NO. I WILL TAKE IT AS IT IS. THANK YOU. I WILL LEAVE VIA THE BACK WAY, IF IT'S ALL THE SAME TO YOU.
‘Er… how did you get
THROUGH THE WALL. SO MUCH MORE CONVENIENT THAN CHIMNEYS, DON'T YOU THINK?
The apparition dropped a small clinking bag on the counter and lifted the horse easily. The shopkeeper wasn't in a position to hold on to anything. Even yesterday's dinner was threatening to leave him.
The figure looked at the other shelves.
YOU MAKE GOOD TOYS.
‘Er… thank you.’
INCIDENTALLY, said the customer, as he left, THERE IS A SMALL BOY OUT THERE WITH HIS NOSE FROZEN TO THE WINDOW. SOME WARM WATER SHOULD DO THE TRICK.
Death walked out to where Binky was waiting in the snow and tied the toy horse behind the saddle.
ALBERT WILL BE VERY PLEASED. I CAN'T WAIT TO SEE HIS FACE. HO. HO. HO.
As the light of Hogswatch lit the towers of Unseen University, the Archchancellor sat down with a sigh in his study and pulled off his boots.
It had been a damn long night, no doubt about it. Lots of strange things. First time he'd ever seen the Senior Wrangler burst into tears, for one thing.
Ridcully glanced at the door to the new bathroom. Well, he'd sorted out the teething troubles, and a nice warm shower would be very refreshing. And then he could go along to the organ recital all nice and clean.
He removed his hat, and someone fell out of it with a tinkling sound. A small gnome rolled across the floor.
‘Oh, another one. I thought we'd got rid of you fellows,’ said Ridcully. ‘And what are you?’
The gnome looked at him nervously.
‘Er… you know whenever there was another magical appearance you heard the sound of, er, bells?’ it said. Its expression suggested it was owning up to something it just knew was going to get it a smack.
‘Yes?’
The gnome held up some rather small handbells and waved them nervously. They went
‘Good, eh? That was me. I'm the Glingleglingleglingle Fairy.’
‘Get out.’
‘I also do sparkly fairy dust effects that go twing too, if you like…’
‘Go away!’
‘How about “
Ridcully scored a direct hit with the rubber duck, and the gnome escaped through the bath overflow. Cursing and spontaneous handbell ringing echoed away down the pipes.
In perfect peace at last, the Archchancellor pulled off his robe.
Warm water cascaded off Mustrum Ridcully's pointy bathing cap.
Mr Johnson had, surely not on purpose, designed a perfect bathroom — at least, perfect for singing in. Echoes and resonating pipeways smoothed out all those little imperfections and gave even the weediest singer a rolling, dark brown voice.
And so Ridcully sang.
‘—as I walked out one dadadadada for to something or other and to take the dadada, I did espy a fair pretty may-ay-den I think it was, and I—’
Ridcully stopped singing as the tones of the organ came through the wall.
Bathtime music, eh? he thought. Just the job.
It was a shame it was muffled by all the bathroom fixtures, though.
It was at this point he espied a small lever marked ‘Musical pipes’.
Ridcully, never being a man to wonder what any kind of switch did when it was so much easier and quicker to find out by pulling it, did so. But instead of the music he was expecting he was rewarded simply with several large panels sliding silently aside, revealing row upon row of brass nozzles.
Ridcully tapped the nozzles.
Nothing happened. He looked at the controls again, and realized that he'd never pulled the little brass lever marked ‘Organ Interlock’.
He did so. This did not cause a torrent of pleasant bathtime accompaniment, however. There was merely a thud and a distant gurgling which grew in volume.
He gave up, and went back to soaping his chest.
‘—running of the deer, the playing of… huh? What—’
Later that day he had the bathroom nailed up again and a notice placed on the door, on which was written:
‘Not to be used in any circumstances. This is IMPORTANT.’
However, when Modo nailed the door up he didn't hammer the nails in all the way but left just a bit sticking up so that his pliers would grip later on, when he was told to remove them. He never presumed and he never complained, he just had a good working knowledge of the wizardly mind.
They never did find the soap.
Ponder and his fellow students watched Hex carefully.
‘It can't just, you know,
‘The ants are just standing still,’ said Ponder. He sighed. ‘All right, put the wretched thing back.’