Several stories of peddlers, choices, crossroads, and arcane clockwork devices point to the mystery, and maps, keys, and music figure prominently. The stories celebrate patterns, numbers, marvelous inventions, puzzles, and possibilities. Milford’s rich, complex language hints of magic and connection, of interwoven fates and tragedies. Each guest is matched with an activity: dancing, building with cards, whittling, offering cigars, binding papers into books. The stories, part morality tales and part facets of a drawing-room mystery, suggest a hidden conversation among the assembly: supplicating, surmising, interpreting, warning. Twelve guests plus innkeeper, maid, and neighbor Phineas Amalgam (compiler of these tales, according to the title page) make up the company of 15, including one child, Maisie, who is traveling alone. Rain pours down and waters rise as a group of travelers, trapped by the weather in an inn above the river Skidwrack, tell stories.
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