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Spring came early to Whistle. I had arrived three days ago, driven by a fit of wanderlust out of nowhere. It's not something I can easily explain. Lust is lust, whether it is craving for adventure or flesh or gold, and like any red-blooded man, I had needs. So I went up and out to this village with naught but a sword and a buckler to my name, passing many villages just like it on the way.

Just like it? No, not quite. There was one big difference here, one defining moment that made Whistle my ultimate, if not attractive, destination. The Black Company was recruiting.

"Next!" The sergeant shouted from his desk. Another young man that I had met (Peytr, very nice lad, came from some farm five days' journey north. He shared his sandwiches.) stood up with that all-too-eager attitude of a young man joining up to his sign his life away. That was what was happening. If I am overly literal, forgive me. I was not born a poet.

The sergeant nodded, grunted, and muttered things under his breath while Peytr shuffled his feet and answered the questions. He was nervous and excited. The sergeant didn't care. He was denied entry, his lack of experience with weapons given as the reason. Lucky lad.

I felt grateful for the recruitment sergeant.

"Next!"

It was my turn. I half considered not answering the call. Maybe I could head back north with Peytr as a spare farmhand, seeing as he had nowhere else to go to but home. The boy's parents were wealthy, if not in the material way that nobles were. They had a stable. Sizeable farmlands where ten others worked on the produce. Chickens that provided enough eggs for a small village, one much like Whistle.

The foolish part of my head squashed the pacifist, and I was by the sergeant's table faster than I could recite the Emperor's name.

"Training?" The sergeant asked, not even bothering to look at me. I don't think he looked at half the applicants, and I don't blame him. Jian'an was an agricultural backwater, knowing nothing but indolent peace after the Emperor's clean sweep centuries ago. It saw occasional legion founding, but that was about it for martial activities. The last one was eleven years ago.
>>
>>3623404

>"I've killed before." [Technically True]

>"Shortsword, polearms, lances. And a bit of plain ol' pugilism." [Honest]
>>
>>3623406
>"Shortsword, polearms, lances. And a bit of plain ol' pugilism." [Honest]
>>
>>3623406
>"Shortsword, polearms, lances. And a bit of plain ol' pugilism." [Honest]
>>
>>3623412
>>3623413
>"Shortsword, polearms, lances." [Honest]

He looked up. Then just as quickly looked down. I silently cursed my physical deformities, all two of them. People were superstitious about eye colours in these parts of Sinae. It was one of the reasons I didn't manage to hold down a single job for long.

"You don't look old enough to have training in so many weapons," the serjeant said brusquely. "You a deserter from the legions?"

"No. Want to see my arm?"

"No need. Only fething idiots ditch the legions only to join the Company. I'll need you to prove your skills with those weapons later. Language?"

"I'm speaking Sinaean with you, aren't I?"

"Don't get fresh with me, boy," he grunted, still avoiding my eyes. "The Company has a lot of men. Foreigners, some of them. It helps to know what kind of languages you can use."

>"What is this, the sign-up sheet for an Imperial Examination?" [Evade]

>"Sinaean, obviously. Greek. Some Latin. I know a bit of Parthian, too, if that helps." [Honest]
>>
>>3623417

>"Sinaean, obviously. Greek. Some Latin. I know a bit of Parthian, too, if that helps." [Honest]

Maybe we will be put into something useful
>>
>>3623417

>"Sinaean, obviously. Greek. Some Latin. I know a bit of Parthian, too, if that helps." [Honest]

What the fuck are we? Some demigod or something? Certanly not a peasant
>>
>>3623433
>>3623436

"Read? Write?" The sergeant asked.

I shrugged. "Not much of a point if I can't do either. Why would I learn half a language?"

He made a kind of a disbelieving snort. Understandable. Linguists weren't common this corner of the Empire. But when you have as little to do as I do, you'll find that any distraction, even the boring old academic sort, is welcome. Up toa point.

"You'll get tested on that, too," he promised. "Background issues? Anything that will drag in to the well-being of the Company? I'll tell you right now that if you are thinking of somehow using Company status to avenge your dead parents or some bullshit like that, you will be executed."

>"As far as I know, I'm clean as a Whistle." [Lie by Omission + Pun]

>"I'm not bringing any baggage with me, aside from my armour and traveling pack." [Pseudotruth]
>>
>>3623439
>"As far as I know, I'm clean as a Whistle." [Lie by Omission + Pun]
>>
>>3623439
>>"As far as I know, I'm clean as a Whistle." [Lie by Omission + Pun]
>>
>>3623439

>"I'm not bringing any baggage with me, aside from my armour and traveling pack." [Pseudotruth]
>>
>>3623463
Running two quests now?
>>
>>3623452
>>3623458
>>"As far as I know, I'm clean as a Whistle." [Lie by Omission + Pun]

It was even true. Kind of. None of the local constabularies would be looking for me, and anyone else wouldn't think I would be all the way here in the middle of boring ol' Jian'an. Farmers' daughters and fresh milk is all well and good, but a young man like me starts longing for action something fierce. And those who know me, know me enough to discount the countryside as a hiding place. More fool they.

More fool I.

"Well, I can't test for that," he said begrudgingly, wincing only slightly from my terrible joke. He didn't even bother glancing at the stack of 'wanted' posters from the prefecture's bureaucrats. Anyone would remember golden-eyed criminals. The rumours alone would have accosted me on the road here. Not that I was entirely bloodless. Just because Jian'an was a peaceful province didn't mean there weren't bandits, the mean and small sort that don't make big enough waves to get the prefects all concerned.

"Once you sign up, the only way out is two feet first," the sergeant warned. "You'll be dedicating your life to the Company. One of us until the bitter end. Are you sure you want to do this?"

I wasn't about to let the blood of three bandits be shed for nothing. Besides, it was hard to hold on to a job in this economy. And society. Farmers tightened their grips on pitchforks when I passed them by with a friendly greeting, and milkmaids turned around from the road, thinking me and my golden eyes might spoil their milk rotten. Superstitions, am I right?

"Sure as sure," I replied, thereby sealing my life to the Company for the foreseeable future. "Where do I sign?"

"Not here," the sergeant told me. "Behind me, in the tent. You'll find Scrivener."
>>
>>3623467
---

Scrivener, it turned out, was not a name but a title. There were Scriveners before him, and Scriveners after him too, likely as not. At this moment, Scrivener was a scrawny old man, half-blind from too much reading under candlelight and a beard that sorely needed trimming.

"You're the one Sergeant Iacob accepted?" Scrivener asked, squinting at me as if that would help his eyesight. "I heard you, you know. Knowing multiple languages - not too common among youngsters. Don't think you won't be tested on them."

"I heard of you, too," I told him. Some parts of the Annals were spread for public consumption, though not willingly, I suspect. Centuries of warring had resulted in some of the precious memorial-books of the Company getting looted by rival mercenary outfits or plumb lost. "Scrivener Lee was a looker. Or so I am told."

"And short-lived," the modern day Scrivener cackled. "She barely contributed a chapter to the Annals before running off with the Captain. They were both hanged, of course. The only way out of the Company-"

I interrupted him. "Yeah, I got the spiel from Frown-Face outside. I'm supposed to sign my name here, aren't I?"

"Here's the contract." The old man produced a scruffy parchment, dotted with tiny scripts that marched off the edge of the paper like ants. I didn't bother reading it. I knew what it said.

I hesitated. "Whatever I write here, it will be my name regardless of what I was named before?" That was the famous law of the Black Company. It was the reason many criminals with light enough charges not to be pursued for execution but heavy or embarassing enough that they would flee would join the outfit. Sometimes, they were nicknames, taken from his or her appearances or characteristics. At other times, they were wishful thinkings. I have it in good authority that Biggus Dickus a frequently occuring character in the Annals throughout the centuries.

The old man nodded. "Choose wisely, or not at all. The name you pick now will be the name used by your brothers."

So I signed.

>Biggus Dickus, if only to keep the tradition going.

>Aurelius, on account of my golden pupils.

>Lu Bu, because I was something of a fanboy of that ancient warrior of myths and legends.

>Whisper, after the town I joined up the Black Company in. My sentimentality knows no bounds.
>>
>>3623466
Loose lips...
>>
>>3623471
>White bitch, that's what your friends used to call you
>>
>>3623471
>Aurelius, on account of my golden pupils.

Birds of prey and other predators are famous for their golden like eyes too.
>>
>>3623471
tradition going.

>Aurelius, on account of my golden pupils.
>>
>>3623471

>Aurelius, on account of my golden pupils.
>>
>>3623492
>>3623478
>>3623488

"I thought my eyesight was going. You really do have golden pupils."

I looked up. The old Scrivener was staring at me, though not with the revulsion or fear that I was used to. "I hope that's not a problem."

"No problem at all," he took the contract out of my hands. "You are one of us, now, Aurelius." Was he mocking my name choice, subtly prodding that it was too fancy for someone of my station? Maybe he was right. But it was better than Biggus Dickus.

"When are we going?" I didn't have a lot of goodwill stored with the innkeeper, and my reserves of brass was quickly running out. That was one of the reasons I befriended Peytr, I admit. Years on the road will bring any honest man to a mercenary lifestyle.

When he heard my situation, Scrivener told me where he could find the rest of the Company men. There were only ten here, a platoon's worth. A recruitment party. The main camp, he said, was further west.

When I exited the tent, I waved the Sergeant, who didn't wave back, and waved at the dejected Peytr, who did. He immediately sprang up to me. "You owe me," the farmboy said, ignoring the way others lined up to join were edging away from me on account of my eyes. "Please. I need to join the Black Company."

"Three sandwiches," I sighed, aghast at the moral rot that set in on the preciously innocent farmboy after three days of chatter with me. That was hardly fair - how was I supposed to convince a Sergeant I just met, especially when he didn't like me? I don't think he hated me, because that was his default attitude, but he didn't favour me either, and that amounts to the same thing.

"I... I can't go back," Peytr did that thing with his eyes again, and I found myself wavering.

>So I marched back to the Sergeant.

>"Go back home," I told him with a gentleness I hoped he could sense.
>>
>>3623509
"Why? You have a life there, you'll die here, so why you can't go back?"
>>
>>3623509
>So I marched back to the Sergeant.

So he doesn't have the supplies to return? Sure thing man come aboard. You will probably die on the road anyway.
>>
>>3623509
>So I marched back to the Sergeant.
>>
>>3623509
>So I marched back to the Sargeant
>>
>>3623509
>"You are too nice for a mercenary. Go back home," I told him with a gentleness I hoped he could sense.
>>
>>3623547
>>3623542
>>3623521
"What's wrong with Peytr?"

The Sergeant half-turned, irritation written on his face. It didn't take Zhuge Liang to know he was not in the mood. But I am an old romantic. When push comes to shove, I like to think that I will be doing the pushing instead of the being shoved. So I asked again. "What's wrong with Peytr as a candidate? He's strong enough, and you can probably teach him how to swing a spear."

The line of men looking to join had by then thinned significantly. Maybe it was my eyes. It was definitely my eyes. Maybe that was why the Sergeant was so irate, and not my interruption of his questioning to a big oaf who looked like he used to be a miner.

"Do you know why I am angry, trooper?"

"Is it because most of the wannabes went away because of my eyes?"

"It is not because most of the wannabes ran away because of your eyes," he says, looking at me straight in the eyes. In that moment, I felt a flicker of respect. "It is because he is an only son in a decent family, and despite fifteen years in the Company, I am not enough of a cold hearted bastard to deprive a mother of his son." It seemed I struck gold for an officer. He really was a swell guy.

"And the father?" I asked helpfully.

"Fuck the father." Like many soldiers, he had deep seated issues with paternal figures.

"...my sister," Peytr said, voice as quiet as a mouse. Rats are the loud ones. Mice just squick.

"Come again?"

"I said, I did it with my sister," the comely farmboy repeated louder, looking defiantly at the both of us. The prospect of having to return home had allowed him to summon up the strength, for all the wrong reasons. "And by 'did it', I mean-"

"Welcome to the Company," the Sergeant said. "Now get the fuck out of my sight."

Years of life had given me a deep wisdom in reading people's emotions. Right now, that experience-honed instinct told me that the Sergeant was angry. So I beat an expeditious retreat, carefully dragging (but not touching) the shocked farmboy into Scrivener's tent. The name he was given was, perhaps unimaginatively, Sister.
>>
>>3623566
The next few days, we lounged around the inn (my tabs now under the Company's, making it hard for the innkeeper to throw me out) watching the villagers' daughters and getting acquainted with each other. Scrivener figured out I was being honest about my linguistic capabilities pretty quick, but the threatened combat trial didn't come. The Sergeant was unhappy about the rate of recruitment, and he was eager to move back to where the rest of their black brothers were.

"Do you think I'm disgusting?" Sister asked me while we were underway to Silver. The Black Company was camped outside that city.

"No," I answered, and slapped his hand that was tugging at my sleeves. "Please stop touching me."

"I think it's love, you know?" Sister started. I hastily moved up to change the order of the marching line, and decided to strike up a conversation with one of my new brothers.

>The one with the ugly, scarred mug. He probably had a lovely heart to form an ironic contrast to his exterior.

>The arrogant bastard named Quick. He had a rapier, and a mustache, and- you probably formed a mental image of him already.

>The shy one, named Hood. She was one of the new recruits, a barbarian from the island of Alexandria Eskhata.
>>
>>3623567
>The shy one, named Hood. She was one of the new recruits, a barbarian from the island of Alexandria Eskhata.
>>
>>3623567
>The one with the ugly, scarred mug. He probably had a lovely heart to form an ironic contrast to his exterior.
>>
>>3623567

>The shy one, named Hood. She was one of the new recruits, a barbarian from the island of Alexandria Eskhata.

Barbarian you say?

Also, if Sister loves his sister he should go for it.
>>
>>3623567

>The shy one, named Hood. She was one of the new recruits, a barbarian from the island of Alexandria Eskhata.
>>
>>3623591
>>3623574
>>3623602

"Hi." There is nothing wrong with a simple greeting. Hood responded with a stiff nod, and adjusted her hood closer. I was not deterred. And unlike the others, I had the advantage of speaking Greek. "Lovely weather for a march, isn't it?"

Hood unshouldered her bow.

"Days like these, it really makes me appreciate the wind in my hair and the sun on my face. Say, do you always wear that hood?"

Hood restrung her bow.

"I know you're feeling a little shy, but maybe a little open air might do you some good. I don't even know what you look like, and we're supposed to be brothers!"

She nocked an arrow.

"Oop, I think it's time to make friends with others. Good talk, let's do it again sometime!"

Sure, she did point the arrow at me, but she didn't fire. And that makes all the difference. I decided to make more friends today.

>The Sergeant looked glum. I made the mistake of thinking too highly of my charisma and went to cheer him up.

>Quick was chatting with Sister. I wondered if there was some sort of radar that sisterfuckers use to tell each other apart.

>At least Ugly Mug didn't have a bow and arrow to threaten me with.
>>
>>3623605

>At least Ugly Mug didn't have a bow and arrow to threaten me with.

I bet he is just as ugly on the inside.
>>
>>3623611
Also, it was the eyes wasn't it? Barbarians might be more superticious than other
>>
>"And the father?" I asked helpfully.
>"Fuck the father." Like many soldiers, he had deep seated issues with paternal figures.
>"...my sister," Peytr said, voice as quiet as a mouse. Rats are the loud ones. Mice just squick.
>"Come again?"
>"I said, I did it with my sister," the comely farmboy repeated louder, looking defiantly at the both of us. The prospect of having to return home had allowed him to summon up the strength, for all the wrong reasons. "And by 'did it', I mean-"
>"Welcome to the Company," the Sergeant said. "Now get the fuck out of my sight."

Quality writing, QM.

>>3623605
>The Sergeant looked glum. I made the mistake of thinking too highly of my charisma and went to cheer him up.

I like him, ok.
>>
>>3623605

>The Sergeant looked glum. I made the mistake of thinking too highly of my charisma and went to cheer him up.
>>
>>3623605
>>The Sergeant looked glum. I made the mistake of thinking too highly of my charisma and went to cheer him up.
>>
>>3623605
>>The Sergeant looked glum. I made the mistake of thinking too highly of my charisma and went to cheer him up.
>>
>>3623628
>>3623625
>>3623621
>>3623616

The Sergeant turned his head to look who it was. "Oh."

"You want to talk about it?" I asked.

Sergeant sighed. "I don't know what it is with you, golden eyes."

"Aurelius," I helpfully reminded him of my name.

"Goldfuck," Sergeant said as if he didn't hear me. "First a recruit with Alexandrian eyes, and now with a literal sisterfucker."

"I think Quick is also a sister fucker," I told him. I had a nose for these things.

"I don't care if he fucks his sisters or his nephews," Sergeant growled. "Look. This is my first command, my first platoon. I cannot afford to fuck this up. I cannot afford to let YOU fuck this up for me."

That hurt. I was no harm to anybody, if we looked at the last eleven years. And as for longer than that, I say let bygones be bygones. Life is too short to hold decade-long grudges. "I won't fuck this up for you," I assured him.

"Don't say, do. If it wasn't for your capability as an interpreter, I would have never have admitted you in."

"What?" I was hurt. Never let it be said that I partook in base nepotism of the linguistic kind! "Do you not need any lancers? Polearms are the standard weapons for the average Black Company trooper, aren't they? And shortswords are, well, shortswords!" Ubiquitous things, those shortswords. Can never have enough of them.

"You're going to be Scrivener's, soon as we join back with HQ," he told me. "Then you'll be off my hands."

That was not good. I didn't join up the Company to ink quills and fetch herbal teas for the old fogeys. I told him how I felt about this development. He told me in no uncertain terms where I could shove my concerns.

"Just keep quiet and don't make trouble, Alexandrian," Sergeant said threateningly. He still wouldn't look into my eyes.

"I won't." And that was a promise. I had all the intention in the world to keep it.

The platoon commanded by Sergeant consisted of myself, Ugly Mug (not his name), Quick, Scrivener, Sister, and Hood. There were three others, hanger-ons and extras. I didn't bother learning their names.

"Name's James, mate," one of the extras offered me a hand after I had that talk with Sergeant. "Heard you talking with Sergeant. You in trouble already?"

"You don't mind my eyes?"

"What?" the extra named James said. "Mate, I'm colour blind."

"Oh." I briefly considered graduating him from extra to tentative associate.

"Look, the reason I'm talking with you is, I think that Sergeant fellow is a right hardass," he whispered conspiratorially. It struck me how much distance we'd gained from the rest of the platoon, me and the three extras. I still wasn't sure about graduating the extra named James. "I figure, you might be interested in a little payback?"
>>
>>3623640

"What kind of payback?" I asked. I was raised from a strict household, and never got to participate in childhood pranks. It was a sore point in my otherwise exemplary life.

"The three of us, we ain't actually gonna join the Company," one of the extras said, grinning evilly. "All that armour and weapon in the wagon, I figger it's gonna do us more good than some dead black brothers. You get me?"

I did. "And you want me to help?"

"'course!" Extra named James said. "Why, yer practically family, what with Sergeant hatin' yer guts!"

I decided not to graduate James from extrahood.

>If there is anything I like less than a cup of hot chocolate gone cold, it's traitors. So I told them precisely what I thought about this plan of theirs.

>Mutiny right off the bat? This was way above my paygrade. I boldly ran away.
>>
>>3623642
>If there is anything I like less than a cup of hot chocolate gone cold, it's traitors. So I told them precisely what I thought about this plan of theirs.
>>
>>3623642
>If there is anything I like less than a cup of hot chocolate gone cold, it's traitors. So I told them precisely what I thought about this plan of theirs.

Damn, I was starting to like James the extra. Ratting our comrades is a no-no, but these aren’t comrades.
>>
>>3623642
>If there is anything I like less than a cup of hot chocolate gone cold, it's traitors. So I told them precisely what I thought about this plan of theirs.

I hope we did it with our fist
>>
>>3623642

>If there is anything I like less than a cup of hot chocolate gone cold, it's traitors. So I told them precisely what I thought about this plan of theirs

Nut kick? Nut kick.
>>
>>3623659
>Nut kick
+1
>>
>>3623648
>>3623649
>>3623655
>>3623659
>>3623661

"This sounds like a very good idea," I told them. This was actually a fakeout. I didn't actually think this was a terribly good idea. In my line of business, we call this a lie.

"Right? I mean- oh sweet merciful Fortuna!" the extra who was not James moaned as I kicked his unmentionables, then ceased doing even that once my shortsword found purchase in his ear canal. Unfortunately, the blade got stuck by the pesky bone bits that covers one's thinking box. I let go of the shortsword, and the extra who was not James fell on the ground.

"What the fuck?" The other extra who was not James shouted. James clumsily swung his own pike.

Aurelius: Healthy
>Combat = +100DC [Healthy +5DC, Skilled II +10DC, Unnatural Strength +5DC, Unnatural Endurance +5DC, Unnatural Will +5DC, Elite II +20DC, Legionarius II +20DC, Chainmail +15DC, Roundhelm +10DC, Dagger +5DC]
>Armour Value = 30AV [Chainmail +15AV, Roundhelm +15AV]
VS
Extra named James: Healthy
Extra (not James): Healthy
>Combat = +60DC [Healthy +5DC, Chainmail +15DC, Pike +10DC, Extra (not James) +30DC]
>Armour Value = 15AV [Chainmail +15AV]

>Personal Combat DC90
>3d100
>>
Rolled 81 (1d100)

>>3623674

Falcon (shortsword to gut) punch!
>>
Rolled 59 (1d100)

>>3623674
do you want one person to roll 3d100 or three guys to roll 1d100?
>>
>Legionarus

Ooh, plot.
>>
Rolled 26 (1d100)

>>3623674
>>
>>3623674
Ah very nice, big fan of the Black Company combat system.
>>
>>3623674
Roll under or over?
>>
What the FUCK is this?
>>
>>3623467
>Anyone would remember golden-eyed criminals.
OMG OMG OMG
>>
>>3623674
>Unnatural Strength +5DC, Unnatural Endurance +5DC, Unnatural Will +5DC, Elite II +20DC, Legionarius II +20DC
OwO what's this? :3
>>
>>3623692
Who's that ?
>>
>>3623677
>>3623678
>>3623681
>3 Success (roll under)

I immediately dodged, of course. Pikes are naturally unwieldy weapons, especially in the hands of an untrained combatant. Barrelling against the stomach of the one-not-called-James, I managed to duck beneath the swooping blade edge. The extra was not so lucky.

"I didn't intend to!" the extra named James cried out, as he failed to halt the momentum of his pike. Bereft of his weapon, lodged as it was in the stomach of the extra, he decided to take up his shortsword. That was what he should have done the moment close quarter combat began. I would have told him, but he had stopped being one of the black.

After that, it was a simple matter of being too close for him to use his sword. Shorter blades are almost always better in intimate situations, as one of my adopted fathers said (I forget which), since the balance was much easier to sift at a moment's notice. I elbowed his right armpit, which made him drop the sword. Then I slit his throat.

When I stood up to look at the rest of the platoon, I realised why they weren't coming to help. Extra named James was not so simple, after all. He'd had help.

Five bandits were already dead, but six more remained. And of the brothers, there were losses - bloody Quick was on the floor, unconscious, maybe a corpse. I couldn't tell. Sister seemed to have caught the fancy of one of the marauders, so I concluded he was safe for the time being, if not in mind then in body. Hood was unconscious as well. I couldn't see any wounds, but an archer is not useful for this kind of short-range melee, anyway. Scrivener was hiding under the tent-wagon. Of the fighting men of the platoon, only Sergeant and Ugly Mug were standing.

>And I merrily ran away.

>Picking up extra-named-James' shortsword, I ran to help. This romantic side of me will get me killed one of these days.
>>
>>3623716
>picking up the shortsword
We may be fools, but we're not cowards.
>>
>>3623716
>>Picking up extra-named-James' shortsword, I ran to help. This romantic side of me will get me killed one of these days.
>>
>>3623716
>>Picking up extra-named-James' shortsword, I ran to help. This romantic side of me will get me killed one of these days.
>>
>>3623716
>>Picking up extra-named-James' shortsword, I ran to help. This romantic side of me will get me killed one of these days.
>>
>>3623716
>>Picking up extra-named-James' shortsword, I ran to help. This romantic side of me will get me killed one of these days.
>>
>>3623716
>Picking up extra-named-James' shortsword, I ran to help. This romantic side of me will get me killed one of these days.

Tally-ho! Shall we see a return of the brutal casualty roster? Sister pls no
>>
>>3623720
>>3623721
>>3623722
>>3623723
>>3623724
>>3623727

My father died from falling from a horse, I think. It is hard to remember. It was a particularly unheroic death, for an unheroic father who was never there to see his son grow up like the man he never was. Then again, he did marry my mother, who was (it was widely agreed) the most proper lady in all of the City. The point is, I would still be dying a better death than my father if I was cut to pieces while defending a freshly-sworn in mercenary outfit.

I am not a soldier. I do not have issues with paternal figures. But Sergeant was the first old gruff man who seemed to have a lick of morals in the eleven years of my traveling. The ones who seemed decent usually ended up revealing themselves as murderers, bandits, rapists, or sister fuckers.

I rushed to help Sergeant and Ugly, like the romantic that I was.

Aurelius: Healthy
>Combat = +110DC [Healthy +5DC, Skilled II +10DC, Unnatural Strength +5DC, Unnatural Endurance +5DC, Unnatural Will +5DC, Elite II +20DC, Legionarius II +20DC, Chainmail +15DC, Roundhelm +10DC, James' shotsword +15DC]
>Armour Value = 30AV [Chainmail +15AV, Roundhelm +15AV]
VS
Extra 1(bandit): Healthy
Extra 2 (bandit): Healthy
Extra 3 (bandit): Healthy
>Combat = +70DC [Healthy +5DC, Leather body armour (black) +10DC, Club +5DC, Extra 1 and 2 +50DC]
>Armour Value = 15AV [Leather body armour (black) +10AV]

>Personal Combat DC90
>3d100
>>
Rolled 26 (1d100)

>>3623740
>>
Rolled 26 (1d100)

>>3623740
>>
Rolled 23 (1d100)

>>3623740
>>
Rolled 82 (1d100)

>>3623740
>>
>>3623743
>>3623745
>>3623747

One of the first things they train you in legionary camps was this: "Stab them with the pointy end." Then we repeated that training until our legs were sore and our arms were near to falling off. We did it the next day, then the morrow after that, until it became second nature to us.

Not that I was marked with the legionary's tattoo. I hear they're exceedingly difficult to get rid of, formed as it is from the Emperor's tears or some nonsense gobbledeegook like that.

What I was, was being very, very good at stabbing things. I lunged toward the first bandit, who was, like myself, a romantic. You do not need to be a fervent student of the histories to know about the Yellow Turbans who were active centuries ago all across Sinae. The man's handkerchief was decidedly less yellow and more brown, but the gesture was there. I gutted him first with gentle hands.

Then I rolled on the ground. The four remaining bandits were not clued in to my existence yet, though two were turning to intercept a new threat that they heard as Brown Turban fell on the earth. I sunk James' shortsword one more time, its blade so coated in human fat and meat residue by now. This is the problem with the younger generation. They don't take pride in their equipment, equipment that will outlast their lives. This one certainly did James. I left the shortsword in the second extra-bandit's belly and went for the dagger that slit James' throat.

It would be very embarassing if I didn't draw it quickly enough.

>1d100
>>
Rolled 22 (1d100)

>>3623753
>>
Rolled 87 (1d100)

>>3623753
>>
Rolled 43 (1d100)

>>3623753
>>
>>3623756
[This is a roll under quest]

I am often embarassed. A man I knew once snuck into my wife's house during a women-only party. The aftermath was explosive, and I had to divorce her to maintain appearances. Appearances! One of the things I don't need to bother with as a vagrant. I still miss her soft pillowy arms. The things I used to do for politics.

I wasn't embarassed at the speed of my draw. I can hear it now - "The fastest dagger in the East!" The blade was firmly lodged in to the eye socket of the third bandit. I looked around and then realised no one was here to applaud.

Ah, well. People prefer prolonged fights. Showmanship, they call it, or sportsmanship. I suppose I'm not made for the Olympiads.

Sergeant and Ugly had finished the rest. The noise I made from taking care of the three (I have no excuses but this: it had been eleven years.) weakened them by way of attention diversion. They looked in pain.

"Are you in pain?" I asked. They nodded. "I think Scrivener has a medikit."

"What the fuck? Sergeant said. Given the circumstances, I had to agree. I'd realised my own shortsword was still stuck in one of the extra's spine, and it would probably be chipped. What the fuck indeed.
>>
>>3623770
"What the fuck?"

We all three turned to look at the last bandit, who was in the process of preparing to dry hump Sister.

"He's about to hump Sister!" I shouted.

His hip moved, coming into contact with Sister. The comely sister fucker shivered in revulsion. Or pleasure. I have no insight into the mind of sister fuckers.

"You can come out of this alive, bandit," Sergeant said. He sounded tired more than he was in pain. "We dealt with the rest of your kind. Let him go, and we'll part ways, just like that."

"Gentlemen of the Road?" the Bandit asked. He humped again, making Sister faint.

"Gentlemen of the Road," Sergeant agreed. That was a most ancient pact of bandits, announced when two different rival parties found themselves attacking the same quarry. Ménage à trois were messy things indeed, especially if it involved loot and an unsuspecting party who didn't consent to getting plundered.

They would withdraw, but so would the other side. The prey would not be preyed upon. Everyone would live to see the day again.

"Five minutes," the bandit pleaded. "Come on, man, it's been a week in the woods."

That was about long enough for Hood to recover and put an arrow through the bandit's head.

>I went to see if Sister was alright. He was a brother now, even if he was Sister.

>"Nice shot!" I cheered. Then Hood shot at me.

>I immediately began looting the dead, including those of former brothers.
>>
>>3623777
>>"Nice shot!" I cheered. Then Hood shot at me.
>>
>>3623777
>"Nice shot!" I cheered. Then Hood shot at me.
>>
>>3623777
>>"Nice shot!" I cheered. Then Hood shot at me.
arrow dodging is a useful skill
>>
>>3623778
>>3623779
>>3623783

It was a halfhearted shot, and only pierced my calves. I knew that if she wanted to kill me, she would have gone for the unprotected eye. That is how I knew she was warming up to me. I told Scrivener as much while he patched me up. I didn't believe me.

"Is that how you pick up girls, Aurelius?" the doctor-slash-scribe asked. "Get shot in the leg?"

"Could have been worse. Could have gotten me in the eye."

"It got one of your major arteries," Scrivener said quietly. "I'm sorry, Aurelius. I'll have a talk with Sergeant, but I don't think he wants to have to execute another. Not so soon after losing so many."

"It's alright," I reassured him. "Does that mean I can stay on the wagon while everyone else walks?"

He looked sad. I wondered if Quick was a friend of his. "Yes, Aurelius," he said gently. "You can stay on the carriage."
>>
>>3623786
he didn't believe me*
>>
>>3623786

It would have been a pleasant ride, if it weren't for all the other corpses. Scrivener insisted in it, saying that they were our brothers, they deserved having graves, et cetera ad aeternam. I slept through the journey, and missed most of the scenery.

I woke up with Ugly dumping earth on my face.

"Hey!" I shouted. Ugly dropped his shovel, which was unfortunate, because I was below him. By law of gravity as expounded upon by Marquis Sun, things drop when they are no longer held up. "I'm still alive," I wheezed once I could start breathing again, which was a while. By then, Ugly wasn't above me.

It wasn't long until Scrivener's head popped into sight. "What the fuck? Scrivener said.

"Language!" I told him. Two "What the Fucks" were quite enough for a single day, thank you very much.

"You were dead!" he stuttered. "Your major arteries were ruptured, and we had no replacement blood-"

"Do I look dead?" I inquired.

"No."

"Do I sound dead?"

"No."

I wiggled my toes experimentally, Then my fingers. Last to wiggle was my nose. They all wiggled. "Then," I declared, "I must not be dead."

They hauled me out of the grave with a ten feet pole, and burned the thing afterwards. I thought it was rather wasteful, doing away with such a nice and sturdy staff like that. I was then brought to the Captain, who had apparently been briefed on what occurred during the banditry in the mountains. He sighed, and he looked tired. In that moment, he reminded me of Sergeant.

"Say," I asked, remembering Sergeant and his wounded shoulder. "Where's Sergeant?"

"Infection's gotten to him," Scrivener said solemnly. "Speaking of which, I should attend him."

>I followed. Not like I could do him worse than an infection.

>"Can a man get some food around here? My stomach's so empty, it feels like my grave."

>The excitement today had drained me. I decided to take it easy for the night.
>>
>>3623795
>>I followed. Not like I could do him worse than an infection.
>>
>>3623795
>I followed. Not like I could do him worse than an infection.
Ok so what the ever living shite are we? Because it's clear we're not human, if not completely human.
>>
>>3623795

>I followed. Not like I could do him worse than an infection.
If the archer wasn't executed she better have an awesome apology letter for us.
>>
>>3623795
>"Can a man get some food around here? My stomach's so empty, it feels like my grave."
>>
>>3623795
>I followed. Not like I could do him worse than an infection.
>>
>>3623809
>>3623812
>>3623825
>>3623819
"When I die, I want you to divide my things among what remains of my destroyed platoon," Sergeant said. He was on his bed, feverish, tears falling from the pain as Scrivener tightened the bandage again. "And- oh god, am I dead? I see dead people."

Scrivener and I looked around. There wasn't anyone else in the sick room, because there was no war going on.

"Right beside you, Scrivener," Sergeant said urgently. "A ghost, that's what it is! Here to haunt me for my lack of commanding skills. If I were a better commander, I could have resolved the intra-party disputes..."

He went on like that for a while. I noticed that the arrow that got me in the calves was here, my dried blood still glowing faintly gold on the arrowtip. It was a wonder that Scrivener didn't notice while he was bandaging me, but then again he was half blind.

I carefully undid the bandage while Scrivener went to get hot water, and then pierced the infected shoulder with the bloody arrow. I'd bandaged everything up like normal when Scrivener ran back in, alerted by the screams.

"What happened?" he asked. I shrugged innocently, because I had done no wrong.

Sergeant was greatly taken with brain fever due to his infection. "That god-damned Gold-Eyes!" he screamed. "He stabbed me! He fucking stabbed me!"

"Don't be ridiculous," Scrivener said. "He's unarmed."

"My blood burns!" Sergeant groused. That would be my ichor burning through the system, taking out the infection. "My arm! My arm... can move?" he said, opening and clutching his right hand, which had been rendered immobile from the wound.

"Nobody say it," I warned.

"What the fuck." Scrivener and Sergeant said tiredly.

Sergeant checked out of the sick tents an hour later, and was back in our uncomfortably large platoon one. Most of the beds were empty on account of their deaths en route to Company HQ. There was a bit of a scene with Hood shouting that I was a censores agent sent to infiltrate the Company. An Eskhatan like her would know of the secret agents of the Emperor well, seeing as half their island burned from the first (and last) time they rebelled. Come to think of it, those secret agents were supposed to have golden eyes as well. It took a while for Sergeant to calm her down, and even whiler to get her to apologise to me.
>>
>>3623867

"Make sure you get plenty of sleep," Sergeant said before tucking in. "We're finally going on the march tomorrow. Most of you won't survive," he said, before realising he was talking to a mostly empty platoon tent, corrected to "almost all of you won't survive. We have to work together and keep a good head on our shoulders if we are to get over the obstacles presented to us."

And the obstacles were great indeed. Even the Emperor's legionary would have thought twice before going where we were headed.

>The scream-filled deserts of the Goebi, where the first dynasties of Sinae rose and fell.

>The flat plain-steppes of the horselords of Magal.

>The islands-chain of Wae, supposedly guarded by powerful wind spirits.

>The jungles of Nanman, home to poisoners and frog hunters.
>>
>>3623870

>The jungles of Nanman, home to poisoners and frog hunters.
Does our blood deal as well with poisons as it does with infections?

And who is left on the platoon? Us, Ugly, Hood, Sister? Or are there any other Extras not named James?
>>
>>3623870
>>The scream-filled deserts of the Goebi, where the first dynasties of Sinae rose and fell.
>>
>>3623870

>The flat plain-steppes of the horselords of Magal
>>
>>3623870
>>The flat plain-steppes of the horselords of Magal.
>>
>>3623870
>The flat plain-steppes of the horselords of Magal.
Fortuna?
>>
>>3623475
Ahaha are you from the other black company quest? Man i want it to come back.

>>3623404
Oh and op is this having anything to do with the black company quest that was on here befor? Or just its own thing in the same setting?
>>
>>3623870
>The islands-chain of Wae, supposedly guarded by powerful wind spirits.
>>
>>3623980
I think the setting is actually modified real earth, judging by the names.
>>
>>3623879
>Platoon
Replacements will be introduced
>Blood
No, poison will still fuck you up, just not as badly as others

>>3623980
No relation to the excellent Black Company Quest run before, I'm flattered anyone even considered for a second that this had anything to do with that. Quality-wise, this is not going to reach your expectation if you are thinking of that quest from before. I was bored while internet was down and started writing something sorta based on my quest's setting, and then this abomination came out.

Then people actually voted for things, and here we are.

The setting is kinda-sorta Commentarii setting set ages later. Some things are intentionally kept ambiguous.
>>
"Tell me, Brother Aurelius. Are you a man of god?"

"After a fashion," I replied. Discussing the intricacies of religion was my second favourite thing to do, after drinking warmed posca tiredly in between tender lovemaking with young married women. There is a lie in the previous sentence.

I've been told that I am a habitual liar. That is why I can say with absolute certainty that religion is a useful thing. The Imperial Cult was one I found a lot of use for, though like all religions, the Cult degenerated after the founding prophet, the Emperor, disappeared.

Dead, some said. Found bleeding his precious golden ichor from the marbled steps of Xuchang. The entire Cao Clan was put to the sword after that, because Xuchang happened to be their illustrious family's domain. I felt rather bad for the Caos. The Simas were probably behind that, as usual. They never found the Emperor's body.

"I make sure to thank the gods every day," the ugliest brother in black I had in the world grinned, splitting his gaping wound of a mouth to a friendly smile. For all the horrors his visage could conjure, he was actually a decent guy. I did say there would be an ironic contrast between the inside and out.

"For the little joys, you see. That I am still alive, and able to give thanks for the fresh air, the clean food, and water that does not burn my intestines when drunk." Theophilos (who I had taken to calling Ugly until I found out what his name was three months later) rumbled. He had been badly mistreated as a child, which apparently included torture. I didn't ask for details. He volunteered them anyway, especially when he was feeling thankful. "...that I have someone to speak to, who does not run away from the first look of my face."

"We're brothers in that regard, at least." My golden eyes were something that made me a social pariah in most Sinaean circles. I don't like to talk about it. "How do you feel about the Imperial Cult?" I asked. I was personally a fan, for personal reasons.
>>
>>3624010

"Oh, blessed one!" Theophilos intoned. "Pacifier of the Four Cardinal Directions! Inheritor of the Mantle of Responsibility! Chief among Gods!" He went on for a while, going through the Ten Thousand And One Names. By the fifty fourth, I realised that he was not going to stop until he went through all of them up to "Omega", and turned my eyes back to the pool we were supposed to be watching.

This was a Magal tribe's hotspot, where they came every few months when summer returned to the usually grey steppes. Life briefly flourished here in greens and yellows when rare warmth touched the lands, and with grasses came horses.

Where horses ride, a Magal is not far behind. That's an old Sinaean proverb, though I suspect "Magal" was substituted with "Mongol" back in those days when it was first uttered.

Eventually a tribe of the horse people arrived to replenish their water. Actually, it would be too grandiose to call it a tribe. Maybe a clan? It was bigger than a family, anyway. "That's the quarry," I told Theophilos. "We should return." I had no wish to face twenty wild riders with just Theophilos. His face could launch a thousand ships away from him, but the Magal were fearless.

"Our orders have been fulfilled," Theophilos agreed. We turned around to start the long trek back to camp. Our camoflage was hopefully going to obscure us while we crawl-stalked the flat plains. I was not looking forward to it, but it was better than being out here without posca or hot chocolate.

Something tingled my left earlobe. Telltale sign of magic, that. A tribe that small didn't have any shamans, surely?

>I stayed put. If there was no shaman after all, I would be shish kabob'd with Magal arrows.

>I immediately took off to a run. If I was right, then I would have survived another second. And -then- I would be shish kabob'd with Magal arrows.
>>
>>3623993
Man good thing Forgotten recommend this, I can't wait to achieve great things at great personal/Squad costs
>>
>>3624020

>I stayed put. If there was no shaman after all, I would be shish kabob'd with Magal arrows.
>>
>>3624010
>>3624020
Some heavy hints on who we are in those posts

>I stayed put. If there was no shaman after all, I would be shish kabob'd with Magal arrows.
>>
>>3624020

>I stayed put. If there was no shaman after all, I would be shish kabob'd with Magal arrows.
>>
>>3624066
The dead emperor? Or maybe a descendant?
>>
>>3624063
>>3624066
>>3624076

I put my faith in probability and reason. Shamans weren't a dime a dozen, like all ensorceled individuals. They were more like one in ten thousand, or hundred thousand. I do not have the data to say either way, but what is important is that they are very rare. The Company itself only had five wizards in its employ, and we were considered one of the elite, barring the legions themselves.

And the legions were mostly gone from the world. After the Emperor disappeared, some Parthian madman named Ariamnes decided to look for him in the West, taking with him most of the Emperor-founded legions. The ones that were founded after... well, they make decent garrison troops, I'll give them that.

A moment passed, then another. No fireballs appeared, nor did buzzing ball of giant wasps. I sighed in relief. The crawling began in earnest. I ate dust and grass like a horse, but at least I wasn't dead.

When I returned, I found reason to distrust reason.

"You were being scried," Dumpling said, dispelling something invisible with intricate fingerwork. "They know we were waiting for them, now."

"It's not like I could cast wizardry on them back," I protested. "They were a tiny tribe. How would they have a shaman?" It was cheating. Unfair. No, not fair at all.

"What's done is done," Dumpling said. Ever the pragmatist, our Dumpling. The only time I saw her facade crumple with emotion was when her third sister - triplets, they were - died in the Burning of Luoyang. That city seems to burn with the regularity of a water clock. I know that metaphor did not make sense, but I did warn you that I was not born a poet.

The Captain glowered on her mobile throne, a rickety skull-and-bones affair that made her look more cartoonishly evil than foreboding. Not that anyone would have the guts to tell her, because she was foreboding in person. "This is worrying," she grated. Everything was worrying to her. Or disturbing. Yes, that was a favourite of hers. "Aurelius is right," she said, making me blush before averting my gaze, "it's improbable that such a small clan has a shaman among them."
>>
>>3624135

"Scouts for a bigger horde?" Lieutenant suggested. Now there was a terrifying man if I ever saw one. Six feet tall and then some, with glowing, rune-embossed swords (in the plural), he went around encased in matte black armour. Because shining things make night operations difficult, of course. "Our client was worried about such a thing happening."

Gods. I near watered the fountain then and there. Magals were bad enough in their usual kin-groups. They were closely in touch with their western cousins, which gave them access to metal weapons and armour that could compare favourably against Sinaean steel. I tried not to imagine those iron-shod horsehooves running wild over my crumbling body. Then I did.

I suddenly wished we were anywhere but here. The screaming deserts of the Goebi, maybe, or the poison-infested jungles of Nanman. Even the kase kami protected islands of Wae seemed a better prospect of invasion. Against the horse people, there is no offense, only defense.

>"We should cut our losses and run to the wind," I wisely suggested.

>"I have a bad feeling about this," I muttered. Have I mentioned that I am usually right?

>"I don't suppose our patron is sending a legion our way." I could hope.
>>
>>3624118
We are actually kid's descedant. The archer lady was pregnant all this time and we are the last remant of Kid lineage
>>
>>3624136
>"I have a bad feeling about this," I muttered. Have I mentioned that I am usually right?
>>
>>3624136

>"I don't suppose our patron is sending a legion our way." I could hope.
>>
>>3624136
>>"I don't suppose our patron is sending a legion our way." I could hope.
>>
>>3624162
I though Ugly was supposed to be the one in the group with positive thinking.
>>
>>3624136
>"I don't suppose our patron is sending a legion our way." I could hope.
>>
>>3624162
>>3624169
>"I don't suppose our patron is sending a legion our way." I could hope.

"I didn't know Theophilos got so much handsomer," Captain remarked drily, which would have made my heart flutter under ordinary circumstances. That it didn't spoke to the level of madness we were facing. A fully mobilised Magal horde, united under one banner!

"We do have a legion coming our way," Lieutenant growled. He wasn't particularly angry. That was just how he talked. "The 13th, looks like. Not one of the True Imperials, but it's something."

I sighed. It was something indeed. But it would have been a daunting task even with an Emperor-founded legion.

"They were founded two weeks ago," Lieutenant said after a treacherous pause.

"I don't need to hear this," I groaned. I really didn't. I was not an officer, just one of the junior Scriveners of the Company. I was going to be a full one soon, what with the death of Scrivener (half-blind one), but I wasn't yet. Why was I sent for? I asked them that.

"Because we need someone to keep the records," Lieutenant said.

"Because I prefer handsome young men to decrepit old ones," Captain said in that chilling sweet voice of hers. Lieutenant glowered at me. I made a note not to cross ways with him for a week.

"I think it is time our junior Scrivener was excused," Lieutenant said, though more like an order than a suggestion. "Battle plans are for our ears only."

That suited me just fine. I wasn't interested in the overall picture. The broad strokes terrified me to bits already. When orders eventually trickled down the ranks, I was eating dinner with the rest of my platoon.

>I was sitting beside Sister. My politeness, it is an affliction. I could not keep the sister fucker away, no matter how politely I requested him to keep his distance.

>I was eating out of one plate with Honey. She was a sweet little thing we picked up from Vale, a mute girl who followed me like a father. It warmed my heart to know I was being fatherlike to someone in the world, UNLIKE A CERTAIN FATHER WHO DIED FROM A HORSE FALL.

>Sandwiching me were Dumpling and Morion, the formerly triplet wizards. It's best to make friends with a wizard than an enemy. Ask anyone.
>>
>>3624170
Maybe, but I don't want to curse us by saying that we have a bad feeling.


>Sandwiching me were Dumpling and Morion, the formerly triplet wizards. It's best to make friends with a wizard than an enemy. Ask anyone.

Get on the wizard's good side
>>
>>3624218
>Maybe, but I don't want to curse us by saying that we have a bad feeling.
QM TRAP: DODGED
>>
>>3624216
>Sandwiching me were Dumpling and Morion, the formerly triplet wizards. It's best to make friends with a wizard than an enemy. Ask anyone.
I ALSO PUT ON MY ROBE AND WIZARD HAT!
>>
>>3624216
>I was eating out of one plate with Honey. She was a sweet little thing we picked up from Vale, a mute girl who followed me like a father. It warmed my heart to know I was being fatherlike to someone in the world, UNLIKE A CERTAIN FATHER WHO DIED FROM A HORSE FALL.
>>
>>3624216
>>I was eating out of one plate with Honey. She was a sweet little thing we picked up from Vale, a mute girl who followed me like a father. It warmed my heart to know I was being fatherlike to someone in the world, UNLIKE A CERTAIN FATHER WHO DIED FROM A HORSE FALL.
>>Sandwiching me were Dumpling and Morion, the formerly triplet wizards. It's best to make friends with a wizard than an enemy. Ask anyone.

can Honey be with us along with the wizards? it will probably prevent them from telling us to screw ourselves

if no just stick by the wizards, if they like us enough they won't blow us appart
>>
>>3624216
>I was eating out of one plate with Honey. She was a sweet little thing we picked up from Vale, a mute girl who followed me like a father. It warmed my heart to know I was being fatherlike to someone in the world, UNLIKE A CERTAIN FATHER WHO DIED FROM A HORSE FALL.
>>
>>3624218
>>3624223


With our luck the wizards willw ant to experiment with our blood or something.
>>
>Twins and Honey

"Here comes the plane!" Honey shouted. I have no idea what she does that. A plane does not just come. A plane is a flat thing, and once moved, stops being a plane. Maybe a squiggly line. I indulged her anyway. It was bad enough being an orphan, she didn't need her foster caretaker to dash her imagination too.

"Here comes the plane," I agreed. The spoonful of Company rations, unpalatable at the best of times, was to Honey the nectar of the gods. Gods, I really am bad at metaphor.

"Mmm!" she mumbled. Poor thing. I'd found her halfway dead from starvation.

"Don't talk with your mouth full," I admonished. Beside her were Dumpling and Morion, the wizard ex-triplets. They liked Honey too. I think everyone in our platoon did.

Our platoon was a bit of an oddity, mostly riffraff we picked up from our three month journey to the north, including yours truly. There was a lot of infighting going on in the Imperial prefectures now that the Emperor was out of the picture. That wouldn't have spelled doom for the Empire, but Ariamnes just had to take most of the Emperor-founded legions and go west on a wild goose chase. As one of the Immortals, he could have taken the Imperial seat just as well as anyone.

The resulting power vacuum didn't cause the Empire to collapse overnight, the governors and prefects still fearful of Ariamnes' return. But as months turned to years, they grew more lax, more and more openly taking power for themselves. But never sending their precious legions, oh no. Legion fighting legion would create a public relations so catastrophic that everyone who holds power would be pulled under the resulting political fallout.

Enter the free companies. We do the dirty job, because somebody has to.

Actually I'm not sure about that last part, but somebody does do the dirty job. And that amounts to the same thing. And besides, we pick up the survivors who can fight, and sometimes the survivors who can't fight, like Honey. We aren't all bad.

There was Dumpling and Morion, as mentioned before, and also Theophilos ("Ugly"), Hood who still swore up and down she got my major arteries (and I equally swore she didn't), Sister. There was also Trevain, who like some posh aristocrat elected to use his own name, though none of us knew who he was. He reminded me of Quick, but he used a shortsword, so he was slightly better. Raindrops was the obligatory black market contact any self-respecting platoon had. I kept Honey away from that one. Not because Raindrops was into children, mind, but I didn't want her to get infected with the seediness of that man.
>>
>>3624267

And there was Sergeant. He was the kind of man anyone would like, if it weren't for his crippling self-doubt stemming from certain issues with paternal figures in his past. He would never admit it, of course. No soldier ever does. It's an epidemic, really.

"No it isn't," Sergeant protested. "Have you considered that you might actually be projecting your own insecurities?"

I asked where Sergeant found those words, in that precise order. He refused to tell me.

"Anyway, we have our orders," Sergeant said. "I need two volunteers to make contact with the Magal."

>"Well, looks like it's time for my daily Scrivener meeting. Good luck, folks!" [Slip out and away]

>"It would be a shame if Honey were to be orphaned a second time." What can I say, I have no compunction when it comes to preserving my own life. [Guilt trip]
>>
>>3623993
Ok i was mostly asking becouse of the title and how it started out,
I mean its looking fine so far keep it up.
>>
>>3624270
>"Well, looks like it's time for my daily Scrivener meeting. Good luck, folks!" [Slip out and away]
>>
>>3624270
>time for my daily Scrivener meeting
Why find excuses when they are provided to you?
>>
>>3624270
>"Well, looks like it's time for my daily Scrivener meeting. Good lu- ah what the hell, why bother, you are sending me right? fuck
>>
>>3624270
>"It would be a shame if Honey were to be orphaned a second time." What can I say, I have no compunction when it comes to preserving my own life. [Guilt trip]

I'm sure Hood would happily raise our adopted child.
>>
>>3624287
This was supposed to be a oneshot. Now I'm not so sure.
>>
>>3624300
Put a coin in the curse jar trooper. no cursing with Honey in the company. We need to show a better example then that stupid man that died falling from a horse.
>>
>>3624267

>"Well, looks like it's time for my daily Scrivener meeting. Good luck, folks!" [Slip out and away]

Tell Marion and Dumpling to look after Honey for us when he innevitably volunteers us because we speak some languages
>>
>>3624310
Dew eeet!!
>>
>>3624270
>"Well, looks like it's time for my daily Scrivener meeting. Good luck, folks!" [Slip out and away]
>>3624310
Oh no
>>
>>3624315
Not just that from all the scribes we are the most likely to survive if the Magals decide to kill the negotiator
>>
>>3624324
>>3624315
>>3624304
>>3624288
>"Well, looks like it's time for my daily Scrivener meeting. Good luck, folks!" [Slip out and away]

"There is no such thing," Sergeant scowled.

"How do you know?" I countered. "Who's the Scrivener here, me, or you?"

"You've never gone to any of their meetings."

"More reason to go now, then. Imagine all the piled up scrolls to sort. Oh, woe is me."

"Even if it does exist, you were specifically requested," Sergeant lifted a piece of paper scribbled in the infernal handwriting of Lieutenant. My heart sank. I think Lieutenant had something against golden eyes. I said as much.

"No, I'm pretty sure it's everyone who has problems with your kind," Hood said viciously. She still hadn't gotten over the rape and ravaging of half her island.

"Please don't fight again," Sergeant said pleadingly. "And no, it's not because you have gold eyes. It's because you speak Parthian." Damned horse people speak. I knew I should have not bothered to pay attention in the schola.

"Poor Honey," Dumpling said soothingly.

"We'll take care of the sweetling," Morion added. The two wizard twins blew their noses out of their 'kerchiefs in unerring sync in mock sadness, waving them at me as if I were a soldier going to the front. Which is a patently ridiculous comparison. Men going to the front had it better - they had other soldiers to fall back on to.

I didn't have anyone.

"Well, you have me, Brother Aurelius," Theophilos said warmly while we were staking out the same damned hole. Of course he had been the only one to volunteer. This time, though, Dumpling was forced to come. Sergeant wanted a wizard in hand to ward off enemy shamans. She wasn't very happy, which was why there was steam blowing out of her nose now.

The three of us looked like badly rotten turnips from a distance. This nameless land really was too flat.

"Contact," Dumpling whispered. "I don't think it's a shaman."

My earlobe tingled.

"Nevermind," Dumpling said. "That's the same scrying spell." It stopped tingling as Dumpling repeated the same finger gestures from before. "Engage?"

Why was it that I became the commander when I had to make the tough choices, and not during the picking of volunteers?

>"...Charge?" We were supposed to speak with them. I hoped they were in a talkative mood.

>"Maybe we should stand up and wave at him," I suggested. The open air really does something to your brain, one of its effects being unreasonable optimism.

>"Can you nuke the enemy shaman with your magical thingummywut?" I didn't have the clearest idea of what magickery constituted.
>>
>>3624376
No wait they could rather use arrows..fuck.
>>
>>3624353
>>"Maybe we should stand up and wave at him," I suggested. The open air really does something to your brain, one of its effects being unreasonable optimism.

be ready to nuke them please Dumpling
>>
>>3624353
Go there and talk with them

I get tha Hood is still a little bit mad kek, we should use Honey to sweeten her
>>
>>3624389
They know we have a mage if anything the first to get a arrow to the face will be Dumpling.
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>>3624397
ok, then this?>>3624394
>>
>>3624353
Guess it's this then:>>3624394
>>
>>3624270
>"It would be a shame if Honey were to be orphaned a second time." What can I say, I have no compunction when it comes to preserving my own life. [Guilt trip]
>>
>>3624353
>"Maybe we should stand up and wave at him," I suggested. The open air really does something to your brain, one of its effects being unreasonable optimism.
>>
>>3624353

>"...Charge?" We were supposed to speak with them. I hoped they were in a talkative mood.
Activate Interrogation Mode.
>>
>>3624892
i though we were talking not punching him.
>>
>>3624353
>"Maybe we should stand up and wave at him," I suggested. The open air really does something to your brain, one of its effects being unreasonable optimism.
>>
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>Go There And Talk To Them

I expected to be shot at from one of their recurve bows. Every step of the way was a surprise. The rider was alone, his compatriots not in the immediate line of sight. In Magal country, that means as far as the end of the earth.

The shaman was alone.

"Ohh, I don't like-"

"Don't even think of finishing that sentence," Dumpling said. I finished the sentence in my head.

When we were in shouting range, I gave him the traditional greeting ("May your horse herds be ever plentiful" and that kind of culturally specific stuff), surprising the hell out of the Magal rider. I don't think he expected any Sinaean, or Imperial for that matter, to know Old Parthian. The rider answered back politely, and there was my second surprise for the day, the first being of course that I wasn't shot while approaching the rider.

The shaman was a girl.

"Well of course she's a girl," Dumpling said. "Can't you tell from the way she paid attention to her horse's hair?"

Equine dressage is hardly my area of expertise. My ancestors were famously terrible at cavalry. I asked her if her tribe might be interested in a "candid exchange of information". She said that we were all going to die.

"I think we're off to a good start."

"Shut up, Theophilos. I am thinking." I didn't want to die.

"Why are we going to die?" I asked, or at least the closest equivalent. Old Parthian is filled with horse puns, which I dare not put to ink. They're kind of kinky ones too, more often than not. That was one of the two reasons I rare put Old Parthian to use.

"There is a storm of horses coming," she replied. "My family is not a part of it, and this is why we flee south. You must do it too, golden eyed one. All will perish, those who resist the Horde."

Apparently Magal were pretty superstitious too, but in the other direction. She didn't mind my eyes. She seemed to like it. Or maybe that's just my self-inflated ego talking. I thought Hood liked me too, after she shot me.

>I invited the shaman rider to "milk our horses together". That was an offering to share a drink, and have a talk. Nothing lewd, I promise.

>I decided to skeddadle. I'd heard enough, and the primary mission objective - "go talk to a Magal" - was finished. Not even a good lay with the Captain could convince me that staying a single moment longer in this godforsaken plain was a good idea.
>>
>>3625589
>I decided to skeddadle. I'd heard enough, and the primary mission objective - "go talk to a Magal" - was finished. Not even a good lay with the Captain could convince me that staying a single moment longer in this godforsaken plain was a good idea.

Done and done.
>>
>>3625589
>I invited the shaman rider to "milk our horses together". That was an offering to share a drink, and have a talk. Nothing lewd, I promise.

Knowing were the horde is comming from would be nice. Would allow us to pick the terrain and what not.

>>3625621
More info is usualy good specialy since we won't be able to retreat.
>>
>>3623740
>My father died from falling from a horse, I think. It is hard to remember.
And here I thought that I our father died while putting on a shoe.
>>
This reads like Commentarii of the Good Black Company trooper Aurelius. Thoroughly entertaining, Τύχη! Even if it is just a oneshot.

I wonder what the contract is. Is the Black company tasked with stopping the horde?

>>3625589
>I invited the shaman rider to "milk our horses together". That was an offering to share a drink, and have a talk. Nothing lewd, I promise.
>>
>I invited the shaman rider to "milk our horses together". That was an offering to share a drink, and have a talk. Nothing lewd, I promise.

At least, that was the intent. Dumpling threw murder-glares at me as the shamaness started erecting her yurt, then and there. She was clearly angry that I wanted to talk to her more. I kicked myself too, mentally. It was dangerous to dally for long, even if there weren't a Magal tribe in sight.

Her practiced hands raised the fabric in a flash. Satisfied with the state of the stiff poles' plantation, she beckoned us in.

The Magal are a people always on the move, and even loners travel with a small herd of horses who carry materials for their simple tents. They make good windshields. It is customary for the Magal to invite guests in if their conversations are going to be longer than a sneeze. The winds are strong in this place, and already my nose was feeling numb.

A lone woman inviting in foreign men, however, can be interpreted in a wildly different manner. I tried not to think about stories of Magal outriders abducting men to use as the shamaness brought the three of us in her tent. Dumpling suddenly latched onto my arm for reasons unknown. I was in heaven. Then Theophilos latched himself on to me as well, mistakenly interpreting the act as a sign of welcoming physical intimacies. That returned me to planet earth.

The Rite of Milk Exchange conducted (I'd brought a canister of our goatmilk, just in case), we sat on the carpeted floor while cradling our cups of warm horse milk. The Shamaness was looking at me expectantly. Now that we were indoors, she had discarded most of her windbreaker robes, and I realised with a heart-flutter that she was the sort of girl I wouldn't mind showing to my mother. My father could go fuck himself.

>"We're supposed to stop the Horde," I began. It wasn't as if she couldn't read my mind, anyway. "I was hoping to find out any possible weakness to the Khaganate, if any."

>"You're very pretty." Women make fools out of the best of us.
>>
>>3625855
>>"We're supposed to stop the Horde," I began. It wasn't as if she couldn't read my mind, anyway. "I was hoping to find out any possible weakness to the Khaganate, if any."
>>
>>3625855
>"We're supposed to stop the Horde," I began. It wasn't as if she couldn't read my mind, anyway. "I was hoping to find out any possible weakness to the Khaganate, if any."
We're not that thirsty!
>>
>>3625858
Ditto
>>
>>3625855
>>"We're supposed to stop the Horde," I began. It wasn't as if she couldn't read my mind, anyway. "I was hoping to find out any possible weakness to the Khaganate, if any."
>>
>>3625886
>>3625874
>>3625876
>>3625858
>"We're supposed to stop the Horde," I began. It wasn't as if she couldn't read my mind, anyway. "I was hoping to find out any possible weakness to the Khaganate, if any."

She nodded. She wasn't very fond of the Khaganate, either. Her pretty face scrunched up to a scowl as she started talking animatedly about the brutality with which the Khagan was rounding up the other tribes to forge the Horde. It explained the tiny size of her own tribe. She seemed to feel strongly about the new Khagan's regime, as if her own parents were killed by the Khaganate.

"My parents were killed while resisting the Khaganate," she said. That explained a lot.

"What are you two talking about?" Dumpling asked, her face uncomfortably close. She was still hugging my right arm. It was nice.

"We would like to hear what has transpired from your conversation," Theophilos said, his face dreadfully close. He was still latched onto my left arm. I felt sick.

"Her own tribe suffered from the growing Horde," I told them as I shook both of my brothers off my appendages. "They are massing in force, mostly focused in the north. It sounds like it's only a matter of time until the Khagan completes his tribal collection and unifies the Magal."

"That's terrible," Theophilos cried when I told him about her parents. As an orphan himself, he had a lot of sympathies for other orphans. "We should tell them to stick with us, Brother Aurelius. It's better to stick together against adversity, than it is to scatter in the face of the enemy. The Company can take care of her tribe."

I doubted that. The Company was not in the habit of caring for anyone but themselves.

"The brothers are good people. They'll understand we need to care for the refugees," Theophilos insisted. Dumpling and I laughed, until we realised he was being serious.

"Why do you laugh?" the Shamaness inquired. Her eyes glowed softly under the yurt's lamplight.

>"I would like to offer you the chance to join my herd, thereby ensuring your own safety from the wolves-that-prowl," I told her. I was, in fact, offering refuge from a more selfish reason. Ensorcelled are a rare resource. The Company could always use another wizard, or shaman as the case happened to be.

>I wasn't as hard-hearted a bastard I thought I was. I told her to leave south in haste. If she stuck around, there was going to be nothing but blood and death for her and her tribe.
>>
>>3625855

>"We're supposed to stop the Horde," I began. It wasn't as if she couldn't read my mind, anyway. "I was hoping to find out any possible weakness to the Khaganate, if any."

Shake off Ugly, keep Dumpling attached so our planet gets better, it seems the wizard is jealous.
>>
>>3625903
>"I would like to offer you the chance to join my herd, thereby ensuring your own safety from the wolves-that-prowl," I told her. I was, in fact, offering refuge from a more selfish reason. Ensorcelled are a rare resource. The Company could always use another wizard, or shaman as the case happened to be.
>>
>>3625903
>>I wasn't as hard-hearted a bastard I thought I was. I told her to leave south in haste. If she stuck around, there was going to be nothing but blood and death for her and her tribe.
>>
>>3625903
>>"I would like to offer you the chance to join my herd, thereby ensuring your own safety from the wolves-that-prowl," I told her. I was, in fact, offering refuge from a more selfish reason. Ensorcelled are a rare resource. The Company could always use another wizard, or shaman as the case happened to be.

but make sure to tell her that if they accept they are expected to help, and that we will face the horde, if she wants safety she has to continue fleeing
>>
>>3625855
>"You're very pretty." Women make fools out of the best of us.
>>
>>3625916
>but make sure to tell her that if they accept they are expected to help, and that we will face the horde, if she wants safety she has to continue fleeing
I like this.
>>
>>3625903
>"I would like to offer you the chance to join my herd, thereby ensuring your own safety from the wolves-that-prowl," I told her. I was, in fact, offering refuge from a more selfish reason. Ensorcelled are a rare resource. The Company could always use another wizard, or shaman as the case happened to be.
>>
>>3625913
>>3625916
>>3625927
>>3625929
>"I would like to offer you the chance to join my herd, thereby ensuring your own safety from the wolves-that-prowl," I told her. I was, in fact, offering refuge from a more selfish reason. Ensorcelled are a rare resource. The Company could always use another wizard, or shaman as the case happened to be.

"How big is the herd?" She asked. "How large are their horses, how virile the studs? Do the mares cry or stay silent in birthing? Do they sire many foals?" The linguists of Old Parthia must have been centaurs.

"The herd is small, but choice," I replied. "Our horses are large, with energetic studs. Even the mares stay silent in the painful birthing. Ours is a herd of many foals." To wit: the Company was not very numerous, but powerful, with trained and armed individuals to drive its rivals away. We were used to pains and sorrows of life, which we accepted with glum silence (well not quite true, I always complain. But then again, I am a habitual liar.), and our Company was one that had a great number of new blood flowing in all the time.

I hesitated. "But do not swear the oath when entering the grazing field," I told her. I didn't want to chain her and her people to a life of serving the Black Company. She had to be given the freedom to run away if the situation went to shit, which it usually does. Aurelius, you incorrigible romantic.

"My tribe will be interested," she declared. Her tribe? I guess the fact that she was a shamaness gave her a large voice in the running of the tribal governance. "But the elders will ask a gifting of horses." That was a kind of short-term hostage-taking that the Magal practiced when making difficult diplomatic choices. It was supposed to ensure that the other side wasn't going to renege on the deal.

"Sure," I told her. "You can take Theophilos."

She shook her head, and with a slight smile, laid her hand on mine. Things were a blur after that. The air vibrated with magic, a surprised gasp from Shamaness, and then Dumpling punched me.
>>
>>3625978
>>I tried to see if the bind was secure. No harm in trying.
>>
>>3625970

When I came to, Theophilos was carrying me. I screamed. "You were knocked out cold," Theophilos told me, eventually, after I'd calmed down. "Dumpling was being unreasonable," he said. I agreed. "She volunteered to go as the hostage."

I found that disagreeable. When you only have five Ensorcelled, losing one, even if only temporary, is a huge blow. I was going to get chewed out by Lieutenant for this.

>"Take me back," I told Theophilos. I had to be the hostage. Dumpling was too valuable.

>I resigned myself to latrine duty for the next two weeks. "I hope Dumpling likes horse dumplings," I murmured.
>>
>>3625978
>I tried to see if the bind was secure. No harm in trying.


Dumpling is based protective tsun but what the hell is this?
>>
>>3625981
>>"Take me back," I told Theophilos. I had to be the hostage. Dumpling was too valuable.

but actually, Ugly will be the hostage
>>
>>3625985
Ditto
>>
>>3625981
>>"Take me back," I told Theophilos. I had to be the hostage. Dumpling was too valuable.
>>
>>3625981
>>"Take me back," I told Theophilos. I had to be the hostage. Dumpling was too valuable.
Lets save the demsel from horse dumplings like the goddamn romantic we are. Shit.
>>
>>3625981
>"Take me back," I told Theophilos. I had to be the hostage. Dumpling was too valuable.
>>
>>3626004
>>3626001
>>3625988
>>3625985
>"Take me back," I told Theophilos. I had to be the hostage. Dumpling was too valuable.

I have a fondness for Magal dumplings. The horse people know how to eat meat, in contrast to the nearly vegetarian Sinaeans, who can only afford pleasures of the flesh (culinarily speaking) on special occasions. I was actually looking forward to having some of their food while relaxing in their yurts, given the treatment of political hostages.

It would have also helped me stay out of Lieutenant's sight. Captain liked to bully me by showing faux favouritism, which riled Lieutenant to no end. And since he couldn't talk back against Captain, he would inevitably send me on dangerous missions. Women.

I didn't know why Dumpling punched me. There was no magic when Shamaness held my hand. Nothing arcane, at least. I wasn't eager to go face to face with Dumpling so soon after her attack against my person, but it was a duty, nay, my responsibility, to see her back to the Company safe.

Theophilos, on realising the merits of my multi-pronged arguments, carried me back to the yurt, which was in the process of being dismantled by Shamaness. She looked surprised to see us return so soon. Dumpling had her back turned on us.

I explained to Shamaness that Dumpling was Ensorcelled and too valuable to send as a hostage.

>Instead, I offered my body.

>I begged her to take Theophilos.
>>
>>3626012

>I begged her to take Theophilos
>>
>>3626012
>>Instead, I offered my body.
>>
>>3626012
>Instead, I offered my body.
>>
>>3626012
>>Instead, I offered my body.
>>3626012
>>
>>3626012
>Instead, I offered my body.
Its totally because we can speak her language, right?
>>
>>3626012
>>Instead, I offered my body.
>>
>>3626012
>>I begged her to take Theophilos
>>
>>3626025
>>3626041
>>3626042
>>3626044
>>3626049
>Instead, I offered my body.

She blushed, making me mentally go over my words. I had told her that Dumpling was too valuable. Then I said, "Take my horse." Euphemism, you understand. Old Parthian revolved around horses and livestock and such things as a language.

Perhaps I am rusty in Old Parthian. I had very few people to speak it with while I lay low in the southernlands of Sinae. Jian'an. Houguan. Nanhai. These horse-poor provinces lack speakers of the tongue. I didn't think there was anything off with what I said.

Dumpling disagreed. "What the hell did you tell her?" she asked, grabbing me by my ears. "She's lighting up like a Saturnalian celebration tree!" I told her. She reddened, and stomped away in a huff.

"Let's go, Theophilos. Aurelius wants to be with his girlfriend," she said. "Too valuable," she muttered, thinking I couldn't hear. What she didn't know is that I was very good at listening. People often came to me to spin their tales of woe and offload their mind. They were always happy to find an appreciative audience who didn't interrupt them. Then again, she is a mind-reading wizard. Maybe she did know I could hear. But why would she mumble with such low volume if she wanted me to hear?

Women. I will never understand them.

Theophilos waved his goodbyes, promising to help taking care of Honey. I smiled at that. Honey was one of the few people who accepted Theophilos without batting an eye from his horrendous face. She had seen worse. I stopped smiling.
>>
>>3626071

"Tell me a story," Shamaness said. We were tucked into our separate sheepskin bedsheets. The wind was at it outside, howling like a Nanman leopard. I hoped Theophilos and Dumpling were snugly wrapped in their own tents. "Tell me of the lands you have seen."

I shuffled in my comfortable bedding to face her. She did the same. "There are islands, divinely protected by mad spirits, that foreigners can barely come to trade or make war against them," I whispered. My voice sounded louder than it actually was within the yurt, even with al the caterwauling the wind was making. "I have seen deserts where the dead-yet-not moan against the scraping sands that bother their gaping mouths, shutting up each winter when snow eases their pain."

She listened with a sombre face. I think she wanted to know more about a land other than hers, to feel that there was some small mercies and kindnesses in the world somewhere. I switched the tone.

"I have been to the edge of the Nanman jungles, where the most beautiful flowers bloom, aided by the plentiful water and eternal warmth." That got her attention. I described it to her, how it opened its petals to the first light of day, and closed once more as the sun winked out. The giant insects who scuttle and buzz around the prehistoric jungle-forests, painting the air green and yellow with pollen. How the dazzling array of colours from a hundred thousand different competing plants flowering to spread their seed made men go mad from the sensory overload.

I had woven the story to a macabre end. It is hard to tell her of kindnesses and mercies when there are none to be found.

"You can't have only warm days," she giggled. "And flowers the size of a horse head? I knew you were a liar, Aurelius, but now I see you are a romantic liar."

The darkness hid my smile as I protested her accusation vigorously. They were quite real, if slightly exaggerated. In truth, the men went mad because the pollen was poisonous, not because of the amount of colours in their eyes. But much of the things from Nanman can sound ridiculous, even impossible. All I will say is this: if you do not believe me, go there yourself.

"Tell me about yourself," she said, after a while.
>>
>>3626073

>"I'm not telling you my True Name." I'd heard all about the things wizards could do with your True Name. I was confident that she couldn't get it out of my brain with her mind reading skills, too. I had no idea what it was.

>"I come from a long and storied line of liars. My father was a horseman who could not ride a horse, my grandfather a minister who never sat down long enough to administrate, and my great-grandfather..." the less said of him, the better.

>"What can I say about myself? I had an unprepossessing childhood. I was slotted into the cursus honorum, even as I was married off to a woman I barely knew. Then some scandal happened just as I was growing to love her and her I, forcing me to a divorce I never wanted." The words tumbled out of me, bare in detail as they were. I didn't meet Shamaness' eyes.
>>
>>3626076

>"I come from a long and storied line of liars. My father was a horseman who could not ride a horse, my grandfather a minister who never sat down long enough to administrate, and my great-grandfather..." the less said of him, the better.

Let's embarrass father in front of the people that can actually ride horses.

Poor dumpling doesn't know if she is jealous because we stayed or if she is flattered because we said she was too valuable
>>
>>3626073
>"I come from a long and storied line of liars. My father was a horseman who could not ride a horse, my grandfather a minister who never sat down long enough to administrate, and my great-grandfather..." the less said of him, the better.
>>
>>3626076
>"I come from a long and storied line of liars. My father was a horseman who could not ride a horse, my grandfather a minister who never sat down long enough to administrate, and my great-grandfather..." the less said of him, the better.
>>
>>3626076
>>"What can I say about myself? I had an unprepossessing childhood. I was slotted into the cursus honorum, even as I was married off to a woman I barely knew. Then some scandal happened just as I was growing to love her and her I, forcing me to a divorce I never wanted." The words tumbled out of me, bare in detail as they were. I didn't meet Shamaness' eyes.
>>
>>3626091
>>3626087
>>3626083
>"I come from a long and storied line of liars. My father was a horseman who could not ride a horse, my grandfather a minister who never sat down long enough to administrate, and my great-grandfather..." the less said of him, the better.

"You are a funny man, Aurelius," she laughed. "Most of the men I know try to up-play their ancestry. They think that the achievements of their fathers give them authority and power."

"The more fool they," I replied. "Though I hope that is not true, for other reasons. For one, my father was not much of a man."

"Why do you refrain from talking ill of your grandfather?" she asked. "You were fine with dismissing your father and grandfather." Curiosity had peaked in her. I didn't notice the warning signs, the sparkle in her eyes, the slight tremble on her lips. It was dark, and there was no light. It was long past midnight by my reckoning. We were supposed to be asleep.

"I did say the less said of him, the better," I answered. "That's not exactly high praise."

"But you also don't mention specific ills of him," she pointed out. Damn. She had me there. I tried not to think of my great-grandfather. I told her that.

"Why?"

The eternal question. Why is the sky blue? Why do men kill? Why do the gods watch us play out our miserable lives? Why is the greatest syllable in the known world. It stumps the wisest man under its repetitive blows.

"Good night, Shamaness." I abruptly turned away from her. I heard a sharp intake of breath. She thought she had offended me, maybe. She was half right.

"Good night, Aurelius," she whispered softly at my back. She didn't quibble at the name I had used.

The next morning was markedly less windy. We packed the yurt and loaded the horses, one of which she lent me for riding purposes. The Magal are always on the move. That means their main source of food is gained through bartering, milking, or butchering. This one had been marked to be turned into meat before me and my pesky need for a mount changed the picture. I gave the horse a dried apple from my rations.

We made good progress, mostly thanks to the good weather. We spoke little. There wasn't much to talk about.

We arrived an hour after midday. I said before that this was a remarkably small tribe, but I was wrong. The group that I had seen days before by the pool had been a splinter, maybe a scouting group, though more likely to be a hunting expedition given their numbers. This was the tribe. There had to be at least a hundred tents here, each for one family. Some were as large as our platoon tents, others as massive as the Captain's. Three mounted watchmen (watchriders?) greeted Shamaness when she entered the clearing. They were less certain about me.
>>
>>3626111

"Plentiful grazing," I blessed them. They were startled. One near fell off his horse.

"You know the Tongue?" one of them said, approaching me with undisguised friendliness. It is terrifying when people come to you with such an open expression. You never know what they are actually thinking. "It has been many centuries since we had tales of an Imperial bothering to learn how to speak our way."

>"I'm not Imperial," I replied. "I'm Black Company."

>"It has been many centuries since the Magal rode in to the center of Sinae." There were speakers of Old Parthian in the Capital. They just tended to be massive perverts. That, or following a fad.
>>
>>3626113
>>"I'm not Imperial," I replied. "I'm Black Company."
>>
>>3626076
>"What can I say about myself? I had an unprepossessing childhood. I was slotted into the cursus honorum, even as I was married off to a woman I barely knew. Then some scandal happened just as I was growing to love her and her I, forcing me to a divorce I never wanted." The words tumbled out of me, bare in detail as they were. I didn't meet Shamaness' eyes.
>>
>>3626113

>"It has been many centuries since the Magal rode in to the center of Sinae." There were speakers of Old Parthian in the Capital. They just tended to be massive perverts. That, or following a fad.
>>
>>3626113
>"I'm not Imperial," I replied. "I'm Black Company."
>>
>>3626113
>>"I'm not Imperial," I replied. "I'm Black Company."
>>
>>3626142
>>3626132
>>3626123
>"I'm not Imperial," I replied. "I'm Black Company."

"Ah," the rider said knowingly. "You're one of them." It seemed the Company had been here before. I didn't know that. "Are you here to steal off our princess?"

That made me almost fall off my horse. "What princess?"

"Katyusha," he answered. "You mean you rode all the way here with her without knowing her name?"

Katyusha. Katharos, snow-pure. It was a pretty name. "I didn't ask." Magal do not have princesses. They use a different word entirely for chieftain's daughter. I wondered what this rider was talking about.

"You are a strange man," he laughed. It is a good sign when the Magal riders are filled with mirth. Their only other emotion is fury.

The chieftain of this tribe was a dashing young warrior in his early thirties. He looked strong enough to eat an ox by himself, and had arms that could smash marble. I once dabbled in poetry, before my wife laughed at my votive poems.

"Katyusha speaks of an alliance," he said. "What makes you think your herd can match mine?"

>"Two small herds are easy prey, compared to a single unified one," I replied. "The Horde that comes cannot be resisted by any free Magal. Not alone."

>"I don't think so. I know so." Three months of living with the Company had given me the measure of its strength. Pikemen reinforced by crossbowmen, with swordsmen like myself augmenting the short-ranged defences. I was pretty sure we could deal with a herd the size of this tribe.
>>
>>3626143
>"Two small herds are easy prey, compared to a single unified one," I replied. "The Horde that comes cannot be resisted by any free Magal. Not alone."
>>
>>3626143
>"I don't think so. I know so." Three months of living with the Company had given me the measure of its strength. Pikemen reinforced by crossbowmen, with swordsmen like myself augmenting the short-ranged defences. I was pretty sure we could deal with a herd the size of this tribe.
>>
>>3626154
Ditto
>>
>>3626143
>>"Two small herds are easy prey, compared to a single unified one," I replied. "The Horde that comes cannot be resisted by any free Magal. Not alone."
>>
>>3626143
>"Two small herds are easy prey, compared to a single unified one," I replied. "The Horde that comes cannot be resisted by any free Magal. Not alone."
>>
>>3626143

>"I don't think so. I know so." Three months of living with the Company had given me the measure of its strength. Pikemen reinforced by crossbowmen, with swordsmen like myself augmenting the short-ranged defences. I was pretty sure we could deal with a herd the size of this tribe.
>>
>Both, sort of, starting with
>"Two small herds are easy prey, compared to a single unified one," I replied. "The Horde that comes cannot be resisted by any free Magal. Not alone."

His face was mirthless. "My ancestors heard such words, many centuries ago. An appeal to a common enemy. The sweet words of unification. They followed then, and became vassals to landworkers. You know of whom I speak of."

Of course I did. Every children in Sinae knew the name of Alexandros of Numante. The man. The myth. The legend. The Emperor.

"We Magal are not as foolish as you urbanised population think," he continued. "We were spurned after being used, like so many unwanted stepchildren. You think I will accept the same thing to happen?"

"Your ancestors accepted because that was the only choice," I replied. I am something of an amateur historian. Some of my humble additions have made their way into the Capital's Bibliotheca, though more, I suspect, due to my lineage than my worth as an author. "You know that you must fall under the Company's banner, or die like scattered horses, bereft of the protection of fences."

"Careful, emissary of the Company," the chieftain warned me. "You come under the diplomatic flag, but we Magal are known to be impulsive."

I am Scrivener. Diplomacy is not my job. Only a strong sense of self-preservation let me continue on without showing weakness. If I made plain on my face what I was feeling right now, I would not have left the tent alive.

"You are too proud to serve under those you deem weaker than you," I said. "Fine. I think the Company can definitely destroy your herd, if forced to fight. But we don't want to. All we want is to fulfill the comission we were hired to do. A legion is coming to assist us in our defences of northern Sinae. Fortifications are being prepared, walls raised, ballistae set up. If you want to go against the Horde, we are your best bet." I was gambling on their pride. It felt dirty, playing on their sentiments like this. "If you want to flee, then the Company will not stop you. We are not here to attack your tribe. We are here for the Horde."

The chieftain didn't answer immediately. "I do not have an answer immediately," he said. "Come back tomorrow. You will have an answer then."

That was alright. I knew how to dig a hole for myself to sleep in. I always carried a spade with me. The one I had now happened to be the selfsame one Theophilos was digging my grave with.

"Are you mad?" The chieftain was aghast when I told him where he could find me. "You can't sleep in the open air. You will die. Katyusha brought you here, and Katyusha will remain responsible for you."

>I protested. I couldn't sleep under one roof with a woman I barely knew. Necessity demanded last night, but I -was- a man.

>I accepted, though I tried not to seem too eager. It gets lonely at night in these cold wintry plains, and we're currently in summer. I hoped the Company would be gone by winter.
>>
>>3626143

>"I don't think so. I know so." Three months of living with the Company had given me the measure of its strength. Pikemen reinforced by crossbowmen, with swordsmen like myself augmenting the short-ranged defences. I was pretty sure we could deal with a herd the size of this tribe
>>
>>3626182
>>I accepted, though I tried not to seem too eager. It gets lonely at night in these cold wintry plains, and we're currently in summer. I hoped the Company would be gone by winter.
>>
>>3626182
>I protested. I couldn't sleep under one roof with a woman I barely knew. Necessity demanded last night, but I -was- a man.
>>
>>3626182

>I accepted, though I tried not to seem too eager. It gets lonely at night in these cold wintry plains, and we're currently in summer. I hoped the Company would be gone by winter.
>>
>>3626182
>>I protested. I couldn't sleep under one roof with a woman I barely knew. Necessity demanded last night, but I -was- a man.

out of decency
>>
>>3626182

>I protested. I couldn't sleep under one roof with a woman I barely knew. Necessity demanded last night, but I -was- a man.
>>
>>3626182
>I protested. I couldn't sleep under one roof with a woman I barely knew. Necessity demanded last night, but I -was- a man.
>>
>>3626188
I also don't want to betray dumpling.
>>
>>3626182
>>I protested. I couldn't sleep under one roof with a woman I barely knew. Necessity demanded last night, but I -was- a man.
>>
There is also the fact that if we sleep in the same tent we will develop feelling for each other and she will end up into the company or will try to force us to leave it.
>>
>>3626191
Nah, I bet if we fuck the shamaness we end up marrying in their coulture or something
this is the second QM trap we dodge, there was that one about having a bad feeling
>>
>>3626186
>>3626188
>>3626189
>>3626190
>>3626192
>I protested. I couldn't sleep under one roof with a woman I barely knew. Necessity demanded last night, but I -was- a man.

The chieftain guffawed, and his lackeys followed suit. "You Imperials and your icky feelings!" he said. "I don't care what you do under the privacy of her yurt. It is not my place to mess with the property of the Princess."

"I'm not a property," I told him crossly. I was pretty sure there was no human selling buying involved, just pure hostage-taking, plain and simple. "Don't you care about the ramifications of putting a hot-blooded man with a young woman like that?"

He smiled. "Katyusha knows how to handle herself with men, if Imperials can be called men. And I do not believe she is taken. It would be good for her to find a man at last."

"I thought I didn't count as a man."

"Looks like there will be no worry of keeping you and her in the same room," the chieftain said. Another round of guffaws followed. "Go now, lest Katyusha kill me for keeping you overlong," the chieftain said. "Tonight, there will be feast."

"Oh, there you are at last!" Katyush- Shamaness said, when I exited the tent. She looked nervous. "You didn't die," she stated. I thought that was self-evident. "Did they harm you? Emasculate you, perhaps? Chieftain didn't brand you with the heated iron, did he?" She looked half anxious, half angry. Angry at all the possible mistreatment I might have received. Anxious that I didn't form a negative opinion of the Magal.

I wasn't harmed in any way, and I assured Shamaness of that. A bit of masculine pride was singed. I've had worse. "All ills would be forgotten depending on the quality of the dinner," I declared.

She clapped her hands joyfully. "How timely! We are having a feast tonight. Make sure you wear your best!"

I looked down at myself. Back up to her expectant face. Back down again. Up. "I didn't bring any spares." I wasn't exactly planning on being taken hostage.

"That won't do," she said with a frown. "I'll have to see if I can borrow some clothes your size."

>"I like my clothes." Mainly, I liked the armour. I never parted with it if I could help it, except when sleeping.

>"Do you think they'll let me borrow some?" I had always been curious as to the customs and traditions of the different peoples of the world. Magal were known for their colourful patterend clothes.
>>
>>3626203
>>"Do you think they'll let me borrow some?" I had always been curious as to the customs and traditions of the different peoples of the world. Magal were known for their colourful patterend clothes.
>>
>>3626203
Middle ground, keep the armor but adorn with some of the local acessories.
>>
>>3626203
>>"Do you think they'll let me borrow some?" I had always been curious as to the customs and traditions of the different peoples of the world. Magal were known for their colourful patterend clothes.


Lets be real, if they want us dead it doesn't matter how much armour we have on
>>
>>3626203
>>"Do you think they'll let me borrow some?" I had always been curious as to the customs and traditions of the different peoples of the world. Magal were known for their colourful patterend clothes.

make sure it's not marriage attire, these fucking tribals are always marrying people without their consent
>>
>>3626218
>>3626206
>>3626223
Travel had made me grimy. The average trooper is not exactly the paragon of hygienic virtues in the best of days, and I had been scrawling and stalking through the flatlands. Before I knew it, Shamaness sicced some grandmothers on me. What followed was the third most humiliating moment in my life.

The women of Magal have arms of steel. They made use of that to strip me clean. Once peeled from my clothing, I was unceremoniously dumped into an oversized bucket, after which the grandmothers vigorously scrubbed me in all the right and wrong places.

"Please don't look at me," I said miserably. I was wet, denuded, and in public. No one seemed to really care, except for the young girls that came to stare. More, I think, because I was a foreigner, than for my looks. Shamaness was prowling around all the while, keeping guard in the perimeter. I don't know what she was guarding against. It isn't as if I could have jumped off the bucket, not with four of these grandmothers holding me down.

She only eased her concern when I was dressed, deigning to dress up herself then. She didn't say anything, but I stayed outside. It was common decency.

"Are you done?" I shouted into the yurt. The sun was cradling on the horizon, and I was hungry. I could smell the feast, and it smelled like meat and oil and gravy and all the wonderful things of the world.
>>
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>>3626234
"Just a moment!" she called back. After fifteen thousand just-a-moments later, she popped out of the flaps and did a little spin. "What do you think?" she said.

>"Very good. Now let's go before all the seats are filled." I had only eaten Company rations the past three months. Say what you will about Milo's quartermastering skills, but nothing could compare to real homecooked food.

>"It is very nice." It was more than nice. She looked absolutely radiant. I momentarily forgot my hunger while she moved this way and that to show off each and every pattern on her dress.
>>
>>3626239
>>"Very good. Now let's go before all the seats are filled." I had only eaten Company rations the past three months. Say what you will about Milo's quartermastering skills, but nothing could compare to real homecooked food.
foooooooooood!
>>
>>3626239
>>"It is very nice." It was more than nice. She looked absolutely radiant. I momentarily forgot my hunger while she moved this way and that to show off each and every pattern on her dress.
>>
>>3626239

>"Very good. Now let's go before all the seats are filled." I had only eaten Company rations the past three months. Say what you will about Milo's quartermastering skills, but nothing could compare to real homecooked food.

Ignore waifuing, acquire food
>>
I'm actually torn now.
Can we have a pic of the mage twins? To help a bit with our response?
>>
>>3626239
>"Very good. Now let's go before all the seats are filled." I had only eaten Company rations the past three months. Say what you will about Milo's quartermastering skills, but nothing could compare to real homecooked food.
>>
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>>3626259
Twins are of Parthian ancestry, but don't speak the culture
>>
>>3626268
*speak the language or know the culture well
>>
>>3626271
So no harm in flattering one of their own I change to

>"It is very nice." It was more than nice. She looked absolutely radiant. I momentarily forgot my hunger while she moved this way and that to show off each and every pattern on her dress.

My real love is the murderous Hood anyway.
>>
>>3626240
>>3626246
>>3626261
>"Very good. Now let's go before all the seats are filled." I had only eaten Company rations the past three months. Say what you will about Milo's quartermastering skills, but nothing could compare to real homecooked food.

"As if they would dare begin the feast without us," Shamaness laughed. The everpresent cold tinged her face with the colour of the sunset. She tapped her shoes in place. "Race you there?"

"But I don't know where-"

"Just follow me!" And she ran off, her skirt billowing in the wind. I sighed. First she made us late by taking ages on her costume, and now she was demanding I race with her while wearing a skirt.

Women.

>1d100 to see how you do in this impromptu race
>>
Rolled 71 (1d100)

>>3626291
>>
>>3626275
>My real love is the murderous Hood anyway.
Nothing spices up a relationship like attempted murder
>>
Rolled 93 (1d100)

>>3626291
As if she had any chances
>>
Rolled 33 (1d100)

>>3626291
beep beep
>>
>>3626292
>>3626294
This is a roll under quest
>>
>>3626297
It's okay i got it.
>>
>>3626297
Good I was hoping we loose. Trip and land our face first into dirt
>>
>71
>93
>33

A gaggle of grandmothers appeared in my sight. I froze. Their steely fingers had made a lasting impression on me, physically as well as mentally. I was not going to let them see me again so they could manhandle me, race be damned.

I took a circuitous route, wedging myself between tents and clambering over baskets, always following the scent of delicious food. Once or twice I was almost spotted by those grandmothers, but I had trained for this. Legionary camping grounds are pitted with spear walls and low-ceilinged crawlspaces for training.

"You're still late," Shamaness said with a teasing smile, as she heard my explanations.

"Only because of the grandmothers."

"Oh, don't be a sore loser," she joked, poking me lightly in the rib. "Now come on and seat down, Chief is going to make a big speech!"

>My eyes sought out the platters of meat dumplings. The rest of the feast went by in a blurry haze. All I know is that my stomach rejoiced that evening.

>Restraining my bestial desires, I sat down and politely listened to the Chief. I hoped he was the laconic kind.
>>
>>3626317
>Restraining my bestial desires, I sat down and politely listened to the Chief. I hoped he was the laconic kind.
>>
>>3626317
>>Restraining my bestial desires, I sat down and politely listened to the Chief. I hoped he was the laconic kind.
>>
>>3626317

>Restraining my bestial desires, I sat down and politely listened to the Chief. I hoped he was the laconic kind.
>>
>>3626317
>Restraining my bestial desires, I sat down and politely listened to the Chief. I hoped he was the laconic kind.
>>
>>3626317

>My eyes sought out the platters of meat dumplings. The rest of the feast went by in a blurry haze. All I know is that my stomach rejoiced that evening.

I bet we end up married and don't even notice.
>>
>>3626317
>My eyes sought out the platters of meat dumplings. The rest of the feast went by in a blurry haze. All I know is that my stomach rejoiced that evening.
>>
>>3626317
>>Restraining my bestial desires, I sat down and politely listened to the Chief. I hoped he was the laconic kind.
>>
>>3626317

>My eyes sought out the platters of meat dumplings. The rest of the feast went by in a blurry haze. All I know is that my stomach rejoiced that evening.
>>
>>3626356
>>3626325
>>3626321
>>3626319
>>3626318
It was a short dinner speech. The intimate sort, intended for family members and close friends. The entire tribe except me was kith and kin. They laughed at the inside jokes. They nodded at the remembrance of their past. I stealthily tossed dumplings into my mouth.

"A decision looms upon us all," the chieftain said. "Do we stand and fight? The Sable Arrows have submitted before the Horde. The Blackbows are destroyed, never to let their mounts graze again in their ancestral lands. Three Hooves have submitted before the self-proclaimed Khagan. All our old allies are dead or broken."

All shaman-less tribes. The chieftain went on to reason their continued existence to Shamaness. Wizards can make or break a battle, and the Khagan did not have any. I consoled myself with that new bit of information. What we knew about the Magal was woefully small, as far as recent news went. When the speech ended and the feast began, I was the only one with an appetite.

The night passed in silence, then the morn. I was called to the chieftain's tent as soon as lunch was over. The first thing I told the chieftain was the size of our forces, one thousand well-trained men. There was also a legion coming to assist us, I reminded him. Lastly, I mentioned our five wizards. I think that did the most to persuade him to see my way.

When evening fell, I was given leave to saddle a horse they were lending me. I'd done it. I walked into the den of the lion and was going to return, more or less whole.

"Aurelius!"

I turned. It was Shamaness. I am sure it was just my imagination, mostly from the increasingly reduced visibility with the sun going down, but she seemed sorry to see me go. I know, it's egotistical to think that. These fancies occasionally strike me when my brain is idle. Once, I thought Dumpling was attracted to me.

She made her way to me and my horse. "Take these dumplings," she told me, thrusting a basket of yesterday's leftovers. It was made of some kind of bark, dried and lacquered to hold food. The top was fastened tight, to prevent spillage while on the move. "I saw how much you liked them," she said shyly. "Share them with your friends, the one with the broken face and the girl."

"Thank you for the hospitality," I said, meaning every word. "I even got to keep the pretty clothes. They are surprisingly comfortable to move around in. I wish I had something I could give you." My mother always told me to give as much as I receive. "Will I see you again?" I wanted to know if her tribe was going to join us in this temporary alliance.

She lowered her face. "Do you want to?" she asked. "See me again, that is."
>>
>>3626523

>"Of course," I said. Any reinforcement would help against the screaming Horde that was only enlarging. There is nothing dishonourable about fearing the horse people. You would feel the urge to break formation and run too, if you were faced with the elusive mounted archers of the Magal.

>"By which I mean, of course, whether your tribe would be joining our defensive positions further south." I wanted to make sure there was no misunderstanding between us. I don't do relationships very well, and the past events - the sleepless nights, the race to the feast, my embarassing shower - could have engendered some misunderstanding between us.
>>
>>3626526

>"Of course," I said. Any reinforcement would help against the screaming Horde that was only enlarging. There is nothing dishonourable about fearing the horse people. You would feel the urge to break formation and run too, if you were faced with the elusive mounted archers of the Magal.

Misunderstandings ahoy

Let it stew for a few seconds and then add

"Your tribe would be invaluable to the defensive effort."
>>
>>3626549
Actually, take out that last part, its kind of rude to say we want to use her tribe, even if we stay friends or something else there is no harm in saying we shall meet again
>>
>>3626526
>"Of course," I said. Any reinforcement would help against the screaming Horde that was only enlarging. There is nothing dishonourable about fearing the horse people. You would feel the urge to break formation and run too, if you were faced with the elusive mounted archers of the Magal.
>>
>>3626526

>"Of course," I said. Any reinforcement would help against the screaming Horde that was only enlarging. There is nothing dishonourable about fearing the horse people. You would feel the urge to break formation and run too, if you were faced with the elusive mounted archers of the Magal.
>>
>>3626526
>>"Of course," I said.
>>
>>3626571
>>3626578
>>3626580
>>3626549
>"Of course," I said. Any reinforcement would help against the screaming Horde that was only enlarging. There is nothing dishonourable about fearing the horse people. You would feel the urge to break formation and run too, if you were faced with the elusive mounted archers of the Magal.

"Then we will see each other again," she said earnestly. Maybe I was getting the hang of this diplomacy thing.

"Did you mean it, when you said you wished you could give me something back?" she said suddenly.

"Of course." I wouldn't have said it, if I didn't mean it. Unless it was a lie. Though I confess myself to be a fluent liar, that was not one of them.

---

"What did she ask for?" Dumpling asked, her mouth full of dumplings. It had been reheated by one of the cooks named Glen, who I had to bribe with a fourth of the leftovers. It was worth it. Nobody likes cold, congealed-in-oil dumplings. If anyone claims to do so, I shall call him a liar with no hesitation. It takes one to know one.

"Maybe it was a kiss," Trevain said dreamily. Sister sighed. Trevain and I shuddered. "No, it was not a kiss," I told him.

"A special token," Sergeant said knowingly. When I began the story, he was pretending to be asleep. The warmed dumpling delivery made him ditch that play-acting very quickly. Dumpling threw a hair-raising hex on him, which made Morion snicker.

"She asked for forgiveness," I answered. "She said she was sorry about needling me with my great-grandfather."

There was a collective groan, except from Theophilos, who said it was a nice thing for her to do. "Bo~ring," Trevain said monotonously. "I thought you would have bagged a girl by now, Aurelius. You have the looks, as long as you keep your eyes closed. That gold stuff? Freaky." I remembered why I didn't like our corporal again.

"I don't think it's right to get into a relationship so thoughtlessly," I retorted. The first and last time I was married was when the duty was thrust to me. Just as we were becoming happy, it was taken away from us.

Morion made an eye at her sister. "Don't you think it's about time you got over your first marriage?" she asked, a cheeky smile on her face. "You're so young! You can start again, you know." I knew she meant no harm. She was also wrong. I may look young for my age, but that has more to do with factors beyond my control.
>>
>>3626638
>But an unwilling divorce is a kind of scar that does not heal so quickly. I was not ready to open my heart to another relationship. Not yet. [No romantic relations Aurelius]

>"I guess I haven't sorted out my feelings yet," I admitted. My ex-wife was often on my mind. She was a kind woman, who had no ill will toward me for the arranged marriage.

>"Because there are so many fine ladies just waiting to jump on a divorcee," I chuckled. It wasn't like I hadn't tried. I just hadn't found anyone who liked me in that way yet.

>"But I did start again. Haven't you seen me and Hood? We're totally an item." And then Hood shot at me. I probably should have seen that coming.
>>
>>3626646
>"But I did start again. Haven't you seen me and Hood? We're totally an item." And then Hood shot at me. I probably should have seen that coming.
Deflect with comedy
>>
>>3626646

>"But I did start again. Haven't you seen me and Hood? We're totally an item." And then Hood shot at me. I probably should have seen that coming.

I can't resist my one true waifu, I demand Hood pics.
>>
>>3626646
>>"Because there are so many fine ladies just waiting to jump on a divorcee," I chuckled. It wasn't like I hadn't tried. I just hadn't found anyone who liked me in that way yet.

It's not like anyone would like me....baka...
>>
>>3626674
Biu this one is also good, maybe we start with this one and close with the hood comment.
>>
>>3626646
>"Because there are so many fine ladies just waiting to jump on a divorcee," I chuckled. It wasn't like I hadn't tried. I just hadn't found anyone who liked me in that way yet
>>
>>3626683
Its all good in da hood
>>
>>3626646
>"But I did start again. Haven't you seen me and Hood? We're totally an item." And then Hood shot at me. I probably should have seen that coming.
Hold that pain inside and keep it there
>>
>>3626646
>>"But I did start again. Haven't you seen me and Hood? We're totally an item." And then Hood shot at me. I probably should have seen that coming.
>>
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>>3626741
>>3626735
>>3626673
>>3626657
>"But I did start again. Haven't you seen me and Hood? We're totally an item." And then Hood shot at me. I probably should have seen that coming.

"Don't do it!" I said. "Think of Honey!" That made Hood hesitate. That was all the time I needed. I rushed out of the tent. A cry of blood-curdling rage followed me, as did shafts of arrows. It is a testament to legionary training that I managed to survive. All that marching around gave me the kind of legs Olympians would envy. Not that I was ever in the Legion. My arm was completely unblemished.

By the time Sergeant and the rest had calmed the wild archer, it was long past Honey's bedtime. I wish I'd gotten to see her again, but she had been in Platoon C's tent with Maid when I returned from field. She was the sergeant of that platoon, and was something of a grandmother figure to a lot of the brothers.

I got to see her sleep, at least. It's one of the things that keep me living on and on. The vague hope that I might meet my ex-wife again is another. I regret to this day not dropping everything except her and running out of the Capital, scandal be damned. It is my horse-fall moment. The painful memory I always return to. Should haves and would haves are painful things. Don't do anything you would regret five years from now.

"She missed you," Morion said with a wry smile, when I approached the specially arranged camp bed we made for her. She was rocking it back and forth, though Honey was fast asleep. It was a snug little thing, made from bits of scavenged cloth we'd scrounged up from along the way. She was growing fast, no thanks to the terrible food from the Company's cooks. It was getting to the point that I was considering giving her a regular bed, instead of resizing her current one.

Morion tapped my shoulder. She was holding up an uninspired scrawl depicting some sort of a basilisk's head. I am no art critic, but that thing had more in common with Sinaean chicken scratches than anything with intelligent design behind it.

"She drew you and Sergeant holding hands while waiting for you," Morion told me.

It was the greatest painting I had ever seen.
>>
i fuken love yer writing
>>
>>3626762
I knew I was right in electing hood as my waifu, and we even had progress! No arrows hit us and she even hesitate, she's warming up to Aurelius! Lol
>>
>>3626762
>That picture
Well >>3626809 sold me on Hood.
10/10 would gladly make an army worthy of Mordor with her.
>>
Four wagons trundled on the rough road to Rainless. That poor excuse for a town was the furthest settlement of any size this north, a good two days' ride from the canyon mouth where the Company was camped in. It was also our sole supply of dried fruits and stale beer, the two joys in life of a garrisoned mercenary-soldier.

The canyon that the Company was camped in wasn't actually a canyon, but a big hole in the even bigger Wall that went round the border of old Sinae, back when the Empire used to have an Emperor. No one took care of those walls these days, which meant it had deteriorated with the inevitability of time. Most of the Wall was secure, which was the reason Sinae wasn't being constantly raided by the Magal. But there were holes like these dotting throughout the entire superstructure that ran from east to west for how many miles long.

In the old days, Capital would have sent men with the skills and resources to shore up the Wall again. In modern times, that's usually where the local prefects and governors placed a garrison and called it a day. Unfortunately for us, we were the garrison. And doubly unfortunate was the fact that a Horde was forming.

I say a Horde is forming like it is inevitable. It isn't. Usually, they tend to fizzle out before gaining momentum. Either the Khagan that was driving the whole thing dies, from disease, or jealous subordinate, or even laziness - one Khagan died from falling off a horse because he was so lazy he would sleep while riding - and even to old age, with a Horde forming too slowly. Often times, the Magal fought among each other, ancient blood grudges still running too strong for them to form a bond.

A lot of the people in Rainless thought this was going to just another false alarm. I didn't think so. I had a bad feeling about this.

And because I said that, the formation of the Horde is a definite certainty. It's not that I cause these things to happen, mind you. I just have a sense for these things. You shouldn't shoot the messenger.

As I was saying, four wagons were trundling into Rainless, that dessicated husky excuse for a town. My platoon was on turnip duty. I have no idea why they call it that. It means we are supposed to bring the food back to the camp.

Morion and Dumpling were asleep, their twin heads lying on each other for support. Hood was sharpening her dagger. Everyone else was either driving the other wagons or inside the other wagons. I was the only one left on Honey duty. Maybe they should come relieve me if they liked children so much.
>>
>>3626833

"I spy with my little eye... something yellow!" Honey said.

"My eyes," I replied. She pouted at how easily I solved her riddle. "And they're gold, not yellow." There was nothing else to see aside from the dust and the sky. Gods know that if you are resorting to the ground and the heavens with this game, you really are fucked with boredom.

"You do it, then!" she said, bouncing unhappily on the wagon. I sighed. This was one of the less pleasant parts of child raising. You don't hear parents going on and on about the cost of housing and feeding to their childless siblings. Oh, no. No mention of the midnight crying or the irrational angerspiketantrums (I made that word up. I am allowed to do that, because I am a Scrivener.) that is natural for little men and women whose brains are trying to grasp the idea that they won't be the same way they are forever. Instead they brag about how precocious the child is, or how angelic they are when they sleep (if they sleep), or a thousand different things.

Humbug, I say. Children are nothing but a pain in the arse.

"A-relly!" Honey tugged my sleeves. "You spy? Please?"

There was no helping it. Who could say no to those eyes? "I spy... soldiers?"

"You are not s'posed to say what you spy," Honey said patiently.

"No, soldiers." Hood raised her head, eyes blazing. I could see that she was bored too. "Soldiers!" I shouted, banging on the wagon to get the attention of others. Morion and Dumpling woke up with a startle. "What?" Dumpling said, half dazed. "What?" Morion said, more sharply. I pointed at Rainless, where we were headed.

Golden eagle standard. All-metal armour. Huge, boxy shields.

"Legionaries," Hood muttered darkly. That was the first thing she said this entire trip.

"Must be our reinforcement," Morion said. "What are they doing, just standing here- oh god."

I covered Honey's eyes. She'd seen enough before I rescued her. She didn't need to witness crucifixions.

>Keeping my hand over Honey's eyes, I hugged her tight. The poor girl. I kept my head down low, burying it against Honey's head, hoping I wouldn't be recogniseable to the legionaries. Her hair smelled like the dust. "Don't look," I whispered gently. "It's alright. You're with the Company now."

>"Dumpling, I need you to take care of Honey." Not waiting for a response, I dropped off the still-moving wagon. My wagon was the lead one, and I had reasons not to want to be seen by anyone remotely Imperial.
>>
>>3626838
>Keeping my hand over Honey's eyes, I hugged her tight. The poor girl. I kept my head down low, burying it against Honey's head, hoping I wouldn't be recogniseable to the legionaries. Her hair smelled like the dust. "Don't look," I whispered gently. "It's alright. You're with the Company now."
>>
>>3626838
>>"Dumpling, I need you to take care of Honey." Not waiting for a response, I dropped off the still-moving wagon. My wagon was the lead one, and I had reasons not to want to be seen by anyone remotely Imperial.
>>
>>3626838
>>Keeping my hand over Honey's eyes, I hugged her tight. The poor girl. I kept my head down low, burying it against Honey's head, hoping I wouldn't be recogniseable to the legionaries. Her hair smelled like the dust. "Don't look," I whispered gently. "It's alright. You're with the Company now."
>>
>>3626838

>Keeping my hand over Honey's eyes, I hugged her tight. The poor girl. I kept my head down low, burying it against Honey's head, hoping I wouldn't be recogniseable to the legionaries. Her hair smelled like the dust. "Don't look," I whispered gently. "It's alright. You're with the Company now."

Give something for Hood to do, so she doesn't attack them too.
>>
>>3626838
>Keeping my hand over Honey's eyes, I hugged her tight. The poor girl. I kept my head down low, burying it against Honey's head, hoping I wouldn't be recogniseable to the legionaries. Her hair smelled like the dust. "Don't look," I whispered gently. "It's alright. You're with the Company now."
The Imperials can bitch all they want, we're stuck with the company.
>>
>>3626838
>>Keeping my hand over Honey's eyes, I hugged her tight. The poor girl. I kept my head down low, burying it against Honey's head, hoping I wouldn't be recogniseable to the legionaries. Her hair smelled like the dust. "Don't look," I whispered gently. "It's alright. You're with the Company now."

PROTECT HONEY!
>>
>>3626838
>Keeping my hand over Honey's eyes, I hugged her tight. The poor girl. I kept my head down low, burying it against Honey's head, hoping I wouldn't be recognizable to the legionaries. Her hair smelled like the dust. "Don't look," I whispered gently. "It's alright. You're with the Company now."

We Protec
>>
>>3626859
Also, chicks dig guys that are good with children, we'll score so many points we might not even be turned into a shiskebob
>>
>Keeping my hand over Honey's eyes, I hugged her tight. The poor girl. I kept my head down low, burying it against Honey's head, hoping I wouldn't be recogniseable to the legionaries. Her hair smelled like the dust. "Don't look," I whispered gently. "It's alright. You're with the Company now."

These words were as much for myself as for Honey. Her whole body trembled like a frightened rabbit I once owned. It would cower in the corner of its cage when I tried to stroke it. Even my pets hated my golden eyes. A part of me, a very selfish part, was thankful that Honey wasn't shaking because of me.

"Hood, no!" Dumpling whisper-shouted. "Are you fucking crazy? You'll get us killed!"

I looked up. Dumpling was trying to wrest Hood's bow away from her. Was she going to try and shoot a legionary when we were about to enter their camp? Hood was completely off her rockers. I could see the madness in her eyes. Behind the madness, sorrow.

The crosses. I understood. "Dumpling, knock her out."

"It might have complications-"

"She won't be calmed, damn you," I snarled. Dumpling startled. I never swore at her before, not when she knocked me out, not when she fed me that god-awful stew of hers. After a second of doubt during which Morion took over in fighting over the bow with Hood, she cast the spell. Hood slumped forward.

"I don't want you to fight," Honey said. Poor, foolish Honey. We were in the Black Company. Fighting is what we did.

"Can you manage a glamour?" I asked. Dumpling looked tired, but she nodded anyway. "Good. I'm going to need one for me, and one for Hood here. Make her look non-threatening. We might get questions with a knocked out Eskhatan. Garrison legionaries are lazy, not stupid."

"I can't manage two. Not before we are too close to the legionaries." That was bad. We were nearing enough that I could see the posted sentries and almost make out their facial features.

>"Just cast it on Hood." And they say chivalry is dead.

>"I'll cover Hood's face with her hood. Get me the glamour." I wasn't going to risk being seen by a legionary.
>>
>>3626936
>>"Just cast it on Hood." And they say chivalry is dead.

put a blindfold on us, pretend to be a blind scrivener
>>
>>3626942
If eye colour was the issue, you would have been hiding it all along. Golden eyes are a rumour-worthy feature.
>>
>>3626936
>"Just cast it on Hood." And they say chivalry is dead.
>>
>>3626948
so our face is the problem?

get Hood's hood to cover it then
>>
>>3626936

>>"Just cast it on Hood." And they say chivalry is dead.

Ever the romantic, if they recognize us, take care of Honey will you Dumpling?

I mean, it's been 11 years, they probably won't recogn- ops, I better not finish that or else I'll curse us.
>>
>>3626936
>"I'll cover Hood's face with her hood. Get me the glamour." I wasn't going to risk being seen by a legionary.
>>
>>3626936
>"I'll cover Hood's face with her hood. Get me the glamour." I wasn't going to risk being seen by a legionary.
>>
>>3626936
>>"I'll cover Hood's face with her hood. Get me the glamour." I wasn't going to risk being seen by a legionary.
drag hood into the wagon, as I assume she is sitting on the outside.
>>
>>3626936

>>"Just cast it on Hood." And they say chivalry is dead.
>>
>>3626942
>>3626951
>>3626954
>>3626971
>>3627721
>"Just cast it on Hood." And they say chivalry is dead.

The wagon rumbled on. I took the precaution of taking Hood's hood to hood my head. It wasn't going to cover my face, but it would stop casual glances. I wondered if it made me look even more out of place. Probably not. Hopefully not.

"Close your eyes," I told Honey. As we were closing in to Rainless-turned-into-legionary-camp, the screams were getting louder. Crucifixion is a favourite pastime of the garrison legionaries, those who haven't been Emperor-founded. False Imperials, some call them, though they are Imperial enough. I used my hands to block her ears, as well as I could.

Dumpling looked close to fainting. She was tired and hungry, two things you do not want to be when casting magic. She managed to throw a smirk toward me. "You old romantic," she mocked half-heartedly. "Save the girl! Let me sacrifice myself!" she said. Was she trying to mimic me? I never talked like that. I told her that. She was too tired to make another quip.

"What the fuck went on in here?" Sergeant was here. He must have heard some of the commotion and run to us.

"Sarge," Morion saluted. Sergeant hated it when she did that. He liked to say he was one of us. The man actually believed it, too. "Hood went apeshit just now, tried to shoot one of the legionaries. I don't think they noticed, but we had to put her under."

"And why is Aurelius cowering with Hood's hood?" he demanded. The wagon trundled ever closer to the first pocket of legionary watchmen. "Goldeneye, I swear, if you have any criminal ties that you didn't manage to let go of-"

"You from the Company?" We froze. A scrawny boy - couldn't be more than fifteen - popped up. He had a missing tooth and a cheery smile. "We were supposed to expect you. Our legate wants to talk." He seemed oblivious to the paused drama that was going on here.

"Sergeant Iacob, nice to meet you," Sergeant immediately took charge. "We're here for our food shipments."

"Thought as much," the boy-legionary said. "Name's Tom. Those two there are Dick and Harry. Those two can help you load your foodstuff on the wagon. Any of you speak High Imperial?" Latin, the language of the Emperor and his legions. The Emperor-founded ones, anyway. This boy spoke Sinaean like the rest of us. "Legate only speaks that. I think he understands Sinaean, but he's too much of a prick to use it like the rests of us."

Sergeant's eyes immediately flicked to me.

>"Take care of Honey, will you, Dumpling?" I asked. She was the person I would have made a family with, if I could. It was a one-sided attraction. I trusted her - or was attracted to her - enough to entrust Honey. Mind you, I felt the same toward a couple of other women. None of them were here, though.

>Body language is supposed to be the root of all languages. I motion-graphed my unwillingness to go face-to-face with a legate while Tom's back was turned.
>>
>>3628031
>>Body language is supposed to be the root of all languages. I motion-graphed my unwillingness to go face-to-face with a legate while Tom's back was turned.
>>
>>3628031
>>"Take care of Honey, will you, Dumpling?" I asked. She was the person I would have made a family with, if I could. It was a one-sided attraction. I trusted her - or was attracted to her - enough to entrust Honey. Mind you, I felt the same toward a couple of other women. None of them were here, though.
>>
>>3628031
>"Take care of Honey, will you, Dumpling?" I asked. She was the person I would have made a family with, if I could. It was a one-sided attraction. I trusted her - or was attracted to her - enough to entrust Honey. Mind you, I felt the same toward a couple of other women. None of them were here, though.
Tempted to go just to see what the legate makes of us.
>>
>>3628044
>>3628132
>"Take care of Honey, will you, Dumpling?" I asked. She was the person I would have made a family with, if I could. It was a one-sided attraction. I trusted her - or was attracted to her - enough to entrust Honey. Mind you, I felt the same toward a couple of other women. None of them were here, though.

I hopped out of the wagon before she could ask questions. I felt dirty. Leaving Honey like that was tantamount to falling on a horse and dying before greeting your son. Sergeant must have caught on to my trepidation, because he kept trying to communicate with me with a sort of monkey sign language. I understood none of his frantic body language.

Following Tom, I tightened the hood's coverage when we entered the barracks. The legionaries were camped without a castrum, the fortifications that legions usually built whenever they stopped marching. It was an understandable lapse of habit. What little trees lived this close to the Wall were weak, spindly things, barely useful as firewood.

"Black Company?" the Legate was a tall, handsome man, if generic. He had the kind of face that you immediately thought of when you combined the qualities of tall and handsome. The arrogant accent of his High Imperial made it clear that he was educated in the Capital, and he was proud of it. A ranking member of the Imperial Cult, then, disgraced or exiled. Capitalists didn't like coming out of their marbled cities if they could help it. Becoming a legate of a freshly-founded False Imperial legion was not the kind of thing they volunteered to become.

Sergeant poked at me to translate. He didn't speak High Imperial. I sighed.

>"Yes," I said, grinding my voice to a gravelly masculinity.

>I nodded.
>>
>>3628183
>>I nodded.
>>
>>3628183
>"Yes," I said, grinding my voice to a gravelly masculinity
>>
>>3628183
>>I nodded.
>>
>>3628183
>"Yes," I said, grinding my voice to a gravelly masculinity.
>>
>>3628184
>>3628185
>>3628195
>>3628203

He scoffed. "Clearly the Company's reputation for discipline has been overexaggerated. Where is your salute, man? Your words? You are the translator, are you not?"

I had to speak sooner or later anyway. "Yes," I said, grinding my voice down to a gravelly masculinity.

The legate stared. I lowered my hood further. "What is wrong with your voice?" he asked.

"He said, what is wrong with your voice," I relayed to Sergeant. He blinked in confusion. "What?" he asked. I relayed that back to the legate.

"Your voice. I asked what was wrong with it."

"What is wrong with my voice?"

"No, not your voice, your voice." I helpfully translated that for Sergeant again, who was growing increasingly confounded. He coughed, and tried to say a few stock lines. "There is nothing wrong with my voice," he declared. The legate didn't look very happy.

"You know what, forget it," he said. "I don't have all day to spend with mercenaries." The way he said that made it seem like an insult. "Are you the Captain? Captain..." he scrunched his face, trying to read out the foreign name on his slip of a paper in as authentic a High Imperial accent as he could muster. "Shushukabouche?"

Gesundheit. "Zhukova," I corrected for him. "And no, Sergeant here is just a sergeant." It was a good thing the Captain wasn't meeting him. She would have gutted him for that atrocious pronounciation.

"Your sergeant's name is Sergeant?"

"No, that's just what we call him." Sergeant meanwhile was feeling increasingly sidelined. "What's he talking about?" he asked me. I shushed him.

The legate sighed and put away his paper slip. "Normally I would ask for credentials and rank, but you don't seem like the sort who appreciate proper procedures." That wasn't fair. I liked procedures. Lining up for lunch was one of my top five hobbies. "You are also not high ranked enough for me to bother entertaining. Grab your provisions and be on your way. Oh, tell your Captain that the 13th Legion is coming soon." I nodded. This time the legate didn't bother trying to correct my failure to follow military protocol.

I was elated. Somehow the hood that didn't cover my face at all miraculously saved me from being recognised. I didn't know the legate, though I also didn't get a good look at his face on account of all the hoodying. But remembering faces is one of the necessary skills of surviving in the Capital. I couldn't be too careful.

>I grabbed Sergeant's arm and pulled him out with me to return to the wagon.

>But there was something I had to ask. "Who are you crucifying?"
>>
>>3628204
>>I grabbed Sergeant's arm and pulled him out with me to return to the wagon.
>>
>>3628204
>>I grabbed Sergeant's arm and pulled him out with me to return to the wagon.
>>
>>3628204
>I grabbed Sergeant's arm and pulled him out with me to return to the wagon

No good deed comes unpunished. So we better go.
>>
>>3628204
>>I grabbed Sergeant's arm and pulled him out with me to return to the wagon.
>>
>>3628204

>But there was something I had to ask. "Who are you crucifying?"
>>
>>3628222
>>3628221
>>3628211
>>3628209
>I grabbed Sergeant's arm and pulled him out with me to return to the wagon.

I wasn't about to overstay my welcome. We had reported in, gotten a response, and now it was time to load the proverbial turnips into the not so proverbial wagons. I had gotten off so easily. And to think I had had a bad feeling about this!

"What the hell was that?" Sergeant said as I dragged him out.

"Nothing," I assured him.

"That didn't look like nothing. That looked like you were trying to get away from someone who might recognise your face. And your voice. You went all cromagnon in there."

For all his faults, Sergeant has his moments of lucidity. It is usually when they are least warranted. "I might have heard his voice before," I allowed. "I just didn't want to meet someone from the past."

Sergeant nodded. That was an answer he could appreciate. It got him off my back for now. Capital is massive and tiny, all at once. Social circles tend to revolve around socialer circles. And Capitalists rarely forget a face.

Honey ran to me when she saw us coming back out, Dumpling behind. "I thought you were going to become like them," she said as she hugged my leg, pointing at the crosses. The things children think of. I was just a humble Company man. Why would they crucify me? I assured her that my life wasn't that exciting. Crucifixions are reserved for the worst of the worst. Or anyone the censores didn't like.

On second thought, I could plausibly see a scenario where I would be crucified. Still, I didn't tell that to Honey. "Only bad men get crucified," I told her.

"A-relly is a badman," she sniffled. "Hood told me so." Oh, that little shit. Shooting at me was fair game, but turning the impressionable mind of Honey against me? That was a foul. If she wasn't so pretty, I would have knocked her teeth out. I may be slightly sexist.

"Your father only had a bad throat," came the voice from behind my back. "Nothing wrong with his conscience, I hope. The Black Company was famous for being able to keep their noses clean when I was still in the Capital."

It was the legate.

>Honey came to save me. "A-relly doesn't have bad throat," she said knowingly. "He has bad, black heart, and eats babies for breakfast!" Somehow, I didn't feel saved.

>I scooped up Honey wordlessly and tried to look casual as I made my way toward the wagon.
>>
>>3628247
>>I scooped up Honey wordlessly and tried to look casual as I made my way toward the wagon.
>>
>>3628247

>I scooped up Honey wordlessly and tried to look casual as I made my way toward the wagon.

Oh Hood, my love, at least you care about our child, but we will have to talk about those things she told Honey.
That can vreate some deep daddy issues where she only trusts bad people.
>>
>>3628247
>>I scooped up Honey wordlessly and tried to look casual as I made my way toward the wagon.
>>
>>3628247

>Honey came to save me. "A-relly doesn't have bad throat," she said knowingly. "He has bad, black heart, and eats babies for breakfast!" Somehow, I didn't feel saved.
>>
>>3628247
>I scooped up Honey wordlessly and tried to look casual as I made my way toward the wagon.
>>
>>3628251
>inb4 that's the reason why Hood told Honey we are evil. The people who went to Hood island said to be good people but they ended up destroying Hood's island. So now Hood only trust bad people.
>>
>>3628258
>>3628267
>>3628251
>>3628250
>I scooped up Honey wordlessly and tried to look casual as I made my way toward the wagon.

He didn't stop me. Not like he had any reason to talk with a lowly mercenary like yours truly. The rest of the day was spent in backbreaking labour as I helped in loading the provisions.

"Damn you, Glen," Sister grumbled. "You better make something edible out of these things, this time." His physique was that of a rough-working farmer, and he hauled more of the barrels than anyone else. Several Rainless village girls who were bored with watching the crucifixion came by to whistle at Sister. He ignored them. I waved at them, which caused them to scurry away. Dumping accidentally dropped her barrel of beer on my foot after that.

We were completely exhausted when we clambered onto our wagons. There was less space now that food was laden on them, which meant that we all had to scooch to share what little space remained. It was time we went on our way. The oxen would find the way in the night. They had been resting most of the day, anyway.

>I took my place beside Dumpling. She was trying to fight off her sleepiness while maintaining Hood's glamour. She was failing.

>I sat beside Hood. If I wasn't so tired, I would have given her a piece of my mind for badmouthing me to Honey.

>Sister sat beside me. He claimed that his space in the other wagon was taken by a sack of potatoes. "What are potatoes?" I asked. I was pretty sure they didn't exist in this setting.
>>
>>3628274
>>I took my place beside Dumpling. She was trying to fight off her sleepiness while maintaining Hood's glamour. She was failing.
>>
>>3628274
>>I sat beside Hood. If I wasn't so tired, I would have given her a piece of my mind for badmouthing me to Honey.

with this little room she won't be able to shoot us....probably
>>
>>3628274

>I sat beside Hood. If I wasn't so tired, I would have given her a piece of my mind for badmouthing me to Honey.

Ok, mommy and daddy need to have a little talk, send Honey to keep Dumpling company, bith to entertain the wizard and to prevent Honey from listening.
>>
>>3628279
And we probably have to give her hood back before she realizes we took it.
>>
>>3628274
>I took my place beside Dumpling. She was trying to fight off her sleepiness while maintaining Hood's glamour. She was failing.

>>3628277
She could stab us. If i recall archers usually carry daggers with then.
>>
>>3628280
Hmm fair point.

>>3628274
>>3628282

Changing my vote to:
>I sat beside Hood. If I wasn't so tired, I would have given her a piece of my mind for badmouthing me to Honey.
>>
File: Meet the Twins.png (968 KB, 869x1200)
968 KB
968 KB PNG
Begun, the waifu wars have.
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>>3628274

>I sat beside Hood. If I wasn't so tired, I would have given her a piece of my mind for badmouthing me to Honey.
>>
>>3628285
Wait, this thing is actually from a manga or something?

And there is no war Qm, only love!
>>
>>3628274
>I took my place beside Dumpling. She was trying to fight off her sleepiness while maintaining Hood's glamour. She was failing.
>>
>>3628277
>>3628279
>>3628283
>>3628287
>I sat beside Hood. If I wasn't so tired, I would have given her a piece of my mind for badmouthing me to Honey.

She moved without complaint, a rare thing from our wild barbarian lady. The glamour was fading from her face, returning her original Eskhatan features. I was glad. She was much prettier with her original face. The glamour had turned her into a redhead. There was a faraway look in her eyes. I turned my head to look at what she was staring.

"The cross," she said, "is where my family ended up." I was too tired to be shocked. She never told anyone about herself before. I had had a feeling that was the case.

The glamour faded away completely as Dumpling drifted to the realm of dreams. I moved to pull her slipping blanket over her. I didn't want to have to stop the train of wagons just to pick up the blanket. When I lay back on my seat, I saw that there were tears in her eyes.

Then she said something that disturbed me even in my work-induced torpor. "One day, I will kill the Emperor."

"The Emperor is dead," I said quietly. She didn't reply. I fell asleep.

When I woke up an hour later from a particularly strong jolting of the wagon, I realised my head had fallen onto her shoulder.

>I continued to lie just like that, until she woke up. The pre-dawn light was colouring the horizon blue, but the high skies were still pitch black. It was going to be a while until the sun rose.

>I hurriedly removed my head before she could wake up. Who knows what she would have done if she had woken up?
>>
>>3628289
Nah, the manga is called Otoyomegatari and isn't related to this quest. Good art, though. Text was slightly edited by me.
>>
>>3628296

>I continued to lie just like that, until she woke up. The pre-dawn light was colouring the horizon blue, but the high skies were still pitch black. It was going to be a while until the sun rose.

We are the freaking emeperor aren't we?
>>
>I continued to lie just like that, until she woke up. The pre-dawn light was colouring the horizon blue, but the high skies were still pitch black. It was going to be a while until the sun rose.
>>
>>3628296
>>I continued to lie just like that, until she woke up. The pre-dawn light was colouring the horizon blue, but the high skies were still pitch black. It was going to be a while until the sun rose.
>>
>>3628296

>I continued to lie just like that, until she woke up. The pre-dawn light was colouring the horizon blue, but the high skies were still pitch black. It was going to be a while until the sun rose.
>>
>>3628299
His progeny, I think.

>>3628296
>I realised my head had fallen onto her shoulder.
Gasp, what obscenity!

>I continued to lie just like that, until she woke up. The pre-dawn light was colouring the horizon blue, but the high skies were still pitch black. It was going to be a while until the sun rose.
>>
>>3628314
>>3628304
>>3628303
>>3628300
>>3628299
>I continued to lie just like that, until she woke up. The pre-dawn light was colouring the horizon blue, but the high skies were still pitch black. It was going to be a while until the sun rose.

"I've heard a story like this one," I told her when she woke up. "It involves a sleeping beauty. See, she fell into an enchanted sleep because of a jealous uncle who wished to steal her virginity. The only way she would wake up was-"

Her hand went for her dagger. I ran out with an unsightly yelp. Then I stumbled. Sleeping in a cramped wagon is terrible for your back. I was on the ground, as helpless as a new-born mouse. Muscle cramps and general exhaustion had come to grab me at the worst moment possible. Hood drew her bow.

"Wait!" I said. "Think of Honey!" She didn't hesitate this time.

---

"...and that's how I ended up seeing the rest of my life," I said. "It was tedious. Like an Annals Book that didn't go through editing." My work shift was just about ending. As a Scrivener, there were many things I could do until my leg wound healed, one of which was stitching the wounded. "I think she was aiming for my unmentionables," I continued, "but I managed to regain the strength of my legs at just the right time."

"You really have a death wish, don't you?" Scrivener Lee (no, not the pretty one, this one was a guy) said. He was originally one of the war orphans we seemed to pick up every now and then. Two years older than Honey, he had been taught by the half-blind Scrivener who was now dead. Now, he was my assistant. He wasn't comfortable with my eyes at first. By now, he knew my eyes were the least of his concerns.

"I saw the other junior Scriveners talking about sneaking out to watch her shower. They came back with arrows up their butt. You remind me of them."

"I never got to see her bath," I said.

"I shouldn't have mentioned that," Scrivener Lee said. "I should not have mentioned that."

"Relax. I can't run right now." Actually I could. I've always had an uncanny ability to heal more quickly than your average how-may-year-old. But there were certain benefits in being an invalid. Like not being sent for more turnip duty.

I asked anyway. "Tell me about the bathing spot."

"No."

"You are my assistant. You are supposed to assist me."
>>
>>3628299
Or simply someone who had a remarkably similar upbringing. I'm still not quite sure
>>
>>3628321

"No. You are not going to rope me into one of your insane plans. Shouldn't we be writing down the names of the dead?" It was a tedious and routine procedure. Books of the Annals would get worn out, which meant we had to regularly rewrite the whole damned thing. Mostly in pieces. The Annals alone warranted five wagons to move around. And this was after they lost most of the records from there hundred years ago and beyond after a particularly nasty war.

Nasty for the papers and books, that is. All wars are nasty for humans.

>"I know you have a thing for White Bitch," I said. "I'm going to tell." Juvenile Schola-yard tricks. What better way to communicate with a minor?

>"But you will have the legendary Aurelius at your side, helping you in the art of stealth. Don't you want to get a glimpse? At least once, before your lifetime ends?" As far as possible deaths went, it wouldn't be a bad way to go.
>>
>>3628324
>>
>>3628324
>White Bitch
???

>"But you will have the legendary Aurelius at your side, helping you in the art of stealth. Don't you want to get a glimpse? At least once, before your lifetime ends?" As far as possible deaths went, it wouldn't be a bad way to go.
What can go wrong with involving a geriatric scribe in spying on a tribal woman wash?
>>
>>3628324
"You tell me now where it is or I'll tell Sister and Ugly that you will be sleeping with them for now on"

Do not take the kid with us, he doesn't deserve to die.
>>
>>3628324
>>"I know you have a thing for White Bitch," I said. "I'm going to tell." Juvenile Schola-yard tricks. What better way to communicate with a minor?
>>
>>3628324
>>"But you will have the legendary Aurelius at your side, helping you in the art of stealth. Don't you want to get a glimpse? At least once, before your lifetime ends?" As far as possible deaths went, it wouldn't be a bad way to go.

and agree with >>3628335
don't take him with us, just get the location
>>
>>3628335
>>3628342
Wait what? I thought he is an old dude.
>>
>>3628344
>"You don't look old enough to have training in so many weapons," the serjeant said brusquely. "You a deserter from the legions?"
>>
>>3628345
I think he was referring to the other scrivner, the old one who died iirc
>>
>>3628344
No, our assistent is a kid, not much older than Honey.
That's I want to just get the bath's location and leave him here making copies.
>>
>>3628324
>>"But you will have the legendary Aurelius at your side, helping you in the art of stealth. Don't you want to get a glimpse? At least once, before your lifetime ends?" As far as possible deaths went, it wouldn't be a bad way to go.
But don't bring him
>>
>>3628331
>>3628342
>>3628352
>"But you will have the legendary Aurelius at your side, helping you in the art of stealth. Don't you want to get a glimpse? At least once, before your lifetime ends?" As far as possible deaths went, it wouldn't be a bad way to go.

I briefly considered using his boy-crush on Corporal White Bitch, from Platoon K. She was a menace to young boys like him, and I had no doubt that she and he would get along, in the basest sense of the word. But he didn't know that. I did, which meant that I held power over him.

Knowledge is power. Guard it well. Who said that? I have no idea. I decided to put it down as a quote from Aurelius, somewhere in the Annals.

"...well, maybe," he said. The boy was too much of a straight lace to go himself, especially when he was certain to be caught. But he was also budding into manhood. My proud boast was the last thing needed to crush his wall of indecision. He told me where the bathing spot was.

I was indignant. I had had to wash myself with tiny water rations all this time. The women had a damned hot spring?

>"See you later, alligator," I shouted, whooping all the while. Scrivener Lee was too surprised at seeing an invalid run like the wind to demand I fulfill my part of the bargain.

>"We'll go there together later," I told him. Have I mentioned that I am a habitual liar? I was going to go that very evening.
>>
>>3623690
Historical fantasy, if I were to hazard a guess.
>>
>>3628364

>"See you later, alligator," I shouted, whooping all the while. Scrivener Lee was too surprised at seeing an invalid run like the wind to demand I fulfill my part of the bargain.

Its not for kids, piss off
Now, Aurellius, the mature, will be a peeping tom
>>
>>3628364

>"See you later, alligator," I shouted, whooping all the while. Scrivener Lee was too surprised at seeing an invalid run like the wind to demand I fulfill my part of the bargain.
>>
>>3628364
>>"See you later, alligator," I shouted, whooping all the while. Scrivener Lee was too surprised at seeing an invalid run like the wind to demand I fulfill my part of the bargain.

This can only end well.
>>
>>3628377
I predict arrows, daggers and even magic depending on the ones present

Wait....waaaaaaait
If Hood is bathing she won't have any weapons on her!
>>
>>3628380
>If Hood is bathing she won't have any weapons on her!
Not even a lalaw behuw knife to defend her modesty?

If it is not too late, lets grab a frigging shield.
>>
>>3628367
>>3628371
>>3628377
>>"See you later, alligator," I shouted, whooping all the while. Scrivener Lee was too surprised at seeing an invalid run like the wind to demand I fulfill my part of the bargain.

You may be thinking that I am something of a lecher, to sprint off to where there might be beautiful women in the middle of the day. I must disabuse you of that notion. I was a happily married man. I knew what sex was like. It was fun, but it wasn't the all-encompassing thirst that youngsters seem to think it to be. The truly intoxicating part in the marriage was the love between two people.

But I get ahead of myself. Singing of love is the role of poets. And my wife, as kind as she was, could not help but laugh at my poor attempts at flowery verse.

The biggest attraction was the hot spring itself. A life as a vagabond had given me many scars, visible and visible. The relatively fast rate of healing does not mean I do not crave the usual treatments of the wounded. I decided to take a long-awaited medical leave.

As I suspected, no one was here. It was a little after lunch. My brothers would be napping, rutting, playing cards, or taking their turn in the watch. I had the whole hot spring entirely to myself.

How shall I describe the submergence into the hot water? It was cleansing. I felt my sins wash away into fluffy nothingness. I immersed myself in the pool, lower and lower, until I was up to my nose. I got used to the rotten egg smell very quickly. It is from a chemical that is a natural byproduct of the hot spring process, I have been told.

The plan was to relax like this for a while, until the usual bath time started. I would hide behind a rock, or a tree, or something. I didn't want to think about it. I didn't want to think about anything. And by not thinking at all, I fell asleep. I believe I dreamed a dream. It was a very good dream, one that would make any red-blooded man go quick. Just as the peak of the oneiric experience was about to be attained, a chorus of feminine voices from a distance, out of sight, woke me.

>I was far too gone to rush out of the pool. Besides, there were no trees here, only rocks. I was not about to leave the comforting depth of the hot spring to shiver beside a rock. "Let them come," I muttered defiantly to myself. "I was here first."

>And I bravely ran away.
>>
>>3628384
>>I was far too gone to rush out of the pool. Besides, there were no trees here, only rocks. I was not about to leave the comforting depth of the hot spring to shiver beside a rock. "Let them come," I muttered defiantly to myself. "I was here first."
>>
>>3628384
>>I was far too gone to rush out of the pool. Besides, there were no trees here, only rocks. I was not about to leave the comforting depth of the hot spring to shiver beside a rock. "Let them come," I muttered defiantly to myself. "I was here first."
>>
>>3628384
>>I was far too gone to rush out of the pool. Besides, there were no trees here, only rocks. I was not about to leave the comforting depth of the hot spring to shiver beside a rock. "Let them come," I muttered defiantly to myself. "I was here first."
It is in the culture to talk mixed baths anyway.
>>
>>3628384

>I was far too gone to rush out of the pool. Besides, there were no trees here, only rocks. I was not about to leave the comforting depth of the hot spring to shiver beside a rock. "Let them come," I muttered defiantly to myself. "I was here first."
Announce our presence so they don't step near already naked. We try not to be a perv most of the time
>>
>>3628384

>And I bravely ran away.
>>
>>3628384
>And I bravely ran away.
>>
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>>3628386
>>3628389
>>3628390
>>3628392
>I was far too gone to rush out of the pool. Besides, there were no trees here, only rocks. I was not about to leave the comforting depth of the hot spring to shiver beside a rock. "Let them come," I muttered defiantly to myself. "I was here first."

"Sup." I raised my hand in greeting as the first woman came around the rocks. A whole group of women followed. Most of them I didn't know personally. One or two of them I knew personally. Scattered amidst the feminine Horde were my platoon mates - Dumpling, Morion, Hood. And Honey.

"I am betrayed," I said sadly, ignoring the scandalised looks. Normally I would have boldly run away. This was not a normal time. "Sweat and tears, Honey. Time and backbreaking labour like you were my own daughter, and this is how you pay me back. Hiding the existence of a hot spring to your wounded caretaker." At least Honey had the decency to blush and hide behind Dumpling. Hood was calmly notching an arrow on her bow.

"What do we have here?" I looked up behind me. There was the statuesque form of Captain, unmistakable with her blue hair. And unlike the other women, who were still dressed, she was completely in the nude. I squinted. Not completely. She was still wearing that stupid hat of hers. I unsquinted and tilted my head even further back.

A niggling question that had always dogged me in my idle moments was answered that day.

>"Hello, Cap'n." Hot springs are dangerous things. Avoid them if you can. The flippancy with which I greeted the naked Captain was the one thing that would haunt me for the rest of my life.

>"Please don't kill me." Cowardice is a good thing. It has kept me alive on a number of occasions. Besides, women love weaklings. They like to think they can make the weak stronger by their ministrations. I should know, there was that time in Xuchang when-
>>
>>3628427
>>"Hello, Cap'n." Hot springs are dangerous things. Avoid them if you can. The flippancy with which I greeted the naked Captain was the one thing that would haunt me for the rest of my life.
>>
>>3628427
>"Hello, Cap'n." Hot springs are dangerous things. Avoid them if you can. The flippancy with which I greeted the naked Captain was the one thing that would haunt me for the rest of my life.
>>
>>3628427
>>"Please don't kill me." Cowardice is a good thing. It has kept me alive on a number of occasions. Besides, women love weaklings. They like to think they can make the weak stronger by their ministrations. I should know, there was that time in Xuchang when-
>>
>>3628427

>"Please don't kill me." Cowardice is a good thing. It has kept me alive on a number of occasions. Besides, women love weaklings. They like to think they can make the weak stronger by their ministrations. I should know, there was that time in Xuchang when-
>>
>>3628427
>>"Hello, Cap'n." Hot springs are dangerous things. Avoid them if you can. The flippancy with which I greeted the naked Captain was the one thing that would haunt me for the rest of my life.
>>"Please don't kill me." Cowardice is a good thing. It has kept me alive on a number of occasions. Besides, women love weaklings. They like to think they can make the weak stronger by their ministrations. I should know, there was that time in Xuchang when-

Hello Cap, please don't kill me
>>
>>3628454
This is too important a vote for me to allow you to merge the choices, diluting them. After all, the vote made here will decide you actually thought I would tell you before the vote ended, didn't you?
>>
>>3628427
>hello there
>scrivener Aurelius
>>
>>3628457
>>>"Please don't kill me." Cowardice is a good thing. It has kept me alive on a number of occasions. Besides, women love weaklings. They like to think they can make the weak stronger by their ministrations. I should know, there was that time in Xuchang when-

this then
>>
>>3628466
>>3628457
mostly because I don't want hot spring trauma and want to visit some others in the future
>>
>>3628427
>>"Hello, Cap'n." Hot springs are dangerous things. Avoid them if you can. The flippancy with which I greeted the naked Captain was the one thing that would haunt me for the rest of my life.
Live bravely
>>
>>3628427
>>"Please don't kill me." Cowardice is a good thing. It has kept me alive on a number of occasions. Besides, women love weaklings. They like to think they can make the weak stronger by their ministrations. I should know, there was that time in Xuchang when-

Actually I want to live
>>
>>3628427
>>"Hello, Cap'n." Hot springs are dangerous things. Avoid them if you can. The flippancy with which I greeted the naked Captain was the one thing that would haunt me for the rest of my life.
>>
>>3628427
>"Please don't kill me." Cowardice is a good thing. It has kept me alive on a number of occasions. Besides, women love weaklings. They like to think they can make the weak stronger by their ministrations. I should know, there was that time in Xuchang when-
>>
>>3628427
>>"Hello, Cap'n." Hot springs are dangerous things. Avoid them if you can. The flippancy with which I greeted the naked Captain was the one thing that would haunt me for the rest of my life.
>>
>>3628427
>"Im married man!" Someone said that best defense is offense.
>>
>>3628427

>"Please don't kill me." Cowardice is a good thing. It has kept me alive on a number of occasions. Besides, women love weaklings. They like to think they can make the weak stronger by their ministrations. I should know, there was that time in Xuchang when-
>>
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I came back from a wonderful bath for a tie. As far as QM curses go, it's pretty mild.
>>
>"Hello, Cap'n." Hot springs are dangerous things. Avoid them if you can. The flippancy with which I greeted the naked Captain was the one thing that would haunt me for the rest of my life.
>>
>>3628582
Wessa gonna die...
>>
>>3628427
>>"Hello, Cap'n." Hot springs are dangerous things. Avoid them if you can. The flippancy with which I greeted the naked Captain was the one thing that would haunt me for the rest of my life.
>>
Fuck you OP for making me think ForgottenQM is back.
>>
>>3628638
Nigga he's gotta fuck some 'Roos in the outback.
>>
>>3628638
He never left
>>
>>3628638
You realise Forgotten IS back and is doing "Sworn to Valour" right?
>>
>>3628638
>>3599087
>>
>"Hello, Cap'n." Hot springs are dangerous things. Avoid them if you can. The flippancy with which I greeted the naked Captain was the one thing that would haunt me for the rest of my life.

No one said a word. Hood withdrew her notched arrow with a self-satisfied smirk. Dumpling covered Honey's eyes and closed her own.

Captain laughed.

"I like this one," she said. "He's got spunk, if no sense. Aurelius, you are the first Scrivener who has had the gall to talk with me so freely." Scriveners like myself were chosen because of our fluency in various languages, which apparently translated into medical work as well. It did mean we weren't part of the regular training, naturally resulting in a stereotype of us being less martial than the rest of the brothers.

An entirely undeserved reputation. I could swing my sword as well as any brother of mine. I told her exactly what I thought about that stereotype.

"Aurelius!" Dumpling hissed. "What do you think you are doing? Get out of the pool, right now!"

"Oh no, let him enjoy himself," Captain said. "After all, our brave Scrivener needs his rest time for his next task."

"Yes!" I agreed enthusiastically. Mars preserve me, I was well and truly comfort-drunk. "There are tomes to transcribe, books to boggle. Women to womble..."

"A Khagan to send a message to," Captain suggested.

"Exactly. A Khagan to... to... what?" The magic of the hot spring was rapidly expiring.

"Scrivener Aurelius, you and your platoon will be my little ambassadors to the Khagan of the Horsefucker Horde."

Hood shot at me.

Captain Zhukova was faster. She dived into the water, quicker than I could scream "Aieeeeee!" and cover my family heirloom. When she came back up, the arrowshaft was between her teeth. She chomped on the wood, crackling it to pieces. That woman was a biter.

"Save your arrows for the Magal, Trooper Hood," she said in a commanding tone after spitting out the splinters. Then she added, "Good aim, though." She gave her a thumbs up.

Hood did not look happy despite the compliment. I was understandably upset. But the thing I learned was equally valuable.

>"The carpets match the drapes," I declared in front of the expectant male members of the platoon. They gasped in wonder and amazement.

>I knew I was already walking on tightropes. It was a secret I would keep to my grave. A betrayal to the male segment of the human race, I know, but I would rather betray the world than have the world betray me.
>>
>>3628427
>"Hello, Cap'n." Hot springs are dangerous things. Avoid them if you can. The flippancy with which I greeted the naked Captain was the one thing that would haunt me for the rest of my life.
>>
>>3628657
>>"The carpets match the drapes," I declared in front of the expectant male members of the platoon. They gasped in wonder and amazement.

Your writing constantly makes me laugh, good work
>>
>>3628657
>>I knew I was already walking on tightropes. It was a secret I would keep to my grave. A betrayal to the male segment of the human race, I know, but I would rather betray the world than have the world betray me.
>>
>>3628663
Thanks, apparently I should fuck myself for not being as good as ForgottenQM. If that was the standard all the other QMs would be hanging in the gallows.
>>
>>3628657
>>"The carpets match the drapes," I declared in front of the expectant male members of the platoon. They gasped in wonder and amazement.

We went too far to chicken out
>>
>>3628657
>"The carpets match the drapes," I declared in front of the expectant male members of the platoon. They gasped in wonder and amazement.
>>
>>3628657
>>"The carpets match the drapes," I declared in front of the expectant male members of the platoon. They gasped in wonder and amazement.
>>
>>3628657

>I knew I was already walking on tightropes. It was a secret I would keep to my grave. A betrayal to the male segment of the human race, I know, but I would rather betray the world than have the world betray me.

Gentlemen do not tell


And fuck, we screw over the entire battalion, I feel bad.
>>
>>3628657
>"The carpets match the drapes," I declared in front of the expectant male members of the platoon. They gasped in wonder and amazement.
>>
>>3628657
>>"The carpets match the drapes," I declared in front of the expectant male members of the platoon. They gasped in wonder and amazement.
>>
>>3628657
>I knew I was already walking on tightropes. It was a secret I would keep to my grave. A betrayal to the male segment of the human race, I know, but I would rather betray the world than have the world betray me.
That's no woman. That's a fucking monster.
>>
>>3628657
>>"The carpets match the drapes," I declared in front of the expectant male members of the platoon. They gasped in wonder and amazement.
>>
>>3628663
>>3628669
>>3628670
>>3628671
>>3628673
>>3628677
>"The carpets match the drapes," I declared in front of the expectant male members of the platoon. They gasped in wonder and amazement.

"No," Sister said disbelievingly. "Really? Blue is her natural colour?"

"How does that even work?" Sergeant wondered.

"Could be an artefact glamour," Trevain muttered thoughtfully. "I once had a whore in Poyang who went around in that getup. Had pink for hair. She costed extra if you wanted her to use cat ears."

We were huddled in our man cave, soundproofed with pillows and bedsheets. A large "NO WOMEN ALLOWED" sign was posted outside, courtesy of Sergeant. He was a man too. Everyone wanted to know.

"She was naked as the day she was born, Corporal," I sighed. "Don't just speed-listen."

"You said she had her hat on."

"For all I know, she had it on when she popped out of her mother's womb," I replied. We then took a moment to appreciate the image of Captain Zhukova's mother. None of us had ever seen Captain carry any kind of memento to do with her family. We could only imagine.

"So exactly how large were her..." Sister gulped, "assets? This big?"

I stared at him. Sister made a choking noise, and enlarged the boundary of the imaginary sphere contained with his hands. I shook my head. Not there yet. Theophilos gave an appreciative whistle.

"What?" he said defensively, when we turned to look at him. None of us had heard him come in. "I am a man."

"Shut up, Theophilos," Corporal Trevain said. "We aren't in an Arthur Miller play."

"Fuck the tits," Sergeant said. Oh would I ever! "How was the ass? Pillowy? Or is she one of those tight people? Or maybe even-"

"Knock-knock," a sing-song voice pierced the mancave.

>"...Who's there?" I felt a chill in my back.

>"Go away, we don't want a subscription!" I was just about to get to the good part.
>>
>>3628723
>"Go away, we don't want a subscription!" I was just about to get to the good part.
>>
>>3628723
>>"Go away, we don't want a subscription!" I was just about to get to the good part.
>>
>>3628723
>"...Who's there?" I felt a chill in my back.

Ten gold pieces it's Honey.
>>
>>3628723

>"...Who's there?" I felt a chill in my back.
>>
>>3628723

>"...Who's there?" I felt a chill in my back.
>>
>>3628723
>"Go away, we don't want a subscription!" I was just about to get to the good part.
>>
>>3628744
You're on.
>>
>>3628723
>>"...Who's there?" I felt a chill in my back.
>>
>>3628779
>>3628749
>>3628747
>"...Who's there?" I felt a chill in my back.

"You disappoint me, Aurelius," the voice replied playfully. "I would hope you would at least remember the voice of the girl you are responsible for. You rogue."

My head scrolled over the intimate encounters I had in the last eleven years. There were three, and none of them were in the Company. It's hard to find bedfellows while on the road. "I don't remember doing anything so naughty," I replied. Who could it be? The voice was too muffled for me to recognise. "Wait, is this Hood?"

Pause. "I will need to hear about this relationship between Trooper Hood and you, Scrivener." The cold steel in that voice. The clipped and precise accent which betrayed a hint of northwestern Varangian. But more than that, the implied threat dripping from every syllable.

"...Captain?"

The Black Company is formed with a tight bond that begins with the platoon. Brothers are expected to eat together, sleep together, and fight together. It was that iron resolve that makes the Company so remarkable as a fighting unit, and allowed it to go on where others had failed.

When Captain came into the picture, all the camaraderie of being perverts together dried out. Instead of waiting for the Captain to enter, they ejected me from the cave. I found myself on my butt, looking up at the uncomfortably tall Captain. "Hello there, darling," she said in a sickly-sweet voice. She dropped to her knees so that her inhumanly beautiful face were mere inches away from mine. "Are you ready to ride? Good." She didn't wait for me to answer. "It's time to meet the Khagan."

The price I had to pay to gain the forbidden knowledge of the Danube Blues was gaining the attention of Captain Zhukova.

>It was worth it. I have no regrets.

>And that, my brothers, is a price too terrible for anything in the world.
>>
>>3628807

>And that, my brothers, is a price too terrible for anything in the world.
More suffering
Now getting shot by Hood seems like a blessing
>>
>>3628807
>And that, my brothers, is a price too terrible for anything in the world.

i don't want to end up like the captain and scrivener couple that got hanged.
>>
>>3628807
>And that, my brothers, is a price too terrible for anything in the world.
>>
>>3628815
That's only because they tried to leave the Company.
>>
>>3628813
At least Hood's arrows are always filled with L.O.V.E. also know as, Level Of Violence
>>
>>3628823
If you put the captain picture as darksaber you gonna get lot of people to go to her. We need pictures QM!!
>>
>>3628807
>It was worth it. I have no regrets.
Channel our inner Postal Dude.
>>
>>3628807

>And that, my brothers, is a price too terrible for anything in the world.
>>
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>>3628831
I have no idea who Darksaber is, and I only picked the anime character "Esdeath" as Captain as a nod to ForgottenQM's Black Company Quest. Someone more acquainted with anime stuff can probably find better images.

Have a piccy while I am busy writing the other thread.
>>
>>3628807
>>It was worth it. I have no regrets.
>>
>>3628860
What other thread? Do you have another quest?
>>
>>3628807
>It was worth it. I have no regrets.
>>
>>3628807
>>It was worth it. I have no regrets.
>>
>>3628807
>>It was worth it. I have no regrets.
>>
>>3628807

>And that, my brothers, is a price too terrible for anything in the world.
>>
>>3628807

>And that, my brothers, is a price too terrible for anything in the world.
>>
>And that, my brothers, is a price too terrible for anything in the world.

"Get up, sleepy bones," Dumpling poked me in the rib. I woke up immediately.

"What time is it?" I asked. It was dark out.

"Time to go to the Khagan. Oh no you don't," she said as I turned over in my bedsheet. "You got us in this mess. You are coming with us."

"I'm a Scrivener," I pleaded. "I know nothing about fighting." Come to think of it, there had been precious little fighting in the three months I was in the Company. There was the introductory bandit attack, but that had basically been it. This level of inactivity was apparently usual between jobs, according to the Annals.

"You're a good fighter," Dumpling chuckled. "I saw the might of your shortsword yesterday." I blushed. The man in the hot spring was not me. The Great Enemy must have ensorcelled me that day. I really didn't know what came over me. I shut up about my fighting skills and started to dress.

The current holder of the commission was a prefect of one of the northern Imperial provinces. Apparently he was more caring of his people than usual. Being next to the Magal probably helped that. Not paying attention to his lands would have quickly resulted in a Magal invasion. That was why he had payed the expenses to hire the Company all those months ago.

We were wasted here. There was nothing to do. That was the way I liked it. This adventuresome emissary business to the Khagan sounded like just the kind of thing that would be written in the Annals. I wanted no truck with it.

Captain was waiting for us with the horses. Everyone had already been saddled. I grumpily took my place on the last horse, a miserable wretch named Bozo. It was nothing like the Magal horse that Shamaness had lent me. Sinaean horses are, as a rule, bad-tempered, hunch-backed, small, and unwilling to obey orders.

"That sounds like you," Sergeant said as we rode, when I shared my examination. "All you do is complain. Complain, complain, complain."

I silently theorised that Sergeant was beginning to see me as a paternal figure. That was the only justification for his newfound hostility towards me.

"Well, I guess this is goodbye, Captain," I said. A single platoon with no silver-tongued diplomat type to navigate the bothersome Magal traditions and customs. We were almost certainly going to die. "Please don't forget about me in the Annals. And omit the part about my golden eyes."

"What are you talking about?" she asked. My heart lifted. Had she reconsidered, after all? Had Lieutenant talked over the wastefulness of sending a platoon away to their deaths? "I'm going with you. I have to be there so I can kill that Khagan fuckwad myself."

We were all going to die.

>And I bravely rode away. Away from the Company, away from the mad Captain, away from the Magal Horde that was forming just north.

>I followed with the certainty of the man meeting his maker. At least Honey was being taken care of.
>>
>>3629024
>>I followed with the certainty of the man meeting his maker. At least Honey was being taken care of.
>>
>>3629024
>I followed with the certainty of the man meeting his maker. At least Honey was being taken care of.
>>
>>3629024
>>I followed with the certainty of the man meeting his maker. At least Honey was being taken care of.
>>
>>3629024
>>And I bravely rode away. Away from the Company, away from the mad Captain, away from the Magal Horde that was forming just north.

Cowards live
>>
>>3629024

>I followed with the certainty of the man meeting his maker. At least Honey was being taken care of.

Not gonna run and be hanged.
Time to flirt with Hood and see if we can get shot and left behind as an injuried soldier
>>
>>3628427

>"Hello, Cap'n." Hot springs are dangerous things. Avoid them if you can. The flippancy with which I greeted the naked Captain was the one thing that would haunt me for the rest of my life.

Idk should we try to pull the cap into the hot springs and then we run away? Or do we do a call and get all thr men in here and start a water pool fight?
>>
>>3629024

>I followed with the certainty of the man meeting his maker. At least Honey was being taken care of.
>>
>>3628647
Are you fucking kidding me? Pmfg iv been passih over that quest this whole time not knowing rrrrrrreeeeeeeee!!!!!!!
>>
>>3629024
>I followed with the certainty of the man meeting his maker. At least Honey was being taken care of.
We are but the delivery weapons system to the WMD known as the Captain.
>>
>>3629024
And I bravely rode away. Away from the Company, away from the mad Captain, away from the Magal Horde that was forming just north.
>>
>>3629024
>I followed with the certainty of the man meeting his maker. At least Honey was being taken care of.
>>
>inb4 the Khagan wants to make a offer for the black company. Join him and take part of the spoils they take or be crushed under the hooves of his horde.
>>
>I followed with the certainty of the man meeting his maker. At least Honey was being taken care of.

If there was anything I hated more than traitors, it was father-figures who fell off their horse before saying anything like "I'm proud of you, son." Or "I always trusted in you."

Come to think of it, I never said those to Honey either. I turned my horse around. "You're not going back," Captain said as she caught me with her arm when I tried to go back.

"I have to," I said urgently. "Honey needs me. I need to provide a memory of a dependable father figure. What was Honey going to become without at least a memory of a good man in her life?" Nothing good, I imagined. She might even join a mercenary company. I shuddered.

She chuckled. "She doesn't need you for a dependable father figure, Scrivener Aurelius. And if you are so worried about her, come back alive and do it later. We have work to do." Her steely arms brooked no further argument. I am not ashamed to say that I cried a little, knowing as I did that I would die without saying goodbye to Honey.

===

Nine horses rode down the dusty plains of Beidi. Three hawks circled above our heads, following our route. Sister said that it was a good sign. Hawks were the animals of the heavens.

"You are thinking of eagles," I told him. That made him droop on his saddle. Morale was low ever since our Captain shared us the plan. She had been negotiating a marriage with the Khagan. I wasn't surprised she had managed that. The Captain was a beauty, one who could have turned heads even in the Capital. If it wasn't for her personality, she could have lived an easy life as the primary wife of some wealthy pontifex. Even now, after a week on the move, she looked as fresh as the day she stepped into the hot spring.

When she noticed my stares, she winked. I turned my face around.

I knew that her face wasn't the only thing the Khagan was looking forward to. The Black Company was well known for a reason. We endured where others faltered. Our soldiers were forged in the fires of war, contracted as they were until their deaths. Brothers in truth as well as name, the Company was family for most of us. With the Captain, he must have reasoned, would come the Company.

What the Khagan was forgetting was that we were also loyal to our comission. I had only been with the Company for three months. This was my first tour of duty. I just hoped it wouldn't be the last.
>>
>>3629329

The welcoming party was extravagant. Richly robed men in powerful steeds came to greet us, and gave us new, fresh mounts. They were elated. The wedding was a big event. One thousand sheep had already been marked for the slaughter. The entire Horde was celebrating.

The Magal do not have a concept of a wedding of treachery. They believe all weddings are overseen by the gods. The very idea of using wedding as a tool of war is, to them, anathema. Each happy face glowing toward me was like a stab in the gut. Simple men, simple lives. What makes kind men take up arms against others? The Khagan had many and much to answer for.

They welcomed us like treasured guests. Smiles, laughter, blessings abounded. Well-wishers shouted prayers for fertility and good health at Captain, who remained impassive through it all. Even Theophilos found soft words and smiling greetings here. Two girls giggled as they kissed his cheeks, then ran away.

"Treachery," Hood said. "I don't like this. All this skulking around, stabbing people in the back." She scowled at me. She was thinking about her own island, how half of it was ravaged by the legions. I was ever her scapegoat whenever the topic of Imperials came up because of my golden eyes.

"Less said about it, the better," Morion said. The Company does not fight fair, not if we can help it. She was born and raised among Company men, and came to take up the Oath when she was of age. "Just do as the Captain says, and we will live to see the next campaign."

>I tried not to think about it. I thought instead of the imagined Magal Horde, one that would sweep south through the hole filled Wall like an iron fist, the divided Imperial governors and prefects crumbling under their iron hooves. "Barbarians," I tried to reason with myself. They were less than men. Subhuman. I failed.

>I leave the moralising to the philosophers. It is too much to think about in our labour-filled lives. Let intellectuals in their marbled towers speak sonorously over the nature of life and misery. I lived only to live another day.
>>
>>3629335
>>I leave the moralising to the philosophers. It is too much to think about in our labour-filled lives. Let intellectuals in their marbled towers speak sonorously over the nature of life and misery. I lived only to live another day.
>>
>>3629335
>>I tried not to think about it. I thought instead of the imagined Magal Horde, one that would sweep south through the hole filled Wall like an iron fist, the divided Imperial governors and prefects crumbling under their iron hooves. "Barbarians," I tried to reason with myself. They were less than men. Subhuman. I failed.
>>
>>3629335

>I tried not to think about it. I thought instead of the imagined Magal Horde, one that would sweep south through the hole filled Wall like an iron fist, the divided Imperial governors and prefects crumbling under their iron hooves. "Barbarians," I tried to reason with myself. They were less than men. Subhuman. I failed.

Its never pretty.
Let's hope we don't become a pragmatic fag and at least feel bad about this.
>>
>>3629335
>I tried not to think about it. I thought instead of the imagined Magal Horde, one that would sweep south through the hole filled Wall like an iron fist, the divided Imperial governors and prefects crumbling under their iron hooves. "Barbarians," I tried to reason with myself. They were less than men. Subhuman. I failed.
>>
>>3629335

>I tried not to think about it. I thought instead of the imagined Magal Horde, one that would sweep south through the hole filled Wall like an iron fist, the divided Imperial governors and prefects crumbling under their iron hooves. "Barbarians," I tried to reason with myself. They were less than men. Subhuman. I failed.
>>
>>3629376
You incorrigible romantic, you
>>
>>3629335
>>I leave the moralising to the philosophers. It is too much to think about in our labour-filled lives. Let intellectuals in their marbled towers speak sonorously over the nature of life and misery. I lived only to live another day.
>>
>>3629383
Honestly i just don't want to be prince 2.0
>>
>>3629335
>>I leave the moralising to the philosophers. It is too much to think about in our labour-filled lives. Let intellectuals in their marbled towers speak sonorously over the nature of life and misery. I lived only to live another day.
>>
>>3629335

>I tried not to think about it. I thought instead of the imagined Magal Horde, one that would sweep south through the hole filled Wall like an iron fist, the divided Imperial governors and prefects crumbling under their iron hooves. "Barbarians," I tried to reason with myself. They were less than men. Subhuman. I failed.
>>
>>3629335
>>I tried not to think about it. I thought instead of the imagined Magal Horde, one that would sweep south through the hole filled Wall like an iron fist, the divided Imperial governors and prefects crumbling under their iron hooves. "Barbarians," I tried to reason with myself. They were less than men. Subhuman. I failed.
>>
>>3629335

>I tried not to think about it. I thought instead of the imagined Magal Horde, one that would sweep south through the hole filled Wall like an iron fist, the divided Imperial governors and prefects crumbling under their iron hooves. "Barbarians," I tried to reason with myself. They were less than men. Subhuman. I failed.
>>
>I tried not to think about it. I thought instead of the imagined Magal Horde, one that would sweep south through the hole filled Wall like an iron fist, the divided Imperial governors and prefects crumbling under their iron hooves. "Barbarians," I tried to reason with myself. They were less than men. Subhuman. I failed.

I consider myself a friend to all humans who would extend the same courtesy to myself. I wasn't queasy about taking the lives of bandits, or killing men while looking in their eyes. Simple enough to kill a faceless horde characterised by the colours of their banners. It is when helmets become faces, and banners turn into family emblems, that things become hard.

These people pass down their unique familial themes. Motifs. They become the basis for the decors of the next generation. And from the foundation of the ancestors, they weave something new. See how the Hawk evolves over the different weavers. Each Horse tells a tale of its own unique herd. Do not despise them for their nomadic lifestyle, my son. Someday, you will rule over these people.

Fool of a father. I caressed the carefully threaded robes that they had given us, filled with charms and wards against ill health and bad luck. Gold and green and red they were, signifying wealth, health, and longevity. A single thread of white ran horizontally through my coat of many colours, representing the flat plains of Beidi.

I am not a trained singer. My extensive education in the Schola did not account for the skillset required for a troupe. Bringing joy to other people is considered a vulgar profession, while learning how to plot the death of others is considered the greatest of virtues.

But I dabbled in poetry once, and song and poems go hand in hand like my wife and I did during Saturnalia, so very long ago. Stretching my mind back even further to the past, I remembered of the Varangians. A horse people, one who were not so dissimilar to the Magal. A people in mourning, who nevertheless found every occasion to sing.
>>
>>3629469

Remember, Alyosha, the roads of Smolenshchina,
Remember the rain and the mud and the pain,
The women, exhausted, who brought milk in pitchers,
And clasped them like babies at breast, from the rain.

The whispering words as we passed them - "Gods bless you!"
The eyes where they secretly wiped away tears.
And how they all promised they would be "soldatki",
- The words of old Varangia from earlier years.

The road disappearing past hills in the distance,
Its length that we measured with tears on the run.
And villages, villages, temples and graveyards,
As if all of Varangia were gathered in one.

It seemed that in each village we passed through,
The hands of our ancestors under the sod
Were making the sign of Svarog and protecting
Their children, no longer believers in their ancestral gods.

Remember, Alyosha, the hut at Borisov,
The cry of the widow as she mourned, and the sight
Of the grey-haired old mother, her velveteen jacket,
The old man, as if dressed for death, all in white.


Hood shot an arrow at me half-heartedly after I finished. "You're bringing the mood down," she scolded.

I did not sleep well that night.
>>
>>3629476

Morning found me doing my daily stretch. I may be merely a Scrivener, but the habit was burned into me in what seemed like many lifetimes ago. At this time of the day, only the womenfolk and the children were awake. The men were asleep.

"That's the pale-faced man!" the children whispered among themselves. They giggled when I stretched. Some copied me, from a distance. When I started executing more complicated moves, they panted in exertion as they did their best in following.

Children. They are such fragile vessels, so willing to adapt and accept from older vessels. We adults abuse them so by giving as inheritance violence and strife.

Captain found me playing with the children. I was "it".

>I immediately tagged her. "You're it!" I cried.

>I had to shoo the children away. "Orders, sir?" I asked.
>>
>>3629488
>>I had to shoo the children away. "Orders, sir?" I asked.
>>
>>3629488
>>I had to shoo the children away. "Orders, sir?" I asked.
>>
>>3629488

>>I had to shoo the children away. "Orders, sir?" I asked.
>>
>>3629488

>>I had to shoo the children away. "Orders, sir?" I asked.

Isn't it ma'am?
>>
>>3629488
>I immediately tagged her. "You're it!" I cried.
>>
>>3629488
>>I had to shoo the children away. "Orders, sir?" I asked.
>>
>>3629488
>I had to shoo the children away. "Orders, sir?" I asked

Is this the time we kill everyone in their sleep?
>>
>>3629488
>I immediately tagged her. "You're it!" I cried.
>>
>>3629492
>>3629496
>>3629502
>>3629516
>>3629525
>>3629537
>I had to shoo the children away. "Orders, sir?" I asked.

"Ma'am."

"Ma'am. Orders?" I must have been half asleep.

"I didn't see you at the feast last night." It was true. I had spent much of the evening scribbling slim verses of poetry and remembering my wife. And for a dangerous moment, my father.

"I had a lot on my plate," I replied. She raised a blue eyebrow. "Literally. I had food brought in."

"Mmhmm," she said. "Did you see me in the dress?" I shook my head. "You should. Come on."

>"Uh, do you have actual orders for me? Because I was tagged three times by Ayshe, and I was actually looking forward to making her it this time." That girl was troublesome to catch, more due to her size than her speed. I would never in my life admit to being outsped by some wisp of a girl.

>I followed. Weddings are a special occasion in any woman's life, even one as cold and heartless as Captain. I supposed she wanted to flaunt herself to someone she knew.
>>
>>3629602
>>I followed. Weddings are a special occasion in any woman's life, even one as cold and heartless as Captain. I supposed she wanted to flaunt herself to someone she knew

Oh boy we're going to die
>>
>>3629602
>>"Uh, do you have actual orders for me? Because I was tagged three times by Ayshe, and I was actually looking forward to making her it this time." That girl was troublesome to catch, more due to her size than her speed. I would never in my life admit to being outsped by some wisp of a girl.
>>
>>3629602
>I followed. Weddings are a special occasion in any woman's life, even one as cold and heartless as Captain. I supposed she wanted to flaunt herself to someone she knew
>>
>>3629602

>"Uh, do you have actual orders for me? Because I was tagged three times by Ayshe, and I was actually looking forward to making her it this time." That girl was troublesome to catch, more due to her size than her speed. I would never in my life admit to being outsped by some wisp of a girl.


I know she is inviting us just as an excuse to talk in private and probably relay the murder plan but I want to play dumb
>>
>"Uh, do you have actual orders for me? Because I was tagged three times by Ayshe, and I was actually looking forward to making her it this time." That girl was troublesome to catch, more due to her size than her speed. I would never in my life admit to being outsped by some wisp of a girl.
>>
>>3629602
>>I followed. Weddings are a special occasion in any woman's life, even one as cold and heartless as Captain. I supposed she wanted to flaunt herself to someone she knew.
>>
>>3623993
Well you can make any black company in any world THE black company.
Books of the south and the many deaths were /weird/ like that

Don't be humble about your craft op, this writing immediately stands out as solid, even GOOD.
>>
>>3629602

>I followed. Weddings are a special occasion in any woman's life, even one as cold and heartless as Captain. I supposed she wanted to flaunt herself to someone she knew.
>>
>>3629602
>I followed. Weddings are a special occasion in any woman's life, even one as cold and heartless as Captain. I supposed she wanted to flaunt herself to someone she knew.
>>
>>3629602
>>I followed. Weddings are a special occasion in any woman's life, even one as cold and heartless as Captain. I supposed she wanted to flaunt herself to someone she knew.
>>
>>3629602
>>I followed. Weddings are a special occasion in any woman's life, even one as cold and heartless as Captain. I supposed she wanted to flaunt herself to someone she knew.
>>
>>3629602
>Uh, do you have actual orders for me? Because I was tagged three times by Ayshe, and I was actually looking forward to making her it this time." That girl was troublesome to catch, more due to her size than her speed. I would never in my life admit to being outsped by some wisp of a girl.
>>
>>3629602
>>I followed. Weddings are a special occasion in any woman's life, even one as cold and heartless as Captain. I supposed she wanted to flaunt herself to someone she knew.
>>
>>3630662
>>3630340
>>3629997
>>3629840
>>3629736
>>3629648
>>3629613
>>3629610
>I followed. Weddings are a special occasion in any woman's life, even one as cold and heartless as Captain. I supposed she wanted to flaunt herself to someone she knew.

So I resigned myself to being dragged by Captain's hands. Her silvery blue hair tickled my nose as we darted around the tents, between outgoing sheep herders and embers from yesterday's feast. Strong winds were a constant in the Beidi plains. The one eternal companion to their unrecorded lives.

Women were busily preparing things in the main tent of ceremonies. Carpets of every colour I could imagine covered the inside from wall to ceiling, a necessary preparation in blocking out the knifelike winds from outside. Simpler patterns, practice-ones and children's-ones, covered the floor. The seat of honour, where the bride and the bridegroom would be placed, had the cloth with the most elaborate patterns and needlework.

"Those two carpets, with the thorn pattern," Captain pointed. "They were my grandmother's."

I wasn't surprised. The Magal and the Varangians share many similarities. Marriage and shared grazing grounds made them neighbours. Shamaness had a Varangian name, I remembered. Katyusha. Snow-pure.

Captain had disappeared. The other women were chatting merrily with each other despite the early hours, the only sign of their sleepiness a few discreet yawns. They stole glances at me while pretending to be busy talking with each other. "That man is cute! Why does he have golden eyes? Did he pain his pupils?" "I wonder if he's married to either of the Parthian twins we saw yesterday." "Have you seen the man with the scar-like mouth? I bet he is an able provider!"

Theophilos might find happiness here, I mused.

"The eyes are beyond my control," I told them in Old Parthian. The mother does not choose the colouring of her foal. An equestrian people, an equestrian language. They squealed, embarassed at being found gossiping, and fled the tent with breathless laughters and teasing curses.
>>
>>3630711

"Good, you chased them away." I turned. My legs turned to jelly. Captain Zhukova was wearing the traditional dress of the Magal, one reserved for the bride. It was by far the most intricately spun dress I had seen from the Magal. She had the majesty of an empress, one who could have stood side by side with the man who would conquer the world.

She spun around experimentally. Trinkets of brass and silver and gold jangled, the bracelets in her ankles and wrists clanging musically against each other. Her bare feet traced silently on the brushy sheep-wool carpets. The silk that covered her hair billowed like a cape.

And her eyes. So faraway. Remembering the lands of her fathers, dancing the same dance that her mothers would have done. Then she sang. She sang of the faraway hinterlands, the snow-capped Pyrennes. The gold-weighted wheats that would greet the overworked farmers in the start of autumnal months. She sang of the battles of her ancestors, the treacheries of her grandmothers.

The Varangians are different to the Magal in one regard. They would do everything to survive. And in that sense, they are very much like the Black Company. She sang of bloody vengeance, of ignominious treachery, honourable lords slain by hammers and sickles of uncaring peasants.

Of course I lied to the recruitment sergeant. I also spoke Varangian.

>And at that moment, I truly feared her. She was singing and dancing with all the sentimentality of a woman in love. Monster. Abomination. Mars help me, and I was sworn to her command. I realised then that the Black Company was so powerful not because of the individuals within, but its chief. Captain Zhukova, the Ice-Queen of Khulan.

>She was a bastard. A cold-hearted bitch. She had no qualms sinking a dagger into her unsuspecting would-be husband, had probably played him like a fiddle and khitar. And now she danced upon the ancestral symbols of the people she would betray. That was when I fell in love.
>>
>>3630717
>>And at that moment, I truly feared her. She was singing and dancing with all the sentimentality of a woman in love. Monster. Abomination. Mars help me, and I was sworn to her command. I realised then that the Black Company was so powerful not because of the individuals within, but its chief. Captain Zhukova, the Ice-Queen of Khulan.
>>
>>3630717
>>And at that moment, I truly feared her. She was singing and dancing with all the sentimentality of a woman in love. Monster. Abomination. Mars help me, and I was sworn to her command. I realised then that the Black Company was so powerful not because of the individuals within, but its chief. Captain Zhukova, the Ice-Queen of Khulan.
>>She was a bastard. A cold-hearted bitch. She had no qualms sinking a dagger into her unsuspecting would-be husband, had probably played him like a fiddle and khitar. And now she danced upon the ancestral symbols of the people she would betray. That was when I fell in love

Because I want to make it harder for OP and I'm very biased.
>>
This will not lock your character to a "route". Neither will I pursue a harem ending. Consider this a gauging of interest for the character Captain.
>>
>>3630717
Actually switching my vote here >>3630727
to back

>>3630732

I feel like both fit our character well, she's a monster, and she's powerful and we are strong because of her, and shit... we've fallen in love
>>
>>3630717
>And at that moment, I truly feared her. She was singing and dancing with all the sentimentality of a woman in love. Monster. Abomination. Mars help me, and I was sworn to her command. I realised then that the Black Company was so powerful not because of the individuals within, but its chief. Captain Zhukova, the Ice-Queen of Khulan.
>She was a bastard. A cold-hearted bitch. She had no qualms sinking a dagger into her unsuspecting would-be husband, had probably played him like a fiddle and khitar. And now she danced upon the ancestral symbols of the people she would betray. That was when I fell in love.
Tags: [Corruption] [Guro] [Blood] [Bride] [Clothed Female Nude Male] [Incest] [Horse] [Magical Girl] [Military] [Moral Degeneration] [Muscle] [Scar] [Sister] [Sleeping] [Sweating] [Torture] [Tutor]

Man this is one weird Doujin of a quest.
Just kidding, I was just curious about how many tags I can use to describe this quest.
>>
>>3630717
>And at that moment, I truly feared her. She was singing and dancing with all the sentimentality of a woman in love. Monster. Abomination. Mars help me, and I was sworn to her command. I realised then that the Black Company was so powerful not because of the individuals within, but its chief. Captain Zhukova, the Ice-Queen of Khulan.
>>
>>3630717
>And at that moment, I truly feared her. She was singing and dancing with all the sentimentality of a woman in love. Monster. Abomination. Mars help me, and I was sworn to her command. I realised then that the Black Company was so powerful not because of the individuals within, but its chief. Captain Zhukova, the Ice-Queen of Khulan.
>>
>>3630717
>>And at that moment, I truly feared her. She was singing and dancing with all the sentimentality of a woman in love. Monster. Abomination. Mars help me, and I was sworn to her command. I realised then that the Black Company was so powerful not because of the individuals within, but its chief. Captain Zhukova, the Ice-Queen of Khulan.
>>
>>3630717
>>And at that moment, I truly feared her. She was singing and dancing with all the sentimentality of a woman in love. Monster. Abomination. Mars help me, and I was sworn to her command. I realised then that the Black Company was so powerful not because of the individuals within, but its chief. Captain Zhukova, the Ice-Queen of Khulan.
>>
>>3630717
>>And at that moment, I truly feared her. She was singing and dancing with all the sentimentality of a woman in love. Monster. Abomination. Mars help me, and I was sworn to her command. I realised then that the Black Company was so powerful not because of the individuals within, but its chief. Captain Zhukova, the Ice-Queen of Khulan.
>>
>>3630711

>>And at that moment, I truly feared her. She was singing and dancing with all the sentimentality of a woman in love. Monster. Abomination. Mars help me, and I was sworn to her command. I realised then that the Black Company was so powerful not because of the individuals within, but its chief. Captain Zhukova, the Ice-Queen of Khulan

Damn this woman, we better watch Dumpling's, Hood's and Shamaness's back, she may try something
>>
>>3630937
Shamaness's is safe she isn't part of the horde.
>>
>>3630717
>And at that moment, I truly feared her. She was singing and dancing with all the sentimentality of a woman in love. Monster. Abomination. Mars help me, and I was sworn to her command. I realised then that the Black Company was so powerful not because of the individuals within, but its chief. Captain Zhukova, the Ice-Queen of Khulan.
>>
>>3630717
>>She was a bastard. A cold-hearted bitch. She had no qualms sinking a dagger into her unsuspecting would-be husband, had probably played him like a fiddle and khitar. And now she danced upon the ancestral symbols of the people she would betray. That was when I fell in love.
>>
>>3630717
>>And at that moment, I truly feared her. She was singing and dancing with all the sentimentality of a woman in love. Monster. Abomination. Mars help me, and I was sworn to her command. I realised then that the Black Company was so powerful not because of the individuals within, but its chief. Captain Zhukova, the Ice-Queen of Khulan.
>>
>>3630717
>She was a bastard. A cold-hearted bitch. She had no qualms sinking a dagger into her unsuspecting would-be husband, had probably played him like a fiddle and khitar. And now she danced upon the ancestral symbols of the people she would betray. That was when I fell in love.
>>
>>3631052
>>3630947
>>3630937
>>3630901
>>3630800
>>3630791
>>3630788
>>3630753
>And at that moment, I truly feared her. She was singing and dancing with all the sentimentality of a woman in love. Monster. Abomination. Mars help me, and I was sworn to her command. I realised then that the Black Company was so powerful not because of the individuals within, but its chief. Captain Zhukova, the Ice-Queen of Khulan.

The Magal make use of giant eagles, the size of foals, when they go to the hunt. Aquila chrysaetos. They are always female. The males are smaller, shyer, and weaker. A fully grown female can take on a wolf.

Her movements were reminiscent of the majestic bird of prey that so often decorated the patterned cloth of the Magal and the Varangians. The ever-circling predator, spinning round as she neared the ground. Tightening her talons around the prey's throat like a noose.

"Boo." She whispered. Her nose touched mine. It was very soft. I could not move, so transfixed was I by her predatory presence. "What did you think, Alyosha? Do I dance well? Am I not a fetching bride?" she laughed. Mother Venus. She had been listening in when I sang. She knew I spoke Varangian. She spoke in the guttural language of her forefathers. "You know, Aurelius, you are the first man to see me in my bridal gown." Her unrevealing blue bore into my gold.

My mouth dried. What did this woman want from me? "You don't have to do this," I replied in Varangian. "We could find another way to defeat the Horde. There will be no turning back if we go through this... this base treachery. The Magal will never trust a foreigner again."

How could they trust those who would trample all over what they held as most sacred? An angry Magal people, united in their hatred of outsiders. It dawned on me. "It will be an all-out war between Sinae and the entire Magal people."

I saw the answer in her eyes before she said the words.

"I know."

In her eyes was the vengeful ice of the Varangians. The proud and reclusive people who had been utterly destroyed by the Emperor for refusing to kneel, until the very end. Suddenly, I was very glad our platoon was the one to meet the legate, and not Captain. I didn't know how she might react to the crucifixions. She was much like Hood in that regard.

To think, my father was supposed to administrate over these people. What had the Emperor been thinking?

It is a good sign when the Magal riders are filled with mirth. Their only other emotion is fury.
>>
>>3631140

I am a Scrivener, not an officer. My rank was not even that of sergeant. The respect afforded to my office stems from tradition. You do not want to badmouth the man in charge of writing down your elegies. But it was not my place to make decisions.

>Showing initiative is for heroes. I kept my nose clean and waited for the day of the wedding. There was nothing that could be done. Once the Captain made her mind up, it was sure to be accomplished. The lump in my throat never went away.

>I decided to do something very, very foolish. Romantics are said to be the servants of Tyche, the Goddess of Fate. I wondered if she was giggling even now, watching my agonising decision-making.
>>
>>3631141
>>Showing initiative is for heroes. I kept my nose clean and waited for the day of the wedding. There was nothing that could be done. Once the Captain made her mind up, it was sure to be accomplished. The lump in my throat never went away.
>>
>>3631141
>>Showing initiative is for heroes. I kept my nose clean and waited for the day of the wedding. There was nothing that could be done. Once the Captain made her mind up, it was sure to be accomplished. The lump in my throat never went away.
>>
>>3631141
>>I decided to do something very, very foolish. Romantics are said to be the servants of Tyche, the Goddess of Fate. I wondered if she was giggling even now, watching my agonising decision-making.

let's at least try to prevent genocide
>>
>>3631141
>I decided to do something very, very foolish. Romantics are said to be the servants of Tyche, the Goddess of Fate. I wondered if she was giggling even now, watching my agonising decision-making.
>>
>>3631141
>>I decided to do something very, very foolish. Romantics are said to be the servants of Tyche, the Goddess of Fate. I wondered if she was giggling even now, watching my agonising decision-making.
>>
>>3631141

>>I decided to do something very, very foolish. Romantics are said to be the servants of Tyche, the Goddess of Fate. I wondered if she was giggling even now, watching my agonising decision-making.


Aaaaaa I'm scared! But mother didn't raise no coward, let's take action.
>>
>>3631141
>I decided to do something very, very foolish. Romantics are said to be the servants of Tyche, the Goddess of Fate. I wondered if she was giggling even now, watching my agonising decision-making.
>>
Let me guess we are about to challenge the leader of the horde for the captain's hand?
>>
>>3631181
worse, we are about to challenge the leader of the horde for the leadership of the horde
>>
>>3631141
>>I decided to do something very, very foolish. Romantics are said to be the servants of Tyche, the Goddess of Fate. I wondered if she was giggling even now, watching my agonising decision-making.
>>
>>3631141
>Showing initiative is for heroes. I kept my nose clean and waited for the day of the wedding. There was nothing that could be done. Once the Captain made her mind up, it was sure to be accomplished. The lump in my throat never went away.
>>
>>3631141
>I decided to do something very, very foolish. Romantics are said to be the servants of Tyche, the Goddess of Fate. I wondered if she was giggling even now, watching my agonising decision-making.
>>
>>3631141
>I decided to do something very, very foolish. Romantics are said to be the servants of Tyche, the Goddess of Fate. I wondered if she was giggling even now, watching my agonising decision-making.
>>
>>3631141
>I decided to do something very, very foolish. Romantics are said to be the servants of Tyche, the Goddess of Fate. I wondered if she was giggling even now, watching my agonising decision-making.
>>
>>3631141
>Showing initiative is for heroes. I kept my nose clean and waited for the day of the wedding. There was nothing that could be done. Once the Captain made her mind up, it was sure to be accomplished. The lump in my throat never went away.
>>
>>3631141
>>I decided to do something very, very foolish. Romantics are said to be the servants of Tyche, the Goddess of Fate. I wondered if she was giggling even now, watching my agonising decision-making.
>>
>>3631141
>>Showing initiative is for heroes. I kept my nose clean and waited for the day of the wedding. There was nothing that could be done. Once the Captain made her mind up, it was sure to be accomplished. The lump in my throat never went away
>>
>>3631140
>I decided to do something very, very foolish. Romantics are said to be the servants of Tyche, the Goddess of Fate. I wondered if she was giggling even now, watching my agonising decision-making.
>>
>>3631141
>>I decided to do something very, very foolish. Romantics are said to be the servants of Tyche, the Goddess of Fate. I wondered if she was giggling even now, watching my agonising decision-making.
PLOOOOT
>>
>>3631462
>>3631430
>>3631362
>>3631231
>>3631210
>>3631198
>>3631191
>>3631176
>>3631171
>>3631161
>>3631157
>>3631156
>I decided to do something very, very foolish. Romantics are said to be the servants of Tyche, the Goddess of Fate. I wondered if she was giggling even now, watching my agonising decision-making.

This was no way in account of any feeling of heroism that began gushing from my heart. If I was to remain alive after this, my participation of the event, indeed the event itself, would have to remain unknown by the general public. Heroes are heroes because someone blab about the operation afterward. It's unprofessional, that's what it is. I was Black Company. We may have the blackest of morals, but we prided ourselves in our professionalism.

"Poison," Hood suggested. She was the first person I had recruited for my little rebellion. Say what you will about her trigger-happy nature, but she was unhappy about the turn of events. When I told her what she was planning, that unhappiness turned into active dislike. "We poison the Khagan, and we no longer have to deal with the marriage."

"They do have doctors, you know," I said. "You think the most powerful man in the Horde isn't going to have people checking up on his health? Poison might just increase the paranoia."

"An accident, then?" Dumpling suggested. "They don't have shamans here, I don't think."

"Risky." Magic was, at the best of times, unstable. This was a delicate operation. The most of magic I wanted used was glamours and misdirective spells, not direct thaumaturgic attacks. Don't get me wrong, Dumpling was more than competent in her craft. But the kind of magic that does not scream arcane fuckery afterward tended to require far more than competence. "He travels with bodyguards. Any "accident" that gets all of them will be met with suspicion. Who do you think they're going to point fingers at first, one of them, or some strangers they barely know?"

Hood threw a ball of lambwool at me. "Look, we're offering solutions, and you are only shooting them down. What idea did you have?"

I had none. That was the thing. I could not think of anything. It isn't as if I was trained in some assassin school. I had a very ordinary life until eleven years ago, as ordinary a life as being in the Capital would allow.
>>
>>3631645

"Just challenge the Khagan during the wedding for Captain's hand," Trevain said off-handedly, reading a flowery Gaelic novel in one hand. On its covers were two barely-dressed men. They were looking at each other hungrily, like hunches of meat. "Honourable, justifiable. Makes for a good story."

"...and a good story makes it easier for them to swallow." Dumpling said slowly. Oh no.

"An ardent youth, who couldn't stop himself from throwing his life against the man that stole his beloved," a smile began creep on Hood's face. I wished they wouldn't look at me like that.

"Someone who could loudly announce to the world his love for Captain Khuzova," Trevain said idly.

I raised a hopeful finger. "You could-"

"In Old Parthian," he finished.

>"Conference is over, everyone. We are going to stand aside to watch Sinae burn."

>"This is a terrible idea." It was also the only idea.
>>
Sorry for the slowness and the reduction in writing quality. My juice is running out.
>>
>>3631651
>>"This is a terrible idea." It was also the only idea.
>>
>>3631651
>>"This is a terrible idea." It was also the only idea.
>>
>>3631655
make a sleep then emperor
>>
>>3631651
>"This is a terrible idea." It was also the only idea.
Lol, end the session after the duel and start again some other time OP.
>>
>>3631651
>"This is a terrible idea." It was also the only idea.
God, I hope we can prevent this outcome in the Commentarii.
>>
>>3631651
>>"Conference is over, everyone. We are going to stand aside to watch Sinae burn."

I can't
>>
>>3631651
>>"Conference is over, everyone. We are going to stand aside to watch Sinae burn."

Certain death or certain death. Difficult choice
>>
>>3631651
>"This is a terrible idea." It was also the only idea.
>>
>>3631651
>"This is a terrible idea." It was also the only idea.
>>
>>3631651
>"Conference is over, everyone. We are going to stand aside to watch Sinae burn."
>>
>>3631651
>"This is a terrible idea." It was also the only idea.
>>
>>3631651
>>"This is a terrible idea." It was also the only idea.

I hope we can actually not marry her afterwards, wouldn't want to end up with her.
but then again, she will probably be mad as hell after it
>>
>>3631651

>"This is a terrible idea." It was also the only idea.

Hood talking with us? Normally and even helpfully?
Now my heart is happy, I guess preventing what happened to her people to happen to others left a good impression.
>>
>>3631651
>"This is a terrible idea." It was also the only idea.
This is so stupid it's gonna be funny as fuk.
>>
>>3631651
>"This is a terrible idea." It was also the only idea.

If something happens to us hopefully Hood will take care of Honey.
>>
>>3632621
We should tell her so.
>>
The plan, if such a grandiose name could be put to the suicide-by-arrows that we had drafted, was this: I would sneak into the wedding tent and hide between the tents. When the wedding came, I would jump out dramatically and demand the right to duel for the hand of the would-be-wed.

It was a terrible idea. I told them that. But do they ever listen?

"We need you looking grand and majestic and more like an imperial princeps instead of... this."

"You just pointed at all of me," I told Hood.

"You need to be less of you." So even Hood, the ardent anti-Imperial, had a thing for imperial princeps out of story books. It was a surprisingly tender characteristic, for such a blood-thirsty I'm-a-damaged-woman brooder. I didn't say that out loud, because my life had to be intact for the plan to work.

The two women of the Rebel Alliance got to work. They pampered and pompered me with mascaera, combed my hair for the first time in eleven years. They even cut my beard. "To make you look younger," Dumpling explained. "Magal don't wear beards, only whiskers. And I don't have the time to trim one into existence."

"Can't you just glamour me?" I asked. Dumpling shook her head. "With so many people, someone is bound to realise." Sorcery, fake or real, rely on misdirection. The more eyes there are, the more likely for a non-physical spell to fizzle.

I sat mournfully as my companions of the road fell on the floor. The hair I kept long was now short, fashionable. My chin was bare as a baby's bottom. Not that I ever touched one. I looked at the reflection staring at me from the brass water bowl, golden eyes gazing like a hawk. Dumpling frowned. "I've seen someone like you somewhere," she said.

"It's the eyes," I told her. She shook her head. But she didn't voice her suspicion.

Hood glowered at me. I think she knew. "Time to put on the show," I told them both.

----
>>
>3633750

The stars shone bright that night. I could see Pyxis, the Compass Constellation, its twinkling points clearer than it ever was. Gods of my fathers, I prayed, let the choice I made be the correct one. Guide me as you did the Archaeonauts of old. The stars didn't reply. Symbols and miracles happen to heroes and warlords. I was neither.

It was the night before the wedding, when all through the tent complex was quiet. Not a creature was stirring, not even a lamb. Everyone was ready to get blitzed during the real wedding feast. The Magal really know how to throw a big feast or seven. There was an entire week of pre-wedding feasts before the Big One.

Everyone, except the little rebels. "This is it," I whispered. I paused. Good guys usually say something like, "Let's do it, guys!" or "Our friendship will last us even beyond death, even if we die doing what is right!". As a member of the infamous Black Company, we had no such illusions. "Please take care of Honey," I told them. "She's the reason I'm doing this." Not the only reason, but the greatest reason. I didn't want her to inherit a burnt and ravaged world.

Do you think I am overreacting? Then you haven't seen what an angry Magal tribe can do to an Imperial province. The Halgal Tribe was betrayed by Prefect Joachim Hennaech fourty years ago, when he hired their services for a border dispute with another prefect. He decided to "re-negotiate" the price after the war was over. There was nothing to renegotiate with once the second war ended.

Multiply that by a hundredfold. You have the Horde.

Dumpling and Hood nodded. Hood grabbed my hand, and I was surprised for a moment- oh, it was Dumpling. My heart thumped in a different way. "It'll be fine," she whispered. And she kissed.

For an infinite second, I felt like this was all worth it. Heroes get women thrown at them after their feats, but I got to be kissed by Dumpling even before I did anything! Take that, Pericleus!

"I'm not giving you a fucking kiss," Hood hissed when I looked at her. "Now get in the fething tent."

>Then I did something I would not have done if I wasn't going to die the next day. I kissed the both of them.

>"Tell Honey that I died well," I said.
>>
>>3633753
>>Then I did something I would not have done if I wasn't going to die the next day. I kissed the both of them.
>>
>>3633753
>Tell Honey that I died well," I said.
>>
>>3633753
>Then I did something I would not have done if I wasn't going to die the next day. I kissed the both of them.
Literally yolo
>>
>>3633753
>"Tell Honey that I died well," I said.
>>
>>3633753
>>Then I did something I would not have done if I wasn't going to die the next day. I kissed the both of them.
>>
>>3633753
>>3633810
Changing my vote to break the tie.

>Then I did something I would not have done if I wasn't going to die the next day. I kissed the both of them
>>
>>3633753
>Then I did something I would not have done if I wasn't going to die the next day. I kissed the both of them.
>>
>>3633753
>>Then I did something I would not have done if I wasn't going to die the next day. I kissed the both of them.
>>
>>3633778
>>3633808
>>3633849
>>3633859
>>3633868
>>3633867
>Then I did something I would not have done if I wasn't going to die the next day. I kissed the both of them.

Smiling at the choked sounds of outrage I was leaving behind, I ran into the wedding tent. It was time to make like a rug and hide.

You might think that I might have been too nervous to sleep. After all, my performance tomorrow could very well decide the course of nations, the history of entire people-groups. It would certainly decide how painfully I would die.

But a seasoned roadster like myself learns to let loose during sleep. If you fuck up sleeping, that's going to affect you the entire day afterward. The key is blanking your mind, not letting the chaotic voices in your head go over every mistakes made in your life (and believe me, I've made plenty), instead thinking about fanciful what-ifs. If I had not divorced her, as social customs and propriety dictated. If I had dutifully progressed through the cursus honorum instead of running away from the stress of it all. If I hadn't been in Xuchang that fateful evening, when...

Hm. Maybe I wasn't as good at this as I pretended.

>I rolled myself into a carpet, snug as a bug, and closed my eyes.

>I chose to crawl under one of the carpets. Hopefully no one would tread on me.
>>
>>3634003
>I rolled myself into a carpet, snug as a bug, and closed my eyes.
>>
>>3634003
>>I rolled myself into a carpet, snug as a bug, and closed my eyes.
>>
>>3634003
>I rolled myself into a carpet, snug as a bug, and closed my eyes.
>>
>>3634003
>I rolled myself into a carpet, snug as a bug, and closed my eyes.
>>
>>3634003
>I rolled myself into a carpet, snug as a bug, and closed my eyes.
>>
>>3634070
>>3634064
>>3634043
>>3634038
>>3634026
>I rolled myself into a carpet, snug as a bug, and closed my eyes.

When the voices woke me, it was still around midnight. Old Parthian. Caretakers, I thought. Here to do the last of the cleaning and sweeping before the wedding truly began.

"You know what you must do." A male voice. A strong voice. It was a deep, husky voice, one that would melt Trevain in a second.

"I hate this." Captain.

I sat up in alarm, or I would have if I hadn't been rolled up in a carpet. Snug as a bug. Thank the gods I was immobilised that way. I would have spoiled everything, then and there. Then I realised I was immobilised. How was I going to appear dramatically? One thing at a time, Aurelius.

"I don't want to kill you," she said softly. Was she crying? She sounded like she was. "There has to be another way."

"The Horde fractures in time. Thus has it always been." Strong, confident. That made the fatal resignation in the voice hold so much more weight. "Once I die, my people will scatter again, to be preyed upon like yearling foals by the Imperials. Zhukova, look at me." Now I definitely heard sniffles. I couldn't imagine it. The strong, vicious Captain, weeping like a heartbroken damsel, literally in distress. I could almost see Tyche in my mind's eye, sniggering at the uncomfortable position I was placed in. Gods damn you, Tyche. I didn't need to see this side of her. She seemed almost... human.

"Hate will bind the Horde," the masculine voice said after a pause. "Hate will fuel them far longer than any man."

"This is not a price I am willing to pay, Yesugei."

"We swore an oath."

"We were children!"

Now I understood. The cryptic invitation into the wedding tent. The unreadable dance of the bird of prey. The numerous hints that she gave, until it climaxed with the words: "I know." They were cries for help. She had shown me around the wedding tent to get me familiarised with the setting. The bit about me being the first man to see her in the bride groom was puzzling, but everything else fit.

"You will do your part, and avenge both our people," the Khagan's voice (was there any doubt at this point?) said with a finality that brooked no argument. The susurration of cloth against cloth indicated his departure. A tension-filled silence left behind informed me clearer than any eyesight that Captain was still there.

And then she wept. As if to dispell any doubt of her presence, she bawled like a child. Except, this wasn't a girl who was crying about the candied figs she dropped. It was Captain, mercurial Captain, merciless Captain, beautiful, lonely Captain. And she was crying.

It felt like the Olympus had cracked and burst.
>>
>>3634086

>Captain was going to owe me for this. Big time. I told her so. "You're going to owe me for this. Big time." Me and my big mouth. Me and my big goddamn mouth.

>I listened silently, an unseen companion in her moment of weakness. I wondered if any of the others would believe what I heard tonight. Probably not.
>>
>>3634086
>Captain was going to owe me for this. Big time. I told her so. "You're going to owe me for this. Big time." Me and my big mouth. Me and my big goddamn mouth.

This is the choice to keep going with the plan right?
>>
>>3634094
>I listened silently, an unseen companion in her moment of weakness. I wondered if any of the others would believe what I heard tonight. Probably not.
There are some things you don't tell no body, this is one of them.
>>
>>3634094

>Captain was going to owe me for this. Big time. I told her so. "You're going to owe me for this. Big time." Me and my big mouth. Me and my big goddamn mouth.


Seeing a lady's private parts and deepest secrets in rapid succession. Aurelius either pissed off a god or is their favorite.
>>
>>3634094
>I listened silently, an unseen companion in her moment of weakness. I wondered if any of the others would believe what I heard tonight. Probably not.
>>
>>3634094
>I listened silently, an unseen companion in her moment of weakness. I wondered if any of the others would believe what I heard tonight. Probably not.
>>
>>3634094
>Captain was going to owe me for this. Big time. I told her so. "You're going to owe me for this. Big time." Me and my big mouth. Me and my big goddamn mouth.

Its all an act!
>>
>>3634094
>I listened silently, an unseen companion in her moment of weakness. I wondered if any of the others would believe what I heard tonight. Probably not.
>>
>>3634094

>I listened silently, an unseen companion in her moment of weakness. I wondered if any of the others would believe what I heard tonight. Probably not.

I don't get this choice

So the captain wants us to make what? What was her cry of help? To save the guy she loves, this dude here?
How can we do it?
>>
>>3634094
>I listened silently, an unseen companion in her moment of weakness. I wondered if any of the others would believe what I heard tonight. Probably not.
>>
>>3634103
>>3634113
>>3634116
>>3634178
>>3634229
>>3634239
>I listened silently, an unseen companion in her moment of weakness. I wondered if any of the others would believe what I heard tonight. Probably not.

I must have dozed off.

Horns and cymbals woke me. Once again, I flailed in the confinement of the carpet, but thankfully the carpet resisted my ill-advised attemp at revealing myself prematurely. The happy would-be-weds weren't inside the tent itself, taking a circuit and accepting the well-wishes of their guests. For the Magal, the ceremony of the wedding itself was an intensely private affair, usually involving just the direct family members and the priest himself. I had no doubt I was currently alone in the tent.

Laughters and benedictions rang merrily outside. I heard the entrance to the tent sift as the bride and groom entered, together with the priest. I couldn't see if Captain had the telltale signs of a tear-filled night. I had hidden myself too well, like Cleopatra of old, ensconced safely within. Besides, my eyes would have been too noticeable.

"We honour the beast and the bird who roam as they will among hill and sky," the priest started. "In joining man and woman, we reenact the first act of reproduction..." That was my cue to interrupt. I can honestly say that I did not hesitate when the moment came, so wrapped up I was with the sheer audacity of what I was about to do.

I rolled out of the carpet. There were gasps. Two men - uncle and father to our dear old Khagan, presumably - grabbed the hilt of their swords when they saw that I was armed. I spared a glance at Captain. She was wearing the bridal gowns that she showed off to me five days ago. She didn't even look up to see the intruder.

Now or never, Aurelius.

>Here went nothing. "By the customs of man and beast, I challenge the right of Khagan Yesugei in the taking of his bride. May the gods award the maiden to the better warrior."

>"I invoke the ancient blood pact forged between the Khagan of the First Horde and my ancestor, the Emperor." I would not have used my great-grandfather's name if the need was not dire. "Accept the duel, Khagan Yesugei, or be forever dishonoured in the eyes of the Offsprings of An."
>>
>>3634283
>"I invoke the ancient blood pact forged between the Khagan of the First Horde and my ancestor, the Emperor." I would not have used my great-grandfather's name if the need was not dire. "Accept the duel, Khagan Yesugei, or be forever dishonoured in the eyes of the Offsprings of An."

Here we go
>>
>>3634283
>"I invoke the ancient blood pact forged between the Khagan of the First Horde and my ancestor, the Emperor." I would not have used my great-grandfather's name if the need was not dire. "Accept the duel, Khagan Yesugei, or be forever dishonoured in the eyes of the Offsprings of An."
These words sound too cool not to say
>>
>>3634283
>"I invoke the ancient blood pact forged between the Khagan of the First Horde and my ancestor, the Emperor." I would not have used my great-grandfather's name if the need was not dire. "Accept the duel, Khagan Yesugei, or be forever dishonoured in the eyes of the Offsprings of An."

This is gonna be horrible. Let's do it
>>
>>3634283
>Here went nothing. "By the customs of man and beast, I challenge the right of Khagan Yesugei in the taking of his bride. May the gods award the maiden to the better warrior."

So we either get married with the captain or we reveal our secret
>>
>>3634283

>"I invoke the ancient blood pact forged between the Khagan of the First Horde and my ancestor, the Emperor." I would not have used my great-grandfather's name if the need was not dire. "Accept the duel, Khagan Yesugei, or be forever dishonoured in the eyes of the Offsprings of An."

Lets hope we can spare him so the captain can gave him
>>
>>3634283

>"I invoke the ancient blood pact forged between the Khagan of the First Horde and my ancestor, the Emperor." I would not have used my great-grandfather's name if the need was not dire. "Accept the duel, Khagan Yesugei, or be forever dishonoured in the eyes of the Offsprings of An."

Would you look at that, now even if we survive this, my lovely Hood will arrow us to death....I can't wait! Arrows of love, like a cupid.
>>
>>3634329
>>3634317
>>3634302
>>3634294
>>3634292
>"I invoke the ancient blood pact forged between the Khagan of the First Horde and my ancestor, the Emperor." I would not have used my great-grandfather's name if the need was not dire. "Accept the duel, Khagan Yesugei, or be forever dishonoured in the eyes of the Offspring of An."

The Compact of the Sword. After the destruction of the Varangians and their diaspora, the Emperor had force-marched his exhausted legions to the border region of Baatur, where the Magal had mustered their horsemen to aid their neighbours against the Imperials under their first ever Khagan. They were too late to come to the Varangians' assistance, but their soldiers were fresh, while the legionaries were exhausted. The Emperor had twenty hard-used legions. The Magal had the Horde.

What saved the Emperor then was Magal superstition. They saw the burning pyres of Khulan even in the distance, and feared what the Emperor represented. A long-simmering vengeance of the agricultural societies, who had for centuries suffered minute raids and thefts at their hands.

The Emperor proposed to meet the First Khagan alone. The Khagan reluctantly agreed. What ensued next was a private duel, known only to those bored enough to sift through the expansive Imperial Bibliotheca and travelers familiar with Khaganate oral traditions. People have no care for the histories anymore. Those who do are lazy layabouts or liars plundering the past for believable tall tales. After all, truth is the foundation of any falsehood. Guess which group I belonged to.

The terms were simple. A duel between the two men. The reward - a one-time right to command the other with complete authority. The Emperor even used blood magic to seal their oaths. That is how you know he was an unpleasant sort. Nothing good comes out of blood magic.

Any suspicion of reneging on the compact satisfied with a blood ritual sparsely described, the two men went at each other like dragon and tiger.

History does not tell us how the two men fought. The first ever man to unite the disparate Magal must have been an exceptional man indeed, to grab together the thousand different tribes and clans and bond them toward a single purpose. At any other point in history, he would have succeeded and placed the entirety of the Known World under the iron-shod hooves of his people.

The Emperor, however, was the Emperor.
>>
>>3634317
If he is defeated the horde will certanly see him as weak and will shatter. Question is if anyone will try to take revenge on him if we spare him. Or he will be forced to join the company because he can't stay with his people any longer so he better start somewhere else.
>>
>>3634332

In the aftermath of the duel, His one command was this: "The Khagan of Magal will honour all such demands of duel from me and my blood, binding him forever more in the Compact that was performed." Cruel bastard, my great-grandfather. They both knew the Emperor was the better fighter, or magus, if the conspiracies have any basis. Either way, the Khagan knew enough. He would never be able to overcome the Emperor in single combat. He had tied the chiefest position of the Magal, spiritual and political, to the burden of having to accept any and all such duels, with all the blood magic fuckery that it implied.

That was how the Great Liar bound the will of the Magal under his throne. Even two centuries after His death, the Magal never made an attempt to invade all of Sinae outright. A national trauma, I am told. Fifteen years of seeing only smoke from Khulan probably did not assuage their fears any. Legionaries can be right old bastards when they want to be. Ask Hood.

But look at me yammering on nervously about the past, when I should by all rights be describing the present.

"Uncle, Father," the Khagan said. "Please, it is alright. That is not the Emperor." Of course I wasn't. The Emperor was dead, nigh two centuries ago. I told him that.

"And you are nothing," the Khagan said gravely. There was no insult intended. He was right. I was just a Scrivener, member to a wandering mercenary company. He was Khagan. Such men who are able to inspire unity are the greatest of us. There was a certain nobility in him, the way his brows cut sharply to make way for the ridges that led to his eyes. His vibrant blue eyes, furrowed by bushy brows that seemed to stare into your soul.

The blue hair. I gasped. They were... brothers? Cousins? Relatives, definitely.

>"Do you refuse?" I asked, hope surging in my heart for a moment. If he refused... I actually have no idea what would happen if he refused.

>"Wait, hold on, time out," I said. "Just a moment, I really gotta ask. You guys are siblings? And you are getting -married-?" Was humanity going through an incest phase?
>>
>>3634335
>>"Wait, hold on, time out," I said. "Just a moment, I really gotta ask. You guys are siblings? And you are getting -married-?" Was humanity going through an incest phase?
>>
>>3634335
>"Wait, hold on, time out," I said. "Just a moment, I really gotta ask. You guys are siblings? And you are getting -married-?" Was humanity going through an incest phase.
>>
>>3634335
>"Do you refuse?" I asked, hope surging in my heart for a moment. If he refused... I actually have no idea what would happen if he refused.
>>
>>3634335

>"Wait, hold on, time out," I said. "Just a moment, I really gotta ask. You guys are siblings? And you are getting -married-?" Was humanity going through an incest phase?
Now I gotta ask.
>>
>Was humanity going through an incest phase?

I really hope this doesn't mean our ex-wife was also related to us. Although i guess cousins are okay-ish?
>>
>>3634341
Oh, now I get it. He is from the same people as the captain, the ones that got slaughtered, he doesn't give a shit about the Magal, he just wants to make the Magal fight the Siane eternally, that's his revenge.
>>
>>3634346
Eskhatans got off lightly.
>>
File: Khagan Yesugei.png (307 KB, 569x571)
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307 KB PNG
>>3634338
>>3634339
>>3634341
"We're cousins," the Khagan said, glowering.

"Once removed," Captain whispered.

"Once removed." Rose touched his cheeks. At least he had the decency to blush.

"Well that makes it better," I said. "First cousins, once removed. My wife was my second cousin, thrice removed." Capital politics prefers close family marriages. My other choices were my sister, my other sister, my half-sister, and a plethora of quarter-siblings. No, I have no idea how that works either.

"You are one of the Company men," the Khagan noticed. "Is he your-?"

"No, I came by my own initiative," I hastily cut him off before Captain's eyes could betray the truth. Well, her truth. I did come by my own initiative. "So do you accept? Or..." I hadn't the foggiest of what would happen if he refused. Would a long-dead God (with a capital G) rouse itself from its slumber to smite him? Would there be an earthquake to swallow all involved in the broken ritual? A series of volcanoes rise up to cremate everything under their ashes?

He didn't either, from the complicated expression on his face. He was considering it though. Then he sighed. "I accept."

My heart sank.

>"So... how do you want to do this? Like, to the first blood, or..." What am I, a blood mage? I didn't know how it worked! I didn't know how any of this worked!

>"One more question, I promise. Cousins are fine, right? Please tell me it's fine." What? I don't need validation for my life choices. I just- it was the first time I'd met someone who was prepared to marry a cousin (once removed), outside of the Capital. That place is a madhouse.
>>
>>3634354
>>"So... how do you want to do this? Like, to the first blood, or..." What am I, a blood mage? I didn't know how it worked! I didn't know how any of this worked!
>>
>>3634354
>"So... how do you want to do this? Like, to the first blood, or..." What am I, a blood mage? I didn't know how it worked! I didn't know how any of this worked!
>>
>>3634354

>"So... how do you want to do this? Like, to the first blood, or..." What am I, a blood mage? I didn't know how it worked! I didn't know how any of this worked!

Anything but to the death, if we win we can make him join the company and then the cap can marry him for good.
>>
>>3634354

>"So... how do you want to do this? Like, to the first blood, or..." What am I, a blood mage? I didn't know how it worked! I didn't know how any of this worked!
>>
>>3634366
>>3634364
>>3634362
>>3634360
>"So... how do you want to do this? Like, to the first blood, or..." What am I, a blood mage? I didn't know how it worked! I didn't know how any of this worked!

"You do not keep records of the Great Duel?" he looked surprised. "It is a historical moment, long enshrined in Magal lore."

"Yeah, in Magal lore," I said. "For the Emperor, it was the Day of Mars." You don't carve out an empire without breaking a few nations. Sometimes to the last man.

"Until one yields to the other," he said. He didn't show it, but he was slightly miffed that the duel didn't apparently take a huge part in Schola historical curriculum. "Until the victor commands the loser, the spells maintain their effect. Be very careful in what you order, Imperial Scion. If I am incapable of fulfilling it..." he paled. I paled. We all paled. Knowing the Emperor, it could very well result in all our collective souls being dumped into the cthonian nethers to be judged by the Seven Who Reside Below.

"Alright," I said. "Weapons?"

"Take what you wish, and so will I. The duel will take place outside."

>"Oh no you don't," I unsheathed my gladius. "I'm not letting you outside to go get a horse." I am a decent rider. The Magal begin their equestrian training from the age of three.

>A bigger audience. That would mean that it would be easier for everyone to accept the outcome, Khagan included.
>>
>>3634374

>A bigger audience. That would mean that it would be easier for everyone to accept the outcome, Khagan included.
>>
>>3634374
>>A bigger audience. That would mean that it would be easier for everyone to accept the outcome, Khagan included.
>>
>>3634374

>A bigger audience. That would mean that it would be easier for everyone to accept the outcome, Khagan included.
>>
>>3634378
>>3634379
>>3634384
>A bigger audience. That would mean that it would be easier for everyone to accept the outcome, Khagan included.

"Oh, you cheeky bugger."

"I did say take what you wish. Do you wish to borrow a horse?" the Khagan said emotionlessly from atop his mount. I shook my head. I was a halfway decent mounted lancer, but the kind of horses I was used to were faster, stronger, and more importantly, armoured. Descendants of the Nisaean mounts that the Emperor had brought from beyond west who could actually bear the weight of barding. The Magal prefer smaller horses, one who can survive the harsh hinterlands of Baatur and Beidi. Their greatest trait is their endurance, not charging speed. Hence, the mounted archery.

I took stock of my equipment. A loaded crossbow, with five more bolts. Superfluous, if I missed the first shot. It takes time to load crossbows, which is why they usually stayed behind pikemen and fire in salvoes. I also had my service pike. Good anti-cavalry weapon... with other men beside you. Alone, I stood much less chance. Besides, he wouldn't charge me directly, not without softening me up with arrows.

And of course, my trusty gladius. Ivory-handled and hilted, its Iberian steel blade as sharp as the day it was forged. It supposedly belonged to my great-grandfather, looted from the body of the man who killed my great-great-grandfather. I doubted it. But it was a nice sword.

The Khagan was waiting. He was polite enough to give me sufficient time to say one more goodbye.

>I went to Hood. "Look, I know we started off roughly-" I couldn't believe it when she shot me right before the duel.

>"Hello, Cap'n," I said, the ghost of the roguish smile I had flashed in the hot springs returning to my lips. It felt like so long ago now. "Goodbye, Cap'n."

>Dumpling reddened when she saw me walk up to her. "Look, yesterday was my bad-" And she kissed me. And I don't mean the usual cheek stuff. She did it in my lips.

>"Trevain." "Aurelius." I'm not sure why I chose to say my last goodbyes to the corporal. But I did it.

>"This is it, Sergeant," I said. "Looks like you'll be out an irritating Goldeneye soon." I was inconsolable. What was Sergeant going to do without his father figure that he could hate on?

>"Feels like four days and two hours ago when we first joined, doesn't it?" I said to Sister. "Behave while I'm gone, alright? And don't fuck any sisters. Also if you touch Honey in any way or form, I will haunt your arse from the Great Beyond."

>"Theophilos. Buddy." He really was a nice guy. "It was good to have met you. Stay safe, alright? Also the Magal girl over there, the one with the massive tits - yeah, her. She has a crush on you. Make of that information how you will." You can lead a horse to the river, but you can't force it to drink.
>>
>>3634395
>>"Theophilos. Buddy." He really was a nice guy. "It was good to have met you. Stay safe, alright? Also the Magal girl over there, the one with the massive tits - yeah, her. She has a crush on you. Make of that information how you will." You can lead a horse to the river, but you can't force it to drink.
>>
>>3634395
>"Theophilos. Buddy." He really was a nice guy. "It was good to have met you. Stay safe, alright? Also the Magal girl over there, the one with the massive tits - yeah, her. She has a crush on you. Make of that information how you will." You can lead a horse to the river, but you can't force it to drink.
>>
>>3634395

>I went to Hood. "Look, I know we started off roughly-" I couldn't believe it when she shot me right before the duel.

I cannot resist it!

Can we get a shield for those arrows he will be using?
>>
>"Theophilos. Buddy." He really was a nice guy. "It was good to have met you. Stay safe, alright? Also the Magal girl over there, the one with the massive tits - yeah, her. She has a crush on you. Make of that information how you will." You can lead a horse to the river, but you can't force it to drink
>>
>>3634427
Oh yes, I forgot you do have a shield
>>
>>3634395

>I went to Hood. "Look, I know we started off roughly-" I couldn't believe it when she shot me right before the duel.
>>
>>3634432
Yeah, so maybe we walk up to her with a shield raised, but if she is really pulling that arrow we make a detour and go for someone else lol
>>
>>3634395
>Dumpling reddened when she saw me walk up to her. "Look, yesterday was my bad-" And she kissed me. And I don't mean the usual cheek stuff. She did it in my lips.
>>
>>3634454
I could go with
>Dumpling reddened when she saw me walk up to her. "Look, yesterday was my bad-" And she kissed me. And I don't mean the usual cheek stuff. She did it in my lips.

girl genuinelly likes Aurelius
>>
>>3634395
>>I went to Hood. "Look, I know we started off roughly-" I couldn't believe it when she shot me right before the duel.
>>
Bros before hoes Anons
>>
>>3634395
>Dumpling reddened when she saw me walk up to her. "Look, yesterday was my bad-" And she kissed me. And I don't mean the usual cheek stuff. She did it in my lips.
>>
>>3634476
this is a last meeting kind of deal, we aren't betraying any bros man
>>
>>3634479
we could just make the fucker wait and talk with the 3 of them too
>>
>>3634395
>"Theophilos. Buddy." He really was a nice guy. "It was good to have met you. Stay safe, alright? Also the Magal girl over there, the one with the massive tits - yeah, her. She has a crush on you. Make of that information how you will." You can lead a horse to the river, but you can't force it to drink.
>>
>>3634395
>>Dumpling reddened when she saw me walk up to her. "Look, yesterday was my bad-" And she kissed me. And I don't mean the usual cheek stuff. She did it in my lips.
>>
>>3634395
>I went to Hood. "Look, I know we started off roughly-" I couldn't believe it when she shot me right before the duel.

Dodging arrows is a usefull skill.
>>
>>3634395
>Dumpling

Tell her to take care of Honey
>>
>toomanyvotes.jpg

>Dumpling reddened when she saw me walk up to her. "Look, yesterday was my bad-" And she kissed me. And I don't mean the usual cheek stuff. She did it in my lips.

I gaped. "Wow." Wow.

"You can't die, alright?" Dumpling said, squeezing my hand. Her darkened face was brilliantly red, sunset-touched. "If you die, who will look after Honey? You think Hood and I will carry on after all like single mothers? Hah!" There were tears in her eyes as she smiled mock-triumphantly. "Not a chance! If you don't come back, know that you are dooming Honey to a life of cinder sweeping!"

"I won't die," I told her. I was going to die.

"Are you done," the Khagan said. He was unaffected by the goings-on. "The sun is going to set."

One more thing. "Theophilos!"

"Brother Aurelius!"

"That comely Magal maiden over there, the one with - yes, the big tits." Thank the gods for big tits. "She is enamoured with you. I overheard her talking of how able you looked in earning for a family. Make of this information how you will."

Theophilos gave me a thumbs up. He really wasn't a bad guy, despite the- oh gods, I wasn't intended to look at his face.

Black is our name, and black our hearts, but even in our crude, paramilitary lives, shades light occasionally filter in through the cracks. That's what being a human means, right? A person is not defined by any one attribute - his face, birth, or even sex. It is what we do that gives meaning to our selves. And no one, not even the Emperor, was a villain from start to finish.

That kiss, though. Wow. If I didn't know better, I'd think she had a thing for me. Aurelius, you sly dog. Stealing a kiss away from a girl who doesn't even like you. This life was definitely ending on a high note!

"HoodIknowwestartedoffroughlybutyou'renotabadgirlokaybye," I said, before I exhausted my opponent's patience. She shot at me. I dodged, because I knew she was going to do that. What I didn't know was that she would fire a second arrow. The arrows. They are multiplying.

>Bo3 1d100
>>
>>3634822
Time to ruin it!
>>
Rolled 27 (1d100)

>>3634822
>>3634831
>>
Rolled 56 (1d100)

>>3634822
Roll low right?

Is Hood mad because of the kiss or because she discovered we are directly related to the late emperor? Probably both.
>>
Rolled 43 (1d100)

>>3634822
>Hood and I will carry on like single mothers?

Dumpling don't tempt us!
>>
>>3634835
>>3634847
>>3634852

I guess all that tease actually gave us a skill in dodging arrows uh?
>>
>>3634835
>>3634847
>>3634852
"Imperial Scion," the Khagan said. He looked at me dispassionately. "You don't strike me as exceptional."

"I'm not the Emperor Himself, you know," I replied. The Emperor made many progenies in his centuries of existence. I can say with complete confidence that the vast majority of them were useless luggards, leeching off the wealth of the Capital while engaging in petty politics. That is also where I gained my revulsion for sister-fuckers.

"Still, you did dodge all three arrows," he nodded approvingly. I didn't mention that I had a lot of practice. A lot of practice. "I must thank you for one thing, Imperial Scion. I will gain great pleasure in killing you today. Nothing personal, you understand. Your great-grandfather was..."

"A bit of a prick," I replied, shrugging. "I hear that a lot. Shall we get this over with?"

"Gladly. I have my own death to arrange." His lips turned into a rare smile. "You have a very detached way of viewing things, Scion. Perhaps, if we had met at more peaceful times, we could have been friends."

>I stabbed the horse. Look, it's his fault for starting to monologue.

>"I get where you're coming from." I got where -Hood- came from. "But the people in Sinae aren't too bad, on the whole. Well, there's them hating my irrationally for my eyes, but..."
>>
>>3634856
Hood is love, but also skill!

I'm sure she did this to warm us up to dodge the Khagan's arrows, she truly cares lol
>>
>>3634869
>"I get where you're coming from." I got where -Hood- came from. "But the people in Sinae aren't too bad, on the whole. Well, there's them hating my irrationally for my eyes, but..."
>>
>>3634869
>I stabbed the horse. Look, it's his fault for starting to monologue.
>>
>>3634869
>>I stabbed the horse. Look, it's his fault for starting to monologue
>>
>>3634869


>I stabbed the horse. Look, it's his fault for starting to monologue.
>>
>>3634869

>"I get where you're coming from." I got where -Hood- came from. "But the people in Sinae aren't too bad, on the whole. Well, there's them hating my irrationally for my eyes, but..."

Lets not repeat that bastard's mistakes.

Also, they might see as a dirty move if we attack before things are going.
>>
>>3634869
>I stabbed the horse. Look, it's his fault for starting to monologue.
>>
>>3634869
>I stabbed the horse. Look, it's his fault for starting to monologue.
>>
>>3634869
>>I stabbed the horse. Look, it's his fault for starting to monologue
>>
>>3634869

>"I get where you're coming from." I got where -Hood- came from. "But the people in Sinae aren't too bad, on the whole. Well, there's them hating my irrationally for my eyes, but..."
>>
>>3634913
>>3634911
>>3634884
>>3634883
>>3634880
"Chubal!" The Khagan was aghast at the death of his mount. He didn't appreciate the fall, either. "You honourless wretch!" he shouted.

I cut the lifestrings of the horse, ending its misery. "Look to the burning dead of Khulan and tell me of honour." I've lived on the road for eleven years, with little but my sword and buckler to keep me company. Honour is an admirable trait. But there is no honour in death.

"The blood of the Emperor truly flows in your veins," he snarled. Somehow, I don't think he was saying that as a compliment.

I jumped on him while he was down.

Aurelius: Healthy
>Combat = +155DC [Healthy +5DC, Skilled II +10DC, Unnatural Strength +5DC, Unnatural Endurance +5DC, Unnatural Will +5DC, Divine Bloodline: Imperial Scion +20DC, Elite II +20DC, Dirty Fighting +15DC, Legionarius II +20DC, Chainmail +15DC, Roundhelm +10DC, Gladius hispaniensis +15DC, Iron buckler +10DC]
>Armour Value = 30AV [Chainmail +15AV, Roundhelm +15AV]
VS
Yesugei, Khagan of the Horde: Healthy
>Combat = +130DC [Healthy +5DC, Skilled V +25DC, Elite III +30DC, Winds of Destiny +50DC, Fell Off A Horse -10DC, Wolfhide cloak of badassitude +10DC, Brass lamellar armour (exceptional) +20DC] Weapon DC unavailable (see Fell Off A Horse)
>Armour Value = 20AV [Brass lamellar armour (exceptional) +20AV]

>Personal Combat DC75
>3d100
>>
Rolled 1 (1d100)

>>3634931
>>
>>3634932
Jesus tapdancin' Christ
>>
>>3634932
THE SKALDENING 2 : ELECTRIC BOOGALOO
>>
>>3634932
IACTA ALEA EST
>>
>>3634932
Holy god. After that, does anyone else even need to roll?
>>
Rolled 23 (1d100)

>>3634941
There's still an option to critfail, right?
>>
Rolled 83 (1d100)

>>3634931
Yeaaaahhh

I actually want to spare him Qm
Will we get the choice? Even if he lives, they won't follow him anymore.
>>
Rolled 98 (1d100)

>>3634932
CRITFAIL TIME
>>
>>3634954
Wow!
I saved us by a second
>>
>>3634953
What if the horde becomes so impressed that they made us the new Khagan
>>
Rolled 99 (1d100)

>>3634931
I'm gonna....>>3634932
Oh..do i need to roll?
>>
>>3634963
Then we'd marry Captain Zhukova, and all would be right with the world.
>>
>>3634954
>>3634967
Where were you when the first three rolls hadn't been rolled? I didn't even get to use my Winds of Destiny feature.
>>
>>3634963
Can't accept, we are part of the company after all.
>>
>>3634970
The winds of destiny blew Yesugei right off his horse.
>>
>>3634970
Had to entertain family... sorry?
>>
>>3634963

Nah, we will make him join the company so that he can marry the captain like both of them wanted
>>
>>3634978
If he survives. Which I don't think is going to happen.
>>
>>3634996
being so awesome like we were, we can probably choose to spare him
>>
>>3634978
Wouldn't that mean that he will be our superior? I mean we did killed his horse. Then again it's his fault for trying to use it in the first place.
>>
>>3635002
whatever, the captain would be eternally grateful that we saved the life of her loved one, he wouldn't be able to do anything, remember how she was crying over him last night

and he would join as a recruit, beneath us, tradition is tradition after all, even if you are fucking the captain
>>
>>3635007
Oh yeah. I forger tou need to get in as a recruit. Maybe she will stop teasing us and the lieutenant won't send us to deadly missions all the time.
>>
>>3634932

And I beat the shit out of him.

On any other day, the Khagan would have had an advantage on me. I won't make empty claims like, "I could beat the guy one-handed!" or "Khagan? After the horse died, I knew it was all over." like I knew what was going on. The fact of the matter is this: The man was down, his weapons were on the ground. He had also suffered significant emotional trauma from seeing his mount cut down in front of him. Probably.

And the one beautiful thing about war is, it doesn't matter. Nothing matters. How does that song go? All's fair in love and war.

I kicked his hand that was scrabbling for his curved sword. I could have ended him then and there. But I wasn't about to do his work. I threw away my gladius and punched him. I felt my knuckle break, the tender ligaments tearing from the brute violence being inflicted onto it. Yesugei had it worse.

By the fifth blow, he was out. I was breathing heavily, sitting on him in an immodest position that anyone would usually associate with lovers. "Yield?" I panted.

"Kill me." He had regained his consciousness.

"Do you yield?"

"Why don't you want to kill me?" he asked. Well, gargled, really. The blood was pooling in his mouth. "I was going to kill everyone. I would have killed everyone, if it weren't for you."

>"Because," I said wearily, "I don't hate you. I even pity you. And I understand where you are coming from."

>"What, and do Captain's job for her? Nah. She would kill me for that. Now get up, you crybaby. Let's get this blood magic shite over with."

>"I knew I wouldn't die," I said matter-of-factly. "Hood got dibs on that. So in a way, I'm basically an immortal." Seriously, that girl had it out for me.
>>
>>3635013
>>"I knew I wouldn't die," I said matter-of-factly. "Hood got dibs on that. So in a way, I'm basically an immortal." Seriously, that girl had it out for me.
>>
>>3635021
>>"I knew I wouldn't die," I said matter-of-factly. "Hood got dibs on that. So in a way, I'm basically an immortal." Seriously, that girl had it out for me.
>>
>>3635021

>"Because," I said wearily, "I don't hate you. I even pity you. And I understand where you are coming from."

Besides


>"I knew I wouldn't die," I said matter-of-factly. "Hood got dibs on that. So in a way, I'm basically an immortal." Seriously, that girl had it out for me.
>>
>>3635021
>>"What, and do Captain's job for her? Nah. She would kill me for that. Now get up, you crybaby. Let's get this blood magic shite over with."
>>
>>3635021
this>>3635036
>>
>>3635030
I fucked up and linked to the wrong post>>3635021
>>
>>3635021
>"Because," I said wearily, "I don't hate you. I even pity you. And I understand where you are coming from."
>>
>>3635021
"I knew I wouldn't die," I said matter-of-factly. "Hood got dibs on that. So in a way, I'm basically an immortal." Seriously, that girl had it out for me.
>>
>>3635021
>"What, and do Captain's job for her? Nah. She would kill me for that. Now get up, you crybaby. Let's get this blood magic shite over with."
>>
>>3635021
Changing my vote and supporting this:>>3635036
>>
>>3635036
+1
>>
>"Because," I said wearily, "I don't hate you. I even pity you. And I understand where you are coming from."

Alexandria Eskhata, the island named after the Emperor himself, burned when they rebelled. Half its population enslaved or executed. The purges in Oesgrimm and Culach when the farmers unknowingly housed rebels. And Khulan. Oh, how Khulan burned. The ice-lands. The frozen Siber. They all had burned for fifteen years.

Each Imperial road that connected all the provinces was constructed with the blood and tears of the newly subjugated. Literally, sometimes. Like I said, legionaries can be right old bastards when they feel like it. I can't hold a grudge over someone who hates me for my great-grandfather, so great was his sins.

"Besides, I knew I wouldn't die," I said matter-of-factly. "Hood got dibs on that. So in a way, I'm basically an immortal." Seriously, that girl had it out for me.

"Hood?"

"The girl with the bow."

"Ah." Yesugei nodded knowingly. "The one with the magnificent tits."

"The one with the magnificent tits," I agreed. Though not as magnificent as Captain's. Not that you would tell the would-be-husband that, the lucky fuck. "I'll never get to touch them."

"You never know," he said, a strange light in his eyes. "Though, I thought you were a thing with the younger Parthian girl who kissed you."

"What, me? Me and her? Nah." Perish the thought. Women of the Company wanted me as a lover like they wanted bad skin, and Dumpling was one of the most sought-after girls in the entire Company. Have you ever dated someone who could so completely glamour into anything and everything you wanted? Me neither.

I tried to console myself by putting the blame on the golden eyes. Three months of being in the Company, and not a single woman interested in me. My wife really was too kind to describe with words, for putting up with a man like me. "I've never had success with women. I guess it's the eyes."

Yesugei stared at me as if I was a moron, which was not a very smart thing to do when he was beaten up and prone on the ground. I refrained from punching him again. We'd just gotten to start talking with each other without involving weapons. "So, feel like yielding after that chat?" I asked.

He burst into laughter. "You are a funny man, Aurelius. Most men would hate those who try to kill them." Funny man. Now where had I hear that before? "I yield," he said, and a great weight seemed to be lifted up from his young shoulders. "I yield, may father forgive me. Now give me your command."

>"By the power invested in me by the gods... I want you go to back in the wedding hall and make Captain a goddamn happy woman for the rest of her days, with none of this bullshit about glorified suicide by wife. Congratulations on the wedding, you cheeky bugger."

>"Join the Black Company." Simple is best. "...as my assistant. I could use an extra foot massagist." You try marching fifty miles a day and not live without one. I dare you.
>>
>>3635133
>>"By the power invested in me by the gods... I want you go to back in the wedding hall and make Captain a goddamn happy woman for the rest of her days, with none of this bullshit about glorified suicide by wife. Congratulations on the wedding, you cheeky bugger."

and then

>"Join the Black Company." Simple is best. "...as my assistant. I could use an extra foot massagist." You try marching fifty miles a day and not live without one. I dare you.


no reason not to have both, marry her and join the company, because if he doesn't we will have to hang the captain
>>
>>3635133

>"By the power invested in me by the gods... I want you go to back in the wedding hall and make Captain a goddamn happy woman for the rest of her days, with none of this bullshit about glorified suicide by wife. Congratulations on the wedding, you cheeky bugger."

Oh, a happy ending!
>>
>>3635133

>"By the power invested in me by the gods... I want you go to back in the wedding hall and make Captain a goddamn happy woman for the rest of her days, with none of this bullshit about glorified suicide by wife. Congratulations on the wedding, you cheeky bugger."

Why has he collected the horde in the first place? Drought? I'm all for happy endings but if they really need to move past the wall to feed, there isn't much he can do.
>>
>>3635133
>>"Join the Black Company." Simple is best. "...as my assistant. I could use an extra foot massagist." You try marching fifty miles a day and not live without one. I dare you.
THE CAPTAIN IS OURS MUAHAHAHA
>>
>>3635133
>>"Join the Black Company." Simple is best. "...as my assistant. I could use an extra foot massagist." You try marching fifty miles a day and not live without one. I dare you.
>>
>>3635153
Looks like I did a really bad job communicating the character's motives.
>>
>>3635144
I think people can marry others from the company. Besides if he want to make the captain happy he knows he can't force her out and so he will automaticaly have to join it. He just won't be under us.

>>3635133
>"By the power invested in me by the gods... I want you go to back in the wedding hall and make Captain a goddamn happy woman for the rest of her days, with none of this bullshit about glorified suicide by wife. Congratulations on the wedding, you cheeky bugger."
>>
>>3635133
>>"Join the Black Company." Simple is best. "...as my assistant. I could use an extra foot massagist." You try marching fifty miles a day and not live without one. I dare you.
>>
>>3635133
>"Join the Black Company." Simple is best. "...as my assistant. I could use an extra foot massagist." You try marching fifty miles a day and not live without one. I dare you.
>>
>>3635133
>"Join the Black Company." Simple is best. "...as my assistant. I could use an extra foot massagist." You try marching fifty miles a day and not live without one. I dare you.

Wise men are few and far between

Sadly we won't be able to name a lake after the Captain, but at least we got her cousin to join
>>
>>3635153

>"Hate will bind the Horde," the masculine voice said after a pause. "Hate will fuel them far longer than any man."

>"This is not a price I am willing to pay, Yesugei."

>"We swore an oath."

>"We were children!"

You know that people we keep mentioning that the Empire wrecked? The Other Horse peoples? The people the Captain comes from?
>>
Hm, so you want Captain to remain single?

>>3635174
ONCE REMOVED!
>>
>>3635133
>"Join the Black Company." Simple is best. "...as my assistant. I could use an extra foot massagist." You try marching fifty miles a day and not live without one. I dare you.
We'll get the captain to fall for us eventually.
>>
>>3635133
>"Join the Black Company." Simple is best. "...as my assistant. I could use an extra foot massagist." You try marching fifty miles a day and not live without one. I dare you.

>>3635184
They can do it in the company, or we can go the harem route
>>
>>3635133
>>"Join the Black Company." Simple is best. "...as my assistant. I could use an extra foot massagist." You try marching fifty miles a d
>>
>>3635133

>"By the power invested in me by the gods... I want you go to back in the wedding hall and make Captain a goddamn happy woman for the rest of her days, with none of this bullshit about glorified suicide by wife. Congratulations on the wedding, you cheeky bugger."

Both are clearly valid
>>
Marrying the Captain automatically results in him having to follow Black Company, by the way. I'm not going to trick you with "Hah! He's still Khagan!" That's too crafty by half for this humble QM of yours.
>>
>>3635184
People are trying to make a harem..unsurprisinly.
>>
>>3635206
I don't want to be a pain but looks like samefagging is afoot qm, can we have a revote with people cpnfirming their vptes with the same id?
>>
>>3635161
I've just been reading with my ass, sorry. I mean, it looked like standard not!Mongol invasion, but weren't they driven by bad years of drought in the steppes?

This guy, though, is not!Slavic child, kidnapped and then somehow got to position to lead the hordes he so thoroughly hates for destroying his not!Slavic people altogether. So he hatches a genius plan - move the hordes against not!China and let them die in combat, ending the threat of roaming nomads altogether.

But then he meets his cousin and figures that if he dies by her hand, he manages to create a power vacuum and piss off the horde to recklessly charge the not!Chinese border or something. Or they just simply dissipate.

So, I think I get the motivation as a character (if my ass read that correctly), but I simply don't think it would work and leaves me kind of wondering about the whole affair.

>>3635183
Right, so if they are other horse people that were destroyed by the Empire, this makes sense.
>>
>>3635206
If you don't want everyone keeping all the girls just say that the harem route doesn't exist and people need to pick ONE girl.

Or don't do it but from now on every girl will become a potential wife.
>>
>>3635222
The only way this type of plan works if he was that angry and petty enough to pull this kind of shite.
Also if he really loves the Captain he can marry her later. And with that.

>>3635133
>"Join the Black Company." Simple is best. "...as my assistant. I could use an extra foot massagist." You try marching fifty miles a day and not live without one. I dare you.
>>
>>3630733
>harem
This is a strictly no-harem quest.
...I will accept concubinage. Limited to two.

>>3635216
I have no idea how that stuff works, but sure, if you think it'll help. Please vote in response to THIS post the vote you want to see win.
>>
>>3635236
Its simple, people change their Ips to get new Id and vote again so to confirm your vpte you have to use an ID that was already used, so those guys that keep changing won't be ablento repeat the number they already used.

>"By the power invested in me by the gods... I want you go to back in the wedding hall and make Captain a goddamn happy woman for the rest of her days, with none of this bullshit about glorified suicide by wife. Congratulations on the wedding, you cheeky bugger."
>>
>>3635236
Oh fer fred fuch's sake.

>"Join the Black Company." Simple is best. "...as my assistant. I could use an extra foot massagist." You try marching fifty miles a day and not live without one. I dare you.
>>
>>3635236

>"By the power invested in me by the gods... I want you go to back in the wedding hall and make Captain a goddamn happy woman for the rest of her days, with none of this bullshit about glorified suicide by wife. Congratulations on the wedding, you cheeky bugger."
>>
Rolled 2 (1d2)

>>3635236
I'm conflicted now. I want the harem but still...
1. Take the cap for ourselves
2. Let them marry
>>
>>3635236
>>"Join the Black Company." Simple is best. "...as my assistant. I could use an extra foot massagist." You try marching fifty miles a day and not live without one. I dare you.
Haven't voted before now, so its not a "confirmation".
>>
>>3635236
>Join the Black Company." Simple is best. "...as my assistant. I could use an extra foot massagist." You try marching fifty miles a day and not live without one. I dare you.
>>
>>3635252
I understand your internal conflict, and regardless of what wins out I want to let you know that made a proper choice in the end and that this anon is proud of you for doing so.
>>
>>3635236
>>"By the power invested in me by the gods... I want you go to back in the wedding hall and make Captain a goddamn happy woman for the rest of her days, with none of this bullshit about glorified suicide by wife. Congratulations on the wedding, you cheeky bugger."
>>
>>3635242

>>"Join the Black Company." Simple is best. "...as my assistant. I could use an extra foot massagist." You try marching fifty miles a day and not live without one. I dare you.
>>
>>3635236
Fuck me

I change from
>>3635276
To


>>"By the power invested in me by the gods... I want you go to back in the wedding hall and make Captain a goddamn happy woman for the rest of her days, with none of this bullshit about glorified suicide by wife. Congratulations on the wedding, you cheeky bugger."
>>
>>3635133
>>"Join the Black Company." Simple is best. "...as my assistant. I could use an extra foot massagist." You try marching fifty miles a day and not live without one. I dare you.
>>
>>3635236
>"By the power invested in me by the gods... I want you go to back in the wedding hall and make Captain a goddamn happy woman for the rest of her days, with none of this bullshit about glorified suicide by wife. Congratulations on the wedding, you cheeky bugger."
>>
>>3635252
There is no harem though...only two concubines.
>>
>>3635309
Yes. The Captain will be our wife, honey and hood will be the concubines.
>>
>>3635236
>"By the power invested in me by the gods... I want you go to back in the wedding hall and make Captain a goddamn happy woman for the rest of her days, with none of this bullshit about glorified suicide by wife. Congratulations on the wedding, you cheeky bugger."
>>
>>3635319
>Not getting PRINCE'D and turning into a horrific monster blocking us off from the Captain route again.
But the future refused to change.
>>
>>3635319
Why don't you want cap to be happy and marry the man she loves anon? Are you that selfish?
>>
>>3635236
>"Join the Black Company." Simple is best. "...as my assistant. I could use an extra foot massagist." You try marching fifty miles a day and not live without one. I dare you.
I still want to waifu the captain.
>>
>>3635330
They're cousins. It's for their own children's good.
>>
>>3635330
Think about it, anon. Varangian-Imperial children. We could have kids with blue hair and gold eyes. It'd be amazing.
>>
>>3635378
>>3635361
But anon, she wants the other guy, we can't force it, we are not our great grandfather, she loves him, we should give them what they want.
>>
>>3635385
>we are not our great grandfather
Don't let your dreams be dreams. If we're willing to work for it, we can be the equal of our glorious ancestor.
>>
>>3635385
>>3635378
>>3635361
I'm of the opinion that he joins the company first before he thinks about marrying her again, that way it still shows that regardless of what happened they still love eachother.
>>
>>3635236
>>>"By the power invested in me by the gods... I want you go to back in the wedding hall and make Captain a goddamn happy woman for the rest of her days, with none of this bullshit about glorified suicide by wife. Congratulations on the wedding, you cheeky bugger."
>>
>"By the power invested in me by the gods... I want you go to back in the wedding hall and make Captain a goddamn happy woman for the rest of her days, with none of this bullshit about glorified suicide by wife. Congratulations on the wedding, you cheeky bugger."

I helped him up. "Also, knock it off with the whole 'woe-is-me-world-on-my-shoulders' thing. It's creepy. You're what, twenty?"

Yesugei massaged his face. Despite the mauling I had given him, he looked noble and beautiful and all that rot. Some people have all the luck. "I will probably have to join the Company," he said with a sigh.

"You don't have to join," I assured him. "You could be one of our camp followers." Every mercenary company, after hitting a certain size, gains hanger-ons and civilians who offer their services to the weary soldiers. I happened to know that Sister was spending a third of his paycheck on a paramour who had a certain familial resemblance. I didn't investigate further.

"I'll take the Company over that," he said. "I can fight. You will not find me a burden." Pause. "One of these days, we should have another duel. I will show you then how real Magal men fight. You were lucky today."

"And dirty," I chuckled. "Don't you forget it. Let's go back. We're keeping everyone else waiting."

---
>>
>>3635133
>>"By the power invested in me by the gods... I want you go to back in the wedding hall and make Captain a goddamn happy woman for the rest of her days, with none of this bullshit about glorified suicide by wife. Congratulations on the wedding, you cheeky bugger."

I feel like we should consult this with capitan first. But who has time for that
>>
>>3635735

The Magal are an emotional people. They are intense in their rivalries, intense in their friendships, intense in their courtships. They rarely forget slights made against them, but treat strangers at their doorstep with the most familiar kind of hospitality.

Though Yesugei renounced his position as Khagan, they still gave us a wedding to remember. The ex-Khagan divested most of his possessions, many of which had been wedding gifts. The only thing he took was a new horse and his weapons.

And a beautiful wife. She had looked happy. More happy than I could remember her ever being. I felt a little jealous. The last time I had made anyone so happy was when I had been with my wife.

"I do not know how I am to live, Aurelius," Yesugei said. "I was so focused in dying for all this time. How do you do it?" We were riding off south, back to the sleepy encampment where the rest of the Company was stationed. No doubt they were eagerly waiting for us back home. Home. What a nostalgic word.

"Hmm?" I looked up from my ornery mount. I could swear it was trying to make me go horsesick.

"Live," Yesugei said. "I feel like a man with a horse but none of the knowledge to guide his mount. I feel like the arrow loosed into the open wind, only to find nothing in its path."

>"Have fun. Enjoy a life with your new wife. Fight with her occasionally about what colour of dress she should have worn. What do I care?" I shrugged. "It's your life, Yesugei. Live as you would live."

>"Do I look like a counselor?" I asked rhetorically. "I'm a body doctor, not a mind doctor."

>"I have Honey," I said contentedly. "And that is enough."
>>
>>3635760

>"Have fun. Enjoy a life with your new wife. Fight with her occasionally about what colour of dress she should have worn. What do I care?" I shrugged. "It's your life, Yesugei. Live as you would live."
>>
>>3635760
>"Have fun. Enjoy a life with your new wife. Fight with her occasionally about what colour of dress she should have worn. What do I care?" I shrugged. "It's your life, Yesugei. Live as you would live."
>>
>>3635760
>"Have fun. Enjoy a life with your new wife. Fight with her occasionally about what colour of dress she should have worn. What do I care?" I shrugged. "It's your life, Yesugei. Live as you would live."
>>
>>3635760

>"Have fun. Enjoy a life with your new wife. Fight with her occasionally about what colour of dress she should have worn. What do I care?" I shrugged. "It's your life, Yesugei. Live as you would live."
>>
>>3635760
>>"I have Honey," I said contentedly. "And that is enough."
>>
>>3635760
>"I have Honey," I said contentedly. "And that is enough."
>>
>>3635760
>"I have Honey," I said contentedly. "And that is enough."
Considering that we were forced to divorce our wife. I think we're already happy with what we got now, at least we're trying to raise her in our own sick and twisted way. Which is probably a better way than Sister.
>>
>>3635760
>"Have fun. Enjoy a life with your new wife. Fight with her occasionally about what colour of dress she should have worn. What do I care?" I shrugged. "It's your life, Yesugei. Live as you would live."
>>
>>3635862
Our wife, bless her beautifull person, would probably do a better job at it. But we are trying.
>>
>>3635867
>>3635774
>>3635771
>>3635770
>>3635768
>"Have fun. Enjoy a life with your new wife. Fight with her occasionally about what colour of dress she should have worn. What do I care?" I shrugged. "It's your life, Yesugei. Live as you would live."

"A life of my own..." he said. He was quiet the rest of the ride.

We returned to the Company, one fighter richer. They accepted us with welcome arms, and the news of the Horde's dispersal with even more joy. Of course they didn't believe the bit where a mere Scrivener challenged the Khagan and beat him to an inch of his life, before forcing him to make the tribes disperse. They thought it was Captain who did it by feminine wiles, despite vehement denial from her part.

I could live with that. I didn't want my name known too broadly. The only time heroes are made is when their stories are told. That was not the Black Company way. We did our job, got paid, and fuck off to gods know where else. No Sinaean chronicler would tell of the fateful duel in the centuries to come.

And that suited me just fine.

"Hey," Dumpling said. We were in our platoon tent, exhausted from the rigours of travel.

"Hey," I replied. "Told you I wouldn't die." I thought I had been lying then.

"I know. You did." Beat. "Thanks."

"I thank myself, too. I'm too young to die." Youth is relative. As far as I am concerned, I will be too young to die a century from now. Life, for all its miseries, holds a special place in my heart, for all the memories it has given me. The good, the bad, the ugly - all have a story to tell, in their own way.

"So... what are you going to do next?" She fidgeted.

"I am going to sleep," I declared. "I didn't get to sleep at all, what with Captain crying all night long. Good night."

Dumpling kicked me the moment I lay on my cot. Hood hooted with laughter, having watched the whole thing. Docile and quiet one moment, viciously jumping on me the next.

Women.

~ FIN ~
>>
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14 KB JPG
>>3635890
Or is it?
>>
>>3635897
Why yes I would like to play another short story involving the tales of the Black Company.
>>
>>3635897
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a1Y73sPHKxw
>>
>>3635897
Also I like how you write, so I'd be up for some more
>>
>>3635897
Yeah sure.
>>
I felt I had to wrap it up before I fell asleep today. That was... quite a ride. I think this past tense first person way of writing is much easier for me, comes without the hesitancy of my other quest. Part of why I was able to update it so frequently, really.

I've never finished a quest before. So this is a thing. I'm not getting any of the euphoric burst I thought I would from having an end. It feels a bit hollow. Maybe because of the shit ton of loose ends and my terrible ending post. But eh.

What did you think? The humour did get a little juvenile at times (all the times) but that's me, I can't change who I am. I think. Though I have been told a swift kick in the head by a horse can do wonders for personality shifts. The writing, well, that's something that needs to be constantly worked on. Some parts I had easier time writing, other parts I was more or less spitting out words like machine guns. Then there's the parts where I agonised over every sentence, then deleted them, and agonisingly birthed them again. Brrr.
>>
>>3635897
yes I would like to see more of Aurelius, we still have to take care of Honey and see how our relationship with Dumpling and Hood will end up, you never properly gave us a route lock in any of the two

>>3635923
the humor was nice, as well as the overlaying threat of violence at every corner I enjoyed it very much

thanks for running
>>
>>3635923
I liked it from start to finish
>>
>>3635923
I thought the humor was alright considering the personality of the protagonist.
>>
>>3635923
The humor was the best part honestly, I chuckled more than once. Hope to see more of this.
>>
>>3635923
Good Quality quest. Will come back for more.
>>
>>3635897
I like it. It'd be cool if next episode is from the perspective of another company member.
>>
>>3635923
Noooooooo
It can't end before our love for Hood becomes fulfilled! She's fibally warming up, even sleeping at the same tent after she discovered our ancestor, she totally wants us.
>>
>>3635897
MORE
>>
>>3636342
Ditto
>>
>>3635923
I enjoyed it and the humour was fun. I hope you decide to do a full quest rather than leaving it at a once shot (whether it is with Aurelius or someone else)
>>
>>3637567
See >>3637197
>>
>>3635923
best story ive read and participated in for i dont know how long
hope you had enough fun to continue qming



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