The cereal wasn't too bad, though it was sweeter than she liked; the juice was room temperature and astringent. Theo ate quickly, keeping an increasingly worried eye on her mother, who continued to drink coffee and stare a hole into her cereal.
Theo cleared her throat.
"Early class this morning, Kamele?" she asked, trying to sound bright and interested – and hoping to bring her mother to a realization that her cereal was getting cold.
Her mother glanced up, her eyes soft and not really focused.
"Yes," she murmured. "I do have the early class this morning, Theo. Thank you for reminding me. I'd best be on my way." She slid off the stool, carried her untouched bowl and the half-empty cup to the disposal.
Well, Theo thought, that didn't work, did it?
Kamele bent to pick up her bag.
"Don't dawdle," she said, slinging it over her shoulder. "I'll be a little late this evening – there's a meeting. If it looks like it'll go long, I'll text you." She bent and brushed her lips against Theo's cheek.
"Learn well," she murmured, and was gone, moving quickly toward the receiving parlor, her footsteps sounding sticky against the slick floor. Theo heard the outer door chime and cycle.
This, she thought, finishing her cereal hurriedly, is not good. She sat back, reaching for the leg pocket where her mumu rode. She'd just text a quick message to Father, and ask him to –
Or, she thought, hand poised above the pocket, maybe not. For all she knew, Kamele wasn't speaking to Father, and would refuse anything he sent to her. She was certainly behaving like – Theo took a breath. Until somebody told her something, she couldn't dismiss the possibility that Kamele had – had released Father. There were signs, she thought carefully. Before last night, Kamele had always referred to Father as "Jen Sar." "Professor Kiladi," in all its stiff formalness – that was how a junior academic referred to a senior, not how a woman spoke of her onagrata.
Theo sighed. She hated not knowing what was going on. Maybe the best thing to do was wait for Oktavi's dinner with Father, and ask him again.
Maybe he'd even give her a better answer than "local custom."
Grumbling to herself, she stuffed the disposables into the receptacle, shut the door to the kitchen, and glanced at the readout set into the top of the table. Still plenty of time to meet Lesset before class, if the bus didn't run late.
"Bus!" she said out loud, and smacked fingertips against her forehead. She didn't have to catch the bus today. She lived inside the Wall now; school was just a belt ride away.
"Great," she muttered, and slung her pack over her shoulder. "So I'll be early."
* * * *
She was at the Team's usual table in the Ready Room, working on the lace flower again, her tongue between her teeth as she tried to figure out how to make it 3D and all one piece, when Lesset wandered in – and stopped just inside the door, blinking.
"Theo! What're you doing here this early? Is something wrong?"
Theo frowned up at her. "If something was wrong, I'd be late, wouldn't I?"
"It would depend," her friend said reasonably, "on what was wrong."
"I guess." She sighed and reached for her pack. "Actually, something is wrong. Kamele moved out of Father's house. We're Mice now."
"You're living in the Wall? Really?" Lesset blinked, then grinned. "That's tenured!"
Theo eyed her sourly. "No, it's not." She bent to put her hook and thread away into her bag.
"Seriously tenured," Lesset insisted. "Where's your nest?"
"Quadeight Twobuild, right on the belt."
Lesset's grin went from wide to round. "Fact?"
"No, theory!" Theo snapped. "What'm I gonna do, make up the direction?"
"But that must be – it's gotta be... Chaos!" Lesset sat suddenly, her pack bumping the table, and there she continued to sit, staring right through Kartor and Roni when they came in. Kartor flopped into the chair on Theo's right, his eyes pinned to the screen of his mumu. Roni dropped her bag on the table and went over to Team Two's table, just like she always did.
"Any time you're ready," Theo muttered, and Lesset turned to her, putting a quick hand on her arm.
"I'm sorry," she said, though she didn't sound particularly contrite. "It just came to me that you're living – you must be living in, you know – her apartment."
Theo sighed, and wished she hadn't put her handwork away. "Her who?"
Lesset frowned. "Don't you ever read The Faq?"
The Faculty-Administration Quarterly carried the daily university news – lists, mostly. Lists of people who were applying for grants. Lists of people who had gotten their grants. Lists of people going on sabbatical. Lists of people coming back from sabbatical. Changes of address.
Kamele said that once, in the long ago past, The Faq really had only been published once a quarter, but the level of news generated by such a large faculty and administration forced a more frequent publication schedule. She read it, and Father, too, though Theo thought they had different reading experiences. For instance, Kamele called it The Faq or, sometimes, The News.
Father called it The Scandal Sheet.
"I skim it sometimes," Theo said, and made a face. "Bor-ing."
Lesset sighed and shook her head. "Information is never boring," she said in a prim voice that made her sound exactly like her mother.
"Long lists of names are boring," Theo answered, then prodded. "You were going to tell me who her is."
"Well..." Lesset chewed her lip. "Professor Flandin – the sub-chair of the History of Ed – "
"Lesset, I know who Professor Flandin is! Kamele's in EdHist!"
"All right, don't roar at me! How'm I supposed to know what you know?"
"I'm sorry," Theo said, noticing that her shoulders had climbed up nearly to her ears. She relaxed them, deliberately, and looked at her friend. "So you think we're in Professor Flandin's apartment? Why? She go Topthree?"
"Topthree!" Lesset laughed and patted Theo's arm. "You really don't read The Faq, do you? Professor Flandin didn't get promoted. She got disbarred."
Having delivered this last in a penetrating whisper, Lesset folded her hands on her knee, and gave a single, solemn nod.
"Disbarred?" Theo frowned. Now she came to think about it, she'd heard something...
"Falsifying data," she said, suddenly remembering. She looked at Lesset. "She falsified cites in her last two pubs."
Lesset smiled. "You do pay attention sometimes! So, anyway, if Professor Waitley's been assigned – Quadeight's only two ramps down from Topthree! – been assigned to Professor Flandin's apartment, that must mean the dean approved her temp-posting to sub-head. That wasn't in The Faq yet!"
"Maybe they're waiting to make the announcement at the Faculty Meeting," Theo said, but she was thinking about Kamele – Temp Sub-Head! – and she hadn't said anything – not a word. That felt pretty bad, like Kamele didn't trust her. But, Theo thought, her spirits rising considerably, if the temp appointment was the reason Kamele had moved to the Wall, then that meant they could go home after the search was finished and the department had appointed someone permanent!
The knot in her stomach eased, and she looked up with a smile as the first whistle sounded.
"Time to go," Lesset said, as she and Theo rose and shouldered their packs.