Putting Down Roots Pt. II 60th of Spring 522 AV Naadiya had been weaving mosquito netting for days now. She had gotten rough estimates of the dimensions she would need to cover with the material and got started as soon as she could. Time was something the woman did not have an excess of these days and weaving such wide panels of fabric was slow work. For a few days now, her routine was waking up, referencing her journal, getting a cup of steaming coffee and sitting at the loom to get as much done as she could before going over to help Dawn in the store. The length of fabric she was now taking off the loom that she’d set up at the Protea was very large. Naadiya had pushed the boundaries of her loom to get the widest panel she could manage and even that seemed too narrow. There was a single loom at the Tropical Fever boutique that had larger dimension and lately she had been keeping that loom set up with her work product. It was one of the ways she had been able to juggle her weaving and new shop-assistant duties. So far she had yet to be fully burned out and having something to focus on also gave her a reprieve from the biological nightmare she was experiencing in her own body. It had been a little while since Naadiya had narrowed down the specifics of her own curse and like many of the other affected inhabitants of Syka, she’d made adjustments to her daily life. Her days were a good bit more inconvenient, but she was making the best of it. Another change she’d made had been to pray. Since arriving in Syka and being so quickly inundated with time-consuming work and then plagued with a penis that came and went, Naadiya had let not paid as much attention to the gods as she maybe should have. Had I been a more holy person, this curse may not have stuck for so long. As far as she knew, no one had been able to truly mute or remove their curses which gave her no relief. Naadiya wished someone would do something effective. Her short time among the Svefra had her thoughts quietly lingering near the idea of sacrifice. But what, or who? She wasn’t ready to make such a decision, especially when the outcomes weren’t even guaranteed. “Wasn’t Michaela sacrifice enough?” she was standing by her window, looking up at the sun, voicing her question but receiving no answer. Folding up the yards of mosquito netting, Naadiya placed it on top of the other panels. She had planned on having a small greenhouse built in her new home but glass was not easily come by in the settlement. It had to be shipped in from far away which made it a luxury few people spent their money on, especially when it could so easily be shattered by the wildlife and then a replacement would be another troublesome task. Originally she was just going to have the builders wrap the fabric around the structural columns on the lower level of her workspace but then Naadiya reasoned that if she framed the mosquito netting the way artists did their canvases, she would be able to use those in place of window panes.
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