Timestamp: 16th of Summer, 518 AV
Kelski hadn’t any clue where Stumble Alley was. In fact, if she had any spare coin to bet and there had been a pool to toss some into, Kelski would have gambled that there was no such thing as a Library in Sunberth, let alone an alley that contained one. Yet, having made herself a complete and utter pest in the Seaside Market asking about books and talking to each and every vendor, someone finally pointed her in the right direction. The dilapidated building wasn’t impressive and she didn’t think to consider that it would hold books, but at the described spot Kelski pushed the door open and walked into a whole new world.
The book collection was amazing.
She spent most of the morning just wandering around touching spines and reading titles, trying to figure out where to start and what she wanted to read. There were things she needed for The Midnight Gem. And those things consisted of books on how to cook, take care of a home, garden, and some handyman type repair. Kelski was going to start with the cooking, since she had virtually no experience, and found the section on foods, food preservation, and cooking and picked out several books that appealed to her predatory nature.
She gathered her chosen books together, took them to a table with a chair, and spread out. Drawing her backpack to her, she removed a blank book, quill, and a small bottle of ink. Then, carefully opening the cookbook, she began to copy some of the basic instructions on cooking, ranging from how to measure ingredients to what measurements were, and then followed by some of the most painfully simple recipes she could find.
Kelski bent over her work, awkward at the copying, because it was the type of activity she was not used to. Her long black hair that faded to white at the tips was gathered up at the nape of her neck and twisted into an awkward knot. Somewhere in the middle of her copying, she’d kicked off her boots and had loosened the collar of her shirt, rolling up her sleeves to get more comfortable. Her world had been reduced to careful replication… word for word… as she crafted a new book from an old one.
It wasn’t distasteful work. Kelski loved the feeling of the quill sliding across the paper in the blank book. She loved that the writing was unique to her and something no one could ever take from her. Someday she’d open this book and know that it existed because she’d brought it into the world one letter at a time from another book someone else had done the same for. Ink had its own smell. Sharp, pungent, and almost alluring to her… the Kelvic just wanted more and more of it. She had to stop several times to sharpen her quill or shift her back muscles that were slowly growing strained.
But she didn’t mind. The long skirt she wore was warm as the sun climbed to the sky. She could measure time by the shadows cast by curtainless windows that illuminated the books, slowly elongating their shapes as Syna migrated across the sky. It was slow work. It was retrospective work. Kelski could slip out of her body, dwell exclusively in her brain, and suddenly everything that was wrong in the world was right in her head.
Her pen scratched across the paper, filling the off-white pages with ink. She kept crafting the books, one by one, unwilling to stop until she heard the sound of someone else in the library. Kelski had assumed she was alone and had felt safe alone. This was anything but lonely….