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Lords and Ladies

Lords and Ladies

Titel: Lords and Ladies Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Terry Pratchett
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wizard now. I’ve only got to give an order and a thousand wizards will…uh…disobey, come to think of it, or say ‘What?’, or start to argue. But they have to take notice.”
    “I’ve been to that University a few times,” said Granny. “A bunch of fat old men in beards.”
    “That’s right! That’s them !”
    “A lot of ’em come from the Ramtops,” said Granny. “I knew a few boys from Lancre who became wizards.”
    “Very magical area,” Ridcully agreed. “Something in the air.”
    Below them, the cold black waters raced, always dancing to gravity, never flowing uphill.
    “There was even a Weatherwax as Archchancellor, years ago,” said Ridcully.
    “So I understand. Distant cousin. Never knew him,” said Granny.
    They both stared down at the river for a moment. Occasionally a twig or a branch would whirl along in the current.
    “Do you remember—”
    “I have a…very good memory, thank you.”
    “Do you ever wonder what life would have been like if you’d said yes?” said Ridcully.
    “No.”
    “I suppose we’d have settled down, had children, grandchildren, that sort of thing…”
    Granny shrugged. It was the sort of thing romantic idiots said. But there was something in the air tonight…
    “What about the fire?” she said.
    “What fire?”
    “Swept through our house just after we were married. Killed us both.”
    “ What fire? I don’t know anything about any fire?”
    Granny turned around.
    “Of course not! It didn’t happen. But the point is, it might have happened. You can’t say ‘if this didn’t happen then that would have happened’ because you don’t know everything that might have happened. You might think something’d be good, but for all you know it could have turned out horrible. You can’t say ‘If only I’d…’ because you could be wishing for anything . The point is, you’ll never know. You’ve gone past. So there’s no use thinking about it. So I don’t.”
    “The Trousers of Time,” said Ridcully, moodily. He picked a fragment off the crumbling stonework and dropped it into the water. It went plunk , as is so often the case.
    “What?”
    “That’s the sort of thing they go on about in the High Energy Magic building. And they call themselves wizards! You should hear them talk. The buggers wouldn’t know a magic sword if it bit them on the knee. That’s young wizards today. Think they bloody invented magic.”
    “Yes? You should see the girls that want to be witches these days,” said Granny Weatherwax. “Velvet hats and black lipstick and lacy gloves with no fingers to ’em. Cheeky, too.”
    They were side by side now, watching the river.
    “Trousers of Time,” said Ridcully. “One of you goes down one leg, one of you goes down the other. And there’s all these continuinuinuums all over the place. When I was a lad there was just one decent universe and this was it , and all you had to worry about was creatures breaking through from the Dungeon Dimensions, but at least there was this actual damn universe and you knew where you stood. Now it turns out there’s millions of the damn things. And there’s this damn cat they’ve discovered that you can put in a box and it’s dead and alive at the same time. Or something. And they all run around saying marvelous, marvelous, hooray, here comes another quantum. Ask ’em to do a decent levitation spell and they look at you as if you’ve started to dribble. You should hear young Stibbons talk. Went on about me not inviting me to my own wedding. Me!”
    From the side of the gorge a kingfisher flashed, hit the water with barely a ripple, and ricocheted away with something silver and wriggly in its beak.
    “Kept going on about everything happening at the same time,” Ridcully went on morosely. “Like there’s no such thing as a choice. You just decide which leg you’re heading for. He says that we did get married, see. He says all the things that might have been have to be. So there’s thousands of me out there who never became a wizard, just like there’s thousands of you who, oh, answered letters. Hah! To them, we’re something that might have been. Now, d’you call that proper thinking for a growing lad? When I started wizarding, old ‘Tudgy’ Spold was Archchancellor, and if any young wizard’d even mentioned that sort of daft thing, he’d feel a staff across his backside. Hah!”
    Somewhere far below, a frog plopped off a stone.
    “Mind you, I suppose we’ve all

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