Assassin In The School
At
this point, it should be explained that the second most dangerous person in the
world is reading the newspaper, the Ankh-Morpork Times: The Truth Shall Make
Ye Frew, as the letterhead reads.
She
is not quite awake yet, and is drinking Klatchian coffee to remedy this fact.
She is one of three people in the world who can drink pure Klatchian coffee
without getting extremely drunk first.
She
has just accidentally tipped a spoonful of oatmeal onto a picture of a
humorously shaped vegetable, and is currently scanning an editorial about how
her father is allowing too many dwarves into the city.
"Hey,
check this out." She pushes the paper across to the table to her father, who is
also drinking Klatchian coffee and is reviewing a police report.
Lord
Vetinari takes the paper. "Too many dwarves…more than the human population…the
rat population has gone down? Who wrote this?"
Alexandria
shrugs. "I think the head of the Rich Snobby Bastards' guild wrote it. So, what
are you reading?"
"Sergeant
Colon's police report." Her father smiles slightly. "There are some very
unconventional uses of punctuation in this. You could learn something."
Alexandria
shrugs. She knows how to use punctuation, unlike most Morporkians. She also
knows how to spell.
Alexandria
is a striking person, the daughter of the Patrician of Ankh-Morpork and an
unidentified high-ranking lady vampire who lives in Uberwald. Alexandria has
been educated at the Assassin's Guild. Not only is she a very talented and
educated person, but she is also the youngest person to ever pass the
Assassin's test. She owes this to her personal tutor, a young man named
Jonathon Teatime, who disappeared under mysterious circumstances last
Hogswatch. Alexandria has had only the best since her birth. Her father hired a
governess named Susan Sto-Helit, who came very highly recommended.
From
her father, Alexandria got her thin figure, unnerving calmness, high
intelligence, a sharp nose, and a tendency to wear black. From her mother, she
got long, silky black hair and a widow's peak, violet eyes, pale skin, and
blood-red lips, excellent vision in the dark, and a general ability to not mind
blood and gore. She was, in fact, the only person who ever ate the black
pudding on Thursdays. Also—and this is important—from her mother, she got
intriguing magical abilities.
Because
of this, Alexandria is being tutored in both wizardry and witchcraft
(which are NOT the same things, and if you don't believe it, read Equal
Rites, by Terry Pratchett) by Eskarina Smith, the only woman ever to be
accepted at Unseen University.
Lord
Vetinari shrugs. "Well, whoever wrote this editorial must be wrong."
"Why
do you say that?" Alexandria asks.
Vetinari
quietly points to a corner. A small, worried-looking rat is sitting there,
staring at the Patrician of Ankh-Morpork and his daughter.
"They
carry disease," Alexandria says.
The
rat suddenly turns into a man. "I don't." He looks at them mournfully.
"At least, I don't think I do."
"Well,
have you gotten yourself checked?" Alexandria snaps.
Vetinari
sighs and lays the police report aside. It can wait until this odd visitor is
dealt with. "How did you get in here?"
"It
was easy," the man says. "I got in through that little hole in the wall, then
went through the ventilation until I found you two. My name's Peter Pettigrew,
by the way." He looks at the floor. "My master sent me here."
"Who,"
asks Vetinari coldly, "is your master?" Havelock Vetinari is morally opposed to
people calling other people "master." He considers it detrimental to political
morale, and demeaning, besides.
"Voldemort,"
whispered Pettigrew. He straightened up. "My master bids you to…oh jeez, what
did he say...inhume his greatest enemy."
Vetinari
gives him a Look. "And you expect me to do this."
Pettigrew
blushes. "Oh no, sir. Voldemort would not ask one with such responsibilities to
kill. But we have heard of your daughter's skill, and request her services."
Vetinari
looks at his daughter. "Just a moment."
The
two converse in the other room for a moment, in ancient Klatchian, which
Pettigrew certainly does not know.
Vetinari:
This would be your first inhuming.
Alexandria: I can handle things myself. You know that.
Vetinari:
Are you sure you really want to be an
Assassin? Because it's either that or rule the city. The people won't respect
you if they know you're an Assassin.
Alexandria:
Who ever said I wanted to rule
the city? I'd like to be an Assassin. Besides, I'd do a lousy job being a
ruler. I don't have leadership material and you know it.
Vetinari:
But we can't count on anyone else to do
it.
Alexandria:
The job shouldn't be hereditary. If we
ran Captain Carrot for Patrician after you died, everyone would vote for him. I
already went over this with you.
Vetinari:
It's your life, my dear. If you want to
make your fortune in highly unusual and difficult inhumations, go ahead.
Alexandria:
Thank you, I will.
Vetinari:
Good luck dealing with him.
Alexandria
walks back into the breakfast room. Pettigrew is still there, waiting for them.
"How
much will Voldemort pay?" Alexandria asks.
Pettigrew
looks surprised. "I don't know. He never said anything about paying."
Alexandria
turns her back haughtily on him. "I am an Assassin, not a murderer. I do not
kill without receiving payment."
Pettigrew
scrabbles for words. "But…that is…I'm sure I could get him to…" He looks
mournfully at Alexandria. "If you don't, he'll kill me!"
Alexandria
takes pity on him. "Tell you what," she says. "First, get me the information
I'll need to inhume this person. Then I'll tell you how much it'll cost."
Pettigrew
nods. "Be back in a second." He turns back into a rat and disappears into a
hole in the wall.
After
a few minutes, a wad of papers is pushed through the hole. Pettigrew crawls
through after it, and turns back into a human.
Alexandria
looks at the wad disdainfully. "This is the information?"
Pettigrew
sweeps the breakfast things aside and sets the papers on the table, smoothing
them out. "This is all you need to know to inhume him. I trust you have some kind
of magical powers?"
"Some,"
Alexandria says cautiously. She picks up a stack of papers and riffles through
them. "This may be very difficult."
"Thirty
million dollars," Pettigrew says.
Alexandria
raises one eyebrow. This is one thousand times the sum an ordinary inhuming
would take. "Time limit?"
"A
year," Pettigrew says. He grins madly. "Is it OK?"
Alexandria
lays the papers aside and smiles thinly. "It's OK."
Alexandria reviews the
information. She has decided on the best way to do the job, and is preparing.
She slips her dagger into the
sheath. It's a special dagger, made out of octiron, a magical metal. It's eight
inches long. She's made the sheath specially for this job. It's disguised as a
wand.
Her magpie, Mordor, is sitting
on her shoulder. He's a very intelligent bird, with an excellent wingspread and
a tendency to steal pieces of jewelry.
Alexandria pats him on the head.
She got Mordor as a birthday present from her father, who felt a little guilty
over sending her to Uberwald during Carpe Jugulum. Alexandria has
trained him well, and he doesn't go to the bathroom on her shoulder anymore.
She checks the locks on her
luggage. And no, it doesn't have any legs. Or teeth. But it does have wheels.
She hasn't packed very much.
Assassins tend to travel light. She has affixed an anti-stealing charm to all
of her things, and, in case that doesn't work, has a booby trap in her luggage.
Her father's clerk, Drumknott, has given her a Dis-Organizer Mk III, which not
only can tell you the time and your appointments, but can also play games on.
It has a wooden frame, in which the imp inserts little colored blocks, and
you're supposed to make them fit.
She checks over the information
once again. "So I'm supposed to just try and bash right through this gate? What
happens if it doesn't work?"
"Then I suppose you're
completely screwed," Eskarina says. She's standing over Alexandria, watching
her pack. Eskarina is a pretty woman, with short brown hair, a gap in her front
teeth, and eyes like steel. She's very pleasant to be around, as long as you
don't cross her.
Alexandria slams down the lid of
the suitcase. It jumps slightly. "I think I'd rather use a teleportation spell,
thank you."
Eskarina sighs. "All right, but
we'll need to get Hex to work out the coordinates."
Alexandria stands in the middle
of an octagon, drawn by Ponder Stibbons, the university programmer. Her things
surround her. "Are you sure this is going to work?"
Ponder checks the measurements.
"It should work. Are you ready?"
Alexandria nods. "Go ahead,
please."
Ponder turns to the students
behind him. "Adrian, initialize the CEF."
Alexandria blinks. "The what?"
"The Controlled Energy Funnel,
if I'm not mistaken." Lord Vetinari emerges from a shadow. "Is that right?"
Alexandria groans. "You're
embarrassing me."
Ponder blinks. "Um, right.
Everyone ready? Let's go!"
Alexandria is lost in a whirl of
octarine light. She dimly sees Eskarina yelling happily, her father watching
with a thin smile, and the great, hulking shape of Hex, looming over the
proceedings. Mordor squawks, but keeps his grip on her shoulder. And then…
The smoke clears, and Alexandria blinks. She is in
a huge hall. There are people sitting at tables, watching her.
A whisper goes through the students. "Just
Apparated here…can't do that…impossible…how?…why?…agent of the Dark Lord…"
Alexandria regains her composure. "Excuse me," she
says. "I do hope I haven't interrupted anything."
A man in a blue robe and a white beard hurries up
to Alexandria. She recognizes him as Albus Dumbledore, the headmaster of the
school. "Young lady," he begins, "what are you doing here?"
"Hopefully, I'm going to attend school here,"
Alexandria informs him coolly. "I certainly hope you aren't going to tell me
that I can't."
Dumbledore stops and looks at her. "How did you
get past the protective spells? Who sent you here?"
Alexandria isn't quite sure of the first question,
so she answers the second one. "My father sent me here."
"And who," Dumbledore asks, "would your father
be?"
"Lord V—" Alexandria begins, but is cut off by
someone's scream. "Lord Vetinari," she says, "the Patrician of Ankh-Morpork."
Dumbledore gives her an odd look. "Let us discuss
this in my office."
As Alexandria leaves the hall, she feels
approximately a thousand eyes staring at her. She mentally gives them the
finger.
Dumbledore clears his throat. "You say Lord
Vetinari sent you here?"
"Yes," Alexandria says. "Do you know him?"
Dumbledore looks pained. "I know him, all right.
Why did he send you here? I thought you were being taught at the Assassin's
Guild."
Alexandria shrugs. "I'm very interested in magic.
I thought I might learn something here."
Dumbledore ruffles through a pile of papers.
"According to your father's letter, you're already very skilled in magic. What
could you possibly learn here that you don't know already?"
Alexandria clears her throat. "Wizardry and
witchcraft are two different things on the Disc," she says, "and I'm very well
versed in both of them. However, the crafts that I have learned are both very
different things; witchcraft is mainly getting inside people's heads and making
things with herbs, and wizardry is mainly measuring things and memorizing
spells. I'd like to get to the root of magic, which you can't get on the Disc."
This little speech, of course, is basically a load
of fewmets. Alexandria knows that witchcraft and wizardry are different things
for a very good reason, and that they are more powerful when separated. But
Dumbledore, despite his reputation, doesn't know that. That's where Alexandria
has the advantage over any witch or wizard on this world. Generic magic is a
very weak thing.
Dumbledore looks at her over his glasses. She can
tell he is impressed. "Well then. If you really want to learn magic, this is
the place." He stands up. "On behalf of everyone here, welcome to Hogwarts."
