THANK YOU. I MUST SAY THESE ARE VERY GOOD BISCUITS. HOW DO THEY GET THE BITS OF CHOCOLATE IN?
“Dunno, m'lord,” said Jason, staring fixedly at the inside of his blindfold.
I MEAN, THE CHOCOLATE OUGHT TO MELT OUT WHEN THEY'RE BAKED. HOW DO THEY DO IT, DO YOU THINK?
“Tis probably a craft secret,” said Jason. “I never asks that kind o'question.”
GOOD MAN. VERY WISE. I MUST-
He had to ask, if only so's he'd always know that he had asked.
“M'lord?”
YES, MR. OGG?
“I 'as got one question . . .”
YES, MR. OGG?
Jason ran his tongue over his lips.
“If I were to . . . take the blindfold off, what'd I see?”
There. It was done now.
There was a clicking sound on the flagstones, and a change in the air movement which suggested to Jason that the speaker was now standing in front of him.
ARE YOU A MAN OF FAITH, MR. OGG?
Jason gave this some swift consideration. Lancre was not knee-deep in religions. There were the Nine Day Wonderers, and the Strict Offlians, and there were various altars to small gods of one sort or another, tucked away in distant clearings. He'd never really felt the need, just like the dwarfs. Iron was iron and fire was fire - start getting metaphysical and you were scraping your thumb on the bottom of your hammer.
WHAT DO YOU REALLY HAVE FAITH IN, RIGHT AT THIS MOMENT?
He's inches away, Jason thought. I could reach out and touch . . .
There was a smell. It wasn't unpleasant. It was hardly anything at all. It was the smell of air in old forgotten rooms. If centuries could smell, then old ones would smell like that.
MR. OGG?
Jason swallowed.
“Well, m'lord,” he said, “right now . . . I really believe in this blindfold.”
GOOD MAN. GOOD MAN. AND NOW . . . I MUST BE GOING.
Jason heard the latch lift. There was a thud as the doors scraped back, driven by the wind, and then there was the sound of hooves on the cobbles again.
YOUR WORK, AS ALWAYS, IS SUPERB.
“Thank you, m'lord.”
I SPEAK AS ONE CRAFTSMAN TO ANOTHER.
“Thank you, m'lord.”
WE WILL MEET AGAIN.
“Yes, m'lord.”