46th of Summer
Balancing the platter with two hands, because holding it with one was hard, he went through the crowd. Every single time someone took a glass off he had to stop and brace himself to adjust the balance. It made him frown in concentration, fearing that any moment now, some sloshed guest or another would reach out too wildly or bump into him and cause a total collapse.
Just as he exhaled in relief, after having survived the dangers of handling fragile glasswork amidst a sea of legs, both wooden and real, a gentle voice spoke.
“Come here little dove.”
Tim turned around. Seated at one of the smaller tables, surrounded by females of various races, circumference and statue sat a Konti woman who could just as well have been one of the white lilies in the small, narrow vast at the center of the table.
“Come closer, don’t be shy,” she said. The other women at her table exchanged a few looks. Two younger, lightly dressed ladies giggled but one particularly tall women with many wrinkles looked like the Konti had squirted a lemon in her face. Moreover, she was dressed in much darker colors than anyone else he’d seen, as if she had by mistake swapped her party dress for a funeral dress. It wasn’t quite black and neither was it a subtle indicator of her character.
She clicked her tongue in disapproval as he stepped closer and he worried he had perhaps spilled something on his clothes, but he didn’t dare to check.
“Such brutes.”
Only now did he recognize her. She’d been at his auction! Her voice, however, was not the kind he’d come to expect. It was rather soft and when she spoke, the words seemed to linger like ghosts before evaporating into the air.
“I was just telling my good friends here I had been hoping to see you again. You’re looking very smart,” she smiled.
“Thank you Miss,” he said, and he made a slight bow as Matilla had taught him to.
The two younger ladies, one with olive skin, the other rather too pale, giggled as if he was some cuddly, furry creature they’d found in the dirt. The Konti kept her composure though.
“I confess that I regret I wasn’t able to purchase you. You’d be looking as smart everyday if you had been under my employment and I wouldn’t have branded you so hideously.”
She let a thin, bony finger slide over his forehead, brushing the straw-like strand away. “Such brutes,” she said again.
“You want to be careful Nova,” the older woman, whose face seemed to have suffered more from the downward drag of earrings than her ears had, said. “It’s improper to conduct yourself so amidst generous hosts.”
Tim thought she was perhaps a failed experiment of an old hag, as she quite looked like an old hag except that her posture was stiffer and erecter than the toughest board in Jed’s workshop.
“Surely you do not mean to forbid me from speaking with whomever I please?” Nova replied. She was still polite, but there was a distinct twang in her voice. Her dress rustled as she returned her attention to the table. Tim caught a whiff of rose-petal perfume and became all the more confident that she was the nicest, sweetest lady he’d seen at this party.
“If I could, I would’ve forbidden you to speak a long time ago,” the old crow sneered. Why this frail, foolish girl bothered with soft-headed, low-life vermin was beyond her and the giggling, chirping two at her right-hand made her want to slap them across the face and remind them of table manners.
“Darling,” Nova turned to Tim again, “would you be so kind to fetch a glass of strong Port for my dear aunt?”
“For us too!” the darker one of the two giddy young ladies said.
“Make that two water, I think they’ve had enough already,” Nova whispered before dismissing him.
Tim settled into a jog, but then reminded himself that running would be highly inappropriate and instead strode back into the cool darkness of the Radacke Mansion. Soon enough, he returned to Nova and her three good friends. He wished she’d been alone at the table so he could’ve talked more. There was something gentle and airy about her, as if she was born from some fluffy white cloud. Less comforting however was that she tracked his every movement with her eyes, as if putting drinks on a table was some delicate, holy matter.
“Excellent.” She even clapped briefly.
“Say, if ever you wish a more respectable job and Jed finds himself in need to dispose of you, come to me…”
“Tim,” he finished.
“Yes, feel free to come to me Tim.”
The old pincer of a woman looked like she was about to dispose of her Port and land it in Nova’s face and Tim quickly excused himself and retreated. He wondered if perhaps live would be better with Lady Nova. Then again, he much preferred his loosely fitting working clothes to these tight, uncomfortable silks that made it difficult to say more than five words without having to suck in another breath.
Armed with an empty platter, he wandered about aimlessly for a moment. The other slaves were too busy to notice him and the guests, either too tall in height or stature, overlooked him just the same.
Another young Radacke slave however had been cursed by being of the exact same height as the eyes of an elderly man with a more fiery color to his cheeks than the reddest wine.
"I'd like similar treatment, slave. Jed's just a kid, after all. Get me a mixed cocktail, and make it quick. Didn't close down my business for the day to stay sober, Gods damned it."
Tim shot a look at Jed, then at the slave. “I’ll fetch it,” he said quickly, much to the relief of his colleague. He could hardly wipe the smirk from his face as he hurried into the kitchen and made a very special cocktail indeed.
After having added a fair bit of salt and other dissolving spices, he put the glass on a platter, gave it a firm stir, dipped his finger in it and tasted a drop. He grimaced. It was absolutely horrible. The salt dominated, but there was a bitter aftertaste that was nothing short of putrid.
Wiping any mischievous expressions from his face, he returned to the wretched old villain and handed him the glass, then retreated a pace and flashed a hint of a wink at Jed. Surely his master would appreciate the joke.