Chapter Twelve
Hear now, The Six Demands We Make of Bellchester:
We Demand for Workers a Thirty-Hour Work Week
this being for the same pay, or more, as the current weeks.
We Demand for Workers Full Citizenship Without Property,
this enfranchising the entire population, with all rights and duties
therein.
We Demand for Workers a Break-up of All Monopolies,
to be divided into worker-owned industries.
We Demand for Workers a Tax Upon Wealth,
consisting of ninety-percent above one thousand pounds a year, and that
reparations be made for the Kerish Famine.
We Demand for Workers Public Trials for Labor Violators,
and that unions be made a protected class; the violation of whose rights
accruing a punishment of forfeiture of all assets.
We Demand for Workers an END to Collar Servitude
The hammer rings loudly in the early morning as Annette pins the notice to the side of a local bakery. She yawns and nearly strikes her own thumb as she misses the nail, which quickly jolts her awake. She turns around, rubbing her eyes and feeling the cool morning fog nestle up against her rosy cheeks.
"I bet you like that last demand, eh, Red?" Patrick chuckles, his throating voice bouncing to her left.
Annette scowls. "We've talked about this."
Patrick's smile quickly leaves his face, and he looks down at the ground. "Right, sorry."
"Thank you," Annette shakes her head. She yawns again and turns to face the third member of their party. "Marian, how many more do we need to post?"
Marian thumbs through the stack in her arms. "Just a handful left."
Annette nods gratefully. "Thank God." She rolls her shoulders and faces Patrick again, still sulking that his joke had failed. "Patrick, you take the rest."
"Why me?"
"You know why," she insists, pulling the flyers from Marian's arms and pushing them up against his chest. She deposits the hammer and nails into his hands. He frowns, but Annette holds firm. "Just do it, we'll keep watch."
Patrick obeys, though makes it clear he doesn't like it. He shuffles away, grumbling, and after he turns a corner Annette can hear the muffled sound of him hammering up another notice.
"So commanding..." Marian whispers provocatively.
"I can be much more than just commanding," Annette flirts back.
"Oh, I'm aware."
Annette shares a knowing grin with Marian, and for a moment considers picking up her hand to kiss it. She decides not to, figuring they'd already be in enough trouble if they were caught putting up the posters. She smiles to herself and turns away, listening again for the sound of Patrick finishing their task.
She'd known Marian for a little while before the Mallets. They'd run into each other at Eleonore's Gallery a few times... well, more than run into each other. Marian was always so friendly to her, appreciative of the fact that Annette was a welcome difference from the men who usually purchased her services.
Marian had a round face and warm eyes, with high cheekbones that shimmered slightly when the light caught her dark umber skin. She was a little shorter than Annette, a fact she often teased her about, and typically wore her curly hair back in a tight bun. Annette had seen it out of its confinement a few times, and knew it poofed out into a soft and voluptuous afro, which she found cute. Marian didn't like to show it off very often, she already received enough strange glares from those who could tell she was from the colonies, and resented the attention that came with it. Around her neck dangles a tight leather collar.
Annette glances back at Marian, noticing her shivering fiercely. "Are you cold?"
"I'm always cold," she puffs back.
Annette makes to grab her coat, asking, "Would you like to borrow my-,"
"Keep it," Marian dismisses.
"It's really no trouble-,"
"I have deep pockets," Marian smirks, shoving her hands into the sleeves of her dress. She shoots a proud look at Annette, though continues shivering. "My hands will be fine. I can handle it."
Annette smiles back. "I'm quite sure you would stare down an upcoming locomotive and still be convinced of your own fortitude."
Marian shoves her. "Shut it, Red."
"Oho, I'm Red now, am I?"
Marian flashes her teeth and sticks out her tongue, but bumps her hip affectionately into Annette. She stands a little closer, and Annette wishes she could just throw her arms around her to keep the cold at bay. They sit and wait for a while, occasionally hearing the sounds of Patrick's hammer ringing out across the square. Annette notices the morning light slowly illuminate more and more of the area, turning the gray fog whiter, and begins tapping her foot impatiently.
After a moment, she leans her head down to Marian and asks, "Do you think I could-,"
"Really?" Marian scowls.
"I'd have enough time if I ran."
"You're unbelievable. Jarl said 'no.'"
Annette looks away mischievously. "He didn't say 'no.' Not technically."
Marian waves a dismissive hand at her. "You've already made up your mind. I have no idea why you're asking me."
"Are you okay to-"
"Finish up here?" She rolls her eyes. "Yes, obviously."
"You're amazing, thank you," Annette bounces in place.
"You'd better be back to warm me up later," Marian pouts, "I'll be pissed if Jarl kills you for this."
"Have no fear," Annette beams, "I'm sure Joan would leap at the opportunity to fill my vacancy in your bed."
"You
know
I hate Joan."
"Then I'll be sure not to let Jarl kill me," Annette pips.
She leans down and kisses Marian's cheek, flashing her a final smile before taking off down the nearby alleyway. She'd already mapped out her route in her head as she put up posters all morning, and so she wastes little time dashing across town. It wouldn't be too far, likely only a mile and a half, and a tiny part of her is grateful for the chance to get her blood pumping to push away the frosty morning air.
- - -
Annette stumbles into the meeting only a few minutes late, relieved that it seems she's only really missed the opening introductions and greetings. She hovers against the back wall, shoulder to shoulder with a crowd of about twenty fellow laborers from different fields of work. Across the room she notices Jarl glare at her, his firm brow lowering, but ignores him.
"...Regardless," Failinis is saying, "I thank you all for joining me today."
A burly man with a bald head leans forward and slams a fist onto the table. "Why are we here, Mallet?"
"For the same reason I always invite you..." the Mallet's leader pauses for a minor effect, "...solidarity."
"Ass," the burly man grunts.
A scrawny man with gaunt cheeks and icy blue eyes glares at Failinus and scowls, "You're here to poach more of our union dues."
"You ought to know by now, Charlie," Failinis shakes his head, "I've no interest in your money."
The final woman at the center table snorts. "Just our workers."
A tense pause fills the room, and the surrounding crowd exchange hushed whispers between one another.
Failinis takes a breath and picks up a piece of paper from the table, holding it up to the room. "Have you had a chance to look over our most recent publication? The Six Demands."
The woman perks up once more, frowning and saying, "We weren't consulted."
Charlie nods his head in agreement, his face scrunched up incredulously. "An end to collar service? Have you lost your mind?"
Failinis smiles. "The Mallets are setting forth an agenda for the cause," he tells them, his voice smooth and polished. "They are finally beginning to fear us, fear the power of the Mallets. Now, the time and the context are right to press them for justice. The unions you represent ought to understand the significance of joining together at this moment."
The burly man shoves his chair back, letting a loud scraping noise screech out across the hall. "Now is the time?
Now
!?"
"Say what you mean, Marcus."
Marcus stands, staring down Failinis like a hound ready to strike. "Where were your Mallets last month when Beckett's men broke the masonry strike, huh? They were
nowhere
to be found!"
A murmur trickles through the crowd.
"I seem to remember your strike was broken by scab workers shipped in from the colonies," Failinis rebuts.
"We could have blocked them if-,"
"No, you wouldn't have," the woman to his right shakes her head. "Sit down, Marcus. You're making an ass of yourself."
"Thank you, Miss Stonewater," Failinis nods.