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The Baker's Wife--complete
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The Baker’s Wife
by Amy Keeley
Smashwords Edition
Copyright © 2013 by Amy Keeley
All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review. For permission requests, contact the author through her website listed below, subject "Permissions Request."
http://amykeeley.wordpress.com/
Cover Design by Amy Keeley
Folkard font copyright 2014 by The Scriptorium, all rights reserved
I know I’m stating the obvious here, but this book is a work of fiction. Everything in this book is either a result of my imagination or is used fictitiously. Any resemblance to any person, place, thing, or event, whether in the past, present, or future, whether alive or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Author’s Note:
In the interest of keeping this a cohesive whole, I’ve made some minor changes from when these books appeared as separate ebooks (e.g. “moon” in reference a lunar month is now simply called “month” unless referencing a specific month). No plot points have been changed.
A Note on Time Measurement In This Story
The world in which Krysilla lives uses a lunar calendar. Each month is 28 days long. Two days at the end of the calendar year are set apart as a special holiday (Two Days), and a means for the calendar to reset. It also happens to be the time each year when the rift created by the Ornic reappears.
The names of the months are, like the traditional Japanese and Native American names for the months, based on something that occurs in that month that stands out.
Each week of seven days begins with a new phase of the moon. Each day is added to it. So, “New Quarter, 2 days,” means it’s the day after New Quarter. However, a more casual way to say it is, “New, two.” Two other phases are shortened as well. Full Moon becomes Fullum. Old Quarter becomes simply Old. The only one that is never shortened is New Moon because it’s considered a special day in the calendar, a sort of mini-Two Days. In other words, a time to re-evaluate your life, consider your ways, and rest for a bit from life.
For the minstrel whose music resonates with me more than he knows.
Part One: Parlay
Krysilla didn’t want to open her eyes. Beside her, her husband, Lejer, slept peacefully, and would until long after the sun had risen. She hated him. Too tired to let it be anything more than a simmering resentment, she rolled out of bed and walked softly to her clothes, piled on top of a stool Lejer had once told her would be hers for sitting on and making herself pretty.
No time for that. Time to work. She yanked on her clothes and tied the blue sash that marked her as a married woman around her waist with a practiced hand. Her bare feet made no noise as she descended to the first floor of the two-story house. The cold crept through her feet and wrapped around her ankles under her plain, heavy, wool skirt. Grabbing some wood, she stuffed it into the oven and drew in the air the spell that would light the fire. Closing her eyes, she tried to concentrate on the spell that would regulate the flames once the temperature was right for baking bread. Her arms felt heavy, and it took several tries of drawing the spell before she could feel it wrapping around the wood and flame together.
It’s the little things, Lejer had told her once, that divide the good from the great. A wave of exhaustion swept over her.
Putting on her clogs and an apron, she took care of the chickens and lit the ovens in the back as she had with the first. She was almost back at the house when she saw their first customer of the day with a bowl of fresh dough.
Great, she thought, and tried to smile. “How are you today, Lily?”
“Oh, I just thought I’d come by early and get this out of the way.”
Of course you can, Krysilla’s resentment whispered. Your husband does all the work so that the only magic you need to worry about is the kind you use on your house. Maybe you’d be late on your family’s bread too if you had something else to worry about.
It was a cold thought. She stuffed it away in her heart and forced her smile to grow. “That’s fine. Let’s go to the scales and see how much you owe me.”
“Your husband,” Lily corrected a little too quickly. As if realizing her gaffe, she said, “I’m sorry. You do the work, so of course I would pay you.”
“No need to apologize. The business belongs to him.” Smile fixed in place now, she switched aprons and washed her hands. She weighed the dough on the shining scales, a square of paper underneath it.
“You’re such a wonderful wife.”
Lily’s words caught Krysilla off-guard. Her smile didn’t waver. “Why do you say that?”
“You do so much. I’m sure I could never manage work and a home as well as you do.”
Krysilla paused. Was this an insult? The hall had dust at least a half inch thick, dishes often waited until just before the next meal and laundry was...no. If she thought about laundry, what little energy she had would leave her. “I try my best.”
“You fulfill your promise very well.”
Krysilla said nothing in response. Focusing on the scales, she closed her eyes and focused on the numbers the king had declared every baker must follow in order to be deemed trustworthy. With her finger, she drew them over the loaf. The spell curled into the dough, waiting to appear in full after the baking was done. Krysilla took note of the result in the spell and took out a piece of paper to write Lily’s receipt.
Lejer should be doing this, she thought, remembering how it had been when they were first married. She trained in the oven room while he dealt with the customers. When she’d learned that, they’d switched and she’d learned how to take care of that aspect until the day he woke her up and said, “I’m too tired today, Krysilla. Be a comfort to me and work the oven today as well, please.”
And because she’d promised to be a comfort to him, and because he provided for her and let her use his magic, she did. Every day since, she did both.
“It’s just,” Lily continued, “you’re so strong. It must give you a lot of power with your magic.”
She hated her strength and clenched her jaw. “Here’s the amount you owe us and the number of the loaf. Do you want to put it in the oven yourself?”
“Oh, no, thank you. As hot as that gets, I think I might faint.”
Die, Krysilla almost said. “And how is your family?” She picked up the dough, still wrapped in the paper and carried it into the oven room.
This room was spotless. Not a speck of dirt or disorder could be seen. Every cleaning spell she knew went into this room and left her exhausted at the end of every day. Lily stepped into the room as if stepping into one of the old Tothsin shrines. “Doing well. My husband is going to take me to the market later today. The ships have come in.”
Krysilla almost lost her grip on the oven door. “Oh?”
“One of them, according to my husband, carries emissaries from the king.”
Emissaries, with beautiful clothes and laughing smiles. People who had never known a day of work in their life. This time she couldn’t stuff the hatred down. It curled into her lips and made her chest tight with unshed tears.
They work, she reminded herself. The magic they learn is what protects us. It’s just a different kind from ours.
Forcing herself away from the thought of the emissaries, she thought of the other things the market brought: spices, flowers, herbs she could add to the garden. It had been a long time since the last ships had come, due to the heavy rain that made the river difficult to navigate. Lejer would let her go if she mentioned the spices. They were getting low.
She thought of the colo
rs of the ships, each one guided by a merchant with a specialty. She thought of the books and the locks and the inventions and most of all, the enormous amount of magic that swirled through the market when the ships came, the spells written on strips of paper and in books.
If she paid enough, she might be able to get one today that had nothing to do with the ovens, but that was still legal for her to know.
And then she realized Lily was still talking. “I’m sorry,” she began to apologize.
“No, it’s my fault. You must concentrate on your work. I’ll just sit here quietly.”
Krysilla nodded, thoughts of the market pulling her back. No, she thought. I have to get my work done first. The thought made her tired. There was always work to do. There was never any time to rest.
But no one else could do it. Her husband couldn’t afford another servant even if he’d wanted to bring one in. Years had gone by before he found a wife he trusted. Everyone in the village had thought he would never marry and adopt his heir instead. As one of the more conservative Tothsins, it wouldn’t be a surprise.
You’re lucky, she told herself and closed up the oven.
Lily paid her and left. Others soon came, and Krysilla’s world became a blur of mixing, kneading, baking, weighing, and taking orders. There had been a time, she remembered, when it had been fun to knead the dough and shape it. Now, not even the order from Lady Felldesh for sweet buns, cake, and bread for an upcoming feast made her smile. She put the paper the order was written on in her pocket without even glancing at what was needed.
In spite of her focus, the market teased her with memories.
The sun was high above the house before she thought of dinner. Hurriedly grabbing some leftover dough from their bread, she shaped it and baked it. While it baked, she went to the kitchen in the back and rinsed the beans she had soaked the night before. Thank the Circle they were the kind that cooked quickly. Soon, a stew was heating up. Giving it a stir and using some wifely magic to keep it at a regular temperature until it was done, she went back to the oven room to finish the orders, then went upstairs to fill her husband’s washbasin with hot water.
And then, as sometimes happened, there was nothing for her to do. Her husband stirred upstairs and she heard him walk around the room as he got dressed. Was the ale where she’d left it for him? Must have been. He didn’t mutter as he came down the stairs.
“Everything all right, Krysilla?”
“Yes.” She leaned against the table with her arms folded. “The ships came in.”
He nodded. “I heard about that yesterday.”
“Ah.” She stared at the oven. “We got an order from Lord Felldesh.” She took the paper out of her pocket and handed it to him. Still a little unsteady from sleep, he walked over and took it, running one hand through his hair as he read. He said nothing, only made little grunts and sounds of thought as he read it.
“We got enough cinnamon?”
“I’ll check.”
He looked up at that. “You haven’t checked it yet?”
“I’m checking it now.”
“You should have checked it as soon as you got the order.”
“It’s been a little busy.”
“It’s always busy, Krysilla. A good baker manages their time. I thought you knew that from handling your father’s business.”
Krysilla’s exhaustion increased. There were times she thought the only reason he married her was because she had taken care of her family after her father had died. Her mother should have, but she’d been so overcome by grief it wasn’t worth even asking. She felt the pouch that contained the cinnamon. “We might have enough for a batch or two.”
“And you didn’t look to see how many batches we would need to make.”
“No.”
He sighed. You could always start working in the bakery again, she nearly said. But she’d only said that once and had regretted it ever since. The silence was too much to bear.
“Well, I guess it’s a good thing the ships have come in today. Otherwise, we’d be in serious trouble. We might have had to back out of the order.”
She nodded, trying not to look too excited at the thought of going to the market. Her exhaustion made it easy.
Everything else was as it had been for the past few years. He put on his dark blue vest that marked him as a married man, and ate dinner with her. They talked of business and accounts and bread until the meal was done and then he left her to clean up while he went to speak with the cook at Felldesh Keep about the order. He often left in the afternoon, either drinking, or talking with the men by the fountain, or going out to the woods to remember his place in the world, as a good Tothsin should.
At first, Krysilla had been confused by the amount of time he had begun to stay away from home. She’d hint that it would be nice for them to sit in front of the fire and talk, as she’d seen her parents do before her father died. He’d humored her once, but it had been awkward. At the end, he’d laughed and asked if she expected him to give her comfort now instead.
She never asked him to sit with her again. And he never brought up the subject again.
Because it was just the two of them (the boys who chopped the wood for the ovens never stayed beyond dropping off the wood and getting paid), the meal didn’t take long to clean up.
She stared at the stool and wondered if she should make herself look pretty before she left.
It was just the market, she thought, and pulled her long black hair out of its bun. She carefully twisted it into a braided rope that hung down her back. A few strands fell down on her forehead, unruly as always. She thought of putting on shoes, but decided against it. The ground would be muddy from the spring rains and only ruin the things. It would be better to save them for a special occasion.
Whenever that was.
Instead, she put on her clogs and filled the handcart with deliveries. Each one brought her closer to the main road, the one that led to the river and the market. It took two hours before she could see the canopies that sheltered the goods the merchants sold. It took another half hour before she reached the edge of the encampment.
The scent of roasting meat and cooked potatoes filled the air, with spices she could only guess at: sharp spices that burned, and warm spices that tingled her nose just from the smelling of them. The sound of the customers haggling with the merchants seemed to have a rhythm, punctuated by the music of the auctioneers at the distant center of the gathering.
The roads were too narrow among the canopies, too packed. She found an empty space for her cart and took a small basket with her. If she needed anything put in the cart, she would have the merchant’s servant, or perhaps the merchant himself, bring it.
She slowly walked through the innumerable colors of the market, her initial glee turning into a slow form of torture. Everywhere she turned there was something to make her smile. Everywhere she turned, there was something to remind her of all the things she didn’t have. Everywhere she turned, there were people who easily bought things she had to refrain from touching.
Eventually, when she’d had enough and she could feel the exhaustion returning, she went to the spice merchant and bought a large pouch each of cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, and cardamom, all the spices needed for the Felldesh order.
The spell merchants she saved for last.
Ever since the beginning of the Tothsin Age, when magic could be broken up into specialties assigned (and limited) to a trade, the spell merchants had become increasingly powerful. Some used their position to spy on those who wanted to learn more than what they should, and some used their position to gain money from those who wanted to know more than what their trade decreed. Krysilla had always been on the lookout for the latter.
She gazed longingly at the spines of the books, taking note of the trades printed on each one. Growing Food. Healing. Spells for the Locksmith.
Her gaze lingered on that title. When she had been young, before her father died, she had found a few pages from a locks
mithing book. Curious, and unaware of the consequences if she should be caught, she’d learned what she could. Once she’d gotten somewhat good at it, she tried to show off for a boy she liked.
His horrified reaction—and warning to never, ever, try her hand at it again—had been her first introduction into the idea that some magics could never be learned.
Still, she thought of those spells and couldn’t help a smile at how wonderful it had felt to unlock something.
“May I help you?”
She looked up at the merchant. “I—I’m looking for baking. Something to do with baking.”
“Fire, earth, water or air?”
Translated into her trade: oven, grain, liquid, or leaven. “Oven, please.”
He plucked out a couple of spell books from a pile. “Having trouble with it, Ma’am?”
“No. It’s...I’m very tired in the morning. I’d like a spell that doesn’t take much effort.”
He frowned. “Books won’t help you with that. It’d be better to get some sleep.”
“Yes, thank you. How much for the book?”
She considered buying the locksmith books as well. But she didn’t know where this merchant stood or what he might do. And she didn’t have time to stand around and wait. The sun was starting to get low in the sky. Instead, she bought the oven book, with its different perspective on the proper way to attach spells to the fire that baked the bread.
Feeling miserable, she slowly trudged down the street. Lejer would be disappointed. What he’d taught her was the culmination of years of baking. There was no need for a book when she had a teacher of his expertise.
But she’d wanted the feel of a spellbook in her hand, any book. The locksmith book.
The sound of a fiddle drifted over the crowd, a light, happy tune, and she wandered to it. Minstrels rarely came this far out, preferring the more populous cities, and citizens didn’t make their own music. The magic surrounding it was considered too wild and unpredictable for commoners to make on their own.