Read Maskerade Online

Authors: Terry Pratchett

Maskerade (34 page)

‘Could he have got into the audience from here?' said Nanny.

‘Who?' said Bucket.

Granny jerked a thumb towards the stage. ‘He's somewhere on there. I can
feel
him.'

‘Then we'll wait until he comes off!'

‘Eighty people coming off stage all at once?' said Agnes. ‘Don't you know what it's
like
when the curtain goes down?'

‘And we don't want to stop the show,' Granny mused.

‘No, we don't want to stop the show,' said Bucket, grasping at a familiar idea as it swept by on a
tide of incomprehensibility. ‘Or give people their money back in any fashion whatsoever. What are we talking about, does anyone know?'

‘The show must go on …' murmured Granny Weatherwax, still staring out of the wings. ‘Things have to end right. This is an opera house. They should end … operatically …'

Nanny Ogg hopped up and down excitedly. ‘Oo, I know what you're thinking, Esme!' she squeaked. ‘Oo, yes! Can we? Just so's I can say I done it! Eh? Can we? Go on! Let's!'

Henry Lawsy peered closely at his opera notes. He had not, of course, fully understood the events of the first two acts, but knew that this was perfectly okay because one would have to be quite naïve to expect good sense as well as good songs. Anyway, it would all be explained in the last act, which was the Masked Ball in the Duke's Palace. It would almost certainly turn out that the woman one of the men had been rather daringly courting would be his own wife, but so cunningly disguised by a very small mask that her husband wouldn't have spotted that she wore the same clothes and had the same hairstyle. Someone's serving man would turn out to be someone else's daughter in disguise; someone would die of something that didn't prevent them from singing about it for several minutes; and the plot would be resolved by some coincidences which, in real life, would be as likely as a cardboard hammer.

He didn't know any of this for a fact. He was making a calculated guess.

In the meantime Act Three opened with the traditional ballet, this time apparently a country dance by the Maidens of the Court.

Henry was aware of muffled laughter around him.

This was because, if you ran an eye at head-height along the row of ballerinas as they tripped, arm in arm, on to the stage, there was an apparent gap.

This was only filled if the gaze went downwards a foot or two, to a small fat ballerina in a huge grin, an overstretched tutu, long white drawers and … boots.

Henry stared. They were
big
boots. They moved back and forth at an astonishing speed. The satin slippers of the other dancers twinkled as they drifted across the floor, but the boots flashed and clattered like a tap dancer afraid of falling into the sink.

The pirouettes were novel, too. While the other dancers whirled like snowflakes, the little fat one spun like a top and moved across the floor like one too, bits of her anatomy trying to achieve local orbit.

Around Henry members of the audience were whispering to one another.

‘Oh yes,' he heard someone declare, ‘they tried this in Pseudopolis …'

His mother nudged him. ‘This supposed to happen?'

‘Er … I don't think so …'

‘'S bloody good, though! A good laugh!'

As the fat ballerina collided with a donkey in evening dress she staggered and grabbed at his mask, which came off …

Herr Trubelmacher, the conductor, froze in horror and astonishment. Around him the orchestra rattled to a standstill, except for the tuba player—

—oom-BAH-oom-BAH-oom-BAH—

—who had memorized his score years ago and never took much interest in current affairs.

Two figures rose up right in front of Trubelmacher. A hand grabbed his baton.

‘Sorry, sir,' said André, ‘but the show must go on, yes?' He handed the stick to the other figure.

‘There you are,' he said. ‘And
don't let them stop
.'

‘Ook!'

The Librarian carefully lifted Herr Trubelmacher aside with one hand, licked the baton thoughtfully, and then focused his gaze on the tuba player.

—oom-BAH-oom-BAHhhh … oom … om …

The tuba player tapped a trombonist on the shoulder.

‘hey, Frank, there's a monkey where old troublemaker should be—'

‘shutupshutupshutup!'

Satisfied, the orang-utan raised his arms.

The orchestra looked up. And then looked up a bit more. No conductor in musical history, not even the one who once fried and ate the piccolo-player's liver on a cymbal for one wrong note too many, not even the one who skewered three troublesome violinists on his baton, not even the one who made really
hurtful
sarcastic remarks in a loud voice, was ever the focus of such reverential attention.

On stage, Nanny Ogg took advantage of the hush to pull the head off a frog.

‘Madam!'

‘Sorry, thought you might be someone else …'

The long arms dropped. The orchestra, in one huge muddled chord, slammed back into life.

The dancers, after a moment's confusion during which Nanny Ogg took the opportunity to decapitate a clown and a phoenix, tried to continue.

The chorus watched in bemusement.

Christine felt a tap on her shoulder, and turned to see Agnes. ‘Perdita! Where have you been!?' she hissed. ‘It's nearly time for my duet with Enrico!'

‘You've got to help!' hissed Agnes. But down in her soul Perdita said: Enrico, eh? It's Señor Basilica to everyone else …

‘Help you what!?' said Christine.

‘Take everyone's masks off!'

Christine's forehead wrinkled beautifully. ‘That's not supposed to happen until the end of the opera, is it?'

‘Er … it's all been changed!' said Agnes urgently. She turned to a nobleman in a zebra mask and tugged it desperately. The singer underneath glared at her.

‘Sorry!' she whispered. ‘I thought you were someone else!'

‘We're not supposed to take them off until the end!'

‘It's been changed!'

‘Has it? No one told me!'

A short-necked giraffe next to him leaned sideways. ‘What's that?'

‘The big unmasking scene is now, apparently!'

‘No one told
me
!'

‘Yes, but when does anyone ever tell us anything?
We're
only the chorus … here, why is old Troublemaker wearing a monkey mask …?'

Nanny Ogg pirouetted past, cannoned into an elephant in evening dress and beheaded him by the trunk. She whispered: ‘We're looking for the Ghost, see?'

‘But … the Ghost is dead, isn't he?'

‘Hard things to kill, ghosts,' said Nanny.

The whisper spread outwards from that point. There is nothing like a chorus for rumour. People who would not believe a High Priest if he said the sky was blue, and was able to produce signed affidavits to this effect from his white-haired old mother and three Vestal virgins, would trust just about anything whispered darkly behind their hand by a complete stranger in a pub.

A cockatoo spun around and pulled the mask off a parrot …

Bucket sobbed. This was worse than the day the buttermilk exploded. This was worse than the flash heatwave that had led a whole warehouseful of Lancre Extra Strong to riot.

The opera had turned into a
pantomime
.

The audience was
laughing
.

About the only character still with a mask on was Señor Basilica, who was watching the struggling chorus with as much aloof amazement as his own mask could convey – and this, amazingly enough, was quite a lot.

‘Oh, no …' moaned Bucket. ‘We'll never live it
down! He'll never come back! It'll be all over the opera circuit and no one will ever want to come here ever again!'

‘Ever again wha'?' mumbled a voice behind him.

Bucket turned. ‘Oh, Señor Basilica,' he said. ‘Didn't see you there … I was just thinking, I do hope you don't think this is typical!'

Señor Basilica stared through him, swaying slightly from side to side. He was wearing a torn shirt.

‘Summon …' he said.

‘I'm sorry?'

‘Summon … summon hit me onna head,' said the tenor. ‘Wanna glassa water pliss …'

‘But you're … just about … to … sing … aren't you?' said Bucket. He grabbed the stunned man by the collar to pull him closer, but this simply meant that he dragged himself off the floor, bringing his shoes about level with Basilica's knees. ‘Tell me … you're out there … on the stage … please!!!'

Even in his stunned state, Enrico Basilica a.k.a. Henry Slugg recognized what might be called the essential dichotomy of the statement. He stuck to what he knew.

‘Summon bashed me inna corridor …' he volunteered.

‘That's not you out there?'

Basilica blinked heavily. ‘'M not me?'

‘You're going to sing the famous duet in a moment!!!'

Another thought staggered through Basilica's abused skull. ‘'M I?' he said. ‘'S good … 'll
look forwa' to that. Ne'er had a chance to hear me befo' …'

He gave a happy little sigh and fell full-length backwards.

Bucket leaned against a pillar for support. Then his brow furrowed and, in the best traditions of the extended double-take, he stared at the fallen tenor and counted to one on his fingers. Then he turned towards the stage and counted to two.

He could feel a fourth exclamation mark coming on any time now.

The Enrico Basilica on stage turned his mask this way and that. Stage right, Bucket was whispering to a group of stage-hands. Stage left, André the secret pianist was waiting. A large troll loomed next to him.

The fat red singer walked to centre-stage as the prelude to the duet began. The audience settled down again. Fun and games among the chorus was all very well – it might even be in the plot – but this was what they'd paid for. This was what it was all about.

Agnes stared at him as Christine walked towards him.
Now
she could see he wasn't right. Oh, he was fat, in a pillow-up-your-shirt sort of way, but he didn't move like Basilica. Basilica moved lightly on his feet, as fat men often do, giving the effect of a barely tethered balloon.

She glanced at Nanny, who was also watching him carefully. She couldn't see Granny Weatherwax anywhere. That probably meant she was really close.

The expectancy of the audience dragged at them
all. Ears opened like petals. The fourth wall of the stage, the big black sucking darkness outside, was a well of silence begging to be filled up.

Christine was walking towards him quite unconcerned. Christine would walk into a dragon's mouth if it had a sign on it saying ‘Totally harmless, I promise you' … at least, if it was printed in large, easy-to-understand letters.

No one seemed to want to
do
anything.

It
was
a famous duet. And a beautiful one. Agnes ought to know. She'd been singing it all last night.

Christine took the false Basilica's hand and, as the opening bars of the duet began, opened her mouth—

‘Stop right there!'

Agnes put everything she could into it. The chandelier tinkled.

The orchestra went silent in a skid of wheezes and twangs.

In a fading of chords and a dying of echoes, the show stopped.

Walter Plinge sat in the candlelit gloom under the stage, his hands resting on his lap. It was not often that Walter Plinge had nothing to do, but, when he did have nothing to do, he did nothing.

He liked it down here. It was familiar. The sounds of the opera filtered through. They were muffled, but that didn't matter. Walter knew all the words, every note of music, every step of every dance. He needed the actual performances only
in the same way that a clock needs its tiny little escapement mechanism; it kept him ticking nicely.

Mrs Plinge had taught him to read using the old programmes. That's how he knew he was part of it all. But he knew that anyway. He'd cut what teeth he had on a helmet with horns on it. The first bed he could remember was the very same trampoline used by Dame Gigli in the infamous Bouncing Gigli incident.

Walter Plinge lived opera. He breathed its songs, painted its scenery, lit its fires, washed its floors and shined its shoes. Opera filled up places in Walter Plinge that might otherwise have been empty.

And now the show had stopped.

But all the energy, all the raw pent-up emotion that is dammed up behind a show – all the screaming, the fears, the hopes, the desires – flew on, like a body hurled from the wreckage.

The terrible momentum smashed into Walter Plinge like a tidal wave hitting a teacup.

It propelled him out of his chair and flung him against the crumbling scenery.

He slid down and rolled into a twitching heap on the floor, clapping his hands over his ears to shut out the sudden, unnatural silence.

A shape stepped out of the shadows.

Granny Weatherwax had never heard of psychiatry and would have had no truck with it even if she had. There are some arts too black even for a witch. She practised headology – practised, in fact, until she was very good at it. And though there may be some superficial similarities between a
psychiatrist and a headologist, there is a huge practical difference. A psychiatrist, dealing with a man who fears he is being followed by a large and terrible monster, will endeavour to convince him that monsters don't exist. Granny Weatherwax would simply give him a chair to stand on and a very heavy stick.

‘Stand up, Walter Plinge,' she said.

Walter stood up, staring straight ahead of him. ‘It's stopped! It's stopped! It's
bad luck
to stop the show!' he said hoarsely.

‘Someone better start it again,' said Granny.

‘You can't stop the show! It's the
show
!'

‘Yes. Someone better start it again, Walter Plinge.'

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