You enter the very round bathroom and see stairs leading down to the lower level.
This part of the bathroom is very clearly divided into three parts. There is one sink to the left of the door and a partial wall that can�t quite reach to the ceiling, making a private area next to the sink. Another wall stretches out with a doorway in the middle of it, cutting the large circle into this small section and what appears to be two more.
Walking through the doorway, you notice that this section holds two small showers on the left side. Like a maze, a path winds around the showers and into a much larger area that is the rest of the room. You take a quick peek into this other area and discover a large bath, almost like those in ancient Rome.
The bath has three levels, each growing in size as the water cascades quietly down. As you enter from the entrance to this bath area you stand at the top of the bath waterfall. The upper tub is the smallest, made for one or two people to fit in. It looks more like a wading pool almost, curved at the bottom, like a bowl or cup.
The middle tub is more like a tub, oval in shape, bottom sloping down at one end. You walk along the edge of the tubs, the floor slopes down as the tubs get larger, the movement is gradual, like the gradual height of the tubs. Absently you look for any sign of a circulation system for the water, but find none out in the open.
The lower tub is only about a foot lower than the top-most tub, but the water spilling into it doesn�t flow out. The magical property of the large tub isn�t as magic when you think you notice some kind of drain along the edge. A bench lines three of the sides of the tub, water deep enough to reach someone�s neck when sitting in it.
You circle the bath set and return to the exit.