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By the ti we reached the second landing, my list had seventeen items on it. I considered that fairly impressive. I’d started the morning with fewer and fully expected to end with more.

That’s the thing about assessnts. You go upstairs intending to count the problems. You co back down having invented a brand new category for them. Which is technically progress if you’re the sort of person who thinks knowledge improves a situation even when the list doesn’t get shorter.

I had the notes from the last inspection in hand. Bram, as usual, had his hands. In his case that amounted to roughly the sa thing, just with better resolution.

"East side first," I said. "Better condition."

"Aye," he said.

He was already past and at the first east-facing door with the brisk confidence of a man who had never once considered that a wall might object to being consulted.

The room was what it had been before. There was more room in it than the fra technically permitted. I’d recorded that twice already and still hadn’t found a respectable asurent for it.

The walk from the door to the window took longer than it should. That had also been written down. Unexplained seconds tend to accumulate if you leave them unattended.

The Abyss-facing light ca in at an angle that had never corresponded to the window’s position. That was why I’d been adjusting the lamp schedule in careful incrents ever since the rooms were finished. Light that behaved badly was best handled with paperwork.

Bram placed both palms flat on the wall.

"There it is," he said.

"The extra room?" I asked.

"That too."

He moved his hands slowly across the plaster, patiently. Exactly the sa way he’d examined the east wall downstairs. Sa thod. Sa calm focus. The sort of air a man had when he was reading a language the wall had forgotten he knew.

"Th’residue," he said. "It’s in th’material itself. Not surface. Deep in."

He leaned forward and pressed his ear to the plaster.

"Like a dye gone right through th’cloth."

I looked at the wall. The wall looked exactly the way it always had.

Which was precisely why it had been placed on the list under matters requiring further attention without any accompanying explanation of what the attention would actually involve.

"Is that a problem for the work?" I asked.

"Problem’s th’wrong word."

He straightened up.

"It’s a property. Like grain direction. Or water mory in flood timber. Y’work with it or y’work against it. Workin’ against it costs twice th’labor for half th’result."

He shrugged slightly.

"Which is why sensible builders prefer cooperation when th’material offers it."

He walked over to the window and studied the light coming in from the wrong angle. He didn’t ntion the angle. That was the sa way people stopped comnting on an oddly hung door once they’d already walked through it a few tis.

"What d’y’call it?" he asked. "This property."

"I’ve had it listed as accommodation adjacency," I said. "Secondary effect."

He made a small sound. Not disagreent exactly. More the sound of a man hearing a description that had carefully catalogued all the symptoms while entirely missing the patient.

"It’s got a na," he said. "Older words."

Then he said the word.

It had more syllables than seed strictly necessary and the vowels were arranged like it had traveled through several languages before deciding to settle down here.

I wrote it down.

Then I looked at what I’d written.

"That’s going to be difficult to put on a contractor specification," I said.

"Never needed to put it on one before," he said easily.

He said it with the relaxed confidence of a man whose specifications had always lived inside his head where auditors couldn’t reach them.

"Second room?"

The second east room was identical to the first. Except the walk to the window took roughly four seconds longer.

I added that beneath the first room’s note with a question mark. Unexplained seconds tended to travel in groups.

Bram checked the wall the sa way. Palms first. Then ear.

After that he paused briefly. I’d co to recognize that pause. It was his version of checking a calculation before committing to it.

"Good bones," he said. "Th’residue’s not structural."

He tapped the wall lightly.

"Th’rooms have been in close company with sothin’ particular long enough to take on its character."

He nodded toward the plaster.

"Like a board beside a hearth for twenty years. Y’can’t get th’warmth out of it anymore. Even if th’hearth’s been cold a decade."

He knocked on the wall twice.

The second knock arrived half a second later than the first.

"Won’t fight th’work," he said. "Just needs to understand what th’work is before it’ll agree to it."

I added that to the notes. I also recorded the timing of the second knock.

That was exactly the sort of detail that liked to beco important later.

The lobby between the two sets of rooms was larger than the landing suggested it ought to be. By a margin I’d eventually stopped asuring.

At so point I’d simply begun thinking of it as the floor having made a decision about how much space it deserved. And then enforcing that decision.

Bram walked a slow circuit around the room with his hands clasped behind his back. He was reading the layout the way certain craftsn read timber grain or weather patterns.

"Good space," he said. "Wasted empty."

"It’s not currently anything," I said. "I use it for checks. There’s occasionally a draft I haven’t located."

He stopped in the center and looked into the middle distance. That was his way of looking at everything at once without alarming it.

"Common room," he said. "Second floor."

He turned slowly in a circle.

"Proper hearthside seatin’. A place guests sit longer than they ant to. Cards. Conversation. Whatever th’house runs to."

He finished the turn and studied the structure around us.

"Foundation’ll take it easy. Load distribution up here’s better than y’d expect from th’ground floor layout."

He nodded once.

"Whoever set th’bones knew what they were about."

I looked up at the space.

There was a faint pattern in the ceiling plaster running in the sa direction as the Walker’s corridor fog. I added it to the lamp schedule and moved on.

So observations beca more useful after they were written down.

"I’ll put it on the plan," I said.

"Aye."

He was already heading toward the west corridor.

The west-facing rooms held their earlier arrangents in the walls. The way old decisions lingered in a building long after everyone involved had forgotten why they were made.

Bram went to the first room and pressed his ear to the wall without prompting.

Then he stepped back.

He had the expression of a man who had just listened to sothing that was still halfway through a sentence it had started years ago.

"Prior occupancy," he said. "Hasn’t checked out."

"Been that way since before I opened," I said. "The east side’s been improving with the accommodation work. The west has been..."

"Waitin’," he said.

He ran a hand along the wall.

"Convinced th’situation’s temporary. Holdin’ th’room for soone who left."

He studied the floor. Then the ceiling. Then the floor again.

"Not gettin’ worse. Just stayin’ put."

He nodded once.

"We’ll want to have a word with it before th’work starts. In th’right season."

He tapped the wall lightly.

"So things clear better in a dry month. When th’material isn’t holding moisture as an argunt."

"Next month," I said.

That conclusion ca from several years of relevant experience and a growing suspicion that certain conversations with buildings required dry weather and patience.

"Next month," he agreed.

Outside the west-facing window the street below perford a maneuver.

I added it to the lamp schedule without looking directly at it. The eastern district had been joining the schedule since dawn and showed every sign of continuing the practice.

I’d deal with it once the assessnt finished. That seed like the respectable bureaucratic approach to inexplicable urban behavior.

The corner room sat at the end of the west hall.

I’d placed it on the list during the last inspection when the reading had shifted in a direction I hadn’t liked.

I opened the door.

It had shifted again.

Sa direction. Further along.

The room had the peculiar quality of a space organized around sothing that had left without filing the proper paperwork.

Very still.

The particular stillness of a room that had been still so long it had begun to believe that was its natural condition.

Bram stood in the doorway.

He said nothing longer than he usually said nothing. Under ordinary circumstances that wasn’t very long.

His hands moved slightly at his sides. Not reaching.

Just adjusting.

The way a craftsman’s hands adjusted when they were reading a material without touching it. Locating its edges through the air.

"Hm," he said.

"It’s moved since my last check," I said.

"Aye."

He stayed outside the threshold.

"Leave this one for last. After th’other work settles in."

He kept studying the room.

"Sothin’ in there has been patient long enough that a few more months won’t trouble it."

He glanced back toward the corridor.

"And y’want th’rest of th’floor comfortable before y’start that conversation."

He paused briefly.

"Whatever that conversation turns out to be."

I wrote: corner room, wait, floor first.

Then I wrote his final line exactly as spoken. So notes needed precision rather than efficiency.

We returned to the lobby and stood there while the lobby arranged its self-determined dinsions around us.

The ceiling pattern continued doing whatever it did.

The draft arrived from the sa unidentified direction it had always favored.

I still hadn’t located it.

"The rate," I said.

The assessnt was finished and the rate question had been warming in the background all morning like a kettle that wasn’t urgent but would eventually insist on being noticed.

"Aye," Bram said.

He put his hands in his pockets with the settled ease of a man who had already completed the logic in his head.

"I want th’hamr."

I looked at him.

"The hamr in the toolbox?" I said.

"Aye."

"The one that needs re-hafting."

"Aye."

He nodded calmly.

"I’ve got grip stuff. Been carrying it a while. Good stuff. Right application. Been waitin’ for th’right job to use it."

He shrugged.

"I’ll do th’re-haft as part of it."

I considered this carefully.

The hamr did need re-hafting. I’d wanted it done for months.

I hadn’t found anyone with the proper grip material yet. With tools, correctly was where the requirents began rather than where they ended.

Bram apparently possessed suitable grip material and had been carrying it around in anticipation of the correct application.

In return for the hamr he was offering a floor’s worth of work.

Including a clearing approach for the west rooms.

A plan for the lobby.

And whatever the next month eventually required.

With the re-haft included.

I examined the offer from the east.

Then the west.

Then both diagonals.

Every angle favored .

That was exactly the part I didn’t trust.

A rate that favored you from every direction was either a gift or a door that opened too easily.

Experience suggested it was wise to determine which before stepping through.

"I’ll need to think about it," I said.

Bram nodded once.

It was the nod of a man who had expected that answer and scheduled his afternoon accordingly.

Outside the west window the street shifted again.

I added the movent to the lamp schedule by feel without looking. The pencil was already in my hand.

The lobby maintained its peculiar dinsions.

The ceiling pattern continued its business.

The draft arrived faithfully from wherever it lived.

"More tea when we’re back down," I said.

"Aye," Bram said.

He was looking at the corner room door. His hands were still in his pockets.

He wore the expression of a man taking a asurent he didn’t bother writing down because he already knew exactly where it would fit.

I added rate, hamr, re-haft included, think further to the list.

Then I led the way to the stairs.

You are reading The Retired Abyss Innkeeper Chapter 27: The Rate Is Reasonable. The Rate Is Also a Hamme on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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