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Then, as he paused in front of the apothecary, he could have struck himself for his stupidity. Of course no mage of India would take her as apprentice, or priestess, or anything else! Her mixed blood would have made her of no-caste; no less than the English, those of the high blood of India shunned the Eurasians. She was ranked with the street sweepers, the Untouchables; no Brahmin would ever teach her, no guru take her for his disciple, not even an old street babu accept her as his chela except on terms no woman of spirit or sense would agree to.

My God, my God, what a waste! He entered the dark and redolent apothecary shop and wordlessly handed his folded piece of paper over to the old, skull-capped man behind the counter. That, and the mezuzah at the door told him that the doctor looked after yet another outcast here.

“Bad knee, or is it elbow or shoulder?” the old Jew asked, perching a pair of gold-rimmed spectacles on the end of his nose to peruse the prescription.

“Knee,” Scott replied. “Broke it in a storm at sea; went to the deck and hit it on a brass fitting.”

“Ah. Never set right, then.” The old man turned and began pulling ingredients from little drawers, muttering to himself as he worked—and sometimes adding a comment over his shoulder to Peter.

“This’ll be what ye’re to start on after ye finish what she give ye,” he said once. And then, a little later, “No opium, no laudanum; she don’t believe in that, no. I’ll be giving ye two bottles and ye mind, ye look at the one, ‘twill only have seven doses. And ye’ll be gettin’ no more from me without she gives ye a new ‘scrip. That’ll be for the bad nights, the stormy nights, when the pain takes ye. One of those, mind, for th’ night. No more.”

“Why?” Peter asked, surprised.

“Hemp,” the old man said abruptly. “There’s them as calls it hashish. ‘Twill let ye sleep, but if ye misuse it, there’ll be no more getting of it from her or me.”

Well! Well indeed! There were doctors who handed out prescriptions containing opiates, laudanum, cocaine, and hemp as if they were no more dangerous than sugar pills. Peter had often considered a little hemp when the pain became too great, but he had feared it as well, for he did not know how much was enough, and how much would leave him with a craving he could not, as an Elemental Master and a member of the White Lodge, afford to have. Pain was preferable to a weakness that could all too easily be exploited. In fact, he doubted that he’d use those pills more often than once a month, and then only when he was not only within protections, but physically guarded.

“I understand your caution—and hers,” he said, with a little nod of respect that seemed to amuse the old man.

A bit more work produced a pair of stoppered brown bottles, both holding pills, the second, as promised, holding no more than seven. Peter paid his bill and pocketed the bottles. Then, with another genial nod and a tinkle of the bell over the door, he left the shop.

There was no doubt in his mind, after a walk of a few blocks, that Doctor Witherspoon had improved his knee. It was just a trifle, and perhaps no one else would have noticed it, but an Elemental Master knew himself completely, inside and out, and this Elemental Master noticed a subtle improvement in his weakest physical point.

It wasn’t so much that there was less pain—that could have been chalked up to the weather. It was that it no longer made that aggravating click it was wont to do, every third or fourth stride.

Now, pills and attention and the warmth of the doctor’s hands, and even the determination of his own mind to sense an improvement could account for the loss of a little pain. The mind played an abundance of tricks, even on an experienced mage. But nothing in the power of persuasion was going to make that clicking go away.

He had a great deal to think about, and since he always thought better on his feet, he let them take him back through the varied neighborhoods until he reached one where cabs were thick upon the ground, and his gradually-assumed, confident, man-about-town air got him one without the least bit of difficulty.

He also climbed into the passenger compartment without difficulty; more evidence of the doctor’s work. “Exeter Club,” he ordered shortly as the cabman peered down through his hatch for orders, and sat back in a seat still smelling faintly of the cigar of its last occupant, to finish his thoughts.

She’s hiding from something, or trying to. Something occult. What in heaven’s name it could be, he had no clues. But if she had been hiding from something that wasn’t arcane, she certainly wouldn’t have the all-too-visible profession, the prosperous establishment in a slightly shabby street, or be spending part of her time doing charitable work at the Fleet Clinic, which had to be in one of the worst areas of London. Physical danger to her there would pass unnoticed in the general nastiness of the neighborhood.

It was clear, clear as the crystal sphere he kept in his own sanctum, that he didn’t have nearly enough information about her to even make an educated guess as to what it was she was hiding from. But much as he found her a pleasant, highly intelligent, potential companion, and much as he would like to further their acquaintance, duty came before pleasure, and his duty was to first report to the Council and then to get back to his own shop. The lovely doctor could wait; he had a higher loyalty to the White Lodge and the Lodge Master that came before any considerations of a stranger. He also had a business to take care of, if he wished to continue eating and enjoying his current all-too-material lodgings.

The cab stopped directly in front of the club, which in the light of day was hardly distinguishable from the ordinary upper-class townhouses on either side of it. Enjoying the fact that he could, he took the stairs two at a time, earning himself a raised eyebrow from the daylight version of the Dragon of the Door.

“Good morning, Cedric. Been to see a new sawbones,” he said by way of explanation. “She’s done me a world of good. You ought to have a look in on her.”

“I think not, sir,” Cedric replied with his usual dignity. “I don’t approve of these woman doctors. It’s unnatural, sir.”

Peter laughed, when he considered just what Cedric guarded from the intrusions of the outside world, and gave him a mocking little salute as he passed within.

The Council would not be meeting at this moment, of course, but Lord Alderscroft seldom left the premises. Rather than keeping a house in town, he kept a luxurious little set of his own rooms here, and as a consequence, needed only his own personal man, for all his other needs were attended to by the servants attached to the club. Peter sent his card up to Alderscroft’s rooms with the cryptic message, “I’ve found what you were looking for,” scribbled on the back, and it was a matter of moments before a boy came down with an invitation to dine with His Lordship in one of the private rooms.

The boy conducted him to what was less a “room” and more of a silk-papered alcove done in unobtrusive mellow blue, a pair of overstuffed leather chairs tucked in beneath a sturdy mahogany table. It earned the name of “private” because of a pair of blue-velvet curtains that could be drawn across the entrance to conceal the diners within, but so seldom were that there was a hint of dust along the top edges of the heavy velvet bands that tied them back to either side.

Alderscroft was already there but, from the presence of the waiter beside him, had not yet ordered. “Pork cutlet and new peas, Jerry,” Peter said as he slid into the unoccupied seat. “Have to get back to the shop before that replacement Almsley conjured up for me frightens off all my customers.”

Alderscroft chuckled, recognizing the joke for what it was, and said only, “Wellington and the rest, Jerry,” before turning his attention to Peter. The waiter vanished with the discretion of all of the Club servants, leaving behind only a decanter and a pair of glasses. It was too early by Peter’s standards for a whiskey, and Alderscroft never touched the stuff so far as Peter knew, but toying with quarter-filled glasses made their conversation look casual and ordinary, should anyone unexpected come past them. Alderscroft poured, and they both toyed, neither raising the glass to his lips.