Spring 51, 514
The Piers of Abura Harbor
--------------------------------
It was not so much that the chair looked unsafe - had the spindly contraption of ropes been, for example, hanging from a ceiling, Minnie would perhaps have been quite enraptured by it. It made her think, in some sense, of the window-game she had played with her darlings, in her much younger days, hitching them to the shutters to swing out and back from her second story window. Had it been like this, she would have looked at it, perhaps, with the same mix of nervousness and excitement that Shearsy or Gypa would have imagined the window-shutters in spring-time.
This contraption, however, was to leave the ground, and that left her with a sick feeling. She had seen, in the Opera House for example, the flight of an Akvatari several times. But it had seemed a beautiful, glorious, and entirely foreign thing - had she even considered the possibility that she herself would fly, she would have presumed that if it was intended for her, then Lhex would have put her spirit in the body of a titmouse or a dragonfly. As things stood, she was a human, and humans did NOT fly.
It was, for all that, a beautiful object, this seat, a broad plank like a bower swing suspended from an ornately carved, and long dead cottonwood by two long, braided cords of silk-smooth fiber, the provenance of which she could not quite decide. The color wavered back and forth between pale gold, dull grey, and shades of heady auburn-russet. She reached out to touch them, delicately, quietly, with her gloved hand. They were smooth, but the individual strands varied from each other - some flicked tiny curls outward, some were coarser, some as fine as…
“Hair…” she said the word with a breath of surprise, her finger lacing through a slender strand of blue ribbon woven delicately into the stout braiding of a thousand sundry hairs.
At this a soft plashing came from the water beside the pier where she stood, and a boy of the Akvatari, perhaps… seventeen, if she judged from his face (which she realized she did not know whether or not aging was comparable with humans)… pulled himself with a languorous grace up a series of handholds on the side of the piling. He landed on the planks with the clever movements of practice, and and then unfolded a set of pale, melon-orange wings, laced with a delicacy that, in Zeltiva, she would have thought of as feminine, with thin whirling strands of sawdust-yellow, and a shot of dark crimson near where they met his back. He shook the water from his wings, an activity that involved tiny flexing of the muscles around his collarbones, and smiled, speaking with the softness she was beginning to grow used to in the people of Abura.
“The sun beats hard today, milady, I ask that thou wouldst forgive me for not observing thee earlier.”
She blushed, and curtsied, with a clumsy awkwardness that she grew more and more aware of each day she spent amogst the graceful inhabitants of the island. The man nodded, but a kind of sharpness entered his eyes - not a cruel sharpness, but the sharpness of one who suddenly notices something he wishes to observe.
She spoke in a voice made small, “I’m… I’m terribly sorry, I know… I… I need a… to… to have a ride, I need to… to visit…”
He smiled, with the kindliness of an early spring thaw, and put a finger to her lips. The peculiar physical intimacy of the people’s interactions continued to confuse her in retrospect, but each time it happened, in the midst of it she found it tremendously calming.
“The lady wishes to hire my services? I am honored.”
“May I ask the fare? Please forgive… forgive me, I don’t… really know the etiquette.”
He shrugged with a kind of diffidence, a sort of tiredness, at the mention of money, but said, “A few copper nilos, milady. Or… a lock of they hair, as I have not carried thee before.” At this, his smile was almost sly.
She blinked at this, but said softly, “My… hair? It is… not very pretty, I do not know if you will… will think the same if you see it…”
HE smiled more generously, then, and said, “May I?” and set a hand to where she had tied the hair inside a long, white kerchief. She nodded, and he leaned forward, so that she could feel the tickle of the damp down of his child-arms against her neck. She felt the vibrations of his fingers as he deftly unworked the knot, and unwrapped her hair with the gentle caution of a furrier touching uncured sables. Then, he breathed, three long, slow breaths that ran across her cheek, down her neck, and into the hollows of her shoulder and bust. As he breathed these three breaths, he ran his fingers through the strands, slowly, his eyes even sharper now, the eyes of an appraiser.
“Thou hast… been traveling, recently, by sea - in fact, thy hair hath bathed in the saltwater itself, not simply in the spray,” he said, in a dreamy, low voice, his fingers now in the roots of her hair. Then, they travelled outwards, “And yet… before this, thy head saw very little sun… no, not the simple dark of thy northern winters… no… thou wast hidden away? I do not think sick, thy purposes were otherwise. And before that…”
He frowned, and his eyes grew heavy, “Yes, before… that…”
He bowed low, then, while Minnie stood stricken and a bit pale, “Milady, somehow in your travels, thy hair has tangled into a dance. I would be honored to free the dance from it.”
Minnie tried to ask about this, but failed, instead simply nodding, red-cheeked. The man, with great care, cut a lock from the middle, where it would show least, and then carefully put the kerchief back around the remainder. Then he took the hank and went to the chair, and holding weight up with one hand, and with the help of a tiny metal hook, he wove the strands into the right braid. She looked, when he had finished, but she could not discern them from the rest of the braid. This felt comforting, for a reason she could not quite place.
“You have…. you… collected all of this?”
He shook his head as he turned again, ready to take the chair from where it hung, “Oh no, milady. My mother, and her father before that.”
Minnie smiled, “So, it is… a family artwork.”
He smiled now, with genuine warmth, “Yes, milady. I think of it thus. I have, now, my mother’s hands, working the same threads she worked.”
Minnie opened her mouth, but blushed, “I’m sorry, I do not mean to keep you from your work.”
“It is my honor milady. Thou hast another question?”
“I was… I was going to ask if you ever show it to her, now? If she hears your... your new stories?”
He said nothing, but his smile softened, and he took Minnie’s had gently in his own, guiding it to the left hand braid. She stepped forward to reach it, and he laced his fingers in her own. He closed his eyes, and his fingers guided hers, delving into the heart of one of the cables of the braid. He seemed to concentrate for a moment, and then Minnie felt his fingers hook a collection of hairs, as much almost as to make a strand of fine yarn.
“This… thou feelest these strands. What dost thou feel?”
“Hair... its… old… a little rough. It is curly, I guess? Has it… been in the sun i guess?”
She felt two lips against her forhead then and turned to see the boy smiling kindly, “That was my mother. She was my first customer. I carried her body to her bier.”
And with that he fluttered his wings outward so that he no longer stood at Minnie’s own level, and slid the hair-braids from their branch, while Minnie stood, rooted. He slid two long loops over his shoulders, and said very softly, “Milady, have a seat, thou hast paid me in full. Tell me where I shall take thee.”
x
The Piers of Abura Harbor
--------------------------------
It was not so much that the chair looked unsafe - had the spindly contraption of ropes been, for example, hanging from a ceiling, Minnie would perhaps have been quite enraptured by it. It made her think, in some sense, of the window-game she had played with her darlings, in her much younger days, hitching them to the shutters to swing out and back from her second story window. Had it been like this, she would have looked at it, perhaps, with the same mix of nervousness and excitement that Shearsy or Gypa would have imagined the window-shutters in spring-time.
This contraption, however, was to leave the ground, and that left her with a sick feeling. She had seen, in the Opera House for example, the flight of an Akvatari several times. But it had seemed a beautiful, glorious, and entirely foreign thing - had she even considered the possibility that she herself would fly, she would have presumed that if it was intended for her, then Lhex would have put her spirit in the body of a titmouse or a dragonfly. As things stood, she was a human, and humans did NOT fly.
It was, for all that, a beautiful object, this seat, a broad plank like a bower swing suspended from an ornately carved, and long dead cottonwood by two long, braided cords of silk-smooth fiber, the provenance of which she could not quite decide. The color wavered back and forth between pale gold, dull grey, and shades of heady auburn-russet. She reached out to touch them, delicately, quietly, with her gloved hand. They were smooth, but the individual strands varied from each other - some flicked tiny curls outward, some were coarser, some as fine as…
“Hair…” she said the word with a breath of surprise, her finger lacing through a slender strand of blue ribbon woven delicately into the stout braiding of a thousand sundry hairs.
At this a soft plashing came from the water beside the pier where she stood, and a boy of the Akvatari, perhaps… seventeen, if she judged from his face (which she realized she did not know whether or not aging was comparable with humans)… pulled himself with a languorous grace up a series of handholds on the side of the piling. He landed on the planks with the clever movements of practice, and and then unfolded a set of pale, melon-orange wings, laced with a delicacy that, in Zeltiva, she would have thought of as feminine, with thin whirling strands of sawdust-yellow, and a shot of dark crimson near where they met his back. He shook the water from his wings, an activity that involved tiny flexing of the muscles around his collarbones, and smiled, speaking with the softness she was beginning to grow used to in the people of Abura.
“The sun beats hard today, milady, I ask that thou wouldst forgive me for not observing thee earlier.”
She blushed, and curtsied, with a clumsy awkwardness that she grew more and more aware of each day she spent amogst the graceful inhabitants of the island. The man nodded, but a kind of sharpness entered his eyes - not a cruel sharpness, but the sharpness of one who suddenly notices something he wishes to observe.
She spoke in a voice made small, “I’m… I’m terribly sorry, I know… I… I need a… to… to have a ride, I need to… to visit…”
He smiled, with the kindliness of an early spring thaw, and put a finger to her lips. The peculiar physical intimacy of the people’s interactions continued to confuse her in retrospect, but each time it happened, in the midst of it she found it tremendously calming.
“The lady wishes to hire my services? I am honored.”
“May I ask the fare? Please forgive… forgive me, I don’t… really know the etiquette.”
He shrugged with a kind of diffidence, a sort of tiredness, at the mention of money, but said, “A few copper nilos, milady. Or… a lock of they hair, as I have not carried thee before.” At this, his smile was almost sly.
She blinked at this, but said softly, “My… hair? It is… not very pretty, I do not know if you will… will think the same if you see it…”
HE smiled more generously, then, and said, “May I?” and set a hand to where she had tied the hair inside a long, white kerchief. She nodded, and he leaned forward, so that she could feel the tickle of the damp down of his child-arms against her neck. She felt the vibrations of his fingers as he deftly unworked the knot, and unwrapped her hair with the gentle caution of a furrier touching uncured sables. Then, he breathed, three long, slow breaths that ran across her cheek, down her neck, and into the hollows of her shoulder and bust. As he breathed these three breaths, he ran his fingers through the strands, slowly, his eyes even sharper now, the eyes of an appraiser.
“Thou hast… been traveling, recently, by sea - in fact, thy hair hath bathed in the saltwater itself, not simply in the spray,” he said, in a dreamy, low voice, his fingers now in the roots of her hair. Then, they travelled outwards, “And yet… before this, thy head saw very little sun… no, not the simple dark of thy northern winters… no… thou wast hidden away? I do not think sick, thy purposes were otherwise. And before that…”
He frowned, and his eyes grew heavy, “Yes, before… that…”
He bowed low, then, while Minnie stood stricken and a bit pale, “Milady, somehow in your travels, thy hair has tangled into a dance. I would be honored to free the dance from it.”
Minnie tried to ask about this, but failed, instead simply nodding, red-cheeked. The man, with great care, cut a lock from the middle, where it would show least, and then carefully put the kerchief back around the remainder. Then he took the hank and went to the chair, and holding weight up with one hand, and with the help of a tiny metal hook, he wove the strands into the right braid. She looked, when he had finished, but she could not discern them from the rest of the braid. This felt comforting, for a reason she could not quite place.
“You have…. you… collected all of this?”
He shook his head as he turned again, ready to take the chair from where it hung, “Oh no, milady. My mother, and her father before that.”
Minnie smiled, “So, it is… a family artwork.”
He smiled now, with genuine warmth, “Yes, milady. I think of it thus. I have, now, my mother’s hands, working the same threads she worked.”
Minnie opened her mouth, but blushed, “I’m sorry, I do not mean to keep you from your work.”
“It is my honor milady. Thou hast another question?”
“I was… I was going to ask if you ever show it to her, now? If she hears your... your new stories?”
He said nothing, but his smile softened, and he took Minnie’s had gently in his own, guiding it to the left hand braid. She stepped forward to reach it, and he laced his fingers in her own. He closed his eyes, and his fingers guided hers, delving into the heart of one of the cables of the braid. He seemed to concentrate for a moment, and then Minnie felt his fingers hook a collection of hairs, as much almost as to make a strand of fine yarn.
“This… thou feelest these strands. What dost thou feel?”
“Hair... its… old… a little rough. It is curly, I guess? Has it… been in the sun i guess?”
She felt two lips against her forhead then and turned to see the boy smiling kindly, “That was my mother. She was my first customer. I carried her body to her bier.”
And with that he fluttered his wings outward so that he no longer stood at Minnie’s own level, and slid the hair-braids from their branch, while Minnie stood, rooted. He slid two long loops over his shoulders, and said very softly, “Milady, have a seat, thou hast paid me in full. Tell me where I shall take thee.”
x