Three: Chasing WaterfallsThe waterfall was the primary landmark of Soulbooks, the clearest feature marked on their sketchy maps, the first thing everyone noticed. Some dwarves were impressed by it while others were terrified, two variations on the same emotion really. Most everyone agreed that the mist was nice. Ida Nourishedclasps came of a mining clan and had never seen such a thing before. She’d beheld the shining ribbon of water from afar and thought to herself, “I could build that.”
She dug out the trade depot and a storage room like one moving through a dream. She carved out a staircase to check the layer beneath without even noticing. The farms were annoying, she wasn’t sure if there was going to be enough clay to dig a proper mushroom field at first, but some prospecting soon solved the problem. She turned the initial failed field into seed storage and drifted back into thought.
Onul had disappeared. Shorey brought the news. There’d been something off about him but Ida hadn’t been able to put a finger on just what. In truth, she’d only half listened to him. They’d known each other all their lives, her family had dug rocks from the earth and his had turned the rocks into blocks, so she tried to offer what comfort she could. If asked she wouldn’t have been able to repeat what she’d said, or even summarize it. She figured he was upset over having developed such a dislike of Onul only to lose him so abruptly. They’d been a sight to see on the journey glaring at each other across the campfire every night. Some dwarves needed a good grudge in their lives. She tried to feel bad about having found the two of them so amusing and couldn’t manage it.
By the time she’d hollowed out the workshops, absently taking in Gears’s request to add space for craft workshops and a kiln, she had grudgingly come to the conclusion that her initial thought of an extension off the existing waterfall channeled into a drop that fell unimpeded into a magma pool was not the place to start. There was no telling where they might uncover magma or if there would be a good angle for the obsidian viewing deck. The queen, she was forced to concede, might not want to lend her the necessary miners, at least not right away. There’d probably be more than tunneling involved too, floodgates or some such; she’d ask Gears once he stopped rushing around like a headless chicken.
Digging out their new home required no actual thought on her part. The layout had been settled upon long ago in Snakecity and then tirelessly gone over and discussed on the journey. Gears had designed it to combine efficiency, comfort, and security. He meant to have them all inside behind a sealable gate before the autumn rains. An admirable goal, but his education in building design had been entirely academic. Ida had hands on experience shoring up mines, sealing off dangerous tunnels and adding comfortable temporary housing to the latest shaft. She had presented the potential problems that might throw a hitch in his designs and they’d started arguing contingency plans with the doctor contributing as a neutral judge and commentator. A bunch of fuss for nothing as it turned out, the site was pure perfection.
She’d finished the area for the kitchen before she realized that what she needed was a scale version to demonstrate her idea to others, a proof of concept, something small enough to build herself but impressive enough to convey the potential scope of the plan. They had set out to found a city for Queen Avuz that was to be the backbone of her future kingdom, and every great city built at the behest of a monarch required a monument. Ida felt the truth of this in her bones. Why not a waterfall? She mulled it over while she tackled the main hall. It was an argument that when combined with a two— no— a three level demonstration waterfall could not fail to move even the hardest heart. Soaring on an updraft of certainty and inspiration, Ida added alcoves to the hall to give the room a sense of space. Gears probably wouldn’t mind.
The food and drink cellar had a coal vein in the back. Ida investigated and found hematite and limonite. Then she realized she’d created a giant hole through the back of their dining area. She wandered upstairs to consult with the others, distracted by thoughts of her waterfall viewing room. She’d have to channel out the floor and create a platform or people would complain about wet clothing, people were like that.
The doctor and the little blonde girl were aghast at what she’d done, the so-called mess. Gears was torn, the value of the coal and iron ore competing against the perfection of his design. She could see him biting into his lip, his eyes rolling in his sockets, as twin desires fought within him. Nomal, the cook who had taken to wandering the wilds with a crossbow for some reason, pointed out that ore was plainly visible in the side of the cliffs so they didn’t really need to exploit this particular vein. If she had cared, Ida could have pointed out that iron ore was rare below the first couple of layers. Shorey did it for her. He also said he would build blocks to patch up the hole. Breathing out in a great gust, Gears told her to harvest the vein so long as it didn’t puncture the actual main hall or stairway. Ida shrugged and did as he asked. Iron was no good to her, it would only rust.
She considered the layout of the river while she worked. She’d have to dig a channel to move the water somewhere more convenient if she was going to build a grand display chamber. Come to think of it, she’d probably end up funneling it through this very shaft once she’d cleaned out the ore. With that in mind, she dug an access room off the back of the butcher’s and the tannery. It could serve as the leatherworks until she had the details of her project hammered out. She told the blonde girl, who was moving barrels to the storage, about it.
“Someone said they were decent with leather. Was it you?”
“No, actually, that was Onul. I’m the carpenter.”
“Oh,” said Ida. She’d stepped in it again. This always seemed to happen when she tried talking to people. She was bad with faces, and names, and personal details, that was all. She looked around at the bare rectangular room she had created with blocks between the mined out gaps. “Woops.”
“It’s all right,” chirped blondie. “A leatherworker is bound to show up sooner or later, and when they do we’ll have the workshop and stockpile ready for them thanks to your foresight.”
“I guess,” Ida answered. She felt like the girl was spreading the syrup pretty thick, but blondie went on, nodding earnestly.
“By then it’ll be even colder and we’ll really need better clothes, having the place prepared might make all the difference.”
“Heh,” was all Ida could say. The girl had a point. On a whim, she accompanied the other dwarf back into the cellars. She opened the last keg of beer and offered her a mug. “What’s your name?”
“I’m Doby Whimtool.”
“Well Doby,” Ida lifted her mug, “let’s have a toast: to the future inhabitants of Soulbooks.”
“May they never go barefoot,” Doby answered. They knocked mugs and drank.
The two of them finished the keg and Ida decided that blondie was alright after all, and that maybe she’d been going about this whole thing wrong. She’d focused on having a steep drop, but wouldn’t a stepped waterfall possess a subtle grandeur of its own?
The doctor interrupted both Ida’s progress on the dormitory and her internal debate between the grand cascade she had first envisioned and a more intricate display of small waterfalls and pools she now contemplated. He was bored, she decided, and he wasn’t going to go away until she paid attention to him.
“I feel we shouldn’t dig any deeper before building the hospital. We’re quite a ways from the surface as it is,” he was saying.
“I thought we’d decided the hospital would be phase two, we’ll get to it later with the barracks and the bedrooms,” answered Ida, almost by rote.
“I always felt that reasoning to be off. It’s not just soldiers who get injured.”
Ida looked around for help but they were alone in the stairwell. “But no one needs a hospital right now, do they?”
“That’s the thing about hospitals, Miss Nourishedclasps. You don’t need one until you do.”
“Look, if I don’t get the forges finished Gears is going to tear his beard out.”
The doctor gave her one of his mild smiles. He was always like this, so polite and contained. “I know that very well. I don’t propose you stop to dig me a hospital. I’m prepared to take care of that myself. What—“
“You are?”
“Yes, of course, but what I need your help with is channeling water. I feel it’s important that we create a reservoir before winter—“
He didn’t need to say any more.
Building the reservoir took frustratingly long. Finding the coal seam had popped the cap off the smelter of Gear's greed and he wanted the gold they found in what was meant to be the reservoir’s control room minded out. He also wanted the whole thing smoothed before it was filled. Ida was grinding her teeth before she was allowed to dig the long narrow tunnel that would connect the reservoir to the catch basin of the mighty waterfall. She carefully punctured the separating wall and fled back the way she’d come. Unnecessarily as it turned out, the water spread through the tunnel in a thin disappointing trickle rather than the expected torrent.
“You don’t have gravity on your side,” explained Gears when he observed their work. “You don’t even have anything to divert the water from the main current and into your channel. Starting higher up would have given you a faster flow, it still could, but I wouldn’t bother. You’ll get enough for a well, eventually.”
It would matter when she began her project, Ida thought. Though, she was already considering using this trickle method to control the water levels in certain pools. In some places the water would have to be deep, but it would be diverting to have areas where it was shallow enough for children to play in. She could remember, vaguely, playing in natural pools as a very young child back before they’d had to flee the caverns.
“I suppose he is right,” sighed the doctor.
They were bent over the holes Ida had opened into the reservoir in preparation for well construction. Ida expressed her opinion by spitting down into the shallow puddle slowly pooling beneath their feet. She kept one eye on the doctor to see his reaction, but he didn’t even flinch. He had stone dust in his hair and the lines around his eyes. She glanced up at the new hospital. Fortunately, the doctor hadn’t uncovered any metal ores or gems during the dig and so the construction had been allowed to remain as square and inviolate as he had imagined it. The whole setup was a bit plain to Ida’s eye, but it was solid work nonetheless, amazing work for someone who was only learning the trade. She looked back at the dwarf.
“You done this before?”
He met her gaze. “No, not at all. I grew up in the city. I always wondered what it would be like to work in a mine though, to live like a real dwarf.” He smiled but his eyes seemed tired. She clapped him on the shoulder.
“Tek, you’re welcome in any mine ‘o mine any time.” His thin smile grew until it was wide and beaming.
“That’s kind of you to say Miss Nourishedclasps.”
“Call me Ida. If we’re going to be sharing the prospecting tunnels in future we might as well be on first name terms.”
They shook on it. As she walked back to the partially finished dormitory, her pick held by the head to avoid accidentally maiming anyone else who happened to be using the stairs, it occurred to her that something she’d said had made someone else happy. That didn’t happen very often. It was worth remembering.
There came a day, not long after, when there was nothing left to mine for the moment. She dug out bedrooms for each of them until Gears told her to stop because they were having trouble furnishing the existing rooms they had. Making a barracks would have been laughable. Even with a few new faces they were a small group and all of them were constantly at work. Well, everyone but Ida that was, for the moment.
She wandered the freshly smoothed main hall for awhile and then popped into the kitchen where Nomal was laboring over barrel after barrel of bilberry biscuits. Ironically, the girl bent over the hot stove looked like she hadn’t had a decent meal in weeks.
“Armok’s blood girl, you look like a risen wraith.”
“What?” Nomal blinked at her through the steam.
“You’ve been so busy down here making meals, when was the last time you ate one of them, or had a decent drink for that matter?”
“That’s none of your business.”
“Sure it is. If we’re going to have to slab you along with your hunter buddy I’d like to know in advance.” Ida was just alert enough to duck the pan that came flying at her head following this remark.
“By the gods, why are all of you so awful?” demanded Nomal, scowling at her stove.
“I don’t think I take your meaning,” said Ida. “I don’t think we’re awful. Well, Gear’s little mustache braids are kind of awful, and I heard the doctor singing in the hallways the other day and that was pretty awful, but by and by-“
“You are awful,” replied Nomal letting go of her anger. She seemed to deflate. Her expression dull and disinterested, which was somehow more worrying than the sudden violence had been. “All of you are obsessed with the weird schemes you have going in your heads and you don’t live in the real world. Someone could die in front of you and you’d step over them and say “Hmmm, I wonder if there’s a way to continuously cycle the water so that the waterfall in my garden will flow all year round.”
There wasn’t anything Ida could say in response to that. She grabbed her pick instead.
Good old Shorey, he might be a bit slow and clumsy but he always came through when needed. Thanks to him, Onul’s memorial hall was the first place to see proper engraving in the entire fortress. His work complimented her careful attempts at elaborate architecture and made them look better than they deserved. She couldn’t help but feel some pride, even as the three of them went about conducting a properly solemn service for Onul.
The ceremony itself was rather awkward, none of them being good with words or particularly devout. They murmured a few prayers and Nomal began to cry. Shorey slunk off to corner of the hall and carefully studied the statue there, a particularly silly course of action since he’d made it himself. Poor boy, he had a good heart but his grasp of social situations didn’t extend much beyond what to do in a fist fight. She pulled Nomal into a hug, glad she was there to look after things. Foolish, the two of them were both morning the same fellow but neither of them seemed to be able to say anything to each other.
She rocked the crying girl back and forth and studied the ceiling. Something really had changed about Shorey’s work. It wasn’t that he’d suddenly become a master overnight, though the work he was doing for Soulbooks was certainly improving his skills, it was more that everything he made had character to it now. There was a certain indefinable quality that drew the eye; even his rock blocks looked more balanced somehow. The rooms with the pools flowing through them would have to be engraved and decorated with statues, she decided. They’d also probably need chairs and tables as well, and a stand for passing out biscuits and cold ale. She’d have to ask both of them about it later.
ooc: notes
In spite of being tagged with every loner/antisocial trait imaginable, Ida was widely loved. All I can think is the few interactions she had with people must have been meaningful. Maybe the way she lived half inside her own head and focused on her own projects so much gave her a kind of aura of determination and joy that touched those who spent time with her.
I don't know if it's something about 40.24 or the Perisdextrant's starter pack but none of my dwarves grieve for friends or pets or relatives. So long as they don't have to see the body, they don't care. I've decided to take some artistic license in that regard.