Entry Number 11, reporting.
Galena, 28
Today, I write with perhaps the best news there can be in the cirumstances: things have returned to status quo.
With Ilral's...efficient prisoner disposal work complete, thoughts of combat and sieges have drifted to the back of the fortress's collective mind. These days, we mostly concern ourselves with that most noble of dwarven endeavours: construction.
As I mentioned in my last entry, the cave-in trap for that persistent riraskorfer was ruined, but fortunately I'm told that reconstruction was easy and quick, and that preparations continue in other areas of the trap. There is no forecasted date of when the actual extermination will take place: I get the sense that the heads of the fortress do not feel it to be a particularly important matter.
Other than that, other areas of regularity include the spike project, which churns on day by day, planting more and more deadly spikes in the ground. The green shafts rising from the sand are an odd sight: sharp and deadly, they almost look somewhat benign in the green-tinted sunlight on the surface through the glass roof, like a miraculous forest in the desert. An oasis, of sorts, which I suppose is what Eribrakas is in a sense. Asto Thec is hot and wide, and there are few settlements in it besides Stalkōlestran bandit camps.
In any case, the spikes continue their march towards construction, and with the regular routine of gather sand, make spikes, plant spikes, the fortress has once again settled into a steady thrum of activity. In this, I have discovered another curious property of Eribrakans: they truly live in the moment. The populace has entirely forgotten about the horrors of the past siege. They don't stop and reflect, as I do, on the fear and danger that comes with living in the city of glass. They don't think of how close the fortress might have come to falling. They just troop on, living day by day, step by step.
A few days ago, I was sitting in the hall and pondering this strangeness over my afternoon wine, when Vucar slid into the chair next to me, with a similarly contemplative look in his eye. He gestured at the surrounding Eribrakans all around, eating and drinking and laughing.
"Weird, isn't it?"
I nodded absently, taking another sip of my wine, still lost in thought. As a token response, I replied:
"Sure is. How're you?"
"Erm, yeah, okay. You know." Vucar massaged his temples gently, elbows on the table. It was then that I realised that no, I didn't know. It'd been some time since I'd spoken with Vucar. We'd both been busy, I suppose. I with my journaling and bookkeeping, he with...well, I have no idea. I pulled myself off of my thought train and turned to face him, and the sight was something of a shock.
My friend looked totally exhausted. Deep welts of purple hung under his eyes, his hair hung loose and unkempt, and his eyes were incapable of quick movement: they lingered in glassy stares, tiredness creeping through his drooping vision every second.
"By Etur, Vucar! What have you been doing to yourself?" In response, he only shook his head and pointed across the room. I followed his indication, and at the far side of the hall, looking equally worse for wear, sat his wife Kib. At her side was her eldest daughter, Stākud, who I believe is six years old. She was toying with a play sword, swinging it this way and that, while her brother of five, Mistźm, laughingly dodged from side to side. In Kib's arms, however, there lay a new member of the family: a newborn daughter, who I had not known of before. I was stricken. Vucar, one of my oldest friends, had had a child and I hadn't even known. I turned to him, incredulous.
"Zulban," he offered sleepily. He gave a little grin and rubbed his eyes. "Noisy thing."
"Good name," I replied, my mouth moving automatically, still getting my head around the new arrival.
"Thanks," he smiled once more, and then, happiness still planted on his face, he fell back into his chair and began to snore.
Zulban is apparently quite a handful.
I excused myself from Vucar's new bed, then headed over to Kib to offer my congratulations. She herself looked only a hair away from Vucar's level of exhaustion, all half-finished sentences and slow enunciations, but was also similarly happy. Her eyes shone through her drooping tiredness. She managed. In her arms, on the other hand, Zulban looked qute unplagued by exhaustion. She looked up and saw me, and happily gurgled, waving her tiny little hands up at my face. I put a single finger up to her, and she siezed a small grip on it, waving it this way and that, joyous at having a new toy.
I spent some time among the four of them, helping Kib as best I could with some of the childcare issues that cropped up, and playing with the other two, who I'd known for a little longer. These days, little Stākud is not so little. At six years, she is halfway to a full-grown adult, and it shows. She has adapted to Eribrakan life well: even at her age, her voice has the scratchy edge, and her skin is tanned dark from the blazing desert sun. I found myself wondering what would become of her as she grew to adulthood, and as she waved the sword this way and that, I couldn't help but wonder if she would be the next arena fighter, the next Ilral. A strange thought.
After some time, I left the family to their business, and checked the daily bulletin. There was little of note posted, just various lost socks, a few scheduled meetings...I soon realised my searching was futile, and was about to turn away, when a busy-looking dwarf covered in ink scurried up next to me, flattened a new, large bulletin on the wall, and then dashed away once more. I was left somewhat bewildered, and then looked up at the new post. In block capitals, it proclaimed: "NEW PROJECT AHEAD. READY FURNACES. PUMPS REQUIRED."
This was truly an interesting development, so I headed straight to Captain Udilråsh, who generally knows about such things. I thumped down the stairs, dodging countless craftsdwarves, and knocked on the glass of her office door. She grated from the other side: "'mon in."
I nudged the door ajar and slipped in, closing it behind me. The captain was sitting at her desk, apparently only vaguely aware of my presence, as though she'd asked me in as an automatic reaction. She had a slight frown on her, eyes focused close to compensate for her troubled vision, and was studiously scrubbing at something with a wet cloth: I couldn't quite see what. For a few moments, I stood before her desk, and she worked on, somewhat oblivious, before I cleared my throat.
As if suddenly waking up from a nap, she jolted up to see me. "Ah! Oh, 'lo there. Sorry, was just tending to this." She waved the white thing in her hand in my general direction, but I was still nonplussed.
"Erm, what is it?" I craned my neck to see, but all I could make it out to be was a curved length of some white material. To be fair to her, if she was shining it, then she was doing an excellent job: it shone like pearl, and all signs pointed to immaculate care of the object...whatever it was.
"Oh," she scratched her head. "Here," she brought the object back behind her desk, and rustled with it some way. There were a couple clicking sounds, and then a quick twanging noise. Then, she pulled it back up again, producing a full crossbow. I was somewhat shocked: though I'd seen the Captain many times, of course, I'd never seen her weapon of choice for some reason or another. It was always stowed on her person, hidden from view, or kept locked up somewhere.
Now I saw it, it really was quite the sight. I'd like to scribe that it was the most brilliant weapon I've ever laid my eyes upon and that it was destined to do great things, but that simply doesn't ring true. Honestly, the weapon looked rather plain. It was no piece of masterwork: a simple weapon for a simple purpose, it had the look of something made with not a particular lack of skill, but rather a sense of apathy: it was a tool, not a piece of art.
However, this contrasted somewhat with the rather obvious fact that it was made of pearl. Bizarre. Why would someone go to the effort of making a bow from pearl, clearly in a rigņthuling, but then create the weapon itself in such a utilitarian fashion?
I realised I'd been staring for some time, and Captain Udilråsh was likely thinking me quite silly now. I tried to cover by rubbing my eyes, muttering something about dust, and then looked up to the Captain. She regarded me with a cocky grin.
"Pretty nice, huh? I take good care of her." She tossed the bow from hand to hand (evidently, it was very very light!) and then flipped it over, placing it gently on the desk before her.
"It's striking, but I have to ask, why...?" I pointed to the pearl stock of the weapon, my point obvious. The captain looked down at my pointing, furrowed her brow, and looked back up, confused.
"Why what? It's a bow. Is there a mark?" She flipped the weapon over and checked where I was pointing, but it was unblemished, simply shining bright like the rest of it.
"Well...why? I mean, it looks great, don't get me wrong, but why out of pearl?" I scratched my beard. I was missing something.
The captain looked up at me as though I'd dropped from the sky and was insisting that the clouds were inhabited by plump helmet men. She maintained this puzzled look for several seconds, before it finally dawned on her.
"Oh, Etur above!" She burst out into a gale of laughter to put a drunk gnome to shame, howling out long and loud and nearly falling out of her chair. "Pearl! Oh gods, that's rich!" She smacked the desk over and over in her fit of humour. I was left completely nonplussed.
"What's so funny?"
But the captain couldn't stop. Her guffaws continued for longer than I found comfortable, and I found myself shifting on my feet. Eventually, she recovered herself, with a last few giggles occasionally still escaping.
"That's not pearl!" She proclaimed. "Heh, but thanks, your mistake's a compliment." She shook her head, suppressing another laugh. "Not pearl. No, the bow's made of bone. Not even nice bone. Dog bone. Probably took about five minutes to make." She slapped her glass desk again, then gripped its edge, calming herself. "Yeah, dog bone. Not pearl, heheh."
I confess, I was completely bewildered. Dog bone. I swear to you now, reader, the thing looked nothing like any bone I ever saw, and everything like every pearl I've ever seen...although I must confess, I've never seen a pearl before. But it looked exactly like all the pearls that had been described to me. What the captain said rang true, however. Why else would someone spend so little time on its construction?
"I, er, suppose you take good care of your weapons then!" I tried to turn the situation away from my rather embarassing error, although at the time I still wasn't entirely sure whether she was serious or not.
"Heh, yeah, I try." She nodded, calming herself once more. "It's an Eribrakan thing. Talk to Ilral or the commander or anyone, you'll see. Our weapons take care of us in a fight, it seems only right we take care of them out of one." I nodded, although I confess the idea of such a trade seemed a tad superfluous with an inanimate object. "Anyway...oh, carp! Speaking of Ilral, did you catch that last fight he had with those prisoners? Where he left the door open?"
I held up a hand to stop her and nodded, slipping into the chair opposite her over the desk. It wasn't an issue I wanted to discuss.
"Ah, no worries." She nodded. "That was pretty hardcore, I can understand you not being used to it." She shuffled a few papers on her desk, and stowed her incredibly shiny bow of bone away. "Just so you know though, that's not really the done thing. I imagine the commander would have had a talk with him about that." I just shrugged. In my mind, it didn't change the fact that it'd happened. I decided to change the subject.
"So I read that new bulletin in the meeting hall." I jerked a thumb upwards at the floor above. "Any idea what's going on with it?"
"Bulletin?" The captain sorted through her disorganised mass of papers. "Hmmm...oh yes!" She produced one document, which didn't look particularly different from any other. "Yeah, the new project. Pumps required. That's not in your department, don't worry."
"Oh, I figured. I was actually just interested." I gestured at the paper. "Is the actual project a secret or something?"
"Huh? Oh, no, no big secret. We're just pumping some magma into an old lake that's posing a safety issue. Too many pond grabbers, so we'll cast them to stone." She scanned the document briefly. "Again, you don't have to do anything with it...and neither do I, it looks like. The Engineers are handling it."
I nodded. I'd heard about the Engineers. In Eribrakas, there exists a Board of Engineers, which consists of the fortress's eminent mechanics, architects and the like, and works alongside the heads of the fortress (formally the "Council") specifically on large projects the fort undertakes. Something like obsidianizing a lake would certainly be within their scope. From my perspective, the most notable thing about the Engineers is that they handle most of their own supply. Things like pipe sections and mechanisms were handled by the Board independently, and I didn't have to keep track of them.
"Anyway," she continued, "Feel free to head down to the caverns and watch. It'll likely be a cool show when it's done." I had to admit, obsidianisation is a sight to behold. Plus, watching a few pond grabbers get entombed would be reassuring. "But look, if that's all, I have to head on patrol in a moment. You always seem to come right when I have to leave!" She hoisted her shiny crossbow onto her back and stood. "But, listen. Come back soon. I actually have some business to talk over with you. Important stuff."
And then, just like that, she was gone, thumping up the stairs, probably up to shoot down some errant vultures.
It's been a curious time. The addition of a new project is always exciting, and hopefully the Board will do a good job (their track record has not been perfect here). However, with that mystery out of the way, a new one has presented itself: what on earth does the Captain want to talk business about? I confess, I'm quite excited. My time here has been fluid and ever-changing, and I can't help but wonder what new shift the direction of my life will enact.
As soon as I know, I will scribe it here in full immediately!
May your sands be soft,
Dr. Eturtulon