
The Master took from his pocket a folded paper and laid it on the table beside the wine. He took the
stopper out of the mouth of a decanter containing a rich golden wine, unfolded the paper, and poured a
thin stream of white powder into the decanter before crumpling the paper and throwing it into the fire.
Then he took a pencil from his pocket, stirred the wine until the powder had dissolved, and replaced the
stopper.
His daemon gave a soft brief squawk. The Master replied in an undertone, and looked around with his
hooded, clouded eyes before leaving through the door he'd come in by.
Lyra whispered, “Did you see that, Pan?”
“Of course I did! Now hurry out, before the Steward comes!”
But as he spoke, there came the sound of a bell ringing once from the far end of the hall.
“That's the Steward's bell!” said Lyra. “I thought we had more time than that.”
Pantalaimon fluttered swiftly to the hall door, and swiftly back.
“The Steward's there already,” he said. “And you can't get out of the other door...”
The other door, the one the Master had entered and left by, opened onto the busy corridor between the
library and the Scholars' common room. At this time of day it was thronged with men pulling on their
gowns for dinner, or hurrying to leave papers or briefcases in the common room before moving nto the
hall. Lyra had planned to leave the way she'd come, banking on another few minutes before the
Steward's bell rang.
And if she hadn't seen the Master tipping that powder into the wine, she might have risked the Steward's
anger, or hoped to avoid being noticed in the busy corridor. But she was confused, and that made her
hesitate.
Then she heard heavy footsteps on the dais. The Steward was coming to make sure the Retiring Room
was ready for the Scholars' poppy and wine after dinner. Lyra darted to the oak wardrobe, opened it,
and hid inside, pulling the door shut just as the Steward entered. She had no fear for Pantalaimon: the
room was somber colored, and he could always creep under a chair.
She heard the Steward's heavy wheezing, and through the crack where the door hadn't quite shut she
saw him adjust the pipes in the rack by the smoking stand and cast a glance over the decanters and
glasses. Then he smoothed the hair over his ears with both palms and said something to his daemon. He
was a servant, so she was a dog; but a superior servant, so a superior dog. In fact, she had the form of a
red setter. The daemon seemed suspicious, and cast around as if she'd sensed an intruder, but didn't
make for the wardrobe, to Lyra's intense relief. Lyra was afraid of the Steward, who had twice beaten
her.
Lyra heard a tiny whisper; obviously Pantalaimon had squeezed in beside her.
“We're going to have to stay here now. Why don't you listen to me?”
She didn't reply until the Steward had left. It was his job to supervise the waiting at the high table; she
could hear the Scholars coming into the hall, the murmur of voices, the shuffle of feet.
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