Itâs been three days since Lutzâs older brothers promised to make hairpin parts for me. Today is the day I go to pick them up.
While secluded at home for the last few days, I managed to complete enough flowers for two hairpins. If you include the one I made before, I was only able to make three out of the whole twenty. All the rest were made by my mother and Tory. The sheer difference in speed is pretty depressing. The two of them, as before, seemed to race against each other while making their flowers. Toryâs speed has improved immensely by now, and between the two of them they made twelve more pinsâ worth of flowers over the last three days. Right now, theyâve split up the work to get the last pin finished.
âIâm gonna go over to Lutzâs house now. I gotta go pick up the pins and give them their money,â I say. âHave fun,â say the two of them, in monotone unison. Neither of them even look up, theyâre so engaged in their work.
I put fifteen medium copper coins in a small coin purse and walk out the front door. I head down the stairs, exit the building, walk through the water well plaza, start climbing the stairs of the building thatâs basically in the front.
Lutzâs home is on the sixth floor, but theyâve rented two floorsâ worth of space. Thereâs lots of stairways, and going up and down them is really difficult, but the interior is spacious. Even though thereâs four boys living there, itâs not actually that cramped. Lutz, however, says that itâs full of all sorts of craftsmanâs tools and thereâs a lot of space set aside for work, so itâs not really as big as it sounds.
I knock on the door and announce myself, and after a moment the door swings open with a creak, revealing Auntie Carla.
âGood afternoon, Auntie Carla. Are the boys home? Iâm here to pick up some handiwork that I asked them to make for me.â
âThey are!â she says, beaming. âTheyâve been waiting restlessly for you all morning.â
Once she says that, her face darkens a bit. She furtively glances around a bit, then leans in, speaking in a lower voice.
ââŚHey, Maine. Lutz is really serious about being a merchant, isnât he? Heâs being very stubborn, so the mood in the house has been pretty bad lately. Even still, he doesnât look like heâs going to back down. Wanting to be a merchant isnât something to tear up a family over! Donât you agree?â
Iâd already heard from Lutz that things werenât going particularly well for him at home, but this looks more serious than Iâd thought. He may be worried, but Lutz does not back down. After all, heâs already made up his mind that heâs going to be a live-in apprentice if he has to.
âI donât think I can answer that, Auntie Carla. Lutz is the one whoâd make that decision, you know?â
An outsider like me butting into a parent-child dispute is only going to sow more discord, so I just tilt my head doubtfully to one side. Carla, having not gotten the agreement she was looking for, frowns sourly, her lips pointed.
âWell, I guess youâre right. If Iâd had a girl, sheâd do what her parents said, but boys just donât listen to anything. Theyâre so disagreeable.â
Well, as for me, I have no real intention of living my life like my parents want me to. Iâll just keep that to myself, though.
Auntie Carlaâs grumblings show no signs of stopping. Her sons, very much used to how troublesome their motherâs ranting could be, stay out of sight lest they get dragged up into it, and Auntie Carla hasnât yet invited me inside. I should just politely agree with her and head her off before she gets really going. Unlike the older ladies who are more than willing to have long conversations outside by the water well as snow piles up around them, I have no particular desire to stand here and chat in this freezing entranceway.
âIt must be rough living with four boys, Auntie Carla.â
âIt is! And they donât even appreciate how hard theyâre making it on me. You know, the other dayâŚâ
Ahh⌠crap. I have a feeling Iâm going to be out here forever.
At about the time I start to wonder if I should just start over entirely, I hear Lutz call out from within the house.
âHey, Mom. Didnât Maine come to pick up that handiwork? She needs to get it before the snow starts falling, so I think sheâs in a bit of a rush. Itâs also really easy for her to get sick, so let her in, please!â
âAh, thatâs right. Come in, Maine.â âThank you,â I say.
Lutz and I exchange glances. You seriously saved me, thank you so much, I say silently. Sorry my mom talks so much, he replies.
Finally, Iâm able to enter Lutzâs house. It really is warm in here compared to outside.
âLutz,â I say, âdid your big brothers finish their work? And did you make sure to practice your math?â
âYeah.â ââŚMaine, are you perhaps the one teaching Lutz how to do math?â
Lutzâs mother, seemingly having listened in on our conversation, asks that question in a somewhat pointed voice. Thereâs an undercurrent of âdonât make my life any more difficultâ buried in there, which I completely disregard, instead turning to smile up at her.
âYeah! Iâve been helping with math at the gates.â
âAhh, youâve been helping your father, then? Thatâs so wonderful. It would be really nice, though, if Lutz would help his father out with his own apprenticeship.â
In this world, a young girl generally helps her parents out with their work until she gets married to a boy that her parents introduce her to. Then, she helps her husband with his work. If she were in a rural farming area, sheâd be helping out with farm work, so sheâd marry a farmer.
In other words, while I, the daughter of a soldier, have been studying various things, others have had the expectation that itâs so that I can eventually become the kind of wife that can support a soldier. It is actually really difficult to be the wife of a soldier, with their irregular work hours and such, and whether or not sheâs able to adapt to it depends largely on if there are other soldiers in the family and if she already understands what the job entails.
I wonder if Carla had heard that my father is letting me help him out at the gate to help me with my future prospects? Unfortunately, Iâm rocketing along the path towards my merchantâs apprenticeship, and have not even the tiniest shred of an intention of becoming the wife of a soldier.
As I head deeper into the house, Lutzâs brothers are lying in wait, gripping hairpins in each hand. When I get close, they all simultaneously stand up, shoving their fistfuls of pins in my face.
âHey, Maine! Take a look.â
âI got these done in no time at all.â âI think these are perfect!â âW-whoa!â I stammer. âLine up! By year!â
Having a whole bunch of sharpened hairpins thrust into my face is actually terrifying. I wave my hands frantically as I dodge out of the way. In a flash, the three of them line up in order of age, just like I asked. One by one, I examine each hairpin and deliver them their pay. Not a single step had been skipped. The smooth finish and expert craftsmanship causes a smile to float across my face.
âAll three of you did way better than Lutz did! You really are professionals. Tory and Mommy are better than me at what Iâm making at home, too. Hey, guys! Do you think I could ask you to help me with my handiwork this winter, too? Iâd have to wait to pay you until the spring, but the pay would be the same.â
âYeah, leave it to us!â
The three older brothers agreed to the work with big smiles. Thanks to the fact that theyâre going to be doing the actual handiwork, Lutz should be free to focus all of his efforts on studying.
âLutz, did you do the calculations? How much is it?â
âSix thousand leon, so six large copper coins. âŚIs that right?â
This time, Lutzâs older brothers made fifteen pin parts. Since each one makes him four medium copper coins, thatâs six large copper coins in total. Heâs making a killing just off of the commission.
âYep, thatâs perfect! Letâs keep practicing calculations like that. Iâm gonna go bring these home now and finish them up; how does going to Mister Bennoâs shop tomorrow sound?â
âSounds good to me.â
By the time I gather up the pins and return home, the final decorations have been completed. I work with Tory and my mother to sew everything together and finish off each pin.
âIâm gonna go bring these to the shop tomorrow and bring back the rest of the money, okay? You guys were so fast, I couldnât keep up with the amount of money I already had.â
When Iâd originally asked Benno to give me some money in advance, I thought that weâd wind up delivering only ten hairpins. Iâm actually kind of shocked that we managed to make twenty. Both my motherâs raw determination in the face of money and Toryâs massive speed increase were far beyond anything I could have imagined.
âYeah, Tory, youâre amazing! Weâll be able to make so many of these this winter.â âRight! Letâs work hard and make a bunch!â
I must tip my hat towards Tory, who is walking steadily along the road of becoming a sewing beauty. I simply cannot compare.
The next day, Lutz and I head for Bennoâs shop, completed hairpins in hand. As we walk along the cobbled road, Lutz asks me a question.
âHey, Maine. Do you have any other things you can to sell?â
âHuh?â âMaster Benno told me that if you wanted to do anything about the devouring, you need a lot of money. When we start selling paper in the spring, it looks like weâll sell it for a really high price, though, but if you had anything else, then⌠If you think of something, Iâll make it, after all.â
Seeing the honest worry in his face, I start to think if thereâs any new products I could come up with to do something about the devouring.
âHmmm, let me thing. All the things Iâve come up with until now that can earn a lot of money are things aimed at wealthy people, huh.â
Itâs obvious that everyday necessities are goods that require spending constant amounts of money. Even the hairpins, though, if we increase the quality of the thread and change the designs, the pricing will be way different, and paper made from the very rare tronbay will be more expensive as well. As such, if we want to make a ton of money, what we need are products that the upper class are likely to want.
âI donât really have a clue what wealthy people want, though. Rinsham, hairpins, and paper are all things that used to be all around me.â
âMan, your world must have been amazingâŚâ
Lutz, whoâs fully aware of the fact that I have memories that arenât just Maineâs, is not only not creeped out by it, but is actually interested. So, when itâs just the two of us talking, thatâs the only time I donât have to keep my memories of Japan purposefully concealed.
As Iâve only become more and more nostalgic about it, I havenât been able to say anything but the most amazing things about it, so I think the image Lutz has of Japan is that of an amazing utopia. To me, it certainly was a utopia compared to here, if only because of the proliferation of bookstores and libraries. Even now, if I could, Iâd go back in a heartbeat.
âI guess I could try taking hints from âdollar storesâ and think of things that could improve peopleâs daily lives? Maybe improving soap, or making more stylish candles? I made some herb candles last year, but I guess those might be a good idea.â
âHerb candles?â asks Lutz, tilting his head to one side and frowning. âDuring last yearâs winter preparations, the candles were extremely smelling, so I added herbs to some of them to try to eliminate the smell. I found some that smelled good, but I also found a bunch that synergized terribly and smelled awful, too. My mom told me not to mess with things I shouldnât and forbade me from making them this year.â
While I was laying in bed, Iâd said that I wanted to make herb candles, but my mother immediately refused and strictly forbade me from leaving my bed. That was absolutely not just out of concern for my health, but probably much more that she was worried about the candles Iâd make.
âMan, you get in trouble a lot.â
âUrgh⌠Trial and error is an indispensable part of making things! For some other ideas, my baskets and lacework were pretty popular, so I wonder if I could make some other kind of âarts and craftsâ⌠wait, no, âarts and craftsâ arenât usually very useful at all.â
Even while casually dismissing my own idea, I dig through my memories from my Urano period for any useful sort of arts and crafts.
âI have absolutely no idea what youâre talking about. In the end, what _can we do?â
No matter what we make, weâll need to start by making all the tools weâll need for that, just like we did with the paper. When I think about that, all of my will to actually do any of that instantly vanishes. Honestly, if itâs not going to be something that can immediately improve my own life, I actually canât summon up very much energy.
âUmmm, I think my biggest problem right now for coming up with new products is that I really canât get fired up for making a bunch of tools for things I wonât actually use in my own life.â
âYou have to!â yells Lutz. âDo you want to die?!â âItâs not that Iâm not worried, itâs just that Iâm not very enthusiastic for making things I donât think are necessities, like, next up is a bookâŚâ âHey, wait! Youâre the only one actually saying that if you yourself donât think somethingâs essential then nobody else is going to buy it! Think of something we can sell!â
Lutz is a little teary-eyed, maybe from getting a bit too agitated. I pat him gently on the shoulder.
âLutz, you should calm down a bit.â
âYouâre the one making me agitated!â âYeah, youâre right. Sorry, sorry.â
As I soothe Lutzâs nerves, somebody suddenly grabs my head from above.
âAaah!â
âJust what are the two of you talking about in the middle of the street? People are laughing; was that supposed to be funny?â
When I hear the familiar sound of Bennoâs voice, I look around my surroundings. Just as he says, I can hear people chuckling as they watch the two of us with small smiles. My face goes red with embarrassment, and I channel my urge to lash out angrily into a fierce glare up at him.
âMister Benno, why might you be here?â
âIâm on my way back from the workshops. What about you two?â âWe finished the hairpins and were going to deliver them to you.â âAh, really? Then, letâs go.â
Benno promptly picks me up and starts walking off at an impatiently brisk pace. From over his shoulder, I see Lutz having to jog to keep up.
He doesnât even put me down once we enter the shop, instead carrying me to his office and setting me next to our usual table. I climb up into a chair, then pull the hairpins from my tote bag, lining them up on the table in front of me.
âCounting the ones we delivered before, this makes a total of twenty,â I say. âPlease look them over.â
ââŚGreat, now I can sell hairpins, too. The baptismal ceremony is next Earth Day, so this is pretty urgent.â
Since thereâs nobody in my house with any connection with this seasonâs baptismal ceremony, I donât particularly care about the details, so I nod politely without paying much attention to what he was actually saying. Then, I realize there was a new vocabulary word I hadnât heard before.
ââŚHey, Lutz. Whatâs Earth Day?â
âWhat?! What are you saying⌠Earth Day is⌠Earth Day, right?â
Since it seems that Lutz canât actually explain it, he passes the buck on to Benno. Benno sighs, then starts explaining it to me.
âTheyâre the names of the days that constantly cycle around. Water Day, Sprout Day, Fire Day, Leaf Day, Wind Day, Fruit Day, and Earth Day, you know?â
Huh? âYou know,â he says, but I donât actually now. This is literally the first time Iâm hearing it. Are these the days of the week?
âSpring is the season of water, when the snow melts and the sprouts start to grow. Summer is the season of fire, when the sun is the closest and the leaves are growing. Autumn is the season of wind, when the cold air is blowing and the fruits are ripe. Winter is the season of earth, when all life is sleeping. Thatâs why Earth Day is the day of rest, when we close the shop.
Earth Day is basically Sunday then. Got it. Since my mother had days off on fixed intervals, I knew that the concept of days in a week technically existed, but since thereâs no calendars in my home, my dad has an irregular schedule, and nobody ever actually mentioned any of the days by name, so I just didnât know them. So, the days of the week have names? Perfect.
âHuh,â says Lutz, âI didnât know that. I knew what the names were, but I didnât know what they meant.â
âThat kind of discussion happens around baptism time. The baptismal ceremonies for each season happen on the first day of that season, so the winter ceremony is on Earth Day.â âAh, I see.â
Since thereâs neither garbage pickup days nor any calendars, the average working person, in their day-to-day lives, doesnât need to know about any other day besides their weekly day off. If the subject isnât specifically brought up at all, you can live your life without needing to think about it.
Even when making arrangements with people, we havenât needed to use anything besides saying how many days in the future itâll be. Perhaps thatâs preferred over the days of the week because itâs easier for both parties to understand? From what Bennoâs saying, this seems like itâs got primarily religious significance. Learning more about this subject makes me kind of uncomfortable, though, so I think it shouldnât be a problem if I just leave it at that for now.
âThatâs enough about the names of days. How about we finish settling this account?â
âSure, itâs not like itâs particularly useful information, ordinarily.â
We finalize the transaction. I take the money I owe Tory and my mother in medium copper coins, which I put in my coin purse, which then goes back in my tote bag. As for the rest of the money, I touch my card to Bennoâs to add it to my savings.
âThereâs one more thing Iâd like to talk to you about.â
As I was packing up to leave, since our business was finished and I didnât want to get in the way of Bennoâs work, he grabs my arm to stop me.
âDid you come up with any new product ideas? Thatâs what you were talking about on the way here, right?â
I have no idea for just how long heâd been listening to our conversation, but judging from the fact that his eyes are brimming with expectation, I see that it was him who kindled Lutzâs sudden passion in coming up with new ideas.
âŚWell, I do need the money, so itâs not like itâs that big of a problem.
For the last few days, the devouring fever has been steadily growing more restless, and pinning it down has taken longer and been more exhausting each time. To be perfectly honest, I canât be sure my body will last long enough for me to actually save up enough money. Thereâs no actual reason for me to openly say something so extremely pessimistic, so I shrug lightly shrug and decide to play along.
âMister Benno, can you think of any sorts of things that would sell for a lot of money? I think that if you want to make a lot of money, you need to sell something unusual or an expensive consumable item to the upper class.â
âSure, thatâs a good start,â he says, nodding, with a hint of a wry smile. âIf Iâm selling something unusual, though,â I continue, âthen it loses its meaning once everyone has it and it stops being unusual, but if someone uses a consumable item, that means they have to buy it again, so thatâs something you can make money off of forever. âŚNow that I think about it, about the rinsham, youâre probably making a lot of money off of that, arenât you?â âYeah, you could say that.â
All of the profits from the rinsham are exclusively Bennoâs, so he says that with a broad, self-assured smile. Incidentally, the high-quality rinsham should be done as well, so he should be starting to sell it soon. If I can think of something like rinsham, I think itâll earn quite a bit of money.
âMy gut feeling is that I should go with more beauty products after all, maybe? You canât underestimate the passion of a beauty-conscious woman, you know.â
Cosmetics are expensive. Even though theyâre expensive, there are many women out there searching for products that suit them and will spend unreservedly on something that might make them a little more beautiful. I think that the nobility and upper class especially will be willing to shell out for effective products. Benno, perhaps having exactly the same idea I am, looks at me with glittering eyes, leaning forward across the table with anticipation.
âWhat are you thinking?â
âUmmm⌠personally, I want a high-quality, good smelling soap. After that, since a lot of these are used during the winter, I think candles that have a variety of different scents pretty popular, maybe? I feel like the herb candles I made last week would make a decent product. After that, this is something that I donât need right now, but I think there would be solid demand for some kind of facial lotion.â
As things come to mind, I count them off on my fingers, and soon Iâm able to list off a few things that might be decent products to sell. Lutzâs eyes are shining too, now, as he looks eagerly at me.
âHey, Maine,â he says, âdo you know how to make all those things?â
âUmmm, I know enough to get started. Itâs like the paper, getting the materials and the tools is going to be a big effort, and thereâs going to be a lot of trial and error in order to get the fine details downâŚâ âAlright, give it a shot!â says Benno, grinning broadly as he points right at me. This is the face of a merchant running profit calculations in his head.
I mumble something to myself about counting chickens before they hatch, reaching up to rub at my temple.
âMister Benno,â I sigh, âitâs really easy to say âgive it a shotâ, but thatâs going to be all the way in the spring, and I donât even know if Iâll even be able to leave the house then⌠wha?!â
Honestly, will I be able to hold out until spring? Thatâs a risk, right? The instant the thoughts form in my head, the tight seal within me blasts wide open and the white-hot fever of the devouring surges out. It burns within me like a blazing pillar of fire. I canât surround it and push it back away like usual, and in my brief moments of panicked confusion it roars out, consuming my entire body.
âOi, Maine!â yells Lutz, noticing this sudden disaster. He stands up, his expression changing in an instant.
I find myself unable to put any real strength into my limbs, and I start to sway dangerously.
With my body burning up from a fever that canât be pushed away, Iâm aware that Iâm in the process of falling from my chair, but I canât manage to stop myself.
Itâs only the fact that my field of view suddenly changes that makes me realize Iâve hit the ground. Even though I hit the ground with a heavy thud, the heat raging within my body far surpasses the pain of the impact, and I donât feel it at all. My eyes, somehow still open, see two sets of feet rush up to me through the thick carpet.
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âMaine, are you okay?!â
Lutz grabs my arms to shake me. He instantly lets go, surprised by the heat, but grabs on even tighter. Benno turns around to face the door, not wasting a moment before ringing the bell to call Mark.
âShit!â he yells. âMark, get her to the old manâs right now!â
âHey!â yells Lutz. âDidnât you say you were going to make a book?! Didnât you say you canât lose yet?! Maine!! Keep it togetâŚâ âMark, âŚurry⌠âŚe prepareâŚâ
Their shouts gradually fade into the distance until I have no idea what theyâre saying anymore. Then, with a snap, I lose consciousness.