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Author's Note
: This story, Terrible Company, is sprawling sword-and-sorcery fantasy satire with a diverse cast of characters. Over its many chapters, those characters will have interactions (both with each other and others) that cross many of the lines that exist between Lit genres. I have come to believe that breaking the story into those different categories, as best I can, is the best way to expose the most readers to parts of the story they might dig, and that they might then be encouraged to read on.
Each chapter is written as a self-contained episode, and although there are running gags that continue through the series that enrich the experience, they shouldn't prevent one from starting anywhere in the series (including the final chapter) and enjoying it for what it is.
This chapter features:
Val, the female Orc Warrior/Fighter
Katsa, the female Human Arcanist
Mathilda, the female Dwarf Healer
Ayen, the male Half Elf Thief
Ivy, the female Human Bard
Enjoy!//
"This is incredible," Ivy said, as she turned the page. Her eyes darted, following the prose line-by-line with rabid enthusiasm. Mathilda grabbed hold of her elbow and gave a light tug, guiding Ivy around an exposed tree root to which the Bard was oblivious. "Oh my Gods! Listen to this! '
Dew graced the pink flesh at the apex her thighs. Grignalda smiled rapturously as she jammed three fingers right in,
pretty hard
, and drove her paramour to the very brink of ecstasy.'
This guy is a genius. I wonder when his next book comes out?"
"Wha' kinda shit name is Grignalda?"
"It's fairly common among goblins," she replied, tucking her thumb into the book to mark her place.
"S'abit of'a mouthful to ge' around in a scene like that, isn' i'?"
"Especially when there's much better things to be getting a mouthful of," Ayen added.
Ivy turned toward Mathilda, expecting the little Dwarf to explode, but Mathilda seemed merely thoughtful. Eventually Ivy shrugged and continued her thought. "I'm pretty sure that a work like this isn't really meant to be read aloud."
"Why no'?"
"Well," Ivy said, "the Maestro was always reading erotica out loud during our lessons, but he stumbled over the names a lot. It felt like they were never intended to be spoken, just imagined."
"Why can't characters in those things just have normal names?" Katsa asked.
Ivy shrugged. "I think it's supposed to be enjoyed alone."
"Ah never understood tha'. People repress themselves. It's un'ealthy."
"If you
really
think that's true," Val reasoned, "then why do you wear clothes at all? Why not just run around naked all the time, kissing and fucking whoever you want?"
" 'ave ye fergotten where we're goin'?" She tapped her metal bracer with the index finger of the other hand, and smiled incredulously. "Ah'm gonna need this armor, I s'spect."
Val rolled her eyes. "Hypothetically speaking."
"Are ye daft? Knuckledraggers an' mouthbreathers 're ev'rywhere! Ah don't want those troglodytes ooglin' mah bits!"
"Sounds pretty repressed to me," Katsa lilted with a smirk.
"S'not even remotely the same! Bein' unapologetic abou' 'avin' a taste for a few dif'rent pies is a far cry from public noodity. Ye can't trus'
anyone.
"
"You are in the wrong line of work," Val laughed.
"If ye think I can't crack skulls jus' as good as you can, yer dead wrong!"
"No!" Val laughed, even harder. "I mean what are you doing healing people if you think so little of them?"
"Oh," Mathilda said, nodding. "Aye. Ah've 'ad tha' though' qui' a few times o'er the years."
"And?"
"An' ev'ry time Ah think abou' i' too hard, that miserable bastard starts givin' me 'eadaches." The dark-haired dwarf grumbled under her breath. "Ah don' 'ave a lo' a choice in the ma'er."
"My hand still isn't quite right," Ayen said, grabbing his wrist reflexively.
"Ah told ye ta stop wankin' i' so much, bu' did ye listen ta me?"
"I don't need to use my
own
hands," Ayen said archly. "I have a wealth of volunteers."
"Yer like the Pied Piper of idiots."
"And
you're
still angry that I won that sweet little Gnome a few towns back. What was her name again?"
"She was an 'alfling!"
"OH MY GODS!
" Ivy cried. Val and Mathilda were both ready, weapon in hand, on the instant.
"What is it?" Katsa gasped, whirling and scanning the trees.
"They're going to fuck!"
"
Who?
" Mathilda and Ayen said together, though it was difficult to sort out which one was incredulous and which one was fearful.
"Oh," Ivy said, coming back to her senses and smiling brightly. "I'm working on a book. This
Double Slit Experiment
has had me all inspired, so I went back to something I'd started years ago. Two of the characters I've recently added bicker all the time, and it's just hitting me now that
of course
they're going to end up together. All that tension has to go somewhere!"
"I thought you were working on that stupi-
ow
..." Katsa glared up at Val, rubbing her side where the big Orc had elbowed her, and stuck her tongue out. "I thought you were working on some kind of
game.
"
"Pretendy Time? I think I'm going to scrap it. Nobody would believe the adventures we have are real. Now I'm working on an erotic pirate novel."
"That sounds awful," she said, and then yelped a few seconds later when Val jabbed her again. "Well it does!"
"I wouldn't have thought bodice-rippers were your style," Ivy said thoughtfully. "Not unless there was a lot of noncon."
"I don't even know what that means," Katsa said dismissively.
"Wot's the appeal o' shreddin' a bunch of corsets?"
"It's not about ripping them up," Ayen answered. "It's about ripping them
off
"
Mathilda nodded slowly as they walked. "Ah think Ah'd like ta read tha'."
"Fantastic!" Ivy exclaimed, leaping briefly-but-spectacularly into the air. Her blouse barely escaped splitting down the middle from the force of her landing. "I've been dying to inflict it on someone else!"
***
"Fuuuuck," Katsa groaned, as they peered through dense foliage. All of them were crouched side by side on a thick branch thirty feet above the ground, except for Mathilda who was so short as to be able to simply stand next to them and be of nearly the same height. "That thing is huge!"
"How do we keep gettin' jobs like this?" Val asked.
"I'm not sure how we keep getting jobs at all," the Thief grumbled.
"Can you kill that?" the Arcanist whined, turning to her right.
"Eventually?" Val said, bobbing her head back and forth. "Sure, but it's gonna take a while. That whole 'the bigger they are' chunk of wisdom is complete bullshit. Being big just means they're gonna take
forever
to die, and Bigfoots are the worst."
"Bigfoots?" Katsa asked. "Not Bigfeet?"
"Bigfoots," Ivy said with certainty.
"They've got really tough skin," Val added, shaking her head. "They're like walking ironoak trees."
Katsa groaned as she watched the Bigfoot putter back and forth in front of the entrance to its cave, assembling various carcasses into different piles. Although it nearly rivaled the ogres they'd encountered several months earlier in size, the Bigfoot seemed somehow more feral. Less civilized. "Is it carcasses or carcassi?" the Blonde wondered aloud.
"Carcasses," Ivy said assuredly. "What do you think, Mathilda?"
"Ah think it needs an editor."
Ivy nodded admittingly. Katsa, Val, and Ayen all turned to glare at the Healer, who continued turning the pages in disapproving obliviousness.
"We should probably send in the Elf."