He stood.
No ceremony in it — just rising from the stone in one motion, the robe settling around him as though it had been waiting for his body to return to vertical, which it had.
He looked at them one more ti.
Both won in the pool now, having slid from the stone ledge in stages while he had been reading the system window — the mother floating on her back with her arms out and her amber eyes at the ceiling, the daughter draped half over her mother's torso with her face in the crook of the older woman's neck, dark hair spreading across the water like ink in a bowl.
Both of them breathing.
Both of them completely, thoroughly finished.
The pool around them carried everything the morning had produced — thin pink, faint white, dissolving in the water the way evidence dissolves when there is enough of it and enough water around it.
He adjusted his collar.
Ran one hand through his hair.
Rolled his sleeves down, fastened them, and looked at the chamber around him with the specific unhurried quality of a man who had nowhere urgent to be until the exact mont he decided he did.
Then he snapped his fingers.
The sound was nothing — a small, dry click in the chamber air, the sort of sound a teacher makes to get a student's attention — but what followed it was not nothing.
The realm gate opened three feet in front of him.
It didn't announce itself with color or light, the way lesser cultivators' spatial techniques did — no golden ring, no dramatic spiritual energy discharge that would rattle the walls. It simply 'opened', the way a door opens when soone who owns the building turns the handle: quiet, complete, the air folding back on itself to reveal a rectangular slice of sowhere else entirely.
Through it, warm garden light.
The corner section of the estate grounds — late morning, the sll of flowering sothing carried through the opening, the stone path visible just past the threshold, a carved wooden log bench sitting at an angle beneath the shadow of a tree that had opinions about how much space it deserved.
The mother's eyes had found the gate.
Wide — the specific widening of amber eyes encountering sothing that shouldn't exist in the enclosed reality of a sealed pool chamber — and she pushed up from the water, arms under her, the involuntary instinct to be upright in the presence of an opening into the unknown.
"'—what is—'"
"'—hm,'" her daughter said, into her mother's neck, not moving, having decided that consciousness was optional.
Then the figure ca through.
She stepped from the garden light into the pool chamber with the specific bowing quality of soone who had learned the geotry of deference early and practiced it until it required no thought — head dropping, spine folding forward, both hands together at her waist, the bow precise and imdiate.
"'—My Lord.'"
She was tribal.
The bone structure of the far mountain clans in her jaw and cheekbones — broad, strong, the specific carved quality of a face shaped by generations of altitude and hard weather — and her body carried the full truth of whatever breeding stock designation he had assigned her, because the clothing she wore was doing approximately forty percent of the job clothing was supposed to do.
The skirt was short.
Short enough that standing upright was already a negotiation with decency, and bending forward at the bow settled that negotiation firmly in the other direction — the hem riding up past the back of her thighs while she held the angle, the curve of her sitting right there in the chamber light, unhidden and apparently untroubled by being unhidden, because this was simply what she wore and she had worn it long enough that she had stopped thinking about it.
The dress above was fitted in a way that suggested whoever made it had very specific priorities — neckline low enough to catalog the full situation from an angle, fabric thin enough in the chest to leave the peaks of her visible when the light hit correctly, which the chamber light did, because the chamber light had no reason to be polite.
She held the bow.
Waiting.
He looked at her, then back at the pool, at the mother watching from the water with amber eyes that had shifted from shock at the gate to a different kind of attention entirely — the specific attention of a woman reading another woman's body from a distance and arriving at a conclusion.
"'—Take these two inside,'" he said.
The maid looked up.
Past him to the pool — the two won in the water, both thoroughly spent, the mother floating and the daughter barely upright — and sothing in her expression did very quick arithtic on the scene and filed the results sowhere she was not going to comnt on.
"'—Yes, Lord.'"
She was already moving.
Into the pool without hesitation, the skirt rising with the water, both arms reaching for the daughter first — the unconscious one, lifted clean and carried to the pool edge with the specific practiced efficiency of a woman whose physical strength was never the thing she led with socially but was absolutely present when called on.
The daughter didn't wake.
She was carried through the gate in the maid's arms, dark hair hanging, both locations still running with what he had left there, the specific warm-and-spent quality of a body that had given everything available and was now simply cargo.
The maid returned.
For the mother.
The mother looked at her.
Then at him.
"'—I can walk,'" she said.
She could not walk.
She discovered this imdiately upon attempting it — legs that had received twelve inches of a Nascent Soul cultivator's modified architecture and had locked around him for an extended period and had then been used as a living floor for the arrangent above them had opinions about weight-bearing, and those opinions were expressed in the specific way that legs express opinions, which is by refusing.
She went sideways.
The maid caught her.
Both arms under the mother's back and knees, lifting with the easy strength of soone who hauled more than this regularly, and the mother made a small undignified sound at the specific soreness that being lifted produced in a body that had recently been addressed in the specific ways hers had been addressed.
"'—I said I can—'"
"'—Yes,'" the maid agreed, carrying her toward the gate.
He watched them go.
The maid with the mother in her arms, stepping through the gate back into the garden corner, the warm light of outside receiving them — and just before the maid turned back to look at him through the opening, he spoke.
"'—As a reward,'" he said, the sa calm delivery, the sa tone he used for everything from filling a womb to ordering tea, "'—I promise to fuck you into a breakthrough.'"
The maid stopped.
Turned.
Sothing moved through her expression in sequence — the specific journey of a face receiving a sentence that contained both the best and most complicated news simultaneously, delight and dread arriving in the sa package.
Her lips parted.
"'—Lord—'"
"'—One condition,'" he added, before she could finish assembling whatever was building in her chest. "'—Don't tell the others I was here.'"
The smile finished forming anyway.
Wide, warm, the specific smile of a tribal woman who had been drafted into a cultivator's estate as breeding stock and had just been offered a cultivation breakthrough as a morning bonus — genuine, pleased, already saying 'yes' before her mouth did.
He snapped his fingers.
The gate closed.
Right there.
Mid-smile, mid-forming-sentence, the realm gate folded itself back out of existence with the sa quiet decisiveness it had opened with, taking the warm garden light with it and leaving the chamber exactly as it had been — stone, pool, the faint sll of everything that had happened in it, and no gate at all.
'''
In the garden corner, the maid stood holding the unconscious daughter.
Looking at empty air where the gate had been.
The smile had not left her face yet — it was still there, residual, the expression that a face holds for a mont after the information that caused it is already gone — but it was getting company.
Specifically, the company of dawning comprehension.
Others would kill her.
Not taphorically — in this estate, with the wives he had collected and the hierarchy those wives had built among themselves, information was currency and the withholding of it was debt, and debt in this context was paid in ways that the maid had seen paid before and had no interest in experiencing personally.
He was sowhere outside the estate.
Alone.
Without any of them knowing.
With two new won — one of them currently unconscious in her arms and running warm down the front of her dress — and she had been told to say nothing, and the gate was gone, and she was holding a daughter who still slled like sex and blood and pool water, and there was no one to tell even if she wanted to.
"'—Lord,'" she said, to the empty garden air.
The carved wooden bench sat in the tree shadow, unhelpful.
The flowers kept flowering.
"'—Lord — wait—'"
Nothing.
She looked down at the daughter in her arms.
The daughter's amber-eyed mother was sowhere nearby, presumably on the path or stone, having been set down in the mont the maid had co back for the second trip.
"'—I am going to die,'" the maid said quietly, to the unconscious girl.
The unconscious girl did not respond.
The maid carried her inside.
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