I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities
Chapter 333: The Last Day
The barter market was in the south quarter, three streets from the lodgings, in a section of Seorak that the current currency system had stopped reaching at some point and that had developed its own logic in the absence.
Mara found this interesting.
Not the barter itself — she had bartered in Oakhaven since she was seven, the specific economy of people who had things other people needed and no reliable medium of exchange between them. The interesting part was the taxonomy. The Seorak barter market had developed a classification system for goods that was entirely local, built from the specific resources of the valley’s pre-consolidation economy, and the classification system was visible in how the vendors arranged their stalls.
She walked through it reading the arrangement.
Denro walked beside her with the open attention he brought to new places — the attention of someone who had grown up at the base of a mountain and had developed a tolerance for the unusual but who was still genuinely encountering the world for the first time in most of its forms.
"It’s organized by what things come from," he said. "Not by what they are."
She looked at him.
"The textile stalls," he said. "They’re grouped with the dye stalls and the wool stalls. Not with the clothing stalls. Because they’re all part of the same production chain rather than the same final product."
She looked at the textile section. She looked at the dye stalls beside them. She looked back at Denro.
"Yes," she said.
He looked pleased in the specific way he looked pleased when he had identified something correctly — the thirteen-year-old quality of someone who had been getting things wrong often enough that getting one right felt worth acknowledging.
She walked toward the textile section’s third row.
The vendor was in her seventies. She had the quality of someone who had been doing the same thing for a very long time and had arrived at a specific mastery within it, the economy of motion that came from ten thousand repetitions of the same gestures. She was sorting fabric samples when they arrived, the pre-consolidation weave technique visible in the specific way the threads crossed, the pattern language that the current cultivation system’s standardization had not found useful and had therefore not maintained.
Mara looked at the fabric. She looked at the arrangement of samples. She looked at the vendor.
"The pattern language," she said. "The crossing sequence. It’s not decorative."
The vendor looked up. She looked at Mara for a moment with the expression of someone updating their assessment of a variable.
"No," she said. "It’s not decorative."
"It carries information," Mara said. "In the sequence. The way the threads cross encodes something."
The vendor set down the sample she had been sorting. "Sit down," she said.
They were there for two hours.
Denro sat on a low stool beside the stall and listened with the specific quality of someone who had decided this was interesting and was going to find out why. He did not contribute to the conversation. He understood that his contribution was attendance rather than content and he was comfortable with this.
The vendor’s name was Sera. She had inherited the stall from her mother who had inherited it from her mother who had been running it since the pre-consolidation period’s last generation. The textile tradition she maintained was not a tradition the current cultivation system had any record of, because the current cultivation system had built its records after the standardization and the standardization had not included this.
She explained the pattern language.
Mara listened with the complete attention she brought to all information worth understanding completely. She did not write in the ledger during the conversation. She would write after. The ledger was for filing. The conversation was for receiving.
What the patterns encoded: local history. Not in the narrative sense — in the data sense. Specific information about the valley’s pre-consolidation period. Weather patterns, harvest records, the locations of cultivation-relevant mana concentrations in the terrain. Information that the pre-consolidation community had decided was worth preserving and had found a medium for preserving that would survive the standardization, because nobody who performed the standardization had thought to look at textile patterns for encoded data.
"Why textiles," Mara said.
"Because everyone wears them," Sera said. "Documents can be burned. Libraries can be closed. Fabric goes with you."
Mara looked at the sample in her hands. She thought about the other ledger in her jacket. She thought about carrying things in forms that survived.
"You’ve been maintaining this alone," she said.
"My family has," Sera said. "For four generations."
"Does anyone else in the market know the pattern language."
Sera looked at the stall beside hers. She looked at the one across the row. She looked back at Mara. "No," she said. "Not anymore."
At the end of the two hours Sera reached under the counter and brought out a small piece of fabric, palm-sized, the pre-consolidation weave, a specific pattern in the crossing sequence. She set it on the counter between them. "For asking correctly," she said.
Mara looked at the fabric. She looked at Sera. She picked it up carefully and put it in her jacket pocket alongside the mountain stone Denro had given her, the two things sitting together in the way of things given by people who had something worth giving and had found the right recipient.
"Thank you," she said.
Sera looked at her for a moment. "Come back," she said. "If you’re ever in Seorak again."
"I will," she said.
They walked back through the barter market at the noon hour.
Denro was quiet for a while, which was unusual. He walked beside her with the specific quality of someone processing something they hadn’t expected to need to process.
"She’s been keeping it alone," he said eventually.
"Her family has," Mara said. "For four generations."
He was quiet again. He looked at the street ahead. He looked at his hands. "That seems very lonely," he said.
Mara looked at him. It was the correct observation, delivered with the thirteen-year-old directness of someone who had not yet developed the adult habit of dressing accurate observations in qualifications.
"Yes," she said. "It does."
He nodded. He put his hands in his pockets. They walked.
She thought about four generations of one family maintaining a pattern language nobody else could read, in a market in a declining city, in fabric samples the current cultivation system had looked at and found decorative. She took out the other ledger. She opened it to a fresh page and wrote while walking, the charcoal moving in the deliberate way it moved when she was capturing something before the precision of it faded. She closed it and put it back in her jacket beside the stone and the fabric.
Denro watched her do this without commenting. He had learned that Mara writing in the other ledger was not a moment for commentary. It was a moment for presence.
He was correct about this.
The archive at the afternoon hour.
Kaito had taken Ashe somewhere in the city. Vane was in the third room alone with Nyx. The lamp at its reading angle. The cedar case closed now, the three documents returned to their preservation configuration, but the table still carrying the quality of a surface that had held something significant recently.
The room was quiet.
Nyx had been looking at the alcove wall for several minutes without speaking, the opal eyes running at low output, some interior process running its course. Then she reached into her bag.
She took out something that was not the cedar case.
Smaller. Thinner. Personal paper rather than archive stock — the specific quality of something made to travel rather than to be stored, worn slightly at the fold lines from being folded and unfolded many times over a long period. She set it on the table between them.
He looked at it.
The script was dense and precise, the letterforms close together, the margins tight. Every line was full. It had the quality of someone writing down everything they could before the writing became impossible. He looked at it for a long moment and did not recognize it. Not eastern. Not any continental variant he had encountered in two years of the Academic District’s library or in three weeks of the archive’s pre-consolidation collection. Not anything he had a reference point for at all.
He looked at Nyx.
She was looking at the parchment. After a moment she reached across the table and turned it slightly, orienting it toward herself, and she read something from it. Silently, but with the fluency of someone reading in their own language rather than translating — the eyes moving at the pace of understanding rather than the slower pace of decoding. She read three or four lines. Then she stopped.
She looked at the parchment for a moment longer.
Then she folded it along its established creases, the motion practiced and careful, and put it back where she kept it.
She looked at him.
He looked at her.
He did not ask. The question was present in the room and they both knew it was present and he let it sit there, filed, because asking before she was ready to answer was not how he operated and she knew this about him and the knowing of it was visible in the specific way she held his gaze — steady, assessing, finding what she was looking for.
She looked at the lamp.
"It connects to the archive," she said. "Not in the abstract. Specifically. To what the archive is pointing toward." She looked at him. "When I’m ready to tell you what it says, I will. It isn’t today." She paused. "I wanted you to know it exists."
He looked at the place on the table where the parchment had been.
He looked at her.
"All right," he said.
She looked at him for a moment longer with the opal eyes at their full presence, reading the response with the Dreamscape’s specific quality of attention — not invasive, just thorough, the way she read everything that mattered.
Whatever she found seemed to satisfy the question she had been asking.
The lamp burned. The cedar panels held their preservation smell. Outside, the afternoon was running its course through Seorak’s quiet streets, the city at the hour when most of its business was done and what remained was simply the day finishing itself.
"The market," she said. "Did Mara find what she was looking for."
"I don’t know what she was looking for," he said. "She rarely tells you in advance."
"No," Nyx said. The corner of her mouth moved, genuine and small. "She wouldn’t."
The archive held its quiet around them. The lamp burned at the angle she had set it at on her first day here, six weeks ago, when this room had been empty of everyone except herself and the cedar panels and whatever the archive had been waiting to give to the right person.
It looked different now. 𝐟𝕣𝗲𝕖𝕨𝗲𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝗲𝚕.𝗰𝚘𝐦
Not the room. The room was the same. The difference was simply that it was no longer empty.