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[Late morning of Thursday, June 17 (day 382)]
[Sagert's Books]
It is rather a pleasant day; blustery but not cool. My legs feels rather better today, and I spend the morning on light errands. A stop by the library (really, I must suggest that they see about shimming up some of the shelves; I find that I am rather tired of the occasional volume dropping on me), and then the General Store and the bakery, and a pleasant stop at the Miskatonic before returning home.
I actually do manage an hour or so in the basement. Just planning, really, but I have a few ideas I would like to note down...
I am feeling quite refreshed when I come back up. Not exactly enough to go out again, but I set the sign out to indicate I am open, and brew up a cup of tea. Perhaps someone shall stop in; if not, well, I can certainly look forward to sitting and reading for a moment.
[Open to Samuel, and possibly others]
[Sagert's Books]
It is rather a pleasant day; blustery but not cool. My legs feels rather better today, and I spend the morning on light errands. A stop by the library (really, I must suggest that they see about shimming up some of the shelves; I find that I am rather tired of the occasional volume dropping on me), and then the General Store and the bakery, and a pleasant stop at the Miskatonic before returning home.
I actually do manage an hour or so in the basement. Just planning, really, but I have a few ideas I would like to note down...
I am feeling quite refreshed when I come back up. Not exactly enough to go out again, but I set the sign out to indicate I am open, and brew up a cup of tea. Perhaps someone shall stop in; if not, well, I can certainly look forward to sitting and reading for a moment.
[Open to Samuel, and possibly others]
no subject
Date: 2012-02-02 03:03 am (UTC)"I was a surgeon," I say, glancing reflexively at my hands. "I spent most of my time in a rather small town, but I did have the chance to visit New London on occasion... I suppose I could still manage some of the simpler aspects of the work, but there is little call for that here. There is quite a skilled physician in town, you know." For the moment; I really should see if I can do something about that this year.
I balance the cup on a saucer in one hand and start back out with a measured pace. The cup is not as full as one might like, but it does not spill, and I set it down on the counter as I make my way back into the store proper. "Not at present, though I do intend to browse your selections most thoroughly. Actually, it was a rather different sort of work I came here for," and he lifts the case he was carrying. "I had hopes that I could contract your services in binding a number of important loose pages into a book for safekeeping. Do you ever do that sort of thing?"
"Well," and I realize I am blinking a little. It is a reasonable question, certainly, only... "I have certainly done repairs, and have rebound books on occasion," I say, exploring the possibility. "I imagine I certainly could... is there a uniformity to the pages?" It is easier to address the particulars. "I am sure it could be done if not, but if it's a matter of binding sheets of different sizes and substances together, it's best to know at the beginning."
I have worked with my hands, and I certainly imagine I could do the work. I have just... I really must say I have never thought of myself as a tradesman.
no subject
Date: 2012-02-02 05:23 pm (UTC)"A surgeon," I say, impressed, as I pick up the tea cup with murmured thanks. "And one of two in town? This place is... unusual." I settle on the word with a bemused shake of the head, sipping the tea in silent reflection for a few moments afterward. Unusual doesn't quite cover it. Plenty of potable water, food, renewable electricity, law enforcement, a bookstore and library-- and both a working professional physician and a superfluous one.
To say nothing of the utterly strange experiences I've had with some of the townspeople. Now that I think about it, Mr. Laclos may have been the only citizen I've interacted with for any length of time since I got here that didn't make the hair on the back of my neck stand up at least once a conversation.
Perhaps Mr. Sagert will be the second. He's been impeccably polite, is clearly very well educated, and comports himself as one born into money or title, or both. Then again, five minutes into tea he may start prophesying, or decide he wants to see the inside of my chest cavity.
"I have certainly done repairs, and have rebound books on occasion. I imagine I certainly could... is there a uniformity to the pages? I am sure it could be done if not, but if it's a matter of binding sheets of different sizes and substances together, it's best to know at the beginning."
His speech does not change, remains polite and professional, but something on his face suggests he's been caught off guard. At first, I am at a loss as to why. It's not a typical request, certainly, but not outlandish. As he speaks of details, it becomes clear that it is not a matter of being beyond his capabilities. Perhaps he objects to the work itself?
"They are uniform. Sorted and numbered, as well. Here, have a look," I say, setting down my cup. I work the lid off the well-worn case and remove the first two sheets from the thick, rolled bundle inside. Putting the lid back on the case, I set it aside before spreading the pages out on the counter. They are maps, precisely and intricately inked by my own hand, and in a sense are some of my most valuable possessions. These two date back almost three years, detailing an area quite far to the southeast.
The first is topographic, meticulously detailed through the center where my route passed, with details fading to mere generalities of land features near the outer edge of the map. The second is of the same area, but has almost none of the first's contour lines, instead showing water sources, mineral deposits, forested areas, shelters, roads and trails, and so forth. For information I wish to hide from the casual observer, I use a system of Greek symbols. Both pages are numbered in two different ways: once with the order in which they should fall in the book, and then again, on their edges, with letters and numbers that let me know with which other maps they are associated, and where they fit together.
"I've been something of an explorer and cartographer for many years. You might say this is a portion of my life's work, and it's very important to me that it be adequately protected. Hence the need to have it well and securely bound." In the Order I had studied every old map I could get my hands on, maps of places dead and gone, some for two thousand years, some for a hundred. Looking at a map of a dead civilization really impressed upon you how tenuous everything was; mapping an emerging civilization made you feel like you were part of the birth of something entirely new.
no subject
Date: 2012-02-03 12:36 am (UTC)"It is," I say, "although I must say that it was rumours of Doctor Constantine which drew me here," a lie, but one I have told before and am quite comfortable with, "so the two are not quite unrelated. His skills extend beyond surgery, a fact for which I count myself grateful, even if his medicine could not fully alleviate the damage done to my hands."
I shake my head and turn to the matter of the papers Durand wishes to have bound. "They are uniform. Sorted and numbered, as well," and it is a pleasure to deal with this in an organized fashion. I do not place the area, though that means little. I set down my tea where I can be quite sure it will not spill, and lean over them. They are quite elegantly done, and the material should weather well...
"I've been something of an explorer and cartographer for many years," he says, drawing my attention. "You might say this is a portion of my life's work, and it's very important to me that it be adequately protected. Hence the need to have it well and securely bound."
"I can certainly appreciate that," I say, and for a moment I wish... ah, well, I suppose I can content myself with notes and memories while waiting to begin again. "May I congratulate you on the quality of your work? I assume--" and I catch myself. "I beg your pardon. Will you be having them bound along the edges?" I gesture towards them, "May they be handled?" I am sure they are sturdy enough, but the courtesy of asking is still in order.
no subject
Date: 2012-02-03 04:26 pm (UTC)I glance at his hands, but I do not ask the obvious question. Instead I merely offer quietly, "A terrible trial, for a man of an elite profession." Having many scars of my own that I do not tolerate others to come pawing at, I tend not to paw at others unless doing so gets me something I want. I do offer brief silent thanks to the cold, mechanical workings of the universe that it has not yet been my fate to suffer an injury that made my work impossible.
He compliments the quality of my work, and I nod my thanks. I'm long past any point in my life of needing my ego validated by others, but professional respect is valuable in its own right. It greases the skids of the kinds of informal networking on which I thrive.
When he asks if I want them bound along the edges, I nod. "In addition to the numbering, each one is oriented to north and marked with a compass. I've had to have this done quite a few times before, so I've developed something of a system." That much is true enough. Professional competency is a rare thing, so a system tends to make things run much more smoothly.
"May they be handled?"
"Of course. A man who spends his days among old books can be trusted to know how to handle things with the proper care." And a fastidious type, such as Mr. Sagert appears to be, isn't likely to be leaving greasy fingerprints on the paper. Over time, skin oils can do enormous damage to paper. When I was growing up, there were books and documents we were not allowed to handle without gloves, papers that could only be read in rooms so dimly lit that it seemed you read by starlight.
A lifetime ago. But still, I wish to see some things built to last.
"I trust you have access to materials of suitable quality? My apologies for even having to mention it, but I once had a man bind these for me with a leather cover that turned out not to be properly tanned. It twisted and cracked as it dried, and did considerable damage to my work."
no subject
Date: 2012-02-04 07:59 pm (UTC)"I trust you have access to materials of suitable quality? My apologies for even having to mention it, but I once had a man bind these for me with a leather cover that turned out not to be properly tanned," and really, even the thought is enough to make me cringe. "It twisted and cracked as it dried, and did considerable damage to my work."
"I can only imagine," I say in a slightly strangled voice. "Were you able to effect repairs? But yes; the tanner in town does rather sound work, and I will inspect anything I might use." I step back from the pages.
"What brings you to Excolo?" I say, curious. "Certainly you would not be the first individual I met again here, but I have not heard enough to say if there's anything of particular interest here." Particularly, perhaps, not since Constantine lost his gift...
no subject
Date: 2012-02-05 04:55 pm (UTC)One can love a thing, and still commit oneself to its destruction. Love even lends beauty to the act itself.
"Were you able to effect repairs? But yes; the tanner in town does rather sound work, and I will inspect anything I might use."
"I had to recopy a dozen of the maps and have it bound all over again, but ultimately there was no permanent loss." I had given serious consideration to having it bound with the hide of the man who had bungled it in the first place, but really, what do I know about proper tanning? It would have been the same problem all over again.
Not that the rest of the world would thank me for prolonging his miserable existence. It nags at me, to have tacitly rewarded incompetence. Perhaps someone else will excise him, where I failed. It is the way of things.
"What brings you to Excolo? Certainly you would not be the first individual I met again here, but I have not heard enough to say if there's anything of particular interest here."
"It's... complicated. I hadn't actually heard of this place until a few weeks ago." Finishing my tea gives me time to settle on an answer, and I set the cup down on the saucer. "I don't just make maps of the wilderness, I make records of human activity. Settlements, organizations, institutions. Technology. You might say I'm engaged in compiling the first real history since the bombs dropped."
It might be more accurate to say that I'm pruning humankind's passage through this new history, but I can't exactly say that. "I hadn't planned on staying long, but since I arrived I've had some unusual experiences and encounters. They suggest to me that there is a story here worth recording."
no subject
Date: 2012-02-05 08:07 pm (UTC)"It's... complicated. I hadn't actually heard of this place until a few weeks ago." I nod as he finishes his tea. "I don't just make maps of the wilderness, I make records of human activity. Settlements, organizations, institutions. Technology. You might say I'm engaged in compiling the first real history since the bombs dropped."
"Have you been to Bethlehem? The medical libraries there are--" I realize I am becoming effusive and catch myself-- "quite remarkable, both for scope and preservation." I understand that many of the advantages of the place are due to the construction that was there which predated the need to move underground, but the maintenance at least is impressive. Sadly not as well known as they could be, which I suppose can be attributed to the belowground establishment and the frankly unprepossessing landscape to be found above it. I would rather think it is that than that people are indifferent to the presence of such knowledge, or unwilling to make the effort to gain admittance. "Not that all of it is currently of use, but it does give people something to aim for. Although I suppose that there might be a greater need for compiling history in places that are not quite so established."
"I hadn't planned on staying long, but since I arrived I've had some unusual experiences and encounters. They suggest to me that there is a story here worth recording," and dear me, that sounds very nearly like the start of a seasonal ghost story. I must say I would not mind another unseasonal snow; the last was quite pleasant.
"I suppose you would have to investigate, as well as record," I say thoughtfully. "I do confess to some curiousity as to the nature of these encounters. There are certain local beliefs I have heard, you understand, and while I would not speak to their authenticity..." I trail off questioningly. "Would you care for some more tea?"
no subject
Date: 2012-02-05 10:42 pm (UTC)The enthusiasm in his voice catches me off guard, but I do my best to smile encouragingly. Apparently it's a subject on which he is quite impassioned. And though our opinions of the... meaning, of such a place might be diametrically opposed, I am all ears. Whatever I wind up paying for the work he does, it has been repaid a hundredfold already.
"Not that all of it is currently of use, but it does give people something to aim for.
Precisely the problem, of course. Instead of using their own faculties and powers to decide what they should aim for, they will substitute the ideas of a dead civilization. It isn't knowledge as such that concerns me, of course. I could care less whether they know about blood-borne pathogens, or the fetal development cycle. It is the philosophy implicit in forms and structures of knowledge with which I am concerned. Often, tragically, one cannot separate one from the other.
But I cannot speak of this, at least, not fully. Instead, I say "I've never been, but now that I know, I hope one day to go. It sounds like quite a sight."
"Although I suppose that there might be a greater need for compiling history in places that are not quite so established."
"It's more than that. They have an opportunity to make something new, to break completely with what came before. They might not be footnotes to some larger history. Somewhere out there might be the makings of a different history entirely." I've said more than I intend, so I trail off with an equivocal gesture.
He inquires after my strange encounters, and offers more tea. "No, but thank you. I don't allow myself too many comforts. Vows of the Order." In truth I've no desire to set him hobbling about again, much as I might like a moment to better gauge how much I should tell him. "I don't know precisely how to describe what I've experienced. Broken down and listed as mere phenomena they sound quite banal. But intuitively..." I shake my head.
"Both encounters were with people who were polite, genial, even warm." Warm scarcely covered young Alice's enthusiasm, but then, few words could adequately describe that contradictory child. A mystery I intend to unravel. "But at various points during the conversation, I caught glimpses of something, well, off about them. Eyes that hid an interior life scarcely human. Or speaking of things they should have no rightful way of knowing."
"I know it sounds strange. But if there is one thing I am not, it is being prone to flights of fancy. And in my travels I have learned to trust my instincts." I shrug. "What are these beliefs you mentioned?"