Timestamp: 11th Day of Winter, 512 A.V. Alses hummed happily as she strolled along the skyglass corridors of the Towers Respite. Things were looking up. When the day had begun, just a few bells ago, she had been resigned to her fate. The garden was all shut down for winter (she couldn't excuse any further pottering about out there, not with the snows piling higher and higher) and so she was forced to face up to the unpalatable reality. Cleaning was, whether she liked it or not, going to become a feature of her existence in the Respite. There was nothing else she could really do; she couldn't cook (since she had no real need of food, learning had never exactly been a high priority), helping with the administration of the Respite itself a task best left to those paid to do it, and the garden needed nothing major and/or critical done to it for a good two, two and a half months. This morning, it had been a glumly tired Alses who had plodded up the stairs to the bright and cheery office where Tahala Chinsta and her small team spent their days amid groaning desks, bulging mahogany filing cabinets and seemingly-endless reams of paperwork, all held down with jolly little paperweights and, when things were really busy, any old rock that came to hand. How they could all be so relentlessly cheerful was an abiding mystery to Alses, and perhaps one better answered by an anthropologist of some kind, possibly one with an interest in complex society subgroups or something similar. Many variations on the theme of: 'Good morning' burst from a multitude of smiling mouths as she crossed the threshold, head tilted just slightly to avoid catching her crown-of-horns on the lintel. Her decidedly unenthusiastic “Morning,” seemed to put not a single dent in their armour as they bent willingly back to their tasks Imagine, then, something of the delight when a decidedly hangdog Alses was informed, and cheerfully at that, to report to Cook for something that wasn't cleaning. Perhaps her tactic of burning carelessly untidy students' painstaking notes and research – or more precisely, the tide of complaints it generated for Tahala - had at last worn down the formidable woman. Regardless of the actual motivation, Alses was not going to look a gift horse in the mouth, and so merrily toddled off down to the hygenic hell that was the kitchens of the Towers Respite – a formidable forbidden territory for those with no business there. Barely-organized chaos always seemed to rule supreme in the vaulting chambers that made up the kitchens, a tide of moving humanity that surged and beat against the condensation-beaded walls. Order and counter-order sang in the air, a cat's cradle of opposing commands, everyone fighting to be heard over the bubbling of sauces and the clang of pots and pans on ranges, in sinks and rattling on racks as busy hands darted in and out of the serried copper ranks. Sous-chefs danced through the billows of steam, their knives flashing in the humid air. They were chopping vegetables in double-time, boning fish and filleting meats, the sharp metal dancing a frenzied toccata on long wooden boards in their skilful hands. Iron chains ratcheted back and forth overhead, a constant thunderous fugue that hammered at the senses, callused hands reaching up to pluck handfuls of ingredients from their hooks as they rattled by. Alses pressed herself against a damp wall as an argument of cooks surged past, loudly declaiming about some Eypharian sauce that was apparently on tonight's menu. She swallowed down bile and forced herself not to think too deeply about it all, trying to breathe through her mouth. The odours of the kitchens were already offensive enough to her. “You want?” Alses blinked at the sweat-streaked sous-chef who had whirled out of the morass to stand in front of her, wiping his streaming forehead with a raggedy handkerchief. “You want?” the man repeated, with a short and jerky bow, eyes straying back to the melange of culinary activity on three sides. “Cook sent for me...” Alses replied feebly, overwhelmed as usual by the battering assault on her senses that the kitchens represented. If one was of a philosophical bent, it could be said that that was a metaphor for Lhavit as a whole; a stately ship sailing through a sea of cloud, but rip the top off and underneath one would find a boiling charivari of ceaseless activity that kept the whole grand edifice sailing serenely on. Alses, buffeted by the disgusting smells and sights, wasn't ever in a philosophical mood in a kitchen, and so this deep and moving metaphorical analysis of the city and its place on Mizahar went completely unnoticed. “Back t'your station, boy!” There came the booming tones of Cook, bearing down like a stubby galleon under full sail. “Alses is here t'work for me for a bit.” He nodded to her amicably enough, effortlessly dismissing his underling and gesturing for her to follow him without a single break in his energetic stride, dancing around the myriad obstacles in the way with a consummate ease born of long, long practice and absolute familiarity with the layout of his dominion. Alses, to whom this was still very much alien territory, and still less used to a crowd of people pressing against her on all sides, lagged behind somewhat, but eventually caught the rotund head chef up, breathing heavily after a particularly tight knot of people had forced the deployment of a strategic elbow or two. “Caught me up? Good. Now-” “Is it...” she paused for breath, gasping in the fetid humidity of the place “...is it always like this?” A short, sharp burst of laughter, a bark of sound that had quite a lot of force at close range. “Yes. Students are hungry people, y'self excepting, of course.” He led the way to a smaller antechamber that was at least partially shielded from the main bustle, a room lined with cupboards and long worktables. In the centre there stood a very familiar piece of equipment, the kitchen still. A pot-bellied copper and brass monstrosity, resting, heavy and ponderously bulbous, on four chunky and elaborately clawlike legs that had been cast to look as though they bowed under the prodigious weight. There was ornamentation and scrollwork across the still doors and all sorts of miscellaneous twiddly bits – thick glass gauges and viewing ports, adjustable wingnuts and internal sieves – to afford accurate control of as many conditions as possible. It was an old friend, of sorts; she'd used it on several occasions to distill out attar of roses from the hundreds and hundreds of blooms painstakingly culled in Summer and Autumn from the Respite's gardens, making enough of the devilishly strong rose otto (a thoroughly disagreeable substance until vastly watered down) to keep the Respite's baths smelling sweet right through Winter and Spring. Now it seemed as though Cook had another task to suit her skills. |