column.
“I’ll make another cup of tea, shall I?” said Nanny, relieved that the conversation appeared to be coming to a peaceful end.
“Hmm?” said Granny. She stared at the result and drew two lines under it. “But you enjoyed it, did you?” she called out. “The writin’?”
Nanny Ogg poked her head around the scullery door. “Oh, yes. The money dint matter,” she said.
“You’ve never been very good at numbers, have you?” said Granny. Now she drew a circle around the final figure.
“Oh, you know me, Esme,” said Nanny cheerfully. “I couldn’t subtract a fart from a plate of beans.”
“That’s good, ’cos I reckon this Master Goatberger owes you a bit more than you got, if there’s any justice in the world,” said Granny.
“Money ain’t everything, Esme. What I say is, if you’ve got your health—”
“I reckon, if there’s any justice, it’s about four or five thousand dollars,” said Granny quietly.
There was a crash from the scullery.
“So it’s a good job the money don’t matter,” Granny Weatherwax went on. “It’d be a terrible thing otherwise. All that money, matterin’.”
Nanny Ogg’s white face appeared around the edge of the door. “He never!”
“Could be a bit more,” said Granny.
“It never!”
“You just adds up and divides and that.”
Nanny Ogg stared in horrified fascination at her own fingers.
“But that’s a—” She stopped. The only word she could think of was “fortune” and that wasn’t adequate. Witches didn’t operate in a cash economy. The whole of the Ramtops, by and large, got by without the complications of capital. Fifty dollars was a fortune. A hundred dollars was a, was a, was…well, it was two fortunes, that was what it was.
“It’s a lot of money,” she said weakly. “What couldn’t I do with money like that?”
“Dunno,” said Granny Weatherwax. “What did you do with the three dollars?”
“Got it in a tin up the chimney,” said Nanny Ogg.
Granny nodded approvingly. This was the kind of good fiscal practice she liked to see.
“Beats me why people’d fall over themselves to read a cookery book, though,” she added. “I mean, it’s not the sort of thing that—”
The room fell silent. Nanny Ogg shuffled her boots.
Granny said, in a voice laden with a suspicion that was all the worse because it wasn’t yet quite sure what it was suspicious of: “It is a cookery book, isn’t it?”
“Oh, yes,” said Nanny hurriedly, avoiding Granny’s gaze. “Yes. Recipes and that. Yes.”
Granny glared at her. “ Just recipes?”
“Yes. Oh, yes. Yes. And some…cookery anecdotes, yes.”
Granny went on glaring.
Nanny gave in.
“Er…look under Famous Carrot and Oyster Pie,” she said. “Page 25.”
Granny turned the pages. Her lips moved silently. Then: “I see . Anything else?”
“Er…Cinnamon and Marshmallow Fingers…page 17…”
Granny looked it up.
“And?”
“Er…Celery Astonishment…page 10.”
Granny looked that up, too.
“Can’t say it astonished me ,” she said. “And…?”
“Er…well, more or less all of Humorous Puddings and Cake Decoration. That’s all of Chapter Six. I done illustrations for that.”
Granny turned to Chapter Six. She had to turn the book around a couple of times.
“What one you looking at?” said Nanny Ogg, because an author is always keen to get feedback.
“Strawberry Wobbler,” said Granny.
“Ah. That one always gets a laugh.”
It did not appear to be obtaining one from Granny. She carefully closed the book.
“Gytha,” she said, “this is me askin’ you this. Is there any page in this book, is there any single recipe, which does not in some way relate to…goings-on?”
Nanny Ogg, her face red as her apples, seemed to give this some lengthy consideration.
“Porridge,” she said, eventually.
“Really?”
“Yes. Er. No, I tell a lie, it’s got my special honey mixture in it.”
Granny turned a page.
“What about
Angela Conrad, Kathleen Hesser Skrzypczak