Was it possible Ilisidi winced?
“Geigi-ji, too,” the dowager said, however. “So clever, the lot of you. I trust I’m in time for the ship.”
“For the ship, aiji-ma?”
“Do you think they may bring the boy to the lift in time for us, or shall I leave one of my companions?”
Bren gave a desperate look up—or out, or whatever it might be—since propriety forbade the dowager gazing after this youthful error. By now Jase had the boy by an arm and was towing him down.
“They have him, aiji-ma,” Bren said, quite familiar with the dowager’s iron notion of propriety. “Jase-ji.” He reached out a hand himself to steer Jase down, holding firmly to the safety line.
The boy was near enough. Ilisidi reached out with the crook of her cane and snatched the aiji’s heir close, past her elbow, back into her chief of security Cenedi’s hands and Cenedi very smoothly attached Cajeiri’s gloved hand to the safety line. Jase braked, not showing off a bit, no, and stayed free-fall in escort of their party, workers hovering on the other side of the line—in event of other escapes, one surmised.
Cajeiri meanwhile was shivering—being smaller, and chilling even after his burst of furious exertion, but no one shamed him by noticing.
They reached the lift car.
“ Thatwill become the floor,” Ilisidi said as they entered the car, and gave the proposed lift deck a stamp of that formidable cane. “Set your feet there, boy! Can you manage that? Thank you!”
Cajeiri turned himself as the adults did and youthful feet went there, just so, with no mistakes this time. It must be Cajeiri’s earnest desire not to be noticed for hours and hours.
Court etiquette forbade noticing the event. Security forbade their discussing business of other kinds, so conversation simply and inanely regarded the dowager’s flight, the launch weather, the weather in the far east of the Association, which was the dowager’s domain—and, in one of those strange drifts of converse, to the hatch of wi’itikiin in recent years.
“Fourteen chicks,” the dowager said proudly, as they rode down past third level, “this spring. All living. Those on the higher cliffs we surmise do as well.”
“One is glad to hear it, aiji-ma.” He truly was glad. It was amazing to him. Ilisidi came here turning their lives upside down even if they’d seen her coming, and told him chicks had hatched on the cliffs of Malguri, making what had been a cold, strange station feel the winds of the world. “One is extremely glad to know it.” What is this about the ship? he wanted to ask, but this was hardly the place for it, in a lift where station security often monitored.
Cajeiri, likely, himself, destined for Malguri after this sojourn of Ilisidi’s on the station, kept meekly quiet, family temper having had its expression—family survival sense having come to the fore.
Tatiseigi’s being the boy’s first lessons—what wonder the boy was grim, Bren thought to himself. No companions. No play.
Now diplomatic missions, God help the boy.
And what was this, In time for the ship?
And why did his heart beat double-time, and why did he reckon suddenly Jase should have heard, and hadn’t, because Jase had been out of range.
“This is Jase-aiji, one of the ship-aijiin, who has extended you considerable courtesy. Thisis the paidhi-aiji, whom you surely remember favorably. This is Lord Geigi, whom you have yet to meet formally.”
“Ship-aiji,” Cajeiri said in meek tones. “Thank you. Paidhi-aiji, Lord Geigi. I’m gratified you came.”
“One is equally gratified by your courtesy, aiji-ma,” Jase said smoothly, in the smooth tones of practice. Thatphrase he knew in his sleep.
“Young aiji,” Geigi said.
“See you deal well with these men,” Ilisidi said, and nudged Jase with the head of her cane. “Well done.”
“Aiji-ma. Thankyou for coming. We know it’s an arduous journey.”
“Nonsense. But from a handsome young man, acceptable.”
As their feet found the floor with increasing solidity and a slight rotational queasiness.
“This isn’t right, grandmother-ji,” Cajeiri protested. “Are we safe?”
“Safe? Safe? Do you see these gentlemen distressed?” Ilisidi asked, and stamped the deck with the ferrule of her cane. “Conditions to become ordinary to your generation—one is certain, and far too soon. But well that you notice. Well that you notice, all the same.”
“ Yes, grandmother-aiji.”
“This generation,” Ilisidi said. “Will it be wiser, Geigi-ji?”
“One has hope, nand’ dowager.”
“Thus far, I doubt it. But I venture, hear? I do venture.”
How did one query the dowager when she was in that mood? And where was there time for thoughtful conversation?
And what was this, In time for the ship?
The lift stopped, let them out in the ordinary station halls, but instead of customs and station security, standard procedure when a shuttle with passengers came into dock—Ogun met them.
With Merchesonbeside him.
Yolanda Mercheson, who avoided eye contact, bowing to the dowager.
“Dowager,” Ogun said in the Ragi language. “Welcome to the station.”
“Aiji-ma,” Yolanda said. “We understand your quarters are ready.”
Ordinary workers, mostly Mospheiran, passed by on their various errands—and stopped to stare at a meeting of the paidhiin and atevi aristocrats, and one the widely famous Gran ‘Sidi, with her silver-haired chief of security, Cenedi.
And an atevi youngster.
Movement in the hall outright stopped. People stood. A few bowed.
Ogun took out his pocket com and spoke in his own language: “C1, clearance through the halls. Gran Sidi’s in residence. Advise the council. Intentions as yet unspecified.”
C1 answered, a simple acknowledgment of the orders.
“Nand’ dowager,” Ogun said then—he had learned that phrase in the dowager’s last tenancy. But he gave only a passing glance to the boy—not in as much dismay as confusion, as Bren saw it. Ogun might have heard about the unfortunate incident at the dock, or not: he said nothing, simply bowed slightly, stiffly—never a shipboard or a Mospheiran grace—welcoming the aiji dowager to the station as if this was no surprise at all.
“Her discretion,” Ogun said, passing everything atevi to the dowager and to them, and about that moment Ilisidi’s cane came down smartly on the deck, the end of her patience.
“Translate,” she said.
“A welcome, nandi,” Jase said immediately.
“ She’sthe representative,” Ogun said.
Jase skirted an infelicitous mispronunciation rendering that. One forgave him: the dowager seemed to. She uttered a short, sharp hiss.
“Of course. Does anyone believe we sit in those wretched seats and come to such a frozen desolation in the heavens for our health? A chair. One assumes there will be a chair in a warm place. And supper. I insist on supper. When is the ship leaving?”
“The dowager says yes,” Jase rendered it for Ogun, “and wants to know when the ship is leaving.”
“Ma’am,” Ogun said, a courtesy, “nand’ dowager, we have to go through power-up.”
This arrived in the Ragi language as get it running.
“Get it running,” Ilisidi echoed the translation. “One hopes it runs, nadiin, with some reliability. We expect not to break down. Shall we move temporarily into our quarters?”