Creating a room for a Ku was infinitely easier than crafting the moving ceiling for the Hiru. I’d made a few before I was even an innkeeper, while still living at my parents’ inn. I went with the usual theme of wooden walls, braided together from wooden strips, and three levels; the first being the main floor, the second strewn with floor pillows, and the third a loft nest with a hammock right next to the window that let him look out onto the street. I added a few ropes and a vine swing. By the time we came to the door of his room, Gertrude Hunt had pulled plants out of stasis storage, and garlands of flowering vines and a swing greeted Wing as he came inside. He clutched his poinsettia, dashed up the rope to the loft, and landed in the hammock. Testing all the ropes and the swing would occupy him for at least a couple of hours.
I had just finished settling him in when magic chimed in my head. This chime was deeper than usual. I puzzled over it for a moment and then it hit me. Mr. Rodriguez.
I glanced out of the hallway’s window. A white windowless van politely waited at the end of the driveway. When I went to see Mr. Rodriguez, I did the same thing. I stepped onto his inn’s grounds and waited. When nobody came to throw me out, I went in. I didn’t know what the proper etiquette was, but sitting here making them wait didn’t seem like the polite thing to do.
I went down the stairs, stepped outside, and waved at the van. It reversed, turned, and rolled up my driveway. Mr. Rodriguez got out. He was in his early fifties, with bronze skin and dark hair, touched with gray. A trimmed beard hugged his jaw.
“Dina.”
“Mr. Rodriguez.” I stepped forward and we hugged. That was probably a breach of etiquette, too, but I didn’t care.
A young version of Mr. Rodriguez hopped out of the vehicle on the passenger side.
“My son, Tony,” Mr. Rodriguez said.
We shook hands. Tony seemed to be about my age, with the same dark hair and dark eyes as his father.
“Please, come in.” I led them to the front room. “Would you like some iced tea?”
“I wouldn’t mind,” Mr. Rodriguez said.
I led them through the kitchen to the patio. Tony didn’t gape at Orro, but he definitely glanced in his direction.
I settled them on the back porch, went back inside to get the tea, and had to dodge as Orro nearly knocked me over with a platter. The platter contained a pitcher of iced tea, three glasses with ice and a plate filled with tiny appetizers that looked like very small, fried to a golden crispness crab cakes topped with a dollop of some white sauce and green onions.
“Thank you,” I mouthed and took the platter outside.
“Such a beautiful house,” Mr. Rodriguez said.
“Thanks.” I sorted out the tea and sat down.
Mr. Rodriguez and Tony both took an appetizer and chewed.
I tried one. Eating Orro’s food was as close as you could get to nirvana without enlightenment.
“Did everything go well?” Mr. Rodriguez asked.
“As well as it could have gone,” I said and sipped my tea. How to say this without being offensive or trying to imply. “I just settled him in his room. He seems comfortable.”
“Why did he take off?” Tony asked.
“He wanted a flower. It reminded him of home.”
“Ah,” Mr. Rodriguez said. “He’s probably on a hero’s journey.”
“He said as much.” As soon as they left, I would look this up.
“The Ku are a hunter-gatherer society,” Mr. Rodriguez said to Tony.
Tony looked at me with the long-suffering patience of an adult child who knew an educational lecture was coming and there was no way to escape.
“One can distinguish himself by being a great hunter or a great artisan. Those who can do neither sometimes decide to leave on a hero’s journey through the galaxy. They must perform a great deed and bring proof to their tribe. It would bring his family a lot of honor.”
Tony and I politely sipped our tea.
“I don’t mind taking him off your hands,” I said. “He seems comfortable here and really I have so little going on, I don’t mind keeping an eye on him. We only have three other guests right now, so he won’t bother anyone.”
“I thought as much,” Mr. Rodriguez said. “I have his things in the van.”
“No Oporians?” Tony asked.
The Oporians were basically a larger version of the Ku. Although they came from a different planet, they looked remarkably similar. They also thought the Ku were a tasty snack.
“No. Our permanent guest, a vampire, and a Hiru.”
“A Hiru?” Mr. Rodriguez sat up straighter. “That’s rare.”
“Yes, it was a bit of a surprise.”
“What did you do with the room, if you don’t mind my asking? The common wisdom says black and windowless, but I always felt some doubt about that.”
“It’s a bit difficult to explain. I can show you if you would like.”
I nodded at the inn. A screen descended from the wall and the image of the Hiru’s room appeared in it, with the glowing clouds. The inn always recorded still images just before a guest entered the room, so I would have a record.
Mr. Rodriguez stared at it. “Do you think I could see it? In person?”
He wasn’t asking to see the actual room. That would disrupt the guest’s privacy. “I’ll be happy to make a duplicate.”
Three minutes later we stood in an exact replica of the Hiru’s suite. Tony dipped his hand into the pool. Mr. Rodriguez stared at the clouds, his face lit by their glow.
“Why the sky?” he asked.
“It seemed right. The guest liked it. He loves to float and look at the sky.” He’d been doing precisely that for the last few hours.
Mr. Rodriguez frowned. “I don’t know if anyone told you this, but you have a gift.”