Soul Music
lot.”
The guitar hummed. Buddy picked it up and plucked a string.
Glod dropped his knife.
“That sounded like a piano!” he said.
“I think it can sound like anything,” said Buddy. “And now it knows about pianos.”
“Magic,” said Cliff.
“Of course magic,” said Glod. “That’s what I keep saying . A strange old thing found in a dusty old shop one stormy night—”
“It wasn’t stormy,” said Cliff.
“—it’s bound to…yes, all right, but it was raining a bit…it’s bound to be a bit special. I bet if we was to go back now, the shop wouldn’t be there. And that’d prove it. Everyone knows things bought from shops which aren’t there next day are dead mysterious and items of Fate. Fate’s smiling on us, could be.”
“Doing something on us,” said Cliff. “I hope it’s smiling.”
“And Mr. Dibbler said he’d find us somewhere really special to play tomorrow.”
“Good,” said Buddy. “We must play.”
“Right,” said Cliff. “We play all right. It’s our job.”
“People should hear our music.”
“Sure.” Cliff looked puzzled. “Right. Of course. Dat’s what we want. And some pay, too.”
“Mr. Dibbler’ll help us,” said Glod, who was too preoccupied to notice the edge in Buddy’s voice. “He must be very successful. He’s got an office in Sator Square. Only very posh businesses can afford that.”
A new day dawned.
It had hardly finished doing so before Ridcully hurried through the dewy grass of the University gardens and hammered on the door of the High Energy Magic Building.
Generally he never went near the place. It wasn’t that he didn’t understand what it was the young wizards in there were actually doing, but because he strongly suspected that they didn’t, too. They seemed to positively enjoy becoming less and less certain about everything and would come in to dinner saying things like “Wow, we’ve just overturned Marrowleaf’s Theory of Thaumic Imponderability! Amazing!” as if it was something to be proud of, instead of gross discourtesy.
And they were always talking about splitting the thaum, the smallest unit of magic. The Archchancellor couldn’t see the point. So you had bits all over the place. What good would that do? The universe was bad enough without people poking it.
The door opened.
“Oh, it’s you, Archchancellor.”
Ridcully pushed the door open farther.
“’Morning, Stibbons. Glad to see you’re up and about early.”
Ponder Stibbons, the faculty’s youngest member, blinked at the sky.
“Is it morning already?” he said.
Ridcully pushed his way past him and into the HEM. It was unfamiliar ground for a traditional wizard. There wasn’t a skull or dribbly candle to be seen; this particular room looked like an alchemist’s laboratory had suffered the inevitable explosion and landed in a blacksmith’s shop.
Nor did he approve of Stibbons’s robe. It was the right length but a washed-out greeny-grey, with pockets and toggles and a hood with a bit of rabbit fur around the edge. There weren’t any sequins or jewels or mystic symbols anywhere . Just a blodgy stain where Stibbons’s pen leaked.
“You ain’t been out lately?” said Ridcully.
“No, sir. Er. Should I have been? I’ve been busy working on my Make-It-Bigger device. You know, I showed you—” *
“Right, right,” said Ridcully, looking around. “Anyone else been working in here?”
“Well…there’s me, and Tez the Terrible and Skazz and Big Mad Drongo, I think…”
Ridcully blinked.
“What are they?” he said. And then, from the depths of memory, a horrible answer suggested itself. Only a very specific species had names like that.
“ Students? ”
“Er. Yes?” said Ponder, backing away. “That’s all right, isn’t it? I mean, this is a university…”
Ridcully scratched his ear. The man was right, of course. You had to have some of the buggers around, there was no getting away from it. Personally, he avoided them wherever possible, as did the rest of the faculty, occasionally running the other way or hiding behind doors whenever they saw them. The Lecturer in Recent Runes had been known to lock himself in his wardrobe rather than take a tutorial.
“You better fetch ’em,” he said. “The fact is, I seem to have lost my faculty.”
“For what, Archchancellor?” said Ponder, politely.
“What?”
“Sorry?”
They looked at one another in incomprehension, two minds driving the wrong way up a
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