“Call me Mithter Thilly, thur, but it theemth to me that we're alwayth on the point of thuctheth when her ladythip payth uth a vithit, but when thee'th gone we ecthperienth new difficultieth.”
“What are you suggesting, Igor?”
“Me, thur? I'm not a thuggethtive perthon, thur. But latht time part of the divider array had cracked.”
“You know I think that was because of dimensional instability!”
“
“Why are you giving me that funny look, Igor?”
Igor shrugged. That is, one shoulder was momentarily as high as the other one. “Goeth with the fathe, thur.”
“She'd hardly pay us so handsomely and then sabotage the project, would she? Why would she do that?”
Igor hesitated. He had his back right up against the Code now.
“I am thtill wondering if thee ith all thee theemth, thur.”
“Sorry? I didn't catch that.”
“I wonder if we can trutht her, thur,” said Igor patiently.
“Oh, go and calibrate the complexity resonator, will you?”
Grumbling, Igor obeyed.
The second time Igor'd followed their benefactor she'd gone to a hotel. Next day she'd headed for a large house in Kings Way, where she'd been met by an oily man who'd made a great play of presenting her with a key. Igor had followed the oleaginous man back to his office in a nearby street where—because there are few things that are kept from a man with a face full of stitches—he'd learned that she'd just bought the lease for a very large bar of gold.
After that, Igor had resorted to an ancient Ankh-Morpork tradition and paid someone to follow her ladyship. There was enough gold in the workshop, heavens knew, and the master took no interest in it.
Lady LeJean went to the opera. Lady LeJean went to art galleries. Lady LeJean was living life to the fullest. Except that Lady LeJean, as far as Igor could determine, never visited restaurants and had no food delivered to the house.
Lady LeJean was up to something. Igor could spot this easily. Lady LeJean also did not appear in
Now he reached the glass clock.
It looked almost complete. Jeremy had designed a mechanism to go behind the face and Igor had got it made up, all in glass. It had nothing whatsoever to do with the
Igor looked at his hand-me-down hands. They were beginning to worry him. Now that the glass clock
No one noticed Susan in the library of the Guild of Historians, leafing her way through a pile of books. Occasionally she made a note.
She didn't know if her other gift was from Death, but she'd always told the children that they had a lazy eye and a business eye. There were two ways of looking at the world. The lazy eye just saw the surface. The business eye saw through into the reality beneath.
She turned a page.
Seen through her business eye, history was very strange indeed. The scars stood out. The history of the country of Ephebe was puzzling, for example. Either its famous philosophers lived for a very long time, or they inherited their names, or extra bits had been stitched into history there. The history of Omnia was a
And what about Koom Valley? Everyone knew that there had been a famous battle there, between dwarfs and trolls and mercenaries on both sides, but how many battles had there actually
There were anomalies everywhere.
And no one had noticed.
You had to hand it to human beings. They had one of the strangest powers in the universe. Even her grandfather had remarked upon it. No other species anywhere in the world had invented
And along with this had come an associated power, to make things
Historians were especially good at it. If it suddenly looked as though hardly anything had happened in the fourteenth century, they'd weigh in with twenty different theories. Not one of these would be that maybe most of the time had been cut out and pasted into the nineteenth century, where the Crash had not left enough coherent time for everything that needed to happen, because it only takes a week to invent the horse collar.
The History Monks had done their job well, but their biggest ally was the human ability to think narratively. And humans had risen to the occasion. They'd say things like “Thursday already? What happened to the week?” and “Time seems to go a lot faster these days…” and “It seems like only yesterday…”
But some things remained.
The Monks had carefully wiped out the time when the Glass Clock had struck. It had been surgically removed from history. Almost…
Susan picked up
Something like the Glass Clock had been too big to hide. It had leaked out via the dark, hidden labyrinths of the human mind, and had become a folk tale. People had tried to coat it with sugar and magic swords, but its true nature still lurked like a rake in an overgrown lawn, ready to rise up at the incautious foot.
Now someone was treading on it again, and the point, the key point, was that the chin it was rising to