Miss?"
"Ah, oh, umm..."
The little girl pulled me out of my stupor.
"Well, we're here now. We're going inside Flix"
The boy let go of my hand and looked at the girl still hanging off of my other arm. Her tail's near constant wagging had slowed to a halt as realization formed in her eyes.
"Umm, hey, this place..."
"What? It's the orphanage we live in"
The boy didn't quite answered my question, yet it was enough for me to understand. These two kids didn't look alike in the slightest. They weren't even the same species, yet they acted like siblings. The answer to the question that hadn't quite surfaced in my brain until it was practically pointed out was given to me when I wanted to know something else.
"In that case, can I come in?"
"Huh? What for?"
"I want to talk to the one in charge"
"You..."
The boy glared at me and the girl looked down as she pulled harder on my arm.
"Is there a problem with having a little talk?"
"...no"
He turned away and opened the front door. The hinges screamed out and I saw something flake off one before I followed him inside with the girl still on my arm.
The little spirits followed behind as they flitted around in curiosity.
"We're back!"
Both kids tapped their shoe toes on the ground before entering.
The inside was worse than I imagined. The only light came from the open windows, but as it was pretty late, hardly any ended up inside after bouncing off of the opposing building's outer wall. There wasn't any traces of any dust anywhere, even the floor was pretty spotless, considering that the boy and girl were still wearing their shoes inside.
A bunch of kids were peeking from other rooms, but were nervously keeping their distance.
"Hey, call for Miss Philia"
A little kid ran off after being ordered by the boy and quickly returned pulling the hand of an older lady.
The woman's face was well ordered but creased with wisdom, and there were locks of grey mixed in with the shoulder length sky blue hair. Her well patched dress showed signs that it was once a vibrant red, but not only was it a shadow of it's former self, but it hardly did any favours to properly hide how poor her diet was.
Unrelated to her diet though, was her short stature. Why was it unrelated? Because not only was she shorter than me by a full head, but her body was built with a significant amount of girth. Way more than me at least.
"Oh my, a guest? I hope the children haven't been bothering you"
"Ah, umm, no. I just helped these two get home..."
"Oh, is that so? Come, we don't have much here, but at the very least we can provide a drink"
The woman turned and went through another doorway, several of the little kids following after while the rest stared at me. Without anything else to do, I ended up following after.
In the next room there was several large tables surrounded by chairs of irregular make.
"Please, sit. I will be with you in a moment"
The lady went through another doorway and I could hear her doing some work in the next room.
I sat down randomly at a convenient seat. The girl who was practically attached to my arm let go and pulled closer the seat next to mine and climbed on. None of the other kids sat down, but formed groups, some just watched me from a distance, some others from outside the room.
In the quiet room, the sounds of even more kids in other parts of the building reached my ears.
Soon enough, the lady came back with a tray, a cup, and a pot. She put the tray down and poured the hot liquid from the pot into the cup and placed it in front of me before sitting down.
I raised the cup to my nose and breathed in it's aroma. No, that was way too generous of a word. There was hardly any scent to it. If this was tea, then it was tea made from the tenth brewing. It smelled more like just hot water than anything.
But the lady's strained smile made me ignore that fact and I took a sip.
The taste was definitely hardly any better than water, and I struggled to swallow it due to my physical constitution, but did my best in consideration of the effort she made.
Once a third of the cup was empty, I put it down so we could have our talk.
"So..."
"I am thankful for the kindness you have shown in helping the children of our home"
"Ah, no, it was nothing"
"She saved us from some mean people!"
The girl beside me practically shouted out as her eyes glittered.
"Is that true Torii?"
"Yea. A bunch of scary guys tried to take us away, but that lady saved us"
The boy that I found with the girl answered.
"I see. In that case, I truly am thankful for your kindness and courage miss"
"Ah, no. It wasn't a big deal. But how come such a thing happened?"
"That's...I am sorry, but it is best if you don't get involved. We can't allow harm to come to our benefactor"
"But..."
The lady's kind eyes were stern. She probably really wanted me to drop the subject, and as an outsider, I really didn't have any right to press further on the issue. I wasn't some sort of wandering hero that solved everyone's problems. People wouldn't just open up to me just because I asked.
"That said, while we don't have much to offer, if there is anything we can do to repay your kindness, please don't hesitate to ask, for kindness and mercy are the mottoes of Scarlet's Sweet Home"
(Erk)
"...actually, if you don't mind..."
"Yes? If it's something within my power"
"No, well...what's up with that name?"
"I'm sorry, I don't quite understand"
"The name of this place. It's an orphanage right? What's with the name?"
While obviously it didn't refer to me, the name was plenty embarrassing.
"Allow me to tell you the story of how the name came to be"
I nodded and urged her to tell it to me.
"Long ago, there was a man that would only drink all day and get into fights all night. But one day, he had gone too far and killed a man in a drunken brawl. Wanted by the guard, he fled the city and was forced to wander. As he lay beside the road, starving, a woman appeared out of nowhere, and offered him some food and drink. In the hopes of getting enough food to reach the next city, he tried to rob the woman, but she easily stopped him, like an adult stopping a child. So completely overwhelmed, the man feared for his life, but rather than ending it, the woman simply asked what had happened.
"He resisted at first, but eventually explained what he did and why he was alone on the road with nothing to his name. After listening to his story, the woman offered her hand, and said she would not only forgive him for attacking her, but even help him reach the next city and get a job. The man was skeptical, but the woman was true to her word. She walked with him along the road, shared her food and drink, convince the guard to let him inside the city, and once inside, she even helped convince a person to give the man a job.
"After that, all she said was that now all the man had to do was to forgive himself however he felt fit, and left him. Those words stuck with the man for the next few years. He was given a second chance, a third chance, but the weight of the mercy given to him drove him to not squander the chance he was given.
"But despite that, no, because of it, he couldn't forgive himself. Simply living an honest life wasn't enough to make up for the crime he committed, so he used his savings and bought a plot of land in that city and had a large building built on it. He then used that building to shelter those who were were unable to receive the kindness and mercy that they deserved, and named it after the woman who gave him mercy so many years before"
"Is this person by any chance..."
"That is right. She was Scarlet, the kindest person to ever live!"
I hadn't heard this story before, but I was confident that it told of the same person Alicia often told stories about.
This Scarlet really got around. It made me wonder just how many more stories there were about her.
That said, it felt weird talking about a person with the same name as myself, though I was named after her.
Looking around, several of the kids were nodding, and they all had smiles on their faces. It seemed like they were often told this story.
(...)
"Does this mean that this is the same building that was build all those years ago?"
"It is. Long ago, the founder had this building built strong and sturdy, and we successive directors have done our best to maintain it"
Considering it was over a hundred years old, maybe even several hundred, the building was in remarkable shape. But only remarkable considering how old it was. I could see a few cracks even on the inside of the walls, though there had been an attempt to fill them in with dried mud.
"I see. It really is impressive how well it looks despite it's age"
"We've done our best to do what we can with what we have"
I didn't like it.
Not the part about how well the building's condition was despite it's age, but how they obviously couldn't afford more than whatever maintenance they could do themselves. With just a bit of magic, those cracks could easily be sealed, and it shouldn't have been expensive to replace the missing and broken window shutters.
And even more than that, these kids all looked malnourished, just like the director. And everyone was practically wearing rags. Most of the kids were simply wearing a bunch of scrap cloth sewn together in the semblance of clothing.
So I didn't like it.
"I've been meaning to ask, but how is this orphanage funded anyways? Does the city pay for it?"
"...The lord does not. We are not the only orphanage in this city. There is a much larger one on the eastern side of the city which the lord pays for. This one takes in all the excess children that the other one can't or wouldn't accommodate"
"Wouldn't?"
"The children of non-citizens. The city orphanage doesn't take in anyone who isn't a child of a citizen of the city"
"And there's this many of them?!"
Just in the last few minutes, I had seen at least two dozen children here, and there were at least another dozen or two elsewhere in the building.
"Most of the children here are the orphans of adventurers. Most adventurers don't have citizenship, and if they leave behind a child, they often end up here. Kind travellers would bring children who their local orphanages wouldn't take for similar reasons here"
"I see"
That was a pretty raw deal, but I could see how administrators would've thought it might've been a good idea to balance the books. A pretty cold hearted and naive idea, but one nevertheless.
"Another question. If the lord doesn't pay for everyone here, then how do you pay for everything? Food, clothes, taxes?"
"We rely on private donations from other citizens. Coin from merchants, food scraps from butchers and grocers, cloth scraps from tailors, wood scraps from carpenters. The land itself we don't have to pay for, as the founder managed to negotiate a tax exemption in return for not asking for funds"
It kinda figured that if no central authority was paying for the orphanage, that they'd rely on private donations. The tax exemption was a bit of a surprise, and might've been the only saving grace. A plot this big must've been pretty valuable, though it might not have been when the orphanage was first built.
But one look told me how little these private donations were, and how far they were forced to go.
Things weren't good, and these people were pushing against their limits.
"...In that case, I suppose you wouldn't be opposed to me making a donation as well, would you?"
"Eh? I didn't mean to impose on you further after helping some our children already!"
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