Edith Bent (neé Drapes) lightly kissed her husband Malvolio at the front doors of the Royal Bank, waved good-bye to him as he entered and then strode purposefully down the street. She continued to the very severe front of the newly designated House of the Guild of Auditors, Bookkeepers and Forensic Accountants. Edith noted with satisfaction that people walking by made a deliberate attempt to go around the doorway—and almost eagerly moved out of her way as she turned to enter. She walked through the lobby, nodding in response to several greetings of, "Good morning, Mrs. Bent" and climbed the stairs to her office. She opened the door marked Guildmistress, went to her desk, hung up her coat and sat down. Picking up the morning
Times,
she looked in astonishment at the headline, IS THIS THE MOST DREADED MAN IN ANKH-MORPORK? Below the leader was a picture of Inspector A. E. Pessimal, Adjutant to His Grace, Commander Vimes of the City Watch and Head Auditor.
"Well," she whispered to herself, "I wonder what he'll think of this."
In the office next to Vimes', Inspector Pessimal opened the paper. He stared at the headline and at his photo and blinked a couple of times. And then, in what would have been a surprise to the Guildmistress, a slow, satisfied smile spread across the small man's face. He knew, of course, that the headline was silly. Why, he could name at least five more men and a woman who would strike more terror into the hearts of his fellow citizens than he. Let's see, there's the Patrician, naturally, Commander Vimes, Chrysoprase—possibly Harry King, and certainly Captain Angua. Hmm, maybe it was only
four
men more terrifying men than he. Still, in a teeming metropolis the size of Ankh-Morpork, being number five was pretty impressive—and gratifying.
In the Oblong Office with its commanding view of the city, the Patrician saw the same headline and read the same story. His feelings were decidedly mixed. Pessimal had been one of his clerks, a decidedly
civilian
clerk, and one who was very useful 'investigating' other organized bodies in the city—especially ones that somehow irritated Vetinari. Then Vimes had, to use a rather impolite phrase,
poached
his clerk! His Lordship had not been pleased about that. However, having Pessimal as his adjutant had improved Vimes' own efficiency which, in turn, further reduced crime. Additionally, once the man had been promoted to Inspector and assigned to run down 'creative' bookkeeping throughout the realm, word had gotten out through the business community. All of a sudden tax revenue had miraculously swelled. Despite his personal feelings, His Lordship had to admit that the city had benefitted. And whatever he was, the Patrician was a realist.
Si fractum non sit, noli id reficere, (
if it works, don't fix it) had long been the family motto and A.E. Pessimal definitely worked. Of course, there was the corollary, if it doesn't work break it quick, but for the present things were turning out nicely. Havelock turned his attention to the daily crossword.
A polite but extremely firm knock sounded on the Inspector's door followed by the very large form of Sergeant Detritus, ranking troll on the City Watch. "Good mornin' to youse, Inspector," he rumbled, "Sergeant Haddock want to know if youse is ready to go patrollin'."
"Thank-you, Sergeant," Pessimal replied amiably, "please tell him I shall be down momentarily."
"Yessir." Detritus closed the door and knuckled down the steps. Despite the formality of their speech, there was a close bond between the 2,000 lb. troll and the 120 lb. human, a fact that would surprise many. During the 'rumble' in Sator Square that helped eventually set the stage for the Koom Valley Accord, a young, drug-addled troll had struck Commander Vimes with his club and would have killed him had not the reluctantly recruited A.E. Pessimal insanely attacked the troll with both hands and his teeth. While this did the assailant no harm, it distracted him long enough for Sgt. Detritus arrive and end the battle with one massive fist. Not only did it save the Commander's life but through a series of peculiar circumstances it resulted in Sgt. Detritus acquiring an adopted son, Brick, (the attacker!).
Pessimal looked at his image in the mirror, gave his gleaming breastplate one last swipe with the polishing cloth, and headed out the door. "A man born to the Watch" His Grace had called him the day he was hired, and Inspector Pessimal was every inch that
1
. His rank of Inspector and Head Auditor required that he spent most of his working days in the same sort of very neat brown suit he'd been wearing the day he first entered Pseudopolis Yard (though today they were of much better quality), a fact that A.E. regretted. However, his duties as Adjutant to the Commander required that, at least twice a month, he join the other Watch officers on patrol. These were the days he lived for!
1
Despite a decided lack of inches.
"Good morning, Big Man," Senior Constable Haddock greeted the Inspector warmly. To some, it might have seemed one of those ironic 'Lad' nicknames, given that the Inspector was barely taller than the dwarf Sgt. Littlebottom. However, everyone on the watch knew that, like a Jack Russell terrier, A.E. was only little on the outside. In heart and courage, he was the equal of any.
"And a very good morning to you, Kipper
2
," Pessimal responded with a grin, "what's on the agenda for the day, a trip 'round the docks?"
2
Vetinari has yet to get over the humanizing comradery Pessimal had experienced since he joined the Watch. The man actually has
friends
now!
Haddock shook his head. "Sorry to disappoint you, Inspector, but my guess is that His Lordship is disappointed in last quarter's tax revenue so you and I are going to 'show the flag' on the Street of Cunning Artificers this morning. Then you are to join Constable Thighbiter for the same kind of thing through the Undertaking. I think he wants the city to know that he has ways of making them pay. And since you are now the
Times
proclaimed 'most dreaded man in Ankh-Morpork' who better to drive the point home, eh?"
Haddock was right. Pessimal was mildly disappointed at not having a day on the docks. That part of town, like the Shades, was nearly always good for a bit of truncheon play and A. E. hated to have all the hours he spent on the butts go to waste. Besides, he prided himself on his skill. Even Constable Bluejohn, who could clear a street just by walking down the middle, was impressed. However, the sign on his desk read, "The red pencil is mightier than the club" and quite a number of highly chastised
3
citizens regretfully agreed. Like the witches of far Lancre, Pessimal knew that Respect was golden.
3
and now monetarily distressed.
As the two Watchmen proceeded down the Street of Cunning Artificers, nodding and greeting everyone they encountered, Haddock's habit of obsessively writing things down began to bear fruit. They surreptitiously jotted down the names and shops where the proprietor either greeted them too effusively or studiously looked away. These were obvious candidates for a more studied and prolonged visit. The ones of more concern, though, were those makers and builders who managed to imitate perfect innocence. It took a rare kind of self-control to maintain a poker face in light of the ever present threat of the Patrician's scorpion pits. The whole idea was to not attract attention. Anyone who could do that in the face of Inspector Pessimal's diligent pursuit of numbers was dangerous.
Thomas Stronginthearm, proprietor of Stronginthearm's Iron Founders, Beaters and General Forging, looked up from his accounts and saw the pair proceeding into Five-and-Seven-Yard. He clapped on the helmet he wore for public activities
4
and strolled out to meet them.
4
Thomas was born 'Smith' but upon becoming a journeyman grew a beard and changed his name. Everyone thought that dwarf-made was better and who was he to argue? Besides, it allowed him to raise all his prices by the twenty pence on the dollar. When the Committee for Equal Heights complained, Thomas pointed out that Captain Carrot, an acknowledged dwarf, was a good five inches taller than he was, so what was their question again?
"Good morning, Inspector, Sergeant. Fine day we're having, isn't it?"
Stronginthearm vaguely worried Pessimal. There was never any hint of subterfuge about the foundry (besides the dwarvish name) and the owner seemed as straightforward appearing a businessman as any in the city. A.E. figured that meant either he was 'so sharp he'd cut himself' or the man was getting away with fiscal murder. However, repeated inspections of his tax returns always came away clean. There hadn't even been any errors! It was all most suspicious.
"Good morning, Mr. Stronginthearm," the pair responded politely, "it certainly looks like business is booming."
"Banging, more like, but thanks for asking. This whole Undertaking the Patrician is driving has been great for trade. Makes me feel good to see my taxes coming back to me, even though I know they'll just turn around and go back to the Palace. But so long as the money keeps circulating, things are good, so they tell me."
"I've heard the same thing," Haddock nodded, "I guess this means you'll be hiring new staff next eighth?"
"Have to. What I want is another golem or two but the free ones out-bid me every time I want to buy one. I may have to break down an' hire a free and that will cut into the revenue somethin' fierce. They don't work cheap, you know."