The thought had certainly been on Rhiow’s mind earlier; but now that they were up and out, there were other concerns. She glanced through the patent gate to the darkness beneath Grand Central, from which Kit and Nita were looking through, interested. “Many thanks,” she said. “Having you here as backup lent us the confidence to go all out.”
Kit made a small, only fractionally mocking bow: Nita grinned. “Our pleasure,” she said. “We’re all in the same business, after all. Want us to leave this open for you?”
Rhiow looked over at Saash. “No,” Saash said, turning away from the matrix she was checking. “I want to check its open-close cycle a couple more times. But nicely done, my wizards. Go well, and let’s meet well again.”
“Dai,” the two said; and the gate snapped from its view of the Grand Central tracks to the usual shining warp/weft pattern.
Rhiow turned to Saash, who said, “The matrix is just fine now. That design flaw in the braiding of the catenary is going to have to be looked at, at some point. But not just now…”
“No,” Rhiow said. “I’ll talk to Har’lh about it; I’ll have to report to him this evening anyway. But, Saash … what a job. And you did wonderfully, too,” she said to Urruah. “Not many circles could have taken that punishment.”
She went over to where Arhu was standing. He looked at Rhiow with an expression equally composed of embarrassment and fear.
“I screwed up,” he said.
She breathed in, breathed out. “No,” she said, and gave him a quick lick behind one ear. He stared at her, shocked. “You started your Ordeal. Now at least we have some kind of hint of what your problems are going to be.”
He looked at her, and away again, toward the sunset: the sun was gone now, the darkness falling fast.
“Yes,” he said, in a voice of complete despair. “So do I.”
Chapter Eight
What with the report for Har’lh, and seeing Saash and Arhu safely back to the garage—for Arhu still seemed very disturbed, though his litany of fear had stopped—it was late before she got home. At the sound of the kitty door going, Hhuha looked up from where she was sitting, reading in the big chair. From inside, in the bedroom, a man’s voice was saying, “And now tonight’s list of Top Ten Reasons to call the Board of Health—”
“Mike,” Hhuha said, “she’s back.”
Rhiow ran across to her and jumped in her lap, purring, before Hhuha could rise. “Oh, you rotten little thing,” Hhuha said, picking her up and nuzzling the side of her face, “I’ve been worried stiff, where the heck have you been all evening?”
Once again Rhiow wondered, as she had before, which ehhif demigod Heck was. “Don’t ask,” she muttered. “But I’m glad to be back, oh, believe me I am. Mmm, you had pizza again. Any leftovers?”
Hhuha held her away a little, leaving Rhiow’s hind legs dangling. “I wish you wouldn’t do that,” Rhiow added, with a rueful glance down at her legs. “It’s hardly dignified.”
“I wonder,” Hhuha said, “are you getting out somehow?”
From the bedroom, a snort could be clearly heard over the laughter coming from the picturebox. “There’s nowhere for her to get out but twenty stories down, Sue,” the answer came. “And if she’s doing that, how’s she getting back?”
“I hate it when he’s sensible,” Hhuha muttered, holding Rhiow close again. “Well, you’re okay. I’m so glad. I’ll give you some of that nice tuna.”
“I’ll eat it,” Rhiow said, “though I must be out of my mind.”
But neither of them moved for a few minutes: Hhuha just held Rhiow more or less draped over her shoulder, and Rhiow just let her, and they purred at each other. Moments like this make it all worthwhile, Rhiow thought. Even the almost-getting-eaten-by-dinosaurs part. For the work she did was as much about keeping Manhattan safe for ehhif as for People, and about making it easier for wizards of all kinds to keep the planet going as it should. Wizards had kept various small and large disasters from befalling the city in the past and would do so often again; on the smallest scale, they did it every day. And the purpose, finally, was so that normal life could go on doing what it did—just trying to manage the best it could and finding what joy there was to be found along the way. Entropy was running: the heat was slowly bleeding out of the worlds, and nothing could be done to actually stop the process. But wizards could slow it down, however slightly, and make a little more time for everyone else to purr at each other in…
“You must be hungry,” Hhuha said, and didn’t move.
“Starving,” Rhiow said, and didn’t move, either.
She glanced around, her head resting on Hhuha’s shoulder. Papers were all over the place again, on the living-room table and in a heap by the chair. “I’m going to shred some of those if I get a chance,” Rhiow said lazily, her tail twitching a bit with the pleasant image. “I wish you’d find something else to do with your days; you so dislike what you have to do now.”
’Talk talk talk,” Hhuha said, having just caught the last few sounds of the sentence as a soft trill. “You are hungry, I bet. Come on.”
She finally put Rhiow carefully down on the rug and went to open another can of cat food. Rhiow sat, watching it with some resignation, since her nose told her plainly that the leftover pizza was in the microwave, and there was pepperoni on it.
They always leave it there and sneak slices in the middle of the night. Would they ever notice if I just opened it one night, took a slice out, and closed it again? If I timed it right, each of them might think the other one did it…
“How much of that pizza is left?” Iaehh’s voice came from the bedroom.
“About half.”
“Bring me some?”
“How much?”
“About hah0.”
“Pig.”
“Controlling personality.”
“Pizza in bed. Disgusting.”
“Call it a lifestyle choice.”
“You can damn well choose about half of about half. I get the rest.”
“Forget it,” Rhiow said then, with amusement and resignation, as Hhuha filled her bowl again. “It would never work… you two talk to each other too much. If this relationship were a little more dysfunctional, I’d eat a lot better, you know that?”
“There you go,” Hhuha said, straightening up from the food bowl. “What a good kitty.”
Rhiow set about eating the awful tuna at her best possible speed, so that she could get into the bedroom before the pizza was all gone.
Much later, both of them were snoring, and Rhiow lay at the end of the bed, looking at the yellow Venetian-blind light and thinking. In particular, she was looking at a chance group of wrinkles in the blanket at the end of the bed: they looked a little like two curves and a slash across them.