keys.”
Detritus scratched his head. “Shouldn't there be some blood?” he ventured.
Nobby gave him a sour look. “He couldn't've got away,” he said. “So don't go asking questions like that.”
“Only, if humans is hit hard enough, they leaks all over der place,” said Detritus.
Nobby sighed. That was the calibre of people you got in the Watch these days. They had to make a mystery of things. In days gone by, when it had been just the old gang and an unofficial policy of
Detritus reached down and picked up an eyepatch.
“What d'you think, then?” said Nobby scornfully. “You think he turned into a bat and flew away?”
“Ha! I do not t'ink that 'cos it is in… consist… ent with modern policing,” said Detritus.
“Well,
“Was dat irony?”
“That was metaphor.”
Detritus, uneasy in what was technically his mind, prodded at the torn pieces of clothing.
Something brushed against his leg. It was a cat. It had tattered ears, one good eye, and a face like a fist with fur on it.
“Hello, little cat,” said Detritus.
The cat stretched and grinned. “Gerrt lorssst, coppuurrrr…”
Detritus blinked. There are no such things as troll cats, and Detritus had never seen a cat before he'd arrived in AnkhMorpork and discovered that they were very, very hard to eat. And he'd never heard of them talking. On the other hand, he was very much aware of his reputation as the most stupid person in the city, and he wasn't going to draw attention to a talking cat if it were going to turn out that everybody except him knew that they talked all the time.
In the gutter, a few feet away, there was something white. He picked it up carefully. It looked like the mask the Ghost had worn.
This was probably a Clue.
He waved it urgently. “Hey, Nobby—”
“Thank you.” Something dipped through the darkness, snatched the mask from the troll's hand, and soared into the night.
Corporal Nobbs turned around. “Yes?” he said.
“Er… how big are birds? Normally?”
“Oh, blimey, I dunno. Some are small, some are big. Who cares?”
Detritus sucked his finger. “Oh, no reason,” he said. “I am far too smart to be taken in by perfec'ly normal t'ings.”
Something squelched underfoot.
“It's pretty damp down here, Walter,” said Nanny.
And the air was stale and heavy and seemed to be squeezing the light from the torch. There was a dark edge to the flame.
“Not far now Mrs Ogg!”
Keys jingled in the darkness, and some hinges creaked.
“I found this Mrs Ogg! It's the Ghost's secret cave!”
“Secret cave, eh?”
“You got to shut your eyes! You got to shut your eyes!” said Walter urgently.
Nanny did so, but to her shame kept a grip on the torch, just in case. She said: “And is the Ghost in there, Walter?”
“No!”
There was the rattle of a matchbox and some scuffling, and then: “You can open them now Mrs Ogg!”
Nanny did so.
Colour and light blurred and then swam into focus, first in her eyes and then, eventually, in her brain. “Oh, my,” she murmured. “Oh, my, my…”
There were candles, the big flat ones used to illuminate the stage, floating in shallow bowls. The light they gave was soft, and it rippled over the room like the soul of water.
It glinted off the beak of a huge swan. It glittered in the eye of a vast, sagging dragon.
Nanny Ogg turned slowly. Her experience of opera had not been a lengthy one but witches pick things up quickly, and
…here was opera, all piled in a heap. Once the eye had taken it all in, it had time to notice the peeling paint and rotting plaster and the general air of gentle mouldering. The decrepit props and threadbare costumes had been dumped in here because people didn't want them anywhere else.
But someone
There was something like a desk in the tiny area of floor not occupied by the props. And then Nanny realized that it had a keyboard and a stool, and there were neat piles of paper on top of it.
Walter was watching her with a big, proud grin.
Nanny ambled over to the thing. “It's a harmonium, ain't it? A tiny organ?”
“That's right Mrs Ogg!”
Nanny picked up one of the sheaves of paper. Her lips moved as she read the meticulous copperplate writing.
“An opera about
She thought for a moment, and then added to herself But why not? It's a damn good idea. The lives of cats are just like operas, when you come to think about it.
She leafed through the other piles. “Guys
She sat down on the stool and pressed a few of the cracked yellow keys, which moved with an audible creak. There were a couple of large pedals under the harmonium. You pedalled these and that worked the bellows and these spongy keys produced something which was to organ music what 'poot' was to cursing.
So this was where Wal… where the Ghost sat, thought Nanny, down under the stage, among the discarded wreckage of old performances; down under the huge windowless room where, night after night, music and songs and rampant emotion echoed back and forth and never escaped or entirely died away. The Ghost worked down here, with a mind as open as a well, and it filled up with opera. Opera went in at the ears, and something else came out of the mind.
Nanny pumped the pedals a few times. Air hissed from inefficient seams. She tried a few notes. They were reedy. But, she considered, sometimes the old lie was true, and size really did not matter. It really was what you did with it that counted.
Walter watched her expectantly.
She took down another wad of paper and peered at the first page. But Walter leaned over and snatched at the script.
“That one's not finished Mrs Ogg!”