Lords and Ladies
young fellas in the High Energy Magic research building to knock together for him, clever fellas they were, one day he might even understand half of what they were always gabblin’ on about…
    In the meantime, he’d keep his hat on.
    “Particularly strong, too,” said the Dean. “The gardener told me yesterday they’re playing merry hell with the cabbages.”
    “I thought them things only turned up out in fields and things,” said Ridcully. “Perfectly normal natural phenomenon.”
    “If there is a suitably high flux level, the inter-continuum pressure can probably overcome quite a high base reality quotient,” said the Reader in Invisible Writings.
    The conversation stopped. Everyone turned to look at this most wretched and least senior member of the staff.
    The Archancellor glowered.
    “I don’t even want you to begin to start explainin’ that,” he said. “You’re probably goin’ to go on about the universe bein’ a rubber sheet with weights on it again, right?”
    “Not exactly a—”
    “And the word ‘quantum’ is hurryin’ toward your lips again,” said Ridcully.
    “Well, the—”
    “ And ‘continuinuinuum’ too, I expect,” said Ridcully.
    The Reader in Invisible Writings, a young wizard whose name was Ponder Stibbons, sighed deeply.
    “No, Archchancellor, I was merely pointing out—”
    “It’s not wormholes again, is it?”
    Stibbons gave up. Using a metaphor in front of a man as unimaginative as Ridcully was like a red rag to a bu—was like putting something very annoying in front of someone who was annoyed by it.
    It was very hard, being a reader in Invisible Writings. *
    “I reckon you’d better come too,” said Ridcully.
    “Me, Archchancellor?”
    “Can’t have you skulking around the place inventing millions of other universes that’re too small to see and all the rest of that continuinuinuum stuff,” said Ridcully. “Anyway, I shall need someone to carry my rods and crossbo—my stuff,” he corrected himself.
    Stibbons stared at his plate. It was no good arguing. What he had really wanted out of life was to spend the next hundred years of it in the University, eating big meals and not moving much in between them. He was a plump young man with a complexion the color of something that lives under a rock. People were always telling him to make something of his life, and that’s what he wanted to do. He wanted to make a bed of it.
    “But, Archchancellor,” said the Lecturer in Recent Runes, “it’s still too damn far.”
    “Nonsense,” said Ridcully. “They’ve got that new turnpike open all the way to Sto Helit now. Coaches every Wednesday, reg’lar. Bursaaar! Oh, give him a dried frog pill, someone…Mr. Stibbons, if you could happen to find yourself in this universe for five minutes, go and arrange some tickets. There. All sorted out, right?”

    Magrat woke up.
    And knew she wasn’t a witch anymore. The feeling just crept over her, as part of the normal stock-taking that any body automatically does in the first seconds of emergence from the pit of dreams: arms: 2, legs: 2, existential dread: 58%, randomized guilt: 94%, witchcraft level: 00.00.
    The point was, she couldn’t remember ever being anything else. She’d always been a witch. Magrat Garlick, third witch, that was what she was. The soft one.
    She knew she’d never been much good at it. Oh, she could do some spells and do them quite well, and she was good at herbs, but she wasn’t a witch in the bone like the old ones. They made sure she knew it.
    Well, she’d just have to learn queening. At least she was the only one in Lancre. No one’d be looking over her shoulder the whole time, saying things like, “You ain’t holding that scepter right !”
    Right…
    Someone had stolen her clothes in the night.
    She got up in her nightshirt and hopped over the cold flagstones to the door. She was halfway there when it opened of its own accord.
    She recognized the small dark girl that came in, barely

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