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Chalacos III: El Sur Salvaje

Ebria

Elder Statesman
Joined
Oct 7, 2018
Messages
1,425
Location
Bucharest
Capital
Valls
Nick
Ovi
Ander
27-30 July


Hamrun wasn't really like how I imagined it. I was imagining some god forsaken cities that were built around great castles, with arabesques all-over the place and everything decorated in all sorts of motifs that begin to feel hard on your eyes, all while giving that stench of old, passed, the smell of a past that as much as it went away, it never really left, and will never leave. Big was my surprise when the plane landed at the Tablada Airport, passing right above the city, and I could see some skyscrapers in the north, some high rises in the centre by the sea, and and long rows of classical hamrunite adobe houses, with terraced roofs, which probably Dona Sabrina would have loved. I came three days ago. I had to report in on the 28th, but as I arrived on the 27th, I spent a night renting a room in the city, and walked it up and down to explore it for a bit.

Hamrun was weird. It was Ebrian, it had that feel, but it was strange. The buildings in the city could be divided in three main categories: 1st, the oldest, adobe houses of two stories at most, then the mid century bauhaus style, which San Lawrenz seemed to have a lot and it was even called the White City, and then the new, modern constructions either as social housing, which were high rises, or office buildings, which were quite far away from downtown itself. There were no cathedrals or other grand religious buildings, but small mosques, with only one minaret were dotting the neighbourhoods and obligatory right beside was a chapel, in what felt as a probably forced coming together, but which now, centuries later, felt quite natural.

The number of pedestrianised streets or streets closed off solely for busses, trolleybuses or trams also shocked me. It felt like in the Alcazaba, which was the Ebrian version of the Uroduah Al-Qasbah, the old citadel, you could only walk, and the same in the Ciudad Blanca, the neighbourhood of bauhaus 1930s and 1940s style buildings. Even so, many merchants were going about, with some specialised bicycles that were carrying goods, and sometimes even small carriages pulled by them. Tourists were omnipresent, especially in the Alcazaba, to see the old fortress and the Mezquita Catedral, the 9th century great mosque built in old Batalyaws and turned in the 1500s into a cathedral, in this mix of Uroduah and Christian Ebrian styles. With all the tourists, the image of local romance, orientalism and exotism existed too, and many used that to promote horse drawn carriage tours of the old town, which made hoof sounds omnipresent, and also the smell of horse dung.

What was also surprising was the great number of food carts and street food. I was used to Amerida's and Valls' tapas culture, but it seems it wasn't the same here, for there were little establishments where you could sit down to snack. If you wanted that, the park, or a bench was for you. If you wanted to drink and eat seriously, restaurants were waiting, but weirdly nothing in between. I was imagining carts like that selling hod dogs in Charleroi, or tacos in Gran Occidentia, but no, here they were selling fresh juices, and it seemed freshly squeezed watermelon was one of the most popular, and nuts, especially nuts, going from cashews to roasted chestnuts and or course, corn, from boiled to roasted. Probably for a tourist, this whole overdrive with the sounds, the smells, for between horses, chestnuts, you felt the smell of incense everywhere, followed by the smell of coffee, which was always sold on streets by "cafeteros", who were going about with huge thermoses, and followed by the smell of flowers, especially in the old town, where terraces were filled to the brim with pots of flowers, flowing down the walls, in what was an explosion of colour over what was a city painted mostly white, so as to escape the heat. But over all of this, was the noise. Music could be heard as you were moving about the street, from houses, where people were keeping their windows open in the July heat, most not having air conditioning and most didn't care of the recommendations for a quiet neighbourhood either. Music could be heard from houses, music could be heard from bars and restaurants, music could be heard from the random street singers, either by voice, who were singing either in a weird dialect that I needed a few minutes to recognise as Ebrian, or in a totally foreign language, that clearly was Hamrunite, or playing guitars, which wasn't that weird for Amerida or Valls, as the Ebrian guitar was worldwide known, but also Uroduah or eastern instruments such as the oud or flute. And above everything else, the last of the surprises were the cats. They were everywhere. Roaming all over the place.

The next morning I presented myself to the Military Base 529966, which at first, while still in Valls, I thought it might have been somewhere outside the city, but it was literally in the middle of San Lawrenz. In front of it, a large thoroughfare, on the other side of the road from it, a huge park that led to the Plaza de Ebria, to its left the high walls around the Alcazaba, to it's right, shockingly, a large shopping mall to the right, with hundreds of people walking in front of the base. I was presented by papers to the guard at 7am, as I knew at 8 there was a call up, and I was quickly sent to the administration building, where I was to report to General Oreste Scarlata, the commanding officer.


I was sent to room 5 on the 1st floor and as I entered, there were two desks there, with a lady brewing a coffee in the back of the room, and three more doors going to other, different rooms. I must say I was already a bit anxious. I always were when I was to meet new bosses or people whom I new were to be my superiors, and being in Hamrun, I remembered that they had a completely different language, even the Ebrian they spoke had a weird accent and I was freaking out that I might sound weird with a mixture of Amerida and Valls accents. I laid my luggage on the floor, as I was carrying it with me, and I tried to greet the lady, but all I managed was mumble something, so I was just thankful that she didn't hear me as she was concentrating on starting a coffee maker.

"Buenos días, señora," I say, and that's when she turns to me. She was quite short, and looked like she was in the 50s, with bobbed hair and a pair of reading glasses on. I came closer and looked at me, measuring me from head to toes. Usually I would have worn the grey uniform, but all I had were civilian clothes, which as much as I tried to make them as formal as possible, with a shirt and tie and even a jacket, I really felt out of my place there. "I'm teniente Ander Alejandro Suarez Blanco, I have been transferred from Valls..." I begin saying, but she cuts me off, and I don't really know why, but she instantly became hostile in my imagination. She had the vibe of a typical angry middle aged secretary with no patience at all. "You need to report to General Scarlata," she said. "I was sent to office no.5, do you know where he is?" I ask a bit... anxious, knowing her style and probably just asking for some shouting and yelling just for insisting, but she kept her composure.

"You found him," said a man, shorter than me, a bit on the larger side, but with a clear body shape that shown that he used to be quite athletic. He was wearing a garrison style nutria uniform, with a a white shirt, a greenish dark beige jacket, black tie and a chapiri hat, more typical to the Ebrian legion. I turned around to him and gave him a salute. "Come to my office," he said requesting me to follow him. We entered through one of the doors leading from the antechamber. I offered him my papers.

"Administration and management... Armed Police Corps, Valls, Once de Mayo Committee..." he was whispering, unsure if he knew I was hearing him or not, as he was reading through my files. "So, general Pisani seems to have liked you," he said as he put the files away. "Yes, general," I say, a bit stiff and stern, as I try to show a good image. He smirked. "Weird for that bitter Nuorian to like somebody. But don't fool yourself, he liked you enough to send you here," he said, slowly nodding as if he said something extremely profound. "With all due respect sir, can I ask a question?" I say and he nodded. "Do you think it was a punishment?" I ask, but then I immediately regret for it might have sounded bad. He put his arms on the desk and came closer to me, even if I was standing at attention three meters away from him. "At ease, relax," he says, this time, with a much more warmer tone. "It all depends on how you see it. A mainlander like you, especially from Amerida, would see it as an exile. An islander like me, being sent to San Lawrenz, would be seen as divine blessing. At the same time, a storm feels like it's gathering on the horizon," he said, and I don't really know what came up to me, but I instincively turned my eyes a little towards the window and he immediately caught it and started laughing. "I meant the war... Jesus, it must be true that poetry died on the mainland with Lope De Vega and Miguel de Cervantes..." he said and after he laughed one or two more times, something that got a slight smile even from me, which he seemed to like it, he continued. "Probably you will thank your God, be it Dios or Allah, that you are here, not in Valls or Amerida if it starts, for got knows what can happen in such central places, where hear, we're an insular backwater," he added.

He looked some more through my file and then looked at me. "I'll make you an offer. I need to build this whole Hamrunite Territorial Defence unit all by myself. Probably you've seen the legionnaires marching around. They will soon be gone, either to Hajr, or dislodged in the country, or sent to god forsaken places like Natal or Rio de Oro. A lot of people from allover the place were brought in to administer this unit and you were one of the firsts to arrive. So, as it's fully in my responsibility, I will make you a great offer, and ask you waht do you want," he said and stressed the last part. That took me a bit by surprise. "What do I want?" I repeated, a bit gobsmacked. It was the first time since I put up the uniform that I was asked this. "Yes, do you want to work with the inventories, or here at the headquarters, or in the islands," he added, but I stop him replying maybe a bit too rushed. "Here... headquarters," I say and he smiles and laughs. He looks through my file again. "I'm glad you do have a degree in administration, but you did some report writing mostly and shadowed in some detective work. I know that you are in the end, Armed Police Corps, not a soldier, but I would want more experience in hadling the whole organisation, so I have decided to make you my aide," he said and I look at him with big eyes.

"Still shocked? ever heard of that first come first served saying? Just be lucky you came in early. I will want, for your stay in Hamrun, until you're transferred back, to be my eyes and ears, to help me with the papers, to even help me with some domestic stuff. As we don't really have a lot of space, as you can see... this base was build long before the city expanded so much, I will put you on the list with our cyber experts and others who have the right to live in the city. Go take your uniform from the warehouse..." he was saying but then he stopped looking at the clock. "It's nearly time for the 8am roll up. After you take the uniform, come dressed in it for the roll up and then go to the finance office and make a request for the rent discount in the city, so I can sign it," he said looking around, as if to ensure he didn't forget anything. "Remember. Living in the city is a privilege. If you miss the 8am call when you're on duty, you will lose it, understood?" he said, a bit sternly, so I knew to respond by the books for this, to his joy. "You can stay for a few days at the base, until it's fully populated with the recruits, and until you find yourself an apartment to rent. After the roll call you'll report to Señora Yasmin Tudela, the lovely secretary you already met, to give her your documents so she can build up your files at the base, okay?" he asked. "Dismissed," he said and I saluted and left to get my new uniforms.
 

Ebria

Elder Statesman
Joined
Oct 7, 2018
Messages
1,425
Location
Bucharest
Capital
Valls
Nick
Ovi
Fernando
2nd-4th of August


If there was something I liked about being a teacher, was the joy of the Ebrian summer break, probably the longest in Gallo-Germania, going from the 15th of June to 15th of September for the kids, and from the 1st of July to the 1st of September for us teachers. Of course, getting here was quite something. I got an undergrad diploma in languages, Engwahlian-Neustrian and then a master's in Ethnography, specialising in music. As much as I preferred Engwahlian over Neustrians, for the life of me there were literally no Engwahlian teaching jobs in Valls, because as with Ebrian language and literature, history, geography and other social studies, it seemed that the Pontifical University of Valls was bringing out so many Engwahlian language graduates, that literally there was an inflation of us, and when the private sector got saturated, people jumped on the public sector, taking all the Engwahlian teacher jobs. Hence why I ended up a music teacher. I literally hated Neustrian language too much to interact and teach it on a daily basis. Took it as a minor just because Juan Torrez insisted. After 4 oposiciones exams taken in June that gave me only year round contracts, I finally got a school that gave me a permanent contract, albeit as a music teacher. This allowed me to have literally the first summer as a teacher, in the way it should be spent, enjoying yourself, rather than taking exams after exams, and public meeting to occupy posts and stuff like that. This also gave me the right to boast that "I'm in". Saying that "you're in" meant a lot in Ebrian schooling, as a teacher, because it meant you were tenured and literally you had to kill someone to lose that job. It also meant that once you're in, you can transfer schools and subjects while keeping your permanent contract.

All of this was why, when Ander said, quite fatalistic, I must be honest, that he is transferred to Hamrun, I accepted it quite easily. I remember that July night a few days ago when Francesco randomly dropped the bomb and said we should all go, especially as we have grown up it seems leaning on each other as the most dysfunctional, weird and strange of families, I was quite open to it all. Doña Sabrina, bless her heart, for I don't know if I'll ever see her again, pushed me into "being mature" and following my partner, while Alicia, my sister, and Fátima, my foster mother, were elated to hear that I'd be opening to coming to San Lawrenz.

Fátima and Alicia took me from the airport yesterday, when I arrived and we then drove to the finca where the Cavarra-Montez family lived. Alicia moved here after she married Kristofru and she seemed really happy. She was working full time at a local Agronomic Research Institute, which she was really happy for, especially as she used to moan that even if the mainland was presenting itself as this great breadbasket, you could barely find a job, while her husband, was a landscape architect. While I did find it weird that a region seen as one of the poorest in the country, had stuff like that, it seemed Hamrun was flourishing, and Kristofru, who was working in a big agency, had some contracts with the Ayuntamiento of San Lawrenz for the renovation of some parks, which really made him happy. His vibe, which I first really discovered at their wedding, completely changed, as from what I thought to be a sloppy, uninterested hick, turned to be a quite loving and optimistic man. It seemed pretty much that the war was a faraway thing in the archipelago, as if only mainlanders were scared into thinking of.


"Yes, it was a bit crazy, especially during the secessionist crisis, but most of the people of Hamrun, such as Catholics and the politically unaligned were not interested and wanted to keep the status quo, while the dreams of this progressive islamic republic, scared off Muslim conservatives," said Kristofru as we were "sobre mesa", talking over the table after dinner. It was already already past midnight, but as always, here too, dinners were extremely late in the day. "Yeah, so pretty much Biancardi alienated the majority of the population with his ideological purism," I said and he nodded in approval. Alicia poured me some wine from a bottle that she just opened. "You should try this, hermano. When I first tried those, I was really shocked as to why you can't find any Hamrunite wines in Valls or Sahagún," Alicia said as she poured herself and Kristofru too. We toasted and I tasted it. It was a very sweet wine, but compared to most sweet wines one would find in shops in Valls, its sweetness was not overwhelming and you could feel the notes of berries, and even watermelon in it. Probably my surprise could be seen on my face, as both Alicia and Kristofru began laughing. "It's the land and the climate. Very rich in minerals, very fertile, and the climate is very dry, hot and sunny," she said. We talked some more giving each other an updated on our lives. It was an extremely warm night, with about 30 degrees outside. We were sitting in the yard at the finca, which was about a 15 minutes drive from San Lawrenz, but it was already extremely peaceful and I was shocked how many stars could be seen on the sky. Their dogs, three very slender, if not skinny Hamrunite Hounds, which resembled some Germanian Pointers were running around us, agitated and barking around. "We have foxes and sometimes even jackals roaming about, so they really are quite diligent at protecting the property," said Kristofru.

"How's Ander?" Alicia asked a few minutes later, as we were still enjoying the wine. "A bit stressed. He's running errands for the local commander at his base, a general. They moved him here from Valls to be in the administration of the newly formed Territorial Defence Corps, but instead of doing inventories and receiving shipments or whatever, he ended up the commander's aide," I say. "So he's like a secretary," said Kristofru, smirking. "Even worse, a secretary at least has a very well delimited job at the office. Today, for example, he was running errands for the General's family," I say, shaking my head in disapproval. "I always thought that aide de camps were doing that like... last century..." said Kristofru, but Alicia quickly lightened up, interrupting him. "You were quite close at our wedding and it felt really solid. Are you preparing to tie it down and marry too?" she asked. I smile I had died down a bit and I took another sip of the wine, before responding, a pause that concerned both of them. "Well...you know we don't have marriage rights," I say, but she just waves me off. "Fuck that, I meant just go for a civil partnership at the notary and then we'll do a proper wedding party here," Alicia said, but me frowning immediately killed off her enthusiasm.

"We talked about that. Hell, I'd love it," I say, and I give them quite a bitter smile. "I couldn't really imagine my life without him and feeling tied like that, as if we're two halves of a whole, would be perfect. There is a problem. The world. The future war. This country. I feel that for the time being, this civil partnership is the only thing that will ever happen. Like the apogee of our rights here. Not that I'm complaining, for me it's semantics only. Problem is with the global environment nowadays. Should the likes of Tarusa and Csengia takeover, we know some traditionalist catholic inspired regime will come in Ebria, and if that happens, goodbye everything good and we expect it to even be criminalised again. So me and Ander, decided to not do the official move, at least in the eyes of the world, just to save our skins and standings in case of anything," I say and both Kristofru and Alicia are grimacing. "Hey, it's in the eyes of the world, a party to celebrate it that can work like it in the eyes of family and friends, can work," I say laughing, trying to defuse the situation, but even for me, the laugh felt a bit awkward and forced and I felt exhausted after it.

The next morning, Kristofru was working from home and was doing some drawing for one of the parks in what he called an office, but was just an unused room in the main house of the finca. Alicia went to the city to the Institute, while Fátima was going to the Palace of Culture, where she was teaching a guitar classes there over the summer. I decided to go with them as they were driving towards San Lawrenz, and visit some apartments. I found some in some blocks of flats, that were really cheap, but what in Ebria were called "Apartamentos Rojos", the Red Apartments, for being built in the major cities during the era of social democratic domination in the 60s and 70s, were seen as places where quantity was much more important than quality. Many, like in Valls were infested with cockroackes and rats and usually they were not insulated at all, so it gets extremely hot in them, plus the walls were extremely thin, so you could literally hear your neighbour even when just walking around his own home. Valls used to be filled with highrises of such blocks of flats, but many were demolished in the 90s, for being substandard. After being naïve as I looked at the extremely cheap prices and just reminded myself of childhood doing some visits of such apartments, I decided to look in the Ciudad Blanco, the White City, the 1920s to 1950s bauhaus modernist neighbourhood. I could have checked the new developments too, but they were far away from amenities, very badly connected by public transport and Kristofru told me that they were actually just nicer looking, but actually they are just more expensive "Rojos", so I stayed away from them. Moving around the city, doing the visits, as the temperature jumped to 41 degrees at noon became more and more tiring and exhausting. So I stopped on a bench in a small park that had a large fountain which was cooling off the air, and I decided to just take it easy.

Romina was in Hamrun too, but she was in Gżira, a small town on the northern shores of the island, visiting Fabian's family. She was texting me all day, commenting on the pictures I took on the apartments and stressing me out saying that she wants to be nearby me and Ander and even Francesco, so I should look for nearby ones too. "Thanks a lot, Romina, babysitting you and the Ultramarino is what I want now," I murmured but I quickly stopped because talking to myself was clearly a sign I was stressing out too much. I wanted to text Ander, but right as I opened my hootchat, I get a message from him. "I'm off for about an hour, do you want to get lunch?" it said. "How did you see that instantly?" he followed up, but I just sent him an emojy that mimicked a detective.

We met up for lunch in a restaurant about ten minutes later, quite close to the main boulevard which was going in front of his base too. "Found anything?" he asked me, as he ordered the caracoles, while I went with the salmorejo, as a cold thick tomato soup was perfectly light and refreshing to keep me front getting hyperthermia. "Not anything nice...Going for the snails? You're brave," I say, commenting on his food choices. "I'm Baetican. In Amérida, caracoles are sought for like warm bread. If you don't have some at least once a week, you're doing it wrong," he says smiling. "Of course, God knows how they cook them here, but we'll see..." he adds, smirking. My phone vibrated. It was a message from Fátima, who was sending me a link with an offer with a few apartments in the same building in Ciudad Blanco. She followed up with a message saying that she spoke with the owner and that he will be ready in half an hour to an hour for a visit.

"Cheer up, tío, you need to enjoy life some more, you're always too grumpy," he says and I roll my eyes. "I'm just stressed. Doesn't the potential war stress you?" I ask. His smirk died, and became serious. "Of course it does. More than anything, but when I feel I'm whirlwinding into it, I just block it. I'm thinking that General Scarlata is there to sort this shit out. Dario Rios too, even that marica, Pedro Mendez. They are there to worry about it more than me, especially as they get paid tens of millions of Reales for their jobs. I'm here to follow their orders, sadly, even if they're shitty, but we'll see what happens," he says and smiling, he takes a small sealed wet wipe and just throws it at me, impishly. "Once we'll get an address on our name here, you can transfer your military files to the Territorial Defence here and be sure that we will stay here, not have them send you back to Santiago del Campo," he said, this time more seriously. "Who even knows is war would truly start, or start in such a way that the Valls Pact or the Meridian Union will be called in?" he added. To be fair, I loved that he felt sure on myself, it helped me more. I knew that when it would come to action, a year long military service plus bi-weekly recalled thrice a year proved to be a decent training and the "reptilian brain" will take over in action, but it was this whole calm before the storm that was stressing me. Our food came immediately afterwards. His caracoles, were pretty much snails cooked in a meaty like soup, with some vegetables, while mine was just your typical salmorejo. But Ander seemed to like them, even if he tried to pressure me to try and get out the meat out of the shell with a toothpick.

He still had about 20 minutes of his break, so we walked down towards the base through the El Cid Park, we went to quickly see the Plaza de Ebria, a large crescent shaped building, built for the Ebrian Empire Exhibition in 1929, made out of sand bricks and ceramic tyles with blue and white motifs, with alcoves celebrating all the provinces of Ebria, the associated states of Rio de Oro and Natal and even the territories of the old empire, all showing different historical episodes in each province through mosaics made of the ceramic tiles. It was probably the first image all tourist websites shown in regards to Hamrun, and probably the 2nd for Ebria after the Alcázar of Valls. And yes, despite me stressing out for the potential war, it was inundated by tourists, they either were blissfully going about their visits, or probably were doing a bucket list of what to visit before it started, or... like Ander... preferred not to think of it until it actually started. I left him at his base and then I went to visit what Fátima recommended me. Ander told me that he will just trust me if I like it or not and if I do, he said I should take it, because the chances of getting an apartment for Romina and Fabian, me and him and also Francesco, all on the same building, was minimal, so it was extremely lucky as it is.

I walked in the Ciudad Blanco and it proved a bit harder that I would have liked, to find it. My phone signal was continuously disappearing so I couldn't use the maps, and many street signs were absent, but besides that, the neighbourhood was lovely. Mostly buildings of two to four stories, with all sorts of last century modernist architecture, all painted in white, with the window frames in green, in what is clearly a local motif. I managed to found the building the saw the apartments. They weren't really any different from what you've seen at Doña Sabrina. All four looked the same: as you entered, a very small hallway where you literally could have a hanger and a small chair to sit while you put your shoes on. From it, you had two doors, one leading to the kitchen, the other to the lounge. From the lounge, you had two more doors, one going to the bathroom, which had a tub, not a shower, and another too the bedroom. All apartments were furnished, as the owner said that he used them for short term rent for tourists, but he wants to move to long term, as the threats of war are already killing of his business. That made me think of all the tourists in the Plaza de Ebria, and if that meant that tourism was in a low point, I wondered how the city looked like when it was truly flooded by tourists. I liked them. They looked clean, with no observable infestation, the furniture was quite modern and well kept. I sent Romina and Francesco photos of them and when I received the green light, I knew I had to move fast.

The owner, a certain Ninu Schiano, wanted me to take all four with 8000R per month (meaning about 400 EM for each), but as I wanted only three of them, he didn't give me a discount, and we all had the pay 2500 Reales or 500 EM per month for each. I told him the others will come later to sign, but I can pay to reserve them and do the papers, as I looked at the time, I would even have time to set up my military documents too. I told him I was in a hurry and to my luck, he understood, and drove me to the agency, where I signed for them, paid for them and for the guarantees. After we exchanged phone numbers, I took a taxi back to the finca, where I scanned with my phone the rent contract and quickly updated my details on the service of the Catholic and Royal Army. Never in my life was I happier that this country, despite so much backwardness, was slowly digitising its bureaucracy.

With the evening, I was sitting in with Fátima, Alicia, Kristofru and his family, having dinner and telling them today's story. I was really happy that I managed to sort it out and I felt a huge weight was off my shoulders. I could even spend the evening at the new home tonight, but I was exhausted. Tomorrow Romina and Fabian, with Julio will make the drive from Gzira to move in and I will probably request Alicia's car too, as Ander left his father's ENA with his mother and sister in Chiste, in Nuoria, to move our stuff too. The radio was slowly playing some local flamencos, when its broadcast was stopped, and it announced what I feared the most. Military elements of the Federation bombed Gutarike. The whole table's quite vociferous chats all but stopped. "It's coming?" Alicia asked, quite fearful. "God knows..." I murmured.
 

Ebria

Elder Statesman
Joined
Oct 7, 2018
Messages
1,425
Location
Bucharest
Capital
Valls
Nick
Ovi
Ander
24th of September


School started last week in Ebria. Usually, the school year goes from the Monday closest to the 15th of September to Friday the closest to the 15th of June, giving Ebrian students one of Europe’s longest summer holidays. For me, it meant pretty much that for a long time, I just got used to Fernando being around, sleeping in the morning when I left, and either being in the city, at the gym or at home, when I came back in the evenings. But since school started, our mornings returned to normal, both our phone alarms ringing, both fighting for space in the bathroom to prepare to go to work, both telling each other to eat something in the morning that isn’t solely coffee, and then both ignoring each other at it, followed by both leaving the building.

I was going to the military base, which even now, two months later, still surprises me how weird it is that it’s situated in the city centre, literally on the other side of a large boulevard from a shopping mall. General Scarlata was pretty much in the open saying that some higher ups in the Ministry were waiting up until some real estate investors were getting extremely desperate for this land and only then move, of course, with the money for it going in the hands of the higher ups, not the Ministry itself. I was unsure if it was a joke or not, but knowing how Ebria is seen and how we ourselves see it, somehow it didn’t shock me if it was a sardonic comment with a pretty significant kernel of truth in it.

I left Fernando to walk to his new school, which was very close to our apartment in Ciudad Blanco, while I took the metro… not really a metro… more like a light rail. At first, leaving behind the surprisingly slim fitted grey uniform of the Armed Police Corps felt weird, as I moved around the city with the much looser military nutria uniform, and its bush hat pretty much making me feel like a middle-aged angler, but as tensions were rising all through August and September, the city started filling up with people like me, clearly showing that the Territorial Defence was recruiting and the military was mobilising. My mother and sister told me that in Chiste, capital of the Viceroyalty of Nuoria, it was the same and Doña Sabria was saying the same about Valls. The last few days were the weirdest. When the news of the Nievish attack on Csengia broke out, it’s like everyone just hid in their houses, expecting in every moment the bomb alerts on their phones, signaling the beginning of the world war. At that time, General Scarlata was screeching and screaming and yelling and cursing, because as he too said it, he knew that there were talks to create a corridor to Hansa, but at the same time, he was a supporter of the Csengian Patriots, so that meant he was supporting an invasion of Csengia too. And then, the rumors of talks for ceasefire came, followed by the declaration of neutrality for Ebria and I honestly felt that it was as if the whole nation just breathed a huge sigh of relief.

I entered the base right before the morning roll call. After being noted as present I went to the administrative building, where I was welcomed by Señora Yasmin Tudela, which was as sour as ever, this time commenting something on how military life doesn’t allow people to live normally and form families. I was unsure if she was talking about me or in general or someone else in particular, because she does moan from time to time that her son, who seems to be my age, is in the Ebrian Legion, and prefers to continue there than to become what she calls a “serious man, with a wife and a home”. Of course, at times she moaned too that our generation runs away from responsibilities, especially after she asked me if I was married and I just mumbled something. After her daily whining, she told me that before I start up my computer and continue sorting out some food supplies that were set to arrive for the next week, I should go to General Scarlata’s office, because he in there with “someone from Valls”, she said, in a weird way, like pronouncing the capital’s name was like a curse and was ready to make a cross sign to ensure she remained pure from it.

Ebrian internal prejudices were probably confusing yet funny for a foreigner. As it is natural, everyone from outside the capital hater the capital and vice-versa. But then there was Amérida. Amérida was seen by everyone to be rich and arrogant, and thus annoying. The people of the city and Betica, its surrounding area, found everyone else to be pretty much an impoverished peasant. Then there was Sahagun and Villanueva to the north, Sahagun was seen as the rural nucleus of sheep-shaggers, while Villanueva was seen as grey, dreary and industrial. Everyone looked down on them but the two hated each other the most. Then came Ranero, which being in the middle, somehow made it loved by everyone, but nobody understands why, because everyone too jokes that they go to Ranero for the mountains and totally ignores the city, while the locals just love that, as they feel the tourists bring increased prices. For the islands, Nuoria was pretty much seen as Sahagun, but even worse, as it was even more rural, even more religious and most jokes on them were about how they were just eating putrid cheeses. Hamrun was the black sheep of the family, as it was exotic enough to be mocked by everyone, but at the same time, proud enough of its heritage to just hate everyone else. As San Lawrenz was quite a big city, the 3rd biggest in the country, it felt it was participating in the big league with Valls and Amerida, but it was always cut down to size. In all of this crazy set of unwritten rules of which regions to mock and whom to not, it’s no wonder the secretary just preferred to stay away from the cursed Valls and pushed me in front to join general Scarlata, especially as I was Betican.

“Good morning, sunshine!” I just heard a woman’s voice after I knocked and entered the General’s office. The voice of the woman felt so familiar it gave me a déjà vu, but I couldn’t immediately recognize it especially as the rising sun went directly through the window behind the office, where the General was seated and the woman was in front of me, and it blinded me. “Come in, Teniente Suarez! Take a seat,” I heard the General saying. I saluted and then moved towards the seat and only then I could recognize the woman, mostly from her curly long hair, which was dyed in a very deep red that looked brunette normally, but when the sun was shining on it, its burgundy hues could be observed. It was Vanessa. She smiled at me and gesticulated towards the chair to make me rush and take a seat.

“I was saying to señora comisaria,” he said, continuing his idea before I interrupted, “now that peace was declared, at least for our time, the Ebrian Legion will return from the mainland back to its headquarters in Hamrun and the project of building up the local Territorial Defense Force has been cancelled,” he said, and I was surprised by how bitter his voice was when he finished his sentence. These past two months he hated everything about organizing this military unit, now it felt like his baby was put to rest. “That’s strange, you would imagine now that they built up this new doctrine, you would imagine they would do their best to keep it standardized all over the country,” Vanessa said and the general sighed. “Sadly, orders from Valls came specifically to ask for it to be stopped and for the Ebrian Legion to become the main element of defence in the Hamrunite Archipelago,” he said, sighing again. “May I be frank, señora, even if you’re police?” he asked and as Vanessa nodded, he continued. “I feel it’s less about Hamrunite defence as they returned now to normal and they fear Hamrunite independentist radicals, and having the people armed and military trained is seen by them as a recipe for disaster,” he said and she just nodded. I looked at them at how they both interacted and funnily, the General was speaking so sweetly and honeyed that I was thinking that he was even flirting with her.

She looked at him and grimaced. “Sadly, General Scarlata, this is why I’m here, and sadly, you are right,” she said. “Darío Ríos and all his friends at the Palacio de Magdalena will never say it rightly so, but we know each other for some time know, so I will be frank too and pretty much state that you are right. Having a population armed and trained, especially when half of it wanted to rise in insurrection is suicide. And sadly, this is why I’m here too,” she said, further sinking into her seat, yet taking a more imposing posture too. “I had a talk with your future leader, Regional President Rikkardu Ferro, and the Ministry of the Interior. As you know, we have arrested Abram Biancardi, but it seems we have been naïve in thinking that his disappearance from the local scene will improve things. We might have on our hands a much more vicious and radicalised group, this National Liberation Army,” she said.

“And what do you want from me?” the general asked. “I have been tasked to reform that Once de Mayo Committee and form a taskforce to lead from San Lawrenz to combat this group. I will need you to send my way a list of people who you know might be interested in it. Of course, I will need Ander here too, because he has the experience from the previous committee and of course, I might ask you to do some counterespionage by also providing me with a list of people you went through this base and you think they might have aspirations to join the group,” she continued.

The general sighed and mumbled something. I couldn’t make out exactly what but I did understand something regarding Valls. “It’s your lucky day,” he then said, turning towards me. “I’ll sign the papers today to move you back to the Armed Police Corps. You’re off the hook, teniente Suarez,” he said, this time, giving me a wink. He then turned towards Vanessa. “How quickly do you want it all?” he asked. “As fast as possible,” she quickly responded. “I will sign today Suarez’s transfer papers back to you, and I’ll sort the rest of his bureaucracy with him. Sending you men will take some time and literally snitching people for you to blacklist will take even longer,” he commented. “Understandable. Although, you know me, it won’t end up with black listings, that’s a thing too Tarusan to do. I will just want to build a database of supporters which have the necessary training to become efficient members of the groups, should they be pushed into it…” she added and then grimaced. “… who knows, maybe that will save your life one day.”

For the rest of the morning, more as a favour to both General Scarlata and Señora Yasmin, I sorted their foodstuff inventories and then I had lunch with Vanessa. It seems that she has been promoted and now is a commissioner, but within the current Taskforce she has the status of Commander, pretty much leading it with a direct line to the President of the Government, the regional president and the ministry of interior. She wasn’t happy of coming to Hamrun as she hoped to remain in Valls and lead it from there and maybe even manage to get me back to Valls too, but in her own words, her own hate of San Lawrenz will probably motivate her to work faster and more efficient. In the afternoon I pretty much done only papers, surrendering my nutria uniforms, the keys to the Ministry of Defence ENA car that I had the right to drive when I was doing chores for the general and also, to my own dismay, but I was expecting it, ending my contract with the army which ensured the subsidy on rent. I had to remember, later, to negotiate one with Vanessa, but knowing the policing budgets, compared to the army ones, chances were slim to none to get anything that would pay off all of the rent as the previous one. I then helped Vanessa set up, together with three more colleagues in a wing of the General Police Headquarters in the city centre.

It was late when I arrived home. I messaged Fernando on my surprise transfer and told him I’d be running late, so as to not be concerned nor wait for me if he gets hungry, but by 8pm, about 14 hours after leaving home I could finally arrive and I was ready to just collapse and fall asleep. When I entered the apartment, I could see the TV was on but it its source was changed from television to internet and connected to a music streaming app, which was playing some Tiburowave music, but it was on a volume low enough to just feel like Ambiental music. I heard voices on the balcony and when I locked the door, I could hear Fernando call me out.

I went to the balcony, where I was welcomed by Fernando and Romina. “How does it feel being grey again?” he asked me, but I just leaned in for a kiss. “Better than being beige, believe me,” I said afterwards and I could see Romina being confused. “He’s back in the Police Corps,” Fernando explained, anticipating her question. “So fast? I thought it will be a year or so until then,” she said. I shrugged. “It’s a long story, but it’s a good one. But speaking of good stories, where is Julito?” I ask and Romina just lightens up, opening up her arms with a big smile, leaning on the concrete wall that reached her hips in what was designed as the balcony’s balustrade. “He’s in bed, sleeping. Fabian is taking care of him tonight, for I want to celebrate now. It’s official, he is 100% on formula and other fruit purees and some mixture of chamomile tea and milk that Fabian’s family are ready to do everything to tell me that it’s good for him, because Fabian was raised on that,” she said smiling. “We all know how sane Fabian ended, so it’s not really a valid support,” Fernando said impishly and Romina just slapped him upside the head. “This means that I will be having my first beer in over a year, tonight!” she said and then poked Fernando, “be a sweetie and do the honours, will you?” she said and Fernando rose form his seat and went inside, passing me and slapping my ass. “And feed your man too!” she yells at him as he goes, mumbling something.

“I can see you’re energetic,” I say as I seat down on Fernando’s seat. “Yeah, I’m happy, I feel like the 2nd age of Julio’s life starts now, post weaning. And I’m just happy about it, plus I will be honest, having Fabian’s family around, helps me a lot. I finally got my contract from a translation agency, so I won’t be doing freelance anymore and there is very little to go until my family comes here too, so to be fair, even if I am probably exhausted as fuck, I do feel positive and energetic,” she said. We stopped to hear what was happening inside, as I heard the door unlocking and then voices. “Jesus, don’t tell me he already came asking for help with Julio…” she mumbles, but as I look through the door I recognise Francesco. “Nah, just the Ultramarino,” I say.

For a moment we keep quiet, and concentrate to hear what Fernando and Francesco were talking, but a very strong “ʾAllāhu ʾAkbar,” startles us. It was from the nearby mosque, with the muezzin calling for the prayer past sunset. The calls for prayer initially felt disruptive for me, especially the 5am one, but Fernando slept through them with no issue. It was something that I never took into consideration when imagining Hamrun. The nearby neighbourhood mosque continued its call, but by now we just got used to it. Fernando came with Francesco, a plate with some food he made and some beers immediately after. “Well, to the first beer in so much time!” Romina said and we raised our bottles. We toasted and as I ate, me and Romina just let Fernando and Francisco do some political bickering on how Ebrian Rio de Oro is or not.
 

Ebria

Elder Statesman
Joined
Oct 7, 2018
Messages
1,425
Location
Bucharest
Capital
Valls
Nick
Ovi
Fernando
18th of November


Ander seemed pissed and a part of me was wandering if I should investigate it only to let out the floods of his venting, or wait for it because it might be more like my own mind making scenarios. Even so, if there was a reason to be pissed, it was because the Day of San Romano has fallen unto a Saturday. Usually, it was the most important holiday of the fall season and the best San Romano fell either on a Tuesday or a Thursday, so that the holiday would get tied to the weekend, but this year, it was just a sad normal workweek. This might also be the most important San Romano since forever, at least for me, because with Juan being in Rio de Oro, Fátima decided to not spend it alone in Valls, so she will be coming to San Lawrenz to spend the holiday with the people here. I spoke with Alice to have her and Kristofru come too. I expected them to be harder to persuade and even insist that we come to them, especially if Kristofru’s family might be there too, but they were shockingly quick to accept and be even happy about it.

“Because it falls on the weekend, my mom and Viviana said they won’t travel because they would have had to leave yesterday late at night and then leave San Lawrenz again tomorrow around noon and that it will be too tiring,” said Ander just as he stopped talking on the phone and I sat beside him at the kitchen table, offering him a cup of coffee. I was thankful that he managed to even get some time off for this, and as much as I felt that he didn’t enjoy the fact that his mother and sister wouldn’t take a ferry to San Lawrenz, I feel that they themselves too didn’t want to get their hopes up only for him to be absent again because of work, as much as he insisted that he will pay them their tickets, especially as they would have been expensive so close to the holiday.

“It’s annoying,” he continued. “Ever since my dad died, a few years ago, she just decided to take refuge in Chiste, close to my sister, and didn’t want to hear of anything of mainland Ebria, and especially of her old life in Amérida. Both me and Viviana are trying to get her to move around and be more active, but she doesn’t listen to us and is just stubborn,” he concluded. I took a sip of my coffee while I was playing around with my hands through his hair. “She is clearly struggling and is depressed. Is she living with Viviana?” I ask but he shook his head. “They both live nearby, but each with its own apartment. The prices in Amerida are crazy, and with the money after selling the one we had, they bought two apartments in Chiste and I got money for half an apartment in Valls. Plus, Viviana clearly has commitment issues and just changes boyfriends like socks and she told me she would die if mom would be around to just silently judge her,” he said, finishing up in a lighter mood and we laughed at the image he evoked.

We were interrupted by knocks on the door. I rose, as I was closer to it and opened it. It was Francesco. “Morning! I bought what you asked me,” he said, handing me a bag that was filled with three eggplants, about a kilogram of red and orange bell peppers, onions, pork loin, jamon and two bottles of wine. “Cheers for that. How much do I owe you?” I asked and he just handed me the receipt before he went towards Ander and they just greeted each other like they were besties, which weirded me out a bit.

“Ready for a fiesta?” the Josefino asked, but I just rolled my eyes. “One needs to work first,” I say as I start to take out the groceries from the bag and put them on the table and the counters. “How good are you with baking eggplants and peppers?” Ander asks Francesco and the latter just scoffed. “I’m still happy I haven’t burned my kitchen yet,” he said, shrugging. “Well, now it’s your chance to burn them down and char them,” Ander said.

For the next three hours, I cut carrots, potatoes and chicken breasts that we boiled yesterday and now were cold and manageable to cut. Ander cooked up the pork loin and made it into a roulade with jamon and mushrooms and Francesco baked off the eggplants and the peppers on an open fire on the stove and then struggled to peel off their charred skin. We talked about pretty much anything, going from international politics, personal histories and as always gossiping everyone we knew

“So, what will this whole thing be?” Francesco asked as he looked at the mass of moist cooked eggplants and peppers. “You don’t get escalibada in Radilo or the Ultramar?” Ander asked and Francesco shook his head, his showing his distaste for the eggplants. “I think it’s Gallian influence too, probably that’s why, more from Bezonzaux than the Ebrianidad,” I said. I continued cutting my foods and then tied them all up with mayonnaise and then added some pickles and olives to make a Tarusan salad. Then I aided Francesco cutting the baked vegetables and then we mixed them with vinegar and olive oil, to make a second salad. Before Ander’s finished there was a knock on the door again. “That’s probably Fátima. You always call her at an hour and she arrives half an hour earlier. Alice is the other way around,” I say as I open the door and to my surprise, Fatima was with Alice and Kristofru too.

“Smells good, cuñado,” says Kristofru as I was still shocked. “But first, where’s the booze?” he continued going past me after he shook my hand, going in the kitchen to greet Ander and Francesco, whom he just now meets for the first time. “A San Romano miracle, we’re early…” Alice said and then came closer to me. “Fatima pretty much bullied us into moving, so it’s on her,” she added whispering very conspiratorial as she kissed me. “Fer! So nice to see you!” Fatima said as she came too. “You should grow out your hair, with a buzz cut like this you look like a repo man,” she continued after kissing me too. “Nothing better than some criticism right on the door…” I moan but she rolls her eyes. “Oh Jesus, you influenced Ander too… For a gay couple, you are straighter than Kristofru, and Fabian put together and I can’t understand that,” she says while she hands me the dessert they bought, a box with a selection of turrones and a sweet bread with raisins and fig and date jam. “The first is to make you miss the mainland, the second is to just have Kristofru shut up that we should celebrate it in a Hamrunite style,” she continued a bit mockingly.

We toasted for their arrival with some aguardiente. Normally on the mainland it would have been orujo, a grape pomace brandy, but in Hamrun, the Himyari influences could be felt and pretty much one could find only anise brandy. Me, Francesco and Kristofru then moved to table from the kitchen to the lounge, where we had more space to seat 6 people, as our kitchen was too small for it.

“Where’s Romina?” Alice asked as we were all getting seated. “I was dying to see Julito,” she added. “Romina won’t be joining us this time,” Ander said. “She’s celebrating with the Ortizes, at the direct orders of her mother in law,” he added. “Yeah, Fabian’s mother is scary and a bit too authoritarian. No wonder he preferred to run away from her to Valls,” I add. “Until he ran back to her, this time with a wife and a kid in tow,” said Fátima rolling her eyes. “Yeah, but speaking of wives, the two had the religious ceremony last week,” I said and Fatima and Alice covered their mouths in shock. “Fuck yeah… Finally, these two got hitched. The weirdest of couples I interacted with. I always thought he was gay,” said Kristofru. “No offence,” he added. “None taken, before you said that,” Ander said and je laughed it off. Alice’s husband was his usual a bit socially awkward self, which always made me wonder what he saw in him but I shrugged it off.

I served everyone with the Tarusan salad and some bread, while Ander spiked some horchata with rum and served everybody. “You know, you should get married too,” said Kristofru as we were eating and I observed that he was addressing me and Ander. “Us?” I ask and he happily nodded. I could see Ander getting interested and smiling a bit as he was eating, but he observed that I had Kristofru’s full attention so he just turned towards Fatima to do some small talk, while Alice was talking with Francesco about some politics, as Alice was working on a social aid NGO, they might have found a lot in common to talk about. I don’t know what Ander was talking with Fatima, but I did hear Valls a lot mentioned and I felt I could and would do anything to just run away there. “We talked about it, to be honest… We’ve been together for more than a year, but it’s illegal,” I say.

“What do you mean illegal?” he asked, totally blissful, with his sunburned face that somehow made me think of a bull’s head. “Same sex marriage is not recognized, and now, with the United Kingdom thing, Hamrun and Nuoria have their own laws and they aren’t as progressive as the mainland. We could get a civil partnership but it won’t be like a true marriage, but we decided that it’s the legal part that matters, so in that case, it is the same,” I said, but I was just shocked that Kristofru was so shocked and gob smacked by what I was saying. “In Hamrun and Nuoria it’s not legal anymore, because their old local laws are back in place,” I added. He was looking at me like he wasn’t understanding a thing. “Imħabba, did you hear this mierda?” he said, this time addressing Alice. I don’t really know Hamrunite, but that word I’ve interacted with and it clearly was a pet name for a partner, meaning something like cariño. Alice looked at him a bit annoyed.

“Yes. I know. The nationalists moaned that the laws will bring more respect to the islands, but they cut a series of laws that came directly from Valls because of how our shitty bureaucracy works. So yeah, the government in this shitty country gives once with one hand and takes twice with another,” she said irritate. “Twice?” Kristofru asked and a part of me, I could feel that started to get jealous. I wanted to be so blissfully ignorant too, living my life, getting my money without getting stressed out of whom might win the elections every time, because my life is an electoral issue.

Ander and Fatima went with Francesco to take the appetizer plates to the kitchen and bring the main course, the meat and mushroom roulade and the roasted vegetable salad. “Twice,” I said and then continued. “Because the Royal Proclamation bases itself on the devolution law from the 90s which states that when the devolution is done, it’s to be done to those laws, which means no civil partnership and it means, in my view even worse, the compulsory use of co-oficial languages. Which means that if I don’t speak Hamrunite to C1 level, starting the next semester, I won’t be able to teach at all,” I added. By then the food was served by the three and we started eating but Kristofru’s uselessness was just about to annoy me more and more.

“But you teach Engwahlian,” he said. “Yeah, but I teach it through Ebrian. They want it to be taught through Hamrunite,” I say, maybe showing my exasperation and I could feel Fatima pretty much patting my shoulder in a mixture of support and to tall me to calm down. “But you’re in Hamrun. Of course they’ll want it in Hamrunite,” he said and I could just feel my cheeks on fire, thank God Alice took over.

“It’s not about that. It’s more about shooting yourself in the leg. Out of populistic nationalism, they push for this even if that means reducing the teacher corps because many speak only Ebrian,” she said calmly. “But they’re in Hamrun. I speak Hamrunite and yet we’re talking all here in Ebrian, it’s not that hard!” Kristofru responded in a way that still made we wonder if he actually understood. “You grew up with both languages, Kris. Ander is from Amerida. Fatima is from Valls. Francesco is from Palmira, and me and Fer are from Sahagun. For us, it’s a language that we need to learn now as adults and it’s hard. It’s a semitic language in the end. I live here for 3 years already and I feel it’s still too complicated to speak it. I feel I am barely touching a B1 level and he needs a C1. That’s even better than the Hamrunite you speak,” Alice said, this time even her exasperated. Kristofru just looked around, with a sad view on his face. “So that would mean that if you don’t miraculously learn this language past Christmas break, you lose your job?” he asked me and I nodded. “What a shitty country,” he added and I nodded again.

We continued eating and drinking Ander’s spiked horchata. Afterwards me moved on to the desert and I pretty much phased out during a talk in which Kristofru and Francesco were defending the virtues of the panettone over the turron, as I felt it finally hit me that it will mean that I will be losing my job after Christmas anyway and what I hated the most about it was that it was just the first year I got tenure. I clenched my jaw and I felt the need to just take a glass and smash it but I knew it helped no one. I felt a hand resting under the table on my knee and that brought me all back. It was Ander. I looked and him and his smile was pretty much all I needed to feel better at least for the moment.

“So how come you came here in the end and not organized the San Romano day at your place?” Fatima asked Alice, towards the end of the desert, when Kristofru went to the bathroom. “Oh, we didn’t tell you. I finally managed to cut Kris’ umbilical cord. We were supposed to organize it with his family, as they are pretty much like the Ortizes, as Ander said… authoritative and angry, so of course they were pushing for it,” Alice started saying and then took a pause. “But then we got into a fight,” she continued. “You got into a fight with your in laws?” Fatima asked, and smirked. It was clear she never approved of Kristofru and his family. “Yep, pretty much. And it was about kids. Señora Cavarra-Montez pretty much always opens up the subject of kids everytime we are around. And at some point I said, that we don’t use protection, but nothing happened yet. Maybe I’ll even adopt one if I won’t get pregnant, I say, and that was when she lost it. She pretty much took it personal that she wants biological kids, because adopted kids are not really continuing your lineage and all of that…” Alice said, to the shock of pretty much everyone in the room. “What a bitch,” Fatima added. “So that is when I lost it, and pretty much Kristofru had to take me away to not throw his mother out through the window,” Alice finished, with a victorious smile. “So yeah, that’s why we’re here and we’re so relaxed now, because pretty much I took all my anger at her and now I am all zen,” she added at the end.

We talked some more and drank some wine and in the end, Alice, Kristofru and Fatima left. The latter was spending the night at their place and will take a place Sunday at noon back to Valls. Francesco remained with us to finish the spiked horchata and the wine and the desserts and then helped us clean up.

“I mean, it was tense, like all San Romano feasts. Like a Western movie about Thanksgiving and how all hell breaks loose, but still, decent,” Ander says as we clean up the plates and we begin to wash them. “I actually have a bomb of a news that I must tell you guys too,” Francesco said and we both looked at him. “I wanted to tell you both before they arrived, but I didn’t want to derail the whole thing,” he added. “What’s up?” I asked.

“My visa expires soon, and the government of San Jose doesn’t want to extend my stay in the exchange program I’m in. I will have to return to Palmira,” he said meekly. “Wait, you’re leaving?” Ander asks and Francesco nods. “Isn’t there a way to stay? Isn’t there something you can do to continue it?” I ask and he just shakes his head. “The government wants to set up better ties with Radilo but they also lack funds to send more people so we’re pretty much given the option to do the same in Porto Novo, or come back to Palmira,” he said. “I started to really like Ebria and I began to hope that I might end up setting some roots here, but it seems that at least for the moment, I’ll have to go back home,” he added. “Will you come back?” I ask. “I’d love to,” he said.

“You might be surprised, but you will always find a home with us here in Ebria. Although you might find us in Valls next time,” Ander says and while Francesco didn’t really seem phased by it, my attention moved fully towards him. “What do you mean in Valls?” I ask. “I spoke to Fatima when we brough the food from the kitchen. She knows the situation of the whole public functionaries, not only teachers in Hamrun and Nuoria now. She expected it and used some of her networking and relations. She said she wanted to call you the next days when the whole thing calms down, but there are two schools in Valls that might take you on transfer, tenured as an English teach,” he said and I literally had no aid to breathe. Rarely had I ever felt tears forming up like this, but I just felt for the slightest of moments that all the weight that was pressing on me and wasn’t allowing me to breathe just disappeared and relieved me.

“But… what about you?” I asked. “We’ll sort it out. In the end, I was here because of the mobilization for the war. In the end, the war didn’t come, so there is nothing keeping us here. Plus, I feel it’s time to seek a more administrative job, because I feel Vanessa is losing it and I’d rather not be around,” he said.

“And what about Romina?” Francesco asked. “She will manage, although speaking with her, I understood her family will come to the mainland too, because finding jobs without knowing Nuorian and Hamrunite has just been made more complicated on the islands. Seeing that the Ortiz family pretty much pushes her and Fabian around isn’t the best for either of them. But at the moment, I care only of my family,” Ander said as he came and hugged me.
 
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