71st of Winter, 518AV
The work today was a little more difficult, not by the nature of the job, but by circumstances outside of her work. It seemed, here in Wind Reach, that work was her entire life. She knew the Inarta partied and had fun, but the mixed blood was so intimidated by the red-haired breed that she couldn’t quite bring herself to party with them. Perhaps that was why the seasonal cuts seemed like they were hitting her harder, she hadn’t much to distract herself with. As if on cue with her thoughts, her stomach gargled, annoying loud in the silence of the scribe’s quarters of the enclave. The few other desks of young Yasi and Chiet scribes were full today, and one Yasi looked up at the sound, not quite committed enough to glare. Of course he wouldn’t know, the Yasi rations hadn’t been cut. They would be cut last, along with the Endal, at which point Lani was sure there would be riots. The privileged eagel riders were so used to getting everything they wanted with such little effort…
Stop it. Lani chastised herself. She knew how much effort the Endal put in, she was just tired and hungry which made her irritable. It was still early in the morning and the halfblood was pawning through the pages she was given to copy that day. They seemed entirely mundane and boring, catalogues of numbers on various workshops within the city. They were seasonal budgets meant to make sure each workshop was not wasting material and had what they needed, an odd social concept to Lani. Still, they needed multiple copies of these, one for the city and one for the shop owner, and that is where Lani came in.
Her Nari had vastly improved since she had first set foot in the mountain, and she found she could understand the whole page completely. Of course it was mostly numbers and math with a few scrawled in notes meant to label the numbers. And of course there were words that she only thought she knew because she had to infer from the rest of the sheet. ‘Dividends’ for example, eluded her. But looking at the rest of the chart, it seemed some sort of expense. It truly didn’t matter if she understood the Nari or the math after all, she just had to be able to copy it, that was her job.
She had set out all her materials when she got there out of habit. She was working with scrolls today, so it was easier. Her favorite quill, an inkwell, an ink rag, a razor for cutting the parchment, powdered resin to attach the parchment together, a standard scroll roller, chalk, a straight ruler, string, a leather strap, and, of course, plenty of precut parchment. Compared to copying a book, this was a fairely simple set up, that still required an extra amount of crafts. She had four scrolls to copy, each with two pages within, and one with three. That was a simple matter of nine pages, but she knew it would take her at least half the day before she could move onto her next project. When it came to copying charts, she always was very careful with her string and chalk to make sure she was getting her lines right and her writing did not veer off the page.