Powers
Page 32
I took up the lines—
Let grey gander fly beside grey goose,
North in the springtime: it is south I go.
"Ah!" Memer said, all alight. "I love that poem!"
"Of course you do," Caspro said. "But it's not a well-known one, except to a few homesick southerners." I thought of the homesick northerner, Tadder, who lent me the volume of Denios where I'd read the poem. Caspro went on, "I was thinking that having a kind of live anthology about the house could be very useful to me. If such work seemed at all attractive to you, Gavir. Anything you didn't have by heart you could help me look up, of course. I have a good many books. And you could be getting on with your work at the University. What do you think, Gry?"
His wife was sitting down on the pavement with Melle. She reached up and took his hand, and for a moment they gazed at each other with a calm intensity of love. Melle looked from her to him. She looked hard at him, frowning, studying him.
"It seems an excellent idea," Gry said.
"You see, we have a couple of spare rooms here," he said to me. "One of them is Memer's, as long as she'll let us keep her—through next winter at the very least. There are a couple of rooms up in the attic, where we had two young women from Bendraman living until just lately, students. But they went back to Derris Water to astonish the good priests with their learning, so the rooms are vacant. Waiting for you and Melle."
"Orrec," said his wife, "you should give Gavir time to think."
"Dangerous thing, often, time to think," he said. He looked at me with a smile that was both apologetic and challenging.
"I would—It would—We would—" I couldn't get a finished sentence out.
"To me it would be a great pleasure to have a child in the house," Gry said. "This child. If it pleased Melle."
Melle looked at her, then at me. I said, "Melle, our hosts are inviting us to stay with them."
"With Shetar?"
"Yes."
"And Gry? And Memer?"
"Yes."
She said nothing, but nodded and went back to stroking the lion's thick fur. The lion was faintly but perceptibly snoring.
"Very well, that's settled," said Caspro in particularly broad Uplands dialect. "Go get your things out of the Quail and move in."
I was hesitant, incredulous.
"Did you not see me, half your life ago, in your visions, and I spoke your name? Were you not coming here to me?" he said, quietly but fiercely. "If we're guided, are we to argue with the guide?"
Gry watched me with a sympathetic eye.
Memer looked at Caspro, smiling, and said to me, "It's very hard to argue with him."
"I—I don't want to argue," I stammered. "It's only—" And I stopped again.
Melle got up and sat down by me on the bench, pressing close against me. "Beaky," she whispered. "Don't cry. It's all right."
"I know," I said, putting my arm around her. "I know it is."