Hello. It was strangely difficult to produce this chapter since my storyboard glossed over this part. I suppose I've finally reached the events described in the summary anyway. I'm not very happy with my writing here, but I suppose NaNoWriMo is all about getting it out there. It's fun writing it anyway. Once again, any feedback is welcome.
Chapter 2
My good mood lasted until I arrived back home. The Rharear house was larger than most in the city, a remnant of the days when the Rharears had presided over the agrarian settlement that had been developed into Bronzebrook. The Rharears still had some sway in the local politics, mostly when negotiating with the forest people.
Not that my family lived in the palace: the Rharears rented out the palace in the center of Bronzebrook to the Element Holidaying Agency for a tidy sum, and they maintained it for us in return. Our family home was much smaller than the palace and situated on the outer rim of the city - as far as you could go without leaving the rocky soil that repelled the forests. It was painted a metallic yellow, meant to look both artistic and modern. Like most updated pre-uplift architecture the windows were triangular with energy fields added later to replace the primitive wooden grids. With five floors and only three people living there it was exactly as empty as you'd expect. At least the new sibling would have plenty of space to run around in.
I didn't bother announcing my presence as I entered the house, eager to wash off the green dye that had soaked into my feathers. I set the egg plate parcel down on the table and made my way up the stairs to the sonic shower. I disrobed and stepped into the shower booth. Sound waves tuned to the harmonic frequencies of my body shook the dirt and grime off my skin and feathers. Once the first phase ended a torrent of steam blasted me from the ceiling, moisturising my feathers. Now clean, I left the shower booth and took a bottle of green feather dye from the medicine cabinet. I brushed the dye into my feathers and waited for them to dry.
For lack of anything better to do, I started flicking through news channels on my data pad. The Terrial Empire had been found disappearing its non-terrial subjects to secret penal planets. A Gnollden woman tried to sue Element Drinks after her requested hot tea burned her. I suppose that was what you could expect from the Gnolldens. The Legion commissions a new fleet of battleships from the Shantari Drive Yards, equipped with disruptor cannons.
Why did Sincere Day think it was a good idea to join the Legion? The pay wasn't that good. He could be killed. Did he hate it on Five's Roost so much that he'd risk death? Was nothing here good enough?
The news application provided no less than five articles of celebrity gossip, and another article on the actions of the Terrial Empire; apparently they'd been conducting illegal weapons on void clouds. One headline cheerfully told me that a Federation archaeological project had unearthed Mek-Tottu fossils on a barren planet five systems away from their evolutionary home. The implications were groundbreaking, apparently.
With my feathers dyed I returned to my room and pulled out the training suit. The suit was a resistance trainer - you could set it to work against your every movement while you exercised and you'd build up muscle much faster. I usually used it while I was running and relied on the supposedly abnormal Margan muscle potential to keep myself in shape, but with the recent weather being what it was I thought I might just job on the spot in my room instead. I poked my head out of the window to check the weather one last time and saw a brown suited Margan woman standing under a lamp post. Probably waiting for someone. From the Rharear ancestral home you could barely see the forests. The Comhonlim copse was approaching Bronzebrook at this time of year, and I could see the orange leaves on the horizon.
Before I started my routine I unhooked my old and ragged hammock from the ceiling and folded it into the crevice in the wall behind a hanging tapestry depicting the uplifting of the Margans in traditional panoramic art. It was a somewhat awkward place to put the hammock, especially when you had to lift up the bottom of the tapestry but it was the best place to put it out of the way while I exercised in my relatively sparse room. When I was younger it had been my favourite hiding spot, and I could still fit in there even if it was tightly cramped.
After a brief but intense exercise session I checked the time. The family usually convened in the late evening for dinner, which meant that I still had a few hours to myself. With basic education having ended only last week and being the only child - the eldest child now - of a formerly noble household I theoretically had a number of options open to me. Mostly as some kind of cultural spokesperson, or on the tourism boards where my family name still carried a kind of weight. I didn't want to work in tourism though. While I couldn't say I was fond of Bronzebrook something still struck me as obscene about selling it off to the masses in the core Federation planets. To be perfectly honest, with how strange the day had been this wasn't something I wanted to think about right now.
I finished my exercise sets and re entered the sonic shower. I still had a few hours until my family would return and all my old school friends had other plans for the day or had already started their first shifts at the Element Industries factories. A quick check on my data pad revealed that the market pavilion was still open until late at night. Time to buy a new hammock then.
***
By the time I arrived at the market for the second time that day business had slowed to a crawl. Half of the stalls in the pavilion had closed for the day and I could see Fine Outcome packing away his goods. The hammock had been sold. I left the pavilion through the two main doors at the front of the structure. The street tiles on the road to the pavilion were wet and slippery and I trod on them carefully. The rain had mostly ceased save for a few spatterings of rain that made me glad that I'd decided to wear my raincoat this time. I caught the left eye of an old Margan forest woman attending a stall only a few metres from the front doors to the pavilion. Her table and tent were stocked with a number of items that I only barely recognised, including a stuffed hammock. I approached her stall and inspected the hammock. It was one and a half times larger than my old hammock which I'd had for five years now. The fabric was also rougher to the touch than my own hammock. It was also not as beautiful as Honorable Point's hammock though I'd have been shocked if it cost even half the price.
"Want this hammock?" the Margan forest woman asked. She was shorter than most Margans and her while the language she spoke was the same as my own, the stresses on the syllables and clicks sounded different enough that it was a struggle to make out her words. I switched my translator into active mode, disguising the motion as making a show of examining the hammock thoughtfully.
"I'm not entirely certain yet, though I am leaning towards yes," I said, "Why is the hammock stuffed except for this section here?"
She paused, eyeing me as if I were deliberately asking a stupid question and said, "That's the rain cover. It's stuffed with Tassavy feathers to keep the cold out."
It was a fair question on my part. "That sounds… warm," I said, "I'm not sure that-" the forest woman took a wooden box from the satchel at her waist and shook it up and down five times. Once she was done she slid the lid off and peered into the box. "Excuse me?" I snapped.
Whatever she had seen in the box must have concerned her, because she looked at me with something approaching pity in her eyes and said, "I feel like you might need it in the future. It's ten credits."
I had to admire the woman's selling technique. Her routine was certainly disconcerting. "That wouldn't happen to be a divination cube in your box, would it?"
The forest woman shook her arm. "A fate dice, yes. I find it helps me make good decisions." I kept my face blank and my arms perfectly still. "Would you like to have a reading?" she asked me.
I waved my arm slowly in the negative. "I wouldn't want to impose, Madame…"
"Positive Ulklaw. And it's really no trouble." She shook the divination cube in its box vertically five times. After the last rattle she slid the lid off the top and showed me the cube inside. "This is for the present."
The sky was dim in the evening light but the lamps on the front of the towering pavilion provided enough illumination to see inside the narrow box. The cube inside looked incredibly old, perhaps older than even Bronzebrook. It sat flat against the bottom of the box. The upwards face was painted with straight blue lines - the symbol for water.
Death.
"I got that the last time too," Madame Positive told me. She slid the lid back onto the box and shook the box up and down six times. The next showing would be for the future. The box lid was removed again and I peered inside again.
A triangle and a feather. The symbol for metal.
"Is that it then?" I asked, "Will I die now and yet somehow do great things in the future? Is that what the Divination Cube says? You said it helps you make decisions, yes? I plan to go home without buying your hammock or anything at all, then go to bed. What are the portents for that?"
"Fate dice," Madame Ulklaw said absently. She shook the box vertically five times and showed the contents to me again.
Water again.
I shivered, suddenly cold beneath my padded anorak. A threat to my existence, the Munnki had said. Now the forest woman had rolled for death twice, or even three times if it hadn't been a trick. "Ten credits," I said, fishing out my wallet.
Ulklaw rolled the hammock and tied it with twine. "The Ulklaws are returning to Comhonlim," she said conversationally. "Bronzebrook has been dangerous recently. Be careful."
What could you even say to that? I left the market with a hammock in hand and began the trek home. A Margan woman in a brown suit followed me to the transport stop but didn't get on the bus when it arrived. She sat at the station and watched the bus leave.
The world felt darker, and not just because the sun had finally disappeared into the skyline. Every shadow on the road felt menacing. The Munnki I could ignore, but a divination cube was much more convincing. Both at once?
I hurried home and was disappointed to find that the lights were on in the dining room, where I'd left the egg plate. My parents were home. Holding the hammock in front of me like a shield I entered the house.
***
"The strike starts soon," my mother said, "it has been a long time coming."
Dinner was quiet. My father - Eminent Change, and my mother - Righteous Mountain were often missing from the table, but today they had made it home. I glanced at the parcel I'd delivered, now placed on the Beknom-wood cupboard in the corner of the room. The doors to the cupboard were shut, the metal latch moved into the locking position. It was usually left open. Could the egg be in there?
Eminent Change led his gaze on me with his right eye and I adjusted my seat. "The strike?" I asked. No wonder they'd been coming home later recently. "I thought the Element Holdings associated factories had a no strike rule?"
"That is why it is imperative to strike," Righteous Mountain said. My mother was as sombre as usual. "We have allies in the other cities that will strike with us. All the cities besides Earthbeck."
I recalled the divination cube. The Munnki's words. Death. "Everyone will be fired," I said. "They won't want to seem weak."
Eminent Change dropped his spoon into the bowl of beetle stew and shook both arms in vigorous disagreement. He said, "Five's Roost produces almost five percent of their total products. They will not want to risk falling short this year, with the Terrial Empire driving up their domestic production."
"That makes sense," I said slowly, "but be careful." Could I see a machine in the cupboard? My father caught my staring at the cupboard and exchanged looks with my mother. "What is in that cupboard?" I asked.
"It is a-" Righteous Mountain started to say. She snapped her beak shut and slid her table-stool to the side. "It would be better to show you." My mother walked to the cupboard and brought back the parcel, which she placed on the table. She untied the parcel bend knot that held the fabric together and lay it on the table, revealing the egg plate.
The egg plate was a convex oval-shaped wooden plate, varnished and painted by Fine Outcome following the specifications of my mother's dreams. It would sit on my future sibling's egg incubator and when the time came my father would use it as inspiration to name them.
Apparently my mother had been dreaming of night when she'd laid the egg. Dark colours featured prominently on the plate - blues, greens and reds. Tiny smudges that could be interpreted as Margans danced around the rim of the painting, each following what I could only call random household items. A starship, though not like one I'd seen before, swam through the stars in the corner.
"You're having another child," I said, "When?"
My father walked to the cupboard and opened the latch. With both arms he took a silver, metallic object from the cupboard and carried it to the table like it was made of glass. An egg incubator. Shaped like a large egg itself with a flattened underside for safe storage and carrying, it would keep the egg inside warm and safe until it was time for it to hatch. Righteous Mountain took the egg plate and slid it into the net pocket on the side of the incubator, where it would stay until the egg hatched.
I could see the egg itself through the clear window on the top of the incubator. The egg was a dark green, and was apparently healthy judging by the statistics flashing across the window. In the centre of the window, written in Federation logograph, the time to hatching read 'approximately five months'.
We all spent a while admiring the egg, drinking our beetle soup and making small talk about the state of the city. While still tense, it was a vast improvement from most meals where there was no good news to hold their attentions.
Once the beetle soup was finished I gave thanks for the meal and made my way up to the bedroom. My old hammock still hung in the center of the room. I briefly considered going through the process of unhooking it and replacing it with my new hammock, but it was so late that I judged it not worth the effort. I'd do it in the morning.
***
When I woke up it was still dark. I lay in my hammock wishing I could fall back to sleep. This wouldn't have happened if I'd hung the new hammock up instead, I thought.
The stairs creaked. The third step had been noisy as of late, and the fourth was little better. Was it Righteous Mountain or Eminent Change outside? The stairs creaked twice, three, four, five times. What were my parents doing?
A door opened on this floor as the stairs creaked a sixth time. "Who is that?" My mother.
There was a thud and a scream.
I leapt from the hammock and raced to my door. There was a second scream and thud. My father. The water divination sign flashed through my mind. Death. I turned to the window. My room was one floor off the ground. Could I make it? Yes, but they'd catch me quickly with my inevitably broken legs. I heard footsteps outside the door. I considered the tapestry. A rope? No, the alcove. I hurled my new hammock out of the window and shoved myself into the alcove behind the tapestry.
I heard my bedroom door slide open. People, Margans, walked in. They must have seen my broken window because one of them pushed their way past my old hammock (the hooks in the ceiling were half rusted) and said, "The younger one escaped, must have used that padded hammock to break his fall."
Another voice, likely female, cursed. "Speech, Ability, you go to chase them down. Delivery and I will burn the house."
A pause.
"Are you sure?" another voice. "Holdings wanted to send a message. I think this counts."
Holdings? Why had a Margan named Holdings wanted my family dead. My mind raced. I barely dared to breath.
"Of course. They heard us. What if they saw our faces? We cannot risk this. Now go."
I kept my breathing as calm and steady as I could. The world faded away and I began to feel hungry, as if I had been starving for days. The words of the murderers became like static. Background. I blinked and exhaled. Could I smell smoke?
The house was burning. I staggered out from under the tapestry and ran to my parents' bedroom. I tripped on something soft and fell to the ground. I turned my head back and forgot to breath. The glazed eyes of Righteous Mountain. Ahead of me, slumped against the bedroom door frame was Eminent Change. They were dead. The flames in the hallway crackled yet I could barely hear them.
The egg. I needed to save the egg.
I held my bed robe's sleeve to my mouth and ran down the stairs to the dining room. The incubator wasn't on the table. I searched the room in panic until I remembered the cupboard felt like a fool. The incubator sat on the bottom shelf. I took it into my arms as carefully as I could and looked out the window. A Margan woman in a brown suit stood by the front door, holding something to her ear. A communicator?
The hunger pangs returned. The world's colours faded. I was going to kill her. I stood by the door, setting the incubator down. The front door opened outwards.
"The house is burning," she said, "no sign of the heir." She returned the communicator to her jacket pocket and watched the fire burn. She was tired, and guilty. She wasn't sure how it had come to this. I didn't care.
I threw the door open, stunning the murderer. She stumbled backwards and I kicked her in the head. There was a crack and she fell to the ground.
Colour returned to the world and I stared at the body I had created. I wasn't hungry anymore. I felt sick.
Holdings had done this. I was an idiot. Element Holdings had done this. They wanted to break up the strike. What was going to happen now? Element Holdings was the most powerful organisation in the city - on the planet. I and my new sibling would be helpless and I was sure they wouldn't let me go after this. I screamed and punched the door. It hurt. I'd have to run away. Leave the city. Go into hiding.
I remembered Ulklaw. She'd come from Comhonlim. It was close.
I took the incubator back into my arms, stepped over the body and ran around the house until I was beneath my bedroom window. I picked up my new hammock and wrapped it around the incubator. I was going to need it if I was to survive the winter forest.