Part 45 (1/2)
”Better to die in battle than in bed, they say.” She cracked a toothless grin. ”But there are good ways for a man to die in bed, eh, Beti?”
n.o.bby hoped the glow of his ears wasn't singeing his veil. Suddenly, he felt he'd caught up with his future. Ten d.a.m.n pence' worth of it hit him in the face.
”'scuse me,” he said. ”Are any of you Nubilians?”
”What are Nubilians?” said Bana.
”It's a country round here,” said n.o.bby. He added hopefully, ”Isn't it?”
Not a single face suggested that this was so.
n.o.bby sighed. His hand reached up to his ear for a cigarette end, but it came down again empty.
”I'll tell you this, girls,” he said. ”I wish I'd settled for the ten-dollar version. Don't you just sometimes want to sit down and cry?”
”You look even sadder than Netal,” said Bana. ”Isn't there some way we can cheer you up?”
n.o.bby stared at her for a moment, and then started to sob.
Everyone was staring at Colon, their food halfway to their lips.
”Did I just hear him say that. Faifal? What do I want to be on a camel for? I'm a plumber!”
”He is the down with the juggler. I think The poor man is several palms short of an oasis.”
”I mean the b.l.o.o.d.y things spit and they're a b.u.g.g.e.r to get up the stairs with your toolbox-”
”Now, come on it's not his fault, let's show a little charity.” The speaker cleared his throat. ”Good morning, friend,” he said. ”May we invite you to share our couscous?”
Sergeant Colon peered at the bowl, and then dipped in a finger and tasted it.
”Hey, this is semolina! You've got semolina semolina! It's just ordinary semol-” He stopped, and coughed. ”Yeah, right. Thanks. Got any strawberry jam?”
The host looked at his friends. They shrugged.
”We know not of this 'strawberry hjam' of which you speak,” he said carefully. ”We prefer it with lamb.” He offered Colon a long wooden skewer.
”Oh, you gotta have strawberry jam,” said Colon, carried away. ”When we were kids we'd stir it in and...and...” He looked at their faces. ”O'course, that was back in Ur,” he said.
The men nodded at one another. Suddenly it was all clear.
Colon belched loudly.
From the looks he got from everyone else, he was the only one who'd heard of this common Klatchian custom.
”So,” he said, ”where's the army these days? Approximately?”
”Why do you ask, o full-of-gas one?”
”Oh, we thought we could make a bit of cash entertaining the troops,” said Colon. He was immensely proud of this idea. ”You know...a smile, a song, a lack of exotic dancing. But that means we got to know where they are, see?”
”Excuse me, fat one, but can you understand what I am saying?”
”Yes, it's very tasty,” Colon hazarded.
”Ah, I thought so. So he's a spy. But whose?”
”Really? Who would be so stupid as to use a joke like this as a spy?”
”Ankh-Morpork?”
”Oh, come on! He's pretending to be an Ankh-Morpork spy, perhaps. But they're cunning over there”
”You think? A people who make curry out of something called powder and you think they're clever?”
”I reckon he's from Muntab. They're always watching us.”
”And pretending to be from Ankh-Morpork?”
”Well, if you were trying to look like a joke Morporkian pretending to be Klatchian, wouldn't you look like that?”
”But why'd he pretend to be from there?”
”Ah...politics.”
”Let's call the Watch, then.”
”Are you mad? We've been talking to him! They will be...inquisitive.”
”Good point. I know...”
Faifal gave Colon a big grin.
”I did hear the entire army has marched away to En al Sams la Laisa En al Sams la Laisa,” he said. ”But don't tell anyone.”
”Have they?” Colon glanced at the other men. They were watching him with curiously deadpan expressions.
”Sounds like a ma.s.sive place, with a name like that,” he said.
”Oh, huge,” said his neighbor. One of the other men made a noise that you might think was a suppressed chuckle.
”It's a long way, is it?”
”No, very close. You're practically on top of it,” said Faifal. He nudged a colleague, whose shoulders were shaking.
”Oh, right right. Big army, is it?”
”Could easily be very big, yes.”