Serasia sat quietly as girl slurped up the precious water. She had seen that brief look of irritation on the Kelvic’s face, which had melted into rightful timidity just as quickly, and she was offended by it. Inexplicable anger boiled at the bottom of her throat, but she refused to make a fool herself, or any more of one than she already had. Her back was too straight, her hands paired randomly and her fingers clasped stiffly. As she looked down her nose at the slave, her chin seemed too high, as if lowering it would allow some ugly word to spill from her lips. If Claudia stayed with the eypharian for very long, she would recognize this posture as the precarious brink of a rampage.
“That’s enough,” she said shortly as she saw her head rise from the bowl for the second time. “You may take it down to the water later in the evening, when the air is cooler.” After a few moments to allow for a reply, Serasia stood abruptly and moved to the chest in the corner of the room. “You will bathe then, too.”
She produced a small piece of cloth, too new to be a rag, and closed the space between them. There she raised it to the girl’s chin and neck, wiping the water away where it had carved light lines through the filth on her skin. Her hand, with its painted nails and sparkling knuckles, was not quite gentle enough to match the strange motherliness of the gesture. Serasia did not know whether she liked this creature, but she did know that for some reason she did not want her to leave. If anything, she could be of use around the small home, and she was attractive enough in her animal form to calm the jeweler’s unpredictable nerves.
In truth, Serasia had very few friends. Since the death of her mother, she had hungered subconsciously for companionship. “I saved your life, you know,” she mentioned as she pulled the soiled cloth away and perched it on the side of the bowl. She was not naturally good at the various persuasive techniques customary of her race, but she figured the girl was simple enough that convincing her to stay would not be too hard. “You have no master, but you will earn one soon, if you stay very long in this city. You must know how the people are cruel here.”