The Last Continent
bread with it. Not that they’ve been unkind,” she added quickly, polite even in the throes of woe, “but really there’s got to be more to life than getting beer thrown at you every night and being chased out of town.”
Rincewind felt confident enough to venture a “there, there.” He didn’t risk a “pat, pat.”
“Really I only did it because of Noelene dropping out,” Neilette sobbed. “And I’m about the same height and Letitia couldn’t find anyone else in time and I needed the money and she said it would be okay provided people didn’t notice my hands were so small…”
“Noelene being—?”
“My brother. I told him, trying for the surf championship is fine, and ballgowns are fine, but both together? I don’t think so. Did you know what a nasty rash you can get from being rolled across coral? And next morning Letitia had this tour organized and, well, it seemed a good idea at the time.”
“Noelene…” Rincewind mused. “That’s an unusual name for a…”
“Darleen said you wouldn’t understand.” Neilette stared into the middle distance. “I think my brother worked in the factory too long,” she mused. “He always was very impressionable. Anyway, I—”
“Oh, I get it, he’s a female impersonator ” said Rincewind. “Oh, I know about those . Old pantomime tradition. A couple of balloons, straw wig and a few grubby jokes. Why, when I was a student, at Hogswatch parties old Farter Carter and Really Pants would put on a turn where—”
He was aware that she was giving him one of those long, slow looks.
“Tell me,” she said. “Do you get about much?”
“You’d be amazed,” said Rincewind.
“And you meet all kinds of people?”
“Generally the nastier kind, I have to admit.”
“Well, some men…” Neilette stopped. “Really Pants? That was someone’s name ?”
“Not exactly. He was called Ronald Pants, so of course when anyone heard that they said—”
“Oh, is that all?” said Neilette. She stood up and blew her nose. “I told the others I’d leave when we got to the Galah, so they’ll understand. Being a…female impersonator is no job for a woman, which is what I am, incidentally. I’d hoped it was obvious, but in your case I thought I’d better mention it. Can you get us out of here, Trunkie?”
The Luggage wandered over to the wall at the end of the alley and kicked it until there was a decent-sized hole. On the way back it clogged a watchman who was unwise enough to stir.
“Er, I call him the Luggage,” said Rincewind helplessly.
“Really? We call her Trunkie.”
The wall opened up into a dark room. Crates were packed against the walls, covered with cobwebs.
“Oh, we’re in the old brewery,” said Neilette. “Well, the new one, really. Let’s find a door.”
“Good idea,” said Rincewind, eyeing the spider-webs. “ New brewery? Looks pretty old to me…”
Neilette rattled a door. “Locked,” she said. “Come on, we’ll find another one. Look, it’s the new brewery because we built it to replace the one over the river. But it never worked. The beer went flat, or something. They all said it was haunted. Everyone knows that, don’t they? We went back to the old brewery. My dad lost nearly all his money.”
“Why?”
“He owned it. Just about broke his heart, that did. He left it to me,” she tried another door, “because, well, he never got on with Noelene, what with the, well, you know, or rather, obviously you don’t…but it ruined the business, really. And Roo Beer used to be the best there was.”
“Can’t you sell it? The site, I mean.”
“Here? A place where beer goes flat within five seconds? Can’t give it away.”
Rincewind peered up at the big metal vats. “Perhaps it was built on some old religious site,” he said. “That sort of thing can happen, you know. Back home there was this fish restaurant that got built on a—”
Neilette rattled another unbudging door. “That’s what everyone thought,” she said. “But apparently Dad asked all the local tribes and they said it wasn’t. They said it wasn’t any kind of sacred site. They said it was an unsacred site. Some chief went to prison to see the prime minister and said, ‘Mate, your mob can dig it all up and drop it over the edge of the world, no worries.’”
“Why did he have to go to prison?”
“We put all our politicians in prison as soon as they’re elected. Don’t you?”
“Why?”
“It saves time.” She
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