4th Obsidian, 70A heavy thump drew Goxa's attention from his meal. There on the desk was a lump of emerald, roughly hewn from the rock. It shone in the light through the dining hall's igloo roof window, polished with spit and fine dirt water by the one who had unearthed it. Goxa looked up from the metal to the one who had brought it.
"Found something, did you, slave?" Goxa asked.
"Indeed, master," said Skrunge, his eyes slightly downcast. Not so downcast as normal, though. Something about his posture set Goxa's teeth on edge. The master shifted in his seat, freeing up the small iron blade concealed in his boot should he need it. Skrunge did not move at all, his posture frozen into one of semi-servility.
"You are free to leave, slave," Goxa said, working with practised skill to keep the apprehension from his voice.
"It was not a gift, master," said Skrunge. Goxa felt one of his fingers twitch. He had a feeling he knew where this was going.
"No, it was not," he said.
"It is not your property, master," said Skrunge.
"What is yours is mine," said Goxa, forcing his voice to remain calm. He dared not take his eyes off the slave, but he could see the other slaves gathering to watch the confrontation. The knife pressed against his ankle, tantalisingly. He could end this right now.
"No, master, it is not."
Silence resounded through the dining hall. Even those who had been busy feasting on their rations came to a stop. At the edge of the hall, Kiku began to unholster his whip. Goxa signalled to him with a finger, raised barely an inch from the table; not yet.
"By law, the property of a slave is his master's," pronounced Goxa, and it was a pronouncement. Even to those who had not heard it before, it was clearly more of a recitation than something made up on the fly.
"By law, a slave is one without worth," said Skrunge, in the same measured phrasing. A faint smile tugged at his lips.
"Have you worth?"
"I have."
"And what proof have you of this worth?" Goxa asked.
"The proof lies before you," said Skrunge. Goxa regarded the emerald. It was a fine specimen for a rough gem, a full node extracted from the rock.
"You have unearthed many gems from the stone," said Goxa.
"This I cut with my own two hands."
"Even so, why should this prove you have wor-"
"With my own two hands!" Skrunge yelled suddenly, lifting his eyes to Goxa's face and drawing his hands into clawed shapes. His nails bore deep marks and his fingers callouses and scars where he had scrabbled, successfully, at the rock.
Smack!The backhand blow forced Skrunge's eyes to the ground and his face to the side. Goxa was standing now, his chair pushed back by the force of his arisal. He lowered his hand.
"You are not free yet, slave," he growled. Skrunge glowered, but his hands returned to his sides and he kept his gaze lowered as he turned back to his master.
Goxa narrowed his eyes at the slave. In the periphery of his vision, he was acutely aware of the gathered slaves, the tense air, the gleaming gemstone between them.
"The emerald is payment," Goxa declared. There was a collective exhalation of breath from the gathered crowd. "At the year's turn, come to the firepit's edge. You have earned your free."
Goxa sat down again and returned to his meal. He did not look up as Skrunge's face broadened into a smile and he strode out of the hall, head held high.
1st GraniteThe scream rang out across the frozen wastes, pooling and thickening within the blazing caldera until the very rock trembled with its intensity. Goxa pressed the miner's wrist against the blazing iron of the magma-heated anvil until the wound sealed shut. Moments before he had slit that very wrist with his blade and poured out a libation of blood onto the anvil, a sizzling, smoking offering to the glory of his cruel Mistress.
Goxa let go of the miner's wrist and Skrunge, the free goblin, stumbled toward the crowd. Skrunge looked upon the slaves, his friends and companions, and his lips twisted into a terrible grin. He had earned his free. He was worthy. And he was beyond them. Skrunge turned away from his former life and into the embrace of the handful of frees who stood waiting.
And above, the sky turned to Spring.
Frostbite, in the year 71