The Enchanted Greenhouse(13)



How nice!

Oh wait, this isn’t good.

The gardener had come home. And Terlu hadn’t woken. In fact, the entire night had passed and a slice of the morning, and she’d slept through it all. She glanced at the chair, and the winged cat was gone as well. What must the gardener have thought when he found her asleep in his bed? He’d said to rest, but all night? In his own bed? Yet he hadn’t woken her up. Where had he slept? Had he slept? He’d done plenty of chores. Including making me breakfast.

At least she assumed it was for her; she had no actual way to know that, unless he’d left a note, which it didn’t look like he had. She imagined what such a note would say: Dear stranger in my bed. Or Dear intruder. Or I liked you better as a statue. She got out of bed and ran her tongue over her teeth. Her mouth felt gummy, and she wished she had her brush and paste. Also, a privy.

“Um, hello? I’m awake now? Are you still home?” Of course he wasn’t.

She checked the narrow door by the kitchen sink and, happily, found the washroom, complete with a sink, toilet (with a pull-chain to flush!), and all the amenities. Fresh water was in a deep bowl next to a sponge and a towel that smelled like rosemary. Had he left this for her, as well as the honey cake? She wished he’d stayed for her to ask.

Guilt swirled inside her, also hunger. She loved honey cake, but she’d eaten his soup and slept in his bed the entire night, and to assume he was fine with her taking more … I am the worst houseguest ever. She could bake him a blueberry pie as thanks. Everyone liked pie. Of course he’d have to loan her the ingredients, which wouldn’t make it much of a thank you. She picked up the towel and noticed there were clothes beneath it—pants of the softest wool she’d ever felt and a knit top, as well as clean socks and undergarments, all of which looked her size—and that decided her. He’d left these for her to use, and he’d thought of everything. There was a wedge of soap, as well as jar of toothpaste.

Terlu washed, changed, and emerged, half expecting him to be in the cottage waiting for her, but he wasn’t. It was empty. She felt a little shiver. Just a cottage. Not a storage closet. And she wasn’t on a pedestal; she could walk outside whenever she wanted.

She glanced at the chair, wishing the cat had stayed.

It was quiet, except for the soft crackle of the fire in the hearth. It burned low, and she wondered if she should add another piece of firewood or if he preferred it low. She left it as it was and sat at the table to eat the honey cake in silence.

He’d left a syrup for the cake, which she poured on top, and the moist cake soaked it in. She took a bite—it was perfection: vanilla and honey and lightness. It tasted like sunrise, and all of a sudden she didn’t mind that she was alone. She didn’t feel alone anymore. She poured water from a pitcher by the sink, and she discovered it tasted like strawberries and mint, which was amazing in winter. She marveled at it. Perhaps there was another greenhouse room full of herbs and strawberries, miraculously ripe in the heart of winter.

Terlu cleaned after she finished and tried to think of how she could leave a thank-you, but she had nothing and didn’t want to use any of his paper without asking—she’d already eaten his food, slept in his bed, and used his toothpaste. I’ll simply have to find him, she resolved.

The coat and scarf were where she’d left them, and she put them on. She was pleased to discover that her night’s sleep had cured her of the aches she’d felt when she’d transformed back into flesh. She hoped there wouldn’t be any lasting effects from her time as a statue. That would be nice. She wondered if there had ever been any studies done on the long-term effects of transformation spells. If she had access to the Great Library, she could check, but she had the sense that she was a very long way from the stacks she knew. She wondered how far. How had she come here? Had she been loaded onto a boat like a piece of lumber? Had she been shipped with supplies? Or had she been treated like a person as she traveled? Did whoever transported her know she’d once been a person? Why had she been sent anywhere? She’d been positioned on her pedestal for a purpose. Every new librarian received their training in the North Reading Room, and so they’d all been told her story, in whispers or as a lesson. They’d read the plaque beneath her and wonder: Why had she done it? Why had she risked so much? Sacrificed so much? It hadn’t been for the good of the empire, and it hadn’t been for her own wealth or personal gain—why would anyone want to cast a spell to create a sentient houseplant? She wondered if anyone knew the ignoble truth: it was because she didn’t think she could take one more hour in the stacks without anyone to talk to. She didn’t want to quit, and she didn’t want to leave—she loved the library, and she believed that she could be good at her job, if she could just solve this one little problem. Even more, she didn’t want to slink home and admit that she’d failed to make it in the capital city. Her family hadn’t wanted her to leave, and they hadn’t understood why she’d been so desperate to find a place where she felt she had purpose. Maybe it had been pride or some other personality flaw that had led her to casting the spell that created a self-aware spider plant named Caz, but she had truly thought that since she wasn’t doing any harm, as Rijes Velk herself had pointed out, no one would mind or even notice.

She’d been very, very wrong about that.

In retrospect, she supposed the sudden appearance of a talking plant had been rather difficult to ignore.

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