Making Money
another.
“All right, you two, front and back doors right now!” said a coachman who was faster on the uptake. “Head him off! Go down in the elevator! The rest of you, we’ll squeeze him out, floor by floor!”
As they clattered back down the stairs and ran along the corridor, a man in a dressing gown poked his head out of one of the rooms, stared at them in amazement, and then snapped, “Who the hell are you lot? Go on, get after him!”
“Oh yeah? And who are you?” said a hostler, slowing down and glaring at him.
“He’s Mr. Moist von Lipwick, he is!” said a coachman at the back. “He’s the postmaster general!”
“Someone came crashing through the window, landed right between—I mean, nearly landed on me!” shouted the man in the dressing gown. “He ran off down the corridor! Ten dollars a man if you catch him! And it’s Lipwig, actually!”
That would have restarted the stampede, but the hostler said, in a suspicious voice, “Here, say the word guv, will you?”
“What are you on about?” said the coachman.
“He doesn’t half sound like that bloke,” said the hostler. “And he’s out of breath!”
“Are you stupid?” said the coachman. “He’s the postmaster! He’s got a bloody key! He’s got all the keys! Why the hell would he want to break into his own post office?”
“I reckon we ought to take a look in that room,” said the hostler.
“Really? Well, I reckon what Mr. Lipwig does to get out of breath in his own room is his own affair,” said the coachman, giving Moist a huge wink. “An’ I reckon ten dollars a man is running away from me ’cos of you being a tit. Sorry about this, sir,” he said to Moist, “he’s new and he ain’t got no manners. We will now be leaving you, sir,” he added, touching where he thought his forelock was, “with further apologies for any inconvenience which may have been caused. Now get cracking, you bastards!”
When they were out of sight, Moist went back into his room and carefully bolted the door behind him.
Well, at least he had some skills. That slight hint that there was a woman in his room had definitely swung it. Anyway, he was the postmaster general and he did have all the keys.
It was only an hour before dawn. He’d never get to sleep again. He might as well arise formally and enhance a reputation for keenness.
They might have shot him right off the wall, he thought, as he sorted out a shirt. They could have left him to hang there and taken bets on how long it’d be before he lost his grip; that would be the Ankh-Morpork way. It was just his good luck that they’d decided to give him a righteous smack or two before posting him through the guild’s letter box. And luck came to those who left a space for it—
There was a heavy yet somehow still polite knock on the door.
“Are You Decent, Mr. Lipwig?” a voice boomed.
Regrettably, yes, thought Moist, but said aloud: “Come in, Gladys.”
The floorboards creaked and furniture rattled on the other side of the room as Gladys entered.
Gladys was a golem, a clay man (or, for the sake of not having an argument, a clay woman) nearly seven feet tall. She—well, with a name like Gladys “it” was unthinkable and “he” just didn’t do the job—wore a very large blue dress.
Moist shook his head. The whole silly business had been a matter of etiquette, really. Miss Maccalariat, who ruled the Post Office counters with a rod of steel and lungs of brass, had objected to a male golem cleaning the ladies’ privies. How Miss Maccalariat had arrived at the conclusion that they were male by nature rather than custom was a fascinating mystery, but there was no profit in arguing with such as her.
And thus, with the addition of one extremely large cotton print dress, a golem became female enough for Miss Maccalariat.
The odd thing was that Gladys was female now, somehow. It wasn’t just the dress. She tended to spend time around the counter girls, who seemed to accept her into the sisterhood despite the fact that she weighed half a ton. They even passed their fashion magazine on to her, although it was hard to imagine what winter skin-care tips would mean to someone a thousand years old, with eyes that glowed like holes into a furnace.
And now she was asking him if he was decent. How would she tell?
She’d brought him a cup of tea and the city edition of the Times, still damp from the press. Both were placed, with care, on the table.
And…oh gods,
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