The little man looked up, very worried.
'I'm the Big Man o' the clan, mistress,' he said. 'An' my name it is...' he swallowed, 'Rob Anybody Feegle, mistress. But I beg ye not to use it agin me!'
The toad was ready for this.
'They think names have magic in them,' he murmured. 'They don't tell them to people in case they are written down.'
'Aye, an' put upon comp-li-cated documents,' said a Feegle.
'An' summonses and such things,' said another.
'Or "Wanted" posters!' said another.
'Aye, an' bills an' affidavits,' said another.
'Writs of distrainment, even!' The Feegles looked around in panic at the very thought of written-down things.
'They think written words are even more powerful,' whispered the toad. 'They think all writing is magic. Words worry them. See their swords? They glow blue in the presence of lawyers.'
'All
'Canna say it aloud, mistress,' said Rob Anybody. 'She hears her name wherever it's said, and she comes callin'.'
'Actually, that's true,' said the toad. 'You do not want to meet her, ever.'
'She's bad?'
'Worse. Just call her the Queen.'
'Aye, the Quin,' said Rob Anybody. He looked at Tiffany with bright, worried eyes. 'Ye dinnae ken o' the Quin? An' you the wean o' Granny Aching, who had these hills in her bones? Ye dinnae ken the ways? She did not show ye the ways? Ye're no' a hag? How can this be? Ye slammered Jenny Green-Teeth and stared the Heidless Horseman in the eyes he hasnae got, and you dinnae ken?'
Tiffany gave him a brittle smile, and then whispered to the toad, 'Who's Ken? And what about his dinner? And what's a wean of Granny Aching?'
'As far as I can make out,' said the toad, 'they're amazed that you don't know about the Queen and... er, the magical ways, what with you being a child of Granny Aching and standing up to the monsters. "Ken" means "know".'
'And his dinner?'
'Forget about his dinner for now,' said the toad. They thought Granny Aching told you her magic.
Hold me up to your ear, will you?' Tiffany did so, and the toad whispered, 'Best not to disappoint them, eh?' She swallowed. 'But she never told me about any magic—' she began. And stopped. It was true. Granny Aching hadn't told her about any magic. But she showed people magic every day.