or something, was growing on the inside of the cracked glass
itself. Polly let her lips brush it while holding her breath.
‘Huh,’ said Strappi, and pressed something into her hand.
‘What’s this?’ said Polly, looking at the small square of paper.
‘An IOU. Bit short of shillings right now,’ said the sergeant, while Strappi smirked. ‘But
the innkeeper’ll stand you a pint of ale, courtesy of her grace.’
He turned and looked up at the newcomers. ‘Well, it never rains but it pours. You boys
here to join up too? My word, and we didn’t even have to bang the drum. It must be Corporal
Strappi’s amazin’ charisma. Step up, don’t be shy. Who’s the next likely lad?’
Polly looked at the next recruit with horror that she hoped she was concealing. She hadn’t
really noticed him in the gloom, because he was wearing black—not cool, styled black, but a
dusty black, the kind of suit people got buried in. By the look of it, that person had been him.
There were cobwebs all over it. The boy himself had stitches across his forehead.
‘Your name, lad?’ said Jackrum.
‘Igor, thur.’
Jackrum counted the stitches.
‘You know, I had a feeling it was going to be,’ he said. ‘And I see you’re eighteen.’
‘Awake!’
‘Oh, gods . . .’ Commander Samuel Vimes put his hands over his eyes.
‘I beg your pardon, your grace?’ said the Ankh-Morpork consul to Zlobenia. ‘Are you ill,
your grace?’
‘What’s your name again, young man?’ said Vimes. ‘I’m sorry, but I’ve been travelling for
two weeks and not getting a lot of sleep and I’ve spent all day being introduced to people
with difficult names. That’s bad for the brain.’
‘It’s Clarence, your grace. Clarence Chinny.’
‘Chinny?’ said Vimes, and Clarence read everything in his expression.
‘I’m afraid so, sir,’ he said.
‘Were you a good fighter at school?’ said Vimes.
‘No, your grace, but no one could beat me over the one-hundred-yard dash.’
Vimes laughed. ‘Well, Clarence, any national anthem that starts “Awake!” is going to lead
to trouble. They didn’t teach you this in the Patrician’s office?’
‘Er . . . no, your grace,’ said Chinny.
‘Well, you’ll find out. Carry on, then.’
‘Yes, sir.’ Chinny cleared his throat. ‘The Borogravian National Anthem,’ he announced,
for the second time.
‘Awake sorry, your grace , ye sons of the Motherland!
Taste no more the wine of the sour apples
Woodsmen, grasp your choppers!
Farmers, slaughter with the tool formerly used for lifting beets the foe!
Frustrate the endless wiles of our enemies
We into the darkness march singing
Against the whole world in arms coming
But see the golden light upon the mountain tops!
The new day is a great big fish!’
‘Er . . .’ Vimes said. ‘That last bit . . . ?’
‘That is a literal translation, your grace,’ said Clarence nervously. ‘It means something like
“an amazing opportunity” or “a glittering prize”, your grace.’
‘When we’re not in public, Clarence, “sir” will do. “Your grace” is just to impress the
natives.’ Vimes slumped back in his uncomfortable chair, chin in his hand, and then winced.
‘Two thousand three hundred miles,’ he said, shifting his position. ‘And it’s freezing on a
broomstick, however low they fly. And then the barge, and then the coach . . .’ He winced
again. ‘I read your report. Do you think it’s possible for an entire nation to be insane?’
Clarence swallowed. He’d been told that he was talking to the second most powerful man
in Ankh-Morpork, even if the man himself acted as though he was ignorant of the fact. His
desk in this chilly tower room was rickety; it had belonged to the head janitor of the Kneck
garrison until yesterday. Paperwork cluttered its scarred surface and was stacked in piles
behind Vimes’s chair.
Vimes himself did not look, to Clarence, like a duke.