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Making Money

Making Money

Titel: Making Money Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Terry Pratchett
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whole “three thumbs” situation. The women found handsome husbands who did what they were told, while the men found wives who, amazingly, were remarkably good at picking up the petulance and shaved-monkey touchiness that was the mark of a true Lavish.
    Josephine sat down with a poisonous look of satisfaction at the muttered chorus of agreement. She sprang up again, for an encore: “And what do you intend to do about this unforgivable situation? Your branch has put a mountebank in control of our bank! Again!”
    Pucci spun in her seat. “How dare you say that about Father!”
    “And how dare you say that about Mr. Fusspot!” said Cosmo.
    It would have worked for Vetinari, he knew it. It would have made Josephine look silly and raised Cosmo’s stock in the room. It would have worked for Vetinari, who could raise his eyebrow like a visual rim shot.
    “What? What? What are you talking about?” said Josephine. “Don’t be so silly, child! I’m talking about this Lipwig creature! He’s a postman, for goodness’ sake! Why haven’t you offered him money?”
    “I have,” said Cosmo, and added for his inner ear: I’ll remember “child,” you whey-faced old boot. When I am a master of the eyebrow we shall see what you say then!
    “And?”
    “I believe he is not interested in money.”
    “Nonsense!”
    “What about the little doggie?” said an elderly voice. “What happens if it passes away, gods forbid?”
    “The bank comes back to us, Aunt Careful,” said Cosmo to a very small old lady in black lace, who was engaged in some embroidery.
    “No matter how the little doggie dies?” said Aunt Carefulness Lavish, paying fastidious attention to her needlework. “There is always the option of poison, I am sure.”
    With an audible woosh, Aunt Careful’s lawyer rose to his feet and said: “My client wishes to make it clear that she is merely referring to the general availability of noxious substances in general and this is not intended to be and in no way should be taken as an espousal of any illegal course of action.”
    He sat down again, fee earned.
    “Regrettably, the Watch would be all over us like cheap chain mail,” said Cosmo.
    “Watchmen in our bank? Shut the door on them!”
    “Times have moved on, Auntie. We can’t do that anymore.”
    “When your great-grandfather pushed his brother over the balcony the Watch even took the body away for five shillings and a pint of ale all round!”
    “Yes, Auntie. Lord Vetinari is the Patrician now.”
    “And he’d allow watchmen to clump around in our bank?”
    “Without a doubt, Auntie.”
    “Then he is no gentleman,” the aunt observed sadly.
    “He lets vampires and werewolves into the Watch,” said Miss Tarantella Lavish. “It’s disgusting, the way they’re allowed to walk the streets like real people.”
    —and something went ping! in Cosmo’s memory.
    He’s just like real people, said the voice of his father.
    “This is your problem, Cosmo Lavish!” said Josephine, unwilling to see targets switched. “It was your wretched father who—”
    “Shut up,” said Cosmo calmly. “Shut up. And those emeralds do not suit you, by the way.”
    This was unusual. Lavishes might sue and conspire and belittle and slander, but there was such a thing as good manners, after all.
    In Cosmo’s head there was another ping, and his father saying, And he’s managed to hide what he is so well and at great pain.
    What he was is probably not even there anymore. But you’d better know, in case he starts acting funny…
    “My father rebuilt the business of the bank,” said Cosmo, the voice still ringing in his head as Josephine drew breath for a tirade, “and you all let him. Yes, you let him. You didn’t care what he did so long as the bank was available to you for all your little schemes, the ones we so carefully conceal and don’t talk about. He bought out all the small shareholders, and you didn’t mind so long as you got your dividends. It was just a shame that his choice in chums was flawed—”
    “Not as bad as his choice of that upstart music-hall girl!” said Josephine.
    “—although his choice in his last wife was not,” Cosmo went on. “Topsy was cunning, devious, ruthless, and merciless. The problem I have is simply that she was better at all this than you are. And now I must ask you all to leave. I am going to get our bank back. Do see yourselves out.”
    He got up, walked to the door, shut it carefully behind, and then

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