Lords and Ladies

Lords and Ladies by Terry Pratchett Page B

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Authors: Terry Pratchett
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from the height?”
    “I mean, the helmet and iron boots department is among those you are lacking in,” said Ridcully.
    The dwarf bowed and produced a slip of pasteboard from one grubby but lace-clad sleeve.
    “My card,” he said.
    It read:

    Ponder peered over Ridcully’s shoulder.
    “Are you really an outrageous liar?”
    “No.”
    “Why are you trying to rob coaches, then?”
    “I am afraid I was waylaid by bandits.”
    “But it says here,” said Ridcully, “that you are a finest swordsman.”
    “I was outnumbered.”
    “How many of them were there?”
    “Three million.”
    “Hop in,” said Ridcully.
    Casanunda threw his stepladder into the coach and then peered into the gloom.
    “Is that an ape asleep in there?”
    “Yes.”
    The Librarian opened one eye.
    “What about the smell?”
    “He won’t mind.”
    “Hadn’t you better apologize to the coachman?” said Ponder.
    “No, but I could kick him again harder if he likes.”
    “And that’s the Bursar,” said Ridcully, pointing to Exhibit B, who was sleeping the sleep of the near-terminally overdosed on dried frog pills. “Hey, Bursar? Bursssaaar? No, he’s out like a light. Just push him under the seat. Can you play Cripple Mr. Onion?”
    “Not very well.”
    “Capital!”
    Half an hour later Ridcully owed the dwarf $8,000.
    “But I put it on my visiting card,” Casanunda pointed out. “Outrageous liar. Right there.”
    “Yes, but I thought you were lying!”
    Ridcully sighed and, to Ponder’s amazement, produced a bag of coins from some inner recess. They were large coins and looked suspiciously realistic and golden.
    Casanunda might have been a libidinous soldier of fortune by profession but he was a dwarf by genetics, and there are some things dwarfs know .
    “Hmm,” he said. “You don’t have ‘outrageous liar’ on your visiting card, by any chance?”
    “No!” said Ridcully excitedly.
    “It’s just that I can recognize chocolate money when I see it.”
    “You know,” said Ponder, as the coach jolted along a canyon, “this reminds me of that famous logical puzzle.”
    “What logical puzzle?” said the Archchancellor.
    “Well,” said Ponder, gratified at the attention, “it appears that there was this man, right, who had to choose between going through two doors, apparently, and the guard on one door always told the truth and the guard on the other door always told a lie, and the thing was , behind one door was certain death, and behind the other door was freedom, and he didn’t know which guard was which, and he could only ask them one question and so: what did he ask?”
    The coach bounced over a pothole. The Librarian turned over in his sleep.
    “Sounds like Psychotic Lord Hargon of Quirm to me,” said Ridcully, after a while.
    “That’s right,” said Casanunda. “He was a devil for jokes like that. How many students can you get in an Iron Maiden, that kind of thing.”
    “So this was at his place, then, was it?” said Ridcully.
    “What? I don’t know,” said Ponder.
    “Why not? You seem to know all about it.”
    “I don’t think it was anywhere . It’s a puzzle .”
    “Hang on,” said Casanunda, “I think I’ve worked it out. One question, right?”
    “Yes,” said Ponder, relieved.
    “And he can ask either guard?”
    “ Yes .”
    “Oh, right. Well, in that case he goes up to the smallest guard and says, ‘Tell me which is the door to freedom if you don’t want to see the color of your kidneys and incidentally I’m walking through it behind you, so if you’re trying for the Mr. Clever Award just remember who’s going through it first .’”
    “No, no, no!”
    “Sounds logical to me,” said Ridcully. “Very good thinking.”
    “But you haven’t got a weapon!”
    “Yes I have. I wrested it from the guard while he was considering the question,” said Casanunda.
    “Clever,” said Ridcully. “Now that , Mr. Stibbons, is logical thought. You could learn a lot from this

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