Summer 82, 512 AV
Basha’ir turned to close the door behind her. She pulled a key on a cord out of the pouch at her belt, then hesitated a moment, looking speculatively at the door handle. Reaching out, she grasped it and pulled the door back open, and stepped back inside the tiny, dark room. She had carefully blown out the oil lamps, and all was in blackness within, but already she had memorized the lay out and meager furnishings. She did not go further in. She did not attempt to retrieve anything. She merely stood, open door in hand, looking out into the dimly lit corridor. Smiling to herself, she stepped back through, her door, right into the corridor, with no-one to stop her. Silly, she knew, but she could never tire of that simple act, stepping out into the world, whenever she chose to. With a satisfied expression, she once again pulled the door too, this time inserting the key and locking it, then slipped the cord about her neck. Pulling her veil up and covering all but her eyes, she began on her way to her new place of employment.
Swathed in a light, brightly colored pashmina, worn over an ankle length dress, Basha’ir moved through the warren like hallways and streets of the city, carefully plotting her course to stay as far away from other pedestrians as possible. It was a walk of only fifteen minutes or so, and soon she was entering An Elegant Weave, where she had just started the week before, as a seamstress. She could hardly believe how fortunate she had been. Trying to strategize around her new state of freedom, and the co-occuring personal responsibility for her own upkeep, she had taken some of the finer dresses she had designed and sewn and embroidered to the shop, thinking perhaps she could sell them. But Mistress Druva, upon seeing Basha’ir’s handicraft, had instead offered her a job. Not as a designer, of course. Mistress Druva did the designing here. The Syliran was impressed enough though to hint at possibly having Basha’ir move up to an assistant designer, after she had learned the ropes of a commercial establishment such as this one. Navia had lamented the impact the storm had had upon businesses that sold anything other than the absolute essentials of life. Things were picking up, though. More and more customers were returning. Many had lost things in the storm. So, all in all, she could use an extra pair of hands.
So far, things had gone well. Basha’ir was more than happy to be given a sewing station at the back of the shop, where she rarely had to interact with customers. With the mark of Nikali upon her, she had every intention of trying to steer clear from anything that would cause or require her to have physical contact with anyone, especially skin to skin contact. Her position, though, made that unlikely, unless she would have to take part in a fitting for a customer. That had not been required of her though. Not yet.
Neither had she been serving on the sales floor, and she wondered if she would be given that opportunity. She could not help but think that, for once, perhaps being Ranuri would be something she could turn to her own benefit, instead of some lust filled man's. The gnosis gave her an edge, when it came to the gentle art of persuasion. She was eager to find out if she could put it to good use and make some sales on behalf of her new employer. Time would tell about that, she supposed.
The day passed quite quickly, as Basha’ir was kept busy from the moment she sat down to her work. This consisted primarily in simply sewing. Already another worker had cut out the various pieces needed to be put together to make several different garments, and Basha’ir began on a man’s shirt, a simple thing of bleached linen. Carefully laying two sections together, she began to stitch the seam, with a deft, quick flash of her needle in and out of the fabric. Paying close attention to make sure the stitches were small, even and tight, she worked diligently until the two pieces were joined as one. Over the course of the morning, the shirt took form and became an actual piece of clothing, with Basha’ir adding on the various bits, stopping to carefully iron the seams as it became more three dimensional. Long, long ago, one of the other slaves back in Ahnatep had taught her, the best sewing was a result of careful attention to pressing the seams out flat and in the right way. By the mid-day break for some food, the shirt was almost done. One of the other assistants happened to walk by and complimented Basha’ir on her fine needlework, and the young woman blushed with pleasure. As she sat on her stool and nibbled at a piece of bread that she had brought with her, she tried to think when she had ever had a compliment since being marked by Nikali that she could wholly attribute to herself, and not to the effect of Ranuri. It felt almost overwhelming, to think about people looking not at her, but at her handiwork, and praising it for its own, real worth.
The meal break was short, and some workers might have complained about the toil of many hours. But Basha’ir, feeling even more motivated, tackled the shirt with renewed energy, and within the hour it was done. Smiling, she gave it one last press and then hung it up with other finished pieces that the other seamstresses with her were working on. One of them gave her a look of slight surprise, and commented on how quickly she had finished it. But the words were said in a friendly way, with no spite attached. Basha’ir, still swathed in her long dress and veil, ducked her head shyly, but acknowledged the comment with a quiet explanation of how, once she went at something, she liked to get it finished, and it was really nothing much, to be done so quickly. The two other women began a conversation about this and before Basha’ir knew it, she was actually laughing quietly about one of the lady’s hilarious story about a garment gone completely awry in the heat of trying to get it ready quickly for a customer. As they all got back to their work, Basha’ir taking up the first pieces of another shirt, Basha’ir was still smiling. Life seemed to her very good at that moment, with unlimited potential, if things could just run smoothly.
The afternoon passed in much the same fashion. Mistress Druva returned to the shop and came back to the sewing room to check on the progress of a dress that the head seamstress was working on. She paused long enough to watch Basha’ir as she sewed, and nodded and gave her yet another compliment. Then she asked for the half finished piece and Basha’ir handed it over and Navia showed her where she could do the stitching a bit differently and thus make the collar lay a bit flatter. Basha’ir watched with interest and when her employer handed the shirt back she immediately tried out the technique. Navia watched for a moment and nodded her head in approval. She then moved on to another worker, to inspect some other garment, and Basha’ir looked at her own work for a moment longer. An idea came to her, but she hesitated to try it out, not wishing to find her plan was flawed and she might then make the shirt less than perfect. She thought of the many dresses she had at her room. Some might have said they were stolen, that when Theodoric died and she was kicked out of his rooms, she should have left all behind and not taken a thing. But she had thought that a few dresses, some clothes to wear to keep herself decent, were little enough payment for all he had asked of her. Now she was thinking she could take the dresses apart and perhaps she could try out her idea on material that did not belong to Mistress Druva. With this idea tumbling over in her mind, she went back to work on the shirt in her hands and once again, the later part of the afternoon flew by.
When the hour drew near for the shop to close, one by one the other seamstresses departed, laying aside their work to be resumed on the morrow. Basha’ir was so close to finishing the second shirt, though, that she continued to stitch. The cuffs were almost done, and she hated to just leave it. Mistress Druva had already departed and finally there was only the one assistant left in the front of the shop. After a few more minutes, this one poked her head into the sewing room, looked about, saw only the newest girl, and sighed unhappily. It seemed she needed to leave and yet there was a customer who she was waiting for, a man who had placed an order and was supposed to be by for a fitting. Mistress Druva always liked to keep her customers happy and would have wanted the assistant to stay a bit longer, just to see if the man would still show up. But really, the woman needed to be away, on this day she just could not stay late. She looked speculatively at Basha’ir and finally she made her suggestion. Would Basha’ir mind to stay and then lock the door once she left? The assistant was sure the man would not show up, and Basha’ir would only have to stay for say, another half hour? Then she could go home.
Basha’ir was secretly quite pleased to be asked to take on this task. It would give her time to finish the shirt, and it was a sign that she was a responsible worker, one who could be trusted. She agreed readily and the assistant smiled in relief. Handing over the key, she explained how to close up the shop, and showed Basha’ir where the garment was that the man had ordered, just in case he did come by. When the young woman saw that it was a pair of trousers, she swallowed nervously. That sort of fitting could possibly require her fingers to be in places that she didn’t even want to contemplate. She said a swift prayer that he would not show up, or that if he did, the trousers as they were would be well fitted already and she need only tack them up at the hem for the proper length. Of the two choices, she fervently hoped that he would just not appear.
Of course, she did not voice her reservations to the assistant. That one left, happy to have divested herself of her last duty of the day. Basha’ir brought the almost completed shirt to the front of the store and sat cross legged on the floor, stitching away and keeping her eye on the door.