• Published 19th Feb 2015
  • 6,665 Views, 192 Comments

A Taxing Evening - Admiral Biscuit



Most of the year, Written Script enjoys his job as town treasurer--but not when tax time rolls around, and everypony thinks they're paying too much.

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Written Script, Town Treasurer

A Taxing Evening
Admiral Biscuit

This was the time of year Written Script hated the most—the time when he had to avoid the tavern, market, and bakery. His workdays often ran long, and by the time he’d neatened up his office and gone home, it was too late to go over to Golden Harvest’s house, so he spent the two weeks either cloistered in his office, or hidden in his house. She had an open invitation at his house, of course, but she usually preferred to stay at the farm: with all her responsibilities, she was often up before the sun, and in bed well after moonrise.

He looked at the hourglass. One more turn, he thought, flipping it over, then I can go home.

It wasn't a bad job—not really. He'd been hoofpicked by Mayor Mare, which was quite an honor in and of itself. It gave him a leg up, if he wanted to make a career of it, and while the pay wasn't great, he normally only worked two days a week.

Except at tax time.

Because while ponies loved the services their tax bits bought, everypony thought their share was too high.

There were occasional mistakes. He caught some of them, and one could always go to a tax tribunal and make a case about the amount owed, but they rarely did. Ponies didn't think about their taxes until they were due, and Written Script had the misfortune during those times to be the face of the bureaucracy.

He ceased his ruminations as he heard hoofsteps in the hall. A moment later, a familiar gray pegasus walked into his office. “Mail,” she cheerfully announced.

“Put it on the desk,” he instructed, pushing a stack of papers aside to make her room.

She nodded and reached into her saddlebags, eventually passing over four mouthfuls of envelopes. “Do you have outgoing mail?”

Written Script nodded, and floated a stack of letters over to Postmare Hooves. “They're already franked, and arranged in alphabetical order.”

“Thanks!” She grabbed them out of the air and gently deposited them in her left bag. “It's that time of year again, isn't it?”

He nodded. “You did get your tax bill, didn't you?”

“Yes, I—oh!” She stuck her muzzle into her right bag and rummaged around, finally pulling out a stained envelope. “Funny, me forgetting to mail it, isn't it?”

I wonder if it officially counts as mailed? The stamp was never cancelled, but it was delivered by a postmare. I bet there's a rule about that. He carefully slit it open with his letter opener, deftly pulling out the bill and the check. “Since you're here, I can give you a receipt right now,” he offered. “If you want one.”

She nodded, one eye drifting to a town map with all the properties marked. “That's my house,” she said proudly, pointing a wing at a little yellow square off the center of town. “How come it's yellow?”

“Single-family properties are yellow, rental properties are blue, farms are tan, businesses are green, Crown-owned property is orange, and town-owned properties are gray,” he said automatically. Everypony who went into his office was curious about the map. “Each one gets a different color, because each has a different tax rate.”

“Oh. What about the stripey ones, along the edge of the map?”

Written Script didn't even look up from his ledger. “Cloudhomes. They have the lowest base rate, since they don't hook into any municipal services, like water.”

She got a distant look. “I used to live in a cloudhouse.”

He nodded politely and stamped the tax form, then slid it across the desk. “There you go. Good for another six months. Thank you!”

“Have a good day,” she said brightly, and headed out the door.

Why couldn't everypony be as cheerful as her? He slipped her check into his payments folder, and put her file back in the cabinet. He heard her mutter an apology, and braced himself for his next visitor.

Moments later, Caramel came through the door, with a neatly folded piece of paper clenched in his teeth. He walked right up to the desk and spit it out in front of Written Script. “How come I've got to pay for the fire department? They're volunteers.”

“Because their equipment costs money.”

“But they already own it,” he protested. “Besides, what do they need a fire engine for? All it takes is a pegasus or two to drag a cloud over, and put out the fire.”

“First, they took out a loan to buy the fire engine. I'm sure you remember the vote?” Keep your voice neutral, he reminded himself. “And they do get paid whenever they're on duty, and there is a caretaker for the station who cares for the equipment, and keeps the steam up in the engine.”

“I haven't had any fires, and if I did, I'd have Thunderlane get a raincloud to put it out.”

“That's your privilege, of course, but Thunderlane might not be available, or there might not be any rain clouds this side of Cloudsdale,” Written Script reminded him.

“I voted against the fire engine. Therefore, I shouldn't have to pay. All they do is take it out for parades.”

“The fire department averages three fire calls a month,” Written Script said. “They protect lives and property, and it only costs you a quarter mill to pay for that protection.” He glanced down at the paper. “In your case, that's one-and-a-half bits—three bits a year. Surely you can agree that having a fire department, available to anypony who needs it, is preferable to watching your home burn until rainclouds can be located.”

“They should keep them on hoof,” Caramel muttered. “That way, nopony would have to go looking.” He glanced down at the tax bill. “I used to pay less.”

“Before the bond was passed,” Written Script reminded him. “And when it's paid off, your tax rate will drop back to a sixth of a mill.”

“How much will that be?”

“One bit—you'll save a half-bit.”

“That's all? Why isn't it more?” He slumped his shoulders and reached into his saddlebags, pulling out a checkbook. “Can I borrow a quill?”

Written Script nodded, and slid a quill and inkwell over. At least he can't complain when he's writing a check, he thought hopefully. Unfortunately, his hopes were unfounded.

“How come I have to pay for the school? I don't have any foals.”

“Everypony pays for the school.” It's not a hard concept, he wanted to add. Everypony pays for services which benefit the community, whether or not they use that particular service.

“I don't think I should have to,” Caramel signed his check with a flourish, and slid it to Written Script. “It's not fair.”

“Having educated foals benefits the community at large,” Written Script said as he carefully wrote the property identification number on Caramel's check. “Princess Celestia said so, and the ponies of this town got together and built a schoolhouse, where everypony could learn together. You went to school, didn't you?”

“I didn't have to pay for it. It was free back then!”

He stamped the receipt harder than was necessary, and gave it back to Caramel. “Your parents paid taxes to send you to school, as did everypony else in Ponyville. That's why you personally didn't have to pay.”

“I still think it's too much.” He turned towards the door.

Written Script waited until Caramel had disappeared down the hallway before banging his head against his desk. Not for the first time, he wished he had a bottle of apple brandy in his drawer. He looked up at the hourglass—the sand was half-gone already. A few more irate taxpayers to endure, and then he could close his door, tally up the payments received, and notch off one more day.

He slid a hoof through his forelock, then straightened his uncomfortable necktie. Mayor Mare had insisted he wear something dignified, and the tie was one of the few items of clothing he owned. He jerked to attention as a mare came through the door.

“Did my taxes go up again this year?” Blossomforth tilted her head towards the yellow paper clenched under a wing. “Because I don't remember paying this much last year.”

His ears flicked back, and he cautioned himself yet again to be patient. “Cloudsdale re-valued properties, which they do every six years, so your home's valuation probably increased. I’m sure they sent a notice—they usually do.” How do ponies not know these things?

A look of uncertainty crossed her face. “I guess. Who has time to read that kind of thing?”

“It’s good that your property has increased in value,” he assured her. “It means it's worth more than it was, which in turn means that you have more equity in your home.”

“I guess if I was planning to sell it.” She slipped the bill out and smoothed it on the desk. “But I'm not, and the bank doesn't say that I owe more on my mortgage. So how can Cloudsdale say it's worth more?”

“You'd have to take it up with them. We simply tax based on the numbers they give us.”

“It's too much,” she grumbled. “It's easy for you to spend money; it isn't yours.”

Some of it is. I pay taxes, too. He reached into his desk and yanked out a stack of papers, dropping them on the desk with a flourish. “That's the budget for last year. It's public information; feel free to review it and suggest improvements.”

Blossomforth stepped back. “Nuh-uh. That's your job.” She pointed a hoof at her bill. “But it's not fair that I have to pay for weather—I make the weather.”

“Everypony pays,” he reminded her. “It not only covers the cloud patrols, but the factory workers, reservoir maintenance, and so forth. You can't do all that by yourself.”

“I should get a discount.”

He sighed. Every town paid the same rate; it was national law. The money went straight to the Crown, and in return, they got weather. Simple as that. He knew she'd learned that in school—everypony did. They just seemed to forget about it each time a tax bill came. “The rate is set by Equestrian law,” he informed her. “There's nothing I can do to change it. If you're upset, you should petition the Crown, or the Nobles' Council.”

“My house isn't even in Ponyville.”

“Legally, it is. Ponyville's rights extend to cloud homes located within its airspace. You could move it, and then you would not owe us tax in the future.” He pointed to the bill which lay between them.

“Fine.” She began rummaging through her coin purse for bits. “But I'm going to move my house so I don't have to pay you any more.”

“That's your prerogative.” But you’d still owe somepony taxes, he mentally added. Maybe Cloudsdale, maybe the Crown.

While she was occupied counting her coins, he looked in his desk drawer in the hopes that a bottle had suddenly materialized, but no luck.

She triumphantly slid a small stack of bits across the table and snapped her purse back shut. Before he could even stamp her bill paid, she stormed out of the office, her tail swishing angrily back and forth. He sighed. There was a good chance it would be raining over his house again tonight.

On the other hoof, her departure was worth watching. She had a nice, trim body that was really easy on the eyes; if he didn't already have a marefriend, he'd certainly be after her.

Once he'd gotten his mind back out of the gutter, he looked back at his hourglass and watched happily as the last few grains of sand tumbled into the bottom. He could lock his door, sort all the checks, and maybe get home before dark.

He was halfway to the door when the miller came in, still covered in flour dust. She had her saddlebags strapped firmly around her barrel, and they were bulging. His ears flattened involuntarily.

“I'm not happy, either,” she mumbled. She reached back and set a ledger book crammed full of pink forms on his desk. “But you know how it is. Go through it and make sure I'm square.”

A provision of Equestrian law allowed ponies to pay in kind. In the miller's case, she could donate a certain percentage of flour to the Crown, rather than pay in bits. Most ponies didn't bother; the record-keeping was a huge hassle. Unfortunately for him, some of them did, and it was his job to make sure that their numbers tallied with the taxes owed.

He set his abacus on the desk and opened the ledger book while the miller took a seat. It was going to be a late night.

• • •

The moon was high in the sky when Written Script finally trudged to his front door. The raincloud positioned over his house had nearly run dry; only a fitful sprinkle fell on his head as he slogged along his front walk.

He shoved the door open, wiped his hooves on the mat, and dropped his briefcase. He felt like he'd run a mental marathon; it was hard to reconcile how exhausted he was, despite having spent the whole day sitting in his office.

His first stop was the kitchen. He didn't feel like making anything complicated, or even bothering with lighting a lantern. There was still some leftover butternut squash in the icebox that Golden Harvest had made him, and he cut off a generous piece. It wasn't worth warming it up on the stove, so he ate it cold and washed it down with half a bottle of red wine.

He set the plate and glass in the sink to deal with in the morning, and headed up the stairs to his bedroom with the wine in tow. There was a Berrow novel on his nightstand: he could read a chapter or two, maybe. It would help him unwind.

Written Script nosed open his bathroom door and frowned when the steady drip drip of the faucet caught his ears. Something was wrong with it—if it wasn't wiggled just right, it leaked. He'd almost brought it up when Silver Spanner was in his office, but like everypony else, she'd complained about her tax bill, and he was afraid if he mentioned it, she'd charge him twice what the job should be worth in protest. Besides, he'd lived with it for weeks, although it was odd that he'd forgotten to make sure it was off when he'd brushed his teeth in the morning.

A quick nudge with his aura, and the trickle stopped. He nodded in satisfaction and proceeded with his evening routine, making certain that there wasn't a single drip from the faucet when he was done.

He was halfway across his bedroom when he noticed the lump in his bed. He jerked back in alarm, and a faint squeal of surprise crossed his lips before he jammed a hoof against his mouth.

The spill of untamed orange hair should have clued him in right away, and he blamed his fatigue for his reaction. He let out a ragged exhale, gently set the wine bottle by the nightstand, and climbed into bed. His movements were slow and cautious; he had no desire to wake Golden Harvest. He knew she'd be up early; she had chores to do on the farm as soon as the sun rose, after all. Frankly, he was surprised that she'd even come over.

Written Script snuggled up against her warm barrel, and hooked a foreleg over her withers. She shifted into him, breathing out with a brief whuff. He kissed the back of her head and closed his eyes, losing himself in her comforting presence.

Author's Note:

Inspired by real life! Click through to the blog!

Comments ( 192 )

Poor guy.

Too bad he can't get Ms Hooves to shame Blossomforth into behaving more maturely

5642894
When it comes to paying taxes, or paying for service, too many people turn into morons. I doubt there's a solution, although I've considered throwing wrenches at customers, to drive out the dumb. I've got a lot of wrenches, so I could keep it up for a while.

Man I feel bad for written Script. Having to deal with all that nonsense would be straining for him or anyone else that had to go through it. At least he was able to return home to a mare that cares for him.

From an old church musical that my brother was in decades ago...

It's very hard, so they say, to really like a tax collector
Even when he's honest and fair, even then
You have to try pretty hard
To actually like a tax collector...

Nice to see a little Scripty x CT shipping going on there.

“Have a good day,” [Derpy] said brightly, and headed out the door.

Why couldn't everypony be as cheerful as her?

Model citizen Derpy is best pony. :derpytongue2:

5643096

Man I feel bad for Written Script.

I know, right?

At least he was able to return home to a mare that cares for him.

And that makes it all worthwhile.

She got a distant look. “I used to live in a cloudhouse.”

Awwwww.

5643161

You have to try pretty hard
To actually like a tax collector...

I actually do like our local treasurer. She's friendly and polite (even when I pay my taxes late), and I know she puts up with a lot of idiots. Plus, on a local level, I can see exactly were my money's going, you know? Not so much on a federal level.

Nice to see a little Scripty x CT shipping going on there.

Thanks! I hadn't even noticed that they were practically a couple in canon, until Rinnaul pointed it out in a review of one of my stories.

5643168

Model citizen Derpy is best pony.

At least, when she's not breaking the town hall....

5643243 Look on the bright side, she contributes her fair share to the repair fund...

A Taxlng Evening

Admiral Biscuit

Now how did you manage that? :rainbowhuh:

Otherwise magnificent. :trollestia:

It's the most wonderful time of the year!

Fortunately, I have no problems with taxes.
Every month some insurance is deducted (health and social insurance) and tax is calculated from my payment. Everything is automatically done.
Just every January I will sign a tax return in my employer office.
-------------
Poor Written Script. He should live in another country.

Finally, a story about my people.

As an employee of a tax collecting agency (probably the one you're thinking about when you read this), I always enjoy the tax fics that come out this time of year. Your author's note promising a blog post made me expect that you were in the line of work too, because you write it so well. I especially got a kick out of:

I wonder if it officially counts as mailed? The stamp was never cancelled, but it was delivered by a postmare. I bet there's a rule about that.

because that's how it is - everything has a rule if you dig deep enough. Love it, love it all, thanks for making my job seem a little brighter.

5643871
Crazy talent, I guess. Oh well, it's fixed now.

5644144 But do you own land?

because this is dealing with property taxes, which, at least in the states, are calculated and paid seperately from income taxes.

the way property taxes work varies by jurisdiction, but chances are that they do exist in yours. see: http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Property_tax

5644433 Ahhh, so it never occurred to me. Sadly I do not own any land. Yes,yes. My mistake.
See how are taxes difficult? No wonder that he do not like this part of year. :D

Only 3 fires a month? That averages out to 1 per Crusader per month. Seems a little low, doesn't it?

5643096

I felt bad for him until he found a Carrot Top in his bed, now I feel more jealous.

Unless of course she has issues with her taxes, then things are a bit more awkward and there will probably be far less snuggling in the near future.

5645140 clearly the crusaders are slacking

My first thoughts as I saw this story.

weasyl.com/static/media/5f/ce/4f/5fce4fb24973c5779a7711b7e4fa39773acf092d94a35ec71ecbbb9d419476ea.png

Edit after reading: Alright, he was nothing like the Sheriff, poor guy... Just doing his job and he takes the fall for the Crowns Stupidity.

I am Like number 97.

5643984

It's the most wonderful time of the year!

:rainbowlaugh:

5644144

Every month some insurance is deducted (health and social insurance) and tax is calculated from my payment. Everything is automatically done.

That sounds more like an income tax to me. Written Script is handling property tax, which is different. In many cases, it's payed (indirectly) by the mortgage company, but if you own the property outright, or don't trust a bank to take care of your property taxes, you can pay it yourself.

Now with an audio reading by TheCaptainSand (CaptainBron3y)

This story was released a day ago. Damn, that's fast.

5644273

As an employee of a tax collecting agency (probably the one you're thinking about when you read this), I always enjoy the tax fics that come out this time of year.

I honestly haven't seen all that many, I mean compared to some other themes. Applejack's Tax Relief Plan is the only one that comes to mind off the top of my head, although it's surely not the only fic on this site with the theme.

Your author's note promising a blog post made me expect that you were in the line of work too, because you write it so well.

Ha, no; I'm an auto mechanic. I just pay attention at township meetings, and the boss' father is a township treasurer, so I kind of picked up pieces here and there, y'know? Plus, unlike a lot of people, I actually read things like my tax bill, and figure out what I'm paying for.

Incidentally, the blog post is already here, too. There was a link in the author's note; here it is again: BLOG POST.

I especially got a kick out of:
I wonder if it officially counts as mailed? The stamp was never cancelled, but it was delivered by a postmare. I bet there's a rule about that.
because that's how it is - everything has a rule if you dig deep enough. Love it, love it all, thanks for making my job seem a little brighter.

Funnily enough, there is probably actually an official USPS rule that covers this. My work experiences and reading has taught me that many rules that seem weird these days were put in place for a specific reason, or for a specific case--and often as not, there are companies who have figured out bizarre ways to circumvent the rules on the books (like how Ford imports the Transit Connect to avoid paying the 'chicken tax' on it).

5644263
Are your people treasurers or tax agents? Because now I have a great image of a group of tax and finance individuals going where they are needed to save the day. Kind of like this (kind of):

5645140

Only 3 fires a month? That averages out to 1 per Crusader per month. Seems a little low, doesn't it?

Most of those fires probably wouldn't involve a fire department response (although based on the comic, perhaps I should have chosen a higher number).
roundstable.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/Screen-shot-2013-08-12-at-8.55.04-AM-690x445.png

5645159

Unless of course she has issues with her taxes, then things are a bit more awkward and there will probably be far less snuggling in the near future.

That's always a potential issue. I sometimes wonder how professionals handle it. I mean, what do you do if you're married to a cop, and have outstanding warrants? Still, I'd expect Written Script would go the extra mile to make sure things went smoothly when it came to taxing the carrot farm...

5646173

Alright, he was nothing like the Sheriff, poor guy... Just doing his job and he takes the fall for the Crown's Stupidity.

To be fair, it's more like the common pony's stupidity. Of course, we don't know for sure how those things work in Equestria, but here in the US, in Michigan, everything on my property tax bill is pretty clear and understandable, and I have the right to attend any township meeting I care to; I can vote for the township treasurer, and I also can vote on issues which affect my taxes (like the police department thing); and the minutes of each meeting are publicly available. It's hardly the township treasurer's fault if many of the citizens fail to exercise their rights.

I am Like number 97.

:yay:

5646431

This story was released a day ago. Damn, that's fast.

I know, right? I'm as surprised as you are.

5646496 You coulda made it so it was like an individual character came in and complained.
Like many chapters of it.

5646500
I didn't see this one as being more than a one-shot, to be honest. Plus, the sad truth is that if I wanted to be authentic, then it would just be a series of different ponies making essentially the same complaint.

5646509 So you're telling me Rainbow Dash would react the same as Fluttershy when they complained?

5646512
No, not specifically, but there's every chance that it would wind up being the same complaints repeated over and over again. At least, that's been my experience with customers at the shop. Sure, there are variations on the theme, but it all boils down to 'why does it cost so much,' and any explanation generally moves into 'it didn't used to cost so much,' followed by the implied 'all mechanics are crooks.'

5646537 Was about to write a reply with ideas that would have worked.
Realized how correct you were about it.
Fahk.

5646462
I was thinking bureaucrats in general. But heroic tax men would be cool too.

5646562

Realized how correct you were about it.
Fahk.

It's depressing as hell, to be honest.

5646571

I was thinking bureaucrats in general. But heroic tax men would be cool too.

I know, right?

No dislikes. This is literally the first story I've read that had none and was actually published.

5646594
Yeah, there aren't nearly enough fics about bureaucracy.

5646601
I'm pleasantly surprised myself. I guess everyone's had Written Script's experience in one form or another.

5646618
GhostOfHeraclitus has written some, as has Estee. Otherwise, it's a pretty open field, as far as I know.

5646494
That's interesting. In my country taxes are very impersonal and I had no idea it could be any other way. Revenue is taxed at source and for everything else you get a bill - you may contest that but only by filling in a form and mailing it, you won't ever talk to a person (unless you escalate it all the way to the judicial system). Even if you don't pay your taxes, you will never see a taxman coming - they just send in the police to confiscate stuff.

And all this reminded me of the following immortal quote:
"Taxes are the price we pay for civilization."

5646850

That's interesting. In my country taxes are very impersonal and I had no idea it could be any other way.

Yeah, on a local level, at least, everything's pretty open to the ordinary citizen. It actually makes me feel pretty good about how they handle things, because I can participate when I choose to.

5643044 You should make them a deal: if they can dodge a bag full of wrenches you throw at them, they don't have to pay taxes. It's a win-win because you get to throw things at stupid people and they can't get mad at you for it... unless you hit them, in which case they'll just be unconscious and you can snag what they owe anyhow before an amberlamps picks 'em up~

5646601 On of my stories Luna's Lessons went quite a ways with out getting a dislike It finally got one. Granted it never reached the public's real attention by getting featured either though.

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