Rasa sent me with some urgency. May I come in?"
"Yes, of course."
Luet opened the door to find Dolya lying in bed, her sheets up over her shoulders. There was no sign of Mebbekew, of course, but the bed had been well-rumpled, the bath was full of grey water, and a bunch of grapes had been left on the floor-not the way Dolya usually arranged things before taking a midday nap.
"What does Aunt Rasa want of me?" asked Dol.
"Nothing of you, Dol," said Luet. "She wants all her children and Wetchik's children to join her at once."
"Then why aren't you knocking at Sevet's or Kokor's door? They aren't here."
"Mebbekew knows why I'm here," said Luet. Remembering the thump she heard, and the brief amount of time before she opened the door, she reached a conclusion about his present whereabouts. "So as soon as I close the door, he can get up off the floor beside your bed, put some kind of clothing on, and come to Lady Rasa's room."
Dol looked stricken. "Forgive me for trying to deceive you, Waterseer," she whispered.
Sometimes it made Luet want to scream, the way everyone assumed that when she showed any spark of wit it must be a revelation from the Oversoul-as if Luet would be incapable of discerning the obvious on her own. And yet it was also useful, Luet had to admit. Useful in that people tended to tell her the truth more readily, because they believed she would catch them in their lies. But the price of this truthfulness was that they did not like her company, and avoided her. Only friends shared such intimacies, and only freely. Forced, or so they thought, to share their secrets with Luet, they withheld their friendship, and Luet was not part of the lives of most of the women around her. They held her in such awe; it made her feel unworthy and filled her with rage, both at once.
It was that anger that led Luet to torment Mebbekew by forcing him to speak. "Did you hear me, Mebbekew?"
A long wait. Then: "Yes."
"I'll tell Lady Rasa," said Luet, "that her message was received."
She started to back out the door and draw it closed behind her, when Dol called out to her. "Wait... Luet."
"Yes?"
"His clothes . .. they were being washed .. ."
"I'll send them up."
"Do you think they'll be dry by now?"
"Dry enough," said Luet. "Don't you think so, Mebbekew?"
Mebbekew sat upright, so his head appeared on the other side of the bed. "Yes," he said glumly.
"Damp clothes will cool you off," said Luet. "It's such a hot day, at least in this room." It was a fine joke, she thought, but nobody laughed.
Shedemei strode vigorously along the path to Wetchik's coldhouse, which was nestled in a narrow valley and shaded by tall trees just outside the place where the city wall curved around the Old Orchestra. It was the last and, she feared, the hardest part of her task of assembling the flora and fauna for the mad project of a voyage through space, back to the legendary lost planet Earth. I am going to all this trouble because I had a dream, and took it for interpretation to a dreamer. A journey on camels, and they think it will lead them to Earth.
Yet the dream was still alive within her. The life she carried with her on the cloud.
So she came to the door of Wetchik's coldhouse, not certain whether she really hoped to find one of his servants acting as caretaker.
No one answered when she clapped her hands. But the machines that kept the house cold inside might well mask her loudest clapping. So she went to the door and tried it. Locked.
Of course it was. Wetchik had gone into the desert weeks ago, hadn't he? And Rashgallivak, his steward and, supposedly, the new Wetchik, had been in hiding somewhere ever since. Who would keep the place running, with both of them gone?
Except that the machines here were running, weren't they? Which meant somebody was still caring for the place. Unless they carelessly left them on, and the plants untended inside.
That was quite possible, of course. The cold air would keep the specialized plants thriving for many days, and the coldhouse, drawing its power from the solar scoops on the poles rising high above the house, could run indefinitely without even drawing on the city's power supply.
And yet Shedemei knew that someone was still taking care of this place, though she could not