Artist of the Akshauhini - Part 2
Few people have a reason to go out to the Aruchavi Arsenal, the home of the Akshauhini, but everyone knows stories. The hexagonal towers spread out along the Blue Cloud Delta, covered in warships like red locusts on stalks of corn. A hundred feet overhead, the five black rhombuses that levitate in midair. They are, according to most of the stories, the source of the Akshauhini’s power. The reason why Chela became the most powerful of the Empire’s provinces within two generations.
Seeing them up close from the bow of a sampan, what look like flat matte surfaces resolve into a multitude of broken lines, ridges, and indistinct knots of machinery. Multicolored lights glow out from cracks and crevices. Drawn in by the visual complexity unfolding in front of her, Chameshar reaches under the passenger seat, groping for her bag and the sketchbook within. The sampan jolts as if struck, though, and she almost cracks her head against the steel console around the helm.
And then they’re descending, the dark shapes drop out of view and the stomach lurches and the wind whistles against the hull. After a few minutes the rubber padding along the keel presses down on the earth. A long red building is visible through the dusty windshield. The insignia of the Akshauhini is painted above the double doors. The helmsman hops off to lower a set of steps down the side of the ship and help her down. He holds an umbrella over her head as they walk.
Khrotyan meets them halfway along the path. “Welcome at last.”
Chaemshar fights the urge to focus on the diamond shadows stretching across the grass as they walk the rest of the way. A rush of cool air meets her face as the double doors open. The inside of the headquarters is a single hall. At its center is one of the crimson airships, resting within a vast and ornate scaffolding of black iron and carved wood.
“I would’ve thought it busier.”
He laughs. “It would be in any other season. At the moment most of the officers and their sailors are back home attending to their lands, harvesting and the like.” The officers would be the owners of said land and the sailors the tenants.
She thinks of her two elder brothers fumbling about with plots of corn and rice, wrangling workers, and never missing an opportunity to complain about it. “And not you?” She glances over at Khrotyan as they walk along the starboard flank.
“My clan? We’ve very little productive holdings to speak of. For us the Akshauhini is everything. Hence why I’m here at the moment.”
There’s a metal spiral staircase up to where a room has been prepared for her. There’s not much to it at the moment. A desk and chair have been dragged in and set up in a corner. She will also be assigned a clerk who will fetch anything she might need, though she can also bring whatever materials might be appropriate from home.
“I considered collecting canvasses, brushes and the like, but I realized I’ve no idea what you preferences are on such things.”
She’s walking the floorspace, mapping out its dimensions in her mind already, sketching out a plan for what things should be where, how they should be oriented in relation to one another. In the distance through the high windows she can see the helmsman scouring deck of the sampan.
“I believe you’re the first person I’ve met outside of the craft to think of that.” She smiles wryly. “Most people assume my paints are the same as the paint your sailors roll onto your airships.”
That first day is spent becoming familiar with the work. There is to be a book, the actual history. A few past examples exist in the grave-like archive room, but they’re all of inferior quality and poorly updated, decayed fragments of the past. There is also to be a series of paintings. Khrotyan shows her the spaces on the walls of the main hall, now barren. The canvasses would be more than twice Chaemshar’s height, larger than any medium she’s worked with before. She thinks of the towering paintings she once saw in the Imperial Museum, a series depicting the foundation of the Chakchelam Empire in its various stages, and struggles to keep too much of her excitement from frothing to the surface.
The sun has almost set by the time Chaemshar returns home. No one meets her at the door except the brigade of horned and tailed figures, embodiments of various ancestors sculpted from stained teak, collected on the side of the shadowed annex. No one inquires about her day either. She bows her head to the figures, grateful for the small mercy.
******
The first season flows by like water. Her office at the Arsenal becomes an expanded, unbound version of her studio back home, filling up with paints, oils, custom easels, spare canvasses, and a multitude of lamps with different lenses installed into them to control the color and intensity of light. The initial work is split between sketching references for every piece of significant equipment and the historical images that will become the murals.
The process is more of a challenge than she anticipated. Where the outermost contours of the flowers she paints are soft and organic, gentle parabolic curves flowing into one another, the ships are hard, linear, symmetrical. In a purely objective sense the man-made forms are far simpler, but their simplicity leaves far less margin for error or artistic license. The bins in the office fill with discarded abortive sketches. The worst of them she saves for one the torches near the windows, flipping open the lens, channeling a bit of her prana to activate the coil within, and feeding the thick paper inside inch by inch until nothing is left.
At one point near the end of the season Khrotyan finds her sitting on the floor of the main hall, sketchbook in her lap. “Let me get someone to fetch you a chair.”
“No, thank you.” She gestures up at the ship’s bow where it’s cradled on top a curved piece of scaffolding. The gaping barrel that occupies all of the ship’s fore towers over her. “I want to capture it from this angle. For reference.”
Khrotyan grants her access to the interior of the Perilla. It was the flagship of the phraya’s father, he explains. The previous phraya is the one who brought this model of warship into being. In so doing he transformed the Akshauhini into the crimson wall it is today, and funneled wealth into Chela through his subsequent adventures abroad. Chaemshar has to duck her head to get the tips of her horns under the doorframe leading from the bridge to the corridor with the crew quarters. (is she taller than the phrayas? To whose specifications were these ships designed?) Everything has been keep meticulously clean, but the air still carries the faintest hints of hydraulic fluid, engine fumes, and old cooking oil.
“Feel free to reenter any time. The Phraya would like renderings of the Perilla as well.” Khrotyan says. “You’re more surefooted moving about an airship than I assumed you would be, Khun Chaemshar.”
They’re descending a flight of narrow metallic stairs down to the deck where the cylindrical inner workings of the cannon lay. “I’ve been on my father’s ships a few times, though they’re quite different.”
There was a brief moment after her eighteenth birthday when she was being prepared to be a Sirihanok airship commander. She had watched the same process when her two elder brothers went through it. It didn’t take long for everyone involved to know it was hopeless. They should have known back when she was fitted for her focus earrings at fifteen, when she pushed her prana through them for the very first time in front of everyone and was barely able to turn a glass of water cold, much less into a block of ice.
Chaemshar’s first stipend waits on a corner of her table one afternoon. A lacquered envelope marked with the Aruchavi sigil. It would be unbecoming for two people of the nobility without blood relations to exchange money directly in the manner of street vendors or bankers. The rajatas inside the envelope are more than both her brothers’ agricultural efforts have garnered that season combined. Or the past two seasons for that matter. As with her siblings’ earnings, the majority is handed over to her parents, a fraction given back to her. Her mother is the one who takes it from her. She doesn’t say anything, but there’s a twitch when she, handling the envelope like a small dead animal, looks inside. No praise, but certain comments from her father and mother and brothers cease stop being uttered not long after.
“If I had to give that much back to my parents I’d flee to Gadristang screaming,” the sculptor says. It’s the festival of the second equinox. The composer is with his family, but she and Chaemshar are in New Chelor surrounded by the drunken, shimmering festivities. A harvest celebration in a city where little to no one cultivates much of anything.
Chameshar gives a crooked smile around the rim of her glass. “I’ve been to Gadristang. You’d starve in a month doing what you do. We all would.” She puts the glass down next to her on the stone steps. The pomelo wine burns more than she remembers from the last time she drank it. “And I don’t really care about the rajata. I want the doors this will open.”
The sculptor makes a face and performs an exaggerated bow with pressed palms. “Well cheers to you! What’s it like, not caring about rajata, Khun?” She holds up her glass. Humidity has plastered wavy locks to one side of her face.
“Call me that again and I’ll yank your tail.”
They go down the hill to Avenue Phi, inebriated enough to be willing to hazard the crowd. Through the humanity and streams of lanterns all motorized so that they glide overhead like soaring nagas. Bhagyakara’s temple has a queue — the longest naga of them all. Children in paper axolotl masks squeeze past them as they try to go around.
The shrine of Nirmana is lit up as well, but virtually abandoned compared to the home of the neighboring god. The only people in line to make offerings are other regulars of the Artists’ Quarter. The thick hanging vines coming off the edges of the roof muffle the racket outside. It’s quiet enough to hear the coins clacking into the offering box. While they wait, Chaemshar squints in the candlelight as she fishes into her coin purse. She taps the sculptor on the shoulder.
“Here,” she whispers, handing half of the coins to her.
The sculptor looks confused at first, and then reels back, almost bumping into the couple ahead of them. “You. She hisses. “If you ever offer me rajata again I’ll yank your tail.”
Still tipsy, Chaemshar almost laughs but stops when her eyes adjust and she sees the actual expression on the sculptor’s face. They spend the rest of the queue in silence. When it’s Chameshar’s turn the shrine keeper, sitting serene near the back of the shrine, seems to flinch at the sound of her coins sliding into the box.
“Sorry,” she says to the sculptor as they leave.
“It doesn’t matter.” She doesn’t meet her eye, looking instead at the children under the banyan tree in the center of the street. With bamboo sticks they take turns whacking an effigy of a bloody-mouthed aswang dangling from one of the branches.