Work, and recovery from work, took up nearly all of the next day, from dawn to dusk. Mealtime was a fragrant lentil stew with onions and spices, a supper Maia felt sure Thalla had prepared in expectation of Kiel’s return. But the dark woman did not show. Thalla only laughed when Maia worried aloud. “Oh, we got plans, we do. Sometimes she’s away a week or more. Lerners got to put up with it ’cause nobody’s better’n Kiel at cold- rollin’ flat sheet. Don’t you worry, virgie. She’ll be back presently.”
That evening, Maia took their small oil lantern into the ebbing twilight to visit the toilet before going to bed. For privacy, it had become her habit to wait until all the other vars finished. Along the way to the outhouse, she liked to watch the stars, which were beginning to show winter constellations to good advantage. Stratos was slowing in its long outward ellipse, although the true opening of cool season still lay some weeks ahead.
Turning a corner in the warren of laborers’ bungalows, Maia saw someone leaning against the tilted door of the outhouse, facing the other way.
She approached and set the lantern down. “They been in there long?” she asked the woman waiting ahead of her, who shook her head.
“No one’s inside.”
“But then, why are you …”
Maia stopped. Something was wrong. That voice.
“Why am I waiting?” The woman turned around. “Why, for you of course, my meddlesome young friend.”
Maia gaped. “Tizbe!”
The pleasure-clan winterling smiled and gave an offhand salute. “None other than your loyal assistant baggage handler, in person. Thought it was time you and I had a talk, boss.”
Despite her racing heart, Maia felt proud not to show a quaver in her voice. “Talk away,” she said, spreading her hands. “Choose a subject. Anything you like.”
Tizbe shook her head. “Not here. I have a place in mind.”
“All right. Where—”
Maia stopped suddenly, sensing movement. She whirled just in time to glimpse several identical black-clad women bearing down upon her, holding fuming cloths.
Calma Lerner watched with tight lips pressed together as Maia was taken to the ground and her mouth and nose covered. Black fabric cut off vision. A cloying, sweet aroma choked her, invading her brain and smothering all thoughts.
She roused through a cloudy, anesthetic haze to see stars jouncing about like busy glow beetles high in the sky, and dimly recalled that stars weren’t supposed to do that. Only vaguely in her delirium did it occur to Maia that this might be a matter of perception. It was hard to focus while lying supine, tied to the bottom of a rattling, horse-drawn wagon.
Through the night, Maia drifted in and out of drugged slumber, punctuated by intervals when someone would lift her head to dribble water down a cloth into her parched mouth. She sucked like a newborn baby, as if that primal reflex were the only one left her. Dreams confronted Maia with memories drawn randomly from storage, twisted, and made vivid with embellishments by her unrestrained subconscious.
She had been a little over three Stratoin years old… nine or ten by the old calendar. It was Mid-Winter’s Day and Lamatia’s summerlings had been fed and told to go to their rooms, to stay there till the gong rang for evening meal. But the twins had been making plans. At noontime, Maia and Leie knew all full-Lamai folk would be in the great hall to take part in the Ceremony of Initiation. For weeks, the six-year-old class of Lamais had been excitedly wagering which of them would receive ripening, and which would have to await another winter, maybe two. Among clones, with little to distinguish between them, whoever managed to conceive during her first mature solstice had an advantage over her peers, rising in status as her generation matured, perhaps eventually taking a leading role in running the clan.
Maia and Leie were as one in not wanting to miss this, despite rules putting the rites off-limits to mere half daughters. They had spent many furtive hours discovering the route to use—which entailed first slipping out their bedroom window, then around a dormer and down a rain gutter, along a wall lined with decorative, crenelated fortifications, through a loose window into an attic, and down a rope ladder that they had prehung inside a sealed-off, abandoned chimney…
In Maia’s dream, each phase of the adventure loomed as vivid and immediate as it had to her younger self. The possibility of falling to her death was terrifying, but less awful than the thought of getting caught. Capture and punishment were, in turn, negligible deterrents next to the ghastly possibility that she and Leie might not get to
Reaching their final vantage point was the most dangerous part. It meant worming their way along the steep, sloping dome of the great hall itself, whose arching ribs of reinforced concrete held in place huge mottled lenses of colored glass. Crawling the lip so that no shadows would cast into the hall, Maia and her sister finally gathered the courage to poke their heads over a section of tinted window, to catch their first glimpse of the ceremony under way below.
The interior was a swirling confusion of brightness and shadow. The glassy roof poured winter daylight into the chamber, transformed into a brilliance reminiscent of summer nights. Colored panels cast clever imitations of aurorae against the walls below, while others glinted and flashed as gaudily as Wengel Star, when the sun’s small, bitterly bright companion shone high in the summer sky. A roaring fire in one corner of the room gave off heat the twins could feel outside. The flames were colored with additives guaranteed to simulate the spectrum of the northern lights.
It was a spectacle worth every pain taken to get there. Neither Leie nor Maia would have had the courage to come alone.
Still, it took a while to stifle the tremulous certainty that someone was going to look their way. The kids spent more time nudging each other and giggling than stealing quick glances through the burnished lenses. Finally they realized that nobody below was interested in the ceiling at a time like this.
Dancers wove rippling patterns as they undulated before the central dais, waving filmy fabrics that also mimicked ionic displays. The troupe had been hired from Oosterwyck Clan, famed for their beauty and sensuality. Their success rate was well-advertised and only rich clans could afford their services at this time of year.
Censers emitted spirals of smoke, whose aroma was supposed to simulate the pheromones that best aroused males. Behind a veiled curtain, silhouettes told of the assembled mothers and full sisters of Lamatia Hold, watching discreetly offstage so as not to put off their guests.
Maia nudged Leie and pointed. “Over there!” She whispered unnecessarily. Since the music only reached them as a faint murmur, it was doubtful anything they said would be heard below. Leie turned to peer in the direction she had indicated. “Yeah, it’s the Penguin Guild captain, and those two young sailors. Exactly the ones I predicted. Pay up!”
“I never betted! Everybody knew Penguin Guild owes Lamatia for that big loan the mothers gave ’em last year.” Leie ignored the rejoinder. “Come on, let’s get a better look,” she urged, pulling Maia’s arm, causing her to teeter precariously on the steeply tilted wall of the dome. “Hey, watch it!”
But Leie had already slithered to where a great piece of convex glass bulged from the arching roof. Maia heard her sister take in a sudden gasp, then titter nervously.
“What is it?” Maia exclaimed, sliding over.
Leie held up a hand. “No. Don’t look yet! Get a good hold an’ set your feet good. Got it? Don’t look yet.”
“I’m not looking!” Maia whined.