"Won't people be a bit suspicious?" said Brother Plasterer. "Won't they expect lumps of dragon all over the place?"
   "No," said the Supreme Grand Master triumphantly, "because one touch from the Sword of Truth and Justice will totally destroy the Spawn of Evil!"
   The Brethren stared at him.
   "That's what they'll believe, anyway," he added. "We can provide a bit of mystic smoke at the time."
   "Dead easy, mystic smoke," said Brother Fingers.
   "No bits, then?" said Brother Plasterer, a shade disappointed.
   Brother Watchtower coughed. "Dunno if people will accept that," he said. "Sounds a bit too neat, like."
   "Listen," snapped the Supreme Grand Master, "they'll accept anything! They'll see it happen! People will be so keen to see the boy win, they won't think twice about it! Depend upon it! Now ... let us commence . . ."
   He concentrated.
   Yes, it was easier. Easier every time. He could feel the scales, feel the rage of the dragon as he reached into the place where the dragons went and took control.
   This was power, and it was his.
 
   Sergeant Colon winced. "Ow."
   "Don't be a big softy," said Lady Ramkin cheerfully, tightening the bandage with a well-practised skill handed down through many generations of Ramkin womenfolk. "He hardly touched you."
   "And he's very sorry," said Carrot sharply. "Show the sergeant how sorry you are. Go on."
   "Oook," said the Librarian, sheepishly.
   "Don't let him kiss me!" squeaked Colon.
   "Do you think picking someone up by their ankles and bouncing their head on the floor comes under the heading of Striking a Superior Officer?" said Carrot.
   "I'm not pressing charges, me," said the sergeant hurriedly.
   "Can we get on?" said Vimes impatiently. "We're going to see if Errol can sniff out the dragon's lair. Lady Ramkin thinks it's got to be worth a try."
   "You mean set a deep hole with spring-loaded sides, tripwires, whirling knife blades driven by water power, broken glass and scorpions, to catch a thief, Captain?" said the sergeant doubtfully. "Ow!"
   "Yes, we don't want to lose the scent," said Lady Ramkin. "Stop being a big baby, Sergeant."
   "Brilliant idea about using Errol, ma'am, if I may make so bold," said Nobby, while the sergeant blushed under his bandage.
   Vimes was not certain how long he would be able to put up with Nobby the social mountaineer.
   Carrot said nothing. He was gradually coming to terms with the fact that he probably wasn't a dwarf, but dwarf blood flowed in his veins in accordance with the famous principle of morphic resonance, and his borrowed genes were telling him that nothing was going to be that simple. Finding a hoard even when the dragon wasn't at home was pretty risky. Anyway, he was certain he'd know if there was one around. The presence of large amounts of gold always made a dwarf's palms itch, and his weren't itching.
   "We'll start by that wall in the Shades," said the captain.
   Sergeant Colon glanced sideways at Lady Ramkin, and found it impossible to show cowardice in the face of the supportive. He contented himself with, "Is that wise, Captain?"
   "Of course it isn't. If we were wise, we wouldn't be in the Watch."
   "I say! All this is tremendously exciting," said Lady Ramkin.
   "Oh, I don't think you should come, m'lady…" Vimes began.
   "Sybil, please!"
   "…it's a very disreputable area, you see."
   "But I'm sure I shall be perfectly safe with your men," she said. "I'm sure vagabonds just melt away when they see you."
   That's dragons, thought Vimes. They melt away when they see dragons, and just leave their shadows on the wall. Whenever he felt that he was slowing down, or that he was losing interest, he remembered those shadows, and it was like having dull fire poured down his backbone. Things like that shouldn't be allowed to happen. Not in my city.
 
   In fact the Shades were not a problem. Many of its denizens were out hoard-hunting anyway, and those that remained were far less inclined than hitherto to lurk in dark alleys. Besides, the more sensible of them recognized that Lady Ramkin, if waylaid, would probably tell them to pull up their socks and not be silly, in a voice so used to command that they would probably find themselves doing it.
   The wall hadn't been knocked down yet and still bore its grisly fresco. Errol sniffed around it, trotted up the alley once or twice, and went to sleep.
   "Dint work," said Sergeant Colon.
   "Good idea, though," said Nobby loyally.
   "It could be all the rain and people walking about, I suppose," said Lady Ramkin.
   Vimes scooped up the dragon. It had been a vain hope anyway. It was just better to be doing something than nothing.
   "We'd better get back," he said. "The sun's gone down.''
   They walked back in silence. The dragon's even tamed the Shades, Vimes thought. It's taken over the whole city, even when it isn't here. People 'll start tying virgins to rocks any day now.
   It's a metaphor of human bloody existence, a dragon. And if that wasn't bad enough, it's also a bloody great hot flying thing.
   He pulled out the key to the new headquarters. While he was fumbling in the lock, Errol woke up and started to yammer.
   "Not now," Vimes said. His side twinged. The night had barely started and already he felt too tired.
   A slate slid down the roof and smashed on the cobbles beside him.
   "Captain," hissed Sergeant Colon.
   "What?"
   "It's on the roof, Captain."
   Something about the sergeant's voice got through to Vimes. It wasn't excited. It wasn't frightened. It just had a tone of dull, leaden terror.
   He looked up. Errol started to bounce up and down under his arm.
   The dragon — the dragon — was peering down interestedly over the guttering. Its face alone was taller than a man. Its eyes were the size of very large eyes, coloured a smouldering red and filled with an intelligence that had nothing to do with human beings. It was far older, for one thing. It was an intelligence that had already been long basted in guile and marinated in cunning by the time a group of almost-monkeys were wondering whether standing on two legs was a good career move. It wasn't an intelligence that had any truck with, or even understood, the arts of diplomacy.
   It wouldn't play with you, or ask you riddles. But it understood all about arrogance and power and cruelty and if it could possibly manage it, it would burn your head off. Because it liked to.
   It was even more angry than usual at the moment. It could sense something behind its eyes. A tiny, weak, alien mind, bloated with self-satisfaction. It was infuriating, like an unscratchable itch. It was making it do things it didn't want to do ... and stopping it from doing things it wanted to do very much.
   Those eyes were, for the moment, focused on Errol, who was going frantic. Vimes realized that all that stood between him and a million degrees of heat was the dragon's vague interest in why Vimes had a smaller dragon under his arm.
   "Don't make any sudden moves," said Lady Ramkin's voice behind him. "And don't show fear. They can always tell when you're afraid."
   "Is there any other advice you can offer at this time?" said Vimes slowly, trying to speak without moving his lips.
   "Well, tickling them behind their ears often works."
   "Oh," said Vimes weakly.
   "And a good sharp 'no!' and taking away their food bowl."
   "Ah?"
   "And hitting them on the nose with a roll of paper is what I do in extreme cases."
   In the slow, brightly-outlined, desperate world Vimes was now inhabiting, which seemed to revolve around the craggy nostrils a few metres away from him, he became aware of a gentle hissing sound.
   The dragon was taking a deep breath.
   The intake of air stopped. Vimes looked into the darkness of the flame ducts and wondered whether he'd see anything, whether there'd be some tiny white glow or something, before fiery oblivion swept over him.
   At that moment a horn rang out.
   The dragon raised its head in a puzzled way and made a noise that sounded vaguely interrogative without being in any way a word.
   The horn rang out again. The noise seemed to have a number of echoes that lived a life of their own. It sounded like a challenge. If that wasn't what it was, then the horn blower was soon going to be in trouble, because the dragon gave Vimes a smouldering look, unfolded its enormous wings, leapt heavily into the air and, against all the rules of aeronautics, flew slowly away in the direction of the sound.
   Nothing in the world should have been able to fly like that. The wings thumped up and down with a noise like potted thunder, but the dragon moved as though it was idly sculling through the air. If it stopped flapping, the movement suggested, it would simply glide to a halt. It floated, not flew. For something the size of a barn with an armour-plated hide, it was a pretty good trick.
   It passed over their heads like a barge, heading for the Plaza of Broken Moons.
   "Follow it!" shouted Lady Ramkin.
   "That's not right, it flying like that. I'm pretty sure there's something in one of the Witchcraft Laws," said Carrot, taking out his notebook. "And it's damaged the roof. It's really piling up the offences, you know."
   "You all right, Captain?" said Sergeant Colon.
   "I could see right up its nose," said Captain Vimes dreamily. His eyes focused on the worried face of the sergeant. "Where's it gone?" he demanded. Colon pointed along the street.
   Vimes glowered at the shape disappearing over the rooftops.
   "Follow it!" he said.
 
   The horn sounded again.
   Other people were hurrying towards the plaza. The dragon drifted ahead of them like a shark heading towards a wayward airbed, its tail flicking slowly from side to side.
   "Some loony is going to fight it!" said Nobby.
   "I thought someone would have a go," said Colon. "Poor bugger'll be baked in his own armour."
   This seemed to be the opinion of the crowds lining the plaza. The people of Ankh-Morpork had a straightforward, no-nonsense approach to entertainment, and while they were looking forward to seeing a dragon slain, they'd be happy to settle instead for seeing someone being baked alive in his own armour. You didn't get the chance every day to see someone baked alive in their own armour. It would be something for the children to remember.
   Vimes was jostled and bounced around by the crowd as more people flooded into the plaza behind them.
   The horn sounded a third challenge.
   "That's a slug-horn, that is," said Colon knowledgeably. "Like a tocsin, only deeper."
   "You sure?" said Nobby.
   "Yep."
   "It must have been a bloody big slug."
   "Peanuts! Figgins! Hot sausages!" whined a voice behind them. "Hallo, lads. Hallo, Captain Vimes! In at the death, eh? Have a sausage. On the house."
   "What's going on, Throat?" said Vimes, clinging to the vendor's tray as more people spilled around them.
   "Some kid's ridden into the city and said he'd kill the dragon," said Cut-me-own-Throat. "Got a magic sword, he says."
   "Has he got a magic skin?"
   "You've got no romance in your soul, Captain," said Throat, removing a very hot toasting fork from the tiny frying pan on his tray and applying it gently to the buttock of a large woman in front of him. "Stand aside, madam, commerce is the lifeblood of the city, thank you very much. O'course," he continued, "by rights there should be a maiden chained to a rock. Only the aunt said no. That's the trouble with some people. No sense of tradition. This lad says he's the rightful air, too."
   Vimes shook his head. The world was definitely going mad around him. "You've lost me there," he said.
   "Air," said Throat patiently. "You know. Air to the throne."
   "What throne?"
   "The throne of Ankh."
   "What throne of Ankh?"
   "You know. Kings and that." Throat looked reflective. "Wish I knew what his bloody name is," he said. "I put an order in to Igneous the Troll's all-night wholesale pottery for three gross of coronation mugs and it's going to be a right pain, painting all the names in afterwards. Shall I put you down for a couple, Cap'n? To you ninety pence, and that's cutting me own throat."
   Vimes gave up, and shoved his way back through the throng using Carrot as a lighthouse. The lance-constable loomed over the crowd, and the rest of the rank had anchored themselves to him.
   "It's all gone mad," he shouted. "What's going on, Carrot?"
   "There's a lad on a horse in the middle of the plaza," said Carrot. "He's got a glittery sword, you know. Doesn't seem to be doing much at the moment, though."
   Vimes fought his way into the lee of Lady Ramkin.
   "Kings," he panted. "Of Ankh. And Thrones. Are there?"
   "What? Oh, yes. There used to be," said Lady Ramkin. "Hundreds of years ago. Why?"
   "Some kid says he's heir to the throne!"
   "That's right," said Throat, who'd followed Vimes in the hope of clinching a sale. ' 'He made a big speech about how he was going to kill the dragon, overthrow the usurpers and right all wrongs. Everyone cheered. Hot sausages, two for a dollar, made of genuine pig, why not buy one for the lady?"
   "Don't you mean pork, sir?" said Carrot warily, eyeing the glistening tubes.
   "Manner of speaking, manner of speaking," said Throat quickly. "Certainly your actual pig products. Genuine pig."
   "Everyone cheers any speech in this city," growled Vimes. "It doesn't mean anything!"
   "Get your pig sausages, five for two dollars!" said Throat, who never let a conversation stand in the way of trade. "Could be good for business, could monarchy. Pig sausages! Pig sausages! Inna bun! And righting all wrongs, too. Sounds like a solid idea to me. With onions!"
   "Can I press you to a hot sausage, ma'am?" said Nobby.
   Lady Ramkin looked at the tray around Throat's neck. Thousands of years of good breeding came to her aid and there was only the faintest suggestion of horror in her voice when she said, "My, they look good. What splendid foodstuffs."
   "Are they made by monks on some mystic mountain?" said Carrot.
   Throat gave him an odd look. "No," he said patiently, "by pigs."
   "What wrongs?" said Vimes urgently. "Come on, tell me. What wrongs is he going to right?"
   "We-ell," said Throat, "there's, well, taxes. That's wrong, for a start." He had the grace to look slightly embarrassed. Paying taxes was something that, in Throat's world, happened only to other people.
   "That's right," said an old woman next to him. "And the gutter of my house leaks something dreadful and the landlord won't do nothing. That's wrong."
   "And premature baldness," said the man in front of her. "That's wrong, too." Vimes's mouth dropped open.
   "Ah. Kings can cure that, you know," said another protomonarchist knowingly.
   "As a matter of fact," said Throat, rummaging in his pack, "I've got one bottle left of this astonishing ointment what is made…" he glared at Carrot,"…by some ancient monks who live on a mountain…"
   "And they can't answer back, you know," the monarchist went on. "That's how you can tell they're royal. Completely incapable of it. It's to do with being gracious."
   "Fancy," said the leaky-guttering woman.
   "Money, too," said the monarchist, enjoying the attention. "They don't carry it. That's how you can always tell a king."
   "Why? It's not that heavy," said the man whose remaining hair was spread across the dome of his head like the remnant of a defeated army. "I can carry hundreds of dollars, no problem."
   "You probably get weak arms, being a king," said the woman wisely. "Probably with the waving."
   "I've always thought," said the monarchist, pulling out a pipe and beginning to fill it with the ponderous air of one who is going to deliver a lecture, "that one of the major problems of being a king is the risk of your daughter getting a prick."
   There was a thoughtful pause.
   "And falling asleep for a hundred years," the monarchist went on stolidly.
   "Ah," said the others, unaccountably relieved.
   "And then there's wear and tear on peas," he added.
   "Well, there would be," said the woman, uncertainly.
   "Having to sleep on them all the time," said the monarchist.
   "Not to mention hundreds of mattresses."
   "Right."
   "Is that so? I think I could get 'em for him wholesale," said Throat. He turned to Vimes, who had been listening to all this with leaden depression. "See, Captain? And you'd be in the royal guard, I expect. Get some plumes in your helmet."
   "Ah, pageantry," said the monarchist, pointing with his pipe. "Very important. Lots of spectacles."
   "What, free?" said Throat.
   "We-ell, I think maybe you have to pay for the frames," said the monarchist.
   "You're all bloody mad!" shouted Vimes. "You don't know anything about him and he hasn't even won yet!"
   "Bit of a formality, I expect," said the woman.
   "It's a fire-breathing dragon!" screamed Vimes, remembering those nostrils. "And he's just a guy on a horse, for heaven's sake!"
   Throat prodded him gently in the breastplate. "You got no soul, Cap'n," he said. "When a stranger comes into the city under the thrall of the dragon and challenges it with a glittery sword, weeell, there's only one outcome, ain't there? It's probably destiny."
   "Thrall?" shouted Vimes. "Thrall? You thieving bugger, Throat, you were flogging cuddly dragon dolls yesterday!"
   "That's was just business, Cap'n. No need to get excited about it," said Throat pleasantly.
   Vimes went back to the rank in a gloomy rage. Say what you liked about the people of Ankh-Morpork, they had always been staunchly independent, yielding to no man their right to rob, defraud, embezzle and murder on an equal basis. This seemed absolutely right, to Vimes's way of thinking. There was no difference at all between the richest man and the poorest beggar, apart from the fact that the former had lots of money, food, power, fine clothes, and good health. But at least he wasn't any better. Just richer, fatter, more powerful, better dressed and healthier. It had been like that for hundreds of years.
   "And now they get one sniff of an ermine robe and they go all gooey," he muttered.
   The dragon was circling the plaza slowly and warily. Vimes craned to see over the heads in front of him.
   In the same way that various predators have the silhouette of their prey almost programmed into their genes, it was possible that the shape of someone on a horse holding a sword clicked a few tumblers in a dragon's brain. It was showing keen but wary interest.
   Back in the crowd, Vimes shrugged. "I didn't even know we were a kingdom."
   "Well, we haven't been for ages," said Lady Ramkin. "The kings got thrown out, and jolly good job too. They could be quite frightful."
   "But you're, well, from a pos — from a high-born family," he said. "I should have thought you'd be all for kings."
   "Some of them were fearful ilks, you know," she said airily. "Wives all over the place, and chopping people's heads off, fighting pointless wars, eating with their knife, chucking half-eaten chicken legs over their shoulders, that sort of thing. Not our sort of people at all."
   The plaza went quiet. The dragon had flapped slowly to the far end and was almost stationary in the air, apart from the slow beating of its wings.
   Vimes felt something claw gently at his back, and then Errol was on his shoulder, gripping with his hind claws. His stubby wings were beating in time with those of the bigger specimen. He was hissing. His eyes were fixed on the hovering bulk.
   The boy's horse jigged nervously on the plaza's flagstones as he dismounted, flourished the sword and turned to face the distant enemy.
   He certainly looks confident, Vimes told himself. On the other hand, how does the ability to slay dragons fit you for kingship in this day and age?
   It was certainly a very shiny sword. You had to admit that.
 
   And now it was two of the clock the following morning. And all was well, apart from the rain. It was drizzling again.
   There are some towns in the multiverse which think they know how to have a good time. Places like New Orleans and Rio reckon they not only know how to push the boat out but set fire to the harbour as well; but compared to Ankh-Morpork with its hair down they're a Welsh village at 2 p.m. on a wet Sunday afternoon.
   Fireworks banged and sparkled in the damp air over the turbid mud of the river Ankh. Various domesticated animals were being roasted in the streets. Dancers conga'd from house to house, often managing to pick up any loose ornaments while doing so. There was a lot of quaffing going on. People who in normal circumstances would never think of doing it were shouting "Hurrah".
   Vimes stalked gloomily through the crowded streets, feeling like the only pickled onion in a fruit salad. He'd given the rank the evening off.
   He wasn't feeling at all royalist. He didn't think he had anything against kings as such, but the sight of Ankh-Morporkians waving flags was mysteriously upsetting. That was something only silly subject people did, in other countries. Besides, the idea of royal plumes in his hat revolted him. He'd always had a thing about plumes. Plumes sort of, well, bought you off, told everyone that you didn't belong to yourself. And he'd feel like a bird. It'd be the last straw.
   His errant feet led him back to the Yard. After all, where else was there? His lodgings were depressing and his landlady had complained about the holes which, despite much shouting, Errol kept making in the carpet. And the smell Errol made. And Vimes couldn't drink in a tavern tonight without seeing things that would upset him even more than the things he normally saw when he was drunk.
   It was nice and quiet, although the distant sounds of revelry could be heard through the window.
   Errol scrambled down from his shoulder and started to eat the coke in the fireplace.
   Vimes sat back and put his feet up.
   What a day! And what a fight! The dodging, the weaving, the shouts of the crowd, the young man standing there looking tiny and unprotected, the dragon taking a deep breath in a way now very familiar to Vimes . . .
   And not flaming. That had surprised Vimes. It had surprised the crowd. It had certainly surprised the dragon, which had tried to squint at its own nose and clawed desperately at its flame ducts. It had remained surprised right up to the moment when the lad ducked in under one claw and thrust the sword home.
   And then a thunderclap.
   You'd have thought there'd have been some bits of dragon left, really.
   Vimes pulled a scrap of paper towards him. He looked at the notes he'd made yesterday:
   Itym: Heavy draggon, but yet it can flye right welle;
   Itym: The fyre be main hot, yet issueth from ane living Thinge;
   Itym: The Swamp dragons be right Poor Thinges, yet this monstrous Form waxeth full mightily;
   Itym: From whence it cometh none knowe, nor wither it goeth, nor where it bideth betweentimes;
   Itym: Why fore did it burneth so neatlie ?
   He pulled the pen and ink towards him and, in a slow round hand, added:
   Itym: Can a draggon be destroyed into utterlye noe-thinge?
   He thought for a while, and continued:
   Itym: Whyfore did it Explode that noone may find It, search they greatly?
   A puzzler, that. Lady Ramkin said that when a swamp dragon exploded there was dragon everywhere. And this one had been a damn great thing. Admittedly its insides must have been an alchemical nightmare, but the citizens of Ankh-Morpork should still have been spending the night shovelling dragon off the streets. No-one seemed to have bothered about this. The purple smoke was quite impressive, though.
   Errol finished off the coke and started on the fire irons. So far this evening he had eaten three cobblestones, a doorknob, something unidentifiable he'd found in the gutter and, to general astonishment, three of Cut-me-own Throat's sausages made of genuine pork organs. The crunching of the poker going down mingled with the patter of rain on the windows.
   Vimes stared at the paper again and then wrote:
   Itym: How can Kinges come of noethinge?
   He hadn't even seen the lad close to. He looked personable enough, not exactly a great thinker, but definitely the kind of profile you wouldn't mind seeing on your small change. Mind you, after killing the dragon he could have been a cross-eyed goblin for all that it mattered. The mob had borne him in triumph to the Patrician's palace.
   Lord Vetinari had been locked up in his own dungeons. He hadn't put up much fight, apparently. Just smiled at everyone and went quietly.
   What a happy coincidence for the city that, just when it needed a champion to kill the dragon, a king came forth.
   Vimes turned this thought over for a while. Then he turned it back to front. He picked up the quill and wrote:
   Itym: What a happy chance it be, for a lad that would be Kinge, that there be a Draggon to sloe to prove beyond doubt his honey fiddes.
   It was a lot better than birthmarks and swords, that was for sure. He twiddled the quill for a while, and then doodled:
   Itym: The draggon was not a Mechanical devise, yette surety no wizzard has the power to create a beaste of that mag, magg, maggnyt Size.
   Itym: Whye, in the Pinche, could it not Flame?
   Itym: Where did it come from?
   Itym: Where did it goe?
   The rain pounded harder on the window. The sounds of celebration became distinctly damp, and then faded completely. There was a murmur of thunder.
   Vimes underlined goe several times. After further consideration he added two more question marks: ??
   After staring at the effect for some time he rolled the paper into a ball and threw it into the fireplace, where it was fielded and swallowed by Errol.
   There had been a crime. Senses Vimes didn't know he possessed, ancient policeman's senses, prickled the hairs on his neck and told him there had been a crime. It was probably such an odd crime that it didn't figure anywhere in Carrot's book, but it had been committed all right. A handful of high-temperature murders was only the start of it. He'd find it, and give it a name.
   Then he stood up, took his leather rain cape from its hook behind the door, and stepped out into the naked city.
 
   This is where the dragons went.
   They lie ...
   Not dead, not asleep. Not waiting, because waiting implies expectation. Possibly the word we're looking for here is ...angry.
   It could remember the feel of real air under its wings, and the sheer pleasure of the flame. There had been empty skies above and an interesting world below, full of strange running creatures. Existence had a different texture there. A better texture.
   And just when it was beginning to enjoy it, it had been crippled, stopped from flaming and whipped back, like some hairy canine mammal.
   The world had been taken away from it.
   In the reptilian synapses of the dragon's mind the suggestion was kindled that, just possibly, it could get the world back. It had been summoned, and disdainfully banished again. But perhaps there was a trail, a scent, a thread which would lead it to the sky . . .
   Perhaps there was a pathway of thought itself . . .
   It recalled a mind. The peevish voice, so full of its own diminutive importance, a mind almost like that of a dragon, but on a tiny, tiny scale.
   Aha.
   It stretched its wings.
 
   Lady Ramkin made herself a cup of cocoa and listened to the rain gurgling in the pipes outside.
   She slipped off the hated dancing shoes, which even she was prepared to concede were like a pair of pink canoes. But nobblyess obligay, as the funny little sergeant would say, and as the last representative of one of Ankh-Morpork's oldest families she'd had to go to the victory ball to show willing.
   Lord Vetinari seldom had balls. There was a popular song about it, in fact. But now it was going to be balls all the way.
   She couldn't stand balls. For sheer enjoyment it wasn't a patch on mucking out dragons. You knew where you were, mucking out dragons. You didn't get hot and pink and have to eat silly things on sticks, or wear a dress that made you look like a cloud full of cherubs. Little dragons didn't give a damn what you looked like so long as there was a feeding bowl in your hands.
   Funny, really. She'd always thought it took weeks, months, to organize a ball. Invitations, decorations, sausages on poles, ghastly chickeny mixture to force into those little pastry cases. But it had all been done in a matter of hours, as if someone had been expecting it. One of the miracles of catering, obviously. She'd even danced with the, for want of a better word, new king, who had said some polite words to her although they had been rather muffled.
   And a coronation tomorrow. You'd have thought it'd take months to sort out.
   She was still musing on that as she mixed the dragons' late night feed of rock oil and peat, spiked with flowers of sulphur. She didn't bother to change out of the ball gown but slipped the heavy apron over the top, donned the gloves and helmet, pulled the visor down over her face and ran, clutching the feed buckets, through the driving rain to the shed.
   She knew it as soon as she opened the door. Normally the arrival of food would be greeted with hoots and whistles and brief bursts of flame.
   The dragons, each in its pen, were sitting up in attentive silence and staring up through the roof.
   It was somehow scary. She clanged the buckets together.
   "No need to be afraid, nasty big dragon all gone!" she said brightly. "Get stuck in to this, you people!"
   One or two of them gave her a brief glance, and then went back to their…
   What? They didn't seem to be frightened. Just very, very attentive. It was like a vigil. They were waiting for something to happen.
   The thunder muttered again.
   A couple of minutes later she was on her way down into the damp city.
 
   There are some songs which are never sung sober. "Nellie Dean" is one. So is any song beginning "As I was a walking ..." In the area around Ankh-Morpork, the favoured air is "A Wizard's Staff Has A Knob On The End".
   The rank were drunk. At least, two out of three of the rank were drunk. Carrot had been persuaded to try a shandy and hadn't liked it much. He didn't know all the words, either, and many of the ones he did know he didn't understand.
   "Oh, I see," he said eventually. "It's a sort of humorous play on words, is it?"
   "You know," said Colon wistfully, peering into the thickening mists rolling in off the Ankh, "s'at times like this I wish old-"
   "You're not to say it," said Nobby, swaying a little. "You agreed, we wouldn't say nothing, it's no good talking about it."
   "It was his favourite song," said Colon sadly. "He was a good light tenor."
   "Now, Sarge-"
   "He was a righteous man, our Gaskin," said Colon.
   "We couldn't of helped it," said Nobby sulkily.
   "We could have," said Colon. "We could have run faster."
   "What happened, then?" said Carrot.
   "He died," said Nobby, "in the hexecution of his duty."
   "I told him," said Colon, taking a swig at the bottle they had brought along to see them through the night, "I told him. Slow down, I said. You'll do yourself a mischief, I said. I don't know what got into him, running ahead like that."
   "I blame the Thieves' Guild," said Nobby. "Allowing people like that on the streets…"
   "There was this bloke we saw done a robbery one night," said Colon miserably. "Right in front of us! And Captain Vimes, he said Come On, and we run, only the point is you shouldn't run too fast, see. Else you might catch them. Leads to all sorts of problems, catching people…"
   "They don't like it," said Nobby. There was a mutter of thunder, and a flurry of rain.
   "They don't like it," agreed Colon. "But Gaskin went and forgot, he ran on, went around the corner and, well, this bloke had a couple of mates waiting…"
   "It was his heart really," said Nobby.
   "Well. Anyway. And there he was," said Colon. "Captain Vimes was very upset about it. You shouldn't run fast in the Watch, lad," he said solemnly. "You can be a fast guard or you can be an old guard, but you can't be a fast old guard. Poor old Gaskin.''
   "It didn't ought to be like that," said Carrot.
   Colon took a pull at the bottle.
   "Well, it is," he said. Rain bounced on his helmet and trickled down his face.
   "But it didn't ought to be," said Carrot flatly.
   "But it is," said Colon.
 
   Someone else in the city was also ill at ease. He was the Librarian.
   Sergeant Colon had given him a badge. The Librarian turned it round and round in his big gentle hands, nibbling at it.
   It wasn't that the city suddenly had a king. Orangs are traditionalists, and you couldn't get more traditional than a king. But they also liked things neat, and things weren't neat. Or, rather, they were too neat. Truth and reality were never as neat as this. Sudden heirs to ancient thrones didn't grow on trees, and he should know.
   Besides, no one was looking for his book. That was human priorities for you.
   The book was the key to it. He was sure of that. Well, there was one way to find out what was in the book. It was a perilous way, but the Librarian ambled along perilous ways all day.