“I don’t know why she sent you here to wash clothes with your hands in that condition,” said the head laundress over the sound of running water and women talking. “Sacred prostitutes are known for their soft hands, but yours are more than soft. They are almost raw.”
“The cold burned them,” answered Nasreen. “I am sure they will toughen as I work.”
“They will, but I am not one to be cruel for cruelty’s sake. For today, you will learn to fold clothing. Once your hands are healed, you can go dunking them in scalding water but not until then. There is no need to damage your hands even more. It will only delay your ability to work.” The laundress pointed towards one end of the room where older women moved between long tables sorting freshly laundered clothing. “Join the others over there and they will show you what you need to learn.”
Nasreen made her way across the room and looked for an opening at a folding table. One older woman with a kind face motioned for Nasreen to join her.
“Are you from the brothel?” asked the older woman.
“Yes,” answered Nasreen.
“Serving the Locusts must be harder than I thought if you requested to come down here,” she said. “This is much less entertaining for a young thing like you. Those of us who serve here were put her to be forgotten. But as the teachings tell us, all service is valued in Her eyes.”
“The brothel is not what it once was,” said Nasreen. “Especially since we are no longer allowed to speak when we are serving.”
“We have heard that here,” said the woman. “Here, grab some clothes from the pile and I will show you how to fold them to preserve their shape. All fabrics in the temple come through here, from the high priest’s bedclothes to the garments worn by the boys who clean the stables. Every cloth, every cover. Each fabric is cared for based on its material. Silks are cleaned differently than woolen garments. We have much more linen in the summer than we do wool...”
Nasreen nodded, but her thoughts were already on the storeroom and her Prince who waited there for her, and how she could secret away some of the stableboys’ clothing when she left to see him.
Across the temple complex in the library. Aisha looked through the results of her previous months spent sorting codices and documents, looking for anything which could be helpful in their plans for escape. Baraz left little in the section of the tables devoted to Adyll’s maps since they were of tactical interest to the Swarm. The ones Aisha most recently added to the section were maps that Baraz considered out of date or of no importance. One held what seemed to be a map of rivers crossing the plateau. She remembered the high priest tossing it to one side grumbling about the failure of female mapmakers to properly record topography and how they imagined rivers where there were none. Aisha spread the map open on the table and examined it further, keeping one ear towards the door in case she heard the latch turn.
The map showed various cities and villages within Adyll, from the capital on the eastern edge of the plateau, to the agrarian communities far to the south and villages scattered across the western wilderness where shepherds and webbestre lived. Jagged lines lay scattered across the country. Notated only with numbers and not place names, the lines looked like rivers and their tributaries, growing as wide as a finger in some areas, and thin as a hair in others. Aisha searched the margins for a further explanation, finding only a marred bit of handwriting which read deep waters. She rerolled the map and left it on the table.
The words reminded her of the hot springs fed baths of the temple and palace and Thought’s underground river of tears. She added the map to her mental list of items to bring with her from the library. Any map was better than none.
Deep waters.
The Holy Mother admonished her when she began her duties as bookmaker of the three dangers to the written word.
The greatest is fire; and like to it is its opposite, water. The third is pests, which is why Old Scribe and his forbears have always held a place of honor in the library.
Aisha would need to protect whatever she took with her from all three of these dangers. And Old Scribe would need to stay behind to protect the rest from pests. She bent down to pet the cat. “I have to leave here, old friend. I cannot take you with me. Someone needs to protect the library once I am gone.” She set off to fetch the scrolls from their hiding place, as well as the case in which they were found. She gathered the items and quickly made her way to the bookmakers closet where she hid them behind a pile of scrap leather in one of the compartments on the false wall. Old Scribe followed her as she went.
“I saw sealing wax here, Old Scribe,” whispered Aisha as she rummaged through drawers and compartments. “Have you taken it and hidden it away from the mean priests? I would not blame you.”
Old Scribe let out a scratchy meow.
“Well, then, if you didn’t hide it you should tell me where the wax is!” She pulled a few yellowish sticks of wax from a leather bag in one of the compartments. “I found it. No thanks to you.” She gave the cat an affectionate scratch behind his ears.
“Now to break the first rule of the library,” said Aisha. “Never move an oil lamp.” She reached up to the niche set above the work area and removed the lit oil lamp from its metal lined niche. The room darkened once the lamp let its reflective surroundings. She set the lamp on the workbench, and then removed the hidden container of scrolls and set to work encasing it in a thin layer of sealing wax.
Water to stop the fire from burning. Fire to melt the wax and keep water and pests out, even in the darkness of the caves beneath us.