15, Fall 519 AV
To say that Baelin was exhausted would be an understatement; he was worn so thin that he might as well just throw in the towel and call himself a ghost already. Only a bare two bells into the day, the forge stopped getting air from the bellows. And, without air, the hearth wouldn’t hold any heat. And without heat, you have no forging. And with no forge, you didn’t really have a smithy.
After another half-bell of troubleshooting, they couldn’t find any kind of clinker or other obstruction at the bottom of the fire pot, and the bellows―when disconnected―pumped out air just fine. The problem must have been with the tuyere―the pipe leading from the bellows to the hearth. And so Karos and Lawrence had had a decision to make. They could stop production for the day to fix the problem. Or they could have the bellows pumping overtime to force as much air to the hearth as possible, keeping it lit and hot enough for them to continue their work. Then the problem could be fixed overnight, when the hearth was supposed to be cooled down anyways.
It should go without saying which option was picked.
So, as the lowest in position at the Knight’s Armory, the unenviable task of pumping the bellows fell to Baelin. All. Day. Long. No forging, no grinding, no hammering. Just pumping the bellows. Pull up to fill, push down to blow, pull up to fill, push down to blow, over and over and over again. Baelin could barely even feel his arm anymore, and he could already tell that his shoulders and right side were going to be mightily sore in the morning. Gods he was tired.
Baelin followed his route through the Castle Commons on auto-pilot, movements sluggish and body stiff as he concentrated on the singular goal of getting back to his apartment. He could get home, crash on his bed, and then just…not move. The glorious promise of laying down and doing nothing kept him going, prompting one foot in front of the other despite his depleted reserves.
While he may have typically kept his guard up during his walk home―eyeing any and all would-be thieves with the promise of savage revenge should they mark him―today Baelin moved with rote navigation. Past the bone trinkets stall, around the scarf seller with the lazy eye, skirting clear of the bustle of the Pig’s Foot―Baelin remained largely unaware of the people he passed and the attention he may or may not have received.
He just wanted to go home. Lay down. And be done with the day.
Gold on legs is the saying Baelin had heard. For people like this. Those with mizas in their pockets, and little to no awareness to protect them. In the back of his mind, Baelin was dimly aware that this was exactly what he was doing. But he was tired. And he’d gone a full season without being robbed; maybe people overstated the risk. It’d be fine. If he let his guard down just this one time, it’d be fine.
To say that Baelin was exhausted would be an understatement; he was worn so thin that he might as well just throw in the towel and call himself a ghost already. Only a bare two bells into the day, the forge stopped getting air from the bellows. And, without air, the hearth wouldn’t hold any heat. And without heat, you have no forging. And with no forge, you didn’t really have a smithy.
After another half-bell of troubleshooting, they couldn’t find any kind of clinker or other obstruction at the bottom of the fire pot, and the bellows―when disconnected―pumped out air just fine. The problem must have been with the tuyere―the pipe leading from the bellows to the hearth. And so Karos and Lawrence had had a decision to make. They could stop production for the day to fix the problem. Or they could have the bellows pumping overtime to force as much air to the hearth as possible, keeping it lit and hot enough for them to continue their work. Then the problem could be fixed overnight, when the hearth was supposed to be cooled down anyways.
It should go without saying which option was picked.
So, as the lowest in position at the Knight’s Armory, the unenviable task of pumping the bellows fell to Baelin. All. Day. Long. No forging, no grinding, no hammering. Just pumping the bellows. Pull up to fill, push down to blow, pull up to fill, push down to blow, over and over and over again. Baelin could barely even feel his arm anymore, and he could already tell that his shoulders and right side were going to be mightily sore in the morning. Gods he was tired.
Baelin followed his route through the Castle Commons on auto-pilot, movements sluggish and body stiff as he concentrated on the singular goal of getting back to his apartment. He could get home, crash on his bed, and then just…not move. The glorious promise of laying down and doing nothing kept him going, prompting one foot in front of the other despite his depleted reserves.
While he may have typically kept his guard up during his walk home―eyeing any and all would-be thieves with the promise of savage revenge should they mark him―today Baelin moved with rote navigation. Past the bone trinkets stall, around the scarf seller with the lazy eye, skirting clear of the bustle of the Pig’s Foot―Baelin remained largely unaware of the people he passed and the attention he may or may not have received.
He just wanted to go home. Lay down. And be done with the day.
Gold on legs is the saying Baelin had heard. For people like this. Those with mizas in their pockets, and little to no awareness to protect them. In the back of his mind, Baelin was dimly aware that this was exactly what he was doing. But he was tired. And he’d gone a full season without being robbed; maybe people overstated the risk. It’d be fine. If he let his guard down just this one time, it’d be fine.