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that would fill the air for meters around, but its color was muted and its
shape low and round. Intermittent stands of chuffgrass would break up the
lines, and reach full growth at the right time, but its sickly citrus scent
would clash with the scrubwire, and besides, it was on the proscribed list of
plants to which Lord Vorkosigan was allergic. Ah - zipweed! Its blond and
maroon stripes would provide excellent vertical visual interest, and its faint
sweet fragrance would combine well, appetizingly even, with the scrubwire. Put
a clump there by the little bridge, and there and there. She altered the
program, and ran the succession again.
Much better
. She took a sip of her cooling tea, and glanced at the time.
She could hear her Aunt Vorthys moving about in the kitchen. Late-sleeper
Uncle Vorthys would be down soon, and shortly afterwards Nikki, and aesthetic
concentration would be a lost cause. She had only a few days for any last
design refinements before she began working with real plants in quantity. And
less than two hours before she needed to be showered and dressed and onsite to
watch the crew hook up and test the creek's water circulation.
If all went well, she could start laying her supply of Dendarii rocks today,
and tuning the gentle burble of the water flow around and over and among them.
The sound of the creek was another subtlety the design program could not help
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her with, though it had addressed environmental noise abatement. The walls and
curving terraces were up onsite, and satisfactory; the city-
noise-baffling effects were all she'd hoped for. Even in winter the garden
would be hushed and restful. Blanketed with snow broken only by the bare
up-reaching lines of the woodier scrub, the shape of the space would still
please the eye and soothe the mind and heart.
By tonight, the bones of the thing would be complete. Tomorrow, the flesh, in
the form of trucked-in, unterraformed native soils from remote corners of the
Vorkosigan's District, would arrive. And tomorrow evening before Lord
Vorkosigan's dinner party, just for promise, she would put the first plant
into the soil: a certain spare rootling from an ancient South Continent
skellytum tree. It would be fifteen years or more before it would grow to fill
the space allotted for it, but what of that?
Vorkosigans had held this ground for two hundred years. Chances were good
Vorkosigans would still be there to see it in its maturity. Continuity. With
continuity like that, you could grow a real garden. Or a real family...
The front door chimed, and Ekaterin jumped, abruptly aware she was still
dressed in an old set of her uncle's ship knits for pajamas, with her hair
escaping the tie at the nape of her neck. Her aunt's step sounded from the
kitchen into the tiled hall, and
Ekaterin tensed to duck out of the line of sight should it prove some formal
visitor. Oh, dear, what if it was Lord Vorkosigan?
She'd waked at dawn with garden revisions rioting through her head, sneaked
quietly downstairs to work, and hadn't even brushed her teeth yet - but the
voice greeting her aunt was a woman's, and a familiar one at that.
Rosalie, here? Why?
A dark-haired, fortyish woman leaned around the edge of the archway and
smiled. Ekaterin waved back in surprise, and rose to go to the hallway and
greet her. It was indeed Rosalie Vorvayne, the wife of Ekaterin's eldest
brother. Ekaterin hadn't seen her since Tien's funeral. She wore conservative
day-wear, skirt and jacket in a bronze green that flattered her olive skin,
though the cut was a little dowdy and provincial. She had her daughter Edie in
tow, to whom she said, "Run along upstairs and find your cousin Nikki. I have
to talk to your Aunt Kat for a while." Edie had not quite reached the
adolescent slouch stage, and thumped off willingly enough.
"What brings you to the capital at this hour?" Aunt Vorthys asked Rosalie.
"Is Hugo and everyone all right?" Ekaterin added.
"Oh, yes, we're all fine," Rosalie assured them. "Hugo couldn't get away from
work, so I was dispatched. I plan to take Edie shopping later, but getting her
up to catch the morning monorail was a real chore, believe me."
Hugo Vorvayne held a post in the Imperial Bureau of Mines northern regional
headquarters in Vordarian's District, two hours away from Vorbarr Sultana by
the express. Rosalie must have risen before light for this outing. Her two
older sons, grown almost past the surly stage, presumably had been left to
their own devices for the day.
"Have you had breakfast, Rosalie?" Aunt Vorthys asked. "Do you want any tea or
coffee?"
"We ate on the monorail, but tea would be lovely, thank you, Aunt Vorthys."
Rosalie and Ekaterin both followed their aunt into her kitchen to offer
assistance, and as a result all ended up seated around the kitchen table with
their steaming cups. Rosalie brought them up to date upon the health of her
husband, the events of her household, and the accomplishments of her sons
since Tien's funeral. Her eyes narrowed with good humor, and she leaned
forward confidingly. "But to answer your question, what brings me here is you,
Kat."
"Me?" said Ekaterin blankly.
"Can't you imagine why?"
Ekaterin wondered if it would be rude to say, No, how should I?
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She compromised with an inquiring gesture, and raised eyebrows.
"Your father had a visitor a couple of days ago."
Rosalie's arch tone invited a guessing-game, but Ekaterin could only think of
how soon she might finish the social niceties and get away to her work-site.
She continued to smile dimly.
Rosalie shook her head in amused exasperation, leaned forward, and tapped her
finger on the table beside her cup. "You, my dear, have a very eligible
offer."
"Offer of what?" Rosalie wasn't likely to be bringing her a new garden design
contract. But surely she couldn't mean -
"Marriage, what else? And from a proper Vor gentleman, too, I'm pleased to
report. So old-fashioned of the man, he sent a
Baba all the way from Vorbarr Sultana to your da in South Continent - it quite
bowled the old man over. Your da called Hugo to pass on the particulars. We
decided that after all that baba-ing rather than do it over the comconsole
someone ought to tell you the good news in person. We're all so pleased, to
think you might be settled again so soon."
Aunt Vorthys sat up, looking considerably startled. She put a finger to her
lips. [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]

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