56th Summer 514 AV
Just after Lunch
Just after Lunch
The day had started, oddly calm and unstressful. That morning, Adelaide had finally provided her grandmother with the breakfast whisky which she had been hankering after since the beginning of the season, and the old woman had found nothing more to complain about. Breakfast over, the young Sitai had arranged the evening meal with the cook and returned to her room, ready to tackle the question as to whether there was money available to redecorate the upper floor bedrooms, including three which had not been occupied in years. Still, she had grown distracted and found herself writing a little rhyme on the subject of her grandmother. While she was trying to work out what rhymed with 'tough as old boots' and 'cause old women get to say what they like', when the very subject of the rhyme came bursting into her room. Adelaide immediately scrunched up the piece of paper, brushed it onto the floor and stood up respectfully.
"Grandmother! I..."
"They ate my dog."
"Sorry?"
"They ate my dog!" the old woman didn't look her usual confident and abrasive self. Rather, her face was crestfallen and her hand was trembling on her walking stick - the walking stick she usually only used for effect, to hit slaves with and because it was silver-tipped, rather than because she needed it at all.
"They ate your dog?" Adelaide looked blankly at her grandmother and walked over with a small smile. She was tempted to ask if the old woman was sure, but Yatmina Sitai was far from having a brain addled by age, even if she was eccentric, and Adelaide decided that questioning her would only succeed in earning herself a whack with the stick. Instead, she tried to gather more information, "Who ate your dog?"
"The fowlers. The nasty little beasts leapt on poor Genevieve and devoured her while one of the slaves was taking her for a walk. They made one mouthful of her!" Adelaide started to doubt the story a little less. She had heard of a fowler infestation on the fringes of the plantation and Genevieve would certainly be no more than a mouthful - the little dog was a frail thing accustomed to sitting in laps most of the time rather than going for walks. It was a wonder the dog had lived as long as it had, not to mention a happy chance for it that death had come so swiftly.
"Oh Grandmother! That's awful!"
"Tell me something I don't know." the old woman tapped her stick impatiently, "Now tell me what you're going to do about it."
"Well, I will make it known that the Fowlers should be dealt with in the next few days."
"No!" Adelaide stepped back in surprise at the old woman's angry exclamation, "Not in the next few days! You will deal with this today!"
"Today? But grandmother..."
"No Adelaide! No buts! You must avenge my dog! Avenge Genevieve!"
"Avenge..?" then seeing the old woman would not negotiate and would not rest until her granddaughter had carried out her wishes, Adelaide nodded wearily, "Of course Grandmother. I'm only sorry I had not dealt with it when I first heard of it and..."
"As you should be! Without your negligence, those flying beasts would not have eaten Genevieve!"
"Naturally."
And so, a bell later and having had it known that she needed someone as soon as possible, Adelaide was waiting on the porch, dressed practically but appropriate for the hot day in a red linen dress and knee-high leather boots (so as to be able to navigate the terrain) ready to talk with somebody about the problem. She had no idea who would be called to deal with the fowler issue, but only hoped that whoever he or she was would arrive quickly. Yatmina Sitai was not the type to be kept waiting. At least, though, the day got slightly cooler with every chime that passed.
"Grandmother! I..."
"They ate my dog."
"Sorry?"
"They ate my dog!" the old woman didn't look her usual confident and abrasive self. Rather, her face was crestfallen and her hand was trembling on her walking stick - the walking stick she usually only used for effect, to hit slaves with and because it was silver-tipped, rather than because she needed it at all.
"They ate your dog?" Adelaide looked blankly at her grandmother and walked over with a small smile. She was tempted to ask if the old woman was sure, but Yatmina Sitai was far from having a brain addled by age, even if she was eccentric, and Adelaide decided that questioning her would only succeed in earning herself a whack with the stick. Instead, she tried to gather more information, "Who ate your dog?"
"The fowlers. The nasty little beasts leapt on poor Genevieve and devoured her while one of the slaves was taking her for a walk. They made one mouthful of her!" Adelaide started to doubt the story a little less. She had heard of a fowler infestation on the fringes of the plantation and Genevieve would certainly be no more than a mouthful - the little dog was a frail thing accustomed to sitting in laps most of the time rather than going for walks. It was a wonder the dog had lived as long as it had, not to mention a happy chance for it that death had come so swiftly.
"Oh Grandmother! That's awful!"
"Tell me something I don't know." the old woman tapped her stick impatiently, "Now tell me what you're going to do about it."
"Well, I will make it known that the Fowlers should be dealt with in the next few days."
"No!" Adelaide stepped back in surprise at the old woman's angry exclamation, "Not in the next few days! You will deal with this today!"
"Today? But grandmother..."
"No Adelaide! No buts! You must avenge my dog! Avenge Genevieve!"
"Avenge..?" then seeing the old woman would not negotiate and would not rest until her granddaughter had carried out her wishes, Adelaide nodded wearily, "Of course Grandmother. I'm only sorry I had not dealt with it when I first heard of it and..."
"As you should be! Without your negligence, those flying beasts would not have eaten Genevieve!"
"Naturally."
And so, a bell later and having had it known that she needed someone as soon as possible, Adelaide was waiting on the porch, dressed practically but appropriate for the hot day in a red linen dress and knee-high leather boots (so as to be able to navigate the terrain) ready to talk with somebody about the problem. She had no idea who would be called to deal with the fowler issue, but only hoped that whoever he or she was would arrive quickly. Yatmina Sitai was not the type to be kept waiting. At least, though, the day got slightly cooler with every chime that passed.