"Inside, eh? Well, I'll let you off at the fork. Hup. Gettap." The two ponies drew the cart at a pace faster than Whandall would walk. The kinless driver whistled some nameless tune. He was a young man, not much over twenty.
The cart was filled with baskets with the lids tied on them. "What is that?" Whandall asked.
The driver eyed Whandall carefully. "Who did you say your friend was?"
"Shanda."
"Samorty's daughter?"
"Stepdaughter," Whandall said. "Sir."
"Right. Your father work for Samorty?"
"Yes, sir."
"Explains the shirt," the driver said.
Whandall widened his eyes and looked up at him.
The driver grinned. "If you was to look in one of those baskets you'd see cloth just like what you're wearing. My cousin Hallati has a loom in his basement. Weaves that cloth, he and his wives and daughters. We sold a stack of it to Samorty last month."
Halite. Whandall had never heard the name, but he would remember it. How many other kinless were hiding valuables?
"Hope we can move Halite out soon. I don't like this drought much. Gets dry and those Lordkin jackals get ugly. Almost got my cousin's place last time. Almost," the cart driver said, and pulled the animals to a stop. This was the road to the Lordshills. Whandall got out and waved a good-bye.
There were different guards when he got to the gate. They didn't pay much attention to Whandall as he came up the road.
"Don't remember you," one of the guards said. "Where do you live, boy?"
"Lord Samorty's house-"
"Oh. Gardening crew?"
"Yes, sir."
The guard nodded. They didn't bother to raise the barrier, but it was easy to walk around it, and the guards were already talking about the weather by the time Whandall was inside.
There were big houses and wide streets. Palm trees grew at regular intervals, in patterns. The houses were grand. Something more, something weird. Thirty houses shouldn't be quite so similar, though no two were identical; but neither should they remind a boy of a stand of redwoods or a range of hills.
Like a redwood, like a granite hill, each house looked like it had been in place forever. Like... Whandall stepped back and looked around him, because he could feel how the shock changed his face. Anyone who saw him would know he was a stranger, staring as if he'd never seen a long street lined on both sides with houses, none of which had ever been burned and replaced. The flower beds-they were shaped and arranged to fit around the houses! Not one structure showed any sign of haste, of Get a roof on that before the rain starts! Or Use the beams from the Tanner house-they don't quite, but the Tanners won't need them anymore. Or Just do something to shelter us-don't bother me; can't you see I'm grieving?
It made him uneasy.
He didn't know what Lord Samorty's house would look like from the I rout, but it had to be near the wall. He worked his way eastward until he was sure there was only the one layer of houses between him and the wall, then north until he could see the big tree. After that it was no problem finding his way around the back of the house to the fountain. He washed his hands and face and feet without waiting to be told to.
"1 didn't really think you would come back," Shanda said.
"I said I would..."
"A Lordkin's promise." There was not much warmth in her smile, but then it brightened. "You promised to show me the redwoods."
He thought about that.
"I have leathers. For both of us." She showed him a box hidden under the bed in her room. "I got them from the gardeners. They don't use them anymore."
Whandall examined the gear.
"It's good, isn't it?" Shanda demanded.
"It's good enough," he admitted. "But we'd be out all night."
"That's all right; Miss Batty will think I'm visiting," Shanda said. "I'll tell her I'm staying with Lord Flascatti's daughter. Miss Batty will never check."
"But-"
"And my stepmother wouldn't care if I never came back. We'll take lunch and dinner and-"
Whandall looked up at the sun, low in the west. "It's way too late-"
"Not today, silly. In the morning. Or next day. You don't have to get back today, do you?"
He shook his head. If he never came back, his mother would worry about him a little, but she wouldn't do anything, and no one else would care much. Not unless they thought he'd been killed by kinless.
"Did you try that stick?"
Shanda grinned. "That same night. On Rawanda's chair! Yes! It gave
her a little red rash, and it itched her for two days. I think it still does." Her face tell a bit. "Samorty must have got some on his arm, because he got a rash too. I guess he knew what made it, because he yelled at the gardeners about it, and the gardeners yelled back, and they all went out to look for a poison plant, but they didn't find any. I didn't want to hurt Samorty."
Good, Whandall thought. And better that she hadn't been caught, and no one knew where she had been. Or who she had been with...
A little red rash. Whandall had given leaves of that same plant to Lord Pelzed, and they'd used them on Bull Fizzle boys. No one died, but a dozen of them were useless for a week, and Pelzed and the Bull Fizzle Lord had made a treaty not to do that again. Pelzed had been pleased. But here it was just a little red rash. Plants lost power here.
"Let's get something to eat," Shanda was saying. "Serana doesn't think I eat enough. She'll be glad to see you."
The kitchen was warm and dry and smelled of foods Whandall could only guess at. Serana filled his bowl with soup and heaped bread on the table, then apologized for not having anything for him. "Will you be staying for dinner?"
"If that's all right," Whandall said. "Ma'am. This sure is good."
Serana smiled happily.
They watched the gardeners, but they avoided everyone else. Shanda showed him the carp pools, with bright colored fish. A pair of servants got too curious, and Whandall was frantically trying to find answers when Shanda laughed and ran away with Whandall following. She led him to another part of the yard.
There was a small, queer house, too small for Shanda and way too small for Whandall. There were rooms no bigger than a big man, and tiny passages they could crawl through, and open walls. The curious servants had followed. Whandall had to wriggle like an earthworm, but he followed Shanda deeper into the maze, into twists and shadows, until no eyes could reach them.
He felt a moment of panic then. If this place should burn! They'd be trapped, wriggling through flaming twists. But the gardeners were all kin-less, weren't they? And he wouldn't show the little girl his fear. He followed Shanda deeper yet.
There was a small room at the center, just big enough for both of them to sit up.
"Why is it so small?" Whandall asked.
"It's a playhouse. It was built for my little brother, but he doesn't like it much, so I get to play in it."
A playhouse. Whandall could understand the notion, but he would never have thought of it. An entire extra house, just for fun!
After dinner they lay on the balcony above the courtyard und listened to the Lords talk.
Four men and three women lolled on couches that would have looked really nice in the Placehold courtyard. No one said anything until an elderly kinless brought out a tray of steaming cups. Lady Rawanda passed them to the others.
Qirinty's wife sipped, then smiled. "Really, Rawanda, you must tell u& where you get such excellent tea root."
"Thank you, Cliella. It is good, isn't it?" Rawanda said. There was another silence.
"Quiet lately," Jerreff said. "I don't like it."
"Then you should be pleased," Samorty said. "We caught a sneaker last night."