Equal Rites d-3

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Equal Rites d-3 Page 7

by Terry David John Pratchett


  * * *

  Next morning Granny took some pains over her dress, selecting a black dress with a frog and bat motif, a big velvet cloak, or at least a cloak made of the sort of stuff velvet looks like after thirty years of heavy wear, and the pointed hat of office which was crucified with hatpins.

  Their first call was to the stonemason, to order a replacement hearthstone. Then they called on the smith.

  It was a long and stormy meeting. Esk wandered out into the orchard and climbed up to her old place in the apple tree while from the house came her father’s shouts, her mother’s wails and long silent pauses which meant that Granny Weatherwax was speaking softly in what Esk thought of as her “just so” voice. The old woman had a flat, measured way of speaking sometimes. It was the kind of voice the Creator had probably used. Whether there was magic in it, or just headology, it ruled out any possibility of argument. It made it clear that whatever it was talking about was exactly how things should be.

  The breeze shook the tree gently. Esk sat on a branch idly swinging her legs.

  She thought about wizards. They didn’t often come to Bad Ass, but there were a fair number of stories about them. They were wise, she recalled, and usually very old and they did powerful, complex and mysterious magics and almost all of them had beards. They were also, without exception, men.

  She was on firmer ground with witches, because she’d trailed off with Granny to visit a couple of villages’ witches farther along the hills, and anyway witches figured largely in Ramtop folklore. Witches were cunning, she recalled, and usually very old, or at least they tried to look old, and they did slightly suspicious, homely and organic magics and some of them had beards. They were also, without exception, women.

  There was some fundamental problem in all that which she couldn’t quite resolve. Why wouldn’t…

  Cern and Gulta hurtled down the path and came to a pushing, shoving halt under the tree. They peered up at their sister with a mixture of fascination and scorn. Witches and wizards were objects of awe, but sisters weren’t. Somehow, knowing your own sister was learning to be a witch sort of devalued the whole profession.

  “You can’t really do spells,” said Cern. “Can you?”

  “Course you can’t,” said Gulta. “What’s this stick?”

  Esk had left the staff leaning against the tree. Cern prodded it cautiously.

  “I don’t want you to touch it,” said Esk hurriedly. “Please. It’s mine.”

  Cern normally had all the sensitivity of a ball bearing, but his hand stopped in mid-prod, much to his surprise.

  “I didn’t want to anyway,” he muttered to hide his confusion. “It’s only an old stick.”

  “Is it true you can do spells?” asked Gulta. “We heard Granny say you could.”

  “We listened at the door,” added Cern.

  “You said I couldn’t,” said Esk, airily.

  “Well, can you or can’t you?” said Gulta, his face reddening.

  “Perhaps.”

  “You can’t!”

  Esk looked down at his face. She loved her brothers, when she reminded herself to, in a dutiful sort of way, although she generally remembered them as a collection of loud noises in trousers. But there was something awfully piglike and unpleasant about the way Gulta was staring up at her, as though she had personally insulted him.

  She felt her body start to tingle, and the world suddenly seemed very sharp and clear.

  “I can,” she said.

  Gulta looked from her to the staff, and his eyes narrowed. He kicked it viciously.

  “Old stick!”

  He looked, she thought, exactly like a small angry pig.

  Cern’s screams brought Granny and his parents first to the back door and then running down the cinder path.

  Esk was perched in the fork of the apple tree, an expression of dreamy contemplation on her face. Cern was hiding behind the tree, his face a mere rim around a red, tonsil-vibrating bawl.

  Gulta was sitting rather bewildered in a pile of clothing that no longer fitted him, wrinkling his snout.

  Granny strode up to the tree until her hooked nose was level with Esk’s.

  “Turning people into pigs is not allowed,” she hissed. “Even brothers.”

  “I didn’t do it, it just happened. Anyway, you must admit it’s a better shape for him,” said Esk evenly.

  “What’s going on?” said Smith. “Where’s Gulta? What’s this pig doing here?”

  “This pig,” said Granny Weatherwax, “is your son.”

  There was a sigh from Esk’s mother as she collapsed gently backwards, but Smith was slightly less unprepared. He looked sharply from Gulta, who had managed to untangle himself from his clothing and was now rooting enthusiastically among the early windfalls, to his only daughter.

  “She did this?”

  “Yes. Or it was done through her,” said Granny, looking suspiciously at the staff.

  “Oh.” Smith looked at his fifth son. He had to admit that the shape suited him. He reached out without looking and fetched the screaming Cern a thump on the back of his head.

  “Can you turn him back again?” he asked. Granny spun around and glared the question at Esk, who shrugged.

  “He didn’t believe I could do magic,” she said calmly.

  “Yes, well, I think you’ve made the point,” said Granny. “And now you will turn him back, madam. This instant. Do you hear?”

  “Don’t want to. He was rude.”

  “I see.”

  Esk gazed down defiantly. Granny glared up sternly. Their wills clanged like cymbals and the air between them thickened. But Granny had spent a lifetime bending recalcitrant creatures to her bidding and, while Esk was a surprisingly strong opponent, it was obvious that she would give in before the end of the paragraph.

  “Oh, all right,” she whined. “I don’t know why anyone would bother turning him into a pig when he was doing such a good job of it all by himself.”

  She didn’t know where the magic had come from, but she mentally faced that way and made a suggestion. Gulta reappeared, naked, with an apple in his mouth.

  “Awts aughtning?” he said.

  Granny spun around on Smith.

  “Now will you believe me?” she snapped. “Do you really think she’s supposed to settle down here and forget all about magic? Can you imagine her poor husband if she marries?”

  “But you always said it was impossible for women to be wizards,” said Smith. He was actually rather impressed. Granny Weatherwax had never been known to turn anyone into anything.

  “Never mind that now,” said Granny, calming down a bit. “She needs training. She needs to know how to control. For pity’s sake put some clothes on that child.”

  “Gulta, get dressed and stop grizzling,” said his father, and turned back to Granny. “You said there was some sort of teaching place?” he hazarded.

  “The Unseen University, yes. It’s for training wizards.”

  “And you know where it is?”

  “Yes,” lied Granny, whose grasp of geography was slightly worse than her knowledge of subatomic physics.

  Smith looked from her to his daughter, who was sulking.

  “And they’ll make a wizard of her?” he said.

  Granny sighed.

  “I don’t know what they’ll make of her,” she said.

  * * *

  And so it was that, a week later, Granny locked the cottage door and hung the key on its nail in the privy. The goats had been sent to stay with a sister witch further along the hills, who had also promised to keep an Eye on the cottage. Bad Ass would just have to manage without a witch for a while.

  Granny was vaguely aware that you didn’t find the Unseen University unless it wanted you to, and the only place to start looking was the town of Ohulan Cutash, a sprawl of a hundred or so houses about fifteen miles away. It was where you went to once or twice a year if you were a really cosmopolitan Bad Assian: Granny had only been once before in her entire li
fe and hadn’t approved of it at all. It had smelt all wrong, she’d got lost, and she distrusted city folk with their flashy ways.

  They got a lift on the cart that came out periodically with metal for the smithy. It was gritty, but better than walking, especially since Granny had packed their few possessions in a large sack. She sat on it for safety.

  Esk sat cradling the staff and watching the woods go by. When they were several miles outside the village she said, “I thought you told me plants were different in forn parts.”

  “So they are.”

  “These trees look just the same.”

  Granny regarded them disdainfully.

  “Nothing like as good,” she said.

  In fact she was already feeling slightly panicky. Her promise to accompany Esk to Unseen University had been made without thinking, and Granny, who picked up what little she knew of the rest of the Disc from rumour and the pages of her Almanack, was convinced that they were heading into earthquakes, tidal waves, plagues and massacres, many of them diuerse or even worse. But she was determined to see it through. A witch relied too much on words ever to go back on them.

  She was wearing serviceable black, and concealed about her person were a number of hatpins and a breadknife. She had hidden their small store of money, grudgingly advanced by Smith, in the mysterious strata of her underwear. Her skirt pockets jingled with lucky charms, and a freshly forged horseshoe, always a potent preventative in time of trouble, weighed down her handbag. She felt about as ready as she ever would be to face the world.

  The track wound down between the mountains. For once the sky was clear, the high Ramtops standing out crisp and white like the brides of the sky (with their trousseaux stuffed with thunderstorms) and the many little streams that bordered or crossed the path flowed sluggishly through strands of meadowsweet and go-faster-root.

  By lunchtime they reached the suburb of Ohulan (it was too small to have more than one, which was just an inn and a handful of cottages belonging to people who couldn’t stand the pressures of urban life) and a few minutes later the cart deposited them in the town’s main, indeed its only, square.

  It turned out to be market day.

  Granny Weatherwax stood uncertainly on the cobbles, holding tightly to Esk’s shoulder as the crowd swirled around them. She had heard that lewd things could happen to country women who were freshly arrived in big cities, and she gripped her handbag until her knuckles whitened. If any male stranger had happened to so much as nod at her it would have gone very hard indeed for him.

  Esk’s eyes were sparkling. The square was a jigsaw of noise and colour and smell. On one side of it were the temples of the Disc’s more demanding deities, and weird perfumes drifted out to join with the reeks of commerce in a complex ragrug of fragrances. There were stalls filled with enticing curiosities that she itched to investigate.

  Granny let the both of them drift with the crowd. The stalls were puzzling her as well. She peered among them, although never for one minute relaxing her vigilance against pickpockets, earthquakes and traffickers in the erotic, until she spied something vaguely familiar.

  There was a small covered stall, black draped and musty, that had been wedged into a narrow space between two houses. Inconspicuous though it was, it nevertheless seemed to be doing a very busy trade. Its customers were mainly women, of all ages, although she did notice a few men. They all had one thing in common, though. No one approached it directly. They all sort of strolled almost past it, then suddenly ducked under its shady canopy. A moment later and they would be back again, hand just darting away from bag or pocket, competing for the world’s Most Nonchalant Walk title so effectively that a watcher might actually doubt what he or she had just seen.

  It was quite amazing that a stall so many people didn’t know was there should be quite so popular.

  “What’s in there?” said Esk. “What’s everyone buying?”

  “Medicines,” said Granny firmly.

  “There must be a lot of very sick people in towns,” said Esk gravely.

  Inside, the stall was a mass of velvet shadows and the herbal scent was thick enough to bottle. Granny poked a few bundles of dry leaves with an expert finger. Esk pulled away from her and tried to read the scrawled labels on the bottles in front of her. She was expert at most of Granny’s preparations, but she didn’t recognise anything here. The names were quite amusing, like Tiger Oil, Maiden’s Prayer and Husband’s Helper, and one or two of the stoppers smelled like Granny’s scullery after she had done some of her secret distillations.

  A shape moved in the stall’s dim recesses and a brown wrinkled hand slid lightly on to hers.

  “Can I assist you, missy?” said a cracked voice, in tones of syrup of figs, “Is it your fortune you want telling, or is it your future you want changing, maybe?”

  “She’s with me,” snapped Granny, spinning around, “and your eyes are betraying you, Hilta Goatfounder, if you can’t tell her age.”

  The shape in front of Esk bent forward.

  “Esme Weatherwax?” it asked.

  “The very same,” said Granny. “Still selling thunder drops and penny wishes, Hilta? How goes it?”

  “All the better for seeing you,” said the shape. “What brings you down from the mountains, Esme? And this child—your assistant, perhaps?”

  “What’s it you’re selling, please?” asked Esk. The shape laughed.

  “Oh, things to stop things that shouldn’t be and help things that should, love,” it said. “Let me just close up, my dears, and I will be right with you.”

  The shape bustled past Esk in a nasal kaleidoscope of fragrances and buttoned up the curtains at the front of the stall. Then the drapes at the back were thrown up, letting in the afternoon sunlight.

  “Can’t stand the dark and fug myself,” said Hilta Goatfounder, “but the customers expect it. You know how it is.”

  “Yes,” Esk nodded sagely. “Headology.”

  Hilta, a small fat woman wearing an enormous hat with fruit on it, glanced from her to Granny and grinned.

  “That’s the way of it,” she agreed. “Will you take some tea?”

  They sat on bales of unknown herbs in the private corner made by the stall between the angled walls of the houses, and drank something fragrant and green out of surprisingly delicate cups. Unlike Granny, who dressed like a very respectable raven, Hilta Goatfounder was all lace and shawls and colours and earrings and so many bangles that a mere movement of her arms sounded like a percussion section falling off a cliff. But Esk could see the likeness.

  It was hard to describe. You couldn’t imagine them curtseying to anyone.

  “So,” said Granny, “how goes the life?”

  The other witch shrugged, causing the drummers to lose their grip again, just when they had nearly climbed back up.

  “Like the hurried lover, it comes and goe—” she began, and stopped at Granny’s meaningful glance at Esk.

  “Not bad, not bad,” she amended hurriedly. “The council have tried to run me out once or twice, you know, but they all have wives and somehow it never quite happens. They say I’m not the right sort, but I say there’d be many a family in this town a good deal bigger and poorer if it wasn’t for Madame Goatfounder’s Pennyroyal Preventives. I know who comes into my shop, I do. I remember who buys buckeroo drops and ShoNuff Ointment, I do. Life isn’t bad. And how is it up in your village with the funny name?”

  “Bad Ass,” said Esk helpfully. She picked a small clay pot off the counter and sniffed at its contents.

  “It is well enough,” conceded Granny. “The handmaidens of nature are ever in demand.”

  Esk sniffed again at the powder, which seemed to be pennyroyal with a base she couldn’t quite identify, and carefully replaced the lid. While the two women exchanged gossip in a kind of feminine code, full of eye contact and unspoken adjectives, she examined the other exotic potions on display. Or rather, not on display. In some strange way they appeared to be artfully half-hidden,
as if Hilta wasn’t entirely keen to sell.

  “I don’t recognise any of these,” she said, half to herself. “What do they give to people?”

  “Freedom,” said Hilta, who had good hearing. She turned back to Granny. “How much have you taught her?”

  “Not that much,” said Granny. “There’s power there, but what kind I’m not sure. Wizard power, it might be.”

  Hilta turned around very slowly and looked Esk up and down.

  “Ah,” she said, “That explains the staff. I wondered what the bees were talking about. Well, well. Give me your hand, child.”

  Esk held out her hand. Hilta’s fingers were so heavy with rings it was like dipping into a sack of walnuts.

  Granny sat upright, radiating disapproval, as Hilta began to inspect Esk’s palm.

  “I really don’t think that is necessary,” she said sternly. “Not between us.”

  “You do it, Granny,” said Esk, “in the village. I’ve seen you. And teacups. And cards.”

  Granny shifted uneasily. “Yes, well,” she said. “It’s all according. You just hold their hand and people do their own fortune-telling. But there’s no need to go around believing it, we’d all be in trouble if we went around believing everything.”

  “The Powers That Be have many strange qualities, and puzzling and varied are the ways in which they make their desires known in this circle of firelight we call the physical world,” said Hilta solemnly. She winked at Esk.

  “Well, really,” snapped Granny.

  “No, straight up,” said Hilta. “It’s true.”

  “Hmph.”

  “I see you going upon a long journey,” said Hilta.

  “Will I meet a tall dark stranger?” said Esk, examining her palm. “Granny always says that to women, she says—”

  “No,” said Hilta, while Granny snorted. “But it will be a very strange journey. You’ll go a long way while staying in the same place. And the direction will be a strange one. It will be an exploration.”

  “You can tell all that from my hand?”

  “Well, mainly I’m just guessing,” said Hilta, sitting back and reaching for the teapot (the lead drummer, who had climbed halfway back, fell on to the toiling cymbalists). She looked carefully at Esk and added, “A female wizard, eh?”

 

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