Part 35 (1/2)
Binkie. But she was not going to tell Zed about Binkie. ”Things,” she said, vaguely. ”I need a new secretary.”
”I thought I would go and look at the house,” he said.
”I doubt it can be rebuilt,” she said gently. ”Not as it was.”
”I wouldn't want it as it was. Would you?” he inquired.
”I don't know,” said she. ”I hadn't thought about it.”
”I thought you didn't like it,” he said.
I didn't, she thought. But that house had been begun by Lisa Yago. It symbolized something; it contained more than just their personal history.
Suddenly she grew suspicious. Imre might not have kept his promise. ”Why are you up so early?” she said.
”Why are you?” he countered.
She grinned, and said lightly, knowing he would not believe it, ”Zed-ka, I'm hiding something from you.”
But to her dismay, he did not laugh. ”Are you?” His gaze sharpened.
”Rhani -- ” He was interrupted by a knock at the already opened door. Calling good morning, a slave came in with a tray piled high with papers. Amri carried the mail like that, Rhani thought, and her heart wrenched in her chest like a squeezed toy.
Aliza Kyneth followed. ”Good morning, my dear,” she said. She gave Rhani a kiss, and the smile which she might have given her eldest daughter, and turned to Zed. To Rhani's astonishment, her brother stood unmoving as Aliza kissed him.
”Did you sleep?” she asked, looking at them both.
Zed said, ”Yes, Aliza. Thank you.”
Rhani said, ”Very well, thanks.” She pointed to the tray. ”What's this?”
”Letters that came for you in the morning mail. Most of them were hand- delivered. They came from all over Abanat -- expressions of sympathy, probably offers of refuge -- ” she smiled without malice -- ”Who would have guessed a Yago would ever need refuge, on Chabad?” ”None of us,” Rhani said. She sorted through the letters. There were notes from Ferris Dur, from Theo Levos, from all the lesser Abanat families, from the Yago businesses, from the banks, from Charity Diamos -- she held that up for Zed and Aliza to see. They laughed. There was an impressive communique from the Lower House of the Chabad Council, offering sympathies and unspecified support. There was a letter from Clare Brion. She read that; it said, in part, ”_if there's anything I can do, please call me_.” There was no letter from Tuli.
In the midst of the mail was a printed communication from the Abanat police, telling her that Ramas I-Occad was in custody at Main Police Station, along with five self-confessed members of the Free Folk of Chabad. She slipped that into a pocket. At the bottom of the pile, a PIN headline said: ”YAGO HOUSE OBLITERATED!” She made a face at it.
”Rhani, Aliza, if you'll excuse me -- ” said Zed. He started toward the door. A third slave walked in holding yet another tray, on which sat six or seven different kinds of breakfast dishes. Zed lifted an egg tart off the tray and strolled out.
Rhani said to Aliza, ”I want to hire a secretary.”
Aliza said, ”Of course, my dear. In the meantime Imre has instructed one of his secretaries to a.s.sist you in whatever you need. Her name is Nialle Hamish; she is very capable.”
”_One_ of his secretaries?”
”He has three,” Aliza said. ”I'm sorry, my dear, will you need more than one? I know we can -- ”
”No, no,” Rhani said hastily, ”one will be fine. I've never needed more than one.”
Aliza pursed her ample lips. ”That one must have been superb.”
”Yes,” Rhani said, ”he was. What happened to the slave who came with me last night, and to the house steward?”
”We lodged them both in the slave quarters.”
”I want to see Dana. The slave.”
Aliza gestured to one of the women and gave her a swiftly murmured order.
”And ask Nialle to come here,” she added. ”Rhani, before you begin to plan, let me a.s.sure you that you may call this house home for as long as you like.”
Rhani shook her head. ”Aliza, you are the most generous person I know,”
she said. ”But I can't believe that your staff will welcome having to care for two households. As soon we can, Zed and I will go back to the estate. We can live there.”
”But you will rebuild the house?” Aliza exclaimed.
”Certainly,” Rhani said.
A step sounded in the hall. A pudgy woman bowed from the doorway. Rhani recognized her from the phone tape. ”Domna,” she said, ”I am Nialle Hamish.”
Rhani smiled at her. ”Please come in,” she said, liking the woman's voice and bearing. She seemed calmly competent. ”My household calls me Rhani-ka. I'm grateful that Domni Imre can spare you from his work long enough to help me. I need first to deal with this.” She indicated the tray of mail. ”They all need answers and some of them will need handwritten responses. Can you find me a calligrapher?”
Nialle said, ”I myself am a calligrapher, Domna. I beg your pardon -- Rhani-ka.”
”That's wonderful,” Rhani said. The breakfast smells in the chamber grew suddenly tempting. Stepping to the laden tray, she picked out a strip of broiled fish.
Aliza said, ”Rhani darling, I will leave you now. If you need anything, you have only to tell Nialle.” She swayed to the doorway. In a few moments, Dana walked through it. He too was wearing fresh clothes, and his face was swollen -- why? Rhani thought.
He stopped meters from her, and bowed. ”Good morning, Rhani-ka,” he said. She wanted to tell him: I believed that you had run. She wanted to ask him: Would you go? And she wanted to hold him, to touch him....”If you don't mind,” she said to Nialle. At once the secretary left the room, and the slaves followed her. Rhani waited until the door clicked shut before she closed the distance between them. She laid her hands on his arms. He smelled of the same bath scent she did. He gripped her, murmuring her name, and then let go suddenly.
”I forgot your side.”
She laughed at him. ”It's healed.” She touched his cheek very gently.
”How did you come by this?”
”A policeman,” he said, ”last night. When they thought _I_ had burned the house.”
”Binkie burned the house.”
”I know,” he said.
”How did you know?”
”I guessed. He wasn't there, you see. And then Zed told me, last night.”
”Did my brother -- ?” She could not finish the question. But he understood, and shook his head, seeming bemused.
”No. He didn't.” Rhani put her hand on his chest. Under the soft fine weave of his tunic, his heartbeat trembled, rapid as freely running water.
”Binkie -- he told me to run away. He said, '_Zed knows_.' You can guess what I thought.”