Saturday, July 10th 1790

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Glandera

With her hands on her hips, Hilde stared at her daughter. "I can tell by the tip of your nose that you know more. Tell me, where did this basket come from?"

Remorsefully, Glandera looked at the third delivery they had received this week. It was enough for the whole weekend. On the one hand, the young woman was grateful, but on the other, she was plagued by a guilty conscience.

"Well, I admit, I've met someone."

Her mum listened up. "Who is your patron?"

Glandera fended him off with raised hands. "No! Please, I can't tell you who it is. Not today."

"You know the consequences." Hilde pointed her finger at the table. "No bloke gives his beloved such valuable gifts without expecting something in return."

She rolled her eyes. "He asked if I was going on a date with him. But I said no."

"Does he want to meet you in secret?" Hilde's fingertips tripped on the table.

"No, where everyone can see us. And no, mum, he's not pushing me to do anything." In Glandera's head, the sound became a loud drumming. "I turned him down because I don't know him."

"If you don't meet him, you can't get to know him." Tired, Hilde dropped onto the chair. A long day at the market lay behind her.

"I know." The noise had stopped and she sighed.

"He's wealthy if he gives gifts like that." As if nothing had happened, Hilde helped herself from the basket. She rubbed a plum with her hands. "You should think about it. Or doesn't he have a happy face formation?"

"It's not that," Glandera replied, stretching and letting her mind wander. Ferron's skin was tanned and even. His short beard was always well-groomed and his thick dark hair shone in the sun. He was older than her, certainly in his early thirties, and expressed himself in an educated way, something she couldn't say about any other man she knew. She hadn't given it a second thought because she was so scared, but she thought he was handsome. She remembered the disappointed look on his face when she had turned down his invitations. Every time they met, he was friendly, if not caring, and accepted her boundaries. Her heart warmed. She shook her head vigorously - he was a magician, and the idea of meeting him seemed completely absurd to her.

Glandera said goodbye quietly, trotted up the stairs and retreated to her room. Lost in thought, she reached under the bed and pulled out the rock crystal. Today, she had received a perfect amethyst and a smoky quartz as a gift from him. But why did she know their names? She sat down on the chair in front of the window and placed the quartz crystals on the windowsill in the sunlight. Then she folded her hands and rested her chin on them. The jewels were at eye level and the crystal surfaces were so perfect that they reflected her face. She stared into them thoughtfully, and the longer she looked at them, the more she noticed the tiny needles and inclusions.

As carefully as if it were a newly hatched chick, she stroked the rock crystal with her fingertip. She smiled as the familiar tingling sensation began. For her, these stones meant the world. Did the magister know that? Wouldn't a man rather give his beloved a rose? She was poor and without a dowry she couldn't even find a husband. What on earth did this earth mage want with her?


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