CW: Just a lil bit of Enbyphobia to put a downer on your day
"Come in, come in." You motion for them to enter properly, rubbing the light crust of siesta from your eyes. After a brief pause, you realise your mistake, "Ah… Come in."
You pull your little translation guide from a drawer, opening it as the three file in. You're going to have to improve fast if you're going to lead a team, but the book will be a boon for now.
"Ah, um. Welcome, friends. I am Clara de la Cierva and you will be working for me. Introduce yourselves."
None speak immediately. The youngest of them, a tiny woman wearing an approximation of western office attire with a few touches of what can only be local fashion, has her eyes firmly fixed on the floor. The other standout is a middle-aged man in work overalls who exudes a smell of engine oil even from across the room. Has he already been working this morning or is it ingrained so deep in his skin that it never comes out?
The last of them is the only one in traditional clothes, and is also the first to speak.
"Thank you, ma'am. I am honoured to introduce Mr. Ichiro Abe," a gesture to the man, "Miss Kiku Inoue," another to the left, "and I am Michi Kawaguchi."
"Good to meet you. Do any of you speak Albian? Hesperian?"
"No, ma'am. Though there's someone at the main office-"
"Tomomi, yes. I'll manage." You look over the assembled trio, considering the strange turn your life has taken, and how equally strange it must be for these three to be dragged from their usual roles to be the lackeys of a foreigner. You had better make a good first impression, in the name of shared circumstances.
"Mr. Abe, could you wait for me in the main room, I'll be out in a short while."
He nods and gives the slightest of bows before leaving wordlessly. Whether he's quiet or uncomfortable, you'll soon find out. But first, some reassuring words to the other two. You've read enough about Akitsukini to know that they're not as developed in the balance between the sexes as back home. If that's the case, then you girls are going to have to stick together and make sure the men know their place.
"Things are difficult between men and women here. I want you to be certain that I will protect women at all times. If there are any problems, come and see me. Okay?"
Whatever response you had expected, it hadn't been two simultaneous winces. Your attempt at reassurance was now being met by looks of intense awkwardness and discomfort, and you couldn't help but feel a little the fool.
"What?" You ask, possibly more sharply than you intend.
After a length pause, Michi chooses to speak up in response, "I'm sure Miss Inoue appreciates you saying so, Ma'am."
"What about you?"
"I- I would hate to overstep my position as your subordinate. Ma'am."
"I don't speak enough of this damn language for… modesty. Speak." You can feel anger, unwarranted and unbidden, rising in your chest. It's not anger at either of these people, though their inability to speak clearly is not helping. It's the language barrier that is truly frustrating.
"I'm not a woman."
"...What!"
"I'm going to get Tomomi"
- - -
"So, you see, in Akitsukini there are people who are neither male nor female. We occupy a third sex, though it's not something that can easily be described in Albian. The words don't exist, or if they do I don't know them."
Tomomi and Michi are now seated across from your desk, making the tiny office seem even smaller than before. Kiku has been dismissed for the day with distress and instructions to return in the morning. You have a glass of some sort of local spirit in front of you that tastes enough like Hesperian rum to be soothing. Goodness knows you were needing it.
"A third sex, okay… wait, we?" you reply in Albian. At least you're fluent in this one.
"I'm also a non-binary person. There are a few of us who work for Mr. Asano."
You have so many questions. So many. Fortunately, a sense of decorum and the vaguest modicum of respect for other people prevents you from making any… awkward and utterly inappropriate inquiries about genitals or childhood. Instead, you play the ignorant foreigner who is willing to learn. It's barely an act, after all.
"Okay. You're not men or women. You're something else. But look, if I don't use he or she, what do I say?"
"In Albian, we use they and them. In Akitsukini it's more complicated but… This one would refer to oneself using formal language so as to establish one's identity and place in a conversation. Did you follow that?"
"Wait, that's the formal degendered voice, I- Oh, I see. I read about it, but I had presumed it was a hangover from your noble and religious castes."
"That's... not entirely wrong? People like us were more culturally present in those areas back then, so there's a certain association that remains."
"I see." You rub your forehead with the heel of your hand and sigh, "I apologise, Tomomi and Michi, to both of you. You have been very patient with me despite my ignorance."
As much as you still aren't entirely grasping the concept, that was hardly an excuse not to be polite. As strange as it felt, referring to Tomomi and Michi with "they" and "them" in the future would be easy enough. When in Tiberia, after all...
- - -
After that deeply awkward conversation, Tomomi became something of an unofficial attachment to the team - as your language skills improved they offered less advice and translation and more on cultural matters. Fortunately for that time all of you were focused intently on work; You and Ichiro on assembly, directing the various workmen who came and went, Michi on drafting orders and negotiating for better prices, and Miss Inoue… seemed to always be where she was needed, waiting quietly with notepaper, an order form, or some other documentation. The team started to come together as the aircraft did, forming a whole in the centre of the workroom.
It is a replica of the C.5, as requested, but with a handful of improvements and changes. A local engine (By a technicality. It is a locally made replica of a Europan design, similar to the Hesperian model in the original C.5) is installed and much of the frame comes from a retired observation plane. But the tail, the rotating wing, and the landing frame are all hand-tooled by you and your team.
It is not quite the same aircraft. It is paler, the wood is more flexible, and the cabling is perhaps a little lower grade. But it is otherwise a brand new C.5, identical to its sister, which you hope is still intact in Gabriella and her husband's barn back in Turia.
There's a test flight scheduled for the weekend. Now you've just got to decide who's going to fly the thing.
Who is going to fly the autogyro?
[ ] I will. No one else has the experience in an aircraft like this.
[ ] Talk to Mr. Asano. He's the boss, he gets to choose.
[ ] Ask the team. Someone here must have a contact.