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-rw-r--r--novellas/a-little-greed/01-pragmatism.mdwn10
-rw-r--r--novellas/a-little-greed/02-honor.mdwn229
2 files changed, 234 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/novellas/a-little-greed/01-pragmatism.mdwn b/novellas/a-little-greed/01-pragmatism.mdwn
index 37411f7..abb4198 100644
--- a/novellas/a-little-greed/01-pragmatism.mdwn
+++ b/novellas/a-little-greed/01-pragmatism.mdwn
@@ -150,8 +150,8 @@ summon Sharpaxe, the current Head of the Potter Accounts. The active foreman
150noticed all this activity and called Steelgash from Potential Difficulties, who 150noticed all this activity and called Steelgash from Potential Difficulties, who
151upon hearing the situation summoned Urgnok from Wizarding Relations to assist. 151upon hearing the situation summoned Urgnok from Wizarding Relations to assist.
152Urgnok understood exactly who the Boy-Who-Lived was, and sent an urgent request 152Urgnok understood exactly who the Boy-Who-Lived was, and sent an urgent request
153for advice to Ragnok, supreme branch manager and effective head of Goblin 153for advice to Warlord Ragnok, supreme branch manager and effective head of
154government in Britain. 154Goblin government in Britain.
155 155
156Ragnok found himself faced with a plainly unacceptable situation. Less than a 156Ragnok found himself faced with a plainly unacceptable situation. Less than a
157day after Dumbledore had strode into his bank and outright demanded that they 157day after Dumbledore had strode into his bank and outright demanded that they
@@ -366,9 +366,9 @@ feel of the equipment as early as possible.
366Harry's last stop for the day was an examination by the Matriarch for any 366Harry's last stop for the day was an examination by the Matriarch for any
367prophecies that entangled his fate. She was an ancient and hideous Goblin, 367prophecies that entangled his fate. She was an ancient and hideous Goblin,
368blinded at an early age when she first showed signs of divinatory talent and 368blinded at an early age when she first showed signs of divinatory talent and
369locked away in a dark cave to focus on improving her focus. After many years of 369locked away in a dark cave to improve her focus. After many years of rituals and
370rituals and practice, she could feel the influence of the future on any brought 370practice, she could feel the influence of the future on any brought before her
371before her within moments. 371within moments.
372 372
373The blind Oracle passed her hand over Harry, her face locked in a growl of 373The blind Oracle passed her hand over Harry, her face locked in a growl of
374concentration. Long minutes passed, with the uneven smoke of torches coiling 374concentration. Long minutes passed, with the uneven smoke of torches coiling
diff --git a/novellas/a-little-greed/02-honor.mdwn b/novellas/a-little-greed/02-honor.mdwn
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ba1011a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/novellas/a-little-greed/02-honor.mdwn
@@ -0,0 +1,229 @@
1[[!meta title="Chapter 2: Honor"]]
2
3Harry was not a normal child.
4
5Sharpaxe had done all he could for the boy, but he would simply never be more
6than adequate as a fighter. He was fearless and cunning, true, and his height
7and reach did him credit, but his body fundamentally lacked the speed and
8strength of a true Goblin warrior. Against animals, certainly, he won far more
9often than he lost; the boy had acquired a handsome collection of trophies. But
10against his peers, his only hope was exploiting the environment and taking them
11by surprise.
12
13*Trickery,* that's what it was. He was good at it, but it wasn't the way battles
14should be fought. Goblins wore their intentions on their sleeves, and Harry was
15far more subtle than any other in his clan.
16
17There was an old Goblin saying, «Every father learns his son is not a Warlord.»
18Sharpaxe, perhaps, learned this somewhat earlier than most.
19
20In other ways, however, Harry was a unique delight to raise. Goblins lived their
21lives quickly, and Sharpaxe had feared that Harry would not be able to complete
22his education with his peers at the age of 8. But Harry was intelligent, and far
23more curious and inquisitive than any of his peers; he had easily risen to the
24challenge and excelled beyond any expectation.
25
26Under glamours to appear as a Goblin to the foolish wizards, he had already
27worked as a teller on the main floor of Gringotts, and spent time apprenticed
28several different departments. Sharpaxe held no doubt that he would make a fine
29foreman or subchief someday, responsible for millions of galleons in assets.
30With luck, and his longer lifespan, he could easily be a department Head. Harry
31would certainly bring honor and glory to his clan.
32
33<hr />
34
35Harry's inquisitive nature and cunning had already reaped dividends. At the age
36of 7, Harry and his classmates had been taken to see the execution of a
37criminal; some worthless thief named Lacksack who had been caught attempting to
38steal from a vault. Harry had interrupted the proceedings with what would be a
39defining question for the future of Goblin society, «It's wrong to kill him,
40when there is money to be made, isn't it?»
41
42Every eye turned to face Harry. Ragnok, presiding over the execution as was his
43duty, considered the young Human carefully. After a moment, he responded, «How
44can 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
47from lies? Unthinkable!
48
49Ragnok quieted the assembly shortly, and demanded simply, «Explain!»
50
51«We Goblins,» here Harry included himself, «do not lie. Our oaths are our honor.
52Everyone knows this. But the Wizards do not trust in honor, and demand our oaths
53be contracts with magic.»
54
55This was true. Amongst the Goblins, oaths were simple and direct; a common
56farewell was «On my honor, I have not lied to you today.» But by treaty, any
57oaths given to wizards in Britain must be sworn on blood and magic; every
58contract was presented with the oath, "I swear on my blood that I have not
59deceived you or I shall die within the hour; so mote it be." The magic of the
60oath would ensure its truth; either the Goblin who swore it was truthful, or
61they would die. Goblins universally resented such a slight against their honor;
62no Goblin would willingly be called Oathbreaker!
63
64Harry continued, «Lacksack's life is already forfeit. Instead of executing him,
65use him to present a false contract to a wealthy client. The lazy wizard will
66not read the contract, as they never do, Lacksack will swear on his blood, the
67wizard will sign, and Lacksack will be gone from the room before he dies. Goblin
68honor is retained; the oath is true, it is not our fault that the foolish wizard
69will assume Lacksack would not willingly die.»
70
71A genuinely new idea to the Goblin mindset. There was little honor lost in lying
72to a wizard; they showed by their treaties and their laws that they had no honor
73themselves. The mechanics of the treaties would seem to prevent such deception,
74but Goblins knew a loophole when they saw one, and this was an interesting
75opportunity.
76
77Ragnok turned to Lacksack and pronounced, «You have shown yourself to be without
78honor. You have brought shame and disgrace to your family and your clan. This
79child offers you an opportunity to die a warrior's death in service to your
80Bank. Would you die this way?»
81
82The condemned needed little time to consider such an obvious question. «I would
83die 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
86to your family until a client is chosen for your task.»
87
88Harry was proud to have found profit for his Bank.
89
90<hr />
91
92Albus Dumbledore strode in to Gringotts bank early Saturday morning. He had to
93renew the loans Hogwarts established for its incoming underprivileged students
94and collect the various forms and monies needed to cover operating costs for the
95new term.
96
97The teller acknowledged his request to meet with Culthok, the Head of Hogwarts
98Accounts, and directed him to a conference room. Shortly thereafter, Albus was
99mildly 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
104the 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
107year?"
108
109Goblins were conservative when scouting unknown territory; the changes in the
110contract reflected this. A slight increase in interest rates on the loans, and a
111single fee duplicated. Nothing that could not be blamed on incompetence in
112transcription on Lacksack's part should the deception be caught.
113
114The briefest of scowls appeared on Lacksack's face, but he knew his duty to his
115Bank. He had failed once; never again. "Yes. Here are the contracts for you to
116sign. I swear on my blood that I have not deceived you or I shall die within the
117hour; so mote it be." A brief flash signaled magic's acceptance of the oath.
118
119Satisfied, Albus picked up the blood quill and signed each contract. Less than
120ten minutes later he left the bank, pleased that the Goblins had not complained
121about their lack of profit on the treaty-mandated Hogwarts loans. If only
122Culthok could be unavailable more often!
123
124Lacksack staggered as he exited the conference room, his blood already starting
125to boil in his veins. Ragnok awaited him in the office across the hall, and
126presented a goblet of fine screechnap wine, the traditional gift to a Goblin
127retiring from active duty in the bank. Lacksack drank, and sat to await his
128death. He had regained his honor; the first Liar had brought profit to his Bank.
129
130<hr />
131
132As Harry had predicted, the subtle changes were unnoticed, and Gringotts
133profited by the lie. A new weapon was added to their banking arsenal, to be used
134only with care and restraint lest it be discovered. Only the largest and most
135bureaucratically enfeebled clients were targeted, and only meager gains were
136sought. Even so, Gringotts profited. What few criminals there were in Goblin
137society soon found themselves in cells instead of bloody arenas, awaiting not
138execution but the opportunity to regain a little of their honor as Liars. None
139refused.
140
141Harry, too, profited. In thanks for his service to the Bank, a very small
142percentage of all Liar-derived profits was directed to his accounts. Sharpaxe
143was pleased to be able to reward his son this way. Harry had shown he could use
144his uniquely Human perspective to bring profit to the Bank; such behaviour
145should be encouraged.
146
147<hr />
148
149In other ways, Harry's curiosity was a burden on Sharpaxe. He deeply yearned to
150learn the arts of warding and wardbreaking, but Goblin cursebreakers found his
151magic unsuitable, and none of the Human cursebreakers were trusted with the
152knowledge of Harry's presence within the bank. There was little consensus on the
153nature of Harry's magic; it was known that wizards did not train their young
154until years later, so Sharpaxe could not say if Harry's inability to perform the
155Goblin wards was inherent to his species or merely a factor of age. Harry
156stubbornly persisted in his attempts; determined to learn one way or the other
157whether he could perform the magic he envied in his peers.
158
159At the very late (by Goblin standards) age of 9, Harry was rewarded for his
160diligence by his first non-accidental magic. It was a weak anti-theft ward,
161pitiful by Gringotts standards, but true Goblin magic nonetheless. Harry had
162some 6 years to make up in his practical education in magic, but with the theory
163already behind him, he made rapid progress. Harry was ecstatic; he would not be
164some weakling wand-waver, but could wield magic on his own power alone!
165
166Harry was also a dutiful student of politics. He understood his role in the
167Goblin nation: assist the reputation of Gringotts with his fame, grow to be an
168asset by becoming fully-trained as both a Goblin and a Wizard, assume his
169position as the Potter of Potter, claim his seat on the Wizengamot, and become a
170voice for the Goblins in government. Along the way, he was to collect allies
171and, if possible, additional proxy votes or other forms of political power.
172
173Unfortunately, Harry himself could not be present at Wizengamot meetings; he was
174too recognizable even without his scar glamour, and any attempt to more
175completely disguise his appearance risked detection by the Ministry wards.
176Harry's education would have to be completed by proxy; a muggle-born witch,
177dissatisfied with her job opportunities and selected on the basis of being
178unlikely to betray the Bank, was hired to dress as a reporter and sit in on as
179many Wizengamot sessions and Ministry meetings as she could, then extract her
180memories of the events at Gringotts. She knew she was something like a spy, of
181course, but the material she was collecting was technically public knowledge and
182the Goblins both paid well and never insulted her parentage.
183
184Eventually, other sources were acquired for Harry to consume. A promising new
185cursebreaker, one William Weasley, was asked to describe before a panel of young
186Goblins (including one under very heavy glamours who asked the most remarkably
187astute questions) everything he knew about the Ministry and the Ancient and
188Noble Houses. Bill enjoyed the experience completely, and agreed to talk to his
189old neighbors Xenophilius Lovegood and Daedelus Diggory about coming in to do
190the same, all in the name of interspecies relations, of course.
191
192Harry spent many hours in the Potter family vaults, reading the lore and
193journals of his family. His mother's wand, recovered from the wreckage at
194Godric's Hollow, was found to be an acceptable match and allowed him to begin
195his wizarding studies early; Harry resented learning wand-magic, but was no less
196skilled for all that, and reluctantly agreed that he was a better asset knowing
197both true magic and wand-waving.
198
199Memories donated by human cursebreakers proved to be excellent teaching aides.
200
201<hr />
202
203While the Goblins wished to maintain Harry's persona as mythically isolated from
204the wizarding world, it was still desirable to fan his fame with occasional
205Potter sightings. As the story spread by Albus Dumbledore was that Harry was
206safely hidden in the nonmagical world, Sharpaxe generally encouraged Harry to
207explore nonmagical London, as long as he was suitably far from Diagon Alley.
208
209Harry greatly enjoyed the Star Wars and Indiana Jones films, which he saw many
210times. He watched Labyrinth once, and the resulting anger-induced accidental
211magic 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.