a lot, what with her other work, but she was there. Thatâs what itâs all about. Being there. Thereâs got to be a local witch.â
The four witches stared gloomily at the fire. Well, three of them did. Nanny Ogg, who tended to look on the cheerful side, made toast.
âTheyâve got a wizard in, down in Creel Springs,â said Gammer Brevis. âThere wasnât anyone to take over when old Granny Hopliss passed on, so they sent off to Ankh-Morpork for a wizard. An actual wizard. With a staff. Heâs got a shop there and everything, with a brass sign on the door. It says âWizardâ.â
The witches sighed.
âMrs Singe passed on,â said Gammer Brevis. âAnd Gammer Peavey passed on.â
âDid she? Old Mabel Peavey?â said Nanny Ogg, through a shower of crumbs. âHow old was she?â
âOne hundred and nineteen,â said Gammer Brevis. âI said to her, âYou donât want to go climbing mountains at your ageâ but she wouldnât listen.â
âSome people are like that,â said Granny. âStubborn as mules. Tell them they mustnât do something and they wonât stop till theyâve tried it.â
âI actually heard her very last words,â said Gammer.
âWhat did she say?â said Granny.
âAs I recall, âoh buggerâ,â said Gammer.
âItâs the way she would have wanted to go,â said Nanny Ogg. The other witches nodded.
âYou know . . . we could be looking at the end of witchcraft in these parts,â said Gammer Brevis.
They stared at the fire again.
âI donât âspect anyoneâs brought any marshmallows?â said Nanny Ogg, hopefully.
Granny Weatherwax looked at her sister witches. Gammer Brevis she couldnât stand; the old woman taught school on the other side of the mountain, and had a nasty habit of being reasonable when provoked. And Old Mother Dismass was possibly the most useless sibyl in the history of oracular revelation. And Granny really couldnât be having at all with Nanny Ogg, who was her best friend.
âWhat about young Magrat?â said Old Mother Dismass innocently. âHer patch runs right alongside Desiderataâs. Maybe she could take on a bit extra?â
Granny Weatherwax and Nanny Ogg exchanged glances.
âSheâs gone funny in the head,â said Granny.
âNow, come on, Esme,â said Nanny Ogg.
âWell, I call it funny,â said Granny. âYou canât tell me that saying all that stuff about relatives isnât going funny in the head.â
âShe didnât say that,â said Nanny. âShe said she wanted to relate to herself.â
âThatâs what I said,â said Granny Weatherwax. âI told her: Simplicity Garlick was your mother, Araminta Garlick was your granny. Yolande Garlick is your aunt and youâre your . . . youâre your me .â
She sat back with the satisfied look of someone who has solved everything anyone could ever want to know about a personal identity crisis.
âShe wouldnât listen,â she added.
Gammer Brevis wrinkled her forehead.
âMagrat?â she said. She tried to get a mental picture of the Ramtopsâ youngest witch and recalled â well, not a face, just a slightly watery-eyed expression of hopeless goodwill wedged between a body like a maypole and hair like a haystack after a gale. A relentless doer of good works. A worrier. The kind of person who rescued small lost baby birds and cried when they died, which is the function kind old Mother Nature usually reserves for small lost baby birds.
âDoesnât sound like her,â she said.
âAnd she said she wanted to be more self-assertive,â said Granny.
âNothing wrong with being self-assertive,â said Nanny. âSelf-assertingâs what witchingâs all about.â
âI never said there