Searing, 4600
Dorothea saw the man before he saw her. She shouldn’t have been surprised. She should have been prepared, but Sven’s presence at the well caught her off guard. She wasn’t out here much, and somehow she forgot men drew water too, sometimes.
It’s not that she wasn’t allowed out in the town square, right on the other side of her wall. It’s just that when she hit puberty the daily task of collecting water was given to younger sisters, so there was no reason. It’s the same with most of her chores out of the house. She used to spend mornings up in the pasture as a girl, and she’d help clean the Men’s House after a festival, but not in years. Now it was all spinning every day unless there was a special reason to be out and about.
Her father stressed how dangerous men can be and that she needed to be protected. She’d felt enough stares and fended off enough pawing hands to know he was right, but she still felt like she was being punished for being pretty. Anthea’s assurances that she’d have her pick of husbands to compensate rang hollow. The parade of worthless second cousins her Baba brought to the house for a formal introduction did not inspire confidence. They weren’t all stupid, necessarily, but none had anything interesting to say. They were boring. She felt she could do better, but she couldn’t imagine what better might be like.
What she’d heard about Sven was fascinating, by contrast to the local talent. Tall and strange looking, a skilled storyteller and musician, he could read and write and had a “noble bearing”, everybody said. He’d already made the family an exquisite set of dishes, free of charge, so his talent as a ceramicist was apparent. He was someone worth meeting.
It didn’t hurt that she’d spied him bathing in the sea and saw his tattoos. A set of waves that made her think of music for some reason, and a golden spiral. She’d love to ask about them somehow, if she could manage it without anyone else knowing she’d seen him undressed. That would only get both of them in trouble.
Dorothea thought of him frequently, but on this particular trip to the well she was only thinking about her water pump. She’d been called to set it up because the water was low and it was taking too long to use the bucket. Her water pump, a screw in a long wooden tube really, could make the whole thing a lot faster and easier, and no one else quite knew how it worked. So when the water was low, she got a knock on the door.
At home she typically wore a simple shift on a hot day, light and airy. Today, not thinking she’d see anyone except the family, she put no effort into her appearance. She hurriedly threw on a dress, tied on her headscarf, and walked out of the house. No make up, hair leaking out from under the scarf in every direction, dress looking untidy. Not a good look.
When she saw Sven and realized she’d rather look her best, it was already too late. He smiled at her as she approached and she nodded in acknowledgement. She didn’t return the smile in a flirtatious way but looked at him confidently before blushing and breaking eye contact. She gripped the water screw a little tighter in her hands.
“Out of the way,” she told the children and old ladies who were gathered around the rim of the well. Then she bent over the edge and started lowering her contraption down towards the bottom.