34 Summer, 504
It was too warm for work.
It was the height of summer, Alea's father was working hard to bring in fish to feed Denval, and Alea's mother expected Alea to help clean them. If there was anything worse than cleaning fish, it was cleaning them in hot summer weather, when the warmth somehow amplified the awful smell.
Her job was to dispose of the discarded parts of the fish after her mother cleaned them. The buckets of refuse made Alea gag every time the stench hit her nose. She tried to stop breathing, but somehow the smell came through even when she took only the tiniest of breaths.
After about the third bucket, she couldn't take it any more. She was gagging so much she thought her own guts would climb up through her throat, and then she'd have even more to clean up. Desperately, she looked around; no one was watching the eight-year-old girl right at that moment. Quietly, she set her bucket down and jumped off the side of the pier. Worried that someone might have heard the splash, she held herself low in the water and grabbed the bottom of the pier so she could hold herself as close as possible and make it difficult for a casual glance to spot her. If another dock-worker saw her in the water, they might think she needed saving, and that would ruin everything.
She heard voices approaching, and she almost thought she was about to be discovered. She held her breath and held very still, and soon the voices passed by. She waited a few ticks to be safe, then peered over the top of the pier.
This was her best chance. The closest people were the ones who'd just walked past, and they were facing the opposite direction. Trying not to splash too much, she pulled herself along the pier toward the shore. Then, her heart pounding in her throat for fear of being discovered, she dashed for the back of the nearest structure. People usually didn't walk around the backs of buildings, or along the outer edges of Denval, so if she wanted to cross the city, that was the way to go.