"I"m going to make sure the arms are exactly the same length. Look at that piece of paper by the telescope."
"Look for what?"
Grace tweaked one of the arms. "Can you see dark stripes on it now?"
Matsumoto looked startled. "Yes."
"Those are the light fringes I was telling you about. Tell me when they sharpen."
"How sharp?"
"As if you"d drawn them with a pen."
"Now," he said after a moment.
Grace checked. "Good. Right, now we"ll use white light." She relit her lamp and turned off the sodium lamp.
"What? What the devil difference does it make?"
"White light splits into colours. It"s easier to count the lines because the colours will change as they radiate outward. You get lost if you try counting only in grey."
"Oh, yes," he said, sounding unsettled.
"Something wrong?"
"No. This is all very bizarre. I feel rather as though G.o.d has put some malicious b.o.o.by traps into everyday objects."
Grace laughed. "They"re not malicious, they"re rainbows. Right, we"ll start. We"re hoping for little lines to start appearing between these strong ones. It should make them look fuzzy."
She put the sodium lamp on to the edge of the turnstile so that it glowed towards the central mirror. On the piece of paper, the dark stripes turned coloured, except for one black line in the middle.
"They still look pretty sharp to me," Matsumoto said. He jumped when a small camera attached to the telescope took a picture of the lines. Grace had rigged the shutter to snap every five seconds after the light was turned on.
"Hm." She turned the interferometer in the mercury. The lines winked out until the light aligned through the telescope again. They were exactly the same as before. They remained exactly the same through three hundred and sixty degrees, and then again when she tried in the opposite direction. She had expected only faint interference lines, hence photographs that could be accurately examined and measured, but they should have been visible to the naked eye. A nasty weight settled in her stomach.
"I"ve done something wrong," she said.
Matsumoto took the lamp off the turnstile. "Enough for now, the mercury is making me dizzy. Would it be stupid to say that perhaps there is no such thing as ether?"
"It"s there, we know it is. All modern mathematical models of the universe predict it."
"Enough for now," he repeated, and tugged her away. Once they were at the top of the cellar steps, he patted her arm.
"No, no, I need to try it again, I"ll have just misaligned something, or-"
"Fresh eyes. You"ll have them in ten minutes. Come along."
After the gloom of the cellar, the daylight looked too yellow. It was lancing in through the open door in perfectly straight lines. Light travels in straight lines, but is a wave. Not for the first time, her brain b.u.mped against the question of what, exactly, was doing the waving. It was a tired, stale question.
"I don"t want to be out for long," she said. "I won"t have access to a laboratory after tomorrow."
"Why?"
"Term ends. I"m going home."
"I thought that horrible aunt of yours left you her house in Kensington? Set up there."
"It was left as part of my dowry."
"So marry some poor b.a.s.t.a.r.d and then boot him out. Didn"t somebody pa.s.s a law recently saying that what"s yours is yours, regardless of pa.s.sing menfolk? The Bertha crew were rather jubilant for a while, I recall."
"Yes, but it"s not mine. My aunt didn"t settle it on me, she settled it on my father, for me. He thinks anyone related to my mother must be just like her and therefore wouldn"t trust me to efficiently manage pencil shavings. It will never be in my name. When I marry it will be my husband"s, in the good old-fashioned way. Which would mean I"d have to find a husband who didn"t mind ether experiments in the cellar. Which I think is unlikely. Unless you"re willing. There"s a house in Kensington in it for you."
He laughed. "I"d be delighted to, but unfortunately an English bride would cause a horrible scandal. The English are too ugly."
Grace cleared her throat. "Charming."
"Have you seen j.a.panese women? Such delicate creatures. Anyone meeting an Englishwoman in Kyoto could be forgiven for thinking he had run into some sort of troll. Oh, speaking of trolls. Are you going to the Foreign Office ball tomorrow? Your father"s friends with the minister, isn"t he?"
"Yes. That"s why I can"t stay here a few days longer. Are you?"
"The amba.s.sador invited me. You"ll like him. He"s just like me."
"Well, if you hear I"ve shot myself beforehand, you"ll know why."
He laughed again.
Grace pushed her hands into her pockets as they began their usual walk around the edge of the lawn. She had to duck an overhanging rose. Everything was left semi-wild here. Even the college looked as though it might have grown. She glanced back the Virginia creeper across the wall had finally turned red, nearly purple at the bottom, where it blended into lavender bushes. It would all be glorious for a fortnight, then become a mess of bare stalks for the autumn.
She had once met a scientist who worked in more or less the same area she did, one Oliver Lodge of the University of Liverpool. He lectured on ether, and on electricity. She had gone up to Liverpool last year to hear him. He had explained how the electrification of particles, including water particles, would make them coalesce; he had even manufactured a fine rain in the lecture theatre. It was fascinating stuff, and if it was developed properly it would have applications in weather control and in the search for ether, which was only extremely rarefied particles. But she had a feeling that Lodge was one of a kind, and he was already married. What was left, down that road, was to find someone willing to make a bargain, house for laboratory, but since she was neither charming nor personable, she couldn"t imagine how she would go about anything like that.
What she could imagine were two paths. Down one, she found some stupid mistake in the experiment and mended it, and wrote a decent paper, and secured a teaching position; down the other, there was no mistake, and it was all wrong, and perhaps, if she was lucky, she would be able to teach schoolgirls how to make little magnesium fireworks between their literature lessons and sketching. She didn"t much like moments when things split so clearly. It was much better to be able to think that anything could happen, even if it couldn"t. Seeing it made her feel claustrophobic, though dark cellars didn"t.
"Where will you go once term ends?" she asked.
"j.a.pan. I shall take a leisurely route through Europe, though. No rush."
Grace frowned. "So is that it, after London? You"re going home from there? You didn"t say."
"You didn"t ask."
"Withholding basic information until someone asks is a bit vain, don"t you think?"
He lifted his eyebrow. "And making a point of not asking is ... ?"
"Whatever I do, you"ll construe it as an infatuation," she said irritably, though it was just his usual teasing. But her temper was ragged from the heat and the experiment, and sometimes, there was an edge to his playfulness.
"You were the one who asked me to marry you a moment ago."
"For G.o.d"s sake, Matsumoto, what is this, Camelot? Marriage and love are not the same thing. In fact, they tend quickly to become mutually exclusive."
"You used to take my arm," he said.
She stiffened. "What?"
"And then you stopped," he said, without bothering to repeat himself. "I am flattered, but I hope it won"t make things difficult. It has been splendid knowing you, but I"m afraid my family simply would not approve."
She had stopped six months ago, when she caught herself thinking how charming he was. It was bizarrely difficult to keep resisting somebody who, although not naturally striking in any way, behaved as if he were Adonis. "Nor would mine. I stopped taking your arm when you started wearing that G.o.d-awful cologne."
"I see," he said. He didn"t sound convinced. "In that case, I do apologise."
"Good. Listen, I"m going inside, I"ve got to see if those mirrors were misaligned, I"ve still got nearly an entire day before I must be in London."
"I"ll see you in London, then?"
"Perhaps, but if you call at the house, do use the back door; the servants will laugh if you try the front."
As she turned away, she saw him frown. She didn"t stop. She had always known that he strove for regard so that he could laugh at it, but she didn"t think she had known him to be spiteful before. It clanged around inside her head and made her wonder if he had been laughing at her all along.
TWELVE.
LONDON, JUNE 1884.
The dresser rattled urgently.
"Yes, well," said Thaniel, spinning the key over his knuckle. "Give back my socks. And my good tie. I need it for tonight."
Katsu subsided. His springs must have been winding down by now, so perhaps it wasn"t deliberate, but the silence sounded sulky.
Having plotted the kidnap the night before, Thaniel had the day"s clothes out already and so dressed uninterrupted, but the victory soon felt guilt-tinged. Very big to have outwitted a little mechanical octopus whose only ambition was the acquisition of socks. He turned back to let him out. Katsu stayed curled at the bottom of the drawer. Thaniel lifted him out, but he stayed stiff. He put him back. After looking down at him for a little while, he tucked some of the last remaining socks around him by way of an apology.
It was Sat.u.r.day again, the third that he had spent at Filigree Street, and the morning of the Foreign Office ball. There had been no word from Williamson, and Thaniel hadn"t searched the house yet. Mori rarely left it except to buy groceries, and since the grocer"s was at the top of the street, he was only ever gone for less than half the time it would have taken to sift through the workshop and his bedroom. Thaniel was beginning to think Mori was a little agoraphobic, although that was hardly shocking. Boisterous socialites didn"t often become watchmakers. But he was feeling the old weight against his chest again. He was nearly sure that Williamson wouldn"t storm in without telling him, but not positive, and the more time went by, the more often he looked toward the street outside, expecting men in uniform.
He was still not used to full weekends, and as he made his way downstairs, the time stretched out incredibly. He couldn"t get himself out of his old habits of saving time, though, and while he waited for the kettle to boil on the stove, he cleaned the table and put some fresh water in Katsu"s tank on the windowsill. Once he had made the tea, he took two cups through the workshop"s back door. Mori had provided breakfast at seven on every weekday morning, along with j.a.panese conversation tailored to Thaniel"s vocabulary. He had a knack for speaking clearly and grammatically without sounding as though he were talking to an idiot, and Thaniel was learning at the speed of sound because of it. Bombmaker or not, he was owed tea.
"Morning."
"Oh, morning." Mori said it mostly into his microscope. He was building up some miniature clockwork beneath the lens, with very fine, thin tools that looked like something that belonged to a surgeon. "Sorry, I"m counting."
Thaniel stayed quiet and sat down in the high chair. One of the Haverly children was just outside, his nose pressed piggily against the window while he watched the display. He jumped when Mori threw a mint humbug at the gla.s.s. It bounced off and landed in the doorway. The boy grinned and took it, and went on his way. Mori was already looking into his microscope again. Thaniel couldn"t see his fingertips moving, only the tiny shift of the tendons in the back of his hand. Beside him was an empty jar. He had tipped the parts out over the desk in a little heap of cogs and things whose names Thaniel didn"t know. Mori put his left hand out without looking up and lifted a tiny metal framework from halfway down the nearer slope.
"I"ve stopped counting," he said once he had set it in place.
"I think I might have broken Katsu," Thaniel confessed. "He was ... " He tried to decide whether Katsu"s having stolen most of his socks and his good tie was a morally sufficient reason for locking him in the dresser. "He was moving, but then he stopped," he said instead.
"If you can"t find it, you can take one of mine for tonight," Mori said.
"Pardon?"
Mori straightened and put his hands against the base of his spine. "Your tie."
"I said that Katsu might be broken."
"I misheard, sorry."
"No, he has stolen my good tie," Thaniel said. He paused. "At least if watchmaking falls through, you can make your living as a mind-reader."
"I yes," said Mori. "Morning," he added as a postman came in with a big, flat parcel. "Yes, down there. Thank you."
"What"s that?" Thaniel said, curious. The postmarks and stamps weren"t English or j.a.panese.
"A painting. There"s a depressed Dutchman who does countryside scenes and flowers and things. It"s ugly, but I have to maintain the estates in j.a.pan and modern art is a good investment."
"Can I look?"
"I wouldn"t bother," he said, but Thaniel untied the string and folded down the top half of the paper packaging anyway. It was a strange painting. The paint was laid on so thickly that it stood up in b.u.mps from the canvas, all in muddy colours and lumpy strokes. Mori was right, it was ugly, but it was swirlingly distorted as if the wind were a visible force in the air, and in the greens was the sound of the hay moving.
"You should keep this here. It"s good."
Mori made an unwilling sound. "I don"t like Western art."
"No, look at this." He lifted it from its package. It wasn"t heavy. "It"s clever, it looks like busy Mozart."
"What?"
"I ... " Thaniel sighed. "I see sound. Mozart looks like this. You know. Fast strings."
"See? In front of you?"
"Yes. I"m not mad."
"I didn"t think so. All sounds?"
"Yes."
Mori waited, and then prompted him, "For example?"
"For example, when you speak, everything tints this colour." He held up the watch. "Ticking watches are ... what. Lighthouse flashes. The stairs at my old office clang yellow. It"s nothing."
"Do you ever draw them?"