except the dizzying vastness of space. Beside her was the regal woman from the temple who had called Sera’s name.
“Today is a momentous day!” she cried. “The beginning of a new chapter for our beloved City, at long last. This ceremony will free us from the bonds to this planet as Mother Sun will guide us to our new home. All praise her everlasting light!”
“Praise her!” the crowd cried back.
Agnes watched in horror as the woman took out a knife and cut Sera’s arms, just inside her elbows.
She caught sight of a young girl in the crowd that she recognized—it was the girl she had been racing along the banks of the river in Sera’s memory. Tears streamed down her cheeks.
She saw the mother with the purple ribbon clutch at her heart, as if trying to keep it inside her chest.
Then Sera turned and threw herself off the dais.
Agnes screamed, her eyes flying open, and she was back in the bathroom on Creekwater Row. Her heart was beating against her rib cage with enough force to make her vision blur. It took several deep breaths before she was able to form a coherent thought.
“You’re telling me,” she said, panting, “that somewhere . . . up there . . . is that place? That . . . city?” It seemed the wrong word for it—it was so much more beautiful and wondrous than any city Agnes had ever seen or heard of.
“I think so,” Sera said. “But I do not know.”
Agnes was reeling at everything this girl had gone through, the devastating loss she had suffered.
“I’ll help you find this tether,” she vowed, taking Sera’s hands in her own. “I’ll help you get home if I can.” She was suddenly grateful Vada’s ship wasn’t leaving right away. She could not abandon Sera, not now. She had never felt so connected to someone, even though they had only just met.
Sera smiled, and there were tears in her eyes. “You are as kind as Leela, Agnes. And that is the highest compliment I can pay.”
“Who is Leela?”
“My best friend.”
Agnes knew instinctively that she was talking about the girl she’d seen crying at the sacrifice and found she did not mind the comparison.
A knocking on the door made them both jump.
“Are you nearly done in there?” Hattie’s voice seemed too mundane, too normal, breaking the spell that had woven its way into the bathroom.
“Just about!” Agnes called. “Take your robe off and get in the tub, quick,” she said to Sera.
“My orange mother made me this robe,” Sera said, clutching the dirty fabric.
“And I will make sure no one else touches it,” Agnes said. “But we’ve got to get you clean and dressed or my father will be very angry. And trust me, you do not want to incite his ire.”
Sera nodded and slipped off the robe, stepping into the tub.
“It’s warm!” she cried with delight.
“Yes, of course it is,” Agnes said.
And with that, she dunked Sera’s head underwater.
22
Leo
LEO COULD NOT RECALL THE LAST TIME HIS FATHER HAD thrown a party in his own house.
Xavier had insisted the event be black tie. Representatives from Old Port’s wealthiest families were in attendance, men with connections and business interests all over Kaolin. Leo saw George Wilkes of Wilkes Dairy fame, Sebastian Horne of Horne Mills, and Wilbur Grandstreet, whose family owned the shipyard that had built much of the Kaolin naval fleet. A delegate from the Ministry of Agriculture was also in attendance, and Xavier was chatting him up when Robert Conway and his father arrived. Leo welcomed them in the foyer.
“Leo,” Robert said, clapping him on the back and shaking his hand, like he was a politician and not Leo’s best friend. “Quite the do your father’s throwing.” A footman stationed by the door handed him a glass of champagne. “Elizabeth told me all about that tree with the face and that odd sea creature. Are they here tonight?”
He looked around eagerly, as if Leo might be hiding Errol behind a potted plant.
“No, he’s got a different trick up his sleeve,” Leo said. “I think your father will be impressed.”
He wanted to sound jaunty and confident, but his words felt hollow. He didn’t like talking about Sera as if she were some party trick, especially now that he knew her name. Hattie had told him Agnes was getting her ready. His father had asked him to choose a dress for his sister, and Leo had picked out one for Sera too. He wasn’t about to