M r. Pot!" yelled Marcia, striding across the Palace lawns, her quarry in sight. "Mr. Pot!"
Billy Pot did not reply; he was pushing a large wheelbarrow of dragon dung and was not in a good mood. Billy had completely forgotten how pleased he had been when Septimus had allowed him to start collecting Spit Fyre's dragon dung. But that had been in what Billy now considered to be the Good Old Days, when he had a regular job mowing the Palace lawns with his Contraption. Billy's Contraption worked on organic principles, which meant that it contained about twenty hungry lawn lizards in a box that Billy wheeled - extremely slowly - across the grass, while the lawn lizards ate the grass - or not.
Billy kept hundreds of lawn lizards in lizard lodges down by the river, and as the lizard population grew he began to have trouble keeping them under control. The dragon dung had worked miracles - at first. Fearing that a monster lizard had moved into their territory, the lawn lizards instantly became manageable. However, after some time passed and the monster lizard had not materialized, the lawn lizards, which were not stupid, realized something was up. And now they were just as uncontrollable as they ever had been and - having seen off a massive rival - they were arrogant too, and had taken to snapping at Billy's ankles. Billy was done with lawn lizards.
The last straw for Billy had come when, after a long day's mowing and several changes of lizards, the Contraption - never the same since it had been trampled by Simon Heap's horse - had finally fallen to pieces. Sarah Heap had seized her chance. Disgusted with the great piles of dragon dung littering the Palace lawns, Sarah had dispatched Silas to the Port with strict instructions to return with a state-of-the-art lawn mower. Silas was unusually efficient and came back on the return Port barge with an impressive machine.
Billy hated it. It had horrible sharp blades instead of lizards and had to be pulled by horse. Billy was a reptile person; he didn't like horses.
But the dragon dung had kept right on coming.
Sarah Heap, who was finally getting used to telling people what to do, provided Billy with a large field beside the Palace lawns and told him to shift the dragon dung into the field now and get to planting vegetables. Billy didn't like that. He didn't like vegetables, either.
Billy Pot now made a point of not talking to anyone who looked like they might be trouble - and the ExtraOrdinary Wizard yelling at him ticked all Billy's trouble boxes. But Marcia was not easily put off. She chased after Billy, who saw her coming and did his best to pick up speed, but was not entirely successful, hampered as he was by his heavy wheelbarrow.
"Mr. Pot!" Marcia jumped in front of the barrow, caught the heel of her pointy purple python shoe in an old rabbit hole and promptly fell over. Billy peered over the pile of dragon dung only to find that the ExtraOrdinary Wizard had disappeared, which was all right by him.
It was only when Marcia staggered to her feet, clutching the snapped heel from one of the pythons, hair awry and with an extremely irritable glint in her green eyes, that Billy thought it wise to set the barrow down.
He peered over the top. "What?"
"Mr. Pot...ouch...I have a job for you," said Marcia.
"Look, Your ExtraOrdinariness, I already collected the last lot and I ain't got room for no more until the end of the week. Got that?"
"Oh." Marcia was a little taken aback. After twelve years as an ExtraOrdinary Wizard she was used to a little more respect.
"I gotta get on now," Billy growled. He picked up the barrow handles and set off toward the vegetable garden at a slow trudge.
Putting on a fast hobble, Marcia waylaid the wheelbarrow again. "Mr. Pot," she said very insistently.
Billy sighed and let go of the barrow handles. "What?" he asked.
"As I said, I have a job for you. It's a new vacancy - Dragon-Watcher. I think you would be eminently well qualified."
"What d'you mean exactly, Dragon-Watcher?" asked Billy suspiciously.
"I've written out a job description," said Marcia, handing Billy a crisp piece of paper. He took it dubiously and stared at it. Billy didn't like paper very much either, especially fancy pieces of thick paper with writing on them. Actually it was the writing that Billy really did not like - he had no idea where to start with writing.