The Enchanted Greenhouse(58)
“I’ll search for seeds tomorrow, when it’s light,” he said. “Maybe the species can be saved, even though the plants themselves are gone.”
“I can help you,” Terlu offered.
Lotti piped up. “We all can—and will.”
The other plants agreed with her.
“We will staaay with the refugees tonight,” Dendy said, “aaand monitor their health.”
A floral chorus, the nearest plants agreed as well—they’d care for the relocated plants, tend to their roots, ensure they had water and nutrients. The orchid offered to sing to them, and the myrtle offered to teach them a sea shanty. The thistle said they’d dance to cheer them up and proceeded to bob their globular flower back and forth.
“Thank you,” Yarrow said. He rubbed his face with his hands, and she noticed how tired he looked—as tired as she felt. “I can’t … It’s not enough. We couldn’t save them all. This is why I needed a sorcerer, to keep this from happening.”
Ouch. She knew it wasn’t her fault that she’d been sent instead, but the words still stung. “I’m sorry.”
He lowered his hands. “I didn’t mean…” He trailed off, and she knew he did mean it, though she didn’t think he blamed her. He simply wishes someone else was here. It wasn’t personal, even if it felt very, very personal.
“For what it’s worth, I don’t think you need another sorcerer,” Lotti said.
Risa added, “We don’t want another sorcerer. They might force us to sleep again.”
“What we neeeed,” Dendy said to Yarrow, “are more of youuu. More gaaardeners.” He waved his leaves expansively.
Yarrow shook his head. “There’s only me.”
Across the walkway, the fireweed, Nif, was sparking faintly, and the other plants were clustered around him. The morning glory cuddled against him, shivering so hard that her petals fell. The daisy was quietly sobbing, water sliding down their stem.
Terlu knew the obvious answer. She didn’t even have to think about it. “You could ask your family for help. Just until I find the right spells to strengthen the greenhouses. You said they never visit. Maybe it’s time. If even one of them came, it would double what you can do alone.” She didn’t have the expertise to be of much use—she had no illusions about that, though she’d done her best—and the sentient plants didn’t have the size or strength. “Extra bonus: you’d have the chance to make sure they’re all okay.”
His eyes slid to the dead greenhouse, and she could tell he was considering it. The pain of the most recent loss was written in the lines around his eyes. He shook his head, though. “I wouldn’t know what to say. I don’t … I’m not good with words.”
That wasn’t a no. It’s a good idea. She’d thought from the beginning that this was all too much work for one gardener, and she’d thought he shouldn’t be without his family. “I could help.”
He looked so vulnerable as he stared at the windows.
“I could write it for you,” she offered.
“I…” He halted. “Yes. Yes, please.”
* * *
Sitting at Yarrow’s desk, Terlu wrote the letter on pale yellow paper. And then she rewrote it. And then she glared at it for a while. And then she went for a walk in the woods.
The air was as crisp as a ginger cookie. She shoved her hands deep in the pockets of her coat as she trudged beneath a sky that was vibrantly blue. Snow, lacing the trees and coating the ground, shimmered. It crunched beneath her feet as she walked between the trees. She didn’t have a destination in mind and didn’t think she was going anywhere in particular until she walked into a section of the woods that felt familiar.
Frowning at the trees, she tried to figure out why it was familiar. She hadn’t spent much time outside the greenhouse, with the exception of the walk between Yarrow’s cottage and Laiken’s workroom. She hadn’t even been back to the blue cottage, the one that she’d picked out as hers. Since then, there had been a string of more important things to do, such as finishing that letter, helping Yarrow search for seeds, or helping replant the rescued plants—all of which she should be doing right now. Really, she didn’t have time for a stroll in the woods, but she’d felt the need to clear her head. She didn’t know why it was so hard to write a simple letter.
Walking slowly between the trees, Terlu realized why she knew this spot: it was where she’d awakened, where she’d been given a second chance. She wished she knew the date—it could be her re-birthday, celebrated each year with honey cakes. Of course, that was assuming she got to have re-birthdays and that she wasn’t turned back into a statue after anyone official discovered that she not only cast another spell but was planning to cast many more.
That was why this letter was so hard to write, she admitted to herself.
When she’d suggested it to Yarrow, she’d been thinking of him and the plants and the greenhouse. She hadn’t been thinking about herself. If anyone answered the letter and came back to the greenhouse, Terlu would be vulnerable. They could choose to report her, and she would, once again, be guilty. Worse, she’d be a repeat offender.
The wind blew, and snow flew off the branches of nearby pine trees. It swirled around her, sparkling in the sun like flecks of diamonds. She turned to face the greenhouse, barely visible through the forest.