but I have decided to tax something that you could eminently do without. Itâs hardly addictive, is it?â
âSome people tend to think so. There is a certain amount of grumbling, sir.â
Vetinari did not look up from his paperwork. âDrumknott,â he said. âLife is addictive. If people complain overmuch, I think I will have to draw that fact to their attention.â
The Patrician smiled again and steepled his fingers. âIn short, Drumknott, a certain amount of harmless banditry amongst the lower classes is to be smiled upon if not actively encouraged, for the health of the city, but what should we do when the highborn and wealthy take to crime? Indeed, if a poor man will spend a year in prison for stealing out of hunger, how high would the gallows need to be to hang the rich man who breaks the law out of greed?â
âI would like to reiterate, sir, that I buy all my own paper clips,â said Drumknott urgently.
âOf course, but in your case I am pleased to say that you have a brain so pristine that it sparkles.â
âI keep the receipts, sir,â Drumknott inisted, âjust in case you wish to see them.â There was silence for a moment, then he continued. âCommander Vimes should be well on his way to the Hall by now, my lord. That might prove a fortunate circumstance.â
Vetinariâs face was blank. âYes indeed, Drumknott, yes indeed.â
T he Hall had been a full dayâs journey, which in coaching terms really meant two, with a stay at an inn. Vimes spent the time listening for the sound of overtaking horsemen from the city bringing much-to-be-desired news of dire catastrophe. Usually Ankh-Morpork could supply this on an almost hourly basis but now it was singularly failing to deliver its desperate son in his hour of vegetation.
The other sun was setting on this particular son when the coach pulled up outside a pair of gates. After a second or two, an elderly man, an extremely elderly man, appeared from nowhere and made a great show of opening said gates, then stood to attention as the coach went through, beaming in the knowledge of a job well done. Once inside, the coach stopped.
Sybil, who had been reading, nudged her husband without looking up from her book and said, âItâs customary to give Mr. Coffin a penny. In the old days my grandfather kept a little charcoal brazier in the coach, you know, in theory to keep warm but mostly to heat up pennies to red heat before picking them up in some tongs and tossing them out for the gatekeeper to catch. Apparently everybody enjoyed it, or so my grandfather said, but we donât do that anymore.â
Vimes fumbled in his purse for some small change, opened the carriage door and stepped down, much to the shock of the aforesaid Mr. Coffin, who backed away into the thick undergrowth, watching Vimes like a cornered animal.
âNice job, Mr. Coffin, very good lifting of the latch there, excellent work.â Vimes proffered the coin and Mr. Coffin backed further away, his stance suggesting that he was going to bolt at any moment. Vimes flicked the coin in the air and the fearful man caught it, deftly spat on it and melted back into the scenery. Vimes got the impression that he resented the lack of hiss.
âHow long ago did your family stop throwing hot money at the servants?â Vimes said, settling back into his seat as the coach progressed.
Sybil laid aside her book. âMy father put a stop to it. My mother complained. So did the gatekeepers.â
âI should think so!â
âNo, Sam, they complained when the custom was stopped.â
âBut itâs demeaning!â
Sybil sighed. âYes, I know, Sam, but it was also free money, you see. In my great-grandfatherâs day, if things were busy, a man might make sixpence in a day. And since the old boy was almost permanently sozzled on rum and brandy he quite often threw out a dollar. One of the real