Mrs. Grimthorpe’s boarding house was a monument to beige. Miss Finch took the attic room, which had a slanted ceiling and a view of the slaughterhouse. She paid for six months in advance with gold coins that bore the profile of a king no one remembered.
She smiled. It was not a natural smile. It was too wide, too symmetrical, too aware of its own mechanics. But it was, unmistakably, real.
The Clockwork Heart of Miss Marjorie Finch Pobres Criaturas
“Like its exhibitor,” whispered Mrs. Pettle, loudly.
Sir Reginald Hoax opened his mouth. Closed it. Opened it again. No sound came out. She paid for six months in advance with
The citizens of Batherton-on-Mere agreed on three things about Miss Marjorie Finch: first, that she was excessively tall for a woman; second, that her laughter sounded like a startled goose being stepped on by a cab horse; and third, that she had arrived in their respectable town under circumstances that were, to put it charitably, irregular .
“I killed him,” Miss Finch said, and the tent went silent as a held breath. “Not with malice. He had a heart condition. I merely... withheld his medication. He was asleep. He looked peaceful. I took his keys, his money, and his best coat, and I walked to the train station. I have been walking ever since.” It was too wide, too symmetrical, too aware
Miss Finch, who was wearing a dress she had sewn from a dismantled hot-air balloon, stepped into the center of the pavilion. She was not angry. She was, by all appearances, intensely curious.
She closed the notebook. “I am here to ask: is there a place in this world for a creature like me? I can learn. I can improve. I can feel—I think. When Socrates is frightened, I feel a pressure behind my ribs. When I saw the night-blooming cereus open, I wept. The tears were saline. I tested them.”