“And I should just trust ye?” Francia says. “A boy who’s a-being chased?” She looks down to Viola, still waiting on the bottom step. “I can just imagine why ye were running.”
“Oh, stuff it, Francia,” Hildy says, still holding the door open for us.
Francia turns and shooshes Hildy outta the way. “I’ll be in charge of entry into my own house, thank ye very much,” Francia says, then to us, “Well, c’mon if yer coming.”
And that’s how we first see the hospitality of Farbranch. We go inside. Francia and Hildy bickering twixt themselves about whether Francia’s got a place to put us in for however long we might wanna stay. Hildy wins the bickering and Francia shows me and Viola to separate small rooms next to each other one floor up.
“Yer dog has to sleep outside,” Francia says.
“But he’s–”
“That wasn’t a question,” Francia says, leaving the room.
I follow her out to the landing. She don’t turn back as she goes downstairs. In less than a minute, I can hear her and Hildy arguing again, trying to keep their voices down. Viola comes outta her room to listen, too. We stand there for a second, wondering.
“Whaddya think?” I say.
She don’t look at me. Then it’s like she decides to look at me and does.
“I don’t know,” she says. “What do you think?”
I shrug my shoulders. “She don’t seem too happy to see us,” I say, “but it’s still safer than I’ve felt in a while. Behind walls and such.” I shrug again. “And Ben wanted us to get here and all.”
Which is true but I still ain’t sure if it feels right.
Viola’s clutching her arms to herself, just like Francia but not like Francia at all. “I know what you mean.”
“So I guess it’ll do for now.”
“Yes,” Viola says. “For now.”
We listen to a bit more arguing.
“What you did back there–” Viola says.
“It was stupid,” I say, real fast. “I don’t wanna talk about it.”
My face is starting to burn so I step back in my little room. I stand there and chew my lip. The room looks like it used to belong to an old person. Kinda smells that way, too, but at least it’s a real bed. I go to my rucksack and I open it.
I look round to make sure no one’s followed me in and I pull out the book. I open it to the map, to the arrows that point down thru the swamp, to the river on the other side. No bridge on the map but there’s the settlement. With a word underneath it.
“Fayre,” I say, to myself. “Fayre braw nk.”
Which I guess is Farbranch.
I breathe loud thru my nose as I look at the page of writing on the back of the map. You must warn them (of course, of course, shut up) still underlined at the bottom. Like Viola said, tho, warn who? Warn Farbranch? Warn Hildy?
“About what?” I say. I thumb thru the book and there’s pages of stuff, pages and pages of it, words on words on words on words, like Noise shoved down onto paper till you can’t make no sense from it. How can I warn anybody about all this?
“Aw, Ben,” I say under my breath. “What were you thinking?”
“Todd?” Hildy calls from downstairs. “Vi?”
I close the book and look at its cover.
Later. I’ll ask about it later.
I will.
Later.
I put it away and I go downstairs. Viola’s already waiting there. Hildy and Francia, arms crossed again, waiting, too.
“I’ve got to get back to my farm, pups,” Hildy says. “Work to do for the good of all but Francia’s agreed to look after ye for today and I’ll come back tonight to see how yer a-getting on.”
Viola and I look at each other, suddenly not wanting Hildy to leave.
“Thank ye for that,” Francia says, frowning. “Despite what my sister may have told ye two about me, I’m hardly an ogre.”
“She didn’t say–” I start to say before I stop myself, even tho my Noise finishes it up for me. Anything about you.
“Yeah, well, that’s typical,” Francia says, glaring at Hildy but not seeming too put out. “Ye can stay here for the time being. Pa and Auntie are long dead and there’s not too much call for their rooms these days.”
I was right. Old person’s room.
“But we’re a working town here in Farbranch.” Francia looks from me to Viola and back again. “And ye’ll be expected to earn yer keep, even if it’s just for a day or two while ye make whatever plans yer going to make.”
“We’re still not sure,” Viola says.
“Hmmph,” Francia hmmphs. “And if ye two stay on past this first cresting of the orchards, there’ll be a-schooling for ye to do.”
“School?” I say.
“School and church,” Hildy says. “That’s if ye stay long enough.” I’m guessing she’s reading my Noise again. “Are ye going to stay long enough?”
I don’t say nothing and Viola don’t say nothing and Franica hmmphs again.
“Please, Mrs Francia?” Viola says as Francia turns to talk to Hildy.
“Just Francia, child,” Francia says, looking surprised. “What is it?”
“Is there somewhere I can send a message back to my ship?”
“Yer ship,” Francia says. “This a-being that settler ship way out in the dark black yonder?” Her mouth draws thin. “With all them people on it?”
Viola nods. “We were supposed to report back. Let them know what we found.”
Viola’s voice is so quiet and her face so looking and hopeful, so open and wide and ready for disappointment that I feel that familiar tug of sadness again, pulling all Noise into it like grief, like being lost. I put a hand on the back of a settee to steady myself.
“Ah, girl pup,” Hildy says, her voice getting suspiciously gentle again. “I’m guessing ye tried to contact us folks down here on New World when ye were a-scouting the planet?”
“Yeah,” Viola says. “No one answered.”
Hildy and Francia exchange nods. “Yer a-forgetting we were church settlers,” Francia says, “getting away from worldly things to set up our own little utopia, so we let that kinda machinery go to rack and ruin as we got on with the business of surviving.”
Viola’s eyes get a little wider. “You have no way of communicating with anyone?”