I’ve never seen finer. Did you make them?’ Fletcher asked, trying not to stare. Dwarves were not common outside of Corcillum, and Fletcher had never seen one.
‘No, I’m just a vendor. Still doing my apprenticeship. Perhaps someday, though,’ the dwarf said.
Fletcher wondered at how the dwarf could still be an apprentice. He looked much older than him, with his heavy beard and whiskers. His beard reminded Fletcher of Berdon’s in colour, but the bristles were much thicker and longer, plaited and braided with beads throughout. The dwarf’s tresses were just as long, hanging halfway down his back in a ponytail kept by a leather thong.
‘Are your masters looking for any new apprentices? I have plenty of experience in the forge, and I could use the work,’ Fletcher said, his voice hopeful. After all, what else was he going to do to find money in this expensive city? The dwarf looked at Fletcher as if he were stupid, then his face softened.
‘You’re not from around here, are you?’ the dwarf asked with a sad smile. Fletcher shook his head.
‘We won’t hire any men, not while we don’t have the same rights and not while we still hold the secrets to gun making. It’s nothing against you personally. You seem like a nice enough fellow,’ the dwarf sympathised. ‘You’d best go to one of Corcillum’s human blacksmiths, though there are only a few. They do well enough; plenty of soldiers refuse to buy from the dwarves. But I hear they aren’t hiring these days; too many applicants.’
Fletcher’s heart dropped. Blacksmithing was the only profession he knew, and he was too old now to become an apprentice in another trade. There were no forests near the city to hunt in either, unless the jungles over the southern frontier counted.
‘What rights are you denied?’ he asked, suppressing his disappointment. ‘I know the King granted you the right to join the military last year.’
‘Oh, there’s plenty. The law dictating the number of children we can have each year is the most galling. We can only have as many children as the number of dwarves who died the previous year. Given that we can live almost twice as long as you humans, that’s just a handful. As for the right to join the military, aye, that’s a step in the right direction. The King is a good sort, but he knows his people don’t trust us, especially the army, thanks to the dwarven uprisings eighty-odd years ago. The thinking goes, once we’ve proven our loyalty by shedding blood beside his soldiers, well, then the King will revisit giving us equal citizenship. But until that time, this is how it has to be.’ The dwarf’s voice was tinged with a hint of anger, and he turned away as if overcome with emotion, rummaging in a box behind him.
Fletcher remembered the scorn from the other villagers in Pelt when it was announced that dwarves would be fighting in the Hominum army. Jakov had been joking that they could barely brush his balls if they walked between his legs. The stout dwarf’s arms were thicker than most men’s thighs, and his barrel-like chest reflected his deep booming voice. If Jakov took this dwarf on, Fletcher knew who he’d put his money on. The dwarves would make formidable allies indeed.
‘Do you know anywhere cheap and safe to stay around here?’ Fletcher asked, trying to change the subject.
The dwarf turned back and handed him something, closing Fletcher’s hand over it before anyone saw.
‘There’s a place not far from here. It’s a dwarf-friendly tavern, called the Anvil. Maybe somebody can find work for you there. Say Athol sent you. Take the third right down the street, you can’t miss it.’
The dwarf gave him an encouraging smile and turned to another customer, leaving Fletcher holding a square of paper with an anvil printed on the centre. Fletcher smiled and headed in the direction the dwarf had pointed, then remembered he had forgotten to thank him.
As he turned, he locked eyes with the scruffy men