words knocked even Christine back. âOh, dear!! Did they want you to do something?!â
âThey want me to be something. But Iâm not going to!â
Christine stared at her. And then, automatically, forgot everything sheâd just heard.
âCome on,â she said, âletâs have a look around!!â
Nanny Ogg balanced on a chair and took down an oblong wrapped in paper.
Granny watched sternly with her arms folded.
âThing is,â Nanny babbled, under the laser glare, âmy late husband, I remember him once sayinâ to me, after dinner, he said, âYou know, Mother, itâd be a real shame if all the stuff you know just passed away when you did. Why donât you write some of it down?â So I scribbled the odd one, when I had a moment, and then I thought itâd be nice to have it all properly done so I sent it off to the Almanack people in Ankh-Morpork and they hardly charged me anything and a little while ago they sent me this, I think itâs a very good job, itâs amazing how they get all the letters so neatââ
âYou done a book ,â said Granny.
âOnly cookery,â said Nanny Ogg meekly, as one might plead a first offence.
âWhat do you know about it? You hardly ever do any cooking,â said Granny.
âI do specialities,â said Nanny.
Granny looked at the offending volume.
ââ The Joye of Snacks ,ââ she read out loud. ââBye A Lancre Witch.â Hah! Why dint you put your own name on it, eh? Booksâve got to have a name on âem soâs everyone knows whoâs guilty.â
âItâs my gnome de plum ,â said Nanny. âMr Goatberger the Almanack man said itâd make it sound more mysterious.â
Granny cast her gimlet gaze to the bottom of the crowded cover, where it said, in very small lettering, âCXXviith Printyng. More Than Twenty Thoufand Solde! One half dollar.â
âYou sent them some money to get it all printed?â she said.
âOnly a couple of dollars,â said Nanny. âDamnâ good job they made of it, too. And then they sent the money back afterwards, only they got it wrong and sent three dollars extra.â
Granny Weatherwax was grudgingly literate but keenly numerate. She assumed that anything written down was probably a lie, and that applied to numbers too. Numbers were used only by people who wanted to put one over on you.
Her lips moved silently as she thought about numbers.
âOh,â she said, quietly. âAnd that was it, was it? You never wrote to him again?â
âNot on your life. Three dollars, mind. I dint want him saying he wanted âem back.â
âI can see that,â said Granny, still dwelling in the world of numbers. She wondered how much it cost to do a book. It couldnât be a lot: they had sort of printing mills to do the actual work.
âAfter all, thereâs a lot you can do with three dollars,â said Nanny.
âRight enough,â said Granny. âYou ainât got a pencil about you, have you? You being a literary type and all?â
âI got a slate,â said Nanny.
âPass it over, then.â
âI bin keeping it by me in case I wake up in the night and I get an idea for a recipe, see,â said Nanny.
âGood,â said Granny vaguely. The slate pencil squeaked across the grey tablet. The paper must cost something. And youâd probably have to tip someone a couple of pennies to sell it ⦠Angular figures danced from column to column.
âIâll make another cup of tea, shall I?â said Nanny, relieved that the conversation appeared to be coming to a peaceful end.
âHmm?â said Granny. She stared at the result and drew two lines under it. âBut you enjoyed it, did you?â she called out. âThe writinâ?â
Nanny Ogg poked her head around the scullery door. âOh, yes. The money dint