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Book of a Thousand Days
Book of a Thousand Days
Book of a Thousand Days
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Book of a Thousand Days

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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From New York Times bestselling, Newbery Honor-winning author Shannon Hale comes a Brothers Grimm fairy tale retelling about mistaken identity and love gone awry.

When Lady Saren refuses to marry a man she fears, she and her maid, Dashti, are locked in a tower with just a tiny flap open to the outside world. As food runs low and the weather changes from broiling hot to unbearably cold, it is all Dashti can do to make them comfortable in their dark prison.

Not long after their confinement begins, Saren's suitors arrive--one welcome, the other less so--and she orders Dashti to speak to them. Impersonating Lady Saren is a crime punishable by death, but Dashti will have to play the role many times if she is to save them both from the tower and the dangers outside. As she takes control of their desperate situation, Dashti begins to understand her own astonishing talents and believe that even a low-born maid can find true love.

Don't miss any of these other books from New York Times bestselling author Shannon Hale:

The Books of Bayern
The Goose Girl
Enna Burning
River Secrets
Forest Born

The Princess Academy trilogy
Princess Academy
Princess Academy: Palace of Stone
Princess Academy: The Forgotten Sisters

Book of a Thousand Days

Dangerous


Graphic Novels
with Dean Hale, illustrated by Nathan Hale
Rapunzel's Revenge
Calamity Jack

For Adults
Austenland
Midnight in Austenland
The Actor and the Housewife
LanguageEnglish
Release dateDec 1, 2008
ISBN9781599904115
Book of a Thousand Days
Author

Shannon Hale

Shannon Hale is the Newbery Honor–winning and New York Times bestselling author of the Princess Academy series, The Books of Bayern, Book of a Thousand Days, Dangerous, and the graphic novels Rapunzel's Revengeand Calamity Jack, as well as the Ever After High and Princess in Black series, and the upcoming The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl for Marvel. She also wrote three novels for adults, including Austenland, now a major motion picture starring Keri Russell. She and her husband, the author Dean Hale, have four children and live near Salt Lake City, Utah. www.shannonhale.com @HaleShannon

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Rating: 3.993421096491228 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Good fairy-tale story!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A wonderful story.....a mixture of Mongolia, Genghis Khan & Maid Maleen.

    A young woman, Dashti, is bound by oath to Lady Saren, the daughter of a Lord...who is to be sealed in a tower for seven years. After three years they escape, only to find the town completely destroyed by the malevolent Lord who wishes to marry Lady Saren.

    I won't tell you more, but the story was so compelling, I read it in less than 6 hours.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Based on an lesser known Grimm's fairy tale, this delightful story explores themes of duty, loyalty, and love.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I really love Dashti. She manages to be unique in a somewhat cliche, or at least unsurprising, story. It's a delight to read. I love how strong Dashti is, her love for animals and spices, and how she grows throughout the story. Even Lady Saren has some likeable traits.I don't like it quite as much as The Goose Girl and the other Bayern books, but this one is still worth a read and can definitely hold its own as a good fairy tale novel.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Fifteen-year-old Dashti, sworn to obey her sixteen-year-old mistress, the Lady Saren, shares Saren's years of punishment locked in a tower, then brings her safely to the lands of her true love, where both must hide who they are as work as kitchen maids.

    My copy is coming in a couple of days and I just can't wait!! I loved The Princess Academy and The Goose Girl!! I am sure this will be just as good!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I loved this book! I honestly never wanted to set it down. Shannon Hale is such a wordsmith. I love her lyrical language and the way she plays with words like they are her toys. That alone kept me entertained.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Rather simple, yet exciting. I grew to like the characters, and overlook the underdeveloped villain.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I love Shannon Hale and this might be my favorite of all the books she has written. Somehow it was satisfying and unexpected at the same time. I know will seek out the original tale on which it is based which is unfamiliar to me...
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    After her mother's death, Dashti the mucker leaves the desolate steppe in search of her fortune (or at least, survival). On her first day as a maid, she is assigned to Lady Saren--who is promptly locked in a tower for refusing to marry the formidable Lord Khasar. Although Saren is silly and clearly too traumatized to think straight, Dashti is so overwhelmed by their class differences that she lets Saren do whatever she wants, even eat all their food. To make matters worse, Khasar shows up outside their tower and swears he'll tear down the tower to get Lady Saren. Dashti is clever enough to figure out a way to escape the tower, and she hauls Saren along with her like dead weight. They make it to the city ruled by Saren's childhood friend, Lord Tegan. Saren (who is practically catatonic with shock) forces Dashti to switch places with her, and while Saren works in the kitchen Dashti is forced to pretend to be a lady. But then Khasar shows up at the city walls, demanding Saren, and Dashti's true identity is revealed.

    Unique characters, a haunting and creepy story, set in a fantasy world that is not medieval Europe--I should have loved this. As it was, I could barely get through it. I think it's mostly because the target audience for this book is much younger than I. The book felt really manipulative, to the extent that I got extremely frustrated with Dashti for A)not realizing how damaged Saren was and B)being soooo perfect and humble. In fact, her wide-eyed amazement that nobility could ever deign to talk to such a low-class mucker as herself got really, really old really, really fast. Dashti is consistently smarter and braver than everyone else, and it got unbelievable that she never notices this.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    This book, though written really well, isn't what I was expecting, and it's not really the genre that I enjoy.
    It did have some very interesting parts though, and I particularly liked the ending.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I can't say this was a bad book, really, but particularly in the beginning, it felt like it was meant for a lot younger audience than what I imagine YA stands for. Quite frankly, it was often boring, and the princess (Saren) is a real drip. Dashti was more interesting, but being locked up in a tower doesn't make for interesting reading. It got a bit better when they finally got out, but even then, everything seemed to be taking too long. Only in the last third did I think things got a bit better, and Dashti does some very cool things. In the last few pages even the princess wakes up a bit, but that took far too long for my taste. I would have liked this book a lot better if the two could have worked together, instead of Dashti taking care of everything. At least that would have made things less boring. I'm sure people will say that the characters develop well in this book, but I thought it was a bit contrived. Yes, Saren finally finds her courage by the end of the book and Dashti finally disobeys her mistress and learns that there are things more important to her than food, but the way it is described is as if this is a story that someone has thought up (which of course it is) and not as if it really happens. Anyway, I would have given this book 2 stars, except that the ending made it a bit better.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A fantasy, young adult story, written by Shannon Hale, a Newberry honor book author. The story is a rewrite of Maid Maleen, a Grimm's Fairy Tale story. The story is inspired by medieval Mongolia. It is a romance story.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A compelling read, with complex characters, excellent worldbuilding, suspense, and a satisfying resolution.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Book of a Thousand Days is a wonderful book about a familyless mucker Dashti who becomes the maid of Lady Saren from Titor's Garden. However, Lady Saren is banished to live in a tower for 7 years for refusing to marry Lord Khaser of Thoughts of Under. Book of a Thousand Days, told in the form of Dashti's book of thoughts tells of their days in the tower and what happens when they are able to break free. Its a wonderful story about humility, preservation, romance, and adventure. I would recommend this book to readers in 5th grade and older.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A good friend of mine suggested this book to me. She was reading it with her high schoolers as part of their library book club. My friend has never steered me wrong when suggesting books that I might like. Upon starting it, I was afraid that this might be the first book that she recommended that I wasn't going to like. It starts slow (but what can you really expect? The main characters are locked in a tower from the beginning).

    However, once the account of the tower days wraps up and the story begins it really picks up. I loved the way the story ended up. Very sweet. I would definitely recommend this a quick read, and one that you will want to share your with others.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Told in diary form, Book of a Thousand Days by Shannon Hale follows the life and times of Dashti, ex mucker turned lady in waiting to Lady Saren. It begins with their imprisonment in a sealed tower, through their escape and settlement in Khan Tegus's estate.The world Dashti lives in is a mixture of western China, Mongolia, Tibet, European, and Native American cultures. The landscape itself seems to be a blend of the steppes and deserts of western China and the mountains and valleys of Utah. It's a fictional realm with its own history and geographic demarcations but it draws the landscape features of those places.There's a fantasy element to Book of a Thousand Days beyond it's imaginary landscape and mythology. The villain, Lord Khasar, is able to over run cities and armies with some magical help. The how and what he does is a big part of the book. There is also the power of healing power of song, something that Dashti excels at through her mucker upbringing.As everything is narrated through Dashti's point of view, the strength of the book rests on her voice. In print, her voice is perhaps a bit too earnest in places but is otherwise credible. In the audio done by Full Cast Audio, Dashti's performance is over the top to the point that it cuts into the enjoyment of the book.The book is a retelling of the Grimms' "Maid Maleen" which I have not read.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Lady Saren and her maid Dashti are locked in a tower for 7 years because of Lady Saren's refusal to marry a man she despises. Hale uses a journal format with Dashti telling the story based on a little known Grimm tale. Page-turning plot and lyrical language make this another winner from Hale.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was darling. A little Tangled/Rapunzel, with a smidgen of Red Riding Hood, but mainly about the relationship between two young girls. Easy peasy read. 3.5 stars
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    First of all, I think I would have enjoyed my experience a lot more if I had an audio version of it that didn't skip.
    Secondly, if I had known that it took place in (a fictionalized) medieval Mongolia, I also would have enjoyed this book a lot more. Because I, for no reason in particular, love Mongolia.
    Third, this was much better than the other Shannon Hale book I read, Austenland

    Be that as it may, this is actually the first audio book where I took the CD from my car into my house because I was so engrossed in the story that I could not bring myself to turn off my car and end it.

    A retelling of a lesser known Grimm's Fairy Tale, this is the story of Dashti and Lady Sauron, their time in the tower, and so much more. I really liked it, although with Diary of a Wimpy Kid in the running, I doubt it will win.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Book of a Thousand Days is based on the story Maid Maleen by the Brothers Grimm. It's the diary of Dashti, lady's maid to Lady Saren of the fictional realm Titor's Garden. The two girls are imprisoned in a tower by Lady Saren's father for her refusal to marry Lord Khasar whom she hates and fears. During their imprisonment, both girls undergo a slow transformation of spirit that colors their life and decisions thereafter. I admit that when I first started reading Book of a Thousand Days, I wasn't sure what I thought of Dashti's voice. The book is written in first-person, which usually gives me pause as I decide if I like the MC, but it hooked me. Dashti's personality was vivid and sturdy from the very beginning. With humor and strength, this girl was built to withstand gales in both her story-world and the literary world at large.Shannon Hale did a wonderful job making me sympathize with the characters, to the point that Dashti's choices seemed like my own if I were in her place. I became invested in her growth as a character and eager to see her discover more past her limited view of the world. I also appreciate that Dashti wasn't traditionally pretty, a stark contrast to the lovely, but frightened, Saren. Readers could see the flaws in both of the girls and very readily in Saren, in spite of her beauty. (There were times I hated Saren too, I must admit.)I thoroughly hated Lord Khasar and was as disgusted by him as Dashti herself was. I also absolutely loved Khan Tegus. He was a man who I would pick for myself, and I don't often find that in YA novels. This guy is pure gold. Honorable, noble, compassionate, gentle and caring. He held true to the personality the author had given him all the way to the end of the book. I appreciate that she didn't change him or spoil him just to create drama for the two girls. He was also fully-formed. He had his own problems, his own desires, his own responsibilities. He wasn't a flat character created for the MC to swoon over. Yes, there was romance in this book. I read and enjoyed a romantic sub-plot that was so twined with the main plot that it couldn't be separated. That's because I was truly fond of both characters involved. The romance was slow-building, formed from a genuine connection and spiced up by attraction and admiration. It was an incredibly sweet, incredibly moving romance and I wish I could find more like it.As for the world-building, I questioned a lot whether the culture was invented or just unfamiliar to me, and that means it was good. Because it reads from Dashti's perspective, we get a strong view of her belief system and her values, as well as how she changes from the beginning of the book to the end. My rating for this book was five stars, but it merits more.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Dashti is trained as a lady's maid and meets her lady, Saren, on the day she is to be imprisoned for seven years for refusing her arranged marriage. Together they are sealed into a tower, and it's up to Dashti to keep them alive and sane.This is a retelling of a fairy tale that I am unfamiliar with, presented as Dashti's journal including both text and drawings. It's a great story. Dashti is a wonderful character and it's refreshing to read about a character who doesn't magically become beautiful at conclusion. Saren is a more difficult character but still achieves a degree of growth by the end.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I found this book to be rather entertaining. The diary format in books make them a light and fun read, and it keeps you wanting more. For when you stop reading one entry, you see the first words of the second entry and it keeps your attention. The story itself was enjoyable. I liked the character of Dashti, though she does come across as the perfect heroine at times. The romance between Dashti and Teghis was very cute, but slightly rushed due to the books shortness and lots of other things going on. The flaws I saw were again the shortness of the book, and how annoying Lady Saren is through a majority of the book. She tends to whine quite a bit! Though I wouldn't go out of my way to buy it, it is worth a one time read.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    The story is a retelling of a Grimm fairy tale. It is set in medieval Mongolia. Told through journal entries of Dashti, the lady's muckermaid who is imprisoned with her mistress in a tower for seven years by the lord of the land. But before those seven years are up, they run out of food. Dashti breaks them free to discover that the world has changed and their survival is up to her. This book is written more in a middle grade style than in a YA style. There isn't much romance which I found disappointing. Dashti and her mistress to be immature characters and not very likeable. They are complete opposites of each other. Dashti is a Pollyanna and her mistress is depressed and gloomy.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is the 6th book I have read by Shannon Hale. I read it in one night. I stayed up too late reading it. I enjoyed it very much. I like the way Shannon is able to create complete characters in believable settings. The main character in this book is Dashti, who is a mucker girl from the Asian steppes who sings healing songs.She is locked into a tower for a sentence of 7 years with her mistress the 16 year old Saren who has been locked up because she refused her father's order to marry Khasar, who is cruel and evil. Dashti manages to keep herself and Saren, who is suffering mentally, alive in the tower. Both Khasar, the evil suitor and Kahn Tegus, the kind suitor whom Saren wants to marry, visit the tower and speak to Dashti. Dashti proves to be strong and resourceful as she keeps herself and her mistress alive. This lovely story has mystery, adventure, fantasy and romance. I enjoyed it as much as I did Shannon's other books.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    this became one of my favourite reads..i really liked how the characters maturity levels evolved and how rich the storytelling was..i also liked the cover and the book was so engaging throughout that i barely managed to put it down
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Set in the steppes of central Asia, this is a re-imagining of an old fairy tale. Lady Saren has been shut into a tower for seven years for refusing to marry the tyrant her father has chosen for her. She is allowed to have her maid, Dashti, locked in the remote tower with her, and the story is told from Dashti's point of view. Sturdy and practical, Dashti does her best to keep Saren fed and warm through their long imprisonment. As Saren declines, Dashti must make choices for the both of them and attempt escape. Dashti is a wonderful character, loyal and honorable, but forced under desperate circumstances to lie, steal and cheat in order to save her lady and herself. Wonderful historical fiction choice!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I finished this book and I was say it was just a book. There wasn't any super spectacular that stood out to me. Maybe the Asian/Mongolian type culture might be slightly interesting. A little bit of a love story but nothing fantastic....just eech!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    It was amazing. It was great the way she described it and the feeling you got like you were the character, and that you were in the persons shoes. I highly recomend that you read it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Based on Brothers Grimm fairy tale, Lady Saren and her maid, Dashti, are locked in a tower for seven years because Saren refuses to marry the man her father chose. As food runs low and temperatures unbearable, Dashti must make some difficult choices.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I thought Book Of A Thousand Days was an enjoyable, easy, young adult read. The story is based on a Grimm's fairy tale and is told in diary format by Dashti, a maid, who sings songs that have healing powers and has sworn seven years of servitude to her mistress. I've read Hale's Austenland and enjoyed it as well and would really like to read more.

Book preview

Book of a Thousand Days - Shannon Hale

Contents

Map

Part 1 The Tower

Part 2 The Adventure Thereafter

Reading Group Guide

Acknowledgments

A Note on the Author

Books by Shannon Hale

Read on for a sneak peek at Shannon Hale’s new Book of Bayern

FOR VICTORIA

To the girl and the geese nine others said, Nay!

But you poured me some tea and asked me to stay

And built me a cottage at Bloomsbury Place

With pillows on chairs and sun on my face.

Our fifth together is me hugging you;

May dozens more follow before we are through.

A book of thoughts kept by Dashti,

a mucker and a lady’s maid,

Containing an account of our seven years

in a tower and our adventure thereafter

Map

Part 1

The Tower

Day 1

My lady and I are being shut up in a tower for seven years.

Lady Saren is sitting on the floor, staring at the wall, and hasn’t moved even to scratch for an hour or more. Poor thing. It’s a shame I don’t have fresh yak dung or anything strong-smelling to scare the misery out of her.

The men are bricking up the door, and I hear them muttering and scraping cement. Only a small square of unbricked sky and light still gape at me. I smile back at its mean grin to show I’m not scared. Isn’t it something, all the trouble they’re going to for us? I feel like a jewel in a treasure box, though my lady is the—

My lady suddenly awoke from her stupor and sprang at the door, clawing at the bricks, trying to shove her way out. How she screamed! Like an angry piglet.

Stay in! we heard her honored father say. He must have been standing near the opening. Stay until your heart softens like long-boiled potatoes. And if you try to break your way out, I’ve told the guards to kill you on sight. You have seven years to think about disobedience. Until you are meek with regret, your face turns my stomach.

I nearly warned him that such words would bring him bad luck and canker his own heart. Thank the Ancestors that my lady’s fit stopped me from speaking out of turn. When I pulled her back, her hands were red from beating at the bricks and streaked with wet cement. This isn’t exactly a happy-celebration morning, but I don’t see what good it does to thrash about.

Easy, my lady, I said, the way I’d speak to a feisty ram. It wasn’t too hard to hold my lady back, even squirming as she was. I’m fifteen years, and though skinny as a skinned hare, I’m strong as a yak, or so my mama used to say. I sang the calming song, the one that goes, Oh, moth on a wind, oh, leaf on a stream, and invites the hearer into dreaming. I feared my lady was so angry she wouldn’t heed the song. But she must’ve been eager to sleep, because now she’s snoring on my lap. Happily the brush and ink are at hand so I can keep writing. When you can’t move, there isn’t much to do but think, and I don’t much want to think right now.

Sticky sobs shake my lady even while she sleeps. My own eyes are heavy. Perhaps it’s the darkness making us so drowsy. Goda, goddess of sleep, keep us tonight.

Day 2

It’s quiet and as dark as night, our only light a quivering candle. The door is bricked solid. From time to time I hear voices, so I suppose the guards remain outside.

Goda heard my prayer last night and did let us sleep until morning. I know it’s morning because I peeked through the dump hole. That’s a tiny metal flap that opens just enough to empty our chamber pot and wash water on the ground outside. It looks like this.

When I push it open, a lip of brick wall prevents me from looking straight out, but I can see the ground five handspans down. Very thoughtful of her honored father, I think, to design our prison such, so we have a way to throw out our waste and don’t have to breathe foul air for seven years.

This tower used to be a lookout tower, standing as it does on the border between Titor’s Garden, which is her honored father’s land, and Thoughts of Under, which is the realm to the east. The upper story was the lookout, but the windows are bricked blind now. Too easy to escape from, I suppose, or else her honored father hopes to crush her spirits with darkness. The upper floor is my lady’s chamber. The air is best there because tiny slits in the bricks let fresh air slink in. If I press my face to a certain slit, I think I can see blue that is the sky. Or maybe I’m just seeing shadows.

The middle story is our kitchen, with hearth, pots, table, and one chair. Stacks and stacks of wood line the walls, and my own straw mattress keeps the floor company. A ladder descends into the cellar. It looks something like this.

And here’s the bit that makes me tremble with delight—in our cellar there is a mountain of food! Barrels and bags and crates of it. And we have a fine well dug right in the cellar floor. My lady is napping in her chamber, so I just came down here to look at the food. Seven years’ worth. Such a thing I never imagined. Even though I can’t see the sky, it’s hard not to want to dance about, knowing that for seven years at least I won’t starve. That’s paradise for a mucker like me. How my mama would laugh.

Day 6

I’ve been much occupied these past days, learning the ways of our tower, counting sacks of flour and rice, barrels of dried and salted mutton, figuring how much we may eat each day and last for seven years. It’s useful knowing my letters and numbers so I can write down the figuring. We’ve boxes of candles and a stack of parchment, surely enough to keep me writing for seven years.

These are the meals I’ve cooked these last days:

Breakfast—warmed milk with sugar, eaten with flat barley cakes. Each morning the guards knock on the metal flap and hand up a horn of fresh mare’s milk. First thing, I splash a drop of milk in the north corner, facing the direction of the Sacred Mountain, and say my prayers. By tradition, I should dribble the milk on soil, not stones, but it’ll have to do since the metal flap faces south.

Dinner—dung cakes. That’s what we muckers call them, though I don’t use that crude term around my lady, of course. They’re made of salted meat (simmered long to soften) and onions, wrapped in dough and cooked on coals. That’s how we used to eat them with Mama, only here I get to add spices—cinnamon and peppercorns! Two times before the tower I’d eaten spiced food, but never had I reached my own hand into a barrel and touched the raw powders and seeds. Someday when I leave this life and my soul climbs the Sacred Mountain, I imagine the Ancestors will be too beautiful and bright to look at, but their skin and breath will smell of peppercorns and cinnamon, anise, cardamom, and fennel. Heavenly, it is.

Supper—rice and dried peas, boiled with milk and raisins, and sweetened with a pinch of sugar. Delicious. My lady says she’s used to eating the large meal at night instead of midday, but that makes no sense to me. She didn’t order me to change the dinner and supper order, so I’ll keep it the same.

These past meals have been as hearty as I ever had, and if being a lady’s maid means I get to eat the same food as my lady—with spices even!—then you’ll never hear me complain.

Sometimes to get her through a long day, I give my lady a mess of dried fruit or a slap of cheese. Even so, she swears she’s starving. The mouth grumbles more than the stomach, my mama used to say. My lady can’t really be hungry—I think she’s just sad to be imprisoned away from her love and hoping that the food will fill her up where her heart breaks.

But so much food! Each day we eat three times, and I roll around on my mattress at night and laugh into my arm and pray to my mama so she knows I’m doing fine.

Day 11

It occurs to me I ought to relate the why behind our imprisonment. And at the moment, with dinner eaten and cleaned up, washing done, and my lady resting, I’ve nothing more to do but stare at the candle flame. It tosses and bobs like a spring foal and sometimes I find myself staring at it so long, the flame is all I can see for an hour after. But now I’ll write.

I came to the city of Titor’s Garden only one year ago. My mother, the Ancestors bless her, died from the floating fevers that take people in the summer. I was alone, my father dead when I was a baby, and my brothers gone to make their world way when I was a girl of eight and still in two braids. I wear one braid now, though still long down my back. My lady wears her braid pinned up, though she’s not married and just one year older than me. I suppose she has the right to do her hair how she pleases, her being gentry and all.

Anyway, with my mother passed to the Ancestors’ Realm, I made the long walk from the summer pastures to the city, hoping to find work. The city had too many people for my mind. Where do they all sleep? How do you feed so many bodies? My head hurt trying to reason it out. I found the house of chiefs soon enough and purchased employment with my last animal. A thin woman people named Mistress had me stand before her and tell what skills I had, declaring at the end that I would be of best use working in the stables. When she rose from her chair to show me the way, she winced and rubbed her back.

Have a pain there, Mistress? I asked.

She didn’t answer. I suppose it was right nosy of me to speak up like that, but I thought I could help her, and why sit quiet when you can be useful? So I said, I might help that pain, Mistress, if you let me.

She didn’t argue, so I put my hand on her back and I started with the song for body aches, the slow, sliding tune that goes, Tell me again, how does it go? and then twined into it the hopping tune for buried pain that goes, Berries in summer, red, purple, green.

She stretched when I was finished. You’re a mucker, then? I’ve heard of the healing songs but never thought much about them. She looked at me thoughtfully, then set in on any number of queer questions.

What is the proper remedy for a lady in fits?

Make her drink warm milk and rub her back, I answered easily enough.

Show me a straight stitch.

And I sewed a line straighter than the finger of Ris, god of roads and towns.

Let me see your hands, she said, and checked them for calluses. Mmm-hmm. And your mucker mother taught you all the healing songs?

I don’t think a body can know them all, but I know the useful ones, like the song for helping a mare birth a foal and the song to get a she-yak to stand still for milking—

No, no, I have no use for horses and yaks. The songs for aches of back and belly and head. Like you just sang for me.

I know dozens, I guess.

Then I’m going to make you a lady’s maid for the most honored house in Titor’s Garden. Our lord’s second daughter, Lady Saren, she’s bound to need a fresh maid by the time your education is done. She certainly seems to go through them quickly.

Mistress sent me to an old man named Qadan, who lived beside the house of chiefs. I cooked and cleaned for him, and in the afternoons, a group of hopeful scribes joined us for lessons in reading.

As Lady Saren’s maid you’ll need to know your letters, Mistress had said. I didn’t know then why this is so, but I do now—because unlike most gentry, Lady Saren herself doesn’t know them.

What a strange and wondrous time it was, eating two big meals every single day, sleeping by a fire always lit, and learning the secret language of ink strokes. On days when I finished chores and errands early, Qadan taught me sketching. I was so busy and my belly so full, I would fall asleep even as I was falling into bed.

But some nights, when I tossed on my mattress, awake and staring at nothing, the sorrow would strike me. Quiet there in Qadan’s dark house, my heartache felt like a river, and I was sinking into it, carried away fast in its coldness. That’s the best way I can explain it, and what I mean by it is, I missed my mama.

Sometimes Qadan threw candlesticks at us when his back pinched him sour, but mostly he was a good teacher. He said the best way to practice writing was to keep a book of thoughts. The first one I wrote in was left behind in our rush to this prison. I found this blank book of stitched-together pages among the parchment and inks, and I asked my lady if I might take it for my own. She had no use for it.

It seems a bit of a laugh now, all that time spent learning and now I find myself in a tower with no occasion to write my lady’s love letters or keep her books. Instead I’ll record the details of our confinement, so when the seven years are over and the lord’s men pound through the walls, if all they find is a delicate lady and her humble maid shriveled like old ginger roots from lack of sun and air, they’ll know somewhat of our happy time still breathing.

Though my lady doesn’t sound happy. She’s thrashing on her mattress again. I wonder, is it in the gentry’s nature to suffer so? Could the Ancestors give gentry beauty and perfection, food and large houses, and a world to do their bidding, and yet curse them with wretched sorrow? My poor, poor lady.

I had best go see to her now and finish my account later. There will be, I’d guess, plenty of time to do so.

Day 13

While I was washing up tonight, my lady fell asleep on my mattress, not wanting to climb to her chamber. She wears fashionable shoes with the toe long and curled toward her ankle, which are certainly pretty but do make it difficult to clamber up ladders. It wouldn’t be proper for me to sleep on her mattress, so I’ll finish my story before making my bed of the grain sacks in the cellar. The Ancestors bless her.

After one year with Qadan, Mistress had me take the oath of a lady’s maid. I cut my finger, splashed drops of blood toward the north and the Sacred Mountain, and swore to serve the gentry and my new mistress however the Ancestors saw fit.

But I’m still a mucker, right? I asked.

You’ll always be a mucker, said Mistress.

I was relieved. I know muckers are the simplest of commoners and becoming a lady’s maid is a right honor, but I couldn’t give up the wild steppes forever, couldn’t turn my back on Mama and all she taught. I feel like a mucker from the ends of my hair to the mud of my bones.

After the oath, Mistress escorted me to the city’s center and left me at the lord’s house. It was near as beautiful as a mountain in autumn with its three-tiered roof covered in red and green enamel tiles. Inside was less welcoming—grand and cold, the floor stones seemingly cut from ice. Everyone was running around, women were wailing, men were yelling. At the time, I thought it was always that way. I hadn’t heard yet of the trouble.

Hours I spent sitting in a corner, waiting for someone to be sensible. I could see myself in a mirror, and I stared and thought how plain I looked in my mucker boots and working clothes inside a gentry’s house as fine as sugar. I’ll sketch it from memory, so it won’t be just right.

No one paid me the least mind, and though it wasn’t proper, I decided I’d find my new mistress myself. Ancestors forgive me, but what else could I do? I was of no use to anyone just sitting there.

Errand boys rushed up and down corridors, maidens sulked on benches. Some wept. When I asked for directions to Lady Saren’s chamber, no one questioned why I wished to go there.

I entered the chamber slowly, squinting. I’d never met any gentry before and was worried that the glory of the Ancestors might be so bright inside her, it would burn my eyes. I was a little disappointed then to find my lady looking much like anyone else, still in her white sleep clothes, her hair in a braid with half the hair poking out. Her eyes were puffy and red, her nose wet, her feet bare. She sat on her bed, alone, straight as a tent pole.

The first thing I wanted to do was comb her hair straight and plait it tight, dress her and set her up like a proper lady, let the glory of her divine ancestors shine in her properly. But I had to stand there, quiet, and wait for her to look up and see me. It isn’t allowed for a commoner, of course, to speak to gentry first.

The flats of my feet were aching by the time she saw. And in all that time she hadn’t moved.

Who are you? she asked. There was something about her manner that reminded me of a little girl, though I learned since that she’s sixteen years.

My lady, I’m Dashti. I’m your new maid.

You can’t be, they’re all hiding from me because they don’t want— She considered me. What is your name?

Dashti, my lady, I told her again.

She hopped off her bed and grabbed my wrist, but tight. Her swiftness and force startled me. Swear you’ll serve me, Dashti. Swear you won’t abandon me. Swear it!

Of course, my lady, I swear. I didn’t know why she grabbed me and yelled. I’d already taken the oath and learned to write letters and everything.

All right, she said, wandering

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