was the clatter of running feet outside. The door rattled, the chair shook. There was a moment’s silence, and then door and chair erupted in splinters.
    “Take him away!” screamed Wonse. “Fetch more scorpions! Put him in… you’re not the —”
    “Put the sword down,” said Vimes, while behind him Carrot picked bits of door out of his fist.
    “Yeah,” said Nobby, peering around the captain. “Up against the wall and spread ’em, motherbreath!”
    “Eh? What’s he supposed to spread?” whispered Sergeant Colon anxiously.
    Nobby shrugged. “Dunno,” he said. “Everything, I reckon. Safest way.”
    Wonse stared at the rank in disbelief.
    “Ah, Vimes,” said the Patrician. “You will—”
    “Shut up,” said Vimes calmly. “Lance-constable Carrot?”
    “Sir!”
    “Read the prisoner his rights.”
    “Yes, sir.” Carrot produced his notebook, licked his thumb, flicked through the pages.
    “Lupine Wonse,” he said, “AKA Lupin Squiggle Sec’y PP—”
    “Wha?” said Wonse.
    “—currently domiciled in the domicile known as The Palace, Ankh-Morpork it is my duty to inform you that you have been arrested and will be charged with—” Carrot gave Vimes an agonized look—“a number of offenses of murder by means of a blunt instrument, to whit, a dragon, and many further offenses of generalized abetting, to be more specifically ascertained later. You have the right to remain silent. You have the right to be summarily thrown into a piranha tank. You have the right to trial by ordeal. You have the—”
    “This is madness,” said the Patrician calmly.
    “I thought I told you to shut up!” snapped Vimes, spinning around and shaking a finger under the Patrician’s nose.
    “Tell me, Sarge,” whispered Nobby, “do you think we’re going to like it in the scorpion pit?”
    “—say anything, er, but anything you do say will be written down, er, here, in my notebook, and, er, may be used in evidence—”
    Carrot’s voice trailed into silence.
    “Well, if this pantomime gives you any pleasure, Vimes,” said the Patrician eventually, “take him down to the cells. I’ll deal with him in the morning.”
    Wonse made no signal. There was no scream or cry. He just rushed at the Patrician, sword raised.
    Options flickered across Vimes’s mind. In the lead came the suggestion that standing back would be a good plan, let Wonse do it, disarm him afterward, let the city clean itself up. Yes. A good plan.
    And it was therefore a total mystery to him why he chose to dart forward, bringing Carrot’s sword up in a half-baked attempt at blocking the stroke…
    Perhaps it was something to do with doing it by the book.
    There was a clang. Not a particularly loud one. He felt something bright and silver whirr past his ear and strike the wall.
    Wonse’s mouth fell open. He dropped the remnant of his sword and backed away, clutching The Summoning .
    “You’ll be sorry,” he hissed. “You’ll all be very sorry !”
    He started to mumble under his breath.
    Vimes felt himself trembling. He was pretty certain he knew what had zinged past his head, and the mere thought was making his hands sweat. He’d come to the palace ready to kill and there’d been this minute , just this minute , when for once the world had seemed to be operating properly and he was in charge of it and now, now all he wanted was a drink. And a nice week’s sleep.
    “Oh, give up !” he said. “Are you going to come quietly?”
    The mumbling went on. The air began to feel hot and dry.
    Vimes shrugged. “That’s it, then,” he said, and turned away. “Throw the book at him, Carrot.”
    “Right, sir.”
    Vimes remembered too late.
    Dwarfs have trouble with metaphors.
    They also have a very good aim.
    The Laws and Ordinances of Ankh and Morpork caught the secretary on the forehead. He blinked, staggered, and stepped backward.
    It was the longest step he ever took. For one thing, it lasted the rest of his life.
    After several seconds they heard him hit, five storys below.
    After several more seconds their faces appeared over the edge of the ravaged floor.
    “What a way to go,” said Sergeant Colon.
    “That’s a fact,” said Nobby, reaching up to his ear for a dog-end.
    “Killed by a wossname. A metaphor.”
    “Dunno,”

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