Maskerade. - Part 27
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Part 27

"I've been to see Commander Vimes of the city Watch," said Salzella. "He said he'll have some of his best men here tonight. Undercover."

"I thought you said they were all incompetent."

Salzella shrugged. "We've got to do this properly. Did you know Dr. Undershaft was strangled before he was hung?"

"Hanged," said Bucket, without thinking. "Men are hanged. It's dead meat that's hung."

"Indeed?" said Salzella. "I appreciate the information. Well, poor old Undershaft was strangled, apparently. And then he was hung."

"Really, Salzella, you do have a misplaced sense-"

"I've finished now Mr. Bucket!"

"Yes, thank you, Walter. You may go."

"Yes Mr. Bucket!"

Walter closed the door behind him, very conscientiously.

"I'm afraid it's working here," said Salzella. "If you don't find some way of dealing with...are you all right, Mr. Bucket?"

"What?" Bucket, who'd been staring at the closed door, shook his head. "Oh. Yes. Er. Walter..."

"What about him?"

"He's...all right, is he?"

"Oh, he's got his...funny little ways. He's harmless enough, if that's what you mean. Some of the stagehands and musicians are a bit cruel to him...you know, sending him out for a tin of invisible paint or a bag of nail holes and so on. He believes what he's told. Why?"

"Oh...I just wondered. Silly, really."

"I suppose he is, technically."

"No, I meant-Oh, it doesn't matter..."

Granny Weatherwax and Nanny Ogg left Goatberger's office and walked demurely down the street. At least. Granny walked demurely. Nanny leaned somewhat.

Every thirty seconds she'd say, "How much was that again?"

"Three thousand, two hundred and seventy dollars and eighty-seven pence," said Granny. She was looking thoughtful.

"I thought it was nice of him to look in all the ashtrays for all the odd coppers he could round up," said Nanny. "Those he could reach, anyway. How much was that again?"

"Three thousand, two hundred and seventy dollars and eighty-seven pence."

"I've never had seventy dollars before," said Nanny.

"I didn't say just seventy dollars, I said-"

"Yes, I know. But I'm working my way up to it gradual. I'll say this about money. It really chafes."

"I don't know why you have to keep your purse in your knicker leg," said Granny.

"It's the last place anybody would look." Nanny sighed. "How much did you say it was?"

"Three thousand, two hundred and seventy dollars and eighty-seven pence."

"I'm going to need a bigger tin."

"You're going to need a bigger chimney."

"I could certainly do with a bigger knicker leg." She nudged Granny. "You're going to have to be polite to me now I'm rich," she said.

"Yes, indeed," said Granny, with a faraway look in her eyes. "Don't think I'm not considering that."

She stopped. Nanny walked into her, with a tinkle of lingerie.

The frontage of the Opera House loomed over them.

"We've got to get back in there," Granny said. "And into Box Eight."

"Crowbar," said Nanny, firmly. "A No. 3 claw end should do it."

"We're not your Nev," said Granny. "Anyway, breaking in wouldn't be the same thing. We've got to have a right right to be there." to be there."

"Cleaners," said Nanny. "We could be cleaners, and...no, 's not right me being a cleaner now, in my position."

"No, we can't have that, with you in your position."

Granny glanced down at Nanny as a coach pulled up outside the Opera House. "O' course," she said, artfulness dripping off her voice like toffee, "we could always buy buy Box Eight." Box Eight."

"Wouldn't work," said Nanny. People were hurrying down the steps with the cuff-adjusting, sticky looks of welcoming committees everywhere. "They're scared of selling it."

"Why not?" said Granny. "There's people dying and the opera goes on. That means someone's prepared to sell his own grandmother if he'd make enough money."

"It'd cost a fortune, anyway," said Nanny.

She looked at Granny's triumphant expression and groaned. "Oh, Esme! I was going to save that money for me old age!" She thought for a moment. "Anyway, it still still wouldn't work. I mean, look at us, we don't look like the right kind of people..." wouldn't work. I mean, look at us, we don't look like the right kind of people..."

Enrico Basilica got out of the coach.

"But we know know the right kind of people," said Granny. the right kind of people," said Granny.

"Oh, Esme!"

The shop bell tinkled in a refined tone, as if it were embarra.s.sed to do something as vulgar as ring. It would have much preferred to give a polite cough.

This was Ankh-Morpork's most prestigious dress shop, and one way of telling was the apparent absence of anything so cra.s.s as merchandise. The occasional carefully placed piece of expensive material merely hinted at the possibilities available.

This was not a shop where things were bought. This was an emporium where you had a cup of coffee and a chat. Possibly, as a result of that muted conversation, four or five yards of exquisite fabric would change ownership in some ethereal way, and yet nothing so cra.s.s as trade trade would have taken place. would have taken place.

"Shop!" yelled Nanny.

A lady appeared from behind a curtain and observed the visitors, quite possibly with her nose.

"Have you come to the right entrance?" she said. Madame Dawning had been brought up to be polite to servants and tradespeople, even when they were as scruffy as these two old crows.

"My friend here wants a new dress," said the dumpier of the two. "One of the n.o.bby ones with a train and a padded b.u.m."

"In black," said the thin one.

"And we wants all the tr.i.m.m.i.n.gs," said the dumpy one. "Little handbag onna string, pair of gla.s.ses onna stick, the whole thing."

"I think perhaps that might be a leetle leetle more than you're thinking of spending," said Madame Dawning. more than you're thinking of spending," said Madame Dawning.

"How much is a leetle?" said the dumpy one.

"I mean that this is rather a select select dress shop." dress shop."

"That's why we're here. We don't want rubbish. My name's Nanny Ogg and this here is...Lady Esmerelda Weatherwax."

Madame Dawning regarded Lady Esmerelda quizzically. There was no doubt that the woman had a certain bearing. And she stared like a d.u.c.h.ess.

"From Lancre," said Nanny Ogg. "And she could have a conservatory if she liked, but she doesn't want one."

"Er..." Madame Dawning decided to play along for a while. "What style were you considering?"

"Something n.o.bby," said Nanny Ogg.

"I perhaps would like a leetle leetle more guidance than that-" more guidance than that-"

"Perhaps you could show us some things," said Lady Esmerelda, sitting down. "It's for the opera."

"Oh, you patronize the opera?"

"Lady Esmerelda patronizes everything everything," said Nanny Ogg stoutly.

Madame Dawning had a manner peculiar to her cla.s.s and upbringing. She'd been raised to see the world in a certain way. When it didn't act in that certain way she wobbled a bit but, like a gyroscope, eventually recovered and went on spinning just as if it had. If civilization were to collapse totally and the survivors were reduced to eating c.o.c.kroaches, Madame Dawning would still use a napkin and look down on people who ate their c.o.c.kroaches the wrong way around.

"I will, er, show you some examples," she said. "Excuse me one one moment." moment."

She scuttled into the long workrooms behind the shop, where there was considerably less gilt, and leaned against the wall and summoned her chief seamstress.

"Mildred, there are two very very strange-" strange-"

She stopped. They'd followed followed her! her!

They were wandering down the aisle between the rows of dressmakers, nodding at people and inspecting some of the dresses on the dummies.

She hurried back. "I'm sure sure you'd prefer-" you'd prefer-"

"How much is this one?" said Lady Esmerelda, fingering a creation intended for the Dowager d.u.c.h.ess of Quirm.

"I am afraid afraid that one is not for sale-" that one is not for sale-"

"How much would it be if it was for sale?"

"Three hundred dollars, I believe," said Madame Dawning.

"Five hundred seems about right," said Lady Esmerelda.

"Does it?" said Nanny Ogg. "Oh, it does, does it?"

The dress was black. At least, in theory it was black. It was black in the same way that a starling's wing is black. It was black silk, with jet beads and sequins. It was black on holiday.

"It looks about my size. We'll take it. Pay the woman, Gytha."

Madame's gyroscope precessed rapidly. "Take it? Now? Five hundred dollars? Pay? Pay now now? Cash Cash?"

"See to it, Gytha."

"Oh, all right right."

Nanny Ogg turned away modestly and raised her skirt. There was a series of rustlings and elasticated tw.a.n.gings, and then she turned around, holding a bag.

She counted out fifty rather warm ten-dollar pieces into Madame Dawning's unprotesting hand.

"And now we'll go back into the shop and have a poke around for the other stuff," said Lady Esmerelda. "I fancy ostrich feathers myself. And one of those big cloaks the ladies wear. And one of those fans edged with lace."

"Why don't we get some great big diamonds while we're about it?" said Nanny Ogg sharply.

"Good idea."

Madame Dawning could hear them bickering as they ambled away up the aisle.

She looked down at the money in her hand.

She knew about old money, which was somehow hallowed by the fact that people had hung on to it for years, and she knew about new money, which seemed to be being made by all these upstarts that were flooding into the city these days. But under her powdered bosom she was an Ankh-Morpork shopkeeper, and knew that the best kind of money was the sort that was in her hand rather than someone else's. The best kind of money was mine, not yours.

Besides, she was also enough of a sn.o.b to confuse rudeness with good breeding. In the same way that the really rich can never be mad (they're eccentric), so they can also never be rude (they're outspoken and forthright).