OOCI'd like to give a shout-out to Sal Mander for inspiring this noir-lite romp with his, The Death of Sal Mander.
22nd of Winter, 514 A.V.
Trouble lurked in Hirem’s mind, a sense of unease that would not abate no matter how much he tried to comfort himself.
Trouble first began the night Hirem met the young child Timothy, in the street outside the Rat Hole. Up until that point, he had only ever heard whispers of what poverty in Riverfall looked like, but had never actually seen it up close. Up until that point, he had been completely unaware of any real problems that might exist with the Akalak society. From his perspective, Riverfall was an industrious, prosperous community, with a strong work ethic and a peaceful people. It was not his idea of a utopia, but compared to the hive of corruption that had been Ahnatep, and from what rumours he had heard of Kenash, Riverfall gleamed like a diamond in the bright Cyphran afternoon. Even the lowest of Rivarian - the kind that frequented the Rat Hole, for instance - were more respected by Hirem than the thieves that plagued the Pillars of Dust. And, of course, the beauty of the city could not be denied. Even on the chilliest of winter nights, when Hirem could not stand the temperature and fled indoors whenever possible, he found time to admire the majestic Suvan and the austere beauty of the city’s architecture. Whenever he pictured his homeland and its crown jewel, Yahebah, he pictured a settlement marked by Yahal as something special, something that must be preserved. Riverfall was much different; it demanded the god’s attention, scaling the side of a cliff that none would dare climb, let alone settle. For that, the Benshira admired the entirety of the Akalak spirit.
But after seeing the starved face of Timothy stare at him from across the street, with no parents or guardians in sight… Hirem wasn’t so sure.
Disturbed by the encounter, he tried to pass his feelings of alarm off as belonging solely with Tim and those haunting green eyes of his. The Benshira continued his daily routine without much change, thinking that he had at least managed to help one poor urchin off the streets… but now that his eyes had been opened to the idea, the unsettling news continued to attack him. He heard whisperings in the Rat Hole of the other waifs that plagued the docks, heard of the rash of thefts by children during the summer. He saw eyes staring at him from dark alleyways when he did his daily exercises, saw shadows of the poor flickering from building to building. These encounters were not constant, and according to the talk in the Rat Hole it was rare to see an impoverished person in Riverfall, but Hirem couldn’t get them out of his head. ”Where can these people go?” He finally asked of the tavern goers at the Rat Hole, approaching anybody that looked like they might give him an answer. Finally, one hard-drinking member of the Kuvay’Nas gave him an answer. ”They leave the city,” the Akalak murmured, wiping his mouth clean of ale. ”We are no charity that leeches may affix themselves to. Those that cannot work, must leave. Everyone pulls their own weight here.” Hirem, shocked, continued. ”Even the children?” The guard only responded by nodding his head gravely. The Benshira was stupefied by the answer. In Yahebah, those that cannot provide for themselves, are provided for. No one is turned away; no one is deemed unfit of Yahal’s mercy. To think that the poor are pushed into the wilds, exiled from this sanctuary and left alone in the Sea of Grass…
Even the children.
Finally, the nature of Yahal’s message when he sent Timothy to Hirem had become clear.
22nd of Winter, 514 A.V.
Trouble lurked in Hirem’s mind, a sense of unease that would not abate no matter how much he tried to comfort himself.
Trouble first began the night Hirem met the young child Timothy, in the street outside the Rat Hole. Up until that point, he had only ever heard whispers of what poverty in Riverfall looked like, but had never actually seen it up close. Up until that point, he had been completely unaware of any real problems that might exist with the Akalak society. From his perspective, Riverfall was an industrious, prosperous community, with a strong work ethic and a peaceful people. It was not his idea of a utopia, but compared to the hive of corruption that had been Ahnatep, and from what rumours he had heard of Kenash, Riverfall gleamed like a diamond in the bright Cyphran afternoon. Even the lowest of Rivarian - the kind that frequented the Rat Hole, for instance - were more respected by Hirem than the thieves that plagued the Pillars of Dust. And, of course, the beauty of the city could not be denied. Even on the chilliest of winter nights, when Hirem could not stand the temperature and fled indoors whenever possible, he found time to admire the majestic Suvan and the austere beauty of the city’s architecture. Whenever he pictured his homeland and its crown jewel, Yahebah, he pictured a settlement marked by Yahal as something special, something that must be preserved. Riverfall was much different; it demanded the god’s attention, scaling the side of a cliff that none would dare climb, let alone settle. For that, the Benshira admired the entirety of the Akalak spirit.
But after seeing the starved face of Timothy stare at him from across the street, with no parents or guardians in sight… Hirem wasn’t so sure.
Disturbed by the encounter, he tried to pass his feelings of alarm off as belonging solely with Tim and those haunting green eyes of his. The Benshira continued his daily routine without much change, thinking that he had at least managed to help one poor urchin off the streets… but now that his eyes had been opened to the idea, the unsettling news continued to attack him. He heard whisperings in the Rat Hole of the other waifs that plagued the docks, heard of the rash of thefts by children during the summer. He saw eyes staring at him from dark alleyways when he did his daily exercises, saw shadows of the poor flickering from building to building. These encounters were not constant, and according to the talk in the Rat Hole it was rare to see an impoverished person in Riverfall, but Hirem couldn’t get them out of his head. ”Where can these people go?” He finally asked of the tavern goers at the Rat Hole, approaching anybody that looked like they might give him an answer. Finally, one hard-drinking member of the Kuvay’Nas gave him an answer. ”They leave the city,” the Akalak murmured, wiping his mouth clean of ale. ”We are no charity that leeches may affix themselves to. Those that cannot work, must leave. Everyone pulls their own weight here.” Hirem, shocked, continued. ”Even the children?” The guard only responded by nodding his head gravely. The Benshira was stupefied by the answer. In Yahebah, those that cannot provide for themselves, are provided for. No one is turned away; no one is deemed unfit of Yahal’s mercy. To think that the poor are pushed into the wilds, exiled from this sanctuary and left alone in the Sea of Grass…
Even the children.
Finally, the nature of Yahal’s message when he sent Timothy to Hirem had become clear.