“And now?”
“To see what kind of woman would wear Ryxi tailfeathers to dinner. How could anyone resist that?”
“I can’t tell you what you want to know,” she said, sombre for an instant. “I can’t tell you why. But, never mind, I can tell you about the Ryxi.”
Ford was not surprised to notice that Madame Flaubert was back in the room, cooing to her dog, which had spent the interim curled on her chair.
“Even the Ryxi are fellow beings searching for the light,” said Madame Flaubert. “Ridicule damages the scoffer ...”
“I’m not scoffing,” said Auntie Q tardy. “I’m merely telling Ford where I got these feathers.”
She plunged into the tale without looking at Madame Flaubert again; her voice trembled at first, then steadied. Ford listened, amused by the story. He could have predicted it, what a high-spirited rich young wife might do at one of the fancy balls when her “incorrigibly stuffy” husband tried to insist that she be discreet. Discretion, quite clearly, had never been one of Auntie Q’s strong points. He could almost see her younger (no doubt beautiful) self, capering in mock courtship with a Ryxi in diplomatic service ... a Ryxi who had let himself get overexcited, who had plucked the jeweled pin from her turban, and crowed (as Ryxi sometimes did, when they forgot themselves).
He could imagine her shock, her desire to do something outrageous in return. When the Ryxi had gone into the final whirling spin of the mating dance, she had yanked hard on his tailfeathers. By the time the whirling Ryxi could stop, screeching with mingled pain and hu-