OH, YES. AND I MUST LEAVE NOW.
‘What, so soon?’
CERTAINLY. MUSTN’T WASTE TIME! Death adjusted the saddle, and then turned and held the tiny hourglass proudly in front of Albert’s hooked nose.
SEE! I HAVE TIME. AT LAST, I HAVE TIME!
Albert backed away nervously.
‘And now that you have it, what are you going to do with it?’ he said.
Death mounted his horse.
I AM GOING TO SPEND IT.
The party was in full swing. The banner with the legend ‘Goodebye Windle 130 Gloriouse Years’ was drooping a bit in the heat. Things were getting to the point where there was nothing to drink but the punch and nothing to eat but the strange yellow dip with the highly suspicious tortillas and nobody minded. The wizards chatted with the forced jolliness of people who see one another all day and are now seeing one another all evening.
In the middle of it all Windle Poons sat with a huge glass of rum and a funny hat on his head. He was almost in tears.
‘A genuine Going-Away party!’ he kept muttering. ‘Haven’t had one of them since old “Scratcher” Hocksole Went Away,’ the capital letters fell into place easily, ‘back in, mm, the Year of the Intimidating, mm, Porpoise. Thought everyone had forgotten about ’em.’
‘The Librarian looked up the details for us,’ said the Bursar, indicating a large orangutan who was trying to blow into a party squeaker. ‘He also made the banana dip. I hope someone eats it soon.’
He leaned down.
‘Can I help you to some more potato salad?’ he said, in the loud deliberate voice used for talking to imbeciles and old people.
Windle cupped a trembling hand to his ear.
‘What? What?’
‘More! salad! Windle?’
‘No, thank you.’
‘Another sausage, then?’
‘What?’
‘Sausage!’
‘They give me terrible gas all night,’ said Windle. He considered this for a moment, and then took five.
‘Er,’ shouted the Bursar, ‘do you happen to know what time—?
‘Eh?’
‘What! Time?’
‘Half past nine,’ said Windle, promptly if indistinctly.
‘Well, that’s nice,’ said the Bursar. ‘It gives you the rest of the evening, er, free.’
Windle rummaged in the dreadful recesses of his wheelchair, a graveyard for old cushions, dog-eared books and ancient, half-sucked sweets. He flourished a small green-covered book and pushed it into the Bursar’s hands.
The Bursar turned it over. Scrawled on the cover were the words: Windle Poons Hys Dyary. A piece of bacon rind marked today’s date.
Under Things to Do, a crabbed hand had written: Die.
The Bursar couldn’t stop himself from turning the page.
Yes. Under tomorrow’s date, Things to Do: Get Born.
His gaze slid sideways to a small table at the side of the room. Despite the fact that the room was quite crowded, there was an area of clear floor around the table, as if it had some kind of personal space that no-one was about to invade.
There had been special instructions in the Going Away ceremony concerning the table. It had to have a black cloth, with a few magic sigils embroidered on it. It had a plate, containing a selection of the better canapés. It had a glass of wine. After considerable discussion among the wizards, a funny paper hat had been added as well.
They all had an expectant look.
The Bursar took out his watch and flicked open the lid.
It was one of the new-fangled pocket watches, with hands. They pointed to a quarter past nine. He shook it. A small hatch opened under the 12 and a very small demon poked its head out and said, ‘Knock it off, guv’nor, I’m pedalling as fast as I can.’
He closed the watch again and looked around desperately. No-one else seemed anxious to come too near Windle Poons. The Bursar felt it was up to him to make polite conversation. He surveyed possible topics. They all presented problems.
Windle Poons helped him out.
‘I’m thinking of coming back as a woman,’ he said conversationally.
The Bursar opened and shut his mouth a few times.
‘I’m looking forward to it,’ Poons went on. ‘I think it might, mm, be jolly good fun.’
The Bursar riffled desperately through his limited repertoire of small talk relating to women. He leaned down to Windle’s gnarled ear.
‘Isn’t there rather a lot of,’ he struck out aimlessly, ‘washing things? And making beds and cookery and all that sort of thing?’
‘Not in the kind of, mm, life I have in mind,’ said Windle firmly.
The Bursar shut his mouth. The Archchancellor banged on a table with a spoon.
‘Brothers—’ he began, when there was something approaching silence. This prompted a loud and ragged chorus of cheering.
‘—As you all know we are here tonight to mark the, ah, retirement’ — nervous laughter — ‘of our old friend and colleague Windle Poons. You know, seeing old Windle sitting here tonight puts me in mind, as luck would have it, of the story of the cow with three wooden legs. It appears that there was this cow, and—’
The Bursar let his mind wander. He knew the story. The Archchancellor always mucked up the punch line, and in any case he had other things on his mind.
He kept looking back at the little table.
The Bursar was a kindly if nervous soul, and quite enjoyed his job. Apart from anything else, no other wizard wanted it. Lots of wizards wanted to be Archchancellor, for example, or the head of one of the eight orders of magic, but practically no wizards wanted to spend lots of time in an office shuffling bits of paper and doing sums. All the paperwork of the University tended to accumulate in the Bursar’s office, which meant that he went to bed tired at nights but at least slept soundly and didn’t have to check very hard for unexpected scorpions in his night-shirt.
Killing off a wizard of a higher grade was a recognised way of getting advancement in the orders. However, the only person likely to want to kill the Bursar was someone else who derived a quiet pleasure from columns of numbers, all neatly arranged, and people like that don’t often go in for murder.[2]
He recalled his childhood, long ago, in the Ramtop Mountains. He and his sister used to leave a glass of wine and a cake out every Hogswatchnight for the Hogfather. Things had been different, then. He’d been a lot younger and hadn’t known much and had probably been a lot happier.
For example, he hadn’t known that he might one day be a wizard and join other wizards in leaving a glass of wine and a cake and a rather suspect chicken vol-au-vent and a paper party hat for …
… someone else.
There’d been Hogswatch parties, too, when he was a little boy. They’d always follow a certain pattern. Just when all the children were nearly sick with excitement, one of the grown-ups would say, archly, ‘I think we’re going to have a special visitor!’ and, amazingly on cue, there’d be a suspicious ringing of hog bells outside the window and in would come …
… in would come …
The Bursar shook his head. Someone’s grandad in false whiskers, of course. Some jolly old boy with a sack of toys, stamping the snow off his boots. Someone who gave you something.
Whereas tonight …
Of course, old Windle probably felt different about it. After one hundred and thirty years, death probably had a certain attraction. You probably became quite interested in finding out what happened next.
The Archchancellor’s convoluted anecdote wound jerkily to its close. The assembled wizards laughed dutifully, and then tried to work out the joke.
The Bursar looked surreptitiously at his watch. It was now twenty minutes past nine.
2
At least, until the day they suddenly pick up a paperknife and carve their way out through Cost Accounting and into forensic history.