‘Ah, is that so? Yessir, thank’ee sir, godsblessyousir, rightchewaresir,’ said the man, accepting another set of reins.
‘I suppose you don’t need an assistant?’ said Victor wistfully.
Bezam Planter stared at the pile of coins in front of him. Throat Dibbler moved his hands and it was a smaller pile of coins, but it was still a bigger pile of coins than Bezam had ever seen while in a waking state.
‘And we’re still showing it every quarter of an hour!’ breathed Bezam. ‘I’ve had to hire a boy to turn the handle! I don’t know, what should I do with all this money?’
Throat patted him on the shoulder.
‘Buy bigger premises,’ he said.
‘I’ve been thinking about that,’ said Bezam. ‘Yeah. Something with fancy pillars out in front. And my daughter Calliope plays the organ really nice,{25} it’d make a good accompaniment. And there should be lots of gold paint and curly bits—’
His eyes glazed.
It had found another mind.
Holy Wood dreams.
— and make it a palace like the fabulous Rhoxie in Klatch, or the richest temple there ever was, with slave girls to sell the banged grains and peanuts, and Bezam Planter walking about proprietorially in a red velvet jacket with gold string on it— ‘Hmm?’ he whispered, as the sweat beaded on his forehead.
‘I said, I’m off,’ said Throat. ‘Got to keep moving in the moving-picture business, you know.’
‘Mrs Planter says you’ve got to make more pictures with that young man,’ said Bezam. ‘The whole city’s talking about him. She said several ladies swooned when he gave them that smouldery look. She watched it five times,’ he added, his voice rimed with sudden suspicion. ‘And that girl! Wow!’
‘Don’t you worry about a thing,’ said Throat loftily. ‘I’ve got them under contr—’
Sudden doubt drifted across his face.
‘See you,’ he said shortly, and scurried out of the building.
Bezam stood alone and looked around at the cobwebbed interior of the
Then his eye fell on the poster for
Wonder what those two’re doing now? he thought. Prob’ly eating caviar off of gold plates and lounging around up to their knees in velvet cushions, you bet.
‘You look up to your knees in it, lad,’ said the horse-holder.
‘I’m afraid I’m not getting the hang of this horse-holding,’ said Victor.
‘Ah, ‘tis a hard trade, horse-holding,’ said the man. ‘It’s learning the proper grovellin’ and the irreverent but-not-too-impudent cheery ‘oss-’older’s banter. People don’t just want you to look after the ‘oss, see. They want a ‘oss-’olding hexperience.’
‘They do?’
‘They want an amusin’ encounter and a soup-son of repartee,’ said the little man. ‘It’s not just a matter of ‘oldin’ reins.’
Realization began to dawn on Victor.
‘It’s a performance,’ he said.
The ‘oss-’older tapped the side of his strawberry-shaped nose.
‘That’s right!’ he said.
Torches flared in Holy Wood. Victor struggled through the crowds in the main street. Every bar, every tavern, every shop had its doors thrown open. A sea of people ebbed and flowed between them. Victor tried jumping up and down to search the mob of faces.
He was lonely and lost and hungry. He needed someone to talk to, and she wasn’t there.
‘Victor!’
He spun around. Rock bore down on him like an avalanche.
‘Victor! My friend!’ A fist the size and hardness of a foundation stone pounded him playfully on the shoulder.
‘Oh, hi,’ said Victor weakly. ‘Er. How’s it going, Rock?’
‘Great! Great! Tomorrow we shoot
‘I’m very happy for you,’ said Victor.
‘You my lucky human!’ Rock boomed. ‘Rock! What a name! Come and have a drink!’
Victor accepted. He really didn’t have much of a choice, because Rock gripped his arm and, ploughing through the crowds like an icebreaker, half-led, half-dragged him towards the nearest door.
A blue light illuminated a sign. Most Morporkians could read Troll, it was hardly a difficult language. The sharp runes spelled out
It was a troll bar.
The smoky glow from the furnaces beyond the slab counter was the only light. It illuminated three trolls playing — well, something percussive, but Victor couldn’t quite make out what because the decibel level was in realms where the sound was a solid force, and it made his eyeballs vibrate. The furnace smoke hid the ceiling.
‘What you havin’?’ roared Rock.
‘I don’t have to drink molten metal, do I?’ Victor quavered. He had to quaver at the top of his voice in order to be heard.