‘Hah!’ sneered Fate, but a few of the brighter gods looked suddenly thoughtful.
‘Anyway,’ Cohen went on, ‘it dunt matter if someone
‘All that will happen is that
‘What have we got to lose?’ said Boy Willie. ‘We're going to die anyway. We're
‘We've
‘That's why we've lived such a long time,’ said Boy Willie.
‘But…
‘Ach, the great cycle o' nature can eat ma loin-cloth!’ said Mad Hamish.
‘And there's not many as would want to do that,’ said Cohen. ‘And I ain't much good with words, but… I reckon we're doing this 'cos we
But the gods were looking around.
The wings had shattered and broken off. The fuselage smashed down on to the cobbles, and slid on.
‘
A pale hand reached past Rincewind.
‘It would be advisable,’ said Leonard, ‘to hold on to something.’
He pulled a small handle labelled ‘Sekarb’.
Now the
The gods looked down.
A hatch opened in the strange wooden bird. It fell off and rolled a little way.
The gods saw a figure get out. He appeared, in many ways, to be a hero, except that he was far too clean.
He looked around, removed his helmet and saluted.
‘Good afternoon, O mighty ones,’ he said. ‘I do apologise, but this should not take long. And may I take this opportunity to say on behalf of the people of the Disc that you are doing a wonderful job here.’
He marched towards the Horde, past the astonished gods, and stopped in front of Cohen.
‘Cohen the Barbarian?’
‘What's it to you?’ said Cohen, mystified.
‘I am Captain Carrot of the Ankh-Morpork City Watch, and I hereby arrest you on a charge of conspiracy to end the world. You need not say anything—’
‘I don't
‘Hold it, hold it,’ said Boy Willie urgently. ‘Do you know who we all are?’
‘Yessir. I believe so. You are Boy Willie, aka Mad Bill, Wilhelm the Chopper, the Great—’
‘And
‘That is correct, sir.’
‘We must've killed hundreds of watchmen in our time, lad!’
‘I'm sorry to hear that, sir.’
‘'Ow much do they pay you, boy?’ said Caleb.
‘Forty-three dollars a month, Mr Ripper. With allowances.’
The Horde burst out laughing. Then Carrot drew his sword.
‘I must insist, sir. What you are planning to do will destroy the world.’
‘Only this bit, lad,’ said Cohen. ‘Now you could go off home and—’
‘I'm being patient, sir, out of respect for your grey hairs.’
There was a further burst of laughing and Mad Hamish had to be slapped on the back.
‘Just a moment, boys,’ said Mrs McGarry quietly. ‘Are we thinking this one through? Look around you.’
They looked around.
‘Well?’ Cohen demanded.
‘There's me, and you,’ said Vena, ‘and Truckle and Boy Willie and Hamish and Caleb and the minstrel,’
‘So? So?’
‘That's seven,’ said Vena, ‘Seven of us, against one of him. Seven against one. And he thinks he's going to save the world. And he knows who we are and he's still going to fight us…’
‘You think
But the cackle was all alone in the sudden quietness. The Horde could calculate the peculiar mathematics of heroism quite quickly.
There was, there
The Code was quite clear. One brave man against seven… won. They knew it was true. In the past, they'd all
Forget the Code, dismiss the Code, deny the Code… and the Code would
They looked down at Captain Carrot's sword. It was short, sharp and plain. It was a working sword. It had no runes on it. No mystic gleam twinkled on its edge.
If you believed in the Code, that was worrying. One simple sword in the hands of a truly brave man would cut through a magical sword like suet.
It wasn't a frightening thought, but it
‘Funny thing,’ said Cohen, ‘but I heard tell once that down in Ankh-Morpork there's some watchman who's really heir to the throne but keeps very quiet about it because he
Oh dear, thought the Horde. Kings in disguise… that was Code material, right there.
Carrot met Cohen's gaze.
‘Never heard of him,’ he said.
‘To die for forty-three dollars a month,’ said Cohen, holding the gaze, ‘a man's got to be very, very stupid or very,
‘What's the difference?’ said Rincewind, stepping forward. ‘Look, I don't want to break up a moment of drama or anything, but he's not joking. If that… keg explodes here, it
‘Rincewind?’ said Cohen. ‘What're
‘Trying to save the world,’ said Rincewind. He rolled his eyes. ‘
Cohen looked uncertain, but heroes don't back down easily, even in the face of the Code.
‘It'll
‘Yes!’
‘'S not much of a world,’ Cohen muttered. ‘Not any more…’
‘What about all the dear little kittens—’ Rincewind began.
‘Puppies,’ hissed Carrot, not taking his eyes off Cohen.
‘Puppies, I mean. Eh? Think of
‘Well. What about them?’