Терри Прэтчетт - Guards! Guards! стр 12.

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Around him the Brethren were chanting what each man considered, according to his lights, to be something mystical. The general effect was actually quite good, if you didn't listen to the words.

The words. Oh, yes...

He looked down, and spoke them aloud.

Nothing happened.

He blinked.

When he opened his eyes again he was in a dark alley, his stomach was full of fire, and he was very angry.

It was about to be the worst night of his life for Zebbo Mooty, Thief Third Class, and it wouldn't have made him any happier to know that it was also going to be the last one. The rain was keeping people indoors, and he was way behind on his quota. He was, therefore, a little less cautious than he might otherwise have been.

In the night time streets of Ankh-Morpork caution is an absolute. There is no such thing as moderately cautious. You are either very cautious, or you are dead. You might be walking around and breathing, but you're dead, just the same.

He heard the muffled sounds coming from the nearby alley, slid his leather-bound cosh from his sleeve, waited until the victim was almost turning the corner, sprang out, said "Oh, shi," and died.

It was a most unusual death. No-one else had died like that for hundreds of years.

The stone wall behind him glowed cherry red with heat, which gradually faded into darkness.

He was the first to see the Ankh-Morpork dragon. He derived little comfort from knowing this, however, because he was dead.

"t, " he said, and his disembodied self looked down at the small heap of charcoal which, he knew with an unfamiliar sort of certainty, was what he had just been disembodied from. It was a strange sensa­tion, seeing your own mortal remains. He didn't find it as horrifying as he would have imagined if you'd asked him, say, ten minutes ago. Finding that you are dead is mitigated by also finding that there really is a you who can find you dead.

The alley opposite was empty again.

"That was really strange, " said Mooty.

"Extremely unusual, certainly."

"Did you see that? What was it?" Mooty looked up at the dark figure emerging from the shadows. "Who're you, anyway?" he added suspiciously.

"Guess, " said the voice.

Mooty peered at the hooded figure.

"Cor!" he said. "I thought you dint turn up for the likes o' me. "

I TURN UP FOR EVERYONE.

"I mean in... person, sort of thing. "

"Sometimes. On special occasions."

"Yeah, well, " said Mooty, "this is one of them, all right! I mean, it looked like a bloody dragon! What's a man to do? You don't expect to find a dragon around the corner!"

"And now, if you would care to step this way ..". said Death, laying a skeletal hand on Mooty's shoulder.

"Do you know, a fortune teller once told me I'd die in my bed, surrounded by grieving great­grandchildren, " said Mooty, following the stately figure. "What do you think of that, eh?"

I THINK SHE WAS WRONG.

"A bloody dragon, " said Mooty. "Fire breathing, too. Did I suffer much?"

NO. IT WAS PRACTICALLY INSTANTANEOUS.

"That's good. I wouldn't like to think I'd suffered much. " Mooty looked around him. "What happens now?" he said.

Behind them, the rain washed the little heap of black ash into the mud.

...

The Supreme Grand Master opened his eyes. He was lying on his back. Brother Dunnykin was preparing to give him the kiss of life. The mere thought was enough to jerk anyone from the borders of consciousness.

He sat up, trying to shed the feeling that he weighed several tons and was covered in scales.

"We did it, " he whispered. "The dragon! It came! I felt it!"

The Brethren glanced at one another.

"We never saw nothing, " said Brother Plasterer.

"I might of seen something, " said Brother Watchtower loyally.

"No, not here, " snapped the Supreme Grand Mas­ter. "You hardly want it to materialise here, do you? It was out there, in the city. Just for a few seconds... "

He pointed. "Look!"

The Brethren turned around guiltily, expecting at any moment the hot flame of retribution.

In the centre of the circle the magic items were gently crumbling

to dust. Even as they watched, Brother Dunnykin's amulet collapsed.

"Sucked dry, " whispered Brother Fingers. "I'll be damned!"

"Three dollars that amulet cost me, " muttered Brother Dunnykin.

"But it proves it works, " said the Supreme Grand Master. "Don't you see, you fools? It works! We can summon dragons!"

"Could be a bit expensive in magical items, " said Brother Fingers doubtfully.

"three dollars, it was. No rubbish"

"Power, " growled the Supreme Grand Master, "does not come cheap. "

"Very true, " nodded Brother Watchtower. "Not cheap. Very true. " He looked at the little heap of ex­hausted magic again. "Cor, " he said. "We did it though, dint we! We only went and bloody well did some magic, right?"

"See?" said Brother Fingers. "I tole you there was nothin' to it. "

"You all did exceptionally well, " said the Supreme Grand Master encouragingly.

"should've been six dollars, but he said he'd cut his own throat and sell it me for three dollars"

"Yeah, " said Brother Watchtower. "We got the hang of it all right! Dint hurt a bit. We done real magic! And dint get et by tooth fairies from out of the woodwork either, Brother Plasterer, I couldn't help noticing. "

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