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View Full Version : The Difference Between Us And Them



Fat Mike
08-29-10, 06:19 PM
Mike stood in the atrium of the Radasanthian Port Authority. The building was enormous, a fortress that stood against the ocean-borne winds far better than his run down place ever could. The bag that he held at his side was heavy - filled with bills and coins. He hadn't opened it up to count it, somehow he felt that someone would know if he did, but it had enough heft that his shoulder was sore and stiff where it had supported the strap of the burlap bag.

The room he waited in had a chair, but he would rather stand. There was nothing wrong with the chair, made of quality wood and real leather. The bookcase beside it seemed to match, not a speck of dust showing on the tops of the books or the shelves. A richly colored and thick rug was laid down in the center of the room, not a dark corner in sight. The chandelier above took the candlelight and magnified it, throwing it with crystal so that the room was bright, spectral rainbows dancing along the walls.

Finally, someone came out to greet him. The man wore a tailored suit, took the bag without a word and shook Mike's hand. A much smaller pouch was exchanged, full of sheaves of paper. Mike had peaked once before, the first time he made the Port Authority run. The numbers on paper for the amount of money and goods that passed between this and ports beyond was staggering.

Mike thought about those numbers the entire way out the door, beyond the guards, and into the sunny streets. People were passing by on the way to and from the docks, the calls of the homeless piercing through the hum of conversation and waves hitting rock. He stopped, dark eyes falling on an elderly man clothed only in tattered cloth, holding out a bent empty can for change. Just a tiny drop in the giant pool of money the government made of imports and exports would keep this man fed for the rest of his life. It made Mike scared, and it made Mike angry. As he fished around in his pockets for the few coins he'd taken to work for lunch, someone ran by. At first he thought he'd only been brushed up against as the person navigated around the corner of the Port Authority, but then he realized that it had been more than a little bump. The leather folder, bound with cord, had been stolen.

The folder was little use to a thief, but held all of Mike Milton's job security comfortably within its bounds. With a shout, he started running after the figure bobbing through the few clumps of people that mingled the portside streets.

Fat Mike
09-11-10, 09:01 PM
When he began to run after the thief, the crowds parted effortlessly. His dark boots pounding with echoing clacks along the light stone streets, the crowds drew back. Soon, he was catching up with his quarry, grabbing onto bits and pieces of detail that he could glimpse as he caught sight of the man through groups of people and jumping over the rugs of street vendors. The street led into the city, where the wide acreage of the bazaar would hold far more people and nooks that could be easily ducked into.

The idea of losing the thief in between the stalls and vendors of the market caused a panic in aching and burning leg muscles. Fueled onwards by his fear, Mike ignored the hitch in his side and the tight complaint of his lungs and ran faster. He could see a light tunic, billowing out behind the man in the wind, brown hair tousled and curly. In a fist, pumping side to side as he moved, the thief still held the moleskin binder.

Ahead, something seemed to make the thief slow. Mike could see the man ahead stumble though he kept his balance. Then, like a shot in the dark, the thief was gone. It took a few moments for the courier to catch on that the thief had ducked into an alley. Mike came around the corner so fast that he nearly rushed headlong into the wooden fence that lay a mere few feet from the alley opening. Looking upwards, he saw that a ladder against the stone building led up to a thatched roof. There was straw scattered in the alcove - had it been loosened by a thief on the roof or just mere wind? Knowing he was losing precious time, Mike grabbed the ladder, dirty and cold, and began to climb.