'Who're you?' he said.
'Grabpot Thundergust,' said the dwarf, striking his chain-mailed torso. 'And I say—'
Hwel peered closer.
'Here, I know you,' he said. 'You got a cosmetics mill down Hobfast Street. I bought a lot of greasepaint off you last week—'
A look of panic crossed Thundergust's face. He leaned forward in panic. 'Shutup, shutup,' he whispered.
'That's right, it said the Halls of Elven Perfume and Rouge Co.,' said Hwel happily.
'Ver' good stuff,' said Tomjon, who was trying to stop himself from sliding off the tiny bench. 'Especially your No. 19, Corpse Green, my father swears it's the best. First class.'
The dwarf hefted-his axe uneasily. 'Well, er,' he said. 'Oh. But. Yes. Well, thank you. Only the finest ingredients, mark you.'
'Chop them up with that, do you?' said Hwel innocently, pointing to the axe. 'Or is it your night off?'
Thundergust's brows beetled again like a cockroach convention.
'Here, you're not with the theatre?'
'Tha's us,' said Tomjon. 'Strolling players.' He corrected himself. 'Standing-still players now. Haha. Slidin'-down players now.'
The dwarf dropped his axe and sat down on the bench, his face suddenly softened with enthusiasm.
'I went last week,' he said. 'Bloody good, it was. There was this girl and this fellow, but she was married to this old man, and there was this other fellow, and they said he'd died, and she pined away and took poison, but then it turned out this man was the other man really, only he couldn't tell her on account of—' Thundergust stopped, and blew his nose. 'Everyone died in the end,' he said. 'Very tragic. I cried all the way home, I don't mind telling you. She was so pale.'
'No. 19 and a layer of powder,' said Tomjon cheerfully. 'Plus a bit of brown eyeshadow.'
'Eh?'
'And a couple of hankies in the vest,' he added.
'What's he saying?' said the dwarf to the company at, for want of a better word, large.
Hwel smiled into his tankard.
'Give 'em a bit of Gretalina's soliloquy, boy,' he said.
'Right.'
Tomjon stood up, hit his head, sat down and then knelt on the floor as a compromise. He clasped his hands to what would have been, but for a few chance chromosomes, his bosom.
'You lie who call it Summer . . .' he began.
The assembled dwarfs listened in silence for several minutes. One of them dropped his axe, and was noisily hushed by the rest of them.
'. . . and melting snow. Farewell,' Tomjon finished. 'Drinks phial, collapses behind battlements, down ladder, out of dress and into tabard for Comic Guard No.2, wait one, entrance left. What ho, good—'
'That's about enough,' said Hwel quietly.
Several of the dwarfs were crying into their helmets. There was a chorus of blown noses.
Thundergust dabbed at his eyes with a chain-mail handkerchief.
'That was the most saddest thing I've ever heard,' he said. He glared at Tomjon. 'Hang on,' he said, as realisation dawned. 'He's a man. I bloody fell in love with that girl on stage.' He nudged Hwel. 'He's not a bit of an elf, is he?'
'Absolutely human,' said Hwel. 'I know his father.'