A delicate bloom
Timestamp: 23rd Day of Winter, 514 AV
Seirei woke with a soft groan of discomfort when she felt her unborn child pressing down on her bladder. She got up as quickly as her bulging belly would allow her to, and took care of her pressing need. If it wasn't one thing, it was another. Seirei had long since forgotten what it felt like to be free of pain and discomfort. She had been told that this was natural, and that things would get better once she gave birth.
And she wanted to believe that. She really did. But it was hard when she was exhausted because a good night's sleep was little more than a fading dream of the past. These days, she was lucky if she got more than a bell of sleep at a time spread out throughout the night with long stretches of time between them. During these times, Seirei would lay awake, wishing that she could sleep. Often, it was only when exhaustion overwhelmed her, and she passed out from it that she got any significant amount of rest.
That left Seirei feeling very irritable most of the time. Irritable, and moody...and too frightened of Lian, and what he might do if he got angry to ever lash out at him as she wanted to. And that only made her feel worse. Bottling up her feelings only made them stronger. Which led to the need for a distraction. If she was too busy working on something to dwell on her bad mood, it would often fade after a while. This was especially true if she was doing something she loved; like working with wood.
Seirei was currently between projects yet again. It was an increasingly common occurrence this far into her pregnancy. The strain that her pregnancy put on her body got steadily worse the closer she came to the end of it. This meant that she needed to rest frequently throughout the day. She had any number of projects to choose from. But her need for frequent rest breaks made some of the more involved projects difficult for her to manage. Especially when exhaustion made it hard for her to focus on what she was doing.
After giving it some thought, Seirei decided to make some cooking sticks, They were a practical item that most people in Endrykas needed. Traders often were interested in them, as well. Both for themselves, and to sell. So there would definitely be a market for them. Seirei even had a plan that might allow her to sell her finished product to Drykas instead of just traders. Most Drykas were unwilling to buy anything a captive made, believing that a foreigner's work would have to be of poorer quality that a Drykas's would. But Teisaia was a Drykas, and her family were of the Ruby Clan. Like her, they were crafters. It wouldn't look strange for them to be selling something made out of wood. As her friend, Teisaia had already agreed to try and sell things for her to the Drykas. The mizas that were earned from any sales would be given to Seirei in full. Instead of taking a fee for selling her work, Teisaia wanted a couple of the cooking sticks for herself. Seirei was happy to agree to her friend's request.
Having chosen a project to work on, Seirei gathered up several long, thin branches. Using her knife, she began stripping the bark off of the first one. The bark was set aside to be used as kindling for a fire the next time she needed to cook something. Slowly, but steadily, Seirei worked on stripping the bark from each branch.
When she'd finished getting the last bit of bark off of the last branch, she moved on to the next step. Gripping the branch she had been working on firmly between her knees, Seirei began using her knife to sharpen one end of the branch into a sharp point. Every once in a while, she would test the point with her finger to see if it was sharp enough. Once she was satisfied that it was, Seirei flipped the branch, and began sharpening the other end into a point as well.
One by one, Seirei turned each of the branches into a cooking stick. When she was finished, she had nine in total. Two would go to Teisaia as a favor for forgoing the fee she could have charged her for being willing to sell the cooking sticks. It was a way to sell her goods to the Drykas without encountering the difficulties that came with her being a captive, and the remaining seven would be sold; this way, the people who bought her cooking sticks wouldn't ever need to know that a captive had made them. It rankled Seirei that her work wasn't considered to be worth buying...wasn't good enough...just because she was a captive. She knew that she had a long way to go before she became a master carver. But she also knew that her work was good. She put a lot of effort into everything she made. In some ways, her finished products were her children. Part of her didn't want to sell anything to the Drykas. That part of her insisted that if they didn't think her work was good enough just because she wasn't one of them, then it was their loss. But she was too practical for that. It didn't make sense to sell only to traders if she had a way to sell to the Drykas. She would be severely limiting her options that way.
Seirei felt a sharp pain in her abdomen as the baby kicked. She rubbed the spot absently as she examined her work, wishing yet again that the baby would hurry up and be born; she was sick of being pregnant. Now there was just one thing left to do. Seirei set her knife aside, and took up her smoothing cloth. Then she began rubbing the cooking stick, all up and down its length. She wanted to make sure that there were no rough spots that might form splinters that would then get caught in someone's food.
As she worked, she would stop every so often, and run her hand along the wood. In doing so, she was testing her progress, and searching for rough areas she had missed. Each cooking stick was subjected to the same, slow process. Seirei refused to move on to the next cooking stick until the one she was currently working on was completed to her exacting standards.
Seirei woke with a soft groan of discomfort when she felt her unborn child pressing down on her bladder. She got up as quickly as her bulging belly would allow her to, and took care of her pressing need. If it wasn't one thing, it was another. Seirei had long since forgotten what it felt like to be free of pain and discomfort. She had been told that this was natural, and that things would get better once she gave birth.
And she wanted to believe that. She really did. But it was hard when she was exhausted because a good night's sleep was little more than a fading dream of the past. These days, she was lucky if she got more than a bell of sleep at a time spread out throughout the night with long stretches of time between them. During these times, Seirei would lay awake, wishing that she could sleep. Often, it was only when exhaustion overwhelmed her, and she passed out from it that she got any significant amount of rest.
That left Seirei feeling very irritable most of the time. Irritable, and moody...and too frightened of Lian, and what he might do if he got angry to ever lash out at him as she wanted to. And that only made her feel worse. Bottling up her feelings only made them stronger. Which led to the need for a distraction. If she was too busy working on something to dwell on her bad mood, it would often fade after a while. This was especially true if she was doing something she loved; like working with wood.
Seirei was currently between projects yet again. It was an increasingly common occurrence this far into her pregnancy. The strain that her pregnancy put on her body got steadily worse the closer she came to the end of it. This meant that she needed to rest frequently throughout the day. She had any number of projects to choose from. But her need for frequent rest breaks made some of the more involved projects difficult for her to manage. Especially when exhaustion made it hard for her to focus on what she was doing.
After giving it some thought, Seirei decided to make some cooking sticks, They were a practical item that most people in Endrykas needed. Traders often were interested in them, as well. Both for themselves, and to sell. So there would definitely be a market for them. Seirei even had a plan that might allow her to sell her finished product to Drykas instead of just traders. Most Drykas were unwilling to buy anything a captive made, believing that a foreigner's work would have to be of poorer quality that a Drykas's would. But Teisaia was a Drykas, and her family were of the Ruby Clan. Like her, they were crafters. It wouldn't look strange for them to be selling something made out of wood. As her friend, Teisaia had already agreed to try and sell things for her to the Drykas. The mizas that were earned from any sales would be given to Seirei in full. Instead of taking a fee for selling her work, Teisaia wanted a couple of the cooking sticks for herself. Seirei was happy to agree to her friend's request.
Having chosen a project to work on, Seirei gathered up several long, thin branches. Using her knife, she began stripping the bark off of the first one. The bark was set aside to be used as kindling for a fire the next time she needed to cook something. Slowly, but steadily, Seirei worked on stripping the bark from each branch.
When she'd finished getting the last bit of bark off of the last branch, she moved on to the next step. Gripping the branch she had been working on firmly between her knees, Seirei began using her knife to sharpen one end of the branch into a sharp point. Every once in a while, she would test the point with her finger to see if it was sharp enough. Once she was satisfied that it was, Seirei flipped the branch, and began sharpening the other end into a point as well.
One by one, Seirei turned each of the branches into a cooking stick. When she was finished, she had nine in total. Two would go to Teisaia as a favor for forgoing the fee she could have charged her for being willing to sell the cooking sticks. It was a way to sell her goods to the Drykas without encountering the difficulties that came with her being a captive, and the remaining seven would be sold; this way, the people who bought her cooking sticks wouldn't ever need to know that a captive had made them. It rankled Seirei that her work wasn't considered to be worth buying...wasn't good enough...just because she was a captive. She knew that she had a long way to go before she became a master carver. But she also knew that her work was good. She put a lot of effort into everything she made. In some ways, her finished products were her children. Part of her didn't want to sell anything to the Drykas. That part of her insisted that if they didn't think her work was good enough just because she wasn't one of them, then it was their loss. But she was too practical for that. It didn't make sense to sell only to traders if she had a way to sell to the Drykas. She would be severely limiting her options that way.
Seirei felt a sharp pain in her abdomen as the baby kicked. She rubbed the spot absently as she examined her work, wishing yet again that the baby would hurry up and be born; she was sick of being pregnant. Now there was just one thing left to do. Seirei set her knife aside, and took up her smoothing cloth. Then she began rubbing the cooking stick, all up and down its length. She wanted to make sure that there were no rough spots that might form splinters that would then get caught in someone's food.
As she worked, she would stop every so often, and run her hand along the wood. In doing so, she was testing her progress, and searching for rough areas she had missed. Each cooking stick was subjected to the same, slow process. Seirei refused to move on to the next cooking stick until the one she was currently working on was completed to her exacting standards.