"Oh, yes. Many times."
"And looked through her things when she was out of the house. I know how you young bucks do." There were twenty bedraggled peac.o.c.k quills at least wilting in the rings of the ormolu inkstand. Orchid selected one, then wrinkled her nose at it.
"I can sharpen that for you, if you like." Silk got out his
pen case.
"Would you? Thanks." Revolving on the vanity stool, she handed the peac.o.c.k quill to him. "Did you ever try on her underwear?"
Silk looked up from the quill, surprised. "No, I never even thought of it I did open a drawer once and peep into it, though. I felt so bad about it that I told her the next day. Do you have something to catch the shavings?"
"Don"t worry about them. You had a nice mama, huh? Is she still alive?"
Silk shook his head. "Would you prefer a broad nib?" Orchid did not reply, and he, contemplating the splayed and frowzy one before him, decided to give her one anyway. A broad nib used more ink, but she would not mind that; and broad nibs lasted longer.
"Mine died when I was little. I guess she was nice, but I really don"t remember her very well. When somebody"s dead, Patera, can they come back and see people they care about, if they want to?"
"It depends on what is meant by see." With the slender blade of the long-handled penknife, Silk sliced yet another whitish sliver from the nib. He was accustomed to goose and crow quills; this was larger than either.
NlGHTSIDE THE LONG SuN
269.
"Talk to them. Visit with them a while, or just let them see you."
"No," Silk said.
"Just no? Why not?"
"Hierax forbids it." He returned the quill to her and snapped his pen case shut. " "If he did not, the living would live at the direction of the dead, repeating dieir mistakes again and again."
"I used to wonder why she never came to see me," Orchid said. "You know, I haven"t thought about that in years, and now I"ll think about Orpine, hoping that Hierax will let her out once or twice so I can see her again. Have a seat there on the bed, Patera. You"re making me jittery."
Reluctantly, Silk smoothed the canary-colored sheet and sat down.
"A minute ago, you said twenty cards. That"s about as cheap as they come, I bet."
"It would be modest," Silk admitted, "but certainly not contemptible."
"All right, what about fifty? What would she get for that much?"
"G.o.ds!" He considered. "I can"t be absolutely sure. A better sacrifice and a much better casket. Flowers. A formal bier with draperies. Perhaps a-"
"I"ll make it a hundred," Orchid announced. "It will make me feel better. A hundred cards, and everything the best" Orchid plunged her quill into the inkwell.
Silk opened his mouth, closed it again, and put his pen case away.
"And you can say that I was her mother. I want you to say it What do you call that thing where they stand up and talk in the manteion?"
"The ambion," Silk said.
"Right. I never told them here, because I knew-we both knew-what sort of things the other girls would say about
270Gene Wotfe
her, and me too, behind our backs. You tell them tomorrow. From the ambion. And put it on her stone."
Silk nodded. "I will."
With florid sweeps of her quill, Orchid was writing the draft. "Tomorrow, right? When"ll it be?"
"I had thought at eleven."
"I"ll be there, Patera." Orchid"s face hardened. "We all will."
Silk was still shaking his head as he closed Orchid"s door behind him. Chenille was waiting in the hall outside; he wondered whether she had been eavesdropping, and if so how much she had heard.
She said, "You wanted to talk to me?"
"Not here."
"I waited in my room. You never came, so I came over here to see what was up."
"Of course." Orchid"s draft for a hundred cards was still in his hand; he folded it once and thrust it into the the pocket of his robe. "I told you I"d be there in a few minutes, didn"t I? We were a great deal longer than that, I"m afraid. I can only apologize."
"You still want to talk in my room?"
Silk hesitated, then nodded. "We must speak privately, and I"d like to see where it is."
Chapter ll.
SUMMONED.
"What Orchid"s got used to be for the owner and his wife," Chenille explained. "Then their sprats had rooms close to theirs, then upper servants, then maids, I guess. I"m about halfway on the inside. That"s not so bad."
Turning left, Silk followed her down the musty hallway.
"Half look out on the court like mine does. That"s not as good as it sounds, because they have big parties in there sometimes and it gets pretty noisy unless you stay till the end, and usually I don"t. You take those drunks up to your room and they get sick-then you never get the smell out. Maybe you think it"s gone, but wait for a rainy night."
They turned the corner.
"Sometimes they chase the girls along the gangways and make lots of noise. But the outside rooms on this side have windows on the alley. There"s not much light, and it smells bad."
"I see," Silk said.
"So that"s not so good either, and they have to have bars on their windows. I"d rather hang on to what I"ve got." Chenille halted, pulled a key on a string from between ample b.r.e.a.s.t.s, and opened a door.