“I concede that it may be, sir.” The monitor’s face appeared to nod. “Such being the case, perhaps I may proffer an additional suggestion? It is that you abandon this line of inquiry. It will not reward your persistence, sir. Prior to entering the balneum, you inquired about weapons, sir, and places of concealment. One of our wardrobes might do.”
“Thank you.” Silk looked into the nearest, but it was filled almost to bursting with coats and gowns.
“As to weapons, sir,” the monitor continued, “you may discover a useful one in my lowest left drawer, beneath the stockings.”
“More useful than this, I hope.” Silk closed the wardrobe.
“I am very sorry, sir. There appear to have been many purchases of late of which I have not been apprised.”
Silk hardly heard him—there were angry and excited voices in the corridor. He opened the door to the drawing room and listened until they faded away, his hand upon the glass latchbar of the boudoir door, acutely conscious of the thudding of his heart.
“Are you leaving, sir?”
“The left drawer, I think you said.”
“Yes, sir. The lowest of the drawers to your left. I can guarantee nothing, however, sir. My mistress keeps a small needier there, or perhaps I should say she did so not long ago. It may, however…”
Silk had already jerked out the drawer. Groping under what seemed to be at least a hundred pairs of women’s hose, his fingers discovered not one but two metal objects.
“My mistress is sometimes careless regarding the safety catch, sir. It may be well to exercise due caution until you have ascertained its condition.”
“I don’t even know what that is,” Silk muttered as he gingerly extracted the first.
It was a needler so small that it lay easily in the palm of his hand, elaborately engraved and gold plated; the thumb-sized ivory grips were inlaid with golden hyacinths, and a minute heron scanned a golden pool for fish at the base of the rear sight. For a moment, Silk too knew peace, lost in the flawless craftsmanship that had been lavished upon every surface. No venerated object in his manteion was half so fine.
“Should that discharge, it could destroy my glass, sir.”
Silk nodded absently. “I’ve seen needlers—I saw two tonight, in fact—that could eat this one.”
“You have informed me that you are unfamiliar with the safety catch, sir. Upon either side of the needier you hold, you will observe a small movable convexity. Raised, it will prevent the needier from discharging.”
“This,” Silk said. Like the grips, each tiny boss was marked with a hyacinth, though these were so small that their minute, perfect florets were almost microscopic. He pushed one of the bosses down, and the other moved with it. “Will it fire now?”
“I believe so, sir. Please do not direct it toward my glass. Glasses are now irreplaceable, sir, the art of their manufacture having been left behind when—”
“I’m greatly tempted nevertheless.”
“In the event of the destruction of this glass I should be unable to deliver your message to Auk, sir.”
“In which case there’d be no need of it. This smooth bar inside the ring is the trigger, I suppose.”
“I believe that is correct, sir.”
Silk pointed the needier at the wardrobe and pressed the trigger. There was a sharp snap, like the cracking of a child’s whip. “It doesn’t seem to have done anything,” he said.
“My mistress’s wardrobe is not a living creature, sir.”
“I never thought it was, my son.” Silk bent to examine the wardrobe’s door; a hole not much thicker than a hair had appeared in one of its polished panels. He opened the door again. Some, though not all, of the gowns in line with the hole showed ragged tears, as if they had been stabbed with a dull blade a little narrower than his index finger.
“I should use this on you, you know, my son,” he told the monitor, “for Auk’s sake. You’re just a machine, like the scorer in our ball court.”
“I am a machine, but not
Nodding mostly to himself, Silk pushed up the safety catch and dropped the little needler into his pocket.
The other object hidden under the stockings was shaped like the letter
“Would it be convenient for me to withdraw, sir?” the monitor asked.
Silk shook his head. “What is this?”
“I don’t know, sir.”
He regarded the monitor narrowly. “Can you lie, under extreme provocation, my son? Tell an untruth? I know a chem quite well; and she can, or so she says.”
“No, sir.”
“Which leaves me not a whit the wiser.” Silk seated himself on the stool again.
“I suppose not, sir.”
“I think I know what this is, you see.” Silk held the T-shaped object up for the monitor’s inspection; it gleamed like polished silver. “I’d appreciate confirmation, and some instructions on how to operate it.”