‘Now look,’ said Ridcully. ‘I’m a man who knows his ducks, and what you’ve got there is laughable.{80} Give me that … thank you. You do a beak like this …’
‘That’s on the wrong end and it’s too big.’
‘You think that’s a beak?’
‘Look, all three of you are barking up the wrong tree here. Give me that stick …’
‘Ah, but, you see, ducks don’t bark! Hah! There’s no need to snatch like that—’
Unseen University was built of stone — so built out of stone that in fact there were many places where it was hard to tell where wild rock ended and domesticated stone began.
It was hard to imagine what else you could build a university out of. If Rincewind had set out to list possible materials he wouldn’t have included corrugated iron sheets.
In response to some sort of wizardly ancestral memory, though, the sheets around the gates had been quite expertly bent and hammered into the shape of a stone arch. Over it, burned into the thin metal, were the words: NULLUS ANXIETAS.
‘I shouldn’t be surprised, should I?’ he said. ‘No worries.’
The gates, which were also made of corrugated iron nailed to bits of wood by a man using second-hand nails, were firmly shut. A crowd of people were hammering on them.
‘Looks like a lot of other people have the same idea,’ said Neilette.
‘There’ll be another way in,’ said Rincewind, walking away. ‘There’ll be an alley … Ah, there it is. Now, these aren’t stone walls, so there won’t be removable bricks, which means …’ He prodded at the tin sheets, and one of them wobbled. ‘Ah, yes. A loose sheet which swings aside so you can get back in after hours.’
‘How did you know that?’
‘This is a university, isn’t it? Come on.’
A message had been chalked beside the loose sheet.
‘“Nulli Sheilae sanguineae,”’{81} Rincewind read aloud. ‘But your name’s not Sheila, so we’re probably okay.’
‘If it means what I think it means, it means they don’t allow women,’ said Neilette. ‘You should’ve brought Darleen.’
‘Sorry?’
‘Forget I mentioned it.’
Somewhat to Rincewind’s surprise there was a short, pleasant lawn on the other side of the fence, illuminated by the light from a large low building. All the buildings were low but had big wide roofs, giving the effect you might get if someone stepped on a lot of square mushrooms. If they had been painted, it had been an historical event, probably coming somewhere between Fire and the Invention of the Wheel.
There was a tower. It was about twenty feet high.
‘I don’t call this much of a university,’ said Rincewind. He allowed himself a touch of smugness. ‘Twenty feet high? I could pi— I could spit from the top of it. Oh well …’
He made for the doorway, just as the light grew a lot brighter and was tinted with octarine, the eighth colour that was intimately associated with magic. The doors themselves were shut fast.
He banged on them, making them rattle. ‘Fraternal greetings, brothers!’ he shouted. ‘I bring you— Good grie—’
The world simply changed. One moment he was standing in front of a rusting door and the next he was in a circle with half a dozen wizards watching him.
He caught his balance.
‘Well, full marks for effort,’ he managed. ‘Where I come from, and you can call me Mister Boring if you like, we just open the door.’
‘Stone the crows, but we’re getting good at this,’ said a wizard.
And they were wizards. Rincewind was in no doubt of it. They had proper pointy hats, although the brims were larger than anything he’d seen without flying buttresses. Their robes weren’t much more than waist length, and below them they wore shorts, long grey socks, and big leather sandals. A lot of this was not the typical wizarding outfit as he’d grown up to understand it, but they were still wizards. They had that unmistakable hot-air-balloon-about-to-take-off look.
The apparent leader of the group nodded at Rincewind.
‘Good evening, Mister Boring. I must say you got here a lot quicker than we expected.’
Rincewind felt intuitively that saying ‘I was just outside the door’ was not a good idea.
‘Er, I had an assisted passage,’{82} he said.
‘He doesn’t look very demonic,’ said a wizard. ‘Remember that last one we called up? Six eyes and three—’
‘The really good ones can disguise themselves, Dean.’
‘Then this one must be a bloody genius, Archchancellor.’
‘Thank you very much,’ said Rincewind.
The Archchancellor nodded at him. He was, of course, elderly, with a face that looked as though it had been screwed up and then smoothed out, and a short, greying beard. There was something oddly familiar that Rincewind couldn’t quite place.
‘We’ve called you up, Boring,’ said the man, ‘because we want to know what’s happened to the water.’
‘It’s all gone, has it?’ said Rincewind. ‘Thought so.’
‘It can’t go,’ said the Dean. ‘It’s water. There’s always water, if you go down deep enough.’
‘But if we go any deeper we’re going to give an elephant a bloody nasty shock,’ said the Archchancellor. ‘So we—’
There was a clang as the doors hit the floor. The wizards backed away.
‘What the hell’s that?’ said one of them.
‘Oh, that’s my Luggage,’ said Rincewind. ‘It’s made out of—’
‘Not the box on legs! Isn’t that a woman?’
‘Don’t ask him, he’s not very quick at that sort of thing,’ said Neilette, stepping in behind the Luggage. ‘Sorry, but Trunkie got impatient.’
‘We can’t have women in the University!’ shouted the Dean. ‘They’ll want to drink sherry!’
‘No worries,’ said the Archchancellor, waving a hand irritably. ‘What’s happened to the water, Boring?’
‘It’s all been used up, I suppose,’ said Rincewind.
‘So how can we get some more?’
‘Why does everyone ask me? Don’t you have some rainmaking spells or something?’
‘There’s that word again,’ said the Dean. ‘Water sprinkling out of the sky, eh? I’ll believe that when I see it!’
‘We tried making one of these — what were they called? Big white bags of water? The things some of the sailors say they see in the sky?’
‘Clouds.’
‘Right. They don’t stay up, Boring. We threw one off the tower last week and it hit the Dean.’
‘I’ve never believed those old stories,’ said the Dean. ‘And I reckon you mongrels waited till I was walking past.’
‘You don’t have to make them, they just happen,’ said Rincewind. ‘Look, I don’t know how to make it rain. I thought any halfway decent wizard knew how to do a rainmaking spell,’ he added, as someone who wouldn’t know where to start.
‘Really?’ said the Archchancellor, with dangerous brightness.
‘No offence meant,’ said Rincewind hurriedly. ‘I’m sure this is a very good university, considering. Obviously it’s not a real one, but it’s amazingly good in the circumstances.’
‘What’s wrong with it?’ said the Archchancellor.
‘Well … your tower’s a little bit on the small side, isn’t it? I mean, even compared to the buildings around here? Not that there’s—’
‘I think we ought to show Mister Boring our tower,’ said the Archchancellor. ‘I don’t think he’s taking us seriously.’