Lord Felmet looking gloomily at the landscape. It started to rain.
It was on this cue that there came a thunderous knocking at the castle door. It seriously disturbed the castle porter, who was playing Cripple Mister Onion with the castle cook and the castleâs Fool in the warmth of the kitchen.
He growled and stood up. âThere is a knocking without,â he said.
âWithout what?â said the Fool.
âWithout the door, idiot.â
The Fool gave him a worried look. âA knocking without a door?â he said suspiciously. âThis isnât some kind of Zen, is it?â
When the porter had grumbled off in the direction of the gatehouse the cook pushed another farthing into the kitty and looked sharply over his cards at the Fool.
âWhatâs a Zen?â he said.
The Foolâs bells tinkled as he sorted through his cards. Without thinking, he said: âOh, a sub-sect of the Turnwise Klatch philosophical system of Sumtin, noted for its simple austerity and the offer of personal tranquillity and wholeness achieved through meditation and breathing techniques; an interesting aspect is the asking of apparently nonsensical questionsin order to widen the doors of perception.â
âHowâs that again?â said the cook suspiciously. He was on edge. When heâd taken the breakfast up to the Great Hall heâd kept getting the feeling that something was trying to take the tray out of his hands. And as if that wasnât bad enough, this new duke had sent him back for . . . He shuddered. Oatmeal! And a runny boiled egg! The cook was too old for this sort of thing. He was set in his ways. He was a cook in the real feudal tradition. If it didnât have an apple in its mouth and you couldnât roast it, he didnât want to serve it.
The Fool hesitated with a card in his hand, suppressed his panic and thought quickly.
âIâfaith, nuncle,â he squeaked, âthouât more full of questions than a martlebury is of mizzensails.â
The cook relaxed.
âWell, OK,â he said, not entirely satisfied. The Fool lost the next three hands, just to be on the safe side.
The porter, meanwhile, unfastened the hatch in the wicket gate and peered out.
âWho dost knock without?â he growled.
The soldier, drenched and terrified though he was, hesitated.
âWithout? Without what?â he said.
âIf youâre going to bugger about, you can bloody well stay without all day,â said the porter calmly.
âNo! I must see the duke upon the instant!â shouted the guard. âWitches are abroad!â
The porter was about to come back with, âGood time of year for itâ, or âWish I was, tooâ, but stopped when he saw the manâs face. It wasnât the face of a man who would enter into the spirit of the thing. It was the look of someone who had seen things a decent man shouldnât wot of . . .
* * *
âWitches?â said Lord Felmet.
âWitches!â said the duchess.
In the draughty corridors, a voice as faint as the wind in distant keyholes said, with a note of hope, âWitches!â
The psychically inclined . . .
âItâs meddling, thatâs what it is,â said Granny Weatherwax. âAnd no good will come of it.â
âItâs very
romantic
,â said Magrat breathily, and heaved a sigh.
âGoochy goo,â said Nanny Ogg.
âAnyway,â said Magrat, âyou killed that horrid man!â
âI never did. I just encouraged . . . things to take their course.â Granny Weatherwax frowned. âHe didnât have no respect. Once people lose their respect, it means trouble.â
âIzzy wizzy wazzy, den.â
âThat other man brought him out here to save him!â shouted Magrat. âHe wanted us to keep him safe! Itâs obvious! Itâs destiny!â
âOh,
obvious
,â said Granny. âIâll grant you