'I imagine you would. Pot luck, though, I am afraid. Skrp's people are bright enough, but they seem to have a bit of a blind spot when it comes to labels on bottles.'

Lord Vetinari patted his face with a towel and dropped it on the floor. A grey shape darted from the shadows and dragged it away down the floor grille.

Then he said, 'Very well, Skrp. You may go.' The rat twitched its whiskers at him, leaned the mirror against the wall, and trotted off.

'You're waited on by rats?' said Vimes.

'They help out, you know. They're not really very efficient, I'm afraid. It's their paws.'

'But, but, but,' said Vimes. 'I mean, how?'

'I suspect Skrp's people have tunnels that extend into the University,' Lord Vetinari went on. 'Although I think they were probably pretty bright to start with.'

At least Vimes understood that bit. It was well known that thaumic radiations affected animals living around the Unseen University campus, sometimes prodding them towards minute analogues of human civilisation and even mutating some of them into entirely new and specialised species, such as the bookworm and the wallfish. And, as the man said, rats were quite bright to start with. 'But they're helping you?' said Vimes.

'Mutual. It's mutual. Payment for services rendered, you might say,' said the Patrician, sitting down on what Vimes couldn't help noticing was a small velvet cushion. On a low shelf, so as to be handy, were a notepad and a neat row of books.

'How can you help rats, sir?' he said weakly.

'Advice. I advise them, you know.' The Patrician leaned back. 'That's the trouble with people like Wonse,' he said. 'They never know when to stop. Rats, snakes and scorpions. It was sheer bedlam in here when I came. The rats were getting the worst of it, too.'

And Vimes thought he was beginning to get the drift. 'You mean you sort of trained them?' he said.

'Advised. Advised. I suppose it's a knack,' said Lord Vetinari modestly.

Vimes wondered how it was done. Did the rats side with the scorpions against the snakes and then, when the snakes were beaten, invite the scorpions to a celebratory slap-up meal and eat them? Or were individual scorpions hired with large amounts of, oh, whatever it-was scorpions ate, to sidle up to selected leading snakes at night and sting them?

He remembered hearing once about a man who, locked up in a cell for years, trained little birds and created a sort of freedom. And he thought of ancient sailors, shorn of the sea by old age and infirmity, who spent their days making big ships in little bottles.

Then he thought of the Patrician, robbed of his city, sitting cross-legged on the grey floor in

Вы читаете Guards! Guards!
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату