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Marmoset's Story
First off, I'd like to thank my anonymous benefactor. I don't
consider my story especially compelling, but may I never see
the day I
turn down an honest coin. Speaking of which, would anyone care
to
purchase a cluster of bramble berries? I have some brambles
and two
lovely sheaves of Barley, all for sale at reasonable prices.
Now, my story. I'll have to make it brief, as storytelling's
thirsty
work, and I only have the one beer and can't afford another.
I've
been nursing this brew for nigh on a month, and I can only pray
we get
our new brewery up to speed before I finish it. The gentle Dwarf
who
gave me this brew deserves my eternal gratitude.
Until shortly before my exile, I lived in a mining town deep
in the
Dwarf Highlands of the Western Continent. In Brae'Nor, women
are
valued more highly than animals to the extent that they know
enough to
stop work today before they strain themselves such that they
cannot
work tomorrow, and can be taught to endure pain silently. You
may
have noticed that this attitude is a slight departure from what
in
Puddleby is referred to as "enlightened".
Always a quick learner, I played this game well enough to
earn an
assortment of privileges not usually granted to animals. I lived
as a
proper dwarf should, kept my house clean and kids out of trouble
while
the husband worked the mines, and was relatively happy. Until
the
stranger passed through town.
The children announced his arrival in myriad shouts of, "Mommy,
Mommy,
there's a stranger!" Our men all being in down the mines,
we women of
the town did as proper Dwarven women should and picked up our
axes and
prepared to send the stranger on his way.
He was quite an unremarkable man, raggedy and mild and skinny
fit to
starve. But he was human, and his size frightened us considerably.
As he took a shaky step forward and raised his hands, all the
women
scattered to the safety of their homes... all but one.
I mustered up all the courage I could and advanced on him,
growling,
"We've no need fer yer kind here, be off wi' ye."
Rather than run
away, he cringed before me and, in what I must say is the worst
Dwarven tongue I've ever heard, he simply looked me pleadingly
in the
eye and said, "Food."
I took him back to my house, sat him down in my old man's
chair, and
may the gods strike me blind if I didn't feed him the old man's
very
dinner, knowing full well what it would cost me. The kids clung
to
me, and the man kept bumping his head on my ceiling, and it wasn't
too
much of a stretch for me to act very cross the whole time.
Secretly, though, I was euphoric. A Dwarf could live her
whole life
in Brae'Nor and never see a soul from further away than over
the hill.
Although the man's speech was barely intelligible, I made sure
to
grunt often enough to keep him talking. After he ate, he even
helped
me wash up the dishes.
I wanted him to stay all day and tell me about the world in
his broken
Dwarvish, but the midday meal was fast approaching, so I warned
the
stranger he didn't want to be about when the men returned home
for
their dinner. The man thanked me for my hospitality and,
apologetically, pressed a small, flat leatherbound object into
my
hands as he walked out the door. It was the first book I ever
saw.
Thinking quickly, I sent the children to wash up for dinner
and ran to
see the tavern keeper's wife. "You have to help me,"
I pleaded, "I
need two coppers now, and I'll pay you back however you say,
but you
must never breathe a word of this to anyone." When my husband
came
home I told him the coppers were the stranger's payment for the
food.
The tavern got the money right back, of course, and I got a cursing
I'll never forget.
By way of repayment, I did the tavern keeper's laundry for
years until
his eldest daughter was old enough to be pressed into service,
but his
wife kept her word, and neither my children nor my husband ever
learned of my deception.
I suppose you're curious about the book. Well, it was a reading
primer, that's all. For years I secretly studied that book by
the
fire after the rest of my family had fallen asleep, until I knew
every
crease of every page. One night my old man caught me at it,
raged
about "wimmin's place", and threw the book in the fire.
But by then I
already knew every page by heart. And, more importantly, I knew
how
to read. I also learned how to do sums.
That primer ignited my passion for learning, and in the years
that
followed, even paid me back for some of the troubles it cost
me. As
the only Dwarf in town who knew any arithmetic, I was able to
earn my
old man a little extra beer money from time to time helping the
tavern
keeper or the occasional passing merchant with his accounts.
Although my husband never knew it, my moonlighting money bought
more
than his beer. It also bought books, some at prices that would
have
made him choke. I tried not to let him see them, as whenever
he
caught me reading we invariably had a row. This alone was
exceptional. No other women in Brae'Nor ever stood up to their
husbands. I can only imagine the teasing he suffered in the
tavern
because of it.
Then, one night, my whole life unraveled. While my husband
was out
drinking, I had started reading a particularly absorbing treatise
on
comparative Sylvan philosophy, and didn't hear him come stumbling
in.
It must have been a rough night in the tavern, because he snatched
the
book from my hands, heaved it across the house, and shouted that
it
"ain't proper". I yelled back that it was my money,
and I would spend
it as I pleased.
He retorted, "Y'ain't got nothin', woman, this 'ouse
an' ever'thin'
in't's mine!"
"In that case," I screamed, "why don't you
take some more of YOUR
money and pour it down your drunkard's throat and let me finish
my
book!"
I hurled the childrens' old cookie jar at him, and a years'
wages
showerd down on his head. Without a word, he picked up the coins
and
trudged up the hill to the tavern. I closed the door behind
him and
cried.
My next thing I remember after that is the pounding on the
door, then
the shouting. I remember thinking it very odd that my husband
would
demand that I open up the door to his own house. Numbed by shock,
I
sat on the floor and clutched my knees to my chest as the door
crashed
open.
"'Ere y'are, WITCH!" bellowed my husband, his breath
foul with drink.
He pointed his finger at me. "I put up wi' yer ways fer
long... NO
MORE!" Angry murmurs of assent sounded behind him. The
whole town
clamored outside, axes and torches in hand.
Then my old man's eyes rolled back, as they always did when
he'd drunk
too much, and he passed out cold on the floor in front of me.
The
mayor stood behind him, a grimace of terror forming on his face.
"She's witched him!" the mayor yelled. The crowd
roared.
I leaped up and grabbed a big handful of flour out of the
sack in the
pantry, ran to the door, and flung the flour at the torches.
The mob
screamed with instinctive fear at the fireball that erupted,
as I
darted past before they recovered their wits, and ran like never
before nor since.
After that, there's not much to tell. A middle-aged, vagrant
Dwarf
has few options to support herself, and it wasn't long before
I ran
afoul of the law, caught stealing bread. The magistrate feared
the
possible consequences of locking up a literate Dwarf knowledgeable
in
philosophy and rhetoric together with the impressionable, dangerous
lot his prison already held; thus, I found myself on the next
boat to
Puddleby.
Don't feel sorry for me, children. I'm happier here than
I've ever
been before. Here there is culture, there is diversity and variety
of
experiences... and I have all the freedom that I could ever
hope for,
and noone thinks the worse of me for it.
I can play Parcheesi with my "adopted daughter",
Jillian (Mr. and
Mrs. Green Pants' daughter) and read her bedtime stories. I
can
crawl the length and breadth of the lands on my hands and knees
groping blindly for the missing Kanta Klens, and kindly exiles
will
crawl beside me. And, most importantly, I cozy up next to the
fire
and read in the library as much as I want. The only thing I
miss is
beer.
/action grants herself a precious sip.
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