‘You mean roll it up?’ said Sir Reynold, horrified. ‘That could cause such a lot of damage. Oh, the horror! No, hwe had a very careful exercise planned for next hweek, to be done with the utmost diligence.’ He shuddered. ‘hWhen I think of someone just hacking it out of the frame I feel quite faint—’
‘Hey, this must be a clue, sarge!’ said Nobby, who had returned to his default activity of mooching about and poking at things to see if they were valuable. ‘Look, someone dumped a load of stinking ol’ rubbish here!’
He’d wandered across to a plinth which did, indeed, appear to be piled high with rags.
‘Don’t touch that, please!’ said Sir Reynold, rushing over. ‘That’s Don’t Talk to Me About Mondays! It’s Daniellarina Pouter’s most controversial hwork! You didn’t move anything, did you?’ he added nervously. ‘It’s literalleah priceless and she’s got a sharp tongue on her!’
‘It’s only a lot of old rubbish,’ Nobby protested, backing away.
‘Art is greater than the sum of its mere mechanical components, corporal,’ said the curator. ‘Surely you hwould not say that Caravati’s Three Large Pink hWomen and One Piece of Gauze is just, ahem, “a lot of old pigment”?’
‘What about this one, then?’ said Nobby, pointing to the adjacent plinth. ‘It’s just a big stake with a nail in it! Is this art, too?’
‘Freedom? If it hwas ever on the market, it hwould probableah fetch thirty thousand dollars,’ said Sir Reynold.
‘For a bit of wood with a nail in it?’ said Fred Colon. ‘Who did it?’
‘After he viewed Don’t Talk to Me About Mondays! Lord Vetinari graciousleah had Ms Pouter nailed to the stake by her ear,’ said Sir Reynold. ‘However, she did manage to pull free during the afternoon.’
‘I bet she was mad!’ said Nobby.
‘Not after she hwon several awards for it. I believe she’s planning to nail herself to several other things. It could be a very exciting exhibition.’
‘Tell you what, then, sir,’ said Nobby helpfully. ‘Why don’t you leave the ol’ big frame where it is and give it a new name, like Art Theft?’
‘No,’ said Sir Reynold coldly. ‘That would be foolish.’
Shaking his head at the way of the world, Fred Colon walked right up to the wall so cruelly, or cruelleah, denuded of its covering. The painting had been crudely cut from its frame. Sergeant Colon was not a high-speed thinker, but that point struck him as odd. If you’ve got a month to pinch a painting, why botch the job? Fred had a copper’s view of humanity that differed in some respects from that of the curator. Never say that people wouldn’t do something, no matter how strange it was. Probably there were some mad rich people out there who would buy the painting, even if it meant only ever viewing it in the privacy of their own mansion. People could be like that. In fact, knowing that this was their big secret probably gave them a lovely tight little shiver inside.
But the thieves had slashed the painting out as if they didn’t care about making a sale. There were several ragged inches all along the— Just a moment…
Fred stood back. A Clue. There it was, right there. He got a lovely tight little shiver inside. ‘This painting,’ he declared, ‘this painting… this painting which isn’t here, I mean, obviously, was stolen by a… troll.’
‘My goodness, how can you tell?’ said Sir Reynold.
‘I’m very glad you asked me that question, sir,’ said Fred Colon, who was. ‘I have detected, you see, that the top of the circular muriel was cut really close to the frame.’ He pointed. ‘Now, your troll would easily be able to reach up with his knife, right, and cut along the edge of the frame at the top and down a bit on each side, see? But your average troll don’t bend that well, so when it came to cutting along the bottom, right, he made a bit of a mess of the job and left it all jagged. Plus, only a troll could carry it away. A stair carpet’s bad enough, and a rolled-up muriel would be a lot heavier than that!’
He beamed.
‘Well done, sergeant!’ said the curator.
‘Good thinking, Fred,’ said Nobby.
‘Thank you, corporal,’ said Fred Colon generously.
‘Or it could have been a couple of dwarfs with a stepladder,’ Nobby went on cheerfully. ‘The decorators have left a few behind. They’re all over the place.’
Fred Colon sighed. ‘Y’see, Nobby,’ he said, ‘it’s comments like that, made in front of a member of the public, that are the reason why I’m a sergeant and you ain’t. If it was dwarfs, it would be neat all round, obviously. Is this place locked up at night, Mr Sir Reynold?’
‘Of course! Not just locked, but barred! Old John is meticulous about it. And he lives in the attics, so he can make this place like a fortress.’
‘This’d be the caretaker?’ said Fred. ‘We’ll need to talk to him.’
‘Certainly you may,’ said Sir Reynold nervously. ‘Now, I think hwe may have some details about the painting in our storeroom. I’ll, er, just go and, er, find them…’
He hurried off towards a small doorway.
‘I wonder how they got it out?’ said Nobby, when they were alone.
‘Who says they did?’ said Fred Colon. ‘Big place like this, full of attics and cellars and odd corners, well, why not stash it away and wait a while? You get in as a customer one day, see, hide under a sheet, take out the muriel in the night, hide it somewhere, then go out with the customers next day. Simple, eh?’ He beamed at Nobby. ‘You’ve got to outsmart the criminal mind, see?’
‘Or they could’ve just smashed down a door and pushed off with the muriel in the middle of the night,’ said Nobby. ‘Why mess about with a cunning plan when a simple one will do?’
Fred sighed. ‘I can see this is going to be a complicated case, Nobby.’
‘You should ask Vimesy if we can have it, then,’ said Nobby. ‘I mean, we already know the facts, right?’
Hovering in the air, unsaid, was: Where would you like to be in the next few days? Out there where the axes and clubs are likely to be flying, or in here searching all the attics and cellars very, very carefully? Think about it. And it wouldn’t be cowardice, right? ’cos a famous muriel like this is bound to be part of our national heritage, right? Even if it is just a painting of a load of dwarfs and trolls having a scrap.
‘I think I will do a proper report and suggest to Mister Vimes that maybe we should handle this one,’ said Fred Colon slowly. ‘It needs the attention of mature officers. D’you know much about art, Nobby?’
‘If necessary, sarge.’
‘Oh, come on, Nobby!’
‘What? Tawneee says what she does is Art, sarge. And she wears more clothes than a lot of the women on the walls around here, so why be sniffy about it?’
‘Yeah, but…’ Fred Colon hesitated here. He knew in his heart that spinning upside down around a pole wearing a costume you could floss with definitely was not Art, and being painted lying on a bed wearing nothing but a smile and a small bunch of grapes was good solid Art, but putting your finger on why this was the case was a bit tricky.
‘No urns,’ he said at last.
‘What urns?’ said Nobby.
‘Nude women are only Art if there’s an urn in it,’ said Fred Colon. This sounded a bit weak even to him, so he added, ‘or a plinth. Both is best, o’course. It’s a secret sign, see, that they put in to say that it’s Art and okay to look at.’
‘What about a potted plant?’
‘That’s okay if it’s in an urn.’