‘Can I put zis shirt on my expenses?’
‘Yes, I think so.’
‘Good. And now it is all over and time for revards and medals,’ said the vampire cheerfully, adjusting his jacket. ‘So vhere are your troubles now?’
‘Just starting,’ said William. ‘I think I’m going to be seeing the inside of the Watch House in less than an hour.’
In fact it was forty-three minutes later that William de Worde was Helping the Watch, as they say, with Their Inquiries.
On the other side of the table Commander Vimes was carefully rereading the Times. He was, William knew, taking longer than necessary in order to make him nervous.
‘I can help you with any long words you don’t recognize,’ he volunteered.
‘It’s very good,’ said Vimes, ignoring this. ‘But I need to know more. I need to know the names. I think you know the names. Where did they meet? Things like that. I need to know them.’
‘Some things are a mystery to me,’ said William. ‘You’ve got more than enough evidence to release Lord Vetinari.’
‘I want to know more.’
‘Not from me.’
‘Come on, Mr de Worde. We’re on the same side here!’
‘No. We’re just on two different sides that happen to be side by side.’
‘Mr de Worde, earlier today you assaulted one of my officers. Do you know how much trouble you are in already?’
‘I expected better of you than that, Mister Vimes,’ said William. ‘Are you saying I assaulted an officer in uniform? An officer who identified themself to me?’
‘Be careful, Mr de Worde.’
‘I was being followed by a werewolf, Commander. I took steps to … inconvenience it so that I could get away. Would you like to debate this publicly?’
I’m being an arrogant, lying, supercilious bastard, thought William. And I’m good at it.
‘Then you give me no choice but to arrest you for concealing—’
‘I demand a lawyer,’ said William.
‘Really? And who did you have in mind at this time of night?’
‘Mr Slant.’
‘Slant? You think he’ll come out for you?’
‘No. I know he’ll come out. Believe me.’
‘Oh, he will, will he?’
‘Trust me.’
‘Come now,’ said Vimes, smiling. ‘Do we need this? It’s the duty of every citizen to help the Watch, isn’t it?’
‘I don’t know. I know the Watch think it is. I’ve never seen it written down,’ said William. ‘There again, I never knew it was the right of the Watch to spy on innocent people.’
He saw the smile freeze.
‘It was for your own good,’ Vimes growled.
‘I didn’t know it was your job to decide what was good for me.’
This time Vimes won a small prize. ‘I’m not going to be led, either,’ he said. ‘But I have reason to believe that you are withholding information about a major crime, and that is an offence. That’s against the law.’
‘Mr Slant will come up with something. There’s some precedent, I’ll bet. He’ll go back hundreds of years. The Patricians have always set great store by precedent. Mr Slant will dig and dig. For years if necessary. That’s how he got where he is today, by digging.’
Vimes leaned forward. ‘Between you and me, and without your notebook,’ he muttered, ‘Mr Slant is a devious dead bastard who can bend such law as we have into a puzzle ring.’
‘Yep,’ said William. ‘And he’s my lawyer. I guarantee it.’
‘Why would Mr Slant speak up on your behalf?’ said Vimes, staring at William.
William matched him eyeball for eyeball. It’s true, he thought. I’m my father’s son. All I have to do is use it.
‘Because he’s a very fair man?’ he said. ‘Now, are you going to send a runner to fetch him? Because if you’re not you’ve got to let me go.’
Without taking his gaze off William, Vimes reached down and unhooked the speaking tube from the side of his desk. He whistled into it and then put it to his ear. There was a sound like a mouse pleading for mercy at the other end of a drainpipe.
‘Yata whipsie poitl swup?’
Vimes put the tube to his mouth. ‘Sergeant, send someone up to take Mr de Worde down to the cells, will you?’
‘Swyddle yumyumpwipwipwip?’
Vimes sighed and replaced the pipe. He got up and opened the door.
‘Fred, send someone to take Mr de Worde down to the cells, will you?’ he yelled. ‘I’m calling it protective custody for now,’ he added, turning to William.
‘Protecting me from whom?’
‘Well, I personally have an overwhelming urge to give you a ding alongside the ear,’ said Vimes. ‘And I suspect there are others out there without my self-control.’
It was in fact quite peaceful in the cells. The bunk was comfortable. The walls were covered with graffiti, and William passed the time correcting the spelling.
The door was unlocked again. A stony-faced constable escorted William back up to Vimes’s office.
Mr Slant was there. He gave William an impassive nod. Commander Vimes was sitting in front of a small yet significant pile of paper and had the look of a beaten man.
‘I believe Mr de Worde can go free,’ said Mr Slant.
Vimes shrugged. ‘I’m only amazed you aren’t asking me to give him a gold medal and an illuminated scroll of thanks. But I’m setting bail at one thou—’
‘Ah?’ said Mr Slant, raising a grey finger.
Vimes glowered. ‘One hun—’
‘Ah?’
Vimes grunted and reached into his pocket. He tossed William a dollar. ‘Here,’ he said, with extensive sarcasm. ‘And if you aren’t in front of the Patrician at ten o’clock tomorrow you’ve got to give it back. Satisfied?’ he said to Slant.
‘Which Patrician?’ said William.
‘Thank you for that smart answer,’ said Vimes. ‘Just you be there.’
Mr Slant was silent as he walked out into the night air with his new client, but after a while he said: ‘I have presented a writ of exeo carco cum nihil pretii on the basis of olfacere violarum and sini plenis piscis. Tomorrow I shall move that you are ab hamo, and in the event of this not working I—’
‘Smelling of violets?’ said William, who had been translating in his head, ‘and pockets full of fish?’
‘Based on a case some six hundred years ago when the defendant successfully pleaded that, although he had indeed pushed the victim into a lake, the man came out with his pockets full of fish, to his net benefit,’ said Mr Slant crisply. ‘In any case, I shall argue that if withholding information from the Watch is a crime, every person in the city is guilty.’
‘Mr Slant, I do not wish to have to say how and where I got my information,’ said William. ‘If I have to, I shall have to reveal all of it.’
The light from the distant lamp over the Watch House door, behind its blue glass, illuminated the lawyer’s face. He looked ill.
‘You really believe those two men had … accomplices?’ he said.
‘I’m sure of it,’ said William. ‘I’d say it’s a matter of … record.’
At that point he almost felt sorry for the lawyer. But only almost.
‘That might not be in the public interest,’ said Mr Slant slowly. ‘This ought to be a time for … reconciliation.’
‘Absolutely. So I’m sure you will see to it that I don’t have to pour all those words into Commander Vimes’s ear.’