Standing side by side they looked almost exactly like the number 10.
âWhat is happening?' said Spelter. He'd had a sleepless night, and wasn't thinking very straight.
âMagic is flowing into the University,' said Carding. âThat's what sourcerer means. A channel for magic. Real magic, my boy. Not the tired old stuff we've made do with these past centuries. This is the dawning of a ...aâ'
âNew, um, dawn?'
âExactly. A time of miracles, a . . . aâ'
â
Anus mirabilis
?'
Carding frowned. âYes,' he said, eventually, âsomething like that, I expect. You have quite a way with words, you know.'
âThank you, brother.'
The senior wizard appeared to ignore the familiarity. Instead he turned and leaned on the carved rail, watching the magical displays below them. His hands automatically went to his pockets for his tobacco pouch, and then paused. He grinned, and snapped his fingers. A lighted cigar appeared in his mouth.
âHaven't been able to do that in years,' he mused. âBig changes, my boy. They haven't realised it yet, but it's the end of Orders and Levels. That was just a â rationing system. We don't need them any more. Where is the boy?'
âStill asleepâ' Spelter began.
âI am here,' said Coin.
He stood in the archway leading to the senior wizard's quarters, holding the octiron staff that was half again as tall as he was. Little veins of yellow fire coruscated across its matt black surface, which was so dark that it looked like a slit in the world.
Spelter felt the golden eyes bore through him, as if his innermost thoughts were being scrolled across the back of his skull.
âAh,' he said, in a voice that he believed was jolly and avuncular but in fact sounded like a strangled death rattle. After a start like that his contribution could only get worse, and it did. âI see you're, um, up,' he said.
âMy dear boy,' said Carding.
Coin gave him a long, freezing stare.
âI saw you last night,' he said. âAre you puissant?'
âOnly mildly,' said Carding, hurriedly recalling the boy's tendency to treat wizardry as a terminal game of conkers. âBut not so puissant as you, I'm sure.'
âI am to be made Archchancellor, as is my destiny?'
âOh, absolutely,' said Carding. âNo doubt about it. May I have a look at your staff? Such an interesting designâ'
He reached out a pudgy hand.
It was a shocking breach of etiquette in any case; no wizard should even think of touching another's staff without his express permission. But there are people who can't quite believe that children are fully human, and think that the operation of normal good manners doesn't apply to them.
Carding's fingers curled around the black staff.
There was a noise that Spelter felt rather than heard, and Carding bounced across the gallery and struck the opposite wall with a sound like a sack of lard hitting a pavement.
âDon't do that,' said Coin. He turned and looked through Spelter, who had gone pale, and added: âHelp him up. He is probably not badly hurt.'
The bursar scuttled hurriedly across the floor and bent over Carding, who was breathing heavily and had gone an odd colour. He patted the wizard's hand until Carding opened one eye.
âDid you see what happened?' he whispered.
âI'm not sure. Um. What did happen?' hissed Spelter.
âIt bit me.'
âThe next time you touch the staff,' said Coin, matter-of-factly, âyou will die. Do you understand?'
Carding raised his head gently, in case bits of it fell off.
âAbsolutely,' he said.
âAnd now I would like to see the University,' the boy continued. âI have heard a great deal about it...'
Spelter helped Carding to his unsteady feet and supported him as they trotted obediently after the boy.
âDon't touch his staff,' muttered Carding.
âI'll remember, um, not to,' said Spelter firmly. âWhat did it feel like?'
âHave you ever been bitten by a viper?'
âNo.'
âIn that case you'll understand exactly what it felt like.'
âHmmm?'
âIt wasn't like a snake bite at all.'
They hurried after the determined figure as Coin marched down the stairs and through the ravished doorway of the Great Hall.
Spelter dodged in front, anxious to make a good impression.
âThis is the Great Hall,' he said. Coin turned his golden gaze towards him, and the wizard felt his mouth dry up. âIt's called that because it's a hall, d'you see. And big.'
He swallowed. âIt's a big hall,' he said, fighting to stop the last of his coherence being burned away by the searchlight of that stare. âA great big hall, which is why it's calledâ'
âWho are those people?' said Coin. He pointed with his staff. The assembled wizards, who had turned to watch him enter, backed out of the way as though the staff was a flamethrower.
Spelter followed the sourcerer's stare. Coin was pointing to the portraits and statues of former Archchancellors, which decorated the walls. Full-bearded and point-hatted, clutching ornamental scrolls or holding mysterious symbolic bits of astrological equipment, they stared down with ferocious self-importance or, possibly, chronic constipation.
âFrom these walls,' said Carding, âtwo hundred supreme mages look down upon you.'
âI don't care for them,' said Coin, and the staff streamed octarine fire. The Archchancellors vanished.
âAnd the windows are too smallâ'
âThe ceiling is too highâ'
âEverything is too
old
â'
The wizards threw themselves flat as the staff flared and spat. Spelter pulled his hat over his eyes and rolled under a table when the very fabric of the University flowed around him. Wood creaked, stone groaned.
Something tapped him on the head. He screamed.
âStop that!' shouted Carding above the din. âAnd pull your hat up! Show a little dignity!'
âWhy are you under the table, then?' said Spelter sourly.
âWe must seize our opportunity!'
âWhat, like the staff?'
âFollow me!'
Spelter emerged into a bright, a horrible bright new world.
Gone were the rough stone walls. Gone were the dark, owl-haunted rafters. Gone was the tiled floor, with its eye-boggling pattern of black and white tiles.
Gone, too, were the high small windows, with their gentle patina of antique grease. Raw sunlight streamed into the hall for the first time.
The wizards stared at one another, mouths open, and what they saw was not what they had always thought they'd seen. The unforgiving rays transmuted rich gold embroidery into dusty gilt, exposed opulent fabric as rather stained and threadbare velvet, turned fine flowing beards into nicotine-stained tangles, betrayed splendid diamonds as rather inferior Ankhstones. The fresh light probed and prodded, stripping away the comfortable shadows.
And, Spelter had to admit, what was left didn't inspire confidence. He was suddenly acutely aware that under his robes â his tattered, badly-faded robes, he realised with an added spasm of guilt; the robes with the perforated area where the mice had got at them â he was still wearing his bedroom slippers.
The hall was now almost all glass. What wasn't glass was marble. It was all so splendid that Spelter felt quite unworthy.
He turned to Carding, and saw that his fellow wizard was staring at Coin with his eyes gleaming.
Most of the other wizards had the same expression. If wizards weren't attracted to power they wouldn't be wizards, and this was real power. The staff had them charmed like so many cobras.
Carding reached out to touch the boy on the shoulder, and then thought better of it.
âMagnificent,' he said, instead.
He turned to the assembled wizardry and raised his arms. âMy brothers,' he intoned, âwe have in our midst a wizard of great power!'
Spelter tugged at his robe.
âHe nearly killed you,' he hissed. Carding ignored him.
âAnd I proposeâ' Carding swallowed â âI propose him for Archchancellor!'
There was a moment's silence, and then a burst of cheering and shouts of dissent. Several quarrels broke out at the back of the crowd. The wizards nearer the front weren't quite so ready to argue. They could see the smile on Coin's face. It was bright and cold, like the smile on the face of the moon.
There was a commotion, and an elderly wizard fought his way to the front of the throng.
Spelter recognised Ovin Hakardly, a seventh-level wizard and a lecturer in Lore. He was red with anger, except where he was white with rage. When he spoke, his words seared through the air like so many knives, clipped as topiary, crisp as biscuits.
âAre you mad?' he said. âNo one but a wizard of the eighth level may become Archchancellor! And he must be elected by the other most senior wizards in solemn convocation! (Duly guided by the gods, of course.) It is the Lore! (The very idea!)'
Hakardly had studied the Lore of magic for years and, because magic always tends to be a two-way process, it had made its mark on him; he gave the impression of being as fragile as a cheese straw, and in some unaccountable way the dryness of his endeavours had left him with the ability to pronounce punctuation.
He stood vibrating with indignation and, he became aware, he was rapidly standing alone. In fact he was the centre of an expanding circle of empty floor fringed with wizards who were suddenly ready to swear that they'd never clapped eyes on him in their life.
Coin had raised his staff.
Hakardly raised an admonitory finger.
âYou do not frighten me, young man,' he snapped. âTalented you may be, but magical talent alone is not enough. There are many other qualities required of a great wizard. Administrative ability, for example, and wisdom, and theâ'
Coin lowered his staff.
âThe Lore applies to all wizards, does it not?' he said.
âAbsolutely! It was drawn upâ'
âBut I am not a wizard, Lord Hakardly.'
The wizard hesitated. âAh,' he said, and hesitated again. âGood point,' he said.
âBut I am well aware of the need for wisdom, fore-sight and good advice, and I would be honoured if you could see your way clear to providing those much-valued commodities. For example â why is it that wizards do not rule the world?'
âWhat?'
âIt is a simple question. There are in this roomâ' Coin's lips moved for a fraction of a second â âfour hundred and seventy-two wizards, skilled in the most subtle of arts. Yet all you rule are these few acres of rather inferior architecture. Why is this?'
The most senior wizards exchanged knowing glances.
âSuch it may appear,' said Hakardly eventually, âbut, my child, we have domains beyond the ken of the temporal power.' His eyes gleamed. âMagic can surely take the mind to inner landscape of arcaneâ'
âYes, yes,' said Coin. âYet there are extremely solid walls outside your University. Why is this?'
Carding ran his tongue over his lips. It was extraordinary. The child was speaking his thoughts.
âYou squabble for power,' said Coin, sweetly, âand yet, beyond these walls, to the man who carts night-soil or the average merchant, is there really so much difference between a high-level mage and a mere conjuror?'
Hakardly stared at him in complete and untrammelled astonishment.
âChild, it's obvious to the meanest citizen,' he said. âThe robes and trimmings themselvesâ'
âAh,' said Coin, âthe robes and trimmings. Of course.'
A short, heavy and thoughtful silence filled the hall.
âIt seems to me,' said Coin eventually, âthat wizards rule only wizards. Who rules in the reality outside?'
âAs far as the city is concerned, that would be the Patrician, Lord Vetinari,' said Carding with some caution.
âAnd is he a fair and just ruler?'
Carding thought about it. The Patrician's spy network was said to be superb. âI would say,' he said carefully, âthat he is unfair and unjust, but scrupulously even-handed. He is unfair and unjust to everyone, without fear or favour.'
âAnd you are content with this?' said Coin.
Carding tried not to catch Hakardly's eye.
âIt's not a case of being content with it,' he said. âI suppose we've not given it much thought. A wizard's true vocation, you seeâ'
âIs it really true that the wise suffer themselves to be ruled in this way?'
Carding growled. âOf course not! Don't be silly! We merely tolerate it. That's what wisdom is all about, you'll find that out when you grow up, it's a case of biding one's timeâ'
âWhere is the Patrician? I would like to see him.'
âThat can be arranged, of course,' said Carding. âThe Patrician is always graciously pleased to grant wizards an interview, andâ'
âNow
I
will grant
him
an interview,' said Coin. âHe must learn that wizards have bided their time long enough. Stand back, please.'
He pointed the staff.
The temporal ruler of the sprawling city of Ankh-Morpork was sitting in his chair at the foot of the steps leading up to the throne, looking for any signs of intelligence in intelligence reports. The throne had been empty for more than two thousand years, since the death of the last of the line of the kings of Ankh. Legend said that one day the city would have a king again, and went on with various comments about magic swords, strawberry birthmarks and all the other things that legends gabble on about in these circumstances.
In fact the only real qualification now was the ability to stay alive for more than about five minutes after revealing the existence of any magic swords or birthmarks, because the great merchant families of Ankh had been ruling the city for the last twenty centuries and were about to relinquish power as the average limpet is to let go of its rock.