The da Quirms had been quite rich and young Leonard had been to a great many schools, where he had absorbed a ragbag of information despite his habit of staring out of the window and sketching the flight of birds. Leonard was one of those unfortunate individuals whose fate it was to be fascinated by the world, the taste, shape and movement of it…
He fascinated Lord Vetinari as well, which is why he was still alive. Some things are so perfect of their type that they are hard to destroy. One of a kind is always special.
He was a model prisoner. Give him enough wood, wire, paint and above all give him paper and pencils, and he stayed put.
The Patrician moved a stack of drawings and sat down.
“These are good,” he said. “What are they?”
“My cartoons,” said Leonard.
“This is a good one of the little boy with his kite stuck in a tree,” said Lord Vetinari.
“Thank you. May I make you some tea? I'm afraid I don't see many people these days, apart from the man who oils the hinges.”
“I've come to…”
The Patrician stopped and prodded at one of the drawings.
“There's a piece of yellow paper stuck to this one,” he said, suspiciously. He pulled at it. It came away from the drawing with a faint sucking noise, and then stuck to his fingers. On the note, in Leonard's crabby backward script, were the words: “krow ot smees sihT: omeM”.
“Oh, I'm rather pleased with that,” said Leonard. “I call it my ‘Handy-note-scribbling-piece-of-paper-with-glue-that-comes-unstuck-when-you-want’.”
The Patrician played with it for a while.
“What's the glue made of?”
“Boiled slugs.”
The Patrician pulled the paper off one hand. It stuck to the other hand.
“Is that what you came to see me about?” said Leonard.
“No. I came to talk to you,” said Lord Vetinari, “about the gonne.”
“Oh, dear. I'm very sorry.”
“I am afraid it has… escaped.”
“My goodness. I thought you said you'd done away with it.”
“I gave it to the Assassins to destroy. After all, they pride themselves on the artistic quality of their work. They should be horrified at the idea of
“They didn't destroy it?”
“Apparently not, the fools.”
“And nor did you. I wonder why?”
“I… do you know, I don't know?”
“I should never have made it. It was merely an application of principles. Ballistics, you know. Simple aerodynamics. Chemical power. Some rather good alloying, although I say it myself. And I'm rather proud of the rifling idea. I had to make a quite complicated tool for that, you know. Milk? Sugar?”
“No, thank you.”
“People are searching for it, I trust?”
“The Assassins are. But they won't find it. They don't think the right way.” The Patrician picked up a pile of sketches of the human skeleton. They were extremely good.
“Oh, dear.”
“So I am relying on the Watch.”
“This would be the Captain Vimes you have spoken of.”
Lord Vetinari always enjoyed his occasional conversations with Leonard. The man always referred to the city as if it was another world.
“Yes.”
“I hope you have impressed upon him the importance of the task.”
“In a way. I've absolutely forbidden him to undertake it. Twice.”
Leonard nodded. “Ah. I… think I understand. I hope it works.”
He sighed.
“I suppose I should have dismantled it, but… it was so clearly a
“Dismantling a person is sometimes necessary,” said Lord Vetinari.
“This, of course, is a point of view,” said Leonard da Quirm politely.
“You mentioned sacrilege,” said Lord Vetinari. “Normally that involves gods of some sort, does it not?”
“Did I use the word? I can't imagine there is a god of gonnes.”
“It is quite hard, yes.”
The Patrician shifted uneasily, reached down behind him, and pulled out an object.
“What,” he said, “is this?”
“Oh, I wondered where that had gone,” said Leonard. “It's a model of my spinning-up-into-the-air machine.”22
Lord Vetinari prodded the little rotor.
“Would it work?”
“Oh, yes,” said Leonard. He sighed. “If you can find one man with the strength of ten men who can turn the handle at about one thousand revolutions a minute.”
The Patrician relaxed, in a way which only then drew gentle attention to the foregoing moment of tension.
“Now there is in this city,” he said, “a man with a gonne. He has used it successfully once, and almost succeeded a second time. Could anyone have invented the gonne?”
“No,” said Leonard. “I am a genius.” He said it quite simply. It was a statement of fact.
“Understood. But once a gonne has