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    He's alright, our Gum

    EXP: 24,290, Level: 6
    Level completed: 62%, EXP required for next Level: 2,710
    Level completed: 62%,
    EXP required for next Level: 2,710


    Gum do Mugu's Avatar

    GP
    4,429

    Name
    Gum do Mugu
    Age
    41
    Race
    Dheathain Human
    Gender
    Male
    Location
    Corone

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    Low Stretches The Hand

    Dad's dinged up frying pan clanged against the stove grate, and he scratched it around to get it centred over the flames. Strips of bacon fell into the pan; two, four six of them in all, but the metal was still cool. Rhinta had her back to his; a loose chair leg wobbled as she scooted it up to their goodwill kitchen table. She pawed the leg, wondering if its collapse was impending; a laissez-faire smile and she moved on, flicking a fingernail under the chipping paint on the table's rim. “Don't do that,” grumbled the father, his elderly senses sharp as ever despite a turned back; together, they liked to forget she was a grown woman.

    Driving sleet swept the season's bleak backdrop; Radasanth's deepest winter morning waited outside the kitchen window. Inside, Rhint rubbed her hands together to ward off the window frame's bitter draught.

    As the savory smell grew, Rhinta bounced to her feet to run the rule over dad's progress. “Ahm,” she hesitated looking at the meat, the pink flesh was shriveling as it darkened at the edges, and streaked with fat. More than that, the streaks of fat carried an aesthetic that preemptively upset her stomach. “Just eggs for me, dad,” she said, jabbing a jaunty finger into his back. Dad (Mr. Reitinro to her friends) nodded, and dipped his hand into the lonely wicker basket on the countertop. Rhinta's first summer in the sun had brushed a burst of freckles down her nose and onto her cheeks; ever since, her dad bought the freckliest eggs from the stall's clutch. “Look at these beauties,” he insisted with pride, shoving a couple of heavily blotched eggs in her direction. She repelled his request with an eye roll, letting the dogged importance of her own youth take centre stage.

    J. Henrig Reitinro worked swinging his hammer at railway pegs for a few twenties short of a living. Odd jobs and Rhinta's salary made up the rest of their budget. Henrig had a bald patch he scratched for comedy's sake when his daughter's friends brightened his doorstep; and his poorly kept moustache won more crumbs than admirers.

    When the daughter sat back at the table, she did so with a clunk and a wince. Her knee butted the table leg. The porcelain figurine of an elephant teetered at the centre of the table, and Rhinta lurched forward to grab it before it toppled over. Her mother had gotten it on a trip they all took together when she was still studying at the university. Most of the time father and daughter ignored the thing. It was on the table out of love and duty, but memories could be a painful obligation. That day's breakfast showed her the curio in a new light, she inspected every detail. She paused when she noticed the small hole in the bottom of the hollow memento. While the old man was busy cracking eggs, she slipped it under the table and into her bag.

    “Whoa,” she exclaimed at the sudden slide of scrambled eggs in front of her.

    “Time to eat!” dad said, as he sat opposite her. The girl's old man served food with the golden heart of a single dad struggling through life as a widower.

    “Eggs are good,” she said between furious strokes of food shovelling.

    “You're in a rush to get to work, aren't you?” the old man asked, placing his cheek and temple between his thumb and forefinger.

    “I want to take the long way through the indoor market. Don't want to get too wet on the way.”

    “Ah, makes sense.” He was concerned for her, Rhinta's behaviour had been back and forth ever since the breakup.

    “Yep!” She stood with the clink of a dropped fork.

    The old man probed cautiously, “I'll see you when you get home. Okay?”

    “I'll be a bit late today, dad! I'm having dinner with a friend.” She reached under the chipped old table to grab her bag.

    He bit his tongue, hoping she wasn't still seeing the lad, “Ah, well, just be careful Rhint. I know you're a clever one, so I trust you.”

    “Dad, come on. You know it's not Calvino's fault!” she whined with frustration.

    “I know, but...” There was an ace always up his sleeve, and the wrinkly wink of his clear-sky eyes made him a real charmer.

    “Look, I'm gonna be late to work,” she said as she delicately slid her bag over her shoulder and holstered a nearby umbrella onto her hip.

    “Love you!” She slipped on her well worn shoes, and clipped her keys onto a frayed belt loop. The pants were a size too big, she'd lost weight since the cold weather set in; it didn't help that her pockets were crowded with coins. The borrowed belt kept her pants up, against all odds.

    “Love you too, dad!”

    The door slammed, and Rhinta's ponytail waved her into the brittle winter outside.





    The feverish drive of a bereft belly poured the employee horde into the canteen, and the lunch line produced an ear-ringing din of metal trays slammed with spoonfuls of mash and peas. The white noise was punctuated with the ping pong of misheard orders. Glee beamed from their normally dull eyes; they were joyous for the thirty minute escape from the mindless task behind them. An industrialist somewhere on a golf course was boasting with imperious pride, surely his buddies were impressed with the tender treatment he afforded his simple workers. The lunch room stood out as a well equipped privilege compared to the conditions most workers of the time toiled through.

    A plate of fruit and vegetables slid across a plain cafeteria table, eased by a thin layer of grease, and the freckled girl dropped her copy of Moonport by J. M. Faulconnier next to it.

    “They made me read that at school.” The words came from the stout muzzle of Rhinta's colleague, “Big” Robby Hatchford.

    “Me too, but I'm reading it again,” she conceded sheepishly across the table.

    “Don't eat that!” His burly baritone reverberated in the span of his chest. Hatchford's wide scowl bore the scars of his past, hidden behind a chicken-scratch beard.

    Rhinta jumped, with a “Huh!?”

    “The apple...” Hatchford furrowed his bushy brow in the direction of the fruit.

    The fruit was firmly flush with rose on green, but as she turned the apple its truth came to light. The far side had been hiding a mushy patch of depressed flesh, coloured brown and showing patches of fuzzy white mold.

    “Oh, wow.” She placed it delicately at the centre of the table, rotten side facing away from her.

    “Yup. A bad apple.”

    Hatchford had dabbled as a professional pit fighter in the Citdadel. Pundits surmised he could have been as good as Cromwell if he'd stuck at it. After retiring from the fight circle, he joined Radasanth's city guard, turning down promotions to remain a grunt for the thrill.

    “So, hey, you were in the city guard, right? You ever catch any smugglers?” She changed the topic, unconcerned that she was down a fruit.

    “Yup.”

    “At the airship dock?”

    “Sometimes.”

    “Was it dangerous?” As quickly as her dining partner could volley away the questions, she served up more.

    “Yup, sometimes. I still have some friends in the crew down there. I could tell you all about how it is in real life. It's different to how it is in that book, I can tell you that much.”

    Moonport was a famous Radasanthian novel written in the last century. The subject matter was smuggling and high adventure!

    “Oh, that'd be great, I wanna know eeeverything!”

    “Anything to help keep your mind off that fucken jhoist head you're seeing.” Robby rubbed his forehead. His globe of bouncy curls winked at the truth of his soft persona; to his credit, he saw Rhinta as a good kid on the wrong path.

    “We broke up.”

    “Yeah, I heard but-”

    Rhinta bit her tongue in the face of another condescending old man telling her what's best. “But nothing! Are you going to tell me about real life smuggling or not?”

    “Sure, sure. Smugglers it is then.”




    Gentle voodoo flushed luminescent colours through the K-Mon Dojo's sign, the highlight of Yannsen Street. In reality, it wasn't a dojo at all, it was a restaurant. Somebody's memory maintained there had once been a martial arts school there. The place was a short rain shower from the offices of Kerlon and Company, where Rhinta Reitinro had spent the day at work. Inside, the young woman's affinity for brown and grey fabric struck a discord with the discount magnificence of the restaurant's faux foreign décor. Two drinks drowned in drips, awash with more than a minute's condensation. She was alone, but insisted to her waiter that her dining partner was about to arrive.

    CLANG! CRANG! BANG!

    “Oh my gods!”

    Forehead and palm met with blushed embarrassment the second Rhinta jerked around to see what the noise was. Calvino had arrived in typically disappointing fashion. A waitress was on the floor, having taken the worst of the exchange. She took on the role of victim in a dreadful murder scene, and the tasty red sauce filled in for blood.

    “Wow, man. Oh, man. I'm so sorry.”

    Calvino's faculties were partially absent due to a pre-meal indulgence of his insidious substance dependency. He was young, but his moderately handsome features were pocked with discs of thick red skin, each marbled with calcified lines. The centre of the pockmarks were brown, soft, and infected. The dishevelled fellow was suffering from a sexually-transmitted disease known as the jhoist. Out of embarassment, he held his hand over his cheeks, trying to conceal as much as the disfigurement as he could.

    “Let me help you,” he slurred, with his hand extended.

    Looking up at his marred face, the waitress used her good manners to hide her repulsion. She wisely bypassed his assistance and jumped to her feet with a quick “I'm fine, it's no big deal at all!” The truth was that it would, obviously, be the moment that ruined her day. Her blouse would never show the purity of brilliant white again.

    The moment claimed Rhinta's day as well; she wished it away with her flicking wrist as she mouthed “over here” dramatically. Her wagging hand flailed for his attention, and as he started over rubber necking patrons snapped back, lean allocation of self-awareness settling in.

    “As if my face wasn't bad enough,” he grumbled. “They're all staring extra hard. Fuck.” As much as they were taken by his affliction, they were even more concerned by his streetwise kerchief, rolled into a narrow headband.

    “Oh, hush. Come on, just sit down and relax. Nobody is looking at you.” Rhinta was looking at him, though. Her sweet blue eyes, the same as the old man's, flashed with sympathy. Thin and curlies grew from hard-to-reach shaving spots; whether the butcher job he did with the razor that morning came from his man-child incompetence or the pain of his skin condition was unclear.

    “Alright, alright, man,” he slid into the solid seat opposite her. Calvino Celso wore an ensemble of his own ineptitude, shirt stained with food and sweat. In spite of the almost formal setting, he still wore the blue and yellow colours of the Boca Boys.

    “It's really good to see you, Cal. I'm glad you could make it.”

    “Hey, I know. It's good you're alright, Rhint. You're doing good, really good. I'm glad.”

    “Yeah. Work's going well.” She hated it.

    “That's good, yeah.” He slid a fingernail under the crusty rim of a pockmark under his chin.

    “Are you ready to order?” The waiter appeared suddenly.

    K-Mon's staff were waistcoated into anonymity; they wore black on grey, with even greyer trimmings. The interjector's only remarkable feature was robbing the bow-tie of its inherent charm. For a thousand gold, Rhinta wouldn't have been able to pick the man out of a line up; even his voice adhered to the rule of the nondescript.

    “You go first,” offered Rhint. “I'm still picking if that's okay?”

    “Ah, yeah, man, ahm.” Calvino was a menu pointer. “This one here. I can't pronounce that.”

    “The anubih adnaro? Got it, no worries!” The waiter nodded, and smiled. “And how about for you, ma'am?”

    Rhinta replied with confidence, “I would like the nikiw nikasot nikij.” Her pronunciation was very close.

    “Ah, you got it right—most people don't,” laughed the waiter, with a mind for tips. “I'll put that in for you right away.”

    As soon as the waiter was clear of eavesdropping range, Rhinta plunged into a difficult topic, “Are the Bocas giving you your medicine? You seem like you're itching more than usual.”

    “You know how they are, they give me enough to keep me around,” Cal spoke quietly and defensively.

    “And you swear you don't know where you caught it?” Her sullen glower emphasised a critical need for honesty.

    “I swear, Rhint. I've never been with anybody but you.” In his mind he knew it was true, but Calvino accepted how frail his credibility was.

    “Well, people say the Bocas infect you so they can keep you stuck with them,” she explained, “And I think that's exactly what happened to you, Cal.”

    “People say that, yeah. But Dice is like a brother to me, he'd never do that. I must'a caught it off a greasy toilet seat or somethin'.”

    “You know, I was speaking to Dr. Oriz. And she told me that a large enough dose in one go and you knock it out!”

    “A dose that big costs fucken thousands, Rhint. Man, I can't expect Dice to foot that bill for me. The stuff's worth too much on the street.”

    “Well, look, I might be able to help you out. I've got something I'm working on, okay? So just don't do anything stupid with the Bocas, okay? Okay. Promise me.”

    That tender sentiment for an ex-lover blew a silence across the dinner table. Their ripe youth fell from the same tree, hers—they said—blossomed, and his went stale. Yet, nothing could upend their roots. A life on the rails of a wintry rock in the northern ocean made love, especially that bleak love, a rare and essential relief. In that moment, they felt seawater in their lungs.

    The waiter spilled Cal's beans when he put the plate down.

    “Oops! Let me get you some more!”

    “No, it's just a few that spilled, man. Don't worry about it. I'm gonna tip you good, don't sweat it!” Calvino wasn't a bad guy; he just had rough edges.

    Rhinta snorted at her ex's handling of the awkward incident. “Wow, this looks really good,” she said of the exotic dinner plate that appeared in front of her. The meal came with two boiled eggs, and fitting with custom, they were still in their shells; neither shell had a freckle on it.

    When the waiter left, Calvino resumed the conversation. “Rhint, I know you think I can't do it, but man, I can fix this myself,” he sniffed between the words. “There's no legit way you can get that stuff. So just, fuck, man. Just, fucken, don't you do anything stupid for me.”




    The sleet had finally stopped. The moon overhead was an anxious observer, its ethereal vitality shrouded by the passing clouds, and the stars were a dream never so distant. Rhinta pulled her oversized coat tight around her to fend away the bristling cold, but the thin soles of her shoes let through the bite of midnight cobbles. Her pace through Radasanth's maze of broadways and back alleys was a stride shy of a run.

    Rhinta was on Jarrek Street when the pavement beneath began to shake, and a clay roof tile smashed at her feet; she was a little rabbit, fearfully still at the belly end of a cage trap. Her brown eyes flicked up to the sky to see what cataclysm was upon her, but despite the frightening cacophony she witnessed a wonder of the modern world. The moon's intermittent glow was eclipsed entirely by the dreadful vision of an Imperial skynought. The giant balloon was bound with bands of steel, and carried an ironclad hull, and a deck loaded with pivoting cannons. She was a flying fort of magic and steam, a marauding queen with no claim to her aerial queendom.

    After that surprise subsided, the young adventurer knew she was close to the prize. This was the night the delivery came in, and she knew the faces that would be picking it up through her association with Calvino. With a puff onto her chilly palms, she plunged into the coming anxiety for just the murmur of salvation. The main entrance to the multi-purpose harbour was down the street, up around the bend and along a little way.

    Cold midnight rushed over her as she shed her outer coat and stuffed it into a side alley, hoping to retrieve it later. Underneath the coat was her dad's ridiculously oversized work gear. “They'll never believe this,” she muttered, but she had to try it anyway. The clothes weren't a good fit for her frame, but they were a good fit for a work site.

    Her back was straight, her eyes forward, and her stride purposeful. She walked across the work line and onto the approach. Even though it was the middle of the night, the place was still turbulent with tasks in the heat of completion. Beside her, the clip-clop of a draught horse flicked feces onto her borrowed boots, and the orders that billowed from bosses sent labourers to meet the empty wagon with casks and crates. Capitalism, it was alive and well under Imperialist rule!

    She strode stiffly into the dock's primary structure; the building's industrial bustle and cogwheel complexity swallowed her thoughts. It was bizarre even in its time; an intricate arrangement of steel girders pushed a docking platform into the sky, and cargo and workers travelled between the upper and lower sections via steam powered elevators. Airships docked at the top section. Rhinta huddled in her disguise beneath that main platform, mixing readily with the dockers in their plain overcoats.

    Eavesdropping was the crux of her madcap plan, so she started to listen to the loud-mouthed worker's to-and-fro.

    “It's cuz of that fucking 'pizza' that people underneath are sufferin'!” declared a gruff worker with an amputated arm.

    She kept going, walking as close as she could without looking more suspicious than she already did, ears perked for any familiar name.

    “Did you send the stuff up for Mr. Dice?” It was a forewoman; she mentioned a name Rhinta recognised.

    The freckled intruder pulled up and began to tinker with with a fortunately broken valve. She had no idea how to fix it, but her endeavour carried the earnest authenticity of her true goal.

    “Yes, ma'am,” was the reply, “Up elevator B1!”

    “Yes!” she thought. Rhinta let the valve clang down against the pipe, and began looking for a sequence in the elevator numbering system. She was at C, and D was in front of that, so B had to be behind her. The wild adventurer flipped on her heels and indulged in the pleasure of a skipped heartbeat when she spotted and approached the B1 elevator.

    A cracking chorus of adolescent shovel-boys broke out at her as she got close. They were called shovel-boys because they fed coal into the fireboxes that drove steam into the pistons that powered the elevators. Every eager boy was asking the same question of the young woman, “Miss? Miss? Miss? Going up?”

    “Ahm, yes. Yes, please.” Rhinta was surprised at how easy an adventure could be, it was her first.

    A sudden jolt and she was on her way up.

    At the top, she froze the second she stepped off and onto the wind-whipped dock.

    “Hey! Kid! What the fuck are you doing here?!” A pair of folded arms goose-stepped their authority in her direction.

    “Oh, I'm just-”

    “Where's your helmet? You're not supposed to be up here without proper headgear!” Luckily, the angry man had cut her off before she could incriminate herself. “Here, borrow this one—leave it at my office at the end of your shift.”

    "Yes, sir. Thank you, sir."

    "And get a better fitting overalls, you don't want your shit trapped in the fucking machinery. We're thirty days without an accident, don't fuck it up, fucker.”

    “Aye, sir!" She jammed the helmet onto the bounce of her ponytail, and continued with growing purpose.

    Left and right, her gaze snapped back and forth over the broad view in search of a sight. Being so close to success caused her façade tp falter, she was driven only to find what she came for: jhoistfew mixture, the valuable treatment for Cal's awful sickness.

    Trouble and opportunity came in the form of a crew of Boca Boys. They were six guys deep and soldiering in their full colours; they sauntered out of an opposing elevator shaft. Somebody important, a better dressed man, was hidden at the centre of their group. She wondered if it was him, Dice. Yes, they were flanking Dice. A wiry haired redhead, he was the commissioner for the combined interests of Radasanth's major crime families. He was unassuming in all aspects of life. His build took two takes to notice; he hid his strength beneath simple suits fitted for that purpose. The Boca Boys were rungs below the crime boss, but muscle was muscle.

    Rhinta had to watch and hide her face at the same time. Ten yards might have been enough that none of them would recognise her as their boy Calvino's ex, but t]hat risk was too much to take. To remedy her recognisability, she smeared oil from the earlier broken valve across her cheeks, and pulled her helmet down a touch.

    “This the stuff?” Dice slapped a small crate labelled “BANANAS”.

    “Ahm, yes, Mr. Dice. Our mutual friend said to send his regards to yourself and your boss in the city,” replied Sumaes, a lowly skysailor whose anxiety was evident. The well-uniformed rookie had been tasked with taking the fall should the corrupt operation be uncovered by the Imperial government.

    “Good doing business wid'ya, buddy.” As Dice thanked the docker for his assistance, an entourage goon shoved a drawstring pouch into the shaky skysailor's hand.

    “Thanks, he'll be pleased to see this!” said Sumaes, delighted that his pants had gone unsoiled.

    “I'm sure he will. Send Nyadir my regards." Dice went to shake the sailor's hand, but glowered at the grimy sight of a filthy mitt.

    “Sorry...” the pitch of his voice went up several degrees.

    “Forget about it. Just make sure this crate and its contents are loaded onto our wagon downstairs, alright?”

    “Yessir, absolutely.” The nodding was effervescent.

    Dice and his boys walked off and settled at the elevator entrance when Sumaes drew the string on the pouch double tight and made off to deliver the bounty to the half-elf. “Argh, what if I lose it between here and there,” he thought to himself as the rest of the world was reduced to a bit-part in the money's grand debut.

    The gangsters got in the elevator.

    Sumaes was returning to the boss.

    Rhinta took her chance. She burst out for the crate, and soon shuffled to a stop with a glisten to her forehead. A few heads made the turn, but apathy was a powerful sedative in a resentful workplace. It was closed with nothing but draw latches. “Oh my gods, it's not locked!” she fizzed, barely keeping a cap on her ecstasy.

    At first all she found was packing straw. Seconds spilled out like days ahead of her, "I have to find it, I have to find it!" At the bottom of a whole crate she uncovered the key to regaining her old life: a small vial of powder. The glass tube felt so precious. She dragged her bag off her shoulder and pulled out the porcelain elephant from the kitchen table; it was the perfect size to hide the medicine. Rhinta wondered what her mother would say to her about this, but sentimentality called for time she didn't have.

    "Oh god, what- Hey you!"

    It was Sumaes returning after remembering he hadn't secured the important cargo before leaving. She ran for a chute linking the top and the bottom of the airdock.

    "NO-Fuuuuck!"

    Rhinta took a thick breath; the air was peppered with the chemical they sent down the slide. With a cough, a splutter and one last glance at Sumaes as he bumbled towards her, she hopped into the tunnel and slid into an all action escape.
    Last edited by Gum do Mugu; 09-30-2017 at 10:45 AM.
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