By Waughin Jarth
Scene: The Imperial City, Cyrodiil
Date: 7 Frost Fall, 3E 397
It seemed as if the palace had always housed the Atrius
Building Commission, the company of clerks and estate
agents who authored and notarized nearly every construction
of any note in the Empire. It had stood for two hundred
and fifty years, since the reign of the Emperor Magnus,
a plain-fronted and austere hall on a minor but respectable
plaza in the Imperial City. Energetic and ambitious
middle-class lads and ladies worked there, as well as
complacent middle-aged ones like Decumus Scotti. No
one could imagine a world without the Commission, least
of all Scotti. To be accurate, he could not imagine
a world without himself in the Commission.
"Lord Atrius is perfectly aware of your contributions,"
said the managing clerk, closing the shutter that demarcated
Scotti's office behind him. "But you know that
things have been difficult."
"Yes," said Scotti, stiffly.
"Lord Vanech's men have been giving us a lot of
competition lately, and we must be more efficient if
we are to survive. Unfortunately, that means releasing
some of our historically best but presently underachieving
senior clerks."
"I understand. Can't be helped."
"I'm glad that you understand," smiled the
managing clerk, smiling thinly and withdrawing. "Please
have your room cleared immediately."
Scotti began the task of organizing all his work to
pass on to his successor. It would probably be young
Imbrallius who would take most of it on, which was as
it should be, he considered philosophically. The lad
knew how to find business. Scotti wondered idly what
the fellow would do with the contracts for the new statue
of St Alessia for which the Temple of the One had applied.
Probably invent a clerical error, blame it on his old
predecessor Decumus Scotti, and require an additional
cost to rectify.
"I have correspondence for Decumus Scotti of the
Atrius Building Commission."
Scotti looked up. A fat-faced courier had entered his
office and was thrusting forth a sealed scroll. He handed
the boy a gold piece, and opened it up. By the poor
penmanship, atrocious spelling and grammar, and overall
unprofessional tone, it was manifestly evident who the
writer was. Liodes Jurus, a fellow clerk some years
before, who had left the Commission after being accused
of unethical business practices.
"Dear Sckotti,
I emagine you alway wondered what happened to me,
and the last plase you would have expected to find me
is out in the woods. But thats exactly where I am. Ha
ha. If your'e smart and want to make lot of extra gold
for Lord Atrius (and yourself, ha ha), youll come down
to Vallinwood too. If you have'nt or have been following
the politics hear lately, you may or may not know that
ther's bin a war between the Boshmer and there neighbors
Elswere over the past two years. Things have only just
calm down, and ther's a lot that needs to be rebuilt.
Now Ive got more business than I can handel, but I need
somone with some clout, someone representing a respected
agencie to get the quill in the ink. That somone is
you, my fiend. Come & meat me at the M'ther Paskos
Tavern in Falinnesti, Vallinwood. Ill be here 2 weeks
and you wont be sorrie.
-- Jurus
P.S.: Bring a wagenload of timber if you can."
"What do you have there, Scotti?" asked a
voice.
Scotti started. It was Imbrallius, his damnably handsome
face peeking through the shutters, smiling in that way
that melted the hearts of the stingiest of patrons and
the roughest of stonemasons. Scotti shoved the letter
in his jacket pocket.
"Personal correspondence," he sniffed. "I'll
be cleared up here in a just a moment."
"I don't want to hurry you," said Imbrallius,
grabbing a few sheets of blank contracts from Scotti's
desk. "I've just gone through a stack, and the
junior scribes hands are all cramping up, so I thought
you wouldn't miss a few."
The lad vanished. Scotti retrieved the letter and read
it again. He thought about his life, something he rarely
did. It seemed a sea of gray with a black insurmountable
wall looming. There was only one narrow passage he could
see in that wall. Quickly, before he had a moment to
reconsider it, he grabbed a dozen of the blank contracts
with the shimmering gold leaf ATRIUS BUILDING COMMISSION
BY APPOINTMENT OF HIS IMPERIAL MAJESTY and hid them
in the satchel with his personal effects. |