1st Autumn, 516 AV
"Speech"
"Others"
"Speech"
"Others"
Notes :
It was the turn of the seasons. Karin sat on a short break, carefully tying her hair back into a messy, slightly wonky plait as she sipped her waterskin in between fighting with her unruly hair as it swayed playfully in the refreshing breeze. To her left, the very barest bones of the rowing boat were laid, fresh wood smelling sweetly of resin washed with the overlaying scents of the docks. Karin stretched, cat-like, and stood up to walk towards the beginnings of the frame. Today had been a good day so far, and she was sure it would continue in much the same manner.
A short while later, and the young woman was equipped with the tools for the job at hand. Recently, there had been a lull in the construction they'd been contracted to do at the shipyard, and so she was working with a couple of people to make just about the only thing they'd been asked to recently: a rowing boat. As such, the area was quiet, but because of it she somehow felt more at ease.
She grabbed the planning board, with the neat lines and sketches of the rowing boat to be. It was a design of Picalum's, but although when she had first joined the shipyard she had found his handwriting to be difficult to read, now she understood the elegant scrawl. At least, to some degree. However, the section she was looking at made sense. It was the section about creating the spine of the boat. She laid it flat for the others to read, and smiled. There were three of them. Helena was an older woman with a bad back, but was a very competent shipwright having come from Zeltiva a long, long time ago. Okla'Kel was someone she didn't know very well, just another tall, blue-skinned man with strength in his arms and a gaze that put her on edge, slightly. Yet none of them seemed to be organised at all. Karin glanced over at Helena, who was checking over the plans with her. Okla' was sawing, the muscles in his arm pulled taut.
She cleared her throat, nervously. There was the implied need for some sort of organisation. Karin was loathe to draw attention to herself, or claim some sort of leadership over these well-established shipwrights, but someone needed to do something. "Hey. What are you doing, Okla'? And Helena too. We should sort out who's doing what, then we'll get things done quicker." She looked up, feeling the ghost of blush on her cheeks, but Helena was nodding and rolling up her sleeves and Okla' was walking over to the planning table.
Okla' had a surprisingly clear voice for his appearance, so Karin tried her best to disguise her surprise as he spoke up. "I was starting the preparation of the ribs." Helena replied too, her voice low and gravelly like the tide. Karin felt a lot of respect for the older woman, and something of a kinship to her. After all, she was Svefra too. "I wuz goin' to do the ribs too. You, what are ye doin'?"
Karin nodded, and breathed in deeply, rooting herself to her surroundings. "Right. I will prepare the spine, you two carry on with the ribs and I'll come and help you when I'm finished, or the other way round depending on how it goes. After we've got everything done then we should be ready to assemble it, okay?" There were nods all round, so she got to work.
The length of the spine was not as big as some boats, as it was only a relatively small rowing boat. Even so, it was the longest and largest piece of wood, and she was loathe to mess it up. As a result, she worked slowly and carefully, looking at the plans as regularly as made sense. The spine was actually called the keel, but Karin often used the words interchangeably. The majority of her work involved shaping the wood to make it easier to shape into the gentle curve that was needed. It was to fit into the simple wooden frame that acted as the template. Karin was sat on the wood, shaving little fragments of sawdust off as she rocked the tool backwards and forwards. The going was very slow, but she was being careful about it so that she didn't make a mistake. Afterall, the keel would direct how the boat went forwards in the water. If it was wrong, it wouldn't row well at all.
Word count: 757
-Beautiful boxcode credits go to Aislyn Leavold!
Of the sea...