Interesting Times
“Happy Days Are Here Again.” It was a little hard to make out the fine detail because the actors shouted “Hoorrrrrraa!” a lot and spent much of their time talking to the audience and their masks all looked the same to Rincewind. The musicians were in a world of their own or, by the sound of it, three different worlds.
“Fortune cookie?”
“Huh?”
Rincewind re-emerged from the thickets of thespianism to see the landlord beside him.
A dish of vaguely bivalvular biscuits was thrust under his nose.
“Fortune cookie?”
Rincewind reached out. Just as his fingers were about to close on one, the plate was jerked sideways an inch or two, bringing another under his hand.
Oh, well. He took it.
The thing was—his thoughts resumed, as the play screamed on—at least in Ankh-Morpork you could lay your hands on real weapons.
Poor devils. It took more than well-turned slogans and a lot of enthusiasm to run a good rebellion. You needed well-trained fighters and, above all, a good leader. He hoped they found one when he was well away.
He unrolled the fortune and read it idly, oblivious to the landlord walking around behind him.
Instead of the usual “You have just enjoyed an inferior meal” it was quite a complicated pictogram.
Rincewind’s fingers traced the brush strokes.
“‘Many…many…apologies…’ What kind—”
The musician with the cymbals clashed them together sharply.
The wooden cosh bounced off Rincewind’s head.
The old men playing shibo nodded happily to themselves and turned back to their game.
It was a fine morning. The hideout echoed to the sounds of the Silver Horde getting up, groaning, adjusting various homemade surgical supports, complaining that they couldn’t find their spectacles, and mistakenly gumming one another’s dentures.
Cohen sat with his feet in a bath of warm water, enjoying the sunshine.
“Teach?”
The former geography teacher concentrated on a map he was making.
“Yes, Ghenghiz?”
“What’s Mad Hamish going on about?”
“He says the bread’s stale and he can’t find his teeth.”
“Tell him if things go right for us he can have a dozen young women just to chew his bread for him,” said Cohen.
“That is not very hygienic, Ghenghiz,” said Mr. Saveloy, without bothering to look up. “Remember, I explained about hygiene.”
Cohen didn’t bother to answer. He was thinking: six old men. And you can’t really count Teach, he’s a thinker, not a fighter…
Self-doubt was not something regularly entertained within the Cohen cranium. When you’re trying to carry a struggling temple maiden and a sack of looted temple goods in one hand and fight off half a dozen angry priests with the other there is little time for reflection. Natural selection saw to it that professional heroes who at a crucial moment tended to ask themselves questions like “What is my purpose in life?” very quickly lacked both.
But: six old men…and the Empire had almost a million men under arms.
When you looked at the odds in the cold light of dawn, or even this rather pleasant warm light of dawn, they made you stop and do the arithmetic of death. If the Plan went wrong…
Cohen bit his lip thoughtfully. If the Plan went wrong, it’d take weeks to kill all of them. Maybe he should have let old Thog the Butcher come along, too, even though he had to stop fighting every ten minutes to go to the lavatory.
Oh, well. He was committed now, so he might as well make the best of it.
Cohen’s father had taken him to a mountain top, when he was no more than a lad, and explained to him the hero’s creed and told him that there was no greater joy than to die in battle.
Cohen had seen the flaw in this straight away, and a lifetime’s experience had reinforced his belief that in fact a greater joy was to kill the other bugger in battle and end up sitting on a heap of gold higher than your horse. It was an observation that had served him well.
He stood up and stretched in the sunshine.
“It’s a lovely morning, lads,” he said. “I feel like a million dollars. Don’t you?”
There was a murmur of reluctant agreement.
“Good,” said Cohen. “Let’s go and get some.”
The Great Wall completely surrounds the Agatean Empire. The word is completely .
It is usually about twenty-feet high and sheer on its inner side. It is built along beaches and across howling deserts and even on the lip of sheer cliffs where the possibility of attack from outside is remote.
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