Moving Pictures
people just ’cos they’ve been given a meal? What’s he want me to do with this??”
Laddie had dropped a stick in front of Gaspode and was looking at him expectantly.
“He wants you to throw it,” said Victor.
“What for?”
“So he can bring it back.”
“What I don’t understand,” said Gaspode, as Victor picked up the stick and hurled it away, Laddie racing along underneath it, “is how come we’re descended from wolves. I mean, your average wolf, he’s a bright bugger, know what I mean? Chock full of cunnin’ an’ like that. We’re talking gray paws racing over the trackless tundra, is what I’m getting at.”
Gaspode looked wistfully at the distant mountains. “And suddenly a handful of generations later we’ve got Percy the Pup here with a cold nose, bright eyes, glossy coat and the brains of a stunned herring.”
“And you,” said Victor. Laddie whirled back in a storm of sand and dropped the damp stick in front of him. Victor picked it up and threw it again. Laddie bounded off, yapping himself sick with excitement.
“Well, yeah,” said Gaspode, ambling along in a bow-legged swagger. “Only I can look after myself. It’s a dog-eat-dog world out there. You think Dopey the Mutt there would last five minutes in Ankh-Morpork? He set one paw in some o’ the streets, he’s three sets of fur gloves an’ Crispy Fried No. 27 at the nearest Klatchian all-night carryout.”
Victor threw the stick again.
“Tell me,” he said, “who was the famous Gaspode you’re named after?”
“You never heard of him?”
“No.”
“He was dead famous.”
“He was a dog?”
“Yeah. It was years and years ago. There was this ole bloke in Ankh who snuffed it, and he belonged to one of them religions where they bury you after you’re dead, an’ they did, and he had this ole dog—”
“—called Gaspode—?”
“Yeah, and this ole dog had been his only companion and after they buried the man he lay down on his grave and howled and howled for a couple of weeks. Growled at everybody who came near. An’ then died.”
Victor paused in the act of throwing the stick again.
“That’s very sad,” he said. He threw. Laddie tore along underneath it, and disappeared into a stand of scrubby trees on the hillside.
“Yeah. Everyone says it demonstrates a dog’s innocent and undyin’ love for ’is master,” said Gaspode, spitting the words out as if they were ashes.
“You don’t believe that, then?”
“Not really. I b’lieve any bloody dog will stay still an’ howl when you’ve just lowered the gravestone on his tail,” said Gaspode.
There was a ferocious barking.
“Don’t worry about it. He’s probably found a threatening rock or something,” said Gaspode.
He’d found Ginger.
The Librarian knuckled purposefully through the maze of Unseen University’s library and descended the steps toward the maximum-security shelves.
Nearly all the books in the Library were, being magical, considerably more dangerous than ordinary books; most of them were chained to the bookcases to stop them flapping around.
But the lower levels…
…there they kept the rogue books, the books whose behavior or mere contents demanded a whole shelf, a whole room to themselves. Cannibal books, books which, it left on a shelf with their weaker brethren, would be found looking considerably fatter and more smug in the smoking ashes next morning. Books whose mere contents pages could reduce the unprotected mind to gray cheese. Books that were not just books of magic, but magical books.
There’s a lot of loose thinking about magic. People go around talking about mystic harmonies and cosmic balances and unicorns, all of which is to real magic what a glove puppet is to the Royal Shakespeare Company.
Real magic is the hand around the bandsaw, the thrown spark in the powder keg, the dimension-warp linking you straight into the heart of a star, the flaming sword that burns all the way down to the pommel . Sooner juggle torches in a tar pit than mess with real magic. Sooner lie down in front of a thousand elephants.
At least, that’s what wizards say, which is why they charge such swingeingly huge fees for getting involved with the bloody stuff.
But down here, in the dark tunnels, there was no hiding behind amulets and starry robes and pointy hats. Down here, you either had it or you didn’t. And if you hadn’t got it, you’d had it.
There were sounds from behind the heavily barred doors as
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