Dawn arrived as if the town had been reheating itself under thin glass. A pale band of light eased over Elena Hart’s worktable and pooled into colors: a strip of cobalt that looked scraped out of the sea, a sunflower yellow that seemed to laugh, a green like a rumor of moss. She sat on a low stool with her chin almost touching her knees so she could see the way light moved through her samples. Her hands—callused along the edges where glass met blunt metal—moved with the calm impatience of someone in the middle of a long conversation with the material. She scored, snapped, smoothed, and held each sliver up to the light as if it were a small, private verdict.
Miguel shuffled in with a crate that smelled faintly of packing straw and coffee. He carried everything like an offer: tentative, earnest, and slightly off-balance. One end of the crate tilted; two of the thinner sheets slipped like sullen fish. Elena reached, pivoted, and caught them before they could collide. She didn’t move quickly so much as precisely, fingers folding, wrists rotating, the way a knitter might shift a stubborn stitch.
“Nice of you to bring breakfast with the glass,” she said without looking up. The joke softened the morning air.
He grinned, cheeks pink. “Only the artisanal kind. Rosa put a bundle of custard tarts in there. She said the studio was at risk of becoming a monastery.”
Elena allowed herself a small laugh—unexpected, and immediately relished for how foreign it felt. “Tell Rosa the monks prefer biscuits.”
Outside, a gull cried and the town bell chimed the hour. There was something about the cadence that had nothing to do with her commission, which was good; the world functioning on its own schedule felt necessary. Around the corner someone was setting up the week’s market stall: a line of jars with honey gone dark and local cheese wrapped in wax. The smell of baked dough threaded itself into the studio when Miguel eased the crate open, and for a second Elena forgot the frame measurements written in neat pencil and dashed ink on a page clipped to the table.
She bent to a piece of glass the way a surgeon bends to a wound, leaning so that her shoulder shadowed the edge. Her tool rasped, leaving a whisper of grit that she brushed away with a soft cloth. The studio smelled of linseed and the faint metallic tang of flux, and that specific, shimmering dust of crushed color that settled into the cups of her palms like a small map.
There was a knock at the door soft enough to be polite and sharp enough to imply punctuality. Miguel wiped his hands and called a cheerful, “Be right out!”
The visitor was Reverend Lila Maye, smiling as if she had all the time in the world but had come prepared to spend only a portion of it on small talk. Her cardigan was a warm faded mauve and she carried a thin file stamped with the community hall crest.
“Elena,” Lila said, eyes lighting at the sight of the colored panels. “They look like little windows into gossip.”
Elena snorted into a rag. “They behave like gossip as well—hard to pin down and even harder to make quiet.”
They stood and traded a sequence of practical questions—dimensions, mounting needs, timeline. Lila’s tone was all steam-rolled kindness: direct, efficient, and incapable of malice. She had a way of asking a logistical question that made it sound like a blessing. When she mentioned the wedding that would take place in the hall in two months, Elena felt the usual thud of nerves. A public piece changed the logic of her work; she liked to make things slowly in private, layering color and idea until the piece felt like it had its own quiet center. The hall demanded that the piece speak for many people at once.
Miguel hovered at the table, hovering like a small, worried bird. He had been with Elena for a year, apprenticed via Rosa’s recommendation, and his enthusiasm often collided with his coordination. He picked up a small shard and turned it over like a child admiring a joke.
“Rosa says the town’s lighting festival is next week,” he offered, as if rehearsing civics. “They’re putting lanterns along the promenade, and she says your glass would look nice next to them.”
Elena’s fingers paused mid-wash. The idea of her work out in public—hung in the evening with lamps and chatter—made something warm and dangerous pull at her ribs. She had learned over years to speak softly about ambitions, to treat them like fragile cuttings. “The festival is nice,” she murmured. “But the hall window is the priority.”
Lila opened her file and spread a set of photographs like an offering. “This is the room,” she said. Elena leaned close to see the floorboards and the long tongue of windows along the side. The ceiling had been opened up during the renovations to expose the beams, and now the place felt less like a box and more like a chest with the lid thrown back. “We want the window to tell a story about the town’s seasons—work and celebration and quiet mornings like this. We want something that will say the right thing at weddings and community meetings alike.”
Elena’s nails brushed a note at the edge of the photograph and she could feel the familiar weight of responsibility. She stood, smoothing her apron. The first day of a commission always felt like walking into a dark room with a lamp—the same illumination, but different terrain. She enjoyed the challenge. It was the social part—the necessity of telling other people how to look at the light—that frayed her nerves.
Before Lila left, she handed Elena the official dimensions: the central bay, the supporting mullions, the intended mounting points. “Take your time with the palette,” she said. “But remember the first wedding is in two months.”
Elena imagined herself fitting color into architectural ribs. Time would be measured in cutting, leading, soldering. It was the arithmetic of making: length and tone, patience and heat.