The coach rattled across the featureless plains. The land between Ankh-Morpork and the Ramtops was fertile, well-cultivated and dull, dull, dull. Travel broadens the mind. This landscape broadened the mind because the mind just flowed out from the ears like porridge. It was the kind of landscape where, if you saw a distant figure cutting cabbages, you'd watch him until he was out of sight because there was simply nothing else for the eye to do.
"I spy," said the Bursar, "with my little eye, something beginning with . . . H."
"Oook."
"No."
"Horizon," said Ponder.
"You guessed!"
"Of course I guessed. I'm supposed to guess. We've had S for Sky, C for Cabbage, 0 for . . . for Ook, and there's nothing
"I'm not going to play anymore if you're going to guess." The Bursar pulled his hat down over his ears and tried to curl up on the hard seat.
"There'll be lots to see in Lancre," said the Archchancellor. "The only piece of flat land they've got up there is in a museum."
Ponder said nothing.
"Used to spend whole summers up there," said Ridcully. He sighed. "You know . . . things could have been very different."
Ridcully looked around. If you're going to relate an intimate piece of personal history, you want to be sure it's going to be heard.
The Librarian looked out at the jolting scenery. He was sulking. This had a lot to do with the new bright blue collar around his neck with the word "PONGO' on it. Someone was going to suffer for this.
The Bursar was trying to use his hat like a limpet uses its shell.
"There was this girl."
Ponder Stibbons, chosen by a cruel fate to be the only one listening, looked surprised. He was aware that, technically, even the Archchancellor had been young once. After all, it was just a matter of time. Common sense suggested that wizards didn't flash into existence aged seventy and weighing nineteen stone. But common sense needed reminding.
He felt he ought to say something.
"Pretty, was she, sir?" he said.
"No. No, I can't say she was.
Ponder tried to work this out.
"You don't mean that dwarf who runs the delicatessen in-" he began.
"I
He lapsed into silence again, staring at the newsreels of memory.
"I would've married her, you know," he said.
Ponder said nothing. When you're a cork in someone else's stream of consciousness, all you can do is spin and bob in the eddies.
"What a summer," murmured Ridcully. "Very like this one, really. Crop circles were bursting like raindrops. And . . . well, I was having doubts, you know. Magic didn't seem to be enough. I was a bit . . . lost. I'd have given it all up for her. Every blasted octogram and magic spell. Without a second thought. You know when they say things like 'she had a laugh like a mountain stream'?"
"I'm not
"Load of cobblers, poetry," said Ridcully. "I've listened to mountain streams and they just go trickle, trickle, gurgle.
And you get them things in them, you know, insect things with little . . . anyway. Doesn't sound like laughter at all, is my point. Poets always get it wrong. 'S'like 'she had lips like cherries.' Small, round, and got a stone in the middle? Hah!"
He shut his eyes. After a while Ponder said, "So what happened, sir?"
"What?"
"The girl you were telling me about."
"What girl?"
"This girl."
"Oh, that girl. Oh, she turned me down. Said there were things she wanted to do. Said there'd be time enough."
There was another pause.
"What happened then?" Ponder prompted.
"Happened? What d'you think happened? I went off and studied. Term started. Wrote her a lot of letters but she never answered 'em. Probably never got 'em, they probably eat the mail up there. Next year I was studying all summer and never had time to go back. Never
He stretched out with his feet on the Bursar.
"'S'funny, that," he said. "Can't even remember her name. Hah! She could outrun a horse-"
"
The coach rattled to a halt.
Ridcully opened an eye.
"What's that?" he said.
Ponder jerked awake from a reverie of lips like mountain streams and looked out of the window.
"I think," he said, "it's a very small highwayman."
The coachman peered down at the figure in the road. It was hard to see much from this angle, because of the short body and the wide hat. It was like looking at a well-dressed mushroom with a feather in it.
"I do apologize for this," said the very small highwayman. "I find myself a little short."