We entered
the Progenitor's tent, a vast, partitioned hemispherical space multicolored
in a pleasing array of rugs, curtains, cushions, couches. She lay upon
1 in the golden lamplight covered by immaculate white silken sheets. Vryyh
and Fion were with her. At 1 side stood the chief personal attendant and
several lesser servants.
Fion,
kneeling by the Progenitor's couch, rose at once in respect to Ince and
Vryyh stepped forward with her hand out in welcome and relief. Ince ignored
them. She stood at the foot of the couch and studied the Progenitor coldly.
I offered
my medsens at once outlining to her my findings and my procedures to this
point. I wished by that I could have erased the pain Ince had clearly caused
Vryyh. Her hand dropped and her eyes darkened with the shadow of Ince's
denial of her. When I finished there was silence. The rider was thinking;
we waited; the servants waited, hung as much as we were upon what Ince
might say.
She
glanced at me. Swift, it was; she did not want to be here; she wanted none
of this. She stepped back from the couch.