12-17-2019, 12:25 AM
Café near a police station, Central, Shuell
Brandi Sikora shivered as she sat with her coffee. The other Kerlians with her were shunning her, due to her poor performance in the 100m backstroke final. So, she sat apart from the others, trying to analyse her own performance and work out the mistakes she had made which had allowed her to be humiliated by a bunch of people from some horribly patriarchal countries.
Take Romana Lockwood, the Lauchenoirian who’d won bronze for example. Her country had, in the past year at least, a comparably terrible economy. So, it would not be fair for Brandi to blame her performance on the food rationing and the budget cuts in government support for sport in order to divert funds to the military. Not that she would ever dare criticise the government. Their spending priorities were always correct.
She wondered if the others had put more hours in. She tried to train as hard as she could, but sometimes it was difficult. She lived near the border, meaning a strict curfew was in place so she couldn’t train too late at night or too early in the morning. Perhaps that was it – or perhaps, and she hated to admit this to herself, she just wasn’t good enough. These other nations had larger populations than Kerlile. More people to choose from. Perhaps the fact she was the best in her country was meaningless on a global scale.
Thinking on a global scale was something rather alien to a Kerlian. Their world was so cut off, isolated, the rest of the world forbidden to them. It hadn’t ever bothered Brandi, really. She was a perfectly loyal Kerlian. Not fanatical, but she never really had the inclination to disobey or challenge authority. Her life was pretty good, not great, but not bad enough that she felt the need to fight for change. It helped, of course, that she was no fan of men.
“Is this seat taken?” asked a voice, all of a sudden. Brandi jumped, startled. She turned around and glared in the direction of the speaker, a man with a Shuellian accent.
“Nobody is sitting there, but you may not,” she replied, then turned back to her coffee. To her great distress, the man only grinned and leaned against the seat.
“Oh? And why not? As you can see, all the other seats are taken. Surely you’re lonely, sitting here all by yourself. In fact, I should keep you company, it would be rude not to,” he grinned and, to her horror, sat down.
Brandi turned her head slowly in horror until she was looking at his face. Without asking, he stared her straight in the eyes and leaned in closer.
“You have very pretty eyes.”
All of a sudden, Brandi threw her chair back, standing up with such force pushing against the table that her coffee cup, almost empty, wobbled enough to spill a little. The chair slammed back into a wall hard enough to make a loud noise that drew every eye in the café. Yet, in spite of this Brandi moved so fast that nobody managed to react in time when she ran out of the door, ran two doors down, and burst into the police station.
“I’d like to report a crime!” she shouted, so loudly that everyone in the station turned to look at her, just as the patrons of the café had done only seconds before.
“What crime, ma’am?” asked a policeman politely.
“There was this man, at the café two doors down,” she began, panting slightly from the running, and pointing in the direction she’d come. “He sat next to me after I said he couldn’t.”
“… is that all he did, ma’am?” the policeman inquired, looking puzzled.
“He also made unsolicited eye contact, which various studies from the University of Maytown have concluded is an indicator that a man is 97% more likely to commit an offence than if he has never done so. And he flirted with me menacingly.”
Having caught her breath, she glanced around her, noticing the sheer amount of cameras everywhere. There were even more than she was used to - even coming from Kerlile. The police officers scattered around the place all had guns, a pair exiting the building with rifles strapped to their backs and black and blue armored vests on. The man she was speaking to had a rifle sitting next to him and a service cap. Now she was not panting, she noticed the smell of the place, coming from the fact that almost everyone was smoking.
“Ma’am, what actual crime has this man committed?” he asked.
“… weren’t you listening!?” she cried out, coughing a little at the cigarette smoke. “He was harassing me! I told him he may not sit at my table and yet he took the seat anyway, and he made flirtatious comments! If I was home in the Matriarchy, this would be sorted in minutes!”
The door to the police station opened once more and two more people entered – one of the Kerlian coaches, who didn’t do much coaching, but did give a lot of lectures on loyalty to the team; and one of the Shuellian guides in a black jumpsuit.
“Ms. Sikora, you may not run off like that. What were you thinking?” hissed the coach.
“There was a man harassing me! Flirting with me and making unsolicited eye contact! He cannot be allowed to roam the streets, there is a 97% chance he will hurt a woman!” Brandi argued, her disgust at the man overriding her fear of the woman who was so clearly sent to ensure her, and the others’, loyalty.
“Oh,” the Kerlian loyalty coach mused, “well, I can see why that might be different. You see,” she said, turning to the Shuellian guide and police officer, “the women from my country do not take well to harassment. Such things would be shut down immediately back home, so I can understand her reaction. I suggest you log some kind of incident report and investigate this matter,” she looked at the police officer pointedly.
“Yes, ma’am, I will make a report on this matter. Ms… Sikora?” he asked, and Brandi nodded, “I am sorry if you felt any distress.”
“I understand your men are far too used to being able to say what they wish. I do hope that this one learns that flirting with random women is unacceptable,” Brandi stated.
“Yes, well, we should be getting back to the group,” the coach smiled, taking Brandi’s arm and half-leading, half-pulling her out of the station. As they reached the door, she turned back and mouthed ‘sorry’ at the police officer.
They re-joined the group, and this time Brandi found the others including her much more. The man had left the café, evidently scared off by the mob of furious Kerlians calling for his head. After all, when her fellow citizens of the Matriarchy saw what happened to Brandi, all their feelings towards her changed to sympathy. A fellow Kerlian, being subjected to such advances by a foreign male? Regardless of what she’d done, or failed to do rather, she now needed support more than ever.
Brandi Sikora shivered as she sat with her coffee. The other Kerlians with her were shunning her, due to her poor performance in the 100m backstroke final. So, she sat apart from the others, trying to analyse her own performance and work out the mistakes she had made which had allowed her to be humiliated by a bunch of people from some horribly patriarchal countries.
Take Romana Lockwood, the Lauchenoirian who’d won bronze for example. Her country had, in the past year at least, a comparably terrible economy. So, it would not be fair for Brandi to blame her performance on the food rationing and the budget cuts in government support for sport in order to divert funds to the military. Not that she would ever dare criticise the government. Their spending priorities were always correct.
She wondered if the others had put more hours in. She tried to train as hard as she could, but sometimes it was difficult. She lived near the border, meaning a strict curfew was in place so she couldn’t train too late at night or too early in the morning. Perhaps that was it – or perhaps, and she hated to admit this to herself, she just wasn’t good enough. These other nations had larger populations than Kerlile. More people to choose from. Perhaps the fact she was the best in her country was meaningless on a global scale.
Thinking on a global scale was something rather alien to a Kerlian. Their world was so cut off, isolated, the rest of the world forbidden to them. It hadn’t ever bothered Brandi, really. She was a perfectly loyal Kerlian. Not fanatical, but she never really had the inclination to disobey or challenge authority. Her life was pretty good, not great, but not bad enough that she felt the need to fight for change. It helped, of course, that she was no fan of men.
“Is this seat taken?” asked a voice, all of a sudden. Brandi jumped, startled. She turned around and glared in the direction of the speaker, a man with a Shuellian accent.
“Nobody is sitting there, but you may not,” she replied, then turned back to her coffee. To her great distress, the man only grinned and leaned against the seat.
“Oh? And why not? As you can see, all the other seats are taken. Surely you’re lonely, sitting here all by yourself. In fact, I should keep you company, it would be rude not to,” he grinned and, to her horror, sat down.
Brandi turned her head slowly in horror until she was looking at his face. Without asking, he stared her straight in the eyes and leaned in closer.
“You have very pretty eyes.”
All of a sudden, Brandi threw her chair back, standing up with such force pushing against the table that her coffee cup, almost empty, wobbled enough to spill a little. The chair slammed back into a wall hard enough to make a loud noise that drew every eye in the café. Yet, in spite of this Brandi moved so fast that nobody managed to react in time when she ran out of the door, ran two doors down, and burst into the police station.
“I’d like to report a crime!” she shouted, so loudly that everyone in the station turned to look at her, just as the patrons of the café had done only seconds before.
“What crime, ma’am?” asked a policeman politely.
“There was this man, at the café two doors down,” she began, panting slightly from the running, and pointing in the direction she’d come. “He sat next to me after I said he couldn’t.”
“… is that all he did, ma’am?” the policeman inquired, looking puzzled.
“He also made unsolicited eye contact, which various studies from the University of Maytown have concluded is an indicator that a man is 97% more likely to commit an offence than if he has never done so. And he flirted with me menacingly.”
Having caught her breath, she glanced around her, noticing the sheer amount of cameras everywhere. There were even more than she was used to - even coming from Kerlile. The police officers scattered around the place all had guns, a pair exiting the building with rifles strapped to their backs and black and blue armored vests on. The man she was speaking to had a rifle sitting next to him and a service cap. Now she was not panting, she noticed the smell of the place, coming from the fact that almost everyone was smoking.
“Ma’am, what actual crime has this man committed?” he asked.
“… weren’t you listening!?” she cried out, coughing a little at the cigarette smoke. “He was harassing me! I told him he may not sit at my table and yet he took the seat anyway, and he made flirtatious comments! If I was home in the Matriarchy, this would be sorted in minutes!”
The door to the police station opened once more and two more people entered – one of the Kerlian coaches, who didn’t do much coaching, but did give a lot of lectures on loyalty to the team; and one of the Shuellian guides in a black jumpsuit.
“Ms. Sikora, you may not run off like that. What were you thinking?” hissed the coach.
“There was a man harassing me! Flirting with me and making unsolicited eye contact! He cannot be allowed to roam the streets, there is a 97% chance he will hurt a woman!” Brandi argued, her disgust at the man overriding her fear of the woman who was so clearly sent to ensure her, and the others’, loyalty.
“Oh,” the Kerlian loyalty coach mused, “well, I can see why that might be different. You see,” she said, turning to the Shuellian guide and police officer, “the women from my country do not take well to harassment. Such things would be shut down immediately back home, so I can understand her reaction. I suggest you log some kind of incident report and investigate this matter,” she looked at the police officer pointedly.
“Yes, ma’am, I will make a report on this matter. Ms… Sikora?” he asked, and Brandi nodded, “I am sorry if you felt any distress.”
“I understand your men are far too used to being able to say what they wish. I do hope that this one learns that flirting with random women is unacceptable,” Brandi stated.
“Yes, well, we should be getting back to the group,” the coach smiled, taking Brandi’s arm and half-leading, half-pulling her out of the station. As they reached the door, she turned back and mouthed ‘sorry’ at the police officer.
They re-joined the group, and this time Brandi found the others including her much more. The man had left the café, evidently scared off by the mob of furious Kerlians calling for his head. After all, when her fellow citizens of the Matriarchy saw what happened to Brandi, all their feelings towards her changed to sympathy. A fellow Kerlian, being subjected to such advances by a foreign male? Regardless of what she’d done, or failed to do rather, she now needed support more than ever.
LIDUN President 2024 | she/her | Puppets: Kerlile, Glanainn, Yesteria, Zongongia, Zargothrax

