Then she picks up a blanket and wraps it gently around Etty's shoulders.
Etty tucks the blanket in around herself and continues to weep. "I know your father is - is who he is - but mine, I love him, and he would make trouble, does the Baron know that? How would he know, when he just picked me up out of the yard...?"
"He would've been watching you first," she says. "He does that. He's gone for months, sometimes, when he's looking for a new Odette. Has to find just the right one."
Etty cries on her shoulder, quite effectively distracted from the nudity at this point.
There's an odd creeping warm feeling up her back. Sunrise approaching, maybe, she has no idea what it feels like to turn into a swan, but when she lifts her head and wipes the blur out of her eyes the sky out the window is as dark and starry as before.
The baron's daughter hugs her some more. "I know what you mean," she murmurs. "But sometimes I cry anyway."
"I am so afraid of losing my mind," Etty murmurs. "Of writing so carefully so I don't forget and one day looking at the scroll and not remembering what it's for, or not being able to read it."
"Depends on what goes first. I don't know why he cares if Odettes have minds left, but it's probably not for our literacy or our introspection."
"I don't think what the Baron wants matters that much to how the spell works, or there wouldn't be a way to break it like there is."
"Did he just - find the entire curse in a book, or is part of how you build spells a matter of obeying restrictions like allowing a way to break them?"
I'm supposed to know?" she snorts. "I just know he wouldn't have made it like that if he'd had a choice."
"No," agrees Etty, sighing, "I suppose he wouldn't. How do you light candles and freeze raindrops?"
"With magic," she says, leaning her head on Etty's shoulder. "I don't know how to teach it; I've never tried before."
"But - what do you do, are there steps or is it just like lifting your arm?" Tentatively, thoughtfully, Etty lifts her hand to rest it on the other girl's hair.
"I just look at the candle," she yawns, "and make it burn. It takes a little time, but it's more fun than the other way."