IN THE morning, Unar had barely started work when Ylly flew out of nowhere at her.
“They’ve taken her away to sell,” Ylly sobbed, her arms wrapped around Unar’s knees. “Sawas and the baby. They must have seen you. She’s being punished because of you!”
“Quiet, slave!” Unar hissed, in case anyone was close by, but a quick flick of her magic showed they were alone by the watercress beds. “Nobody saw me with Sawas, Ylly.”
Ylly’s whole body quaked.
“Hasbabsah sent me a bird with a message. At daybreak, a Servant went below to grow a new room in Sawas’s hollow. A separate sleeping room for the baby. Sawas and the Servant spoke. Hasbabsah couldn’t overhear them. But then the Servant took Sawas and baby Ylly away, out of the Garden, in the direction of the market. Where else could they be going?”
“Maybe the Servant needed a slave to carry her basket?”
“Then why take the baby?”
Ylly was frantic. Unar didn’t know what to say to calm her. Her magic warned her that others were coming.
“Don’t shake me,” she said. “If anybody sees you, they’ll sell you as well. Listen, you said that Hasbabsah couldn’t be sold because she knew the secrets of the Garden. Doesn’t Sawas know any secrets?”
“No! She’s always stayed below!” Ylly released Unar and crumpled to the earth, burying her face in her hands.
“I’ll find out what’s happening,” Unar said in a low voice. “Oos will tell me. My friend. You remember her. She’s a Servant, now.”
Ylly shook her head.
“Your friend,” she repeated huskily, hopelessly, “she was the Servant who took my daughter and granddaughter away. Oos, the vizier’s daughter.”
Unar grunted. Had Oos been sent on some grim errand to prove her loyalty to Servant Eilif? Or had she thoughtlessly gone to buy glass goblets, jewelled shoes, or other fineries she’d grown accustomed to having in her father’s home, enjoying the freedom she had as a Servant that had been denied her as a Gardener? Not that Oos had wanted to leave the Garden, since passing through the Gates.
“How old is this news?” she asked.
“Three hours, by the water clock. Hasbabsah had to find chalk and paperbark. She had to steal grain to entice the messenger bird to come.”
“Come with me.”
Unar went to the Gate. Ylly followed. The market wasn’t far from the Garden. If Oos had gone there, she’d be back soon; Unar bit her lip and gazed at the open archway with the beautiful carved doors thrown back, wondering if she dared leave the Garden in broad daylight.
She’d almost been a slave. Her parents had all but agreed to sell her. The Garden had saved her. It was her home and her shelter. She wouldn’t risk being expelled for the sake of a rescue mission that might be completely unnecessary. Not when she had so much to learn, and more to accomplish.
Before Unar could decide on anything drastic, Oos returned, alone, along the steep path up to the Garden Gate. Ylly, rocking on her heels at Unar’s side, stiffened at the sight of her but said nothing.
“Unar,” Oos said breathlessly, ignoring the crouching slave. “Were you waiting for me?”
“Yes, I was,” Unar said, relieved to see Oos pass easily through the wards. Oos had neither stolen, raped, nor killed. Nothing bad could have happened to Sawas. She’d be along, soon, carrying some bought trinket or other. “Where have you been?”
Oos seemed taken aback.
“One who walks in the grace of Audblayin has been to the home of the weaver, Epatut. It grows cooler at night, and the Temple was in need of some new blankets. I took two slaves from the low levels for the trade. They weren’t needed here. They’re with Wife-of-Epatut, now. She’s pregnant again, by the grace of Audblayin, and wanted a wet nurse in waiting.”
Unar couldn’t bring herself to look at Ylly.
“It has been cooler at night,” Unar repeated stupidly.
“I don’t need you now, slave,” Oos told Ylly. “I’ll walk alone with this Gardener.”
When Ylly had gone, Oos seized Unar’s hand and dragged her into the green shade of the ferns, where they were concealed by a profusion of new fronds.
“What are you doing, Unar?”
“What do you mean?”
“That slave girl, Sawas, came to me this morning. She said you were learning to swim. She said you wanted to sneak into the Temple and make babies with Aoun. You aren’t loyal to the Temple, she said, but she offered to report everything you did to Servant Eilif, if only she would be allowed to keep her child with her until it was of age, instead of being at the mercy of the Garden’s needs. I had to get rid of her and the child before she could tell anyone else!”
“I don’t want to make babies with Aoun!”
“Is that all you have to say? Have you been learning to swim?”
“Just one lesson, Oos. I’m trying to conquer my weaknesses. You know I’m afraid of the water!”
“Don’t you have enough work to do?”
“Don’t speak to me like I’m a slave. I lied for you, when you made music in the loquat grove. I hid your bells under the avocado tree so you wouldn’t be cast out of the Garden.”
“And now I’ve sold two slaves for you.”
“She was lying about me,” Unar spat, eye to eye with Oos.
“Are your oaths unbound, Unar?”
“No!”
“I think they might be. I think when you went into Understorey, something happened—”
“Nothing happened! I love the Garden. I’m loyal to it. Don’t you believe me? Don’t you know me at all? If my oaths are unbound, why haven’t I bled?”
“Haven’t you?”
“I should hate you for that,” Unar said, but she knew she couldn’t hate Oos, not really.
Ylly’s hatred would surely be enough for both of them.