Hasbabsah cleared her throat. “As I was saying. If the men had known the uses of this tree, their own home, they could have crushed the tallowwood leaves between two stones and rubbed the liquid on my chest to ease the coughing.”
Marram was nowhere to be seen. Unar supposed Bernreb was still busy skinning his latest kill, something large and brown with pendulous arms, in the fishing room.
“Except that the leaves are up in Canopy,” Frog said quietly, under her breath. Not quietly enough. Hasbabsah answered her.
“Not all of them. Low lateral branches have leaves, too. As for the tree that you came from, little Canopy-fruit, it is good medicine, too. Have you never heard of yellowrain tea? But all that our brave hunters could think to do with that priceless crown was cut it off and let it fall.”
“The crown was already cut,” Esse said, emerging from the hanging that led to his sleeping room, rubbing his head and looking out of sorts as always. “And I have heard of yellowrain tea. It is dangerous. Makes a man bleed on the inside. Turns his stool black.”
“Am I a man?” Hasbabsah scoffed. “By the bones!”
“You would be better off teaching them how to sand floors and stuff mattresses. That is all they will ever be fit for.”
“I will decide what they are fit for.”
“They are fit for boiling water. Bring me a full kettle, Gardener. Right now.”
Unar stared back at him, fists on hips.
“No. I’ve filled your nine bags with twine. Right now I want my knife back. You agreed.”
Frog chortled softly behind her.
“I am afraid,” Esse said, “that I made it into something else.”
“What? You had no right! It was mine!”
“It was necessary. To guarantee your safety. You have monsoon-right, do you not?”
Frog stopped laughing. Unar marched right up to Esse where he stood by the embroidered hanging, itching to slap his face. Maybe violence against a host violated whatever rights they had granted. Maybe not. Maybe it would be worth the satisfaction. His chin was prickled with regrowth, and his breath smelled like fish.
“If whatever you made out of my metal really was necessary, you should’ve told me.”
“You would have stopped working. Lazing in the sun is all you know. Meanwhile my brothers and I work ourselves to the bone. You want to see your precious metal? You want proof that it was needed? I’ll show you.”
He seized her arm and bundled her towards the corridor that led to the fishing room.
“Where are we going?”
“You will see.”
“Me too,” Frog said, but Esse pushed her out of the way.
“No. You stay. Only your big sister can come with me.”
“Big sister?” Frog said. She laughed, a little too loudly.
Unar turned to stare at her. That was why Frog looked familiar. Unar didn’t see her own face very often, but Frog certainly could have been her little sister.
Her heart raced. No, it was too much to hope. It was coincidence. Ridiculous. Frog said her mother in Canopy was going blind, and Unar’s mother hadn’t been blind. Before Unar could offer a different name—Isin?—Esse was dragging her away from the fire.
The fishing room was a horror of blood and stringy multiple stomachs, revealed by the light of a greasy lantern with translucent horn panes. Bernreb knelt on the floor, the broad muscles of his back working, lifting his head with a grunt when the door slammed behind Unar and Esse. There were clots in his beard and the carcass stank of rotten thatch.
“You are awake,” Bernreb said to Esse. “Where are you going?”
“Out,” Esse said, and shoved Unar, hard, in the back.
She went face-first into the river without time to scream. Monsoon-rights or no, Esse was going to kill her. Frog went right out of her head. She should have seen the warning signs. Esse was unstable. She should never have asked for the knife. She should have bided her time and then murdered him in his sleep.
A wooden railing punched her midriff. She seized it. Her feet fumbled on a platform twice the size and sturdiness of the one she had arrived on. She choked and cursed.
Esse came out beside her, a more controlled arrival, with a coil of rope over his shoulder that hadn’t been there before. He shook water out of his hair and eyes. His wet sleeves and trouser cuffs were rolled to elbows and knees.
“The yellowrain tree,” he said, knotting the rope into a harness for himself, “took away the old platform. I built it bigger, as if for young children.”
“You didn’t need my knife for this,” Unar croaked. Rain melded with river water on her lips and brow. She hugged herself and shivered. Since becoming a Gardener, she’d spent her monsoon seasons dry, indoors, like other reasonably well-off Canopians, but here she was getting used to the cycle of getting drenched by the waterfall and then drying to a toasted crisp in front of the hearth fire. Esse tied the other end of his rope to the wooden railing and clipped his harness onto it with an S-shaped curve of iron.
“No.” He turned his back to her, crouching down. “Not for the new railing. Put your arms around my neck. Make sure you have a strong grip.”
Unar blinked, frozen for a moment by the realisation that he intended that she cling to him while he swung down lower into Understorey. He hadn’t made another harness for her, nor offered to rope their bodies together, as he and Bernreb had been roped. No. If she weakened and fell, he wouldn’t be sorry. It would be, as he saw it, her own fault.
She threw her arms around him and closed her eyes as he kicked back, hard, away from the platform.
Then they fell.
THIRTY-FIVE
IT WASN’T long before Unar opened her eyes again.
Rain, mist, and falling leaves whirled around her. She sank lower, parallel to the great tallowwood river. Spray from it wet the top of the ropy-barked lateral branch where Esse eventually landed with a lurch.
Unar’s arms jolted in their sockets. She made herself wait until Esse found his footing before her kicking feet found the branch, too. It was barely wide enough to stand on, and the top of it was neither flat nor smooth. Not like a Canopian road. The wood god, Esh, held no sway down here to form wood into functional structures.
Fibrous chunks broke away beneath her feet. She raised her arms to keep her balance and opened her mouth to accuse Esse. There were no structures at all here that she could see.
Then she smelled something awful and familiar. Issi’s solid waste and whey-like sick, mingled with somebody else’s menstrual blood. A smell, she supposed, that was irresistible to dayhunters. Past Esse, she finally saw the hollow in the tree. The smell was coming from there, and she squinted through the gloom, trying to see better.
Only then did she realise the opening into the hollow was too regular to be natural, and that there actually was some sort of structure built above it. Something weighted with a cross-section of tallowwood trunk, with perhaps a crumpled leather chute and several sharpened stakes. It was disguised by a net of leaves and bark, but it was there.