Page 42 of Hemlock & Silver


Font Size:

“It has to be the apple,” I told the rooster. “Ithasto be. I’ve eliminated everything else.”

The rooster cocked one suspicious avian eye at me, then went back to trying to fit his body through the bars of his cage.

“It’s got to be something cumulative. The dose is so small that it didn’t affect you, but it’s built up in Snow. That’s the only explanation.”

The rooster had no opinion about this.

“I suppose she could be eating the seeds…” I had set them aside in an envelope. I peered into it now, disconsolate. Apple seeds had long been known to contain prussic acid, but the symptoms were all wrong. “She’d be having rapid breathing and convulsions. And the doctors would probably have noticed that her blood was bright pink.”

The rooster had his head stuck through the bars and tried to back up, which ruffled his feathers in a way that he didn’t like. He made a hostile sound and tried to turn around without moving his head, which didn’t work well at all.

“Prussic acid also doesn’t tend to be cumulative. Mostly because people just die of it.”

He slapped his body against the bars, decided that he was under attack, and attempted to kick his hypothetical opponent. One of his spurs got stuck in the wickerwork, a clear sign of enemy action, and he kicked wildly until it came free.

I picked up the last quarter of the apple and unwrapped it. The bone-white flesh had turned brown, but the peel still had that otherworldly silver gleam to it. It practically glowed, even in the dim light of the laboratory. I stared at it, willing answers to come.

The rooster managed to extract himself from the bars and began making a hostilemurr-urr-urrrrrsound at the cage, in case it got any further ideas.

I’d done everything I possibly could with the sample I had. No alchemist or physician could do more. There were no tests I hadn’t tried… except one.

It might not work. If the dose was cumulative, I might not feel anything. I was a good deal larger than Snow, after all, a plump adult rooster to the girl’s half-grown bantam.

But it was just possible that I might feel enough to recognize the substance.

The odds were quite good that it wouldn’t be fatal. The rooster was fine, after all, for a value of fine. “Of course, your liver might explode tomorrow,” I informed him. The rooster seemed unconcerned by this possibility.

I sighed, noted down the time and the weight of the apple, then popped it into my mouth and chewed.

It tasted… cold. Almost like mint, the way it chilled my mouth, but the flavor was nothing like mint. It was apple all the way through, but apple with frost on it, almost painfully crisp, as if I’d bitten into glass instead of fruit. Even after I swallowed, the coldness lingered in my mouth, and I felt each bite going down my throat like ice.

I wrote all of it down, then sat for about ten minutes to see if I was going to die.

When I didn’t, I gave the rooster a handful of corn, checked onthe chime-adder, then went back to my room to see what would happen next.

I spent the time waiting for the poison to take effect by writing a letter to the king. I wanted to explain to him about Snow and the apple, in case she wrote to him to say I’d attacked her in the garden.

It’s surprisingly difficult to compose a letter like that.Dear Majesty…No, damn it, that probably wasn’t right.Your Majesty, I have discovered…What? The source of the poison? I couldn’t be sure that the applewasthe source.

Your Majesty,

I have made a discovery that I suspect is related to your daughter’s condition. I found Snow in the garden eating an unusual fruit that does not grow in this area. She refused to tell me where it came from or how she had acquired it. I fear that…

That…

I stared at nothing, which in this case included the mirror. The woman reflected in it had her upper lip curled in exasperation.

I fear that whoever provided the fruit to her may be the source of the poison. I am currently testing it for contamination.

That last line was just this side of falsehood. I’d tested it and found nothing. Unless I started to feel results in the next few hours, I would have to admit that the apple had either been harmless or was so cumulative that it would take me weeks to prove anything.

Frustrated, I wadded up the sheet of paper and flung it aside. A streak of gray shot from under the bed and pounced on it. Iwatched the one-eyed gray cat kick a few times, and then he rolled to his feet and began to stalk off, carrying his prize in his mouth.

“Ohno,” I said, seized by a sudden vision of the scene that might ensue if my letter was found lying in some distant corner of the manor and somehow got back to Snow. I reached for the cat, who eeled out of the way and bolted for the balcony door.

“Cat, no!” I said, which had about as much effect on the cat as it would have on a goldfish. I lunged after the beast, who skittered sideways toward the wall. I thought I’d lost him, but I got a handful of fur and turned to scoop him up against my chest. I was bent nearly double, though, and the motion overbalanced me.

My head struck the immense mirror, and I fell through into silver.