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| author | Julian Blake Kongslie | 2012-01-13 23:37:23 -0800 |
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| committer | Julian Blake Kongslie | 2012-01-13 23:37:23 -0800 |
| commit | a901197441a17b094455ac4dcdc7b349a42fef72 (patch) | |
| tree | b422699349c494db0360020f0a1424004dbe34f0 /novellas/a-little-greed/02-honor.mdwn | |
| parent | Just a tiny note. (diff) | |
| download | writing-a901197441a17b094455ac4dcdc7b349a42fef72.tar.xz | |
About half of chapter 2, A Little Greed.
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| 1 | [[!meta title="Chapter 2: Honor"]] | ||
| 2 | |||
| 3 | Harry was not a normal child. | ||
| 4 | |||
| 5 | Sharpaxe had done all he could for the boy, but he would simply never be more | ||
| 6 | than adequate as a fighter. He was fearless and cunning, true, and his height | ||
| 7 | and reach did him credit, but his body fundamentally lacked the speed and | ||
| 8 | strength of a true Goblin warrior. Against animals, certainly, he won far more | ||
| 9 | often than he lost; the boy had acquired a handsome collection of trophies. But | ||
| 10 | against his peers, his only hope was exploiting the environment and taking them | ||
| 11 | by surprise. | ||
| 12 | |||
| 13 | *Trickery,* that's what it was. He was good at it, but it wasn't the way battles | ||
| 14 | should be fought. Goblins wore their intentions on their sleeves, and Harry was | ||
| 15 | far more subtle than any other in his clan. | ||
| 16 | |||
| 17 | There was an old Goblin saying, «Every father learns his son is not a Warlord.» | ||
| 18 | Sharpaxe, perhaps, learned this somewhat earlier than most. | ||
| 19 | |||
| 20 | In other ways, however, Harry was a unique delight to raise. Goblins lived their | ||
| 21 | lives quickly, and Sharpaxe had feared that Harry would not be able to complete | ||
| 22 | his education with his peers at the age of 8. But Harry was intelligent, and far | ||
| 23 | more curious and inquisitive than any of his peers; he had easily risen to the | ||
| 24 | challenge and excelled beyond any expectation. | ||
| 25 | |||
| 26 | Under glamours to appear as a Goblin to the foolish wizards, he had already | ||
| 27 | worked as a teller on the main floor of Gringotts, and spent time apprenticed | ||
| 28 | several different departments. Sharpaxe held no doubt that he would make a fine | ||
| 29 | foreman or subchief someday, responsible for millions of galleons in assets. | ||
| 30 | With luck, and his longer lifespan, he could easily be a department Head. Harry | ||
| 31 | would certainly bring honor and glory to his clan. | ||
| 32 | |||
| 33 | <hr /> | ||
| 34 | |||
| 35 | Harry's inquisitive nature and cunning had already reaped dividends. At the age | ||
| 36 | of 7, Harry and his classmates had been taken to see the execution of a | ||
| 37 | criminal; some worthless thief named Lacksack who had been caught attempting to | ||
| 38 | steal from a vault. Harry had interrupted the proceedings with what would be a | ||
| 39 | defining question for the future of Goblin society, «It's wrong to kill him, | ||
| 40 | when there is money to be made, isn't it?» | ||
| 41 | |||
| 42 | Every eye turned to face Harry. Ragnok, presiding over the execution as was his | ||
| 43 | duty, considered the young Human carefully. After a moment, he responded, «How | ||
| 44 | can money be made from a thief? He has no honor, no value.» | ||
| 45 | |||
| 46 | «We can make money by his lies.» An uproar swelled in response to this; money | ||
| 47 | from lies? Unthinkable! | ||
| 48 | |||
| 49 | Ragnok quieted the assembly shortly, and demanded simply, «Explain!» | ||
| 50 | |||
| 51 | «We Goblins,» here Harry included himself, «do not lie. Our oaths are our honor. | ||
| 52 | Everyone knows this. But the Wizards do not trust in honor, and demand our oaths | ||
| 53 | be contracts with magic.» | ||
| 54 | |||
| 55 | This was true. Amongst the Goblins, oaths were simple and direct; a common | ||
| 56 | farewell was «On my honor, I have not lied to you today.» But by treaty, any | ||
| 57 | oaths given to wizards in Britain must be sworn on blood and magic; every | ||
| 58 | contract was presented with the oath, "I swear on my blood that I have not | ||
| 59 | deceived you or I shall die within the hour; so mote it be." The magic of the | ||
| 60 | oath would ensure its truth; either the Goblin who swore it was truthful, or | ||
| 61 | they would die. Goblins universally resented such a slight against their honor; | ||
| 62 | no Goblin would willingly be called Oathbreaker! | ||
| 63 | |||
| 64 | Harry continued, «Lacksack's life is already forfeit. Instead of executing him, | ||
| 65 | use him to present a false contract to a wealthy client. The lazy wizard will | ||
| 66 | not read the contract, as they never do, Lacksack will swear on his blood, the | ||
| 67 | wizard will sign, and Lacksack will be gone from the room before he dies. Goblin | ||
| 68 | honor is retained; the oath is true, it is not our fault that the foolish wizard | ||
| 69 | will assume Lacksack would not willingly die.» | ||
| 70 | |||
| 71 | A genuinely new idea to the Goblin mindset. There was little honor lost in lying | ||
| 72 | to a wizard; they showed by their treaties and their laws that they had no honor | ||
| 73 | themselves. The mechanics of the treaties would seem to prevent such deception, | ||
| 74 | but Goblins knew a loophole when they saw one, and this was an interesting | ||
| 75 | opportunity. | ||
| 76 | |||
| 77 | Ragnok turned to Lacksack and pronounced, «You have shown yourself to be without | ||
| 78 | honor. You have brought shame and disgrace to your family and your clan. This | ||
| 79 | child offers you an opportunity to die a warrior's death in service to your | ||
| 80 | Bank. Would you die this way?» | ||
| 81 | |||
| 82 | The condemned needed little time to consider such an obvious question. «I would | ||
| 83 | die a warrior's death, and bring what little honor I can back to my name.» | ||
| 84 | |||
| 85 | «Then so be it. Lacksack, you are the first Liar of Gringotts. You are released | ||
| 86 | to your family until a client is chosen for your task.» | ||
| 87 | |||
| 88 | Harry was proud to have found profit for his Bank. | ||
| 89 | |||
| 90 | <hr /> | ||
| 91 | |||
| 92 | Albus Dumbledore strode in to Gringotts bank early Saturday morning. He had to | ||
| 93 | renew the loans Hogwarts established for its incoming underprivileged students | ||
| 94 | and collect the various forms and monies needed to cover operating costs for the | ||
| 95 | new term. | ||
| 96 | |||
| 97 | The teller acknowledged his request to meet with Culthok, the Head of Hogwarts | ||
| 98 | Accounts, and directed him to a conference room. Shortly thereafter, Albus was | ||
| 99 | mildly surprised to see a Goblin he did not recognize enter with his documents. | ||
| 100 | |||
| 101 | "Who are you? I was to meet with Culthok." | ||
| 102 | |||
| 103 | "My apologies, but Culthok is unavailable today because of an internal matter in | ||
| 104 | the Bank. I am Lacksack, and I am authorized to handle your needs today." | ||
| 105 | |||
| 106 | "Very well, I assume everything is just as it was previously arranged last | ||
| 107 | year?" | ||
| 108 | |||
| 109 | Goblins were conservative when scouting unknown territory; the changes in the | ||
| 110 | contract reflected this. A slight increase in interest rates on the loans, and a | ||
| 111 | single fee duplicated. Nothing that could not be blamed on incompetence in | ||
| 112 | transcription on Lacksack's part should the deception be caught. | ||
| 113 | |||
| 114 | The briefest of scowls appeared on Lacksack's face, but he knew his duty to his | ||
| 115 | Bank. He had failed once; never again. "Yes. Here are the contracts for you to | ||
| 116 | sign. I swear on my blood that I have not deceived you or I shall die within the | ||
| 117 | hour; so mote it be." A brief flash signaled magic's acceptance of the oath. | ||
| 118 | |||
| 119 | Satisfied, Albus picked up the blood quill and signed each contract. Less than | ||
| 120 | ten minutes later he left the bank, pleased that the Goblins had not complained | ||
| 121 | about their lack of profit on the treaty-mandated Hogwarts loans. If only | ||
| 122 | Culthok could be unavailable more often! | ||
| 123 | |||
| 124 | Lacksack staggered as he exited the conference room, his blood already starting | ||
| 125 | to boil in his veins. Ragnok awaited him in the office across the hall, and | ||
| 126 | presented a goblet of fine screechnap wine, the traditional gift to a Goblin | ||
| 127 | retiring from active duty in the bank. Lacksack drank, and sat to await his | ||
| 128 | death. He had regained his honor; the first Liar had brought profit to his Bank. | ||
| 129 | |||
| 130 | <hr /> | ||
| 131 | |||
| 132 | As Harry had predicted, the subtle changes were unnoticed, and Gringotts | ||
| 133 | profited by the lie. A new weapon was added to their banking arsenal, to be used | ||
| 134 | only with care and restraint lest it be discovered. Only the largest and most | ||
| 135 | bureaucratically enfeebled clients were targeted, and only meager gains were | ||
| 136 | sought. Even so, Gringotts profited. What few criminals there were in Goblin | ||
| 137 | society soon found themselves in cells instead of bloody arenas, awaiting not | ||
| 138 | execution but the opportunity to regain a little of their honor as Liars. None | ||
| 139 | refused. | ||
| 140 | |||
| 141 | Harry, too, profited. In thanks for his service to the Bank, a very small | ||
| 142 | percentage of all Liar-derived profits was directed to his accounts. Sharpaxe | ||
| 143 | was pleased to be able to reward his son this way. Harry had shown he could use | ||
| 144 | his uniquely Human perspective to bring profit to the Bank; such behaviour | ||
| 145 | should be encouraged. | ||
| 146 | |||
| 147 | <hr /> | ||
| 148 | |||
| 149 | In other ways, Harry's curiosity was a burden on Sharpaxe. He deeply yearned to | ||
| 150 | learn the arts of warding and wardbreaking, but Goblin cursebreakers found his | ||
| 151 | magic unsuitable, and none of the Human cursebreakers were trusted with the | ||
| 152 | knowledge of Harry's presence within the bank. There was little consensus on the | ||
| 153 | nature of Harry's magic; it was known that wizards did not train their young | ||
| 154 | until years later, so Sharpaxe could not say if Harry's inability to perform the | ||
| 155 | Goblin wards was inherent to his species or merely a factor of age. Harry | ||
| 156 | stubbornly persisted in his attempts; determined to learn one way or the other | ||
| 157 | whether he could perform the magic he envied in his peers. | ||
| 158 | |||
| 159 | At the very late (by Goblin standards) age of 9, Harry was rewarded for his | ||
| 160 | diligence by his first non-accidental magic. It was a weak anti-theft ward, | ||
| 161 | pitiful by Gringotts standards, but true Goblin magic nonetheless. Harry had | ||
| 162 | some 6 years to make up in his practical education in magic, but with the theory | ||
| 163 | already behind him, he made rapid progress. Harry was ecstatic; he would not be | ||
| 164 | some weakling wand-waver, but could wield magic on his own power alone! | ||
| 165 | |||
| 166 | Harry was also a dutiful student of politics. He understood his role in the | ||
| 167 | Goblin nation: assist the reputation of Gringotts with his fame, grow to be an | ||
| 168 | asset by becoming fully-trained as both a Goblin and a Wizard, assume his | ||
| 169 | position as the Potter of Potter, claim his seat on the Wizengamot, and become a | ||
| 170 | voice for the Goblins in government. Along the way, he was to collect allies | ||
| 171 | and, if possible, additional proxy votes or other forms of political power. | ||
| 172 | |||
| 173 | Unfortunately, Harry himself could not be present at Wizengamot meetings; he was | ||
| 174 | too recognizable even without his scar glamour, and any attempt to more | ||
| 175 | completely disguise his appearance risked detection by the Ministry wards. | ||
| 176 | Harry's education would have to be completed by proxy; a muggle-born witch, | ||
| 177 | dissatisfied with her job opportunities and selected on the basis of being | ||
| 178 | unlikely to betray the Bank, was hired to dress as a reporter and sit in on as | ||
| 179 | many Wizengamot sessions and Ministry meetings as she could, then extract her | ||
| 180 | memories of the events at Gringotts. She knew she was something like a spy, of | ||
| 181 | course, but the material she was collecting was technically public knowledge and | ||
| 182 | the Goblins both paid well and never insulted her parentage. | ||
| 183 | |||
| 184 | Eventually, other sources were acquired for Harry to consume. A promising new | ||
| 185 | cursebreaker, one William Weasley, was asked to describe before a panel of young | ||
| 186 | Goblins (including one under very heavy glamours who asked the most remarkably | ||
| 187 | astute questions) everything he knew about the Ministry and the Ancient and | ||
| 188 | Noble Houses. Bill enjoyed the experience completely, and agreed to talk to his | ||
| 189 | old neighbors Xenophilius Lovegood and Daedelus Diggory about coming in to do | ||
| 190 | the same, all in the name of interspecies relations, of course. | ||
| 191 | |||
| 192 | Harry spent many hours in the Potter family vaults, reading the lore and | ||
| 193 | journals of his family. His mother's wand, recovered from the wreckage at | ||
| 194 | Godric's Hollow, was found to be an acceptable match and allowed him to begin | ||
| 195 | his wizarding studies early; Harry resented learning wand-magic, but was no less | ||
| 196 | skilled for all that, and reluctantly agreed that he was a better asset knowing | ||
| 197 | both true magic and wand-waving. | ||
| 198 | |||
| 199 | Memories donated by human cursebreakers proved to be excellent teaching aides. | ||
| 200 | |||
| 201 | <hr /> | ||
| 202 | |||
| 203 | While the Goblins wished to maintain Harry's persona as mythically isolated from | ||
| 204 | the wizarding world, it was still desirable to fan his fame with occasional | ||
| 205 | Potter sightings. As the story spread by Albus Dumbledore was that Harry was | ||
| 206 | safely hidden in the nonmagical world, Sharpaxe generally encouraged Harry to | ||
| 207 | explore nonmagical London, as long as he was suitably far from Diagon Alley. | ||
| 208 | |||
| 209 | Harry greatly enjoyed the Star Wars and Indiana Jones films, which he saw many | ||
| 210 | times. He watched Labyrinth once, and the resulting anger-induced accidental | ||
| 211 | magic very nearly burned down the theatre. | ||
| 212 | |||
| 213 | <hr /> | ||
| 214 | |||
| 215 | > I'd like to add a few more things to this chapter. | ||
| 216 | > | ||
| 217 | > * Something about Goblin food. | ||
| 218 | > * Some mention of Goldknife the healer. | ||
| 219 | > * Name a few Goblin peers of Harry's age. | ||
| 220 | > * More description of the environs of the mines. | ||
| 221 | > * Maybe introduce some of the attempts to gain more political power for Harry. | ||
| 222 | > * Parseltongue. | ||
| 223 | > * Another profit-making scheme of Harry's. | ||
| 224 | > * Mention Dumbledore holding the Potter vote's proxy? | ||
| 225 | > * Harry working as a Teller, interaction with Malfoys? | ||
| 226 | > | ||
| 227 | > My goal length needs some 1500-1600 words. I suspect with these I can fill it | ||
| 228 | > to that length; I'd like this chapter to be the complete raised-as-a-Goblin | ||
| 229 | > chapter so I can dive straight into Hogwarts stuff with chapter 3. | ||
