Witches Abroad
With a W. As in ‘witch.’”
    The door slammed. When it was shut, there was barely a visible crack in the rock.
    The snow was falling fast now. Granny Weatherwax jiggled up and down a bit to keep warm.
    “That’s foreigners for you,” she said, to the frozen world in general.
    “I don’t think you can call dwarfs foreigners,” said Nanny Ogg.
    “Don’t see why not,” said Granny. “A dwarf who lives a long way off has got to be foreign. That’s what foreign means.”
    “Yeah? Funny to think of it like that,” said Nanny.
    They watched the door, their breath forming three little clouds in the darkening air. Magrat peered at the stone door.
    “I didn’t see any invisible runes,” she said.
    “’Corse not,” said Nanny. “That’s ’cos they’re invisible.”
    “Yeah,” said Granny Weatherwax. “Don’t be daft.”
    The door swung open again.
    “I spoke to the King,” said the voice.
    “And what did he say?” said Granny expectantly.
    “He said, ‘Oh, no! Not on top of everything else!’”
    Granny beamed. “I knew ’e would have heard of me,” she said.

    In the same way that there are a thousand Kings of the Gypsies, so there are a thousand Kings of the Dwarfs. The term means something like “senior engineer.” There aren’t any Queens of the Dwarfs. Dwarfs are very reticent about revealing their sex, which most of them don’t consider to be very important compared to things like metallurgy and hydraulics.
    This king was standing in the middle of a crowd of shouting miners. He * looked up at the witches with the expression of a drowning man looking at a drink of water.
    “Are you really any good?” he said.
    Nanny Ogg and Granny Weatherwax looked at one another.
    “I think ’e’s talking to you, Magrat,” said Granny.
    “Only we’ve had a big fall in gallery nine,” said the King. “It looks bad. A very promising vein of gold-bearing quartz is irretrievably trapped.”
    One of the dwarfs beside him muttered something.
    “Oh, yeah. And some of the lads,” said the King vaguely. “And then you turn up. So the way I look at it, it’s probably fate.”
    Granny Weatherwax shook the snow off her hat and looked around.
    She was impressed, despite herself. You didn’t often see proper dwarf halls these days. Most dwarfs were off earning big money in the cities down in the lowlands, where it was much easier to be a dwarf—for one thing, you didn’t have to spend most of your time underground hitting your thumb with a hammer and worrying about fluctuations in the international metal markets. Lack of respect for tradition, that was the trouble these days. And take trolls. There were more trolls in Ankh-Morpork now than in the whole mountain range. Granny Weatherwax had nothing against trolls but she felt instinctively that if more trolls stopped wearing suits and walking upright, and went back to living under bridges and jumping out and eating people as nature intended, then the world would be a happier place.
    “You’d better show us where the problem is,” she said. “Lots of rocks fallen down, have they?”
    “Pardon?” said the King.
    It’s often said that eskimos have fifty words for snow. *
    This is not true.
    It’s also said that dwarfs have two hundred words for rock.
    They don’t. They have no words for rock, in the same way that fish have no words for water. They do have words for igneous rock, sedimentary rock, metamorphic rock, rock underfoot, rock dropping on your helmet from above, and rock which looked interesting and which they could have sworn they left here yesterday. But what they don’t have is a word meaning “rock.” Show a dwarf a rock and he sees, for example, an inferior piece of crystalline sulphite of barytes.
    Or, in this case, about two hundred tons of lowgrade shale. When the witches arrived at the disaster site dozens of dwarfs were working feverishly to prop the cracked roof and cart away the debris. Some of them were in

Similar Books

Alphas - Origins

Ilona Andrews

Poppy Shakespeare

Clare Allan

Designer Knockoff

Ellen Byerrum

MacAlister's Hope

Laurin Wittig

The Singer of All Songs

Kate Constable