Thud! (Discworld 34)
walls a few times lately. Troll graffiti; you know, carved in deep.
Seems to be causing a buzz among the trolls. Important, maybe?"
Vimes nodded. You ignored the writing on the walls at your peril. Sometimes it was the city"s way of telling you, if not what was on its bubbling mind, then at least what was in its creaking heart.
"Well, keep listening, Fred. I"m relying on you not to let a buzz become a sting," said Vimes, with extra cheerfulness to keep the man"s spirits up. "And now I"ve got to see our vampire.)
"Best of luck, Sam. I think it"s going to be a long day."
Sam, thought Vimes, as the old sergeant went out. Gods know he"s earned it, but he only calls me Sam when he"s really worried. Well, we all are.
We"re waiting for the first shoe to drop.
Vimes unfolded the copy of the Times that Cheery had left on his desk. He always read it at work, to catch up on the news that Willikins had thought it unsafe for him to hear whilst shaving.
Koom Valley, Koom Valley . Vimes shook out the paper and saw Koom Valley everywhere. Bloody, bloody Koom Valley . Gods damn the wretched place, although obviously they had already done so - damned it and then forsaken it. Up close it was just another rocky wasteland in the mountains. In theory it was a long way away, but lately it seemed to be getting a lot closer. Koom Valley wasn"t really a place now, not any more. It was a state of mind.
If you wanted the bare facts, it was where the dwarfs had ambushed the trolls and/or the trolls had ambushed the dwarfs, one ill-famed day under unkind stars. Oh, they"d fought one another since Creation, as far as Vimes understood it, but at the Battle of Koom Valley that mutual hatred became, as it were, Official, and as such had developed a kind of mobile geography. Where any dwarf fought any troll, there was Koom Valley. Even if it was a punch-up in a pub, it was Koom Valley. It was part of the mythology of both races, a rallying cry, the ancestral reason why you couldn"t trust those short, bearded/big, rocky bastards.
There had been plenty of such Koom Valleys since that first one. The war between the dwarfs and the trolls was a battle of natural
forces, like the war between the wind and the waves. It had a momentum of its own.
Saturday was Koom Valley Day and Ankh-Morpork was full of trolls and dwarfs, and you know what? The further trolls and dwarfs got from the mountains, the more that bloody, bloody Koom Valley mattered. The parades were okay; the Watch had got good at keeping them apart, and anyway they were in the morning when everyone was still mostly sober. But when the dwarf bars and the troll bars emptied out in the evening, hell went for a stroll with its sleeves rolled up.
In the bad old days the Watch would find business elsewhere, and turned up only when stewed tempers had run their course. Then they"d bring out the hurry-up wagon and arrest every troll and dwarf too drunk, dazed or dead to move. It was simple.
That was then. Now, there were too many dwarfs and trolls - no, mental correction, the city had been enriched by vibrant, growing communities of dwarfs and trolls - and there was more ... yes, call it venom in the air. Too much ancient politics, too many chips handed down from shoulder to shoulder. Too much boozing, too.
And then, just when you thought it was as bad as it could be, up popped Grag Hamcrusher and his chums. Deep-downers, they were called, dwarfs as fundamental as the bedrock. They"d turned up a month ago, occupied some old house in Treacle Street and had hired a bunch of local lads to open up the basements. They were grags". Vimes knew just enough dwarfish to know that grag meant renowned master of dwarfish lore. Hamcrusher, however, had mastered it in his own special way. He preached the superiority of dwarf over troll, and that the duty of every dwarf was to follow in the footsteps of their forefathers and remove trollkind from the face of the world. It was written in some holy book, apparently, so that made it okay, and probably compulsory.
Young dwarfs listened to him, because he talked about history and destiny and all the other words that always got trotted out to put a gloss on slaughter. It was heady stuff, except that brains weren"t involved. Malign idiots like him were the reason you saw dwarfs walking around now not just with the "cultural" battle-axe but heavy mail, chains, morningstars, broadswords ... all the dumb, in-your-face swaggering that was known as "clang.
Trolls listened too. You saw more lichen, more clan graffiti, more body-carving and much, much bigger clubs being dragged around.
It hadn"t always been like this. Things had loosened up a lot in the last ten years or so. Dwarfs and trolls as races would never be chums, but the city stirred them together and it had seemed to Vimes that they had managed to get along with no more than surface abrasions.
Now the melting pot was full of lumps again.
Gods damn Hamcrusher. Vimes itched to arrest him. Technically, he was doing nothing wrong, but that was no barrier to a copper who knew his business. He could certainly get him under Behaviour Likely To Cause A Breach Of The Peace. Vetinari had been against it, though. He"d said it"d only inflame the situation, but how much worse could it get?
Vimes closed his eyes and recalled that little figure, dressed in heavy black leather robes and hooded so that he would not commit the crime of seeing daylight. A little figure, but with big words. He remembered:
"Beware of the troll. Trust him not. Turn him from your door. He is nothing, a mere accident of forces, unwritten, unclean, the mineral world"s pale, jealous echo of living, thinking creatures. In his head, a rock; in his heart, a stone. He does not build, he does not delve, he neither plants nor harvests. His nascency was a deed of theft and everywhere he drags his club he steals. When not thieving, he plans theft. The only purpose in his miserable life is its ending, relieving from the wretched rock his all-too-heavy burden of thought. I say this in sadness. To kill the troll is no murder. At its very worst, it is an act of charity."
It was round about that time that the mob had broken into the hall.
That was how much worse it could be. Vimes blinked at the newspaper again, this time seeking anything that dared suggest that people in Ankh-Morpork still lived in the real world
"Oh, damn!" He got up and hurried down the stairs, where Cheery practically cowered at his thundering approach.
"Did we know about this?" he demanded, thumping the paper down on the Occurrences Ledger.
"Know about what, sir?" said Cheery.
Vimes prodded a short illustrated article on page four, his finger stabbing at the page. "See that?" he growled. "That pea-brained idiot at the Post Office has only gone and issued a Koom Valley stamp!"
The dwarf looked nervously at the article. "Er ... two stamps, sir," she said.