Summer 83, 512 AV
Basha’ir had passed the simple stone structure several times already, in the past week or so. It didn’t lay on her path during her commute to and from her tiny one room apartment. But once she had arrived at An Elegant Weave, she had sometimes been sent out to purchase more thread of this color or that. The vendor Mistress Druva preferred lay in a part of the city that took Basha’ir right past the well, a wishing well they called it. The other seamstresses at the shop had told her all about it, what many people believed, and some of the stories that they swore up and down were absolutely true. Each time she had walked by it, she had studied it, with a bemused look. She considered the ability, or maybe more, the willingness of a dead woman to intercede in the affairs of this individual or that one. To think that a woman, even a queen, so hard done by fate herself, might listen to a particular individual’s sorrow or needs or despair and then act magically to change their lives, for good or bad, well, it wasn’t really so hard to believe, for Basha’ir. On this day, as she passed it, she paused, and for the first time actually walked over to peer down into its depths. Above her head hung a bucket, in which were colorful flowers. Down in the bottom of the dark cylinder, she thought she saw the glint of inky water. As usual, when out and about she was wrapped in a long, broad padmina and a veil covered her head and lower face. Only her deep green eyes peeked out from above the colorful cloth. Idly, her fingers went to the pouch hidden in the swaths of her voluminous dress, and she thought of a certain young man, and his bright red shorts.
To her right, an old, gray haired woman hobbled up and, without seeming to take any notice of the younger woman, she leaned over the lip of stone and tossed in a miza. Her wrinkled lips moved silently, and Basha’ir noted a single tear that trickled down the old one’s pale cheek. Basha’ir felt selfish, that she herself had a wish, when she knew there were so many who had suffered so much more than she ever had. Still…
The old woman shuffled away, and Basha’ir turned her head as she heard another set of footsteps approaching, this time to her left. She looked at the man curiously, wondering what might have drawn him to the well, and hazarding a guess as to what it might be, as she looked at his opaque eyes.