to saw down trees. Lord Rust was not a problem anymore. There were surely only a few more years to go before he would rust in peace. And somewhere in his knobbly heart Vimes still retained a slight admiration for the cantankerous old butcher, with his evergreen self-esteem and absolute readiness not to change his mind about anything at all. The old boy had reacted to the fact that Vimes, the hated policeman, was now a duke, and therefore a lot more nobby than he was, by simply assuming that this could not possibly be true, and therefore totally ignoring it. Lord Rust, in Vimesâs book, was a dangerous buffoon but, and here was the difficult bit, an incredibly, if suicidally, brave one. This would have been absolutely ticketyboo were it not for the suicides of those poor fools who followed him into battle.
Witnesses had said that it was uncanny: Rust would gallop into the jaws of death at the head of his men and was never seen to flinch, yet arrows and morningstars always missed him while invariably hitting the men right behind him. Bystandersâor rather people peering at the battle from behind comfortingly large rocksâhad testified to this. Perhaps he was capable of ignoring, too, the arrows meant for him. But age could not be so easily upstaged, and the old man, while no less arrogant, had a sunken look.
Rust, most unusually, smiled at Vimes and said, âFirst time Iâve ever seen you down here, Vimes. Is Sybil going back to her roots, what?â
âShe wants Young Sam to get some mud on his boots, Rust.â
âWell done, her, what! Itâll do the boy good and make a man of him, what!â
Vimes never understood where the explosive what s came from. After all, he thought, whatâs the point of just barking out âWhat!â for absolutely no discernible reason? And as for, âWhat what!â well, what was that all about? Why what? What s seemed to be tent-pegs hammered into the conversation, but what the hells for, what?
âSo not down here on any official business, then, what?â
Vimesâs mind spun so quickly that Rust should have heard the wheels go round. It analyzed the tone of voice, the look of the man, that slight, ever so slight but nevertheless perceptible hint of a hope that the answer would be âno,â and presented him with a suggestion that it might not be a bad idea to drop a tiny kitten among the pigeons.
He laughed. âWell, Rust, Sybil has been banging on about coming down here since Young Sam was born, and this year she put her foot down and I suppose an order from his wife must be considered official, when!â Vimes saw the man who pushed the enormous wheelchair trying to conceal a smile, especially when Rust responded with a baffled âWhat?â
Vimes decided not to go with âWhereâ and instead said, in an offhand way, âWell, you know how it is, Lord Rust. A policeman will find a crime anywhere if he decides to look hard enough.â
Lord Rustâs smile remained, but it had congealed slightly as he said, âI should listen to the advice of your good lady, Vimes. I donât think youâll find anything worth your mettle down here!â There was no âwhatâ to follow, and the lack of it was somehow an emphasis.
I t was often a good idea, Vimes had always found, to give
the silly bits of the brain something to do, so that they did not interfere with
the important ones which had a proper job to fulfil. So he watched his first
game of crockett for a full half-hour before an internal alarm told him that
shortly he should be back at the Hall in time to read to Young Samâsomething
that with any luck did not have poo mentioned on every pageâand tuck him into
bed before dinner.
His prompt arrival got a nod of approval from Sybil,
who gingerly handed him a new book to read to Young Sam.
Vimes looked at the cover. The title was The World of Poo . When
his wife was out of