Mrs Ogg's chair was rammed back in her effort to rise, but Susan got to the mantelpiece first and snatched what was there, hidden in plain view amongst the ornaments.
“You give that here!” shouted Mrs Ogg, as Susan held it out of her reach. She could feel the power in the thing. It seemed to pulse in her hand.
“Have you any idea what this
“Yes, it's an eggtimer that don't work!” Mrs Ogg sat down hard in her overstuffed chair, so that her little legs rose off the floor for a moment.
“It looks to me like a day, Mrs Ogg. A day's worth of time.”
Mrs Ogg glanced at Susan, and then at the little hourglass in her hand.
“I
“That's because you don't need it to yet, Mrs Ogg.”
Nanny Ogg appeared to relax. Once again Susan reminded herself that she was dealing with a witch. They tended to keep up.
“I kept it 'cos it was a gift,” said the old lady. “And it looks so pretty, too. What do them letters round the edge say?”
Susan read the words etched on the metal base of the lifetimer:
“Ah, that'd be it,” said Mrs Ogg. “The man did say I'd be repaid for my time.”
“The man…?” said Susan gently.
Nanny Ogg glanced up, her eyes ablaze.
“Don't you try to take advantage of me just 'cos I'm moment'r'ly a bit flustered,” she snapped. “There's no way round Nanny Ogg!”
Susan looked at the woman, and this time not with the lazy eye. And there was, indeed, no way round Mrs Ogg. But there was another way, with Mrs Ogg. It went straight through the heart.
“A child needs to know his parents, Mrs Ogg,” she said. “Now more than ever. He needs to know who he really is. It's going to be hard for him, and I want to help him.”
“Why?”
“Because I wish someone had helped me,” said Susan.
“Yes, but there's rules to midwifery,” said Nanny Ogg. “You don't say what was said or what you saw. Not if the lady don't want you to.”
The witch wriggled awkwardly in her chair, her face going red. She wants to tell me, Susan knew. She's desperate to. But I've got to play it right, so she can square it with herself.
“I'm not asking for names, Mrs Ogg, because I expect you don't know them,” she went on.
“That's true.”
“But the child—”
“Look, miss, I'm not supposed to tell a living soul about—”
“If it helps, I'm not entirely certain that I am one,” said Susan. She watched Mrs Ogg for a while. “But I understand. There have to be rules, don't there? Thank you for your time.”
Susan stood up and put the preserved day back on the mantelpiece. Then she walked out of the cottage, shutting the door behind her. Binky was waiting by the gate. She mounted up, and it wasn't until then that she heard the door open.
“That's what
Death found Pestilence in a hospice in Llamedos. Pestilence liked hospitals. There was always something for him to do.
Currently he was trying to remove the “Now Wash Your Hands” sign over a cracked basin. He looked up.
“Oh, it's you,” he said. “Soap? I'll give 'em soap!”
I SENT OUT THE CALL, said Death.
“Oh. Yes. Right. Yes,” said Pestilence, clearly embarrassed.
YOU'VE STILL GOT YOUR HORSE?
“Of course, but…”
YOU HAD A FINE HORSE.
“Look, Death… it's… look, it's not that I don't see your point, but—Excuse me…” Pestilence stepped aside as a white-robed nun, completely ignorant of the two Horsemen, passed between them. But he took the opportunity to breathe in her face.
“Just a mild flu,” he said, catching Death's expression.
SO WE CAN COUNT ON YOU, CAN WE?
“To ride out…”
YES.
“For the Big One…”
IT'S EXPECTED OF US.
“How many of the others have you got?”
YOU ARE THE FIRST.
“Er…”
Death sighed. Of course, there had been plenty of diseases, long before humans had been around. But humans had definitely created Pestilence. They had a genius for crowding together, for poking around in jungles, for siting the midden so handily next to the well. Pestilence was, therefore, part human, with all that this entailed. He was frightened.
I SEE, he said.
“The way you put it—”
YOU ARE AFRAID?
“I'll… think about it.”
YES. I AM SURE YOU WILL.
Quite a lot of brandy splashed into Mrs Ogg's mug. She waved the bottle vaguely at Susan, with an enquiring look.
“No, thank you.”
“Fair enough. Fair enough.” Nanny Ogg put the bottle aside and took a draught of the brandy as though it were beer.
“A man came knocking,” she said. “Three times he came, in my life. Last time was, oh, maybe ten days ago. Same man every time. He wanted a midwife—”
“Ten days ago?” said Susan. “But the boy's at least sixt—” She stopped.
“Ah, you've got it,” said Mrs Ogg. “I could see you was bright. Time didn't matter to him. He wanted the
“More than you think,” said Susan.
“The third time”—another gulp at the brandy—“he was in a bit of a state,” said Mrs Ogg. “That's how I