Dinner With Family Hiroyuki Morioka (a court of thorns and roses ebook free txt) š
- Author: Hiroyuki Morioka
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āThat right? Well, take a good look, because Iām about to lose face for you. I did try learning it for real. I didnāt actually just dip a toe. I mean, who wants to be a second-class citizen?ā
āāSecond-class citizenā? Whatās that?ā
āThey donāt teach kids in Abh school? In the UH, thereās āstar system citizensā and āUH citizens.āā
āOh, that I know,ā nodded Jint. The starpilots of the Star Forces were briefed on the enemyās political systems. In a world where even information could only be transported through planar space, it was difficult to contact people outside oneās star system. In vast nations like the Abh Empire and the United Humankind, a simple letter exchange could often take months. Consequently, residents of the same superstate but of different star systems seldom felt a sense of unity. The average person could only feel a genuine sense of solidarity with the other residents of their own system. And for a superstate like the UH, the impossibility of promoting a sense of belonging to the interstellar power ruling over them was a problem.
The Abh had no desire or political will whatsoever to conquer this āproblemā on their end. In fact, they didnāt consider it a problem to begin with. The Empire didnāt want or expect the residents of its landworlds (i.e., landworld citizens) to be conscious of their status as imperial subjects, let alone feel any affection or loyalty toward their rarefied rulers.
The UH, on the other hand, pushed its constituent star systems to see themselves as members of the interstellar union. In order to foster a sense of unity, they advocated for interpersonal exchange, and sought to homogenize the planetsā respective cultures (starting with the language). Yet the reality was far from that ideal. The UH had incorporated formerly independent systems, and the attempts at homogenization were insufficient. Furthermore, even though travel to other star systems was encouraged, ordinary people could only manage interstellar travel once in a lifetime, if that, thanks to cost and time restraints. As such, even in the UH, the vast majority of people couldnāt regard the politics of the superstate as their concern. That was why the UH restricted citizenās qualifications to participate in politics. Only āUH citizensā were granted the right to vote and run for office, among various other privileges. Star system citizens could only participate in star system politics.
Given all that, it made sense that Durin viewed star system citizens as second-class citizens. Jint didnāt know the exact requirements for becoming a UH citizen, but speaking Ricparl had to be a minimum requirement.
āFor argumentās sake, letās assume I didnāt put in enough effort.ā
āRight,ā Jint concurred ardently.
āEven if I did put in the effort, and learned Baronh, what would I get out of it? The credentials to work for you? Compared to the perks of being a UH citizen, thatās a hard sell.ā
āI mean, you get to work for me, yeah. But also, donāt you want to see the world outside Delktu at least once in your life?ā
āSure, a little. But I think thereās a bunch of places of interest in Delktu I havenāt seen yet.ā
āQue Durin... You really donāt feel like working alongside me, huh.ā
āDonāt get me wrong, Iād love to work alongside you. The only problem is the workplace. If you stay here, on Delktu, Iāll work with you any day of the week. Actually, Iām thinking the time is ripe to strike it out on my own soon. I plan to leave my uncleās company before long. And Iād be ecstatic if you could be my business associate.ā
āHold your horses, my friend. I donāt even know what youāre doing, or what youāre planning to do once youāre on your own.ā
āI could say the same. āServant vassalā is so vague; Iād have no idea what Iām doing.ā
āItās the same as running a company. I think I can secure the engineers. All youād need to do for me is bring together the people who handle the deskwork and operations.ā
āThen it really is the same work either way.ā Then, a devilish curl of the lips. āThe only difference is whoās on top. But I donāt mean to place myself above you, necessarily. Iād just have you learn the ropes under me on a temporary basis. Or you can just be my equal partner on paper. Oh, and there is one other difference: how much work itād take to get up to speed. For a dumb-ass outsider, you do know a little about Delktu, whereas in my case, Iām the wisest man in the land, but I donāt know the first thing about the Abh world. Learning the ropes for me would take about as much work as adding the salt to all the seas.ā
Though reluctantly, Jint nodded. After all, Jint himself had next to no experience with any of this administrative stuff. He had a vague understanding, but had no inkling of the finer points of magistratesā work. That was the reason he was on the hunt for people who had technical know-how, if not experience.
āBesides, I havenāt got any intention of working in the Abh world,ā said Durin.
āThen why didnāt you tell me that from the jump?ā said Jint, raising an eyebrow.
āI hadnāt martialed my thoughts yet. But now I have.ā
āYou couldāve dropped me a line after youād decided.ā
āBut I really did want to see ya, man. If Iād turned you down before, you wouldnāt have come, right?ā
āNot at all. Work is work. I told you I wanted to see you just to hang out, too, didnāt I?ā
āDamn. And here I was pleased with myself, thinking Iād sent you on a foolās errand.ā
āPoor baby.ā
āIn any case, if weāre gonna be building a lovebirdsā life together, youāve gotta come here.ā
āA lovebirdsā life with you is not on my mind,ā said Jint.
āI figured,ā said Durin, nodding lightly. āA manās gotta be proud of his work. All right, enough talk of work. Letās call the boys over.ā
āSure thing, but first, let me hear why you donāt want to become
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