Vignettes from the Predstaval #6
Faddei Peshov looked at the newspaper that had been dropped onto his desk and plucked his glasses from his collar and rested them on his nose. He leaned forward to examine the page, not completely sure what he was looking for until Faina Osinov landed her finger on a small article. Faddei tugged it closer to himself and muttered the words as he read them.
He got only a paragraph and a half of sight reading in when he looked over his glasses and fixed Osinov in ill hidden annoyance. He sighed and set the paper down, laced his fingers together and shifted forward on his seat. He wet his lips. “Tell me,” he began. “Predstav Osinov. How, exactly, does this concern me? This article is about Kudin’s region. Did you confuse us?” Perhaps age was catching up to her.
Osinov’s fur coat ruffled much like an annoyed, toothless wolf. “I fully intend to speak to Kudin about this, don’t doubt me, but I’m not here for the Predstav of Zapagora. I’m here for a word with the most vocal man on refugee restriction.” She jabbed her finger into the paper. “Did you have a part in this?”
“Of course not,” he snapped. He swiped the paper out from under her and jutted it out to her. How dare she come into his office and make such baseless claims? “And even if I had, this is in perfect compliance with the Echyet’s stance. Northern Yshtral hasn’t been touched by Blylahf, and we don’t accept refugees from safe places.”
Her lip curled as she took the paper back from him. The way she clutched it to her chest made it look like she thought newspapers were a dying breed. Faddei leaned back in his seat and crossed his legs. “Any other accusations you have for me, Predstav Osinov?”
“Heartless man.”
Faddei chuckled in amusement and made a sweeping gesture to the door, and the fury she wore would be comical if it were directed at anyone else. As it was, it only proved to annoy him. She spit the words, “Lacking in Echyet ideals,” whirled around, and slammed the door on her way out.
In the privacy of his own office, Faddei let out a groan and slid out of his chair and onto the floor under his desk. He pushed his glasses up and pinched the bridge of his nose; his headache was quickly approaching migraine.












