Elin had learned, as all apprentices in the Hall of Wards learned, to listen for the subtle conversations that crystal made when it was content. The vow-shards hummed in frequencies that did not belong to ordinary sound: a clear, bright vibration like a bell under water, a susurration that answered to patience and to promises kept. Elin moved among them like a person tending a garden, hands steady, breath practiced. She called herself a Glasswright and wore the title as she wore her tools — close to the skin, impossible to shrug off.
Morning light poured into the Hall through high arched windows, sliding along rows of mounted shards so that each one threw a private constellation on the stone. Each shard carried a vow: a merchant’s oath to keep scales balanced, a ferryman’s pledge to never abandon a passenger on a treacherous crossing, a vow from a housemaid that steadied hearths through winter. Elin believed in the holiness of those small shapes. She believed the city’s safety was stitched together, held in place, by a lattice of promises with the Hall at its center. She tended the lattice as if it were a body and she, a careful physician.
She worked with tools that looked more like instruments of prayer than instruments of craft — soft-tipped glass brushes, a fine-carved rod that coaxed resonance without strain. Her apprenticeship had been strict, a long choreography of breaths and syllables. She could feel when a shard lost the fullness of its note; she could tell, without consulting the registers, whether a vow had been renewed on time. Little rituals threaded everything: the small benediction she breathed into a newly polished shard, the way she set a fragment back into its frame and whispered gratitude so that the shard would not feel abandoned. Marta, her apprentice, moved beside her, eager and clumsy in the way of youth, learning the cadence of reverence.
There were small, private superstitions too. Elin had a habit of pressing her palm to a shard’s face and saying thank you for what the vow had kept — for the bridges that did not splinter, for the wakeful watchfulness of cooks who carried fire safely. Sometimes she let her fingers linger on a shard as if on a sleeping animal, feeling for even the faintest hairline of strain. That morning, as she made her rounds, a shard she called “stable” shivered beneath her touch with a freckled fissure that had not been there the week before: fine as a spider’s breath, almost invisible except in the angle of the sun. She would note it on the ledger later and smoothe it with the steady song of tempering, but the line made her throat tense. The lattice lived and aged like any organism; sometimes a crack began for reasons no artisan could explain.