Kit called and sank another ball, then lined up his next shot. Over in the corner, Goldie Morran frowned, looking every inch the disapproving dowager one might see on the Paris Opera House’s grand marble staircase opening night, dressed to the nines and staring down that long, thin nose of hers like a Russian aristocrat. Even the hair-a particularly precise shade of purple Kit still associated with seventh-grade English teachers and aging duchesses-contributed to the overall impression.
Goldie eyed the line of Kit’s cue stick and sniffed. “I knew I would regret this game. You’re too lucky.”
Kit chuckled. “Luck, dear Goldie, is what we make it.” The next ball he called rattled musically into the far corner pocket. “As you, of all people, should know”
She only smiled, a thin hawkish smile that spoke volumes to those who knew her well. Kit suppressed the urge to look for the knife about to plunge into his back. He lined up his next shot and was just about set when Robert LI’s voice interrupted from the doorway.
”Ah, Kit, there you are.”
La-La Land’s antiquarian, a long-time friend, knew that interrupting a game for anything less than catastrophic emergency was considered a hanging offense. Particularly when the opponent was Goldie Morran. Playing Goldie took concentration if you wanted to leave the room still wearing the shirt you’d come in with. Kit had momentary visions of Tokugawa samurai pouring through the Nippon Gate into the Neo Edo’s main lobby, demanding room service.
”What is it?” he asked warily.