It sort of makes me wonder what an alternate reality version of the M:EM would be where it was Sharaka that Kimberley sought out to learn from rather than Jinsen.
Not from this thread, but I figured this would be the best place for an alternative version of
. Feel free to compare and contrast - the mood will be fairly different.
Chapter warnings: racism and slavery
"The so-called Fire-Hand? Nothing but street ruffians with some fire tricks," the greengrocer says sagely, putting my next three days of fruit in a bag, "brainwashed by the Vedalken Cabal."
I blink, confused. "Vedalken Cabal?"
"Never heard of them? Poor girl," he shakes his head as he takes my money. "They freed the slaves so they could turn into criminals and make our country go bad." He taps his nose knowingly.
"Again with the vedalken conspiracies, old windbag?"
I turn to see a robust woman, big arms weighted down by grocery bags.
"Even you can't deny the truth about the Fire-Hand massacres, Julie!" the man snaps.
"Can, did, and will continue to do so to the end of time," the woman replies, unfazed, before placing her order. Miles grumbles under his breath as he starts to gather the food. It looks like it's not the first time they have this conversation. Julie glances to me with a sly smile as she laboriously fishes out her wallet. "Walk with me? I feel the need to repair at the damage Miles might have done to your young mind."
"Pah! The youths should listen to the salt of the earth, pencil-pusher!" Miles says as he helpfully hooks Julie's groceries on her left arm.
"Ever tried to sow salt, old goat? Went well, I bet," the woman said as a goodbye. She steps away, inviting me to follow with a head gesture.
Well, she offered to answer my questions. What else am I to do? "What do you think of the Fire-Hand, then?"
The woman thinks hard before answering. "As a citizen of Algiam, I'm alarmed that such violent actions could be carried in the whole country without anyone the wiser. As a decent person, I could not be happier - slavery is an appalling cruelty, no two ways about it."
"So you approve of the Fire-Hand."
She looks clearly torn. "It needed to be done," she says in the end. "The synod has been dragging their feet on the matter of abolition for years, all because of their connections with the slaver aristocracy, but every year of inaction is an indefensible atrocity laid at all of our feet."
"But not everybody agrees."
"Of course not," she makes a face, "and most of them have appalling or idiotic reasons to do so, as you have seen." She sighs. "Unfortunately, if I have to be completely honest, I think the Fire-Hand's methods are hard to reconcile with civilized society - destruction of property aside, freeing slaves in and of itself has no downsides unless you lived off exploitation, but throwing dozens of people in the street with no support?" She grimaces. "That's how gangs are born."
"Isn't that just what Miles said?"
Her lip curls in distaste. "I hope you're not saying I sound anything like that hillbilly loon. Not even pigs would eat his brains, as they say."
I quickly change topic. "I heard there are benefactors that opened their doors to a lot of freed slaves."
"I heard that too," she scoffs, "why would they do that, though?"
"...to help fellow citizens?"
She chuckles and shakes her head. "Optimist, are you?" She sighs. "Someone well-off enough to house a dozen ex-slaves has the connections to leverage the dependence of their "guests" into an advantage of some kind. Best case scenario, which already happened in Vanira, they get cheap legitimate workers and just replicate slavery with a nicer facade and possibly some governmental oversight, laughable as it is." She stops to politely greet a passing guard, waiting a moment before resuming with a slighter lower tone. "Alternatively, they could turn the freed slaves into a personal gang or militia, depending on the criminal or political leanings of the "benefactor". Proper weaponization hasn't happened yet, not to this extent, but you can see some worrying signs here and there if you know where to look."
I carefully don't point out that she's still sounding a bit like Miles. "So you disagree with the methods?"
She tilts her head one way and the other. "Not necessarily, despite the grisly murders - I will deny ever uttering these words, just so you know," she's quick to add with a cynical smile. "A more lawful and ordered process would have offered all kinds of openings for the slavers to tweak things their way - half of them are old money and most of the rest are also filthy rich. As it stands, the slave market's back is badly broken and the main players have no clean way to return into business barring a war that nobody wants - with the contracts up in smoke there's no proof of ownership, since no synod faction has even dreamed to update slaver laws in the last century - too politically fraught of a topic - so no insurance will pay a single scepter," she says in a single breath, with the tone of someone who knows all too well what she's talking about. "The synod could step in to help the slave-owners, but with the current malcontent it would be a suicide - and possibly not just in a purely political meaning."
I tap my chin in thought. A very complex situation, to be sure, but... "It sounds like this was the best solution, when put like that."
She sighs and tilts her head all to her right, eliciting a loud crack. "Maybe you're right - as an insurance clerk I'm a glorified professional worrier, and I've had a near-permanent migraine since the attacks started, so this story doesn't put me in a good mood, as you can imagine." She shrugs as much as the weigh on her arms will allow. "As I said, it's a thing that needed to be done and I stand by it - I'm just wary of the new problems that will replace the old."
I nod - that makes sense, I guess. "Do you think they the Fire-Hand will attack again?"
She purses her lips. "That's the million-scepters question - and in my line of work, that's not necessarily a figure of speech. Sixteen attacks in just under two months, all successful; if you had asked me at that time, I would have told you nobody with that kind of power would have resisted the temptation to do with the country what they wanted - again, professional worrier and all that." She makes her kinda-shrug again. "But they disappeared since, and nobody has seen neither hide nor hair of the creatures survivors report to have seen, so who knows."
"You live pretty close to the target of the last attack. Didn't you see the Fire-Hand yourself?"
"Ah, that. No, I was at work at the time - ironically, investigating the previous Fire-Hand attack."
I deflate a bit at that. "...oh. Who do you think could have been around at the time?"
"Crazy Thea, for sure," she replies without hesitation, nodding toward the square. "She's the owner of the bar across the ruined building. Nothing happens without her catching wind of it - she's not the most refined company, mind you." She stops, nodding at a nearby building. "Well, that's me. Have a good day, girl - and try not to worry too much, alright?" She winks.
"You too," I reply with a smile.
"Never!" She laughs, and we part ways.
* * *
"I don't care if it was a ten-story fire-spitting lizard or a vedalken statue made of diamonds and snot," Crazy Thea says, opening two beer bottles with each other's cap and setting them in front of two patrons, "this Fire-Hand fella's a **** menace. Felt the earth shaking from here, yes I did."
"Did you went to see what was happening?"
"I'm not that crazy," Crazy Thea says, flipping one of the patrons off for a rude remark. Her knuckles have the rough marks of a pugilist. "I've got a bar to run. I got a good enough look from here, thankyouverymuch."
"And what did you see?"
"Fire and smoke, at first," she says, taking a pause to count on her fingers, "then the help - the free workers, you know, cooks and cleaners - running out, then the guards running out, then the guards limping out, then the slaves running out - from the blood on their hands, I took a guess about the guards that might have wanted to come out crawling - then a bit more fire just to be sure then bam!" She slaps her palm on the bar. "Whole building comes down like trousers when it's two-for-one hour at Josie's." From the widespread snickering, I take a wild guess about the type of establishing she's referencing.
I frown. Did the Fire-Hand hop from there then? "Was there a back door?"
A rough voice calls out from the depths of the bar. "Still talking about Josie's?" I feel myself flush, but I keep my eyes on Thea.
"Sweetie's talking about the building, Rowan, keep your belt buckled," she sneers, but she's dead serious when she meets my gaze. "No use for another escape route, now was there? Boxed on three sides by other buildings, it was sheer dumb luck they stayed up - shut up, Rowan."
I nod. The story is familiar, as is the moniker, but I want to make sure. "Do you know anyone who worked there? Or... well... lived there?"
"Few decent folks had friends there," Thea shrugs, "slave-driving's a nasty business."
"So you're happy the slaves got free, then."
"Mixed bag," Thea shrugs again, "you have to keep in mind most slaves are - were, whatever - orcs and goblins, people that need honest folk with their head screwed up right to keep 'em out of trouble." She turns to call out a middle-aged goblin carrying an empty tray at the other side of the bar. "Am I right or am I right, Rak?"
"Yes sir of course sir!" He replies smartly, bringing the tray back as fast as his short legs allow.
"E-xactly." Thea punctuates her remark with an emphatic punch to the bar.
I point at the goblin's scarred shoulder. "Isn't that a slave brand? Didn't you say..."
"I've only been hiring him, sweetie - you won't find chains in my cellar," she says dismissively, to the exaggerated disappointment of some patrons.
How is that any different, I scream within my mind.
"Don't worry about him - Rak's harmless, practically furniture," Thea shrugs, completely misunderstanding my appalled stare. "He's been around longer than a few tables here, in fact."
Looking around, I can tell that's a genuinely remarkable feat. "Can I talk to him?"
"No chatting with the slaves - well, the help," she rolls her eyes, "when they're on the job."
My eye twitches. "When does he gets off work, then?"
"He leaves to return to whatever rat's nest he sleeps in when I kick the last good-for-nothings out of here," she drawls. "I don't work by clock, sweetie."
"Thank you for the information," I reply stiffly with a polite nod, fists balled at my sides.
"I wouldn't recommend hanging with a goblin after dark, though, sweetie," Thea warns, "they're like magpies, and you've got a shiny pair of eyes there."
My face is a porcelain mask. My face is a porcelain mask. My face is a porcelain mask. "I'll... keep that in mind."
* * *
"Oh, I hear of Fire-Hand sir," Rak nods. He sticks to the half-light of the square's street lamps, refusing to step in the full light.
I tilt my head. "Aren't you one of the goblins they freed?"
"So you know sir." He scratches his head. "Goblin like no change sir, because alive goblin can change into dead goblin sir. No change, alive goblin is still alive goblin sir."
"But now you are not slaves anymore," I insist. "Doesn't that mean you have the same rights of everybody else?"
"Yes sir, of course sir," Rak nods, and I get the feeling he's resisting the urge of rolling his eyes.
I recall the other conversations I had today. Right. "Um... do you get paid more, at least?"
Rak's eyes go wide and he shakes his hands, gesturing me to lower... my voice? "Oh, no change sir, no change at all sir! We no like change sir!" He says out loud, half-turned toward Thea's bar, then leans in conspiratorially. "We ask same wage as before sir - but now boss gets no cut sir, so more coin for goblin sir."
I tilt my head. "Isn't Cr- isn't Thea your boss?"
"Good one sir," Rak chuckles. "Work-boss gets no cut from work-boss sir. Chain-boss gets cut sir. But now no more cut."
"Ah." The slaver. Time to get back on topic. "You were there when the Fire-Hand attacked, then."
"Maybe, sir," Rak says carefully. "I hear guards attack back, sir, and I hear fire and screams."
"You didn't see the fighting?"
"No fighting sir, goblins like no fighting," he says hurriedly. Seeing the smooth scars glinting in the dim light, I don't doubt it.
"Did the other slaves... open your cell, then?"
Rak scratches his head, confused. "No sir, all bodies forget about goblins sir. All but Fire-Hand, sir."
"You saw them, then," I insist. Staying up to this ungodly hour was worth something at least. "The Fire-Hand. You saw what they look like."
"Yes sir, but nobody believes silly goblin sir."
"I do."
"Yes sir, of course sir," he nods, again with no intention of expanding further.
I sigh. "Did they look like a very tall humanoid reptile, Rak?"
Even now, they still hesitate before answering. "I know "human" but not "reptile" sir, and "tall" and "very tall" are small difference for small goblin sir... but Fire-Hand looks like a very very big lizard sir."
"Did they talk to you?"
Rak snickers naughtily. "Good one sir! Nobody wants to talk to goblins sir."
"I'm talking to you."
"Yes sir, of course sir," he nods again, and this time I can hear the sarcasm. "Fire-Hand opens our cage and we're alive sir, that's what matters sir."
"Your cage?"
Rak looks at me like I'm not very bright. "Goblins kept in cage in the cellar sir," he says slowly, "not the good cellar with salami sir, that one has windows sir."
I don't know what to say to that. I fish all the local money I have on me and offer it to him. "Thank you for speaking to me, Rak."
His eyes narrow slightly, but his grin doesn't falter. "Who is that many money for sir?"
"You," I say, confused. I lower my hands so he can reach it more easily. "It's for you, Rak."
This time he squints in open suspicion. He gingerly extends a hand, eyes stuck on mine, and lightly taps a coin. "For silly goblin," he says slowly.
I just nod, and wait.
This time he picks up another coin, glances at it and puts it back, all the while looking like he's a twitch away from bolting. When I keep completely still, polite smile stiffening a bit, his hands dart to mine and take all the coin in a single swipe. He holds it in front of his eyes with both hands, staring suspiciously at it.
I... just stay there, hands still extended. I've never seen quicker fingers, and I'm no slouch myself.
Rak wraps his scarred hands around the money, looking around with comical suspicion; he then brings it to his ear and shakes it. His eyes go wide. "Silly goblin talking, paid with silver instead of lashes sir?" He grins ear to ear, and the money vanishes in a flick of his bony wrists. He winks. "I like this change sir!"
Rak runs away, lightning-fast on his short legs, and he's gone before I can say anything else. I massage my temples, still punch-drunk from... everything as I search for a suitable alley.
A minute later, I'm gone too.
I edited this to tweak one of the last lines: the goblin never acknowledge Rak as his name. Make of that what you will.