Tock slept long and hard again that night, and had dreams of pounding gold. She woke up several times with a start, to the imagined sound of the Isur yelling at her to keep up. It was a restless sleep of aching muscles and misery, at the end of which she gave long and serious consideration to quitting her job. But then, on the one hand she had never been a quitter, and on the other hand she didn't know WHAT other job she could hope to get in a city like this.
Sighing, she pulled her soiled clothes back on on the morning of the 33rd of Autumn, and trudged back down to the smithy. She wondered if she would ever get used to the dull ache in her muscles each day. Maybe she just wasn't cut out for this kind of work.
Building things was great. She was already a skilled crafter. But this? This was such hard, hard work that she didn't know if she could keep up with it. Maybe she could find a job carving wood somewhere.
"Please no more poundin' please no more poundin' please no more poundin'..." she muttered as she walked into the workshop. Her arms couldn't take another day of that.
She walked up to Gondanir, wincing in anticipation. He handed her a pair of tongs, and she heaved a very audible sigh of relief. He stared at her for a moment, and she couldn't tell if he was annoyed or amused. All of his facial expressions usually looked the same to her.
"Wotcher, Bossman?" she asked him.
He was either familiar with the slang, or just chose to ignore it, and said, "Today we apply the gilding. Fetch the shoes..." She nodded and pulled out the horseshoes, while Gondanir brought out a box containing the stacks of gold leafing they'd made the day before. "It is a delicate process, so you will hold the shoes." She nodded again, understanding if he didn't want her handling the delicate, paper-thin materials. She also didn't want to have to spent another day re-pounding them if something got messed up.
With a wire brush, she carefully scraped and cleaned off the shoes to ensure there were no impurities left on the surface that might get trapped under the gold. She carefully cleaned them until the iron had a bit of a shine, then heated them in the furnace again just a bit to ensure anything remaining was burnt off. Then they were dipped in a mildly acidic philter, cleaned and polished some more, and then she brought them over to the Isur.
"Do as I do," he told her, taking one shoe and an etching tool. He began scraping a series of thin lines across the metal in a checkered pattern. Tock nodded and started doing the same. This process was more familiar to her; it wasn't so different from some techniques used in wood carving. The delicate etching work was a relief after the heavy activity of the last few days. They worked through all four shoes, slowly and steadily, and Tock almost wished she knew what God to pray to in thanks for having a task she could sit down while doing.
Once the lines were etched, there was another round of cleaning and polishing, and it was time to add the gold. "Heat the iron," Gondanir told her, "but not so much that it glows. Gold is delicate. Too much heat will ruin the process."
Tock placed the first shoe into the furnace, holding it with a pair of long tongs. She waited, trying to count the time needed before it would be red hot. After a certain wait, she noticed an ever so slight shift in Gondanir's stance. He said nothing, likely wanting her to figure it out on her own, but she took it as a clue that it was time. She pulled the shoe out, holding it up and looking it over carefully. She could feel the heat radiating from it as she carried it to the workbench.
Gondanir performed the delicate work of carefully lifting each paper-thin gold sheet with a pair of wooden sticks, and she was surprised that his thick fingers could manipulate the thin sticks so carefully. He laid the sheets over the shoes one at a time, and they immediately melted into place, working their way into the etched grooves to adhere to the metal. Before it cooled he handed her a small tool tipped with agate. "Rub," he said. "Gently."
Using the tool she rubbed the gold down so that it was firmly adhered to the iron. As the layers were applied and began to cool, the metal hardened, and soon she couldn't tell that she wasn't looking at a solid piece of gold.
They continued the process for all four shoes, heating them just short of red hot, gently applying the gold, and rubbing it into place with the burnisher. Once it was complete they were packed away gently with wool padding, ready to be shipped off to the client.
Tock stood and stretched, grinning. This had been more like it. She had had to endure two days of utter hell and pain, but at the end, there had been delicate, detailed work that was much more her style. She was still stiff and sore from the previous days' work, but she wouldn't be so exhausted when she went back to her rented room this time.
"Well," she said to the Isur, "see ya tomorrow!"
"Do not come in tomorrow," he said gruffly, not looking at her.
She stopped and stared at him. Had she done something wrong? Was she fired? She thought she had been doing a good job. "Oy, why the 'ell not?" she asked.
"Tomorrow is a holiday," he told her. "We are closed."
"Oh," she muttered, then grinned and laughed in embarrassment. Then the most shocking thing happened: Gondanir grinned back. It was brief, it was small, and she wasn't even sure she had seen it, but it made her grin wider.
Maybe he was starting to like her.