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Soul Music

Soul Music

Titel: Soul Music Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Terry Pratchett
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such a din.
    And then…and then…it wasn’t a din anymore.
    It was like that nonsense about white light that the young wizards in the High Energy Magic Building went on about. They said that all the colors together made up white, which was bloody nonsense as far as Ridcully was concerned, because everyone knew that if you mixed up all the colors you could get your hands on you got a sort of greeny-brown mess which certainly wasn’t any kind of white. But now he had a vague idea what they meant.
    All this noise, this mess of music, suddenly came together and there was a new music inside it.
    The Dean’s quiff was quivering.
    The whole crowd was moving.
    Ridcully realized his foot was tapping. He stamped on it with his other foot.
    Then he watched the troll pick up the beat and hammer the rocks until the walls shook. The Librarian’s fingers swooped along the keyboard. Then his toes did the same. And all the time the guitar hooted and screamed and sang out the melody.
    The wizards were bouncing in their seats and twirling their fingers in the air.
    Ridcully leaned over to the Bursar and screamed at him.
    “What?” shouted the Bursar.
    “I said, they’ve all gone mad except me and you!”
    “What?”
    “It’s the music!”
    “Yes! It’s great!” said the Bursar, waving his skinny hands in the air.
    “And I’m not too certain about you!”
    Ridcully sat down again and pulled out the thaumometer. It was vibrating crazily, which was no help at all. It didn’t seem to be able to decide if this was magic or not.
    He nudged the Bursar sharply.
    “This ain’t magic! This is something else!”
    “You’re exactly right!”
    Ridcully had the feeling that he suddenly wasn’t speaking the right language.
    “I mean it’s too much!”
    “Yes!”
    Ridcully sighed.
    “Is it time for your dried frog pill?”
    Smoke was coming out of the stricken piano. The Librarian’s hands were walking through the keys like Casanunda in a nunnery.
    Ridcully looked around. He felt all alone.
    Someone else hadn’t been overcome by the music. Satchelmouth had stood up. So had his two associates.
    They had drawn some knobbly clubs. Ridcully knew the Guild laws. Of course, they had to be enforced. You couldn’t run a city without them. This certainly wasn’t licensed music—if ever there was unlicensed music, this was it. Nevertheless…he rolled up his sleeve and prepared a quick fireball, just in case.
    One of the men dropped his club and clutched his foot. The other one spun around as if something had slapped his ear. Satchelmouth’s hat dented, as if someone had just hit him on the head.
    Ridcully, one eye watering terribly, thought he made out the Tooth Fairy girl bringing the handle of a scythe down on Satchelmouth’s head.
    The Archchancellor was quite a bright man but often had trouble in forcing his train of thought to change tracks. He was having difficulty with the idea of a scythe, after all, grass didn’t have teeth—and then the fireball burned his fingers, and then , as he sucked frantically at them, he realized that there was something in the sound. Something extra .
    “Oh, no,” he said, as the fireball floated to the floor and set fire to the Bursar’s boot, “ it’s alive .”
    He grabbed the beer mug, finished the contents hurriedly, and rammed it upside down on the tabletop.

    The moon shone over the Klatchian desert, in the vicinity of the dotted line. Both sides of it got exactly the same amount of moonlight, although minds like Mr. Clete’s deplored this state of affairs.
    The sergeant strolled across the packed sand of the parade ground. He stopped, sat down, and produced a cheroot. Then he pulled out a match, reached down, and struck it on something sticking out of the sand, which said:
    GOOD EVENING.
    “I expect you’ve had enough, eh, soldier?” said the sergeant.
    ENOUGH WHAT, SERGEANT?
    “Two days in the sun, no food, no water…I expect you’re delirious with thirst and are just begging to be dug out, eh?”
    YES. IT IS CERTAINLY VERY DULL.
    “Dull?”
    I AM AFRAID SO.
    “ Dull? It’s not meant to be dull! It’s the Pit! It’s meant to be a horrible physical and mental torture! After one day of it you’re supposed to be a…” The sergeant glanced surreptitiously at some writing on his wrist, “…a raving madman! I’ve been watching you all day! You haven’t even groaned! I can’t sit in my…thing, you sit in it, there’s papers and

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