Warmth spread from the utility pocket where she kept her mumu. She pulled it out, flicking the screen on with a practiced one-handed motion.
It was a text from Kamele, short and, Theo thought, terse.
Agenda lengthy. Home before ninebell. Do your solos. Don't forget to eat.
Eat. Theo sighed wistfully as she slid the mumu away. She didn't suppose the kaf would be able to deliver one of Father's melted cheese sandwiches and a mug of evening tea. Her eyes filled, blurring the desk. She bit her lip, turned, her foot slid and she went down, hard, on her rump on the cold floor.
"Chaos!" she yelled – and began, to her utter embarrassment, to cry.
* * * *
She'd been lucky in her timing. Not only did she catch the direct bus to Efraim, which was Nonactown's official name, but she got a seat by the screen, where she could pretend to be absorbed in the map and condition reports and ignore the superior looks of the half-dozen Chapelia acolytes in their baggy gray uni-suits and half-face gauze.
She did bite her lip when the 'change for Greensward highlighted, but she didn't tap for a stop; she stayed in her seat, hands folded decorously on her lap, and only had to blink once or twice to clear her eyes as the bus continued on its way.
Strictly speaking, she should have had her mother's permission, if not an actual bluekey, for a solitary expedition outside the Wall. She had tried to text Kamele. All she'd gotten was the "away" message, though, which meant the meeting with the lengthy agenda was level two confidential or higher, a fact that might have been more interesting if Theo hadn't been focused on other things.
In the end, and after a consultation with Coyster, she'd left a short message in Kamele's in-queue, grabbed a sweater, and ran for the bus. There should be no problem accomplishing her errand and getting back to the Wall before Kamele's meeting broke up.
She did think that her mother might not be delighted to hear that Theo had been out alone to Nonactown. But it wasn't, Theo thought, like she was wandering. She had a goal and a destination – Gently Used, on Merchant Street. Father had taken her there – if not often, then at least several times. He'd introduced to the proprietor, too. While that didn't exactly put her or the shop on the Safe List, Theo felt sure that Father wouldn't have taken her anyplace dangerous.
Despite the bus being a Direct, transit time to Merchant Street this evening was slightly longer than she had estimated. The Chapelia de-bussed ahead of her, enmasse and in step, going right while she would be going left, and she breathed a sigh of relief to see them go.
Her feet had barely touched the street when her mumu sang sevenbells. Still, she thought as she walked down the pathway – no belts in Nonactown – or in the suburbs where her – where Father's – house was, either – it shouldn't take that long to buy a rug.
The evening breeze made her glad she had her sweater and reminded her that walking within the Wall, or in its shadow, made both time-keeping and weather-minding by sight difficult. Father did that – used the position of the sun in the sky to tell the time, and the type of clouds and wind-direction to predict coming weather – he said it "kept him close to the world" – and he'd taught Theo the way of it, to Kamele's amusement.
"We have devices called clocks, Jen Sar," she'd said, from her seat on the garden bench. "Which tell us the time when we're inside, too."
"Indeed," Father had answered gravely. "And yet sometimes – we are outside. And in some circumstances – rare, I allow! – devices fail."
Kamele had shaken her head with a small smile and returned to her book; and Father had continued Theo's lesson.
Speaking of time, Theo thought, shaking herself out of her memory, it was passing, and the clouds were moving from the west, on the back of the brisk evening breeze.
The street was busy this evening, light spilling out into the dusk from unshuttered shop windows and doors. Theo walked carefully, her stomach grumbling as the breeze brought the scent of frying spice bread to her. Almost, she crossed the street to buy a slice, but the recollection that there were only twenty-four creds left on her card moved her on past.
First, she told herself, she'd buy the rug. Then, she'd have a piece of fried bread.
The door to Gently Used stood open; on the walk outside, Gorna Dail was talking vivaciously to an old man with an electronic zither strapped to his back.
Theo slipped past the animated conversationalists and into the store. She passed the low counter with its light-guarded displays of rings, fobs, bracelets, and dangles with only a cursory glance. Father wore jewelry – a twisted silver ring on the smallest finger of his right hand – but Kamele said that honors were decoration enough.
The rugs were in the back of the store, piled together by size. Theo located the pile she wanted and knelt beside it, her fingers busy over the fabric.
"Is there something in particular you're looking for, young student?"
Theo gasped, and blinked up into the worn face and smiling eyes of Gorna Dail.
"Such concentration," the shopkeeper said, and the smile moved from her eyes to her lips. "Theo Waitley, that's your name, isn't it? Has the housefather commissioned you for solo flight?"
Theo looked down, and rubbed her hand over the nap of the rug she'd dragged across her knees. It felt good, springy and soft at the same time. Like Coyster.
"My mother and I have... relocated to the Wall," she said to the rug.
There was a small silence, then a neutral, "I see." Gorna Dail hunkered down next to Theo and ran her hand over the rug, like she was considering its merits, too.
"It's good to have something to break up all the white," she said, "inside the Wall."
Theo looked at her in surprise. "You've been inside?"
Gorna Dail laughed. "Long ago – and only for a semester. I was a Visiting Expert, so they gave me an apartment on – Three? – no, I'm wrong. Topthree. It was well enough. By the standards of fourth-class ship quarters, it was spacious. But I remember those walls, and the floors – all white and slick. Easy to clean and to sanitize, I suppose, but not very restful." She glanced at Theo. "In my opinion, of course."
"Not only that," Theo said feelingly, "you can hardly stand up without your feet sliding out from under you!"
"Yes," said Gorna Dail placidly. "I remember that, too." She stroked the rug on Theo's lap again, frowning slightly, and reached out, running an expert thumb down the side of the stack.
"You were a Visiting Expert?" Theo asked, diverted.
"Oh, yes. Years and years ago. Before you were born, I daresay. It's what I did, in those days, to make a name for myself. You won't believe me, maybe, but I have two master certifications, from University itself."
Theo looked at her, but the older woman's attention was on the rugs. "But," she blurted, "what are you doing in Nonac – in Efraim?"
That got her a sideways smile.
"Hah. I had forgotten that... Non-academic! Everyone who is not studying or teaching is non-academic! Do you think I should be living inside the Wall?" She shook her head. "I'm retired, now."
"Then," Theo said. "Why are you on Delgado?"
Gorna Dail laughed. "Because, after all my traveling, I wanted to settle on a nice, quiet, boring little world, where nothing of note ever happens. And Delgado – aside the college and its great work, of course! – is certainly that. Ah." She slid her hand into the pile of rugs, and pushed them up. "Pull that one out, if you will, and tell me what you think of it."
Theo grabbed the rug indicated, and pulled. It was heavier than she had expected, with a sheen to the mixed blues and greens that reminded her of water.