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Soul Music

Soul Music

Titel: Soul Music Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Terry Pratchett
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wouldn’t want the expense.”
    “What do you think, Buddy?” said Glod.
    “Don’t mind,” said Buddy vaguely.
    Glod and Cliff shared a glance.
    “I bet if you were to go and see Dibbler and demand something better you’d get it,” said Glod hopefully,
    “It’s got wheels,” said Buddy. “It’ll do.”
    He climbed aboard and sat down in the straw.
    “Mr. Dibbler’s had some new shirts done.” said Asphalt, aware that there was not a lot of jolliness in the air. “It’s for the tour. Look, it says on the back everywhere you’re going, isn’t that nice?”
    “Yes, when the Musicians’ Guild twist our heads round we’ll be able to see where we’ve been,” said Glod.
    Asphalt cracked his whip over the horses. They ambled off at a pace that suggested they intended to keep it up all day, and no idiot too soft to really use a whip properly was going to change their minds.

    “Buggrit, buggrit! The grawney man, says I. Buggrit. He’s a yellow gloak, so he is. Ten thousand years! Buggrit.”
    REALLY?
    Death relaxed.
    There were half a dozen people around the fire. And they were convivial. A bottle was circling the group. Well, actually it was half a tin, and Death hadn’t quite worked out what was in it or in the rather larger tin that was bubbling on the fire of old boots and mud.
    They hadn’t asked him who he was.
    None of them had names, as far as he could tell. They had…labels, like Stalling Ken and Coffin Henry and Foul Ole Ron, which said something about what they were but nothing about what they had been.
    The tin reached him. He passed it on as tactfully as he could, and lay back peacefully.
    People without names. People who were as invisible as he was. People for whom Death was always an option. He could stay here a while.

    “ Free music,” Clete growled. “Free! What sort of idiot makes music for free? At least you put a hat down, get people to drop the odd copper in. Otherwise what’s the point?”
    He stared at the paperwork in front of him for so long that Satchelmouth coughed politely.
    “I’m thinking,” said Mr. Clete. “That wretched Vetinari. He said it’s up to Guilds to enforce Guild law—”
    “I heard they’re leaving the city,” said Satchelmouth. “On tour. Out in the country, I heard. It’s not our law out there.”
    “The country,” said Mr. Clete. “Yes. Dangerous place, the country.”
    “Right,” said Satchelmouth. “There’s turnips, for a start.”
    Mr. Clete’s eye fell on the Guild’s account books. It occurred to him, not for the first time, that far too many people put their trust in iron and steel when gold made some of the best possible weapons.
    “Is Mr. Downey still head of the Assassins’ Guild?” he said.
    The other musicians looked suddenly nervous.
    “Assassins?” said Herbert “Mr. Harpsichord” Shuffle. “I don’t think anyone’s ever called in the Assassins. This is Guild business, isn’t it? Can’t have another Guild interfering.”
    “That’s right,” said Satchelmouth. “What’d happen if people knew we’d used the Assassins?”
    “We’d get a lot more members,” said Mr. Clete in his reasonable voice, “and we could probably put the subscriptions up. Hat. Hat. Hat.”
    “Now hang on a minute,” said Satchelmouth. “I don’t mind us seeing to people who won’t join. That’s proper Guild behavior, that is. But Assassins…well…”
    “Well what?” said Clete.
    “They assassinate people.”
    “You want free music, do you?” said Mr. Clete.
    “Well, of course I don’t want—”
    “I don’t remember you talking like this when you jumped up and down on that street violinist’s fingers last month,” said Clete.
    “Yeah, well, that wasn’t, like, assassination ,” said Satchelmouth. “I mean, he was able to walk away. Well, crawl away. And he could still earn a living,” he added. “Not one that required the use of his hands, sure, but—”
    “And that penny whistle lad? That one that plays a chord now every time he hiccups? Hat. Hat. Hat.”
    “Yeah, but that’s not the sa—”
    “Do you know Wheedown the guitar maker?” said Mr. Clete.
    Satchelmouth was unbalanced by the change in direction.
    “I’m told he’s been selling guitars like there was no next Wednesday,” said Mr. Clete. “But I don’t see any increase in membership, do you?”
    “Well—”
    “Once people get the idea that they can listen to music for nothing, where will it end?”
    He glared at the

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