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/qst/ - Quests


Giovanno Leone stood with his arms crossed, looking out at the rising sun from atop the apartment block in Duefiume Ponte his Urban Arditi company had claimed as a base. He spoke, but not to a person he could see, nor who could even hear him, but if he closed his eyes, he could imagine him in the air before him regardless.

The last Year’s End, his hillman friend had seemed happy, the festivities in Lapizlazulli well enjoyed by him and his wife, though not his daughter. The Year’s End of 1912 was somber without him- and without certainty of why he was even absent.

“Why?” He asked, “I would understand if you were merely dissatisfied with our Nation and wished not to fight. I know sitting about and waiting for the future to arrive on its own, would be the opposite of what we aspired to do. But why this[/ui], why now? Did you think I would recklessly follow you, as I bid you to do for me in the past? Or did you wish to leave us all behind? Your friends and family both? Did you fear that living without conflict would corrupt your Revolutionary spirit? I simply don’t understand, Bonetto. Surely you didn’t do this simply to wound me, vengeance for God knows what.”

“If you can talk to ‘im and he can hear ya,” a sullen woman’s voice floated over from the entrance to the roof, “Throw out your hand and give ‘im a good clout ‘cross the head for me.”
The hulking Sea Vitelian glanced backwards and opened his eyes. “Tell me, Marcella. What do you know of the principles of Revolution?”

Marcella shrugged, and said, “I know if a machine’s broken, then you either gotta fix it or scrap it. That’s the way it is for a lotta things, ain’t it?”

“That’s true enough,” Leo turned his head back to the horizon. Chiara would have been able to speak much more upon that. Yet she had passed from this world, hopefully to a utopia beyond, something further than any Young Futurist might have dreamed. It made Giovanno sad, however, that she was no beyond any of the living. What would she have done? “Marcella,” he posed the question to her, “If Chiara were alive, would she have gone with Bonetto?”
>>
Marcella grimaced, toyed with the open part of her mechanic’s jumpsuit, tried to close it at the top of the collar again between thumb and finger like whenever she wanted to have a serious conversation. “I dunno, Leo. She was awful fond of the Judge and Cathedra like a lotta these Gilicians are, and her uncle threw in with ‘em. But she liked you an awful lot too. Maybe she would’a gone to whatever side wasn’t yours,” she half closed her eyes and sighed, “And whatever side I wasn’t on.”

“That would not have lasted,” Giovanno said. “…I would not have let it lie as the man I was before did.”

Marcella stared at his back. Wanted to ask who he would have picked. She said nothing, though, and instead approached and wrapped her arms around his center. “He’ll come back ‘round.”

“I know he will,” Giovanno said, “The war against the Reich did not fell him, this will not either.” Yet, he still felt as though a new rift had come in between them, from this question he could not answer.

-----

The chill of a Vitelian winter was hardly a bitter one, you had heard, but you still felt cooler than you’d ever had as you marched at the head of a column of black coated soldiers. Once your most bitter enemies, you now found this band of Forlorn Imperials your charge and blade both in a new war, one you’d never anticipated fighting back when the battles to be fought were against those you now deigned to command.

You are Palmiro Bonaventura, formerly of the Vitelian Royal Army, now a commander in the Gilician Alliance, a loose meshing of several Gilician organizations who first test in working as a single unified entity was coming with the new year. Disillusioned with the control that certain powers had over your country, you had joined with this regional uprising in an effort not for Gilicia’s sake, necessarily, but for Vitelia’s, as your old mentor Di Zucchampo had told you of the damage that tearing Gilicia from the grasp of a group of power brokers known as the Three Points would do to them- and afterwards, perhaps, Vitelia might finally start to heal from its war that had ended just over two years ago.

It was a circuitous route to the Dawn, to Revolution, but you remembered the prophetic dream, wanted to believe in its resolution, which promised the Dawn would come, though suffering and bloodshed would unavoidably precede it. Naught was said of the course, only that it would be a struggle.
>>
Beside you walked your current aide, past childhood friend, in another lifetime your wife, but in this one merely your companion, Elena. She bore the name of her own husband passed on, Giarno, though out of respect rather than love, as she had refused his touch in characteristic stubbornness. You had not been similarly reserved, but your own romantic partner and mother to your two children, Yena Bonaventura, had been sent away and out of Vitelia, both your homeland and Gilicia both no place for her nor your daughter and son, Vittoria and Lorenzo, to be.

“Commander,” a voice said in the harsh edge of the Imperial tongue as a hand touched your shoulder. A runner from elsewhere in the column. “Major Katona says that we need to slow up. The rookie battalion’s falling behind.”

“They’ll catch up,” you replied, “We don’t have any reason to delay. The Royal Army doesn’t know that they’re waiting for us. If our battalion needs to rest then we’ll pause, but otherwise, we’re all going to the same place anyways. Tell Katona that.”

“Yes, sir.”

Elena might have said that she would have appreciated a respite, but she was focused on something else right now, contemplating the misty treetops that stretched on ahead. A hard march certainly wasn’t what she was used to, but she was a strong and tall farm girl even before she had started doing physical training with you. She was wiry and when her arms were bare, they were corded with muscle quite unlike any lady you’d ever seen- even if she frowned when she compared her bicep to yours and found it rather thin when next to it. In your youths, you had competed physically often and been far more evenly matched. No longer. Time had taken its toll in many ways in the journey to adulthood.

Despite your position as commander of what had been called the Black Battalion, after the color of the coats of the Imperial exiles, you didn’t know the specifics of the coming operation. Only that careful manipulations had occurred to set up an entire division of the Vitelian Royal Army’s Gilician Garrison into a terrible tactical position. One you and other units had to exploit. Certain details had been passed down- most importantly, that your numbers were entirely unexpected, the same with the quality of troops. You would be utterly underestimated, and that would be your greatest advantage in the battle to come.

Your battalion as well as two others, one made up of seasoned soldiers and the other of raw recruits barely trained, were on your way from the north to a place called Mariana’s Hollow, following the stream that would eventually run through the bottom of your destination. It wasn’t a place of much importance, largely undeveloped and sparsely populated, but it was also as far north as the north east rail lines went into the Gilician highlands.
>>
Decisive battles had been lacking, and the Gilician Occupation’s command was apparently hungering for something more bombastic than isolated patrols, raids, and occupation of cities where protests and riots were never simple to quell. So they struck out into the territory of the militant irregulars, hoping to either draw out the Gilician Alliance into a field battle, or to be able to exert enough control over the highlands to root out the revolt wherever it could be dug up. Even though the missives from the Continuation Command didn’t indicate such speculation, you noticed that this striking out of the Vitelian Royal Army was directly towards what Di Zucchampo had described as important mining expedition regions. Undeveloped, but great in potential. Was what the Three Points wanted part of this? Perhaps.

The Gilician Alliance was not so different in its desires from their foes. A set piece battle was what the Continuation Command hungered for, and the North Morning Star, your own faction, wanted a big victory to display as a trophy as well. It had only been some months since tensions had escalated to the point that what was occurring in Gilicia could be called a war, by your measure, but the Gilicians were impatient for a real win, while the Vitelian Royal Army, you anticipated, was looking for a flag to raise so they could get out of all this, regardless of the machinations of the Three Points.

How it would all happen wasn’t clear, but you had an idea of how it would happen. A railway was a route of resupply, so cutting that off was a given. While aid couldn’t come immediately this deep into the territory, reinforcement was a definite possibility, so whatever battle was planned couldn’t become a protracted siege. The Gilician Alliance also had a frankly depressing lack of artillery and equipment heavier than machine guns, so the fighting couldn’t become something like you were experienced with in the Auratus War against the Reich.

Fast, aggressive, climactic, such a fight was what the Black Battalion had been made into under your command. All of their machine guns and what light artillery and mortars they had was traded away for machine pistols and small arms suited for the assault. It wouldn’t be a lie to say that they were better equipped for such a task than the Royal Army’s regulars, something most of the Gilician Alliance couldn’t say for any of their troops, many of them forced to use old rifles stolen from armories or smuggled from where they could get some, if they weren’t weapons that had been deserted with.
>>
In the evening, you stopped at the edge of the forest, and the Black Battalion set up camp. A company of friendly horsemen had been waiting for your arrival, calling themselves Ortico’s Outriders, a collection of rural rangers before they had taken up the Gilican Alliance’s cause, none of them bearing the sabers that would mark Royal Army cavalry. Their captain, the titular Ortico, wore a ring like yours that signified allegiance with the North Morning Star. After a brief meeting, the horsemen rode back out, to bring news of your arrival and the rest of the First Northern Regiment to those already here.

Your tent set up, you met with Katona and the company commanders again, mingled with the men who ate cold jerky and hardtack for supper, before returning to bed down for the night. Elena slept on the other side of the tent, not that there was much room for both of you in it, but she refused to be alone still. The sound of her near helped you sleep, admittedly. It distracted you from the feelings of lonesomeness that liked to creep in and protest your life choices- your choice to leave Yena behind, and send her away.

The 28th of January arrived. Ortico returned early, while the sky was still dark as night, to pick up you and Katona, as well as the other leaders such as Lieutenant Colonel Passero, an equal to you in the First Northern, as well as your overall regimental commander Colonel Di Aldila. Everybody was to briefed over much needed coffee as to what was going to happen- and what the goals of the operation to come would be. Ideally, you wouldn’t have had to do this for another couple of days, but apparently, time was shorter than expected.

At twenty-seven years of age, you knew you were still young compared to the average officer, but it made you feel even more lost amongst the largely middle-aged commanders who were at the command briefing along with you. Though nobody was overly old, either- the eldest might have been the same age as Di Zucchampo, the commander in chief of the Gilician Alliance’s militant forces, the so-called Marshall of Gilicia Onore Di Vallenordo. A whispered inquiry to his history revealed that his impoverished estate had been forced to sell off their lands to wealthier nobility, though much of the profit had been donated to the church when the money had been inherited by Onore- despite his name, this man was not much richer than your family was, though his status undoubtedly helped him reach his current position- as well as effective, if hard edged command over an artillery regiment while on the Gilician front during the war against the Reich, eventually placed in a command over a section of defense that managed to stall and repel the Reich’s last offensive against Vitelia just before a ceasefire was arranged.
>>
Despite having little experience commanding a force of the size that was rumored to have been arrayed in this region, his history seemed to make him a natural choice of appointment. His open devotion to the Judge could especially appease the Cathedra and Vilja Domkarl aligned Saints’ Garden, who while by far the least militant wing of the Gilician Alliance, were undeniably the most popular when it came to the support of Gilicia’s general populace. Their influence meant that the Alliance never wanted for food or supplies or willing volunteers, even if the idealistic priests and their monks turned their nose up at procuring weaponry, even when the local militant Holy Orders did not hesitate to provide the assistance their knights could offer.

Your assessment of Marshall Di Vallenordo, as he greeted everybody and told them the plan and circumstances, was that he was a blunt and capable man, though the depth and power of his voice made even quaint statements sound impactful, so his charisma easily had more in his presence than his words, aided by his height and the breadth of his chest and shoulders, and his elegantly groomed grey beard. The tactical plans he left to a subordinate to explain the details of, possibly the proper mastermind of this, though he had nowhere near the presence of leadership and made so little impression you forgot his name by the time the meeting was over. Though you didn’t forget what was told.

The commander of what was called the Gilician Expedition Division was an impatient man, and had the misfortune of falling into what would turn out to be a trap. Poor intelligence and purposeful lies generated from people allied to the Gilician cause within the Royal Army’s own command structure had led to the Expedition Division being deployed into a situation that it was entirely ignorant of the danger of. They expected little opposition, and had encountered such by design, easily clearing out and routing the regional militias that were considered a necessary sacrifice to stoke the enemy’s poorly conceived confidence. They had anticipated Mariana’s Hollow to be a mere staging point before they moved out, spread over the land and fortified positions. They didn’t expect a force triple their size to have arrived, ready to attack them, before their heavy guns had even arrived- those late due to a mix of manipulations but also mere incompetence.

…At least, it was meant to be a battle with odds of three against one. At the moment, it was more like one and one half against one, most of the ready fighters being of the First Northern Regiment and the First Northern Division they were a part of. The other units were late by at least a day, but the plan tolerated no delays. The battle had to begin, and the reinforcements trusted to arrive sooner rather than too much later.
>>
The people who could wait the least, it turned out, was the First Northern Regiment, and the Black Battalion. The train carrying tons of supplies, of ammunition, an entire regiment’s worth of artillery and the guns, was on its way. It would stop at a village called Tristezza, around fifteen kilometers down the rail line from the main assembly point of the Expedition Division, and while it was halted there, it and the village had to be attacked and seized with all haste. Before the main division could react, before the guns could be sabotaged, and then, the Gilician Alliance’s lack of artillery might be cured. So long as the attacking force could also hold out against any counterattack long enough to extricate the precious materiel.

An odd feeling, to be informed of such a vital duty in that way- though the commander of the Black Battalion was not mentioned nor was the battalion itself rather than the regiment as a whole, you knew you would be assigned this task, and wondered what the other commanders here would have thought of somebody as youthful as you being trusted with something so important. How they might have felt about the attack which this battle’s success hinged upon not being carried out by Vitelians, let alone Gilicians, at all.

Not that this would be the first time in history the ends were well justified by the means.

Orders and maps were distributed in heavy, full envelopes, and everybody was escorted back to their units. As you rode back, Katona commented on what he found a funny irony.

“Back to old business for us, isn’t it? This’ll be a hoot among the captains.”

“Our objective is the guns,” you said, “We are not pirates on the hunt for coins and jewels. I expect that to be remembered.”

“As long as the effort’s well rewarded.”

You frowned and opened a map. Tristezza was a tiny settlement, there being only around forty to fifty people living there in total. Enough families to count on fingers and toes. Little more than a stop on the way north along a railway still under construction when the Gilician Uprising began. Scouting by the Outriders and the Alliance’s own infiltrated intelligence indicated that an understrength company sized garrison currently occupied the town. Plenty to dissuade the attacks of any insurgent force that were more than potshots and harassment. Not nearly enough to resist the attack of any of the Gilician Alliance proper units now here. What of the townsfolk? Imported, apparently. A town of non-Gilicians set up to support a stop on the journey north, motivated by subsidy.
>>
The train had around a company’s worth of guards riding on it, as well as its crews, but it was not an armored train in spite of the value of its cargo. A miscalculation on the part of an enemy not wary enough, they acted as though they had nothing to fear. Were they truly so ignorant? They hadn’t sent out deep reaching patrols, hadn’t done proper scouting, the Gilician Alliance’s own scouts would have noticed if they did. Instead, they were securing only the territory needed to offload, and then setting up to move on. The Judge himself couldn’t have handed a better opportunity down.

A check of your watch, and the briefing, once you returned to the Battalion. Six hours until the train arrived. The wording of the briefing was specific- attacking too early could mean warning away the train in the worst-case scenario, or giving the crews time to sabotage the guns. Unacceptable outcomes. That meant, no matter what, you would have to wait.

Making up the First Northern Regiment around you was the aforementioned other two infantry battalions, but also added to Di Aldila’s command were Ortico’s Outriders, who would be performing reconnaissance and support roles ahead of the operation, when it began. Some of them were already out, on watch and scattered over the countryside and woods, even while you had to sit about.
Upon briefing the captains, the first question was blunt as it was unexpected, from all the captains. As you would be assaulting a settlement, and a train, your permission was asked to put it all to the sack. You hesitated- but they insisted on an answer. Under your command, they sought to do what you had always fought to prevent, even if consulting with Katona told you that the matter would be “orderly” and not an orgy of violence and desolation, especially considering that proper tactical objectives were first and foremost. Even so…

“I’m to understand that the valuables desired are not just trinkets,” you said to the captains.

“Are women and girls exempt?” An officer with a burnt cheek asked, as though it was a matter of whether there was any butter for his bread. “Not all the men will be happy with that, if so, but they will chafe if they can take nothing at all.”
>>
…You did have to remember who you were dealing with. Even though you had been placed in command of the Black Battalion because of your ability to communicate, and the officers did recognize you as being in charge, you had mostly been a taskmaster to them, not a friend, not even attempting to connect with them until very recently. Either they would expect you to do things their way- or you would have to enter the field yourself to ensure your will was followed to a degree.

>Were you a rabble, a mob, or soldiers? There was to be no looting of any kind. They were lucky to not be prosecuted for past crimes, to be frank. Their best behavior was expected as well as earnest efforts.
>It was true, they were expected to attack, to fight, to die. Anything material, you would excuse them taking. Not a finger was to be laid on any people, however.
>What choice did you have? This battle was for Gilicia, the welfare of a village of migrants was no concern compared to keeping the men motivated and fighting. So long as it was still “orderly.”
>Other?

Also-

>Accompany the attack yourself. To ensure your will was done- and that you could be said to have been present.
>Go along, and take Elena with you. Perhaps you needed no bodyguard, but she would not be happy being left behind if you went…
>Remain behind. You were a battalion commander, not a man who aspired to be first over the wall for a crown of leaves. Success was best found from a place of proper observation and communication.
>Other?
(Tactical Planning will be in next update- The map and such will come.)
>>
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Previous Threads-
Prologue Part 1: https://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/qstarchive/2023/5687489/
Prologue Part 2: https://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/qstarchive/2023/5771752/
Prologue Part 3: https://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/qstarchive/2023/5810248/

Twitter for announcements and shitposts is @scheissfunker

Starting the thread with a formatting error I thought I had fixed. What an auspicious start to the year. This should, at the least, be the final "prologue." Fingers crossed.
Anyways. I've already posted this everywhere I expect it to be seen, but considering this is the actual series of threads, there's no real reason not to repost PCQ Christmas Fanservice as usual here. The Year's End is the Vitelian Christmas celebration timing equivalent, after all, so it's relevant in context. Even if it's not even close to Langenachtfest anymore.
>>
>>5879266
>Were you a rabble, a mob, or soldiers? There was to be no looting of any kind. They were lucky to not be prosecuted for past crimes, to be frank. Their best behavior was expected as well as earnest efforts
>Accompany the attack yourself. To ensure your will was done- and that you could be said to have been present.
>>
>>5879266
>It was true, they were expected to attack, to fight, to die. Anything material, you would excuse them taking. Not a finger was to be laid on any people, however.

>Accompany the attack yourself. To ensure your will was done- and that you could be said to have been present.

Happy 2024 and all
>>
>>5879266
>It was true, they were expected to attack, to fight, to die. Anything material, you would excuse them taking. Not a finger was to be laid on any people, however.

>Remain behind. You were a battalion commander, not a man who aspired to be first over the wall for a crown of leaves. Success was best found from a place of proper observation and communication.

Happy New Year everybody. Welcome "Don't get fragged by subordinates Any% Speedrun."
>>
>>5879266
>It was true, they were expected to attack, to fight, to die. Anything material, you would excuse them taking. Not a finger was to be laid on any people, however.
>Accompany the attack yourself. To ensure your will was done- and that you could be said to have been present.
>>
>>5879266
>Other?
Anything and everything is MINE. Do you understand? Bring me the prizes first, I will choose what to keep, and you lot may have the rest.
>Go along, and take Elena with you. Perhaps you needed no bodyguard, but she would not be happy being left behind if you went…
>>
>>5879296
+1
>>
>>5879266
>Were you a rabble, a mob, or soldiers? There was to be no looting of any kind. They were lucky to not be prosecuted for past crimes, to be frank. Their best behavior was expected as well as earnest efforts
>Accompany the attack yourself. To ensure your will was done- and that you could be said to have been present.
>>
>>5879266
>It was true, they were expected to attack, to fight, to die. Anything material, you would excuse them taking. Not a finger was to be laid on any people, however.
>Remain behind. You were a battalion commander, not a man who aspired to be first over the wall for a crown of leaves. Success was best found from a place of proper observation and communication.
>>
>>5879266
>t was true, they were expected to attack, to fight, to die. Anything material, you would excuse them taking. Not a finger was to be laid on any people, however.
>Accompany the attack yourself. To ensure your will was done- and that you could be said to have been present.
>>
>>5879271
>>5879348
WilderWonka.wav

>>5879274
>>5879290
>>5879407
They may have things- and you will be there to be sure nothing more.

>>5879288
>>5879369
The above, but from afar.

>>5879296
>>5879343
Become the warlord.

Calling it in an hour.
>>
No changes.
Be there and be (relatively not really) square it is. Updating.
>>
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If you were to look at it from a perspective of what was deserved and what was not, it wasn’t as if these men could expect a cash cheque and a pension for their service. For many, merely having their survival tolerated, even if plenty would consider that more than enough recompense, was not enough reason to risk life and limb, especially in such a dangerous business as the assault. In countless times of eld, when a castle, city, even a fortified village was overcome and stormed, the battle crazed and long-suffering troops could not be held back from baser instinct by even the best and most well intentioned of commanders. You could not hope to exceed them, as you were to these troops. So you would be forced to tolerate a minimal sacking, so long as not a finger was laid on any surrendered or innocent persons, the only greed shown being for goods. To ensure this, as well, you would march forth with the men and oversee not only the attack but their conduct afterwards. Even if a battalion commander was oft comfortably afforded a position to observe more safely from further away, rather than joining in throwing themselves against the teeth of a spirited defense.

You informed the captains, then informed the troops of such ruling. They were dimly bemused at being moralized to, you got the feeling, but flashes of surprise sparked when you said you would be there amongst them in the attack. Having been exiled by their home, perhaps they had only seen one another as proper participants in their battles, and had no expectation of better treatment, not from you.
>>
A final inspection, as you went around to various companies, and looked over the best troops, those who would have the hardest task, of breaking and seizing the town of Tristezza itself. They were all equipped with shorter weapons, automatics, many of them, and what seemed like plentiful ammunition but an amount you knew could easily be expended in less time than it took for the blood of a man to run out of his body.

When you went to Elena with the news that you would accompany the attack, she nodded grimly and stood, but you put a hand on her shoulder and set her back down.

“Y’ don’t think I’m gonna stay here,” her voice began to rise heatedly.

“You are not a soldier,” you said, “This is to be real war.”

“Plenty others are gonna have a taste a’ the same,” Elena said defiantly, putting her hand on your wrist and pushing it off her, “I don’t want no special treatment. If not now, then when? What if this is th’ time holdin’ back matters? Did your first battle come only when y’ were nice and ready fer it?”

You pursed your lips. When your first true battle had come and gone, a great many of your friends lay dead, only to ever be seen again when they haunted your dreams and nightmares both. “I would not wish my first battle upon anybody, most certainly not you, Elena.”

“Don’t try an’ trip me up with all th’ bad things that’ve happened t’ you, Bonetto,” Elena growled, “You know that yer worth all th’ pain an’ loss that can be thrown at me, or else I wouldn’t even think t’ come along. I’m not an idjit, blowin’ down th’ same course as th’ wind.”

“This will not be the only battle,” you had to insist, “Please. I am unfamiliar with too much to be able to keep watch over you along with everything else.”

Elena paused. “Swear you’ll let me come next time.”

“I swear it.”

“Swear on yer father’s name.”

“My father’s name,” you touched Elena’s head, “Isn’t precious enough to offer up that way. I don’t know what is, but I’ll give it up should I take back my word.”

That satisfied Elena, but only barely. She pointed an accusing finger. “You come back now,” she said, “An’ you better not have another scar on you.”

-----

The attack was prepared to spring. Despite nominally being cloaked in black, your battalion was not one for casting down function in favor of fashion, and was mostly cloaked in sheets of greys, blues, and whites in preparation for sneaking up, ready to cast them away when the time came that their concealment would give no further aid. The enemy was passive, and did not notice you, nor pay mind to the outriders that had sniffed out their positions and disposition. No fortifications had been prepared save for those that the village naturally offered- they were practically begging to be pounced upon. Yet…
>>
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The train was late.

It had been fifteen minutes, then half an hour since it was supposed to come steaming up. It was misty and cloudy- even though this shrouded any aerial scouts that might discover you, it also meant that a column of smoke that would have announced where the train might be, was invisible.

Frustrated messages sent by horseman from Lieutenant Colonel Passero demanded to know why the fighting hadn’t begun. The first battalion, his troops, were supposed to march forth and set up a blocking position to stop reinforcements from the main enemy contingent north from coming to interrupt this crucial operation, and the command above him wanted to know why he wasn’t moving out.

You didn’t know what to tell him. The train was simply not here, despite all assurances it would be. Was this some grand deception? No. It was impossible. It was likely some consequence of an unforeseen misfortune that the enemy was ignorant was poor fortune for you too.

The company commanders grew anxious. You listened and hear whispered suspicion that the enemy might have seen you by now- worse, that it was a trap. Perhaps even that the artillery had been unloaded, which was why it was not coming, and in just minutes it would begin to pound the Black Battalion with explosive shells as they sat waiting for it like fools.

A decision had to be made. Perhaps you only needed to wait a little longer, to weather this delay just a bit more, but if not…something had to be done.

>Even if the train was late, it was not safe. You would simply chase it down after your full force assaulted and captured Tristezza. Order all your infantrymen to attack.
>You misliked this delay. Take a company of your men to go down the rails and hunt down the train.
>All haste was necessary, and that would mean trusting Katona with the Black Battalion: while you took the outrider reconnaissance southwards. They were not technically under your command, but your mission was to take the train, and you needed their rapidity of movement. Even if a company of light cavalry against equal odds of defenders was poor odds…
>Hold, and wait. The train would come, and stop, and then, only then, would you spring your attack, the nerves of the rest of the Alliance be damned. At most, a platoon of horsemen would check to see how close it was, naught more undue concern than that.
>Other?
Any specific plans can be made, drawn on or described, and elaborated on for the combat to come. You are not limited to merely blowing the whistle and having everybody charge at once for respective targets.
>>
>>5880212
>Hold, and wait. The train would come, and stop, and then, only then, would you spring your attack, the nerves of the rest of the Alliance be damned. At most, a platoon of horsemen would check to see how close it was, naught more undue concern than that.

Send 3rd Platoon's outriders SE to find that train and gallop back ASAP once they spot it.
>>
>>5880212
>Hold, and wait. The train would come, and stop, and then, only then, would you spring your attack, the nerves of the rest of the Alliance be damned. At most, a platoon of horsemen would check to see how close it was, naught more undue concern than that.

Could something have blocked the tracks or derailed the train up the line?

A train is loud, so even if 3-0 can't spot it visually aural identification should be sufficient for a positive identification, and won't need troops to expose themselves, and so are less likely to be spotted. and will settle the troop's nerves once they know things are going to plan.

We could probably have 2-2 relocate East about 1000 ~ 1500m, and wait for the train to pass then cross the rail lines and assault the south eastern garrison from the treeline / road to their south east once we make contact to prevent the train from retreating, and force the central Garrison to split their focus.

3-2 just needs to use their treeline to push the northern garrison out of position.

1-2 & 2-0 can serve as a picket force to pin the central & southern garrison and prevent them from assisting the outlying forces until they are sufficiently surrounded.
>>
>>5880230
You pick the green text option you think is best, or write in your own suggestion to deal with the current problem?
>>
>>5880212
>Hold, and wait. The train would come, and stop, and then, only then, would you spring your attack, the nerves of the rest of the Alliance be damned. At most, a platoon of horsemen would check to see how close it was, naught more undue concern than that.
>>
>>5880212
>>Hold, and wait. The train would come, and stop, and then, only then, would you spring your attack, the nerves of the rest of the Alliance be damned. At most, a platoon of horsemen would check to see how close it was, naught more undue concern than that.
>>
>>5880212
>You misliked this delay. Take a company of your men to go down the rails and hunt down the train.
>>
>>5880212
>Even if the train was late, it was not safe. You would simply chase it down after your full force assaulted and captured Tristezza. Order all your infantrymen to attack.
>>
>>5880212
>Hold, and wait. The train would come, and stop, and then, only then, would you spring your attack, the nerves of the rest of the Alliance be damned. At most, a platoon of horsemen would check to see how close it was, naught more undue concern than that.
>>
>>5880212
>All haste was necessary, and that would mean trusting Katona with the Black Battalion: while you took the outrider reconnaissance southwards. They were not technically under your command, but your mission was to take the train, and you needed their rapidity of movement. Even if a company of light cavalry against equal odds of defenders was poor odds…
We're too used to the trains in Vitellia running on time...
>>
>>5880212
>>Hold, and wait. The train would come, and stop, and then, only then, would you spring your attack, the nerves of the rest of the Alliance be damned. At most, a platoon of horsemen would check to see how close it was, naught more undue concern than that.
Good things come to those who wait.
>>
>>5880223
>>5880225
>>5880267
>>5880296
>>5880581
>>5880681
Hold...hold...

>>5880462
Take the boys down the tracks.

>>5880563
Get it started, immediately.

>>5880637
We Ride.

Writing.
>>
“What’s the plan, Commander?” Katona asked you as you glanced up and down the far-off suggestion of tracks. A train was not a particularly subtle nor sneaky machine. Especially in weather like this, a train would be blowing its horn from far off- it was not sneaking up on you. Nevertheless, you had to have some faith, and not let haste born of panic get the better of you.

“The plan has not changed,” you said, “The train will come. It follows a schedule that doesn’t suit our preference. That’s just how it is. We will not sacrifice a perfect operation so we can grasp at half a success. I will go round and reassure the men. In the meantime, if and only if that train comes, do we begin.”
“Yessir.”

“I’m going to move the second company to a position to set up a southern flank maneuver,” you said, pointing east, “When the train arrives, or when you hear an attack, take that as free reign to strike. I’ll see you in Tristezza.”

With the weather as it was, it would be entirely possible to dash across the train tracks and to the woods on the other side of the village before the train had come to a halt. Cutting off the retreat path might not turn out to be necessary, but as you said, there was no reason for this operation to not go as well as possible, not when you had a force this capable, for all the ill will laid upon it.

The Second Company of the Black Battalion was, by design, in the middle as far as being well equipped went, but none of the companies suffered for lack of anything. It just meant that there were more rifles than handguns and carbines with the second. The Second Company’s captain was a dark-haired quiet man, contemplative and isolated, who responded to the name Von Kalterose, and had several stories spoken about who he was though none of them had been told by him, all rumored reasons being appropriately theatrical for wild rumors be it an inner beast kept in check or a scandal of highborn courts or even a plot at a coup in a protectorate. His reason for punishment in this fashion of exile was unknown however, but the mystery of him at least did not extend to his capability to fight and direct. He had a presence and physique that compelled obedience amongst his subordinates.

“Captain Von Kalterose,” you said when you approached, “Prepare to move the troops eastwards. We wait for the train to pass, and then move south to catch Tristezza in a pincer.”

Von Kalterose nodded silently, and barked to his second in command, and pointed brusquely. His will was yours, and he did not backtalk or object, merely did. A useful man- the other captains were less ready to follow your command without Katona’s backup, though you doubted that him following your commands had anything to do with your personal character. He likely knew as little about you as you did him, maybe less.
>>
File: scene_35_tristezza3.jpg (406 KB, 1000x1000)
406 KB
406 KB JPG
To the eastern prominence of the woods you went, meeting up with the troop of outriders there- they were amused at you showing up, and replied in the negative when asked if any sign of the train’s approach had been seen or heard. They were mostly humored about the laziness of the garrison of Tristezza; they knew so little about this territory, but sent out no feelers. Whomever had told them such behavior was acceptable, that such laxness was safe, was terribly wrong. What you were about to do to your countrymen would be a dilemma of pride and shame both.

Two hours passed. Furious messages came forth from runners, demanding you follow orders, but you delayed as best you could, until finally, as you were busy reading an ultimatum threatening you to be removed from command, reprimand assured, you heard the whistle, the huff and chuff. Finally, the train was here. You eyed it through the fog as it passed. Little in the way of fortified compartments, certainly not an armored train. A battalion’s worth of heavy cannons and their crew and support, loads of precious ammunition and supplies, piles of cut wood, crates, tarcloth-covered and heaped with snow like they had been left to lie for entirely too long to have been efficiently sent up the chain of logistics.

Hope soared. A slap on the back came from an unknown source, and you took it as a sign of support rather than an assassination attempt as you told Captain Von Kalterose to begin the maneuver when the train was out of sight, told the outriders to go ahead of you and warn ahead if the path was not safe.

You checked your old friend, the only one from the Reich you could call such. It had something wrong with it just the other day, but Katona had fixed it- claimed that, from how you described it working, that the pistol had been broken a while. Funny that. You hadn’t been able to tell until the problem became critical.
The train well past, you marched forward at the head of the company, met an outrider pulling back, who told you that the trees you moved for were clear- no patrols, no booby traps, no ambush, nothing.

…You hadn’t done the Emck in a while, you thought as you motioned for the troops to go on and checked the magazine of your pistol another time. Hopefully you would prevail without good luck being needed…

>Roll 3 sets of 2d100, one for each company. A roll above 40 for the first roll gives a bonus to the all secondary rolls of +5 per success, which is also DC 40. 2nd Company in the 2nd set only needs DC 30s.
>>
>>5880973
Correction, +10 per success.
>>
Rolled 83, 3 = 86 (2d100)

>>5880973
Let's get it!
>>
Rolled 91, 88 = 179 (2d100)

>>5880973
>>
Rolled 95, 64 = 159 (2d100)

>>5880973
>>
>>5880976
>>5880983
>>5881009
Good job 1st Company!
Thank god these were roll overs instead of roll unders or we'd be FUCKED.
>>
The train slowed, and even from this far away, its final whistle as it screeched to a stop could be heard. Time to go. You nodded to the captain, and he pointed, gestured, and runners went all over. No whistles could be heard when the troops started running forward after a final weapons check, heedless of whether you were being left behind. To be with them, you had to keep up. Something you had little trouble doing when you figured out what was happening, though you didn’t try and outpace the white cloaked soldiers. What with you lacking their camouflage.

You heard gunfire from the north, but not from nearby until you were practically on top of the clueless garrison. To one side of you, a black coat threw off his cloak, and his victim only let out a shocked yelp before he was run through with a bayonet and tackled into the snow. Only when the shouts of alarm began to echo did the chattering sound of submachineguns start, the pop of pistols, and the thump of grenades. The Judge had some mercy for you left- as the consequences of your betrayal stayed your hand from any Vitelians, the fighting quite over by the time you passed by any wreckage left by the troops of Second Company. All you saw was the clearing of houses, and the dragging out of cowering civilians as the southern reach of Tristezza was secured. Nowhere left to search and with a chilling lack of prisoners- any wounded seemed to have been bayoneted immediately after being felled- you were met by Captain Von Kalterose, who spoke the first words you’d heard him utter that whole day.

“It is done.” Viteliean- did he know it all along? Or was it merely a phrase he knew?

“Good,” you replied in the Imperial language, “Round up the men, we go north.” The understanding was clear- coming back for loot would come later, and there were no objections.

Not a single casualty had been taken. All that had been lost was ammunition.

Yet also, you thought as you saw the piled dead of uniforms you once shared, now belonging to an enemy, you had lost innocence you thought you already had long had taken away by the war already gone.

-----
>>
Once again, the fighting done by your men outpaced you as you heard all the sounds of battle but only ever saw the aftermath. The train, smoke still pouring from its funnel, was still as black coated men swarmed around and over it; the battle was just about over, and when you reached the final untaken sections of the train, you witnessed naught but the surrender of a foe already vanquished.

First Company had taken the brunt of punishment, Katona reported to you when you met with him again. Forty casualties, nineteen of them mortal. They had a tough time of it when fighting in the heart of the village and over the train until the momentum of the attack from the other companies sent the enemy reeling enough to be pushed through.

The way the Black Battalion fought was brutal and deadly. There were captives, but they were exclusively men who had thrown down their weapons or personnel who were unarmed in the first place. Five civilians had been casualties from the Blackcoats spraying fire through walls, throwing in explosives, and similar things they seemed to regret little. Katona told you it could have been worse.

“We won quickly enough that nothing had to be damaged,” he said with a shrug, “It’s nasty business, but if it was the old times…well. Some people didn’t take prisoners, or leave witnesses.”

“Did you?” you asked coldly.

“I have a heart, Commander. And that heart’s gotten good people killed where a heartless man would have kept them alive.”

A bitter subject. You shut up about it. Still, though…you couldn’t look at these bloodied uniforms and think nothing of it, could you? Hear about unintended deaths caused by people you were responsible for? Was this truly all right, with nothing better that could have been done?

>This was war. Killing and death was the reality of it. No matter the nationality and color of clothing, these people were now your enemies. Plenty of such people would find themselves enemies, if the Dawn was to arrive…
>The civilians were a shame. Victory was not. You had won here, and your troops would carry this day, you already knew. Was this not a cause for happiness? Was a tragedy and further tragedies still not avoided by this quite successful and relatively lightly bloody battle? The Gilician Alliance would celebrate it, and so should you.
>You didn’t want to fight against Vitelia. This victory brought you no joy. What would be thought of you, when friends, family, any who knew and admired you, heard you had brought such a woeful defeat upon your motherland?
>Other?
>>
“The Outriders will handle the prisoners and securing the civilians,” you said, pushing the thoughts aside for now, “Let’s get the wounded cared for, and these guns and cargo secured. Lieutenant Colonel Passero’s going to be in a hell of a fight soon. Once everything’s handled, the men can go and take what they will.”

“Understood, sir.”

Two howitzers had been sabotaged, broken up and jammed with junk, but the other sixteen guns were intact- almost three full batteries of fifteen-centimeter stout barreled howitzers, a sort you seldom saw but heard often, ready to use as soon as they could be taken off the train’s freight cars. To the Gilician Alliance, an incredibly precious acquisition, but you wondered just how long the mountains of shells and powder bags, seemingly endless, would really last. The numerous horses used to drag the guns also had to not only be offloaded, but in time, cared for, fed…

As the prisoners were made to do the heavy lifting under the careful eye of gun toting guards, you made sure your presence could be felt all throughout the Battalion- eyes were on you aplenty, and nobody got up to anything that you had already made clear wouldn’t be tolerated. The civilians were unmolested (beyond hurt they had received without intention in the battle) as the village was ransacked.

…You were left with little to oversee. No prisoners would have anything useful to say that you could think of, not anything you didn’t already know. Runners were already off with news of your victory, and no matter how beleaguered your allies might have been to the north, you were ordered to remain with the artillery unless specifically ordered by Colonel Di Aldila otherwise. Reinforcement duty, if and when needed, was to come from the 3rd Battalion, even if their lack of training and experience made them of questionable use against the Royal Army when they were now well ready for a fight.
So what now…

>Partake in some looting yourself. This village and this train and everybody on it were yours now. Seek your fair take. (Look for anything in particular?)
>You had to keep busy somehow. Throw yourself into tasks meant to be given to others. There were plenty of dead to pile up, thankfully, not too many of your command…
>There was an entire division in the field to the north. Even if only a fraction of it came down, your allies might be in trouble, and a whole battalion wasn’t needed to watch some guns when no reinforcements would be coming from the south anytime soon. Go up to help Passero. (With what portion of your force?)
>Other?
>>
>>5881068
>You didn’t want to fight against Vitelia. This victory brought you no joy. What would be thought of you, when friends, family, any who knew and admired you, heard you had brought such a woeful defeat upon your motherland?
>>5881070
>You had to keep busy somehow. Throw yourself into tasks meant to be given to others. There were plenty of dead to pile up, thankfully, not too many of your command…
>>
>>5881068
>This was war. Killing and death was the reality of it. No matter the nationality and color of clothing, these people were now your enemies. Plenty of such people would find themselves enemies, if the Dawn was to arrive…

>>5881070
>Partake in some looting yourself. This village and this train and everybody on it were yours now. Seek your fair take. (Look for anything in particular?)
Gold, guns, valuables, booze and pretty women
>>
>>5881070
>The civilians were a shame. Victory was not. You had won here, and your troops would carry this day, you already knew. Was this not a cause for happiness? Was a tragedy and further tragedies still not avoided by this quite successful and relatively lightly bloody battle? The Gilician Alliance would celebrate it, and so should you.


>Partake in some looting yourself. This village and this train and everybody on it were yours now. Seek your fair take. (Look for anything in particular?)

Look for any orders or communications, grab a machine pistol or carbine off the dead. Also interrogate the POWs on the reason for the train delay.
>>
>>5881068
>This was war. Killing and death was the reality of it. No matter the nationality and color of clothing, these people were now your enemies. Plenty of such people would find themselves enemies, if the Dawn was to arrive…
>>5881070
>You had to keep busy somehow. Throw yourself into tasks meant to be given to others. There were plenty of dead to pile up, thankfully, not too many of your command…
>>
>>5881070
>You didn’t want to fight against Vitelia. This victory brought you no joy. What would be thought of you, when friends, family, any who knew and admired you, heard you had brought such a woeful defeat upon your motherland?

Keep an account of the dead, and what is taken as spoils. We should at least document things so proper counterclaims can be filed.

>You had to keep busy somehow. Throw yourself into tasks meant to be given to others. There were plenty of dead to pile up, thankfully, not too many of your command…

The faster we get moving the faster the picket forces can be relieved, and the larger distance we put between us and the counter attack.
>>
>>5881068
>You didn’t want to fight against Vitelia. This victory brought you no joy. What would be thought of you, when friends, family, any who knew and admired you, heard you had brought such a woeful defeat upon your motherland?

>>5881070
>You had to keep busy somehow. Throw yourself into tasks meant to be given to others. There were plenty of dead to pile up, thankfully, not too many of your command…
>>
>>5881068
>This was war. Killing and death was the reality of it. No matter the nationality and color of clothing, these people were now your enemies. Plenty of such people would find themselves enemies, if the Dawn was to arrive…

>>5881070
>Partake in some looting yourself. This village and this train and everybody on it were yours now. Seek your fair take. (Look for anything in particular?)
>>
>>5881068
>This was war. Killing and death was the reality of it. No matter the nationality and color of clothing, these people were now your enemies. Plenty of such people would find themselves enemies, if the Dawn was to arrive…

>There was an entire division in the field to the north. Even if only a fraction of it came down, your allies might be in trouble, and a whole battalion wasn’t needed to watch some guns when no reinforcements would be coming from the south anytime soon. Go up to help Passero. (With what portion of your force?)
A quarter of the men.
>>
>>5881068
>You didn’t want to fight against Vitelia. This victory brought you no joy. What would be thought of you, when friends, family, any who knew and admired you, heard you had brought such a woeful defeat upon your motherland?
>Partake in some looting yourself. This village and this train and everybody on it were yours now. Seek your fair take. (Look for anything in particular?)
As anon said, orders or communications, a gun off the dead, interrogate the POWs on the reason for the delay.
>>
>>5881070
supportan also >>5881080
>>
>>5881070
>>5881090
+1
>>
>>5881075
>>5881090
>>5881090
>>5881095
>>5881191
>>5881212
Remember- No Pasta.

>>5881078
>>5881086
>>5881174
>>5881182
Arma Theme.mp3

>>5881080
>>5881203
What a shame.
*Bizarre Lip Smack*

>>5881075
>>5881086
>>5881090
>>5881095
>>5881212
Busy yourself, as your business is done.

>>5881078
>>5881080
>>5881174
>>5881191
>>5881203
Engage in some freebooter behavior. Not like the bodies need it more than you.

>>5881182
Move along north with a quarter.

I might have expected somebody of this political alignment to not be so conflicted on redistribution of wealth.
Anyways, calling it in an hour and a half.
>>
>>5881070
>>5881090
+1
>>
>>5881217
I'll switch to
>>5881078
to break the tie.
>>
>>5881217
>>5881090
+1
>>
>>5881217
>>5881090
>>
>>5881217
>>5881090
Supporting.
>>
>>5881294
Fuck, can't delete this post for some reason. Meant to correct it since it doesn't say anything other than linking then delete this one to make the thread look nicer, sorry QM.
>>
Wow it's been way longer than an hour and a half.

>>5881263
>>5881276
>>5881294
V and B

>>5881267
K and P.

Writing.
>>
The sight of what you had wrought, however indirectly, made you ill to think of the consequences of. Gilician victory? No, nobody that knew you, admired you in any place you ever called home would praise you for this. They would hear of this and any battles you fought and wonder why you had decided to be the scourge upon your motherland. They wouldn’t understand why, and neither did the people who died here. You were sick of this, and it was only the first battle of who could say how many. The Auratus War had felt endless, would this be nearly so much a stay in the icy grip of purgation?

You shouldn’t have felt as though you sinned, but you took no prizes, nothing afforded to the victor, and only went solemnly about business of resolutions and even manual dirty work far below your station, helping move bodies wrapped in sack cloth, tags wrapped around ankles, onto the beds of train cars unloaded of cargo that the Gilician Alliance properly desired. Even when a weapon you might have desired showed up, you moved it to the collection stacks instead of into your own possession.

Idle chatter rather than interrogation brought you the answers to some unimportant questions. The train being so late was a consequence of something of extremely minor chances- the train had been maintained lazily and it broke down on the way here. Such panic was had over something the enemy considered a hassle and an annoyance. If your mood wasn’t so grim you might have laughed about it.

Two hours had passed and the sun was beginning to set when you heard fighting once more, to the northwest. The stray shots of a meeting engagement. Passero’s regulars fighting whatever the Expedition Division had decided to send to investigate. Most of what you had to do had been done already, and the Black Battalion, already half done with fortifying their locations as more laborers from the Northern Division arrived to continue processing of supplies and weapons, took to smoking and eating as they listened to a battle that was far enough away to hear but not close enough to threaten.

It was too late, you thought. The Royal Army didn’t like fighting at night, especially not in terrain like this. A pair of biplane aircraft lazily drifted overhead, and given nothing else to do, your troops shot at them and sent them away, though they had found what they came for. Whatever fight the Royal Army might be planning, they couldn’t be doing it for long. By the time the sun rose again, more of the Gilician Alliance’s troops would be here, and the moment of greatest risk would pass. The commander of the Expediton Division couldn’t have known how tightly the jaws of this trap had closed upon him, the longer he delayed. Even the silence of the cut telegraph cables and the fighting heard in the hills and trees would indicate a raid upon the village and the train rather than the truth of the operation’s scale, which was to surround and destroy the Expeditionary Division itself.
>>
Rolled 11, 84, 16, 88, 20, 74 = 293 (6d100)

If you were in his place at least you’d never have anticipated it. It would be like if you were sent out to hunt Black Coats back in the Emrean Liberation War and you were surrounded and besieged by them. What dark irony, that one of the other things that the captured set to work spoke of was how the last thing they expected to be attacked by, rather than the faded uniforms of army deserters or the greys and browns of the new Gilician forces, was the scorch black of Imperial nightmares.
The fighting continued, into the night rather than dropping away like you expected, which was when an outrider came from the north bearing news…

>Rolls for 1st Northern Division’s 1st Battalion, and for the Expeditionary Division’s attack. Higher is better, Expeditionary’s Attack is weighted with +10.
>>
The sun set, and the fighting went on, until a rider found you helping to haul a crate off of the train.

“The hell are you doing moving boxes?” He demanded, a red-faced young man, possibly a passionate militant, “The first battalion up north is in trouble. Division Headquarters needs you to leave this place to the Outriders and move north.”

“I understand,” you said, “Is the 3rd battalion on their way?”

“They already were, but the first needs all the help they can get. It sounds like there’s a whole regiment coming down on them, if what they’re telling is the truth.”

“Tell Ortico what’s going on,” you pointed to where the Outrider captain had been last, where some horsemen still remained, tending to their mounts. “Then go back to headquarters and tell them I’m on my way.” It’d have been nice if the artillery could be utilized, surely, but the guns had already fallen out of your possession. On the other hand, the enemy didn’t have them either. This would be an old-fashioned sort of fight, if it lasted long enough for you to march the Black Battalion up there…

-----
>>
The battalion was plenty motivated for another fight, but by the time your columns arrived and dispersed, most of the fighting seemed finished. First Battalion hadn’t been dislodged, and Third’s flank, though inexpert, was causing enough disruption that the First hadn’t been overrun by the time your companies fanned out to their defensive positions and threw back the gains that had been made. In the dark, and in the forests, they were far better at the brawling going on than the Royal Army’s troops, which were undoubtedly lacking in veterans.

Casualties were minimal, but an opportunity might have been present. Katona met with you and presented an idea, that even though the First Battalion had been badly mauled in holding their defense, the enemy was in a state of confusion and disarray. An assault would be risky- but if you managed to strike the enemy bad enough, they’d be in no condition to try again.

You thought about it. This part of the ground was sparsely wooded, and thinned out the further along you would be going. In the open, your troops would lack the advantage they had in close quarters, but it was also dark, and their snow cloaks could give them some concealment. You couldn’t count on help from the First Battalion in such a maneuver, though, and the Third’s support would be just that. Even if they were in a state of confusion, marching a battalion into even a reduced regiment sized enemy was quite risky if they caught on to what was happening…

>Hold your positions. There was no reason to commit to any risk, not when the enemy would be at such a disadvantage trying to attack you again.
>Throw your troops forth. The black coats that who were more nightmare fiction than reality to those who joined after the war would show their teeth in this darkness. This would be a tragic day for the Royal Army.
>Leave behind the assault troops that lacked rifle caliber weapons and harass the enemy as they withdrew. It wouldn’t have much effect, but perhaps it would dissuade them from making a second attack tonight.
>Other?
>>
>>5882021
>Throw your troops forth. The black coats that who were more nightmare fiction than reality to those who joined after the war would show their teeth in this darkness. This would be a tragic day for the Royal Army.
>>
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18 KB GIF
>>5882021
>Throw your troops forth. The black coats that who were more nightmare fiction than reality to those who joined after the war would show their teeth in this darkness. This would be a tragic day for the Royal Army.

All in
>>
>>5882021
>Throw your troops forth. The black coats that who were more nightmare fiction than reality to those who joined after the war would show their teeth in this darkness. This would be a tragic day for the Royal Army.
Hate to do it, but gotta finish the plate
>>
>>5882019
>>Throw your troops forth. The black coats that who were more nightmare fiction than reality to those who joined after the war would show their teeth in this darkness. This would be a tragic day for the Royal Army.
>>
>>5882023
>>5882029
>>5882032
>>5882094
Cast the die.

Calling it in an hour. An actual hour, not an hour that's actually a day.
>>
>>5882147
Are the still any Forlorn/penal units in the modern Reich army, or were they purely a wartime instituted measure?
>>
>>5882021
>Throw your troops forth. The black coats that who were more nightmare fiction than reality to those who joined after the war would show their teeth in this darkness. This would be a tragic day for the Royal Army.
In for a penny I guess.
>>
>>5882021
>Throw your troops forth. The black coats that who were more nightmare fiction than reality to those who joined after the war would show their teeth in this darkness. This would be a tragic day for the Royal Army.
>>
>>5882150
>Are the still any Forlorn/penal units in the modern Reich army, or were they purely a wartime instituted measure?
Officially speaking, the Forlorn were not a part of any Imperial command structure, but rather deserters and bandits that were set loose with the claim that none of their actions were accountable to the Reich, and were separate from penal units that were not outright condemnation and exile. Henrik II's Imperial Army does not have punishment units or the like. The same isn't necessarily the case for the Protectorates, but in twenty years hence, nobody wants to be caught making what is seen as the moral mistakes of the last Kaiser's administration.
>>
>>5882162
>>5882173
Two more, no deviation.
Alright then. Writing.
>>
Should have asked for this before, but I had to run errands. I need three sets of 1d100, each one above 50 gets a +10 against the opposed rolls to come.
>>
Rolled 39 (1d100)

>>5882287
>>
>>5882287
>>
Rolled 16 (1d100)

>>5882287
>>
Rolled 67 (1d100)

>>5882287
>>
Rolled 96 (1d100)

>>5882287
>>
>>5882291
>>5882306
>>5882310
>>5882312
Ah well. At least we got one.
>>
Rolled 42, 84, 49 = 175 (3d100)

>>5882291
>>5882306
>>5882310
Well.
Let's see if I need more coffee.
>>
There was no time to waste, if you were to seize this chance. Immediately, you snapped your fingers and told Katona to loose the men; the hounds would have their hunt. Whoops went up, and streaming white and grey cloaks streamed out from the hastily dug holes and piles, leaving their Gilician allies behind, and you to strain to catch up.

Mist and darkness combined to turn the world beyond the trees into a soup where it was impossible to tell apart people at a certain distance, dark contrast on the snow from the moonlight betrayed any who might have tried to hide in plain sight, as they would be forced to when the trees ran out, but the enemy was met before that happened. Apparently, they hadn’t quite been ready to give up quite yet, with how close they still were, but that you were still catching up to the main force and passing by the remnants of fighting told that you had caught them off guard, and were sending them back. Though not without a price. The Royal Army soldiers were recovering- and you caught up soon enough to witness resistance being played out as you were forced to the ground, nicked by rounds that were likely not even aimed at you.

Nearby was a fallen Black Coat who grasped weakly at his Stachelli automatic- you reached over and took it. “Live and I’ll give it back,” you said far more curtly than intended, and you checked it over, pulled magazines from the pouches on the soldier’s leathers. You’d never actually used one of these, only familiarizing yourself with it by happenstance on the march over the past couple of days. You hoped firing it was as easy as it looked…

The magazine was emptied in testing bursts, as you returned fire at an unknown assailant whose rounds cracked over your head, and you put in a fresh stick of rounds before getting up, crouched over, and heading forwards. This was already completely disorganized, and you had lost Katona and sight of any other officer in the rush and forcing down. Ahead- surely allies were there, if bullets kept streaking past you.

Shapes loomed out of the mist, and you took cover behind what turned out to be freshly fallen bodies. Your breath halted, and you peered over them- all were your men, about five of them, and just five to ten meters away were a dozen bodies of Royal Army troops…one moved, then another, pointed their gun at you.

Instinct and training reacted before you thought about it, and you sprayed down one prone threat before diving to the ground and rolling to the side, searching for the other figure. It didn’t take long for them to move- you pulled the trigger in two short holds, five rounds, and a sharp cry, and an agonized groan followed. You finished them off with another few bullets you could have saved- got to your feet all too early when another shape came out from the mist, charging at you with the dull gleam of a bayonet flashing forward. You shot at them- hit them once before the breach held open, the magazine empty.
>>
“Die, Reich Dog!” your assailant still came at you, your shot not placed somewhere that kept them from continuing forward. You drew your close friend, and shot your fellow Vitelian three times in the chest just before he would have run you though. He fell flat on his face just a few paces away, gurgling despondently.

You pointed your pistol about, waiting for the next attacker, trying to think of how many bullets you had left in it, whether you had time to load the last submachinegun magazine you had picked up. Two more shapes appeared, then another. You fired at them, but your shots were hurried and wide. Sparks flew off a helmet that was glanced by your shot, and the return fire caught you in the leg, sending you to the ground, though behind bodies and safe for but a moment. You grit your teeth through the searing pain in your thigh, and took out the Stachelli’s empty magazine- trembled at the wrong time, failed to load a new one, heard the crunch of snow ahead and the shooting of rifles as they tried to either pin you down or blast you through the bodies of your troops. Finally, you set the magazine in, fumbled to close the bolt, but just then, more gunfire came from the side, and shouts of surprise punctuated the threat to your person.

“Hey,” a rasping whisper said in Imperial, “Anybody alive who don't cork themselves with corn?”

“Your commander, soldier,” you rose up, replying in the proper language that wouldn’t get you reflexively shot. “You arrived just in time. Do you know where any of the captains are? Or Major Katona?”

“Von Kalterose is just back there,” The young Reich man said, very young to be a soldier, yet he was a squad leader- he couldn’t have been older than nineteen, which would have made him not even an adult in the war…

“Go and get him, or wait for him to arrive,” you said, “This is a proper mess here.” You paused. “What’s your name, corporal?”

“I’m Vinny.”

“Alright, Vincenzo.”

“You make it sound stupid. Vinny or Vincent.”

“Your commander will have the name you prefer on an award, Vincent,” you brushed off the rough attitude of the stormtrooper as you clenched the wound on your leg. You might have been finished were he not here. You weren’t Leo, you weren’t an invincible champion of the battlefield, even if you were quite formidable.

“Hey,” one of the other troopers said, “The commander got bit. Get a bandage out.”

“I have it,” you said impatiently, “Keep on watch.”
>>
When you met back up with the second company captain, more troops had already passed by, and the fighting went ahead. The last enemies you saw that night had been the ones attacking you- afterwards, despite the setback in the middle of the attack, the Black Battalion had regained their momentum through sheer stubbornness, and overpowered the will of the Royal Army’s southern commitment, sending them running for their lives. Your men chased them, killed them, captured some that had dropped their weapons and failed to flee. You walked past the destruction and carnage again- discarded weapons that would soon belong to the Gilician Alliance. Bodies that now belonged to the earth. Only when you found Katona again, and he recommended you go and get your wound properly treated, did you accept what this was.

Another triumph. A victory for you. A defeat for your home.

-----

The Battle of Tristezza, both the assault and the repelling of the regiment to the north, would prove decisive in the coming days even if your unit saw little action afterwards, the casualties in the night assault having lost you one hundred and forty more men, even disregarding that your wound meant you were in poor shape to run anywhere anyways. Your battalion had mutilated the enemy regiment as they had ran- they had lost a couple hundred in their initial attack, and for every man you had lost they lost three or four in being driven from the field. It was a ruinous defeat for the Expedition Division, especially when the following day saw the rest of their troops engaged by other Gilician Alliance units arriving late.

The Battle of Mariana’s Hollow lasted two more weeks- the Expedition Division, in a trap more perfect than your commanders could have hoped for, acted too hastily and then too skittishly, and isolated themselves too far away from the rest of Vitelia to be rescued, even though probing attacks from the south told of attempts. If the enemy held out longer, perhaps that rescue attempt would have had to be thwarted- but the Expedition Division was hit too hard, surprised too much, and in disarray in land they didn’t know nor intended to fight in, and quickly were out of supplies and under artillery bombardment day and night. They had little choice, the numerous sick and wounded languishing and their commander having shot himself two days before, but to surrender. The initial estimate was of nine thousand prisoners- and the Alliance was in turmoil in the question of how to handle them, but the Vilja Domkarl personally intervened to have them distributed to settlements belonging to the Saints’ Garden. Glad to be rid of them, the prisoners were marched to the interior, though you had your doubts that they would all make it in this winter in their state.
>>
It was far from a defeat that Vitelia would have known in the war against the Reich, or even a particularly costly victory, but rumor had it that the defeat had sent quakes throughout the Royal Army and Vitelia in general. Until now, the conflict in Gilicia was thought to be minor civil disturbances, but an entire division being surrounded and outfought, the Gilician Garrison Command seemingly powerless to help them, showed a sort of weakness that many thought unbelievable, laughable. The Royal Army, unable to cow a regional uprising of rural hicks? When the last enemy they fought was the Kaiser’s armies?

The reality of the situation was more complex of course but the layman saw an extremely negative picture, and surely, given that the loss of the Expedition Division represented a relatively large portion of what had been deemed acceptable to deploy into Gilicia, even the Three Points were seeing the limits of their influence- they were forced to hold back in the center of the province, while the Gilician Alliance’s influence and assets practically exploded, as various foreign benefactors saw fit to increase their secret aid.

You now had some fame as well- some had dubbed you the “Black Knight,” a rather trodden title, you thought, but it made you dread what your former allies would think of your new infamy.
“It don’t make no sense,” Elena said as you let her change your bandages. The leg wound was healing well, but it was still too much time recovering for your tastes. “Y’don’t even wear black.”

“Maybe I should start.”

“Nah. Y’don’t look good in it.”

Your part in the success of this decisive battle did not go unrewarded. An additional two battalion sized elements were placed into your command, and called the “Black Regiment,” your former subordinates found and placed into its structure. Apparently this dread unit had garnered enough fans for such to be justified, and the majority of these new battalions were headstrong young men and boys that needed a lot of training. The type you had hoped you had managed to escape from when you stopped your work as a training officer, but at the very least, they were directly subordinate to you, and had much more respect. Odder reinforcement came from sparse amounts of Black Coats that had been retrieved, captured, or otherwise found, and told of how they could have a place under you amongst their own kind. Within a couple months of that battle, thusly, when your limp was well and gone, you had become a rather powerful figure in the Gilician Uprising.

Yet you felt the same as ever. Unfulfilled. Lonely, save for the moments of light Elena brought just from being an old face.
>>
April arrived, and Spring had driven away the last vestiges of winter in the past weeks. Your regiment was on the march, on its way to what would end up occupying the final major act of your part in the Gilician Uprising. Consequential duties, now that your trainees were considered ready for battle, and the Royal Army had licked its wounds and dared to hope for the future…as well as other peoples.

>You lacked the desire to batter the dignity and pride of your fellow countrymen once more. The unified Gilician Alliance still had business to attend to in the north, and with no love of the Feallinese, you would participate in a larger scale campaign up there than there had been before…
>The Gilician Alliance wanted to bloody the nose of the Royal Army once more- in a way that once again they would not have thought possible. The provincial capital, Fons Lacrimea, was the heart of the Gilician Occupation- and you were to be part of the grand assault to drive the Royal Army screaming from the heart of Gilicia.
>Your commanders had decided that the fighting didn’t need to be contained to Gilicia- a message had to be sent to Vitelia and the Royal Army both, that their armed forces were a failure. So you were striking out in a huge raid- to sack one of the jewels of the Three Points, the villa-city of Luce dei Diamanti.
>Another, very specific request, that you had to call in favors to have considered… (Write in. Be somewhat realistic, you’re not important enough to demand the world.)
Also-
>Do/Handle anything else, commiserate or socialize with somebody in particular?
>>
>>5882586
>The Gilician Alliance wanted to bloody the nose of the Royal Army once more- in a way that once again they would not have thought possible. The provincial capital, Fons Lacrimea, was the heart of the Gilician Occupation- and you were to be part of the grand assault to drive the Royal Army screaming from the heart of Gilicia.
Let's put a fork in this shitshow.
>>
>>5882586
>You lacked the desire to batter the dignity and pride of your fellow countrymen once more. The unified Gilician Alliance still had business to attend to in the north, and with no love of the Feallinese, you would participate in a larger scale campaign up there than there had been before…
If anyone else has good socializing/action ideas I'll probably back those but I can't think of anything that would be smart in this situation.
>>
>>5882586
>>You lacked the desire to batter the dignity and pride of your fellow countrymen once more. The unified Gilician Alliance still had business to attend to in the north, and with no love of the Feallinese, you would participate in a larger scale campaign up there than there had been before…

I don't think sticking the Forlorn anywhere near civic centers is a good idea. the more that die in a hole somewhere never to be found the better.
>>
>>5882586
>>Your commanders had decided that the fighting didn’t need to be contained to Gilicia- a message had to be sent to Vitelia and the Royal Army both, that their armed forces were a failure. So you were striking out in a huge raid- to sack one of the jewels of the Three Points, the villa-city of Luce dei Diamanti.
>>
>>5882586
>>Your commanders had decided that the fighting didn’t need to be contained to Gilicia- a message had to be sent to Vitelia and the Royal Army both, that their armed forces were a failure. So you were striking out in a huge raid- to sack one of the jewels of the Three Points, the villa-city of Luce dei Diamanti.
Striking directly at the three points sounds like a good precursor to the utopian uprising.
>>
>>5882586
>Your commanders had decided that the fighting didn’t need to be contained to Gilicia- a message had to be sent to Vitelia and the Royal Army both, that their armed forces were a failure. So you were striking out in a huge raid- to sack one of the jewels of the Three Points, the villa-city of Luce dei Diamanti.
>>
>>5882586
>You lacked the desire to batter the dignity and pride of your fellow countrymen once more. The unified Gilician Alliance still had business to attend to in the north, and with no love of the Feallinese, you would participate in a larger scale campaign up there than there had been before…
>>
>>5882586
Also:
>Do/Handle anything else, commiserate or socialize with somebody in particular?

Try to get into contact with Yena, at least find out where she's managed to settle down in.
>>
>>5882586
>Your commanders had decided that the fighting didn’t need to be contained to Gilicia- a message had to be sent to Vitelia and the Royal Army both, that their armed forces were a failure. So you were striking out in a huge raid- to sack one of the jewels of the Three Points, the villa-city of Luce dei Diamanti.
>>
>>5882586
>Another, very specific request, that you had to call in favors to have considered… (Write in. Be somewhat realistic, you’re not important enough to demand the world.)
Guard duty for the top brass
>>
>>5882592
Go for the big one.

>>5882594
>>5882606
>>5882712
Head North.

>>5882613
>>5882697
>>5882764
The Smash and Grab. Or Grab and Smash.

>>5882844
The easy holiday.

>>5882745
A very difficult task.

Calling it in an hour and a half.
>>
>>5882639
Also you, for four for the raid.
4 for Fhor four.
>>
>>5882860
Yeah, it's easier to stick a knife in them while their backs are turned. Once they're out of the picture, you can take your rightful place.
>>
Alright, on the raid it is.
Updating.
>>
I abused my sleep schedule too hard and had to collapse and only wake up right before I go to work. Maybe should have saved calling the vote for tomorrow. Oh well.
>>
>>5883073
your sleep schedule and my liver have a lot in common.
>>
>>5883073
Soon?
>>
The Gilician Alliance had expanded its plans and scope of their plans greatly since the unification of command of their disparate factions in the wake of the new year’s battle. There was no shortage of things to do, and somebody with your reputation now could do quite a few things, but there was one thing you didn’t have any taste for, and that was fighting your former comrades in the Royal Army. Especially not when the dreams returned- the old ones with you running free forth with your friends and allies, only this time, when you turned to face them, expecting the nostalgic faces of those no longer able to join you in the future, you saw the Forlorn, and their uniforms were black as the burn they left in their wake, as the unknown fantasy of Zeissenburg instead became Lapizlazulli, helpless in the face of your betrayal.

Instead, the mission you volunteered to take was one where you at least would be striking directly at the enemy you were fighting. Not Vitelia, but the forces that corrupted it. The Gilician Alliance, particularly an ascendent Di Zucchampo, had been emboldened by the successes of the rebellion and its growing strength, and wished to take the fight outside of the Gilician territories. Specifically, to those who masterminded its occupation in the first place, the personal assets belonging to the Three Points.

Said target was a villa-city, a clump of pleasure palaces called Luce dei Diamanti, or simply the Diamond. You’d heard of it vaguely in passing. It was a refuge for the extremely wealthy and influential, and those favored by them, and nobody else. No place of common revelry was this, but a secluded getaway where anything could be requested and no service unknown. Heavily guarded of course, but by mercenaries and the bravos of the famiglie segrete and thus no barrier to a proper armed force. Such as yours, though in truth, two battalions of yours being as new and unblooded as they were meant they were more evenly matched than you would care to admit man for man. They did not have your numbers, though, of twenty-six hundred- nor the sort of weapons you carried.

Even now, the Royal Army underestimated the Gilician Revolt, and assumed wrongly that it took all their strength and focus to keep in the field in Gilicia alone rather than daring to strike out across the great rivers that separated the territory from the rest of Vitelia. Their intelligence, which you had now been informed for sure was purposely soured by sympathizers, assured them of the same weakness that they had been so terribly incorrect in assuming at Maraian’s hollow.
>>
Luce dei Diamanti was only thirty kilometers southeast from the southmost prominence of the Gilician province, far from where most skirmishes or battles took place, but the Royal Army’s hold over the land was not as tight as they might assume, and even a force as large as yours could sneak over if you were careful, the enemy lax enough, and your crossing competent. It would be far from easy, but the Gilician Alliance was brimming with confidence and thought the sting of the blow would be well worth the risk.

Yourself, you wondered if they were already looking for a way to be rid of the Black Battalion before the headache of dealing with them in the time after.

In the time they’d been with them, the second and third battalions of the Black Regiment, each commanded by your former officer subordinates Di Portaltramanto and Di Nero, had gotten to know the original Black Battalion and had rather concerningly found themselves infatuated with particular elements of it. The old uniforms sternly maintained? Being cloaked in such color had an aesthetic appeal, you supposed. The specialist weapons? They lacked them, for now, given that the Gilician Alliance had only freshly run into decent sources of weapons in general and could not so freely give out what everybody wanted, but they desired the automatics nevertheless.

No, what they wanted was something baser. The new troops were all young men, brash and brimming with hot blood, and they saw the Black Battalion’s worn and scarred men with their loot, their freely traded jewels and baubles, their women, and they wanted such things for themselves. It was hard to deny that they felt the same sort of thing you had felt when they were your age, that many of the driven Young Futurists had felt, that primal thirst that generations of history had steadily stamped down but had failed to eradicate from human psyche.
>>
Given that your mission was to raze and ransack a hoard of riches accompanied by many a fair woman, at least, if the rumors of debauchery were even half true, it made you concerned as to how you might preserve whatever integrity the Black Regiment might have. For all the quandary about what the original Battalion had, they had kept their hands off the civilians as you had mandated before, and why wouldn’t they, when they already had plenty of girls, but the other battalions had naught- and awaited the time when they would. While a few of your officers shared your sympathies, particularly Di Portaltramanto with his tendency towards chivalry, plenty more had already seen plenty of thankless fighting for the revolt, and openly spoke of how this pile of treasure would be more than just reward, finally…and they would be harder to dissuade than the youths who would be doing the majority of the fighting, and giving in to their passions without thought for deeper justification.

>Why contain their drive? You weren’t going to do some good-hearted charity work, you were making a raid to destroy, loot, and plunder. Let them put their all into their dirty work. It would be impossible to control what happened after chaos of combat had come anyways, with this amount of people.
>There were standards to maintain. As before, not a finger was to be laid on the people. Any looting done of flesh and blood would see consequences upon the perpetrators- even if this would earn you plenty of resentment. You were their commander, not their enabling friend.
>Preventing the worst-case scenario was for the best, even if it harmed your chances of victory. Only units that could be trusted to keep themselves in check would be taken along- the others would only be fit for security and reserve rather than fighting and sacking.
>Other?

When you asked Elena about the subject, she mostly agreed with you- save for one thing.

“What’re you gonna say when they ask why you get a girl but they don’t?” she asked, as the unit was camped in a town in the march south. Both of you had gone to visit, just to see.

“By now, everybody that needs to understand that, does,” you said, “Besides, what am I to do? Shear your head and cover you in a cloak and try my best to claim you’re a man? I didn’t happen into marriage by abducting a woman in battle. These boys need the discipline of the old Royal Army. A few months on Monte Nocca would get their blood into their muscles and brains instead of their groins.”

Elena leaned against a wall and shook her head. “You lot always have blood down there when y’ shouldn’t. Y’ can’t stop that. But you need to keep them believing you’re in charge, and that means they have t’ want to keep under yer thumb.”

“Surely they can find a woman somewhere else. Whether they return to them or they just wait a bit to find one that won’t resent them for what they’ve done.”
>>
“Might sound funny t’ you, but the girls the black coats got ain’t all that bitter ‘bout it.”

“Were you in their situation, wouldn’t you be resigned to it?”

Elena shrugged. “They ain’t leavin’. I asked plenty a’ times what keeps ‘em, and it’s not that they’re forced t’ stay.” She glanced back to the camp. “Fer the better they think we’re what we’re not, tho’. The Imperials don’t care, but I don’t think most Gilicians would think much a’ you for your taste.”

It was true. Hill Vitelians generally had a distaste for mountainfolk, where you were from, but Gilicians outright smoldered at the thought, the mention of them, like they were little different from Vyemani in overall unpleasantness even if the nature of such had little similarity. It was why she couldn’t be here- and that she couldn’t be here meant you had gone without the small joys that had kept you going in a worse war. No letters. No gifts from afar. No news about her, or your children. You had been utterly isolated, and the pain of such had been shoved into the background, but wore on you no matter how far you tried to put it from yourself.

“Sorry,” Elena said lowly, “Didn’t think about whether y’ wanted a reminder.”

“It wouldn’t be as bad if we could send letters like we used to,” you said, “But even if I could sneak letters back and forth, I don’t even know where she is, or where she’s gone. It’s not like I can leave and track her down now.” Or, perhaps, ever. Was Vitelia just going to let you back in so you could go to Monte Nocca and ask her people where she went so you could follow the trail? Surely not.
Elena crossed her arms and looked at the ground, tapping her fingers against her bicep. “…I could do it. Find her. Not bring her back here, that’d be dumb, but then y’ would know where she’s gone.”

“I can’t ask you to do that.”

“Bonetto,” Elena said sharply, “Yeah, y’can.”

“Would you be alright traveling by yourself?” It was a question you already knew her response to, and she rolled her eyes at you.

“If I can’t walk on the roads in the day,” She pulled her lantern hairpin out of ponytail and toyed with it, “then why the hell would I be alright with goin’ into a gunfight?”

“Even so. Only if you want to.”

Elena opened her mouth, but her brow relaxed and she closed her lips tightly, and her eyes. “I won’t lie t’ ya, Bonetto. I want t’ stay here with you. It’s made up for a lotta lost time. An’…part a’ me wants t’ keep y’ here for good. I can’t help thinkin’ it even if I don’t do nothin’ about it. But I hate seein’ y’ so down all th’ time. I want y’ to be happy, and if doin’ this does that, then it’s worth it all.”

>You’d be happy if she did this favor for you, and tracked down Yena.
>Elena staying here with you would make you happier.
>Other?
>>
>>5883723
>>There were standards to maintain. As before, not a finger was to be laid on the people. Any looting done of flesh and blood would see consequences upon the perpetrators- even if this would earn you plenty of resentment. You were their commander, not their enabling friend.

>>5883725
>You’d be happy if she did this favor for you, and tracked down Yena.
>>
>>5883725
>>There were standards to maintain. As before, not a finger was to be laid on the people. Any looting done of flesh and blood would see consequences upon the perpetrators- even if this would earn you plenty of resentment. You were their commander, not their enabling friend.

Gold, jewels, expensive artwork, plenty of stuff there that will make them rich as a Paellan merchant prince. Get the Saint's Garden to do some fiery sermons towards the new recruits if needed about serious sins and whatnot if needed.

>You’d be happy if she did this favor for you, and tracked down Yena.
>>
>>5883723
>Preventing the worst-case scenario was for the best, even if it harmed your chances of victory. Only units that could be trusted to keep themselves in check would be taken along- the others would only be fit for security and reserve rather than fighting and sacking.
>You’d be happy if she did this favor for you, and tracked down Yena.
>>
>>5883723
>Preventing the worst-case scenario was for the best, even if it harmed your chances of victory. Only units that could be trusted to keep themselves in check would be taken along- the others would only be fit for security and reserve rather than fighting and sacking.
>You’d be happy if she did this favor for you, and tracked down Yena.
Gotta find the wife. The fact we don't know where she's at isn't good.
I miss our tanks.
>>
>>5883723
>There were standards to maintain. As before, not a finger was to be laid on the people. Any looting done of flesh and blood would see consequences upon the perpetrators- even if this would earn you plenty of resentment. You were their commander, not their enabling friend.
Let's not create Stalin.
>>5883725
>Elena staying here with you would make you happier.
This feels like an unnecessary risk to everyone involved.
>>
>>5883723
>Why contain their drive? You weren’t going to do some good-hearted charity work, you were making a raid to destroy, loot, and plunder. Let them put their all into their dirty work. It would be impossible to control what happened after chaos of combat had come anyways, with this amount of people.

>>5883725
>You’d be happy if she did this favor for you, and tracked down Yena.
>>
>>5883723
>There were standards to maintain. As before, not a finger was to be laid on the people. Any looting done of flesh and blood would see consequences upon the perpetrators- even if this would earn you plenty of resentment. You were their commander, not their enabling friend.


>>5883725
>Elena staying here with you would make you happier.

Bonetto likes to stir the pot.
>>
>>5883723
>There were standards to maintain. As before, not a finger was to be laid on the people. Any looting done of flesh and blood would see consequences upon the perpetrators- even if this would earn you plenty of resentment. You were their commander, not their enabling friend.
>>5883725
>You’d be happy if she did this favor for you, and tracked down Yena.
Hey, nice to see this back tanq. Always a pleasure to read these quests.
>>
>>5883723
>Other?
Permit violation of the rich, but not the poor. Remind the men who we're fighting for and against.

>You’d be happy if she did this favor for you, and tracked down Yena
>>
>>5883735
>>5883741
>>5883748
>>5883868
>>5883891
The standards are as before- only things that don't move.

>>5883742
>>5883746
Be selective- prevention is the best cure.

>>5883773
>>5883925
If their wallets are fat then they were asking for it.

>>5883735
>>5883741
>>5883742
>>5883746
>>5883773
>>5883891
>>5883925
Find the green.

>>5883748
>>5883868
Keep the blonde.

I'm more tired than I should be, I'll call it after I take a nap or something.
>>
>>5883723
>Why contain their drive? You weren’t going to do some good-hearted charity work, you were making a raid to destroy, loot, and plunder. Let them put their all into their dirty work. It would be impossible to control what happened after chaos of combat had come anyways, with this amount of people.

>>5883725
>Elena staying here with you would make you happier.
>>
So I woke up from my nap and my internet was down for the entire evening. It's back up now though, so I can at least update more than once today.

>>5884413
One more for going raw and blonde.

Updating.
>>
>>5883725
>Why contain their drive? You weren’t going to do some good-hearted charity work, you were making a raid to destroy, loot, and plunder. Let them put their all into their dirty work. It would be impossible to control what happened after chaos of combat had come anyways, with this amount of people.

>You’d be happy if she did this favor for you, and tracked down Yena.
>>
>>5883723
>There were standards to maintain. As before, not a finger was to be laid on the people. Any looting done of flesh and blood would see consequences upon the perpetrators- even if this would earn you plenty of resentment. You were their commander, not their enabling friend.
>>5883725
>You’d be happy if she did this favor for you, and tracked down Yena.
>>
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“It would make me very happy,” you said, “If you did that sort of favor for me. I don’t know how I’d repay you.”

Elena let out a long sigh and smiled ever so slightly. “Don’t worry about it,” she murmured, “I wanna do it. I don’t need any sorta pay or whatever. Just don’t get thrown in a dungeon or a grave and waste my time doin’ this.”

“I can guarantee that.” For once, you doubted that you would be in a place of particular extreme danger. The last battle had been a close call- but now, you truly wouldn’t have any reason to be anywhere near fighting. There was just too much to handle and coordinate to indulge that anymore. “Whatever you need, I’ll have the quartermaster get ready for you.”

“Sure.” Elena said with a curt nod, her eyes still closed, “You said we’re going south back over the border, right? I can slip away back there and not get noticed ‘til I’m far enough away that nobody thinks different.” She proffered the lantern pin, and you took it. Without such a mark, she would be little different from a normal hill woman, albeit with a rather... should you say, unique look? Not in a suspect way, though, perhaps a bit rough and tumble rather than the farm girl she really was. “…Actually, Bonetto? There was one thing y’ could do,” she pointed to the side, “Buy me more a’ this place’s coffee, a big ol’ can a’ it. I don’t wanna get on my knees an’ beg so I can get a decent cup.”

“I feel like a cup of it myself,” you beckoned to her, “Let’s go.”

The inn’s owners were paid for their stock of precious grounds- they had come into possession of military surplus somehow, and few people passed through who also wanted to pay the price demanded. It was at least real coffee- and real money.

“Ain’t it funny,” Elena said, pointing to your wallet in your breast pocket, “How they don’t bat an eye at how many different coins an’ bills are in there?”

“I guess they won’t complain as long as things stay in a place where they can pay somebody else with it.” The Gilician Alliance had no banks, of course, no mints, no gold reserves, but they had a bizarre collection of a surprising reserve of various sorts of money that they could reliably pay their people with. Even if debate was sometimes lively as far as just how much Reichsmarks were worth in local currency. “The men will have more than they know what to do with soon anyways.”

“That’s the plan, then?” Elena asked, “Handle it like last time, whatever isn’t nailed down is free game, anything with legs isn’t?”
>>
“Greed can be sated, but not immoral lust,” you confirmed.

“Not all a’ them want riches, y’know.”

“They don’t know what they want.”

Elena snickered at that. “Soundin’ like an old man. That what happens when y’ have kids?”

“Maybe so.” You stared into the black depths of your coffee and wondered if you could see any messages in the foam rising to the top. “Some people would consider me lost just from this command, but I won’t let that assumption define me, nor them. I made mistakes when I was in a place like theirs. Not the kind that they want to make just for the sake of it.”

“I think they’ll make up whatever they want after this anyways,” Elena said, “Not sayin’ y’ shouldn’t do your best. Just don’t get killed for it.”

“Again. I don’t intend to.”

Elena took a big gulp of her coffee, then set it down with a scrunching of her face. “You drank this stuff for how long?”

“There wasn’t anything else.”

“Reminds me,” Elena picked up the cup again in spite of her critique of its taste, “You want me to tell her anything when I find her? Maybe you should write a letter, or somethin’.”

You should. “What do you think I should say?”

Elena squinted at you. “She’s your wife. I dunno. But I think, if I were in her place, I’d want y’ to say that you’re sorry.”

A fair suggestion.

>?

-----
>>
The day, or rather, the night, came. The most challenging part would be the crossing, then the march at a quick enough pace to surprise the target of your attack before they knew what was happening- and then, the response to such a surprise assault couldn’t be quick, though you anticipated having to either evade or hold out until it got dark again so you could cross back again without having an enemy take advantage of the vulnerability during such a maneuver, especially by largely inexperienced fighters. Second and Third battalions at least knew how to march, how to use their hand-me-down weapons (most of the best captures went to the experienced units rather than the newbies), and they had the athleticism to not collapse after a good couple hours in full kit, though in your opinion they still would have been wiped out by a march on Monte Nocca. There was no helping it now though, these were the troops you had, and the mission had to be carried out.

The first thing of course was assembling the officers and, along with briefing them on the plan, reminding them to keep their men accountable with the rules you had laid out regarding the pillaging to take place. If they allowed anything you had forbidden to take place, there would be punishment in accordance with the standard for military law- which in the Royal Army’s case had been imprisonment and seizure of pay when it came to abuse of civilians, though technically speaking, the rules were specifically for Vitelian citizens. It wasn’t something you bothered to elaborate on- all present knew what was meant, even if you saw some of the young firebrands from the new battalions curse under their breath and mutter complaints to one another. Too bad. If they weren’t satisfied with what was already bandit’s robbery, then they weren’t done with becoming humans, let alone soldiers. The Black Battalion, for all its infamy, had not disobeyed your orders when they had eyes upon them, after all.

The actual fighting and sacking wasn’t seen as a factor to plan for a struggle for. The same intelligence that had led to amazing results at Mariana’s Hollow was in play here, and not only did this enemy not expect an attack from a force your size, they didn’t expect to be attacked by a Gilician armed force at all, nor were they remotely equipped to fend off such an attack, not when you were planning to be attacking with all of your forces, sweeping forward and overwhelming any resistance with swift brute force. No art was necessary there. No, the difficult part was the movement and coordination, especially in the dark, the timing of things.
>>
Boats and pontoons had been made ready a week ahead of time for this operation- but it would all have to be set up at nightfall. The master stroke of this operation was that it would be completely unanticipated, and a sudden bridge for troop movement, especially one long enough to cross the river that made up Gilicia’s southern border (fifty five meters at the crossing point) would be readily noticed, and the warning might be enough to cause problems in the time it would take you to make the long march. The march itself would also have to be hurried, and woven as best you could around places you might encounter people. Luce dei Diamanti was isolated by design, but its demands meant traffic went in and out constantly, and a night maneuver had difficulties in the doing even when there wasn’t anything getting in the way like the need to not get caught too early.

A simple operation all in all, going someplace and destroying it and coming back, but your command decisions largely were ones of risk taking and confidence in your men. The Black Battalion could lead the point easily enough, but even following on in the dark of night was harder than one might assume. So an easy way to better the chances of minimizing disruption on the march was simply to wait until it was lighter, even if that meant likely spoiling the chances of perfect surprise. After all, you were far further south than you were thought to possibly be anyways- what could be brought to a full regiment that could stop it? A question that friendly infiltration and spying, unfortunately, couldn’t account for. Their guarantees were on surprise and flight, not on marching down boldly and confidently and daring Vitelia to do their worst.

>Night disruptions were a small risk all things considered, with this prize. March so that you attack while the sky is still dark- any pieces that needed picking up could be done so when you withdrew.
>The crossing could be done at night- but the battle was the most climactic piece and could not afford the confusion of night. Use the extra time of early morning to make the crossing and march as clean as possible, and attack at first light.
>Minimize risk, considering how much there was with how many subpar troops you had. Crossing rivers could be dangerous, and you’d make sure both it and the march and attack both were as safe as possible by doing it in early morning light. After all, if anything decided to contest you, who would they be that you couldn’t crush them with the weight of your full force?
>Other things to prepare/brief/advise/whatever?
>>
>>5884811
>?
>Write a letter to Yena apologizing for not bringing her along.
I think this is what is being asked for here? Sorry if I'm reading too much into this.

>>5884812
>Night disruptions were a small risk all things considered, with this prize. March so that you attack while the sky is still dark- any pieces that needed picking up could be done so when you withdrew.
>>
>>5884811
>Write a letter to Yena promising were doing great and that as long as she is doing good, we're definitely doing good.
>Attach a photo? Maybe not of us but Idk a cool landscape?

>>5884813
>Night disruptions were a small risk all things considered, with this prize. March so that you attack while the sky is still dark- any pieces that needed picking up could be done so when you withdrew.
Black is worse camouflage at night then expected but try not to stand in the light much. Stick to shadow and black stuff I suppose but don't rely on them never seeing you. Strike first and win.
>>
>>5884811
>>5884813
>?
>Tell her that things are going...well, which is deeply conflicting. Tell her we love her and continue to miss her every day we spend away. Tell her that we're sorry things had to be this way and may be this way for a while longer.
>Night disruptions were a small risk all things considered, with this prize. March so that you attack while the sky is still dark- any pieces that needed picking up could be done so when you withdrew.
>>
>>5884811
>Write a letter. Take a photo with Elena.
>>5884813
>Night disruptions were a small risk all things considered, with this prize. March so that you attack while the sky is still dark- any pieces that needed picking up could be done so when you withdrew.
Let's take the only good page from George Washington's playbook.
>>
>>5884811
>Apologize for being apart for so long, tell her we're doing this for a better tomorrow, ask for news of her and our children. DO NOT take a photo with Elena.

>>5884813
>Night disruptions were a small risk all things considered, with this prize. March so that you attack while the sky is still dark- any pieces that needed picking up could be done so when you withdrew.
>>
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>>5884813
Supporting >>5884837
>>
>>5884811
>?
Be prepared to have another child on my return. Attach a photo with Elena and the concubines.

>Other things to prepare/brief/advise/whatever?
Find the best route in the morning, sleep during the day, and prepare to cross, march, and attack at dusk.
>>
>>5884813
>Night disruptions were a small risk all things considered, with this prize. March so that you attack while the sky is still dark- any pieces that needed picking up could be done so when you withdrew.

It's a pleasure palace, bets are that the actual place is going to be lit up accordingly even after dark.
>>
>>5884910
Also:
>Write a letter, apologies for not being there for her and the kids, promise to rush over soonish once this rebellion is won, yadda yadda. No photos.
>>
>>5884811
>Write a letter to Yena promising were doing great and that as long as she is doing good, we're definitely doing good.

>>5884813
>The crossing could be done at night- but the battle was the most climactic piece and could not afford the confusion of night. Use the extra time of early morning to make the crossing and march as clean as possible, and attack at first light.
>>
>>5884813
>>The crossing could be done at night- but the battle was the most climactic piece and could not afford the confusion of night. Use the extra time of early morning to make the crossing and march as clean as possible, and attack at first light.
>>
>>5884821
>>5884835
>>5884837
>>5884846
>>5884855
>>5884910
Doing it in the dark.

>>5884936
>>5884943
Wait for first light for the first shot.

Letter contents are cumulative, I think. Well, except for the nature of photographs included.

Calling it in an hour.
>>
You know, it's rally fascinating that you can try and lie down for an hour to take a nap but all that happens is that instead of getting any sleep your back hurts.

>>5884846
>>5884881
Photo

>>5884855
>>5884861
>>5884925
No Photo.

Writing.
>>
>>5885035
Sounds like you need a better mattress, that or your posture is messed up.
>>
When the planning was finalized the day before, it was decided that the most decisive parts of this raid would occur before the sun even rose. The advantage for the risk was too much to consider otherwise. Disruptions caused by the darkness wouldn’t amount to any catastrophes, and considering the amount of force you had, catching whatever meager foe was at this complex of palaces and manors completely off guard made absolute victory and equally absolute certainty.

Even so, whatever preparations could be made, you tried to do in order to minimize inevitable problems. The troops were made to rest while they could and nap early in the evening, whatever maps could be had were studied, copied, marked at least for important landmarks to navigate away from.
There was also the matter of morality. The first battalion, made up of Imperials proper, were not followers of the Cathedra. The other two were however and had representatives of the Saints Garden attached to them as chaplains, a total of four in all. It was no time for a mass ministering, but you did notice some idiosyncrasies with them and what they talked about with the young men. Namely that they spoke a lot of the Nameless Third- namely, the new troops of second and third battalion seemed to have propagated some word of a chronicle written by him that espoused certain practices as being…acceptable. Necessary, perhaps.

“Bunk, of course,” one of the Chaplains said irritably, “The Third was illiterate and left behind no writings, only parts of what he said or believed were passed down by Saint Saulius and Saint Svajone in their own chronicles, and accounts contemporary.”

“And what does this supposed chronicle say?” you asked. Apocrypha were not unknown, but they were usually the domain of wayward easterners who were broken from the Cathedra by Alexander, and had chosen to remain apart even after his rule had left their lands.

“It is a thing of rumors and speculation even amongst them, but…how to put this delicately, Commander, what would you say is moral application of suffering? Sin for better cause?” He didn’t actually allow you to answer. “The Executioner is cleansed of sin because he does a duty for the sake of smiting the forsaken. If in taking up his blade, or his rope, however, he revels in the pain and suffering of the condemned, he corrupts his own soul. This supposed chronicle of the Unspoken Third would present an alternative theory that goes against many a Saint’s words. That to revel and indulge in wreaking wrath upon the deserving is no corruption of the spirit. It is reminiscent of an old divergence called the Cult of the Executioner, who venerate an entity of Death, who serves the Judge. Such thinking is dangerous, considering the den of debauchery that you are heading to. See that the men’s souls are not corrupted in their belief that they do virtue through self-indulgent transgressions.”
>>
The theology lesson wasn’t needed, but you thanked the chaplain for the warning anyways.

The final thing to get done was the letter to Yena you’d be sending off, hopefully speedily, with Elena when she went to track your wife and children down. It was not overly long- an apology for your separation and the length of it, an assurance that it was all for good, that all was going well for you…even if you didn’t want to speak of how it disturbed you, in a way. Soon enough, you wrote, your duty would be done and you would hurry to place her at your side again. After all, you wanted more children, to make up for your absence. It would have been by your measure just enough time that Lorenzo would be weaned…

The sky darkened, and the pontoon bridges went up, accompanying boats hauled out from the woods and set adrift to begin ferrying troops not confident in the shaky temporary bridge. It was a slow and ponderous operation, with much signaling with hooded lanterns and several accidents causing men to near be swept away with the river, but the few Sea Vitelian officers that had come to the movement with you last year managed to be an unexpected asset here. Gilicians were not an aquatic sort, but there was no such thing as a Sea Vitelian who didn’t know how to swim.
No time could be afforded to waiting to have the regiment completely assembled from one shore to the other. Instead, as soon as each company had completed their crossing, they immediately hurried off at a quick march. They would be the ones who forged a trail if one had to be, and as they had the most vital job, all of the first away were of the Black Battalion. You joined with the very last element to cross, along with Elena, and moved off- saying your farewells to your childhood friend as she went in the other direction from you.

You embraced one another, wished each other luck. Perhaps it was good that she wouldn’t have to witness what might come about- good fortune had reared its head, and you’d never been forced to place Elena in danger of coming under attack from an enemy, even if she had been prepared for it.

She vanished into the night, and you watched her until she faded into the dark- and hoped that next you saw her, would also be the day of your reuniting with your family.

-----

>Roll 3 sets of 3d100, one for each of your battalions, first, second, and third respectively, to determine success in night navigation. DC for the first is roll over 50, and for the latter ones, 30, but each success by the first set of three improves the roll of all others by 10.
Won't be finishing the update til I get back from work, so roll off.
>>
Rolled 3, 99, 5 = 107 (3d100)

>>5885103
>>
Rolled 64, 93, 21 = 178 (3d100)

>>5885103
>>
Rolled 49, 89, 93 = 231 (3d100)

>>5885103
>>
In the dark, you could scarcely account for your own group, let alone that of all the others, but by the time you were moving it was impossible to be waylaid- groups had long reached the planned assembly point, and you were practically led by hand to what appeared to be a well cultivated patch of practically constructed forest, filled with sculptures, shrines and structures that had been given the appearance of equivalents lost to antiquity, that gleamed white in the moonlight. They were far more noble looking works of art than befit their patron’s character, surely. Attendants to these structures and idyllic woods had already been seized and made prisoner, groundskeepers and mischievous youths who had sought to not be found, and thus had none expecting a swift return. You might as well have been alone here, albeit assembled in numbers that no aeroplane would have failed to spot- though you wondered if, should any of the kites and balloons now on the ground and roofs go up, if they would see.

“What’s the status of the battalions?” You asked the assembled regiment commanders. It was still plenty dark, and visible about a kilometer or two away were the bright lights of Luce dei Diamanti- far from asleep, you could hear the noise and bustle of partying even from here. Even the outskirts that housed the labor’s housing and the storage yards, the open-air arenas right now unused and the gardens and barns, were lit like a Year’s End Festival by what was happening in the villa and manors that formed the elevated core of the settlement. You wouldn’t have been surprised if fireworks began to shoot up- perhaps that was why none had taken balloons up into the night.

“First Company and Third Company managed to bungle it up,” Katona cursed, “But Second Company made up for them. First and Third, I’ve heard from their stragglers, had to move to evade some travelers and such and now they’re all over the place.” Second Company, with the familiar captain Kalterose. He ever failed to disappoint.

A bad setback, but not the worst. “Di Nero, Di Portaltramanto?”

“Second Battalion is mostly here,” Di Portaltramanto said, “Third Company followed the wrong, mislaid guides, I presume, or second guessed the road being taken. In any case, they are now here to do work most worthy, I hope, and learn of blood and battle in a victory they can take pride in and learn fearlessness from.”

“Perhaps they should be less concerned with pride and worthiness than winning,” Di Nero mused. “Third Battalion is in full attendance. The first company followed the second of the first battalion, and the rest followed suit. We have two full battalions. I recommend we attack immediately. I know the type employed here. We can take them.”

“Have you come to this dreadful place, Di Nero?” Di Portaltramanto asked suddenly.
>>
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“Those of the blackened name are not permitted,” Di Nero said, “But the Secret Families work the same in all places. They aren’t prepared for the sort of force we bring to bear.” He flashed a glance back. “Have you any knowledge of this place?”

“I mislike your implication, sirrah,” Di Portaltramanto said with a bite of insulted anger, “But, yes, my family knows well this place. And I have heard plenty of the depths this den of vice might vanish into the earth should it break natural laws against such a descent.”

“Then there’s no reason to hesitate in bringing all to bear,” Di Nero said confidently. “Commander. I volunteer to lead an attack straight into this town. The other units can move around the flanks and squeeze out any opposition like crushing the pit from an overripe plum.”

“I believe I would be a better fit for a central effort,” Di Portaltramanto spoke up, “Four companies are better able to encircle this place than three, and we do want to trap everybody within. Who knows what important figures reside here now that are ignorant that they may be seized, and held hostage for all manner of ransom?”

“For my part,” Katona said, “If this is to be a proper raid, we could use force, but they still don’t know we’re here. A single company is subtle enough to find a route right into this place, where we could suddenly attack right in their faces with what we have here. Sometimes it’s better to use a needle than a hammer, you know. We’re the best equipped of the lot, and a company of stormtroopers in the right place is worth ten men in another.”

The unspoken alternative of course was to go about and round up your regiment in full, but that would be losing valuable time- and potentially squandering your chance to exploit the darkness before it faded into morning. It was half past three o’clock in the morning- and the sun would be coming quickly once five took the place of four or three…

>A. Brute Force. Di Nero’s hammer crushes the front while the other elements attack the flanks.
>B. Encirclement. Di Portaltramanto’s attacking force pressures the enemy while the other units cut off the routes of escape.
>C. Finesse. Katona and Von Kalterose’s stormtroopers infiltrate Luce dei Diamanti- and the rest of the present forces exploit that breach to burst apart in the depths of the objective.
>Other?
>>
>>5885546
>>C. Finesse. Katona and Von Kalterose’s stormtroopers infiltrate Luce dei Diamanti- and the rest of the present forces exploit that breach to burst apart in the depths of the objective.
>>
>>5885546
>A. Brute Force. Di Nero’s hammer crushes the front while the other elements attack the flanks.
>>
>>5885546
>C. Finesse. Katona and Von Kalterose’s stormtroopers infiltrate Luce dei Diamanti- and the rest of the present forces exploit that breach to burst apart in the depths of the objective.
Infiltrate their pleasure palace and burst in their depths, or something
>>
>>5885546
>C. Finesse. Katona and Von Kalterose’s stormtroopers infiltrate Luce dei Diamanti- and the rest of the present forces exploit that breach to burst apart in the depths of the objective.
>>
>>5885546
>>B. Encirclement. Di Portaltramanto’s attacking force pressures the enemy while the other units cut off the routes of escape.
>>
>>5885546
>B. Encirclement. Di Portaltramanto’s attacking force pressures the enemy while the other units cut off the routes of escape.
>>
>>5885546
>B. Encirclement. Di Portaltramanto’s attacking force pressures the enemy while the other units cut off the routes of escape.
>>
>>5885546
>B. Encirclement. Di Portaltramanto’s attacking force pressures the enemy while the other units cut off the routes of escape.
Ah a fellow Hearts of Iron IV player eh?
>>
>>5885546
>B. Encirclement. Di Portaltramanto’s attacking force pressures the enemy while the other units cut off the routes of escape.
>>
>>5885546
>B. Encirclement. Di Portaltramanto’s attacking force pressures the enemy while the other units cut off the routes of escape.

What are the chances we run across our favourite di Portaltramanto here?
>>
>>5885546
>>C. Finesse. Katona and Von Kalterose’s stormtroopers infiltrate Luce dei Diamanti- and the rest of the present forces exploit that breach to burst apart in the depths of the objective.
Our stormtroopers couldn't be better suited to this task. They'll have no idea what hit them.

Also I would argue against encirclement because their troops likely have very little motivation to fight and will probably break and run if given the chance, but the one thing that would drive them to bravery would be if they're forced to fight for their lives because we gave them no alternative. That's why Sun Tzu says to always leave your enemy an escape route.
>>
Alright, my internet was down most of today, may as well get this done.

>>5885547
>>5885554
>>5885557
>>5885834
The finesse of a pile of stormtroopers.

>>5885549
Smash.

>>5885563
>>5885575
>>5885638
>>5885646
>>5885698
>>5885804
No Escape.

I'd leave it for a bit to call but there's already been enough unintended delays as is. Writing.
>>
“You have the lead, Maggiore Di Portaltramanto,” you nodded to the now beaming officer while Di Nero scowled, but did not object. “Di Nero, divide around the flanks. Katona, send Von Kalterose to secure the other side of this place to intercept anybody fleeing who’s important. Don’t trap anybody who’s just a worker. We aren’t wasting time on small fry with a maneuver this daring. I want you yourself to start rounding up our stray troops, especially the Black Battalion’s. If the fighting takes a more difficult turn we’ll need them.” You looked back to Di Portaltramanto. “What are the chances your cousin is here, by the way?”

“I should hope he is not, and I doubt he is,” Di Portaltramanto said, “Not because his moral character is inappropriate for it, but rather, his pride. He would seek to exceed this place.”

“I do him a favor tonight then,” you said, “May I never do him another. Move out, and keep your boys under control. There’s loot enough here to take without drinking blood.”

-----

What a curious setting for a first battle this would be, you thought nostalgically as you waited at the edge of the woods and watched from your regimental field post as the men marched forward in an unsubtle line, the time of attack having ticked over on all the pocket watches. For you and your friends, before all had vanished into history save for Leo, it had been Castello Malvagio. For your tankers that had come with you, it had been one of many conflicts that couldn’t be named for their frequency and the blur they merged into in the battles of no man’s land. The men of the Black Regiment, two thirds or so of them, would be blooded as part of a party crashing of all things.

“Major Katona?” you asked the first battalion commander idly, as he observed with you, having dispatched whatever runners he could to round up his scattered companies. “What was your first battle?”
>>
“It wasn’t against Vitelians,” Katona said, “It was in the century before this one. I was a fresh faced Dhegyar boy, seasoned off our games of battle amongst our clans in the Dhegyar Protectorate, ready for the real thing after training. It was up in Felbach, north of Fealinn, and we were told that we were going to strike down a group of terrorist militia, that had shot one of the protectorate governor’s sons. There were militia alright, but plenty more too. The orders were to burn it all. At the end of it, I never wanted to be part of anything like that again, and that’s how I got here, in the end.”

“Do you have reservations about this operation, then?” You asked.

“I’ve been part of worse since,” Katona said, shaking his head, “At least I didn’t do what I was told without thinkin’. I won’t try and put it all in pretty nightwear, make an excuse that they deserve it. Sooner it’s over the better, and we can pretend it never happened on a few acres of hills and forests in the middle of nowhere instead of being banished to war without end.”

“That attitude seems an uncommon sort for your lot,” you said.

“Dhegyar or Forlorn?”

“Both.”

“Plenty of them won’t think of settling down, it’s true.” Katona said, then pointed. “Look, it’s starting.”

Even if your troops were new recruits, they had rifles, and training enough with even the poor single-shot reserve pieces older than they were to be able to attack. The bands did not quiet- and the skies above began to brighten with the flame of fireworks for a celebration unknown, and uncaring of what had just begun. If you weren’t looking at it, you wouldn’t have known there was a battle at all. The attack was so large and coming from so many directions though that even the blind would not be ignorant for long.

“It’s already over,” Katona declared only fifteen minutes after the first shot, “Those are street toughs and hired help who fight people like themselves. They’d never get into anything like this if they could help it. See there by that tower. They’re running for their lives.”

They could run, but there would be no place to escape to. The envelopment had ensured that, and there was no way they might slip out in the wear they had, for all your troops did wear uniforms, if humble ones. Black shrouds over grey shirts and trousers, and square caps. Were it not for their equipment your people might be mistaken for field hands.
>>
The music had finally stopped, as had the fireworks, and you could hear how the fighting continued even if organized resistance had collapsed immediately. Holdouts and renewed motivations of unknown stripe, perhaps the wealthy degenerates realizing what their fate might be, or assuming it was worse. Another hour and a half passed before the shooting seemed to fade, but not stop, and the sky was growing lighter with the sun’s awakening as smoke began to spout into the sky, fires starting and spreading as the pillaging threw itself into full gear.

When you looked at what was happening, though, you didn’t see anything that could be called orderly. The unarmed were being chased around by little bands, troops were carrying out riches broken up and laid in piles, draped in their captured booty and indulging in the food and liquor they had freshly captured. Serving staff and socialites both were being hauled over shoulders or dragged by their wrists and ankles. Trails of chaos snaked about between the buildings like ants, and still there was shooting.

By now, the two missing companies of the Black Battalion had returned- as had Di Portaltramanto’s third company, its own commander incensed to have missed what he saw as the best part of the fighting and best take of the plunder.

It was time for you to command them, as what was going on in Diamanti was assuredly not under your control.

>Let them loose. There was still more to sack, and time to do it. Surely, they had been waiting for such.
>Hold them back- in case something happened that you needed to respond to. Not to worry. All loot would be fairly distributed for their service.
>Take command with Katona and move into town. You had to restore order, for it had surely been lost.
>Other?
>>
>>5886133
>Take command with Katona and move into town. You had to restore order, for it had surely been lost.
>>
>>5886133
>>Take command with Katona and move into town. You had to restore order, for it had surely been lost.
>>
>>5886133
>Take command with Katona and move into town. You had to restore order, for it had surely been lost.

And this, comrades, is why the Revolution has Commissars.
>>
>>5886133
>Take command with Katona and move into town. You had to restore order, for it had surely been lost.
>>
>>5886133
>>Take command with Katona and move into town. You had to restore order, for it had surely been lost.
>>
>>5886133
>Let them loose. There was still more to sack, and time to do it. Surely, they had been waiting for such.
>>
>>5886133
>Let them loose. There was still more to sack, and time to do it. Surely, they had been waiting for such.
>>
>>5886133
>Take command with Katona and move into town. You had to restore order, for it had surely been lost.
>>
>>5886134
>>5886136
>>5886160
>>5886175
>>5886199
>>5886436
However it started, you're ending it.

>>5886224
>>5886413
Bob Page.

Calling it in an hour.
>>
“Major Katona,” you said to the Dhegyar officer, “Assemble your men and make ready to go in and link up with Von Kalterose. We need to restore order. I’ll take Di Portaltramanto’s company and find the others. We’re here to loot the place, not to kill and rape everything inside.” Even if some of the higher ups wouldn’t be displeased at such news at all.

“Understood, Commander,” Katona said, “Through any means necessary?”

“Only if they’re so foolish as to require it. Go.”

The two Black Coat companies marched off- you doubted that the worst of the chaos was perpetrated by the demonstrably disciplined Second Company. Instead, your own sponsored officers had lost control of their units. You couldn’t think to scold them too harshly for such. It was their first time handling units near as large, and if their subordinate leaders were anything like the piece of work you had to deal with in convincing of his mission, then there would need to be a lot of education on how things worked after you were out of here.

The captain of Di Portaltramanto’s third company was young and brash like many of his own people, and readily assumed you were leading them in to partake in the new brand of festivities taking place. He was so shocked at your correction that he near outright refused orders, until your implied threat of taking such insubordination more seriously got him and the rest moving. You might not have been the best liked commander, but your methods made sure nobody tried to test the limits of any sense of kindness. The rest had to be reminded that they were not out of your reach or sight here.

You marched at the head of the company column, but couldn’t do anything yet to stop the rampages when you saw them besides shouting orders for squads to stop, though without your oversight you couldn’t be sure they’d join in. You were just one man- you had to find your people and get them on the job.
>>
Di Portaltramanto you found despondent with a single platoon circling a clump of several dozen panicked civilians, many of them dressed in fancy wear- or fancy wear of a sort that might as well be undressed. You walked right up to the young officer and saluted, which he returned with his own shaky copy.
“Commander,” he said, “I can keep these hostages safe, but my captains and lieutenants have scattered, leaving me with naught but my staff.”

“I’ve brought a company,” you said, “Take command of them and round up your people. Make sure to note anybody who needs disciplinary action taken regarding their behavior. Now move.”

“What of you, Commander?” Di Portaltramanto asked hurriedly, moving beside you.

“That’s not your problem” you said, “Worry about reconstituting your battalion. We don’t have time for this kind of disorder.”

Next, you pulled aside a team of Black Coats that had broken off from Katona’s contingent and had them escort you to where Di Nero had set up a point for assembling the captured property and people. At the foot of one of the great halls, he was prowling about, looking unconcerned though he had only somewhat more people than his fellow battalion commander had- he had returned from elsewhere relatively recently, you’d heard.

Maggiore Di Nero!” you called to him, “Your battalion is out of control. Reestablish authority and bring them to heel.”

“Immediately, Signore,” the raven haired man said to you, “Though they are not as loosed as you may believe. A certain chaos is unavoidable when searching through every nook and cranny.”

“That chaos is to stop. Whatever reward there is for it is not worth the cost.”

“We disagree on that point.”

“You have your orders, Di Nero.”

Di Nero narrowed his eyes and considered his response, before softly arriving at it. “…I suppose I do.” With that, he departed without a salute and went to directing his staff and whomever else was present.

Things began to calm down, but it was hard going. You saw infighting break out over the more righteous and those who were either drunk on liquor or on the madness of the sack, or both. Fights over loot that hadn’t been claimed yet, women who were nobody’s, by your word, but it would be insisted on from what you saw until you went in directly, your pistol drawn.

Finally, things were quieting down, though the fires had spread and intensified. It was time to leave- though a new round of shooting began from the east. Katona told you more in a hurry.

“A cavalry unit,” he said, relaying from a runner, “Probably no more than a company or two, but they’re harassing our people on the edge of town, and they’ll probably chase us, too.”
>>
Damn them. Even if they couldn’t hope to defeat your unit, they could delay and pick at you. An unanticipated wrinkle- though the best minor officers were never anticipated, were they? “We’re already on our way out. Get everybody moving. I’ll figure out what to do about these horsemen.” They were unlikely to have reinforcements coming, not soon, at least. Enough men to pose a challenge weren’t even anticipated to be able to arrive within the day. Though could you just ignore them?

Especially when many of the men moving out would be weighed down by their plunder and escorting prisoners captured and deemed valuable- including some that, you were told, were not captured prisoners but newly rebellious servants and trafficked exploited, who saw fit to join and aid the cause. Even if near all of these “volunteers” seemed to be women, all rather attractive, as was the wont of those who had employed them here.

>An early opportunity for punishment showed itself. Demand “volunteers” to take up the duty of skirmishing with the enemy dragoons. They’d be your rearguard.
>Assemble a force of your best soldiers to try and catch and destroy your pursuers- even if that was easier said than done. Better a delay there than letting them have any more chance to disrupt your operation.
>Get the troops marching. All that mattered was that you were leaving. Dealing with any pursuers would be a problem left up to whomever they were making problems for- on the march.
>Other?
Also-
>Harshly punish those who had defied your directives- the death penalty was to be avoided, but none would be spared imprisonment, disenfranchisement, the lash.
>Make an example of the worst offenders, but let off the others. Best not to test loyalty by coming down too hard on what most saw as an opportunity to do what they wished.
>Avoid corporal or long-term punishment. The reward and punishment would be the loot seized. Anybody who took more than their fair share, as it were, simply gave up their share of gold. They ought to thank you for being so lenient, considering.
>Other?
>>
>>5886509
>Assemble a force of your best soldiers to try and catch and destroy your pursuers- even if that was easier said than done. Better a delay there than letting them have any more chance to disrupt your operation.
>Harshly punish those who had defied your directives- the death penalty was to be avoided, but none would be spared imprisonment, disenfranchisement, the lash.
>>
>>5886509
>An early opportunity for punishment showed itself. Demand “volunteers” to take up the duty of skirmishing with the enemy dragoons. They’d be your rearguard.
>Other? Send the very worst of the offenders in under-equipped.
>>
>>5886509
Supporting this >>5886513 devilish idea
>>
>>5886509
>An early opportunity for punishment showed itself. Demand “volunteers” to take up the duty of skirmishing with the enemy dragoons. They’d be your rearguard.

>Make an example of the worst offenders, but let off the others. Best not to test loyalty by coming down too hard on what most saw as an opportunity to do what they wished.

Let blocking force duty serve as the main punishment for most of them.
>>
>>5886512
Hit them before they hit you.

>>5886513
>>5886514
>>5886528
Dispense early consequences.

>>5886512
A harsh punishment to be dealt out.

>>5886513
>>5886514
Make the fighting hard for those who need it hardest.

>>5886528
Don't come down hard on everybody.

Calling it in...I don't know, three hours seems fine.

Everybody sick of Gilicia, don't worry it's gonna end soon and we can move on, it's last longer than I thought, but then there was the possibility of this arc not happening at all either.
>>
>>5886509
>>5886528
+1
>>
>>5886509
>Get the troops marching. All that mattered was that you were leaving. Dealing with any pursuers would be a problem left up to whomever they were making problems for- on the march.
>Avoid corporal or long-term punishment. The reward and punishment would be the loot seized. Anybody who took more than their fair share, as it were, simply gave up their share of gold. They ought to thank you for being so lenient, considering.
>>
>>5886583
Another for voluntolding and making examples.

>>5886591
Get everybody going and split up the wealth.

Writing.
>>
>>5886509
>Assemble a force of your best soldiers to try and catch and destroy your pursuers- even if that was easier said than done. Better a delay there than letting them have any more chance to disrupt your operation.

>Avoid corporal or long-term punishment. The reward and punishment would be the loot seized. Anybody who took more than their fair share, as it were, simply gave up their share of gold. They ought to thank you for being so lenient, considering.
>>
Your battalion commanders were assembled once more- and you told them of what was to happen.

“Whatever valuable that isn’t nailed down or on fire, we’re leaving with now,” you said, “A local cavalry contingent is harassing our western forces, and we aren’t staying to entertain what comes after. We aren’t going to let them do what they wish though, either. All of you, go through and round up your drunks, your murderers and your rapists. They’ve volunteered to serve as screens against the horsemen. Two companies worth if that many have offended. Send them out immediately, the rest need the supplies more than they do.” Vindictiveness had crept into your voice, and all your subordinates knew it, as they did not object. You had the moral high ground here. “Any who come back can expect more, but the harder they fight, the more lenient I will be in regards to proper rebuke for their embarrassment of myself and their unit. Find the guilty and make them service proper sacrifice for their weights in stolen flesh. Have us all ready for our parts within the hour, the sun’s already up. Move.”

A line of salutes, and relaying of your commands as you went to survey the prizes taken and the prisoners seized. The guilty had been crafty enough to hide their evidence away from the now quiet paths between buildings, they had not recreated Sella Castella for you, but you knew what would greet you if you searched for it. No need to behold what you were already doling out punishment for.

The rearguard were left to their fight, screening the regiment’s retreat as a train of baubles and boxes and handcarts formed long snaking rivers back towards the river, not one man holding a rifle in hand, save for those who pointed them at prisoners now also made to carry a share for their captors. Some, as described by Di Nero, seemed more sympathetic to you and needed no such motivation. New recruits that your men were already trying to get friendly with. Did they see you as liberators? You wondered if they had the spite or lack of sense to do so, or could believe such when you had the hidden monsters of the regiment sent to keep the fight from spoiling this parade.

The day dragged on, and the skirmishing continued, increased as reinforcements came from other directions, though none of them enough to overwhelm you. Booty caches were set up as troops had to be further detached to deal with enemy probes and flanks, and the initial rearguard, denied supply initially, finally had to be given ammunition when they realized just why they had been “volunteered,” and begged or mercy. It wasn’t as though they would get better treatment from the enemy if they tried to desert to escape their punishment.
>>
Aircraft arrived in the middle of the day, and some tried to make strafing runs but even without machine guns the amount of rifle fire prevented any from daring to draw closer. The troops began to tire, casualties mounted, and while supplies and wounded and killed were still of plenty acceptable rates considering the causes, the troops were rapidly growing exhausted of waiting for the sunset to escape. Many wanted to leave now, damn the consequences of trying to set up the pontoons and boats during daylight.

Yet they managed to hold, and when night fell you took everything and crossed over once again. There was no reason you couldn’t report this as a success to the Gilician Alliance command.

-----

Indeed it was a success, you were told within a few days. The Vitelian high society was in a complete state of consternation. Several of your captives were heirs, celebrities, and precious hostages indeed, while the amount of gold and jewels and goods stolen away made many of your men much richer within the day. As well as yourself- as some goods were donated to you as a courtesy.

The sins of the surviving rearguard were judged by regimental tribunal. They had suffered the most casualties, but their ordeal was not to end yet. They and the others were encouraged to tell the truth and isolate the worst people, who had defied orders to keep death and defilement to a minimum. In the end, only a few people ended up being given lashings, fines and imprisonment. Most of the worst was instead heaped upon the dead. So be it. If the enemy sorted out your worst for you, then no tears would be shed. They had the chance to die in service rather than be killed by their own comrades in executions.

After what would be called the Sack of Diamanti, the war in Gilicia took a drastic shift. Many Vitelian units slated to add their ranks to the occupation and to fighting the Gilician Alliance’s rural possessions instead were wasted in territorial defense. A vain mistake. When the summer came, the garrison of Fons Lacrimea was isolated and depleted enough by redeployments that when the great battle came to force them out of the provincial capital, they were driven forth and out within a month, and the remainder of the war, the Vitelian Royal Army ceased operations completely in the south.

The Black Regiment didn’t see the most glorious parts of these battles, but it saw plenty of service. It became a renowned, and infamous unit. Bonetto’s Black Coats, they called your unit. The Black Knight of Gilicia, the Ravager of Diamond. It was an image you cared incredibly little for- especially when none of the original Imperial battalion called you it anyways.
>>
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A whole year went by, full of steady low scale combat after so much energy was expended in retaking Fons Lacrimea and later putting Duefiume Ponte to siege. A third winter in Gilicia, another Year’s End away from friends and family. Another tally added to your age. Twenty-Nine years old. Almost thirty. Yena would be twenty-six this year. Vittoria would be four years old, soon, and Lorenzo two. It was the tenth of April when the news finally came that would bring this stage of your life to an end- a ceasefire finally declared.

In the terms of peace, several things would happen. The borders of the Gilician Province were released to the new independent sovereignty of Gilicia- Di Zucchampo’s idea that it would be reincorporated with greater autonomy turned out to be wrong, as hardliners towards national independence had subsumed the old guard in the wake of martial successes. The prisoners taken over the years would finally be returned home, most notably the thousands from Mariana’s Hollow. This peace was brokered by the Vilja Domkarl, whom as one of the final parts of negotiations, finally agreed to take up his office in the Holy City, ending his self-imposed exile. Complete amnesty was made to all militants and rebels of all sorts, and Gilicians in general…with exceptions.

There was a list of certain people of interest which, for reasons not made public, were under no circumstances to be allowed into Vitelia. You only found out later, when you dared to think that it would finally be time to go home, only to be delivered a sealed envelope informing you of your new circumstances. You had managed to make some people in very influential places very, very angry. For this reason, it had been agreed behind closed doors, you were one of a rather small group of people who remained a criminal in the eyes of the Kingdom of Vitelia.

Gilicia did not betray you, but you had not thought you would stay here long after all was said and done. Yet Vitelia treated you like one of the Imperials that had been your command. You were an exile, stripped of citizenship and marked for arrest should you ever return to the country of your birth.

The bright spot was, a year after she had parted ways from you, the twentieth of April, Elena sent you the good news you had been waiting for ever since. She had finally, finally found Yena and your children. They had taken a circuitous route, and Elena had to win the trust of multiple mountainfolk communities for them to tell her each leg of the trail, but she had tracked your wife to a Nief’yem settlement far to the northeast in Trelan, too far, it was thought, for any vengeful Vitelians to bother pursuing her to even if they learned where she was.
>>
You stared at the letter, that had also been sent with a letter from Yena as well- which repeated itself and was messily written. I want to be angry with you, it said, but I cannot bring myself to do so. I have been lonely too long to want for anything but to be by your side. She was healthy, safe, as were the children. Vittoria had grown enough, learned enough to always be asking where you were, and when you were coming back. Judge Above. When you left her she had only been speaking her first words.

There was no doubt about it. It was time to bring the family back together again- Elena would bring them to wherever you told her to, and since you were no longer welcome in Vitelia…that meant you had to consider where you wanted to live now, where to begin anew. An important consideration to say the least. It would be where you would be raising your family for the foreseeable future…

Near anywhere would be a completely new start, relatively, but if you ventured to Trelan, saving everybody any trip whatsoever and heading there yourself, Yena would at least already be established. Living amongst mountainfolk in a mountainfolk dominated nation would be a change, but perhaps you needed the peace of the peaks in your life. You’d rather your children grow up Vitelian, but Trelani at least spoke both the tongue of the mountains as well as Vitelian.

It was also possible to stay where you were in Gilicia. Some sacrifices would have to be made in exchange though. For example, Yena would have to be disguised, as would Lorenzo and any other green haired progeny you had. One of Gilicia’s first acts in its new declared laws was to permanently exile any Mountainfolk and Vyemani who remained in the land, which was not many anyways, but such represented a threat even to somebody such as you who so contributed to its independence. Would Yena be happy with living a life where she was made to keep herself secret? Maybe not, but continuing life in Gilicia was at least stable. Said contributions meant you had opportunities to take here, to make up for having fallen off the ladder in the Vitelian Royal Army. A far easier thing than completely starting from scratch anywhere else, though Gilicia’s culture was one of quite a religious bent, and that would undoubtedly influence your children growing up there.
>>
Then, there was an idle offer made by some of your black coat comrades. They weren’t going to stay in Gilicia- they were going to depart, to the one place they could continue their fighting and transient lives the way they had grown accustomed to, and didn’t want to change over for peace. Sosaldt, the wastelands to the west that had been a cauldron of anarchy since the days of the first Kaiser. Warriors and mercenaries were always in demand, and could always find their way to wealth and fame, even if it was to be amongst rogues and thieves. Sometimes, mercenary lords could even find their way into the favor of great nations again. A place where anybody could dig their way up from any hole, even if they were diving into a deep one to go to Sosaldt in the first place. If you accompanied the Black Coats, though, they were happy to call you their leader once more, and you wouldn’t be going naked and unarmed, but as proper well-armed mercenaries from the start. Maybe not the most stable option- but it was what you knew and knew well, and would present opportunity you might not have otherwise.

Besides that, the world was a huge place, and while Vitelia had branded you a war criminal, no other place had. If you set your mind to it, you could go anywhere on the continent…

>Go to Trelan. It wasn’t so bad there, you heard- and a quiet life in the mountains might be a good return to a rural life long missed, even if your children would be raised like Mountainfolk.
>Remain in Gilicia. Even if you didn’t fit in with its culture or the general sentiments of its people, it was a niche you carved out a place for yourself in. Besides, you’d like seeing Yena in another hair color, anyways.
>Venture to Sosaldt. A dangerous wasteland might not be what most think of as a suitable place to raise a family, but so long as you remained strong and employed by powerful patrons, how deadly could it be? And how great the rewards for your hard fought experience?
>Another place? (Must be on the continent, nobody sane is going overseas)
Also-
>Plan anything for your reunion?
>>
>>5886940
>Go to Trelan. It wasn’t so bad there, you heard- and a quiet life in the mountains might be a good return to a rural life long missed, even if your children would be raised like Mountainfolk.
Yeah, this whole misadventure was a mistake.
>>
>>5886940
>Go to Trelan. It wasn’t so bad there, you heard- and a quiet life in the mountains might be a good return to a rural life long missed, even if your children would be raised like Mountainfolk.

Close enough to Vitelia that we can keep abreast of domestic developments, plus at least they speak the language.
>>
>>5886940
>Venture to Sosaldt. A dangerous wasteland might not be what most think of as a suitable place to raise a family, but so long as you remained strong and employed by powerful patrons, how deadly could it be? And how great the rewards for your hard fought experience?
>>
>>5886940
How long is the time skip for this part? Until Bonetto returns to Vitelia?
Kind of relevant when considering choices on where to go.
>>
>>5886951
>How long is the time skip for this part? Until Bonetto returns to Vitelia?
I wouldn't say any skip would be straight from this vote to Vitelia, but yes, barring some rather large decision while in this next arc, it's where you'll be staying for at least a decade and a half or so.
>>
>>5886940

>Go to Trelan. It wasn’t so bad there, you heard- and a quiet life in the mountains might be a good return to a rural life long missed, even if your children would be raised like Mountainfolk.

We did tell Chiara we wanted to go back to farming for a bit.
>>
>>5886940
>Venture to Sosaldt. A dangerous wasteland might not be what most think of as a suitable place to raise a family, but so long as you remained strong and employed by powerful patrons, how deadly could it be? And how great the rewards for your hard fought experience?
My rational brain says Trelan, but my sovl.. It yearns for the dust and it's grimey charms
>>
>>5886940
>Venture to Sosaldt. A dangerous wasteland might not be what most think of as a suitable place to raise a family, but so long as you remained strong and employed by powerful patrons, how deadly could it be? And how great the rewards for your hard fought experience?
>>
>>5886940
>Go to Trelan. It wasn’t so bad there, you heard- and a quiet life in the mountains might be a good return to a rural life long missed, even if your children would be raised like Mountainfolk.
>>
>>5886940
>Go to Trelan. It wasn’t so bad there, you heard- and a quiet life in the mountains might be a good return to a rural life long missed, even if your children would be raised like Mountainfolk.
Though i'd love to see Yena's alt-hair color sprite it ain't worth surpestision of the idiot. Fuck Sosaldt, all my homies hate Sosaldt.
>The Black coats can send us a letter or something. We have other stuff to take care of and they'll probably be ok without us ||They won't||
and plan something...
>The best apology we could make knowing Yena and idk read up on child rearing. We have a lot of work ahead of us.
>>
>>5886940
>Go to Trelan. It wasn’t so bad there, you heard- and a quiet life in the mountains might be a good return to a rural life long missed, even if your children would be raised like Mountainfolk.
>>
>>5886940
>Go to Trelan. It wasn’t so bad there, you heard- and a quiet life in the mountains might be a good return to a rural life long missed, even if your children would be raised like Mountainfolk.

Happy wife, happy life. This revolutionary things hardly seems worth it…rwptdg
>>
>>5886940
>Another place? (Must be on the continent, nobody sane is going overseas)
Naukland

>Plan anything for your reunion?
Giving your wife the D.
>>
>>5886940
>Remain in Gilicia. Even if you didn’t fit in with its culture or the general sentiments of its people, it was a niche you carved out a place for yourself in. Besides, you’d like seeing Yena in another hair color, anyways.
>>
>>5886940
>Remain in Gilicia. Even if you didn’t fit in with its culture or the general sentiments of its people, it was a niche you carved out a place for yourself in. Besides, you’d like seeing Yena in another hair color, anyways.
I don't particularly like the place but a different haired Yena sounds interesting.
>>
>>5886941
>>5886944
>>5886984
>>5887057
>>5887072
>>5887160
>>5887197
East, to greener pastures. And greener people in general.

>>5886945
>>5887009
>>5887041
To the wastes.

>>5887210
Go north.

>>5887219
>>5887236
Stay in the hills.

Calling it in two hours.
>>
>>5886940
>>Venture to Sosaldt. A dangerous wasteland might not be what most think of as a suitable place to raise a family, but so long as you remained strong and employed by powerful patrons, how deadly could it be? And how great the rewards for your hard fought experience?
Going to Trelan and living a quiet life among mountainfolk won't put us any closer to the revolution. We need to become more powerful. Sure Sosaldt will be hard on our family but so is everything else we've done so far. This is just one more necessary sacrifice for the greater cause.
>>
>>5887369
One more for the wastes.

To Trelan you go then. Writing. Though I'm not sure if it's to see new shores or to settle down or both.
>>
>>5887440

Side note- did our (Vitelian) subordinates and the Comte receive pardons, or are they also on the blacklist?
>>
>>5887450
Your own did- Di Zucchampo did not. Mostly a matter of name recognition when it came to such. Nobody had a seething hatred of the turning of Luigi, for example.
>>
Gilicia owed you a few favors for your service, and you cashed them in. With little more than a haversack full of your clothing and personal possessions and an envelope stuffed with money, you left the new country behind with the courtesy of farewells to your comrades, but staying no longer than that. The Gilician Alliance officials, now forming the fledgling government, had arranged to send you through Holherezh, to Trelan, the northwest neighbor itself showing some gratitude for the continued distraction against Fealinn, who was prosecuting its own border conflict.
From one backwater state to another then to Trelan, though what you knew of Trelan implied it wasn’t a bad place, just a rather unimportant one, tucked up in a cradle of mountains on the edge of the world. An inoffensive democratic republic from the days of the First and Seconds Empires, much like Kallec and Paelli. For now, it was content to remain in the bowl the mountains around it formed, though you had heard it economically supported Kallec, a notoriously militant state.

A journey over the mountains that made up Gilicia’s northern border would have taken days, but a courier aircraft was set aside for your use. You watched the mountains slowly pass by below, mystified by just how giant they were even from high above. Part of you wanted to walk across them anyways, to return to Monte Nocca, in a way, but you had little doubt that you’d get your share of mountain habitation soon anyways.

You landed in Holherezh, not on an airstrip, but merely a cleared patch of meadow near a patrol base. Holherezhans were an unfriendly and prickly sort by nature, naturally combative plains people, many whose way of life hadn’t much changed since the days of old Vitelia when it encompassed them. So there was no railway to get on, but a carriage presented out of courtesy, which would take the trip to the Trelani border and no further.

An uneventful trip, as you kept to yourself just as your guides would like you to, and indulged yourself in your own writings. Without a proper library and study you could only do so much, but it had been a long time since you had been left to focus solely upon your idea of Utopianism. These days, such thought felt further away than every, though. Like you were giving the subject thought out of obligation rather than motivation.
>>
A couple days later, marked more by revelations that Holherehan cuisine was a mix between bland and unreasonably hot rather than any ideological sparks, the river border that separated Trelan from Holherezh was arrived at, and yourself deposited at a small town. There was no bridge, though there was a ferry, a sign of how few people regularly crossed from one side to the other. Despite being right on the border, you still saw no green-hairs, merely the dusty browns and black heads of northerners of a different sort than Hill Vitelians. Pohja, you had heard the ethnicity called, an ancient people of vague and unclear origin on this continent rather than being Nauk descended like most of the north, though Pohjanask was a rather buried idea last you’d been near a discussion involving these northwest territories. The buildings were like in Holherezh as well, squat and wide with long sloping roofs, apparently built that way to let the winds roll over them. It did howl rather loud sometimes on your way here- was it a practical design, or superstition since a Great Gale raged just over the sea from Holherezh?

You didn’t stay long enough in the town to even learn its name well enough to remember it. Only long enough to try and pay a boatman to take you over- but he did it for free, only wanting to know why a “straw head” would be here crossing a river.

“I’m going to find my wife so I can live with her and my children again,” you said.

The conversation continued in the boat, a small thing fit for only three or four people, with a motor, but it went unused. “Your wife and kids, eh?” The middle-aged bearded boatman asked, his Vitelian harsh and tinged with accent of something you hadn’t heard before. “You marry a mosshead, if she’s livin’ in Trelan?”

“We were both born in Vitelia,” you said as the boat swayed in a lazy current, “But yes, she is one of the Mountainfolk.”

“Y’know the name they prefer?”

“Nief’yem, yes.”

“That’s what they want t’ be called in Trelan. Little advice.”

“I see.”

The boat went slightly off course, and the boatman let a oar stay to turn his craft slightly. “It’s a long way to Vitelia from here, unless y’ grow wings and fly.”

“I did take an aircraft over the mountains.”

“Did you/ You must be important.”

“Not really. I just did a lot of people a favor.”
>>
The boatman gave you a humored grin. “Ain’t you wrapped up in mysteries. You really planning to stay there? Trelan’s not Vitelia.”

You breathed in and let out a great sigh. “No, it isn’t. But I can’t go back. I have enemies that banished me specifically from there. I’ll consider it a polite way of them saying if I tried to go back they’d kill me.”

“If every straw head that comes up here’s this interesting, I’ll not have any pennies for bread.”

“I’m not destitute,” you said, “If you want your pennies I have them.”

“Heh,” the bearded man shook his head, “Naw, the Judge hates a man who offers charity then takes it back, y’know.”

There simply wasn’t enough time for you to tell your story in anything but greatly abbreviated form, but the boatman seemed happy enough when he let you off and you wished each other good fortune before you went on your way.

On the other side of the river, you stocked up on necessary goods and learned a little more of the town by happenstance. Apparently, it wasn’t uncommon for barges to go up and down this river. While much of rural Holherezh didn’t offer much, the river formed the joint of three nations, and no matter how they felt about one another such was an inevitable meeting place. You asked where to find a rail line to the country’s heart, since you had to get to its central mountains. Two days of walking on foot, apparently, though there were villages along the way, and then there would be one small rail line, then another that went to Trelan’s capital of Pietranello. You really were out in the sticks, but there was nothing to do about it but soldier on. The rolling foothills were hardly a hard march, and in the spring, you couldn’t complain about the climate, not the view of the mountains wherever you looked. Only that you had to walk this lonely road by yourself.

-----

Perhaps you were spoiled by the modernity of Lapizlazulli and the efforts of King Lucius the Fourth to modernize Vitelia’s infrastructure, but traveling through Trelan, even once you reached the rails, felt like taking steps back through time. Not in a way that was dirty, though. The people had a dignity to them, like they knew what was coming and were merely waiting patiently for it. Even Pietranello, when you laid eyes on it, was more impressive for its site than for the city itself, as it didn’t compare to Donom Dei or Lapizalazulli in sheer size and density. Somebody had big plans for it, though- your train had to stop at the outskirts because too much traffic was going in to accommodate a little passenger train, and even from afar you could see much scaffolding and construction engines that might be more modern than the thing you rode in on.
>>
Pietranello wasn’t your destination, though. It would have to be a city your family would travel to on occasion, since it did pique curiosity, a relief that there was something you could call an actual city in this country. Where you were actually going was a mountain town called Khuf Shumym, though you doubted anybody could tell you exactly where it was until you got close- in an adjacent mountain bowl where another city called Pietrecirchio lay. The same city twice over, were it not that one was the capital, though they were closely linked enough that a highway with passenger trolleys connected them both. It was on one of these trams that you struck up a conversation with the locals, who spoke in a mix of heavily accented Vitelian and Mountainfolk tongue- it was here that people actually looked how you’d expect, as near a third wore an emerald hue of green upon their heads.

“You there,” a young man addressed you, “You new in town?” Your blonde hair made you stick out amongst the group where you were the only shade lighter than the greens.

“I am,” you said. “On my way to the mountains. My wife and children are there.”

“They from here?” Another young man, with muddy brown hair asked. Neither of the boys could have been above twenty.

“She is a Nief’yem,” you gave a half-answer.

“Lucky. Are you going to become a citizen?”

“I suppose I’d have to,” you said.

“The government’s put through an act a year ago,” the first youth said, “They want people to start having big families. They’ll subsidize it, but they only want immigrants of Nief’yem heritage. If your wife’s a Nief’yem, then you should get in on that deal.”

Nice of the local authorities to give their blessing on something you were planning on doing anyways. You’d suggest that the young men get on it too, but you weren’t sure if they were too young for you to speak so brazenly, even if they did such to you. “The government has big plans in store then? If they wanted more people, perhaps they should extend the same offer to other immigrants?”

“And bring in more mesh? Nah, nobody wants that.”

“Mesh?” You asked.

Mesharet,” the green hair boy specified, “The kind of people that live in Holherezh, and that hang around the lowlands here. Already enough of them, and imagine, what if a bunch of Paellans thought they could come up here? Nasty squinties jamming up the streets, I don’t want to think about it.”

“That’s right,” the brown hair boy said, “A bunch of nice people, nice girls, came around because of what happened in Gilicia. Let’s have more of that, not Dhegyar half-horses and yellow men blowing in on the Iceforth.”

“The Kalleans can keep their girls that stink of the stables. Maybe they’d like a donkey faced guy like Nate?”
>>
You didn’t join in on the new game they were playing, but you were well educated on certain opinions and moods. You were from too far away, too different to be more than a curiosity, and the Trelani were happy to keep everybody unlike them far away. What you might have expected from mountainfolk really, though if these boys were any indication, the mountainfolk that lived in cities like this were a far cry from the more mystical traditional ones like you were married to, and even Yena had said that her clan and town weren’t even particularly old fashioned. Was Trelan rushing so fast into the future that it was leaving all else behind? Maybe your expectations of what your new home would be like were off…

Surprisingly, once you asked at the city hall in Pietrecirchio about it, you learned that Khuf Shumym wasn’t very far at all, relatively. A day’s march through the mountains, but the trip was abbreviated by a new pulley lift that attempted to link the townships of the mountains back to the center of the country. What an uncharacteristic innovation- but you were happy to take advantage of it, and after getting the route of what villages and paths to take, you went straight to the cable car, which was busier than you expected with full loads going up near on the hour.

Once again, your appearance was a subject of conversation, though when you told of why you were here, a local noticed something more.

“Say,” an elder man whose hair was flecked with grey said, overhearing the talk you were engaged in, “There was another blonde, a girl, who came up this way some time back. Said she was looking for a Nief’yem with a blonde daughter.”

“I sent a friend to look for my wife and daughter,” you said, “I doubt anybody else came this way looking for anything similar, but her name is Elena.” Just in case.

The man nodded. “Elena was her name, yes. But what takes you all up here?”

You were going to get quite good at telling this story, weren’t you? Though perhaps you could cut out certain details…maybe embellish some others.

>Make the story you repeat that of a humble traveler. Of course your wife came here, she was Nief’yem, and what was a husband to do but follow? You were an explorer, a sightseer, and everything that came before could remain romantic mystery.
>The vague truth that you were a soldier, a mercenary and freedom fighter, though without saying for who. After all, it was what you knew, and Trelan was no different from any other place from having a military that you might find a place being employed in aiding.
>What did you have to hide? If there was any limits to the tale of your past, it was how long it would take to tell. If you were going to live here, then there was no reason to have any doubts to who you were.
>Other?
>>
>>5887841

>The vague truth that you were a soldier, a mercenary and freedom fighter, though without saying for who. After all, it was what you knew, and Trelan was no different from any other place from having a military that you might find a place being employed in aiding.

Wonder how the Trelani? Trelanese? military shapes up. Likely not that impressive but hey it's honest work and a proper state at least.

Also I'm presuming mountainfolk are the largest ethnic group in Trelan, but do they form a majority of the population, or just a plurality?
>>
>>5887841
>Make the story you repeat that of a humble traveler. Of course your wife came here, she was Nief’yem, and what was a husband to do but follow? You were an explorer, a sightseer, and everything that came before could remain romantic mystery.
If and when we want to be employed by the army, we can tell them.
>>
>>5887841
>The vague truth that you were a soldier, a mercenary and freedom fighter, though without saying for who. After all, it was what you knew, and Trelan was no different from any other place from having a military that you might find a place being employed in aiding.
>>
>>5887841
>The vague truth that you were a soldier, a mercenary and freedom fighter, though without saying for who. After all, it was what you knew, and Trelan was no different from any other place from having a military that you might find a place being employed in aiding
>>
>>5887841
>What did you have to hide? If there was any limits to the tale of your past, it was how long it would take to tell. If you were going to live here, then there was no reason to have any doubts to who you were.
>>
>>5887859
>Also I'm presuming mountainfolk are the largest ethnic group in Trelan, but do they form a majority of the population, or just a plurality?
They're a rather slim majority- just a hair over three fiffths proportion of the population, but mind you, the way Nief'yem bloodline rules work a large portion of that, purists would consider half or quarter. So they haven't actually been a majority for all that long.
>>
>>5887841
>>What did you have to hide? If there was any limits to the tale of your past, it was how long it would take to tell. If you were going to live here, then there was no reason to have any doubts to who you were.
>>
>>5887992
Gotcha, better get to work on making that baseball team for Yena then.

(Come to think of it, what sports are popular on Vinstraga? Is there any kind of Olympics equivalent?)
>>
>>5887859
>>5887935
>>5887971
Ronin sounds cooler than vagabondo.

>>5887867
A simple fellow traveler.

>>5887983
>>5887994
All you have is on the table as is.

Calling it in a couple hours.

>>5888021
>Come to think of it, what sports are popular on Vinstraga? Is there any kind of Olympics equivalent?
The globe isn't interconnected enough to have something like the Olympics, though there are regional contests, when things aren't in a hot state. As far as team sports go, in Vitelia, Sea Vitelians and people on the coasts in general like Dive Ball, which could be called contact sport Water Polo but you can only travel with the ball underwater. Sea Vitelians would be fascinated by certain fantastical concepts of spherical floating water arenas that are played by materialized tulpas. Football might not exactly be a shocking twist, but there's a universality to kicking a ball with certain restrictions- though unusually, the wrinkle about not being allowed to pick up the ball is theorized to come from Dive Ball's restriction on throwing the ball through the air. Considering that a football/handball is leather and a Dive Ball is traditionally a two-fists sized sphere of solid lead, this is either quite a logical stretch or an overzealous precaution against the sort of injuries a small cannonball might give.
>>
>>5887841
>>5887935
Changing my vote to
>>What did you have to hide? If there was any limits to the tale of your past, it was how long it would take to tell. If you were going to live here, then there was no reason to have any doubts to who you were.
>>
>>5887841
>The vague truth that you were a soldier, a mercenary and freedom fighter, though without saying for who. After all, it was what you knew, and Trelan was no different from any other place from having a military that you might find a place being employed in aiding.
>>
>>5888127
No hide.

>>5888239
I trooper.

Updating.
>>
>>5888253
Wait what option actually won, since it's still tied?
>>
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41 KB JPG
>>5888888
Oh.
Uh, huh.
You know what, whoever breaks it next, we'll go that way instead of a coin flip, or I'll flip in an hour. I didn't actually notice how it went.
>>
>>5887841
>The vague truth that you were a soldier, a mercenary and freedom fighter, though without saying for who. After all, it was what you knew, and Trelan was no different from any other place from having a military that you might find a place being employed in aiding.
>>
>>5888888 (nice quads)
>>5889019
Now it's tied because of >>5889022
But it wasn't before, since I changed my vote.
>>
>>5887859
>>5887971
>>5888239
>>5889022
Vague truth

>>5887983
>>5887994
>>5888127
Full truth.

>>5887867
Simple traveler.

>>5889031
My mistake, I tallied it wrong.
>>
Soon?
>>
>>5889982
Yeah, yesterday I just couldn't get it out, I'm just piecing together what I've got now.
Probably not soon, but it's coming.
>>
Okay, now it'll be soon.
I've just been half dead for most of the past two days so I couldn't do anything that required creative thought whatsoever, it seems.
>>
You considered telling everything- but decided that the whole truth was unnecessary to identify the new Bonetto here. It could come out for those who could be trusted with such a story, not the entire world. Somehow, you thought that Gilician sympathies weren’t particularly reputable here, even a whole country and mountain range away from the Vitelian breakaway.

A sense of mystery was cultivated amongst those you spoke with in the cable car. You in turn didn’t find out much about them, but from how they looked and what other things were brought on, you surmised that plenty of the people going up and down were doing work in the mountains themselves, perhaps integrating the communities more deeply, maybe improving roads, or perhaps probing for minerals to find. Whatever their reasons for going back and forth, the reputation for mountainfolk villages to keep isolated from the affairs of the outside didn’t seem so strong here.

Where you were going was a town called Travaglio, and even though it was built in the squat styles of old, it was new. The buildings were all grey and white striped stone from near and were one with the peak they were built from and upon with roofs of dark thatch. Fences that trailed the edges of the cliffs streamed with dry flowers and colored paper, and the wind was sweet from them, its song whistling where the sound of the cable car’s machinery did not grind. A place for several hundred people at least, roads arranged like steps with stairs and steep ramps going between them. Something large was being constructed in a canyon cut into the stone on one side of Travaglio, but you were in no mind or motivation to linger and explore, so you carried on after learning the way and buying a loaf of dark bread and a lump of pork lard.
>>
The surprises continued as you arrived at the cable car station and saw a dispatch for cargo bicycles, for moving things as far as the other side of the range, for a deposit. When you continued on the paths beyond the quite well appointed and far from austere town, they had been carved and furnished anew to be far less winding and thin than you expected. Serious work was being done up here, and it raised hopes that the new surroundings you’d find yourself in wouldn’t be lesser than those you had grown up in. Signs constantly advised along the way, however, to not take certain paths in foggy conditions due to wildlife activity. Modernity couldn’t conquer everywhere yet.

By the time you reached Khuf Shumym, the sun was going down and the sky was reddish orange, the mountains dyed with a deepening purple. Here, you’d find your family, or at the very least Elena who might guide you further. It resembled Travaglio outwardly in style, though the wear upon the stones told of the town’s antiquity, and as it resided in the saddle of two peaks, there were no cliffs to be seen and to fear tumbling from.

Thankfully, the search didn’t take long- you saw the object of your search almost as soon as you passed the sign that marked the entrance to the town.

Right by the old wooden gates to the village, little blonde girl was playing with a beetle on a string, dazzled by how it flew in a circle above her. It would have been an ordinary sight for a near four-year-old girl if you knew who it was just by how there wouldn’t be a single other blonde human in this place.

She noticed you approach, and her mouth opened wide when her gaze reached your head. “Ah you my daddy?” She asked in a loud, discordant demand.

You were halted by that obvious question- when you left her, she couldn’t string words together, but did she still remember who you were?

She didn’t wait for your answer as she forgot all about the beetle and let it go, trailing a string as it flew away. “Mommy! Mommy!” She cried as she ran across the dirt path in a stumbling child’s trot, “Daddy’s hee, Daddy’s hee!”
>>
You followed her at a fast walk- of course she wouldn’t be left out of watch, and indeed, over near a signpost and stone shrine lamp, you saw her. Finally, after a lonesome two years, you had your Yena again, holding Lorenzo against her shoulder. Her hair had grown even longer, and was held up in two braids, but when you called out to her, she stared blankly, like she wasn’t sure if you were real.

“He’s heee, he’s hee!” Vittoria continued shrieking and laughing as she tugged on her mother’s skirt and pointed, “Daddy’s hee!” She then charged straight at you, and you barely knelt down in time before she jumped for you and you caught her and brought her to your chest, holding her in the crook of one arm as you went towards Yena.

“You’ve gotten big, haven’t you?” You poked Vittoria’s cheek.

“I’m big, I’m big!”

Yena said nothing, but looked downcast as you tilted her chin up with a finger and kissed her on her lips. There was a moment of silence, as you let her go and brushed your nose against hers, put your arm around her.

“Why mommy sad?” Vittoria asked that rather impolitely, but she wasn’t even quite four yet.

“I’m sorry, dearest,” you said to Yena, “I truly am. But I didn’t know what I was getting into. What I’d be giving up. What I’d have to make you do. But I’m here now.”

Yena still said nothing for a few moments. “Palmiro…” she said quietly, “I’m happy to see you again, but I’m angry, too. Confused. Relieved. It’s all so much. Be patient with me, please.” Her voice was strained and stilted, uncertain right to its vowels.

“You’ve been patient enough with me,” you said, “Where do you live? You should sit down.”

“This way,” Yena turned, “Vittoria, do you know the way home?”

“Yeah I do!”

“Point the way for daddy, then, sweetheart,” you said to her.
>>
The place was what one could expect for the charity of a town for a mother of two. Yes, Yena had been sent off with the sum total of your finances, but you also knew she was extremely frugal when given the choice, not that you were going to pester her yet on the state of finances. A simple hut with three rooms, two interconnected. An extremely humble abode made for only one person at best, but a roof over the head and a brick oven in its center nevertheless. A cradle and a small, squat bed were in the main room- the bedroom itself was quite small, only accommodating a wall sconce with a candle, a small table and dresser, and a bedroll. Apparently this wasn’t actually the poorest situation to be in, as children usually slept around and minded the oven in the main room- the eldest child being the hearth watcher.

Suffice it to say, you could improve on this living situation quite a bit, and you told Yena as much of your intent. She didn’t respond with more than “Mm.”

After a minute of looking around, Yena coughed, and said, “…You must be hungry. Wait here with the children, I’ll get something.”

“We can go together,” You offered, but Yena held her hand up.

“It won’t be long.”

She took Lorenzo with her, and left Vittoria with you, who immediately bombarded you with questions she couldn’t possibly understand the answers to, so you got practice in the sort of vague answers that satisfied very small children. Where were you? Far away. Why were you far away? Work. What do you do for work?

Well, that one could wait. You told her that your work was fighting, and she said that Elder Tzono said that fighting was bad.

Yena came back with a string of foodstuff, roasted legs from some bird, and various vegetables like long onions and roots that had been blackened and caramelized in the same stuff as the meat. The whole spread was laid out on wooden dishes on top of the oven in the center of the house- then all of that transferred to a sheet on the floor, which was where you would dine in lieu of a table.

“What is this?” you asked as she handed you one of the legs off the central wood platter.

“Rock Pheasant,” Yena said flatly, “I gave another family the glaze and marinade. I don’t feel like doing cooking tonight.” An absolute irregularity. Back in Lapizlazulli she had to be convinced not to cook sometimes.

“I want buttah bisky,” Vittoria chirped.

“No butter biscuits until you eat your turnips,” Yena said in well-practiced sternness.

“Tuhnips ah gwoss,” Vittoria whined. “Lowo don’t eat tuhnips.”

You didn’t see the problem- you ate everything greedily- and Vittoria might have been a bit craftier than you thought as Yena scolded her.
“Palmiro, don’t eat Vittoria’s turnips for her.”

You looked down to your plate and noticed that the little scamp had piled hers right next to yours, and her portion was gone- definitely not because she had eaten them.
>>
Yena was quiet for the night, as you all went outside after dinner. She didn’t want to talk, but you put your arm around her- noticed easily how thin she was. Some habits didn’t change, apparently. Whenever you weren’t around, she just didn’t eat.

Time came for you to go to bed, mostly because the children were tired, since the rest of the town was still up and the lamps weren’t being put out. Vittoria and Lorenzo were laid down, the oven’s coals tended and the little ones fast asleep, you and your wife went to the small bedroom- she disrobed to a thin slip and rolled herself in the blankets.

“Yena…” you said, “If there’s something you want to talk about-“

“I don’t want to talk about it,” Yena said, “I don’t want to. I’ll be fine. It’s not you.”

“Let me have some of that blanket at least,” you tugged it off of her, and she allowed enough of it to where you didn’t have a sheet separating you anymore.

When you laid your hands on her, touched her thighs, her small breasts, she exhaled sharply.

“Not tonight, Palmiro…” she said softly.

It would be a lie to say you hadn’t been looking forward to this for a long time. However, you knew well when Yena was in the mood. Her libido was such that the times that she wasn’t were atypical enough to the point that you knew exactly what her tells for such were. You knew her, you knew her body- she was in the mood.

But she didn’t want to be.

>Indulge the both of you. It had been too long to put it off for another moment.
>Let her sleep. You had nothing but time to work everything out, now.
>Other?
>>
>>5891011
>Let her sleep. You had nothing but time to work everything out, now.

Respect her wishes, there is time enough for many more children.
>>
>>5891011

>Let her sleep. You had nothing but time to work everything out, now.

Bonetto's lucky he isn't on the couch.

The kids are cute though, need to protect them at all costs.
>>
>>5891011
>Indulge the both of you. It had been too long to put it off for another moment.
>>
>>5891011
>Let her sleep. You had nothing but time to work everything out, now.
>Other? (Hold her tight at the very least. Nothing crass but going to sleep with her not in your arms is unacceptable.)
>>
>>5891011
>Let her sleep. You had nothing but time to work everything out, now.
Man, I knew fighting for Gilicia was a shit idea. But oh well, dissapointment, expulsion and all that is always the revolutionary experience.
>>
>>5891011
>Indulge the both of you. It had been too long to put it off for another moment.
More children yes
>>
>>5891011
>Indulge the both of you. It had been too long to put it off for another moment.
>>
>>5891011
>Let her sleep. You had nothing but time to work everything out, now.
>>
>>5891011
>Let her sleep. You had nothing but time to work everything out, now.
Yena thighs putting chemicals in the water turning the frickin' mossheads gay!
>>
>>5891013
>>5891016
>>5891033
>>5891061
>>5891113
>>5891145
Give her the Z.

>>5891022
>>5891090
>>5891106
Give her the D.

Calling in an hour.
>>
As it stands.
Writing.
>>
No coom in wife?
>>
>>5891262
Sad!
>>
>>5891262
>>5891264
Don't let it discourage you. She might not wanna smash, but Palmiro can smooth things out with some TLC.
Just gotta remind her why she fell in love to start with.
All this time with him away for next to no good reason and she's probably forgotten.
>>
>>5891011
>Let her sleep. You had nothing but time to work everything out, now.
>>
Deleting posts is broken again, now my shame will live forever.
>>5891262
The kids would hear everything in this mosshead mansion.
>>
So be it. There was nothing but time to work out everything, desires included. You would work your way toward forgiveness honestly, rather than like a lecher. Though that didn’t mean Yena could go cold for another night. You wrapped your arms around her and held her tight to you, and she relaxed, practically melted, even if nothing was said.

You did still love each other.

-----

The next day you woke alongside Yena, though of course, not with her usual way she once did. As was her wont for now. It was alright that she was still quiet, because having hurried here, you had neglected to get your affairs in order, to make sure everything was accounted for. Your finances, your state of housing and employment, and of course, Elena, who was apparently linering in Travaglio, but had been away when you passed through in haste.

After Vittoria and Lorenzo had woken, and breakfast was had (without coffee, unfortunately), you bid them a temporary farewell for the day- there was much to take care of, especially since Travaglio was a good half a day’s walk away, though much faster on a bicycle. You managed to gain the use of one of said machines through offering to take it on a simple job- delivery back to the south side of the mountains at your destination. Mail and goods were supposed to be dispatched every morning or two, usually by the trail watchman or their assistant, but Khuf Shumym’s trail watchman was old and far from too proud to take a temporary holiday, especially with his apprentice mucking about somewhere since last night.

The first matter of business, you thought as you pedaled down the misty morning trail, passing by the lamp men who maintained the trail lights, was your money. Gilicia had paid you a handsome sum equivalent to five years of lieutenant colonel’s wages, and so long as the money changers didn’t rip you off too much (Yena had advised you that being married to Nief’yem should stay greedier hands) then you would be able to live quite comfortably for a good while without so much as thinking about working, at least until Vittoria had become an adult, or you could make a large investment and then employ yourself in sustainment of it. You’d scope out work while out and about. Trelan seemed to have no shortage of needs in its great expansion plans.
>>
Already you saw calls for laborers for construction when you arrived before noon in Travaglio. It would be decent paying, though even on bicycle, the trip back and forth would be arduous and time consuming. It made you wonder if your first plans should be to move the family over to this town, or perhaps, even down to Pietrecirchio, if something else revealed itself down there while you were attending to the bank branch there.

Firstly though, you went by the inns where Elena had been staying- she was there now, and you greeted one another warmly and with an embrace, whereupon you went out for lunch. Your treat, of course.

Upon sitting down, you opened the envelope with Gilicia’s payment within, and handed Elena the equivalent of a year’s wages for a soldier.

“You don’t gotta,” Elena said.

“I insist.” Elena took the money with no further objection. “Will you be staying long?” You asked, “You did accomplish what you came out here to do, but if you could be around a few more weeks, you could be here for Vittoria’s fourth birthday…”

“I’ll stay fer that,” Elena relented, “But after that, I’ll have to leave, Bonetto. It’s been fine here. Doin’ odd jobs and deliveries, trail patrol. It’s opened my eyes t’ things I never would’a have seen if I’d stayed back home. But this place ain’t where I want t’ stay, and I have to go back to Vitelia. T’ tell your folks where y’ve been, where y’ve gone. T’ tell your friends.”

“I’m not sure about that…”

“They got a right to know, Bonetto,” Elena put her hand on your cheek, “Th’ war’s over. Maybe the Kingdom won’t let’cha come back, but maybe that won’t be forever. There’s people who love y’ back in Vitelia.”

Time came for you to get to the cable car to go down the mountain, and you parted ways with Elena. “…Thank you again,” you said to her, “With how long it took, I can’t imagine this was easy.”

“I’ll tell ya th’ story sometime. Long as y’ pay for lunch.”

With that, it was time to go down to the city from the mountain.

-----

The money changer was more merciful than expected- the hue of your head was recognizable from when Yena had come around, apparently, so you didn’t have to fight too hard for your money to be changed and deposited, though five percent still had to be argued down for just how much money five percent was of your lot. One percent was finally arrived at, with the logic that you would be investing the money here anyways.

So that was settled, and with your Vitelian bills newly exchanged for Trelani khezfii and most of it tucked away with the Trelani commerce system, you felt newly comfortably, and established. Now you could actually think about how you’d be spending the years here.
>>
Firstly, your employment…

>You had enough money to not have to work. Which meant you could focus on personal pursuits- maybe writing, if publishing such things would get you spare change you didn’t need much… (This will require frugality in property investment, of course)
>Take up simple labor like construction. You were still young, and physical work required little qualifications while still paying decently. There was plenty of such to do up in the mountains, even if you didn’t want to venture too far from within them.
>Present yourself to the armed forces. You’ve a wealth of experience, maybe they would value your consultation, even if you were not an acting part of it… (Requires living in the city)
>Something else?

Then, the matter of where you would make a more permanent home. The present situation in Khuf Shumym could sustain you, it was a place to sleep with a roof over your head and a heath in the center, but it was humble to the point of aestheticism. Certainly no place to raise a large family.

>Stay within Khuf Shumym. It was an idyllic, peaceful mountain town, and there was no reason to leave it- you could just build the humble home out to better fit your needs, especially given your financial state.
>Move to Travaglio. Still up in the mountains, but larger, and more connected to the rest of the country. A compromise of sorts between rural surroundings and not being in the boonies.
>Move down to the city. The rents were higher, but there would be little that you and the family wouldn’t have access to. The price for opportunities- and being where anything happened.
>Other?

While you were out and passing by the numerous shops and stands, you also thought about your daughter’s birthday, coming up. It was still a good two and a half weeks away, but it’d be good to have a present for her ready ahead of time. Her fourth birthday would be an important milestone- she couldn’t be called a baby anymore at such a point, and she would have to begin some sort of education…

What to get her…she liked butter biscuits, but food for her birthday seemed low effort. She liked goats and bugs, it seemed, but she didn’t have much in the way of toys in general either, besides ones that she must have grown out of. Maybe she’d appreciate something that was unlike anything she’d been allowed to play with?

>What do you want to get for your daughter’s birthday?
Also-
>Take care of or do anything else for the near term?
>>
>>5891447
>Present yourself to the armed forces. You’ve a wealth of experience, maybe they would value your consultation, even if you were not an acting part of it… (Requires living in the city)
>Move down to the city. The rents were higher, but there would be little that you and the family wouldn’t have access to. The price for opportunities- and being where anything happened.
I'm mostly attracted to availability of medical care for our family.
>What do you want to get for your daughter’s birthday?
Nice clothes or shoes. She's a growing child.
>>
>>5891444
>(Yena had advised you that being married to Nief’yem should stay greedier hands)
Have the mossheads ever been caught digging tunnels or poisoning wells?
>>5891447
>You had enough money to not have to work. Which meant you could focus on personal pursuits- maybe writing, if publishing such things would get you spare change you didn’t need much… (This will require frugality in property investment, of course)
>Stay within Khuf Shumym. It was an idyllic, peaceful mountain town, and there was no reason to leave it- you could just build the humble home out to better fit your needs, especially given your financial state.
Maybe do some work to get a discount on labor and materials for expanding the house.
>What do you want to get for your daughter’s birthday?
Find out more of what she likes besides goats and bugs. Definitely a nice doll or stuffed animal, whichever she'd like more.
Clothes and shoes also sound good, something a bit less ethnic, perhaps.

I feel like this is worded like you're trying to get us to get her a gun, but that doesn't seem appropriate for at least a couple of years.
>>
>>5891447
>Something else?
See what is available with the police, with the upcoming expansion they are going to need more hands. Until then spend the time getting settled with the Family again.

>Stay within Khuf Shumym. It was an idyllic, peaceful mountain town, and there was no reason to leave it- you could just build the humble home out to better fit your needs, especially given your financial state.
No reason not to, especially considering our own expansion plans.


>What do you want to get for your daughter’s birthday?
A hat to keep the sun off, a puzzle box and time set aside to assist her education.


>>5891458
>that doesn't seem appropriate for at least a couple of years.
The younger Firearms awareness & safety courses begin the better the outcome, especially if they are around the house and could be stumbled across, though it should definitely be brought up with Yena first to see what she thinks is appropriate.
>>
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>>5891447
>Take up simple labor like construction. You were still young, and physical work required little qualifications while still paying decently. There was plenty of such to do up in the mountains, even if you didn’t want to venture too far from within them.

>Stay within Khuf Shumym. It was an idyllic, peaceful mountain town, and there was no reason to leave it- you could just build the humble home out to better fit your needs,
especially given your financial state.

>What do you want to get for your daughter’s birthday?
>Take care of or do anything else for the near term?
Combining these.
See if we can find a wood worker to make us something like one of these old fashioned piggy banks that double as wooden dolls, this example is a tube in the shape of Pinocchio but if she likes animals, maybe a goat, or just the old go-to pig.
If we're going to be sitting on a decent sum of money while we work, it wouldn't hurt to give her some pocket money now and then to teach her the importance of saving and let us get to know her by allowing her to buy the things she wants when we take the family to Travaglio.
>>
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>>5891458
>I feel like this is worded like you're trying to get us to get her a gun, but that doesn't seem appropriate for at least a couple of years.
A couple years earlier maybe.
>>
>>5891447
>Take up simple labor like construction. You were still young, and physical work required little qualifications while still paying decently. There was plenty of such to do up in the mountains, even if you didn’t want to venture too far from within them.
>Stay within Khuf Shumym. It was an idyllic, peaceful mountain town, and there was no reason to leave it- you could just build the humble home out to better fit your needs, especially given your financial state.

>What do you want to get for your daughter’s birthday?
Some picture books? Toy Swords? A Yellow Haired Doll Baby?
She's 4 going on 5, surely she'll be happy with most anything at this stage.
>>
>>5891447
>Present yourself to the armed forces. You’ve a wealth of experience, maybe they would value your consultation, even if you were not an acting part of it… (Requires living in the city)
>Move down to the city. The rents were higher, but there would be little that you and the family wouldn’t have access to. The price for opportunities- and being where anything happened.

>What do you want to get for your daughter’s birthday?
A toy that she would like. Maybe a children's book.
>Take care of or do anything else for the near term?
Make sure to parent the two children, especially after being absent for so long. Also keep our ears out for whatever is going on geopolitically.
>>
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>>5891472
You're right, we missed it for her third birthday.
>>
>>5891447
>Present yourself to the armed forces. You’ve a wealth of experience, maybe they would value your consultation, even if you were not an acting part of it… (Requires living in the city)

>Move down to the city. The rents were higher, but there would be little that you and the family wouldn’t have access to. The price for opportunities- and being where anything happened.

Healthcare, education, employment opportunities, all good things to have
.
Though perhaps we should be looking to buy a property outright, rather than rent, we should have the cash for that. Saves money in the long run too.

Also maybe we can keep the Khuf Shumym hut as a summer cottage?


>What do you want to get for your daughter’s birthday?
A teddy bear/stuffed animal.

>Take care of or do anything else for the near term?

-Look at investment opportunities in the city (though I guess that will mainly be settled next vote)

-Explore the large family subsidy scheme; how much aid do households get and many kids do you need to have to qualify?

-Do the Emck with Yena, to thank the judge and Yjens for our reunion and keeping us safe these years apart. Above all slowly try to get her to open up again. Maybe go chat with the village elder and Elena briefly about how long she's been like that.

-Write an apology letter to Leo to pass to Elena. Wish him and Marcella well and hope his future endeavours heh to rise to the top as we promised go smoothly.
>>
>>5891447
Supporting >>5891455
>>
>>5891447
>You had enough money to not have to work. Which meant you could focus on personal pursuits- maybe writing, if publishing such things would get you spare change you didn’t need much… (This will require frugality in property investment, of course)
>Move to Travaglio. Still up in the mountains, but larger, and more connected to the rest of the country. A compromise of sorts between rural surroundings and not being in the boonies.
>>
>>5891447
How big are each of the settlements, population wise?
>>
>>5891447
>Present yourself to the armed forces. You’ve a wealth of experience, maybe they would value your consultation, even if you were not an acting part of it… (Requires living in the city)

>Move down to the city. The rents were higher, but there would be little that you and the family wouldn’t have access to. The price for opportunities- and being where anything happened.

>Books about great men and military leadership. She will be proudly following her father's footsteps
>>
>>5891455
>>5891549
>>5891583
>>5891603
>>5891927
Once again, to arms. Well, not really.

>>5891458
>>5891627
Lose yourself in personal pursuits. Your memoirs need attention.

>>5891462
You had a good gig in Lapizlazulli, go for that again.

>>5891464
>>5891490
Bonetto the Builder. Can he fix society?

>>5891455
>>5891549
>>5891583
>>5891603
>>5891927
The City.

>>5891458
>>5891462
>>5891464
>>5891490
The saddle town.

>>5891627
The clifftop.

I'll call things when I wake up next morning, tonight was tiring.

>>5891458
>Have the mossheads ever been caught digging tunnels or poisoning wells?
I know the bit, but no, mountainfolk are known for being societally aloof and isolationist, not particularly mercenary or prone to sabotage for their own ends. Vyemani, on the other hand, have every bad deed in the book attributed to their perceived parasitism off of all other peoples.

>>5891819
>How big are each of the settlements, population wise?
Khuf Shumym is less than two hundred people. Travaglio is around five hundred, though it's expanding to the point where it may be a thousand or more soon. Pietrecirchio, at the bottom of the mountain, is three hundred thousand people within its associated districts. A bit bigger to say the least.
>>
>>5891955
>I know the bit, but no, mountainfolk are known for being societally aloof and isolationist, not particularly mercenary or prone to sabotage for their own ends. Vyemani, on the other hand, have every bad deed in the book attributed to their perceived parasitism off of all other peoples.

What's the main beef Hill Vitelians like Bonetto's family have against mossheads then, competition for living space in the mountains?

(Besides Gilicians of course, who I'm convinced are just the western version of Twaryians.)
>>
>>5891927
+1
>>
>>5891447
>You had enough money to not have to work. Which meant you could focus on personal pursuits- maybe writing, if publishing such things would get you spare change you didn’t need much… (This will require frugality in property investment, of course)
>Move to Travaglio. Still up in the mountains, but larger, and more connected to the rest of the country. A compromise of sorts between rural surroundings and not being in the boonies

>Books about great men and military leadership. She will be proudly following her father's footsteps
>>
>>5891966
The army.

>>5892121
The mountains.

The funny part of these more setting-influential decisions is wondering how you're going to have to deal with them in the future. Just a side effect of placing yourself at the right times and places.

I'll collate the gift ideas and other things into...something.

Writing.

>>5891964
>What's the main beef Hill Vitelians like Bonetto's family have against mossheads then, competition for living space in the mountains?
They're a culturally isolationist outgroup, mostly. Hill Vitelians aren't outright hostile so much as they'd rather just not have to deal with them, which to be fair, is the attitude many mountainfolk have towards the lowlanders.
That mark on your wife's cheek means she's married to a "foreigner," since the ring starts from the right. Even though she considers herself Vitelian, her culture considers Nief'yem to be separate by nature to the point that you'd better say so if you're getting pollen from another garden. Considering that Hill Vitelians and Sea Vitelians consider themselves parts of a singular whole and would never think they are intrinsically distinct on a national citizenship scale, what mountainfolk do is seen as generally untoward in matters of Vitelian spirit, and since they live near Hill Vitelians, they're just the ones who deal with them the most, and the annoyance.
Part of it is related too to what Maddalyn from the main quest finds irritating about them, which is their sense of cultural exceptionalism, if you get close enough to learn that they have such in the first place since it's not loudly expressed in public.
Mountainfolk blood rules would say that Vittoria is Nief'yem and Lorenzo is "half," while Bonetto's family would consider that sort of thing mosshead arrogance at its peak to claim their good Vitelian blood as their own.
>(Besides Gilicians of course, who I'm convinced are just the western version of Twaryians.)
They're a bit different in basic motivation. Yes, Gilicians are culturally religious zealots like Twaryians are, but Twaryian zealotry comes from a deep sense of having been wronged by the heretic, and vengeance not only being justice, but proper and purifying. Gilician animosity towards Mountainfolk primarily comes from the heresy of Yjens and the veneration of what they consider the foul chaos of the Earth, ie spirits and such. Cathedra doctrine states that the only beings that the Judge imbues with his holiness is mankind, so any "spirits" whom are not human can only thus be devils. The mountainfolk didn't really do anything to the Gilicians, as the three founding saints of Gilicia battled against Earth cults unrelated to them, but their heresy in the eyes of Gilicians is still filth.
>>
Old habits died hard. You weren’t one for the peaks, and your accumulated experience would not only be wasted with peaceful living, but it was also highly in demand, the more you poked around with the local armed forces representation. It did mean that your time in the Azure Halls was fading more and more- and your dreams crept into the mists of time, but…you would have time for that. For now, you had to get established. There wasn’t any reason to be rid of the cottage in Khuf Shumym in case you wanted to venture out into the mountains once more, but if you were going to take any career with the military seriously, you had to be in the city. A direct link with the capital meant that a commute was actually possible, rather than taking half the day to even reach the cable car down. Besides that, the most modern services lay in the city. Whenever Yena had given birth, for example, it had always been within easy reach of modern medicine. As nice as the atmosphere in the mountains was, Khuf Shumym lacked for even modern plumbing, let alone healthcare besides folk medicine.

While you were down in the city, you took a good, long look around. Pietrecirchio was far too large to explore in a day, but you could at least see things on the way to and from the city hall. All the new properties were at the edges, you discovered, the same edges that would be interior to the rest if plans went apace, like water soaking into paper. The main inquiry you had at the city hall concerned how large a family had to be in order to start receiving subsidy, and how much. The answer, for the equivalent of one quarter of monthly wages (based on the wage of an average contract laborer) financial compensation and tax exemption from said wage based off of need, three children of Nief’yem descent registered as citizens, so long as they were not a “quarter.” Easy enough for you, then. Nief’yem were considered citizens by their blood alone, and all that had to be done was paperwork that you were pretty sure Yena already had done when she came here. Just one child away, though subsidies only climbed in percentage with each new kid.

You couldn’t think of a time before that a government would pay you so well for doing what you would have done without their encouragement.
>>
The last thing was looking about for something for Vittoria. Her birthday was still a few weeks away, yes, but already, you couldn’t think of what to get. Maybe you just didn’t know enough about the girl she’d become beyond the very basics, though really, she was four. You barely remembered being four years old, but you didn’t recall minding what you got as long as it was anything at all. Clothes? A hat, maybe? Something to make her look less like a mountainfolk girl with bleached hair. Some sort of books? She definitely couldn’t read yet, but at the very least, despite there being two languages in use locally, they only used one alphabet. For a moment you thought you’d get a chronicle of great historical events and those who caused them, only to realize you were thinking about what you wanted rather than what she could even respect. There were few things a child disrespected but the frustration of a thick tome was probably one. You settled on a stuffed animal or doll- you could ask her what kind when she got back.

…What if she asked for an actual goat? Admittedly, you did know how to care after such livestock…

It did bring to mind what you wanted Vittoria to be. Was it proper to expect her to follow after you, or was that falling into the trap your own parents did with their expectations for you? None of their other children had left the town, though. With how many children you expected to have, you could accept some free spirits, sure, but they hadn’t been born yet- and Vittoria was your firstborn. Parents weren’t supposed to have favorites, you knew that much, but she was still special.

Back up you went, though not before getting the proper addresses. Commuting back and forth to the city wasn’t any good right now, so the postal services would have to earn their pay.

-----

Back up to Travaglio you went, then to Khuf Shumym, though it was in the black of night by the time you returned, too late to eat and you knew it but Yena had still put a covered bowl on top of the stove in the center of the house. Vittoria and Lorenzo were asleep, and Yena had curled up with her daughter by the stove. A poke to wake her and let her know you were back, before you joined the pile.

You dreamed that you were held to trial, in a dark, vast room ringed with benches, some shadowed figures you remembered as being your fallen comrades, but on a high podium, you looked up and saw your own face, young and unscarred, bright eyed and furious.

“The council,” you heard your own voice cry down at you, “Accuses you of treason to the Revolution! Do you deny this?”

Your response didn’t matter, as you were pelted with accusations, and ultimately, found guilty, but your sentence was left unknown as you woke up when the judge began to speak it.

-----
>>
The day after, you spent some good time watching after Vittoria while Yena got other things done- after you remembered to do Emck with your wife, which she smiled at you remembering. Slow and steady, that face would be like that all the time again.
Your daughter did have friends she played with, but since you were back, you commanded her attention- especially since you would play horse and airplane with her while Yena hadn’t thought of such games. When you asked her what she wanted for her birthday, she immediately said, of course, a goat.

A stuffed goat?

Any goat. Okay.

A big one.

Yes, of course, dear. You’d have to go looking back in the city when you went to talk to military officials again.

The following days, you made ready to move the family out to the city to a house you’d scouted out. It was near the center of Pietrecirchio, close to a gymnasium with a preschool, which Vittoria would be at a good age to start going to after her fourth birthday. Though…should she go there, you wondered? In your heart of hearts, you considered Vittoria to be a Vitelian, not a Trelani. Part of you wanted to just keep her learning at home, instead of letting another culture steal her away. Perhaps you were more like your parents than you thought.

>You were no schoolteacher- and Yena was her mother, anyways. She could go to public schooling.
>Keep your family to yourself- you’d be responsible for her education, as much of it as possible, at least, depending on how much any work demanded your time.
>Other?

Yena didn’t want to move from Khuf Shumym right away, though not for her own sentiments. The villagers had always considered her rather gloomy, if not unhospitable (your fault, admittedly), but Vittoria didn’t like the idea of going away. Even if she was excited to go someplace new, she would have rather carted all her friends with her, which wasn’t going to happen. She was young, she’d make new friends, but her reluctance was clear, and loud. You agreed to some compromise- for her birthday, you’d come back here so she could have it with her friends for a couple of days.

Progress continued on the work with the Trelani Republican Army- as it was indeed a Republic. Your credentials did sound quite impressive, but they were not so gullible as to take your word on its face, so an investigation on your background and who you were was being done. After about a month, you’d been informed through mail, they’d be happy to consider taking you on as advisor and consultant. Should you be who you said you were. Admittedly, you were probably more than that, but you didn’t want to risk breaking the deal by saying who you were aligned with, even if your faction of the Gilician Alliance wasn’t one with racist tendencies rather than intentions of fighting tyranny.
>>
On the note of communicating with home, you prepared letters to send along with Elena when she made the journey back. It had been years now, but Leo and you had a bond not so easily broken, by your measure. He wasn’t your enemy in the Gilician Conflict, and he was never your enemy in your dreams, no matter how twister they dared to get in an attempt to terrify you. Someday, you intended to meet with him again, and not just a passing day of visitation.

The weeks before Vittoria’s birthday were busy, a lot of moving about, but you got the family and a livable amount of furnishings into the new home. It was one in the style of the new architecture of Trelan. Round in layout like the mountain cottages, though built of modern brick and wood beam and shingle, and taller than any mountain home would be, with two stories. It still was built around an axis whose center was formed by a large stove, though such a thing was less critical for heating rather than being the centerpiece of the home, with all the rooms for living and dining being on the first floor, and other rooms for other activities on the second floor, a staircase spiraling about the vast openness of the main living room.

When you could relax again, one night, Yena had finally grown weary of keeping up any frustrations with you. She had sulked on a walk earlier about how, in the city, there weren’t any good places to do it, and she had relented when the new house had a bedroom that wasn’t immediately adjacent to where the children slept.

Though the racket you made would have shaken the whole house anyways. It had been too long to have any restraint, and you ravished her like a hungry beast, your lips locked together the only thing muffling Yena, her legs closed tightly around you the whole time in case you had any different ideas of how it was going to end.

You wouldn’t know until after Vittoria’s birthday, of course, but you would soon know better than to assume that Yena wouldn’t get pregnant. The ease that she became with child was truly remarkable…

>Roll 3 sets of 1d100. Again, if any are 100, roll another set.
>>
Rolled 13 (1d100)

>>5892507
>You were no schoolteacher- and Yena was her mother, anyways. She could go to public schooling.
We'll teach her about the revolution at him, but she should have the school for socialization at least.
>>
Rolled 87 (1d100)

>>5892504
>Other?
>Make it a good balance. She must learn from where she is but just as much about where she came from and will perhaps one day return.

>>5892507
Oh man here we go plaping again
>>
Rolled 68 (1d100)

>>5892507
>>5892513
+1
>>
>>5892504
Supporting this >>5892511
>>
>>5892507

Largely in line with this >>5892513

Do little things like primarily speaking Vitelian to her at home, celebrating all the various traditions and festivals a Hill Vitelian family would, etc.

Also since we're in the city, perhaps we can look around for a Vitelian or other foreign expat community/district? Surely we're not the only outsider in a place of such size, and it would be easier if the kids had non-Mountainfolk friends to play with as well.
>>
>>5892507
>>5892513
+1
Send her to school, but make sure to teach her about her Vitelian heritage outside of the classroom.
>>
>>5892504
>You were no schoolteacher- and Yena was her mother, anyways. She could go to public schooling.
This is like the one country where she might be okay in public education at this point.
>>5892511
>>5892513
I know 1 is a crit but 13 and 100-13 has to mean something.
>>
>>5892602
Isn't 100 the crit for twins and up?

Though tanq I'm curious how many kids you intend Bonetto and Yena to have, considering you might have to draw all of them down the line...
>>
>>5892504
>Keep your family to yourself- you’d be responsible for her education, as much of it as possible, at least, depending on how much any work demanded your time.
>>
>>5892504
>You were no schoolteacher- and Yena was her mother, anyways. She could go to public schooling.
>>
>>5892511
>>5892531
>>5892602
>>5892699
Public education can't be bad. At least it gets her out of the house.

>>5892513
>>5892518
>>5892547
>>5892556
Fill in the gaps the school inevitably leaves.

>>5892610
No mosshead lies are going into your children's heads. Regardless of if they're mossheads.

Calling it in the morning.

>>5892609
>I'm curious how many kids you intend Bonetto and Yena to have, considering you might have to draw all of them down the line...
Yena wants a big family.
Unless her body gives out she'll stop when you say "when." Or maybe a couple kids after, by accident.
>>
>>5892513
Seconding
>>
>>5892513
+1
>>
>>5892860
>>5892973
Two more for the even hands.
Writing.
>>
Sorry for the delay, don't really have a good reason for it besides fucking around and trying to put some color into writing that's very largely a long span of time passing and a lot of subjects having to be covered in abbreviated fashion. It'll be out soon.
>>
Did I say soon? I meant tomorrow. Today's been a wash. I've been at 50-60% these past few days in general.
>>
>>5894648
It's fine, hope you're feeling better bossman
>>
Your new child wouldn’t be around for some time, though. Good, because already you had plenty to deal with caring for two of them. The coming fall, you decided, Vittoria would be starting school. It would be good to get her out and about with other children, though you didn’t want all of what she learned coming from a state that you considered foreign to your actual person, as well as one that had an unfamiliar note of racial nationalism that would drag your children away from Vitelia and towards itself. So you would definitely be sure to reinforce that, yes, your children were not of this place, you had your own identity, your own culture, and you would keep it even outside of Vitelia.

It wouldn’t be too difficult to do without seeming odd. That Trelani spoke Vitelian as well as the mountain’s tongues was an artifact of the First and Second Empires, and even the Mountain languages that occupied signage were scribed in the modern letters that the First Empire had created and not their own ancient alphabet.

It would be far easier to maintain your connections to the old country if you found an exclave of Vitelians and other such foreigners to this place, but you were having trouble finding such as of yet. The primary ethnicity besides the Nief’yem were a variety of Pohja, or as the Nief’yem called them, Mesharet, and they lived in their own districts for mutual distaste both for and by green hairs- though foreigners like yourself were viewed with complete apathy. You hadn’t learned the actual difference between them when there wasn’t any green involved, but considering that half of your household bore such a verdant hue on their crowns, you considered it for the best to keep away where there were any doubts. There were surely Vitelians here, you just had to have the time to scrape the city to its bones.

April proceeded into May, and you got to know your neighborhood, as well as seeking out where the elusive other Vitelians might be- apparently more of them were in the capital than this place- at least, such was what Elena said when she came down from Travaglio for visits. Vittoria was fascinated with her, for being the only other blonde person she knew of beside you and herself. Such also made the two of you distinctive locally. Many people seemed to know you two, that you couldn’t recall meeting.
>>
A couple times during the preceding weeks, you took the family back up to Khuf Shumym, mostly for Vittoria’s sake. Lorenzo was a quiet boy, though Yena said he had said his first words some time ago, you hadn’t heard him speak any instead of just crying sometimes. Despite the length of the trips back and forth, it was never particularly tiresome, especially when you had Elena there so that Yena could switch off holding a child. Walking the mountain trail was never dangerous, despite Yena saying it could be elsewhere, since there were always patrolmen going back and forth and the cache boxes were always well stocked, even if you hadn’t already brought food and water along.

Then, it was a couple days before Vittoria’s birthday. You’d already gotten her present and taken it to Elena so that it would be a surprise for when Vittoria got to the old village to have a party with her friends up there. It was a big, grey and white felt stuffed goat with leather curly horns, long floppy ears, and yellow button eyes with black stripes for the square look of a real goat. Vittoria would have plenty of birthdays, so all your other ideas wouldn’t go to waste.

“Are y’ sure yer not overdoin’ it?” Elena asked when you set the toy down just inside her door, “That things bigger than she is.”

“Most goats are bigger than children,” you said matter of factly, “She didn’t ask for a kid, she was very specific about it having big horns.”

“Just sayin’ yer playin’ favorites.”

“I’m not taking advice on child rearing from an old maid, Elena,” you teased her.

“Hmph.” She made a sour face, but had no retort.

Vittoria’s birthday came, and it being practically a sendoff, the village spared no effort in making the whole day hers. Something you thanked the elder for- he seemed like a kind and worldly fellow, though one much more content to stay undisturbed in the mountains rather than grasp and plead for any of the modernity the Republic he lived in was offering. Naturally, as soon as Vittoria got her big goat she started hauling it around and whacking other children with it, setting them tumbling down the grassy slopes. You left the scolding to Yena, and for later. At least the other children had the courtesy not to raise too much a fuss over the scrapes. Then she ate so many butter pastries that her stomach started hurting, and as the sun was going down, it seemed like a good place to stop it anyways, but candles and lamps were still lit in the night and the people of Khuf Shumym saw no reason to stop socializing even after the girl of the day had been put to bed.
>>
Once you and the family had left once more with Elena, it was time to also say goodbye again to your childhood friend and old flame- Yena didn’t object when you embraced each other again at the train station, Elena set to go back to Vitelia with what you intended for those at home to see and hear from you. They’d all be seen again, someday, even if you didn’t know when nor where.

Back in the city, the investigation into your background concluded. Apparently, despite your unusual and seemingly inconsistent political leanings (you would have said they were not inconsistent whatsoever but the nuances of the Gilician War were of little interest here) your breadth of experience with multiple kinds of warfare and theory and organization, as well as leadership in experimental units, made you an ideal advisor for the plans Trelan had in store for its defense forces, and you were invited to the capital for your first duties, which would be to observe an upcoming exercise between the prestigious Republican Guard Division and the 1st and 2nd Peninsular Division. They represented two ends of the Trelani armed forces, the peak, and its normal, though ironically the peak was kept at home behind the mountains, while the 1st and 2nd Peninsulars were up where conflict was suspected to take place, where the northern sea was closed off by rival Wezkatinbach, whose naval patrols harassed any Trelani attempts to seek the east and barred trade further off in acts of animosity as blatant as they were petty.

You didn’t expect to be impressed. Trelan had not been in a major armed conflict in decades, and had stayed out of them in general save for border skirmishes. The vaunted Republican Guard had not fired a shot in anger in all of Trelan’s history as a democratic nation since peaceful restructuring of government authority just before the turn of the century. Not long after an event that you remembered only vaguely hearing of in 1897- the descent of the Iceforth Maelstrom sealing away the west. You were too young to understand the significance of it, but in the past, such a thing was said to have caused the precipitous decline of the First Empire.

The morning you were to go to attend to the inspections, you got up before the children did and reassured Yena at the front door before you headed to the train station to head to Pietranello.

“I’ll only be gone a few days,” you told Yena as you made ready to head off to your first assignment from the Trelani Republican Army. You weren’t even in a uniform- more dressed to have a formal meeting at a bank than going to any war. “I’ll be back before you know it.”

Yena looked downcast and bit her lip. “Armies have had a habit of taking you from me.”

“I’m not a soldier anymore, dear,” you put your hand to her cheek, “This is a good thing. The amount they’re paying means we’ll want for nothing. I’ve done enough to have earned an easy time of it now.”
>>
Yena glanced up, then down again, and slowly put her arms around your back and squeezed you to her, her head in your shoulder. “Palmiro?” She asked quietly, “We aren’t holding you back, are we?”



“Don’t be ridiculous,” you hugged her, “I’m doing this for us all. I want to be well off enough that none of our children need be paupers. The hard times are gone and past.”

Yena sighed, but said nothing, and let you go, and you gave each other a kiss before you went off. Off to Pietranello, the Capital of the Republic.

-----

Pietranello was a place you’d gone by before, but not deep enough to see where you’d be heading now. It was more than twice the size of Pietrecirchio, and its tallest parts stretched taller, even if they were still dwarfed by the mountains beyond. They were painted in a coy sort of nod to such, with dark green and grey bottoms and white caps at their upper floors, like they had similar crowns of snow. One of the tall buildings, distinctly undecorated save for a clean white sheen of outer panels of white limestone, was the Trelani Republican Army Headquarters, situated just across from the halls of the Lands Assembly where the government’s heart beat in its chest, both crested with great flags- one the tricolor of the Republic, the other the black flag and seal of its army. Both places were walled off and defended by black iron gates and the Republican Guards. Stiff in their stance, rigid in posture, but their faces held warmth one might find inappropriate for elite guardsmen.
Trelani Republican Guards could be easily seen around the other military establishments in the capital besides the biggest one, and they freely did their marches throughout the city streets, ever a popular sight for the citizenry. Their uniforms were deep, dark green with lighter green stripes and trim, with boiled leather caps not dissimilar to old Reich caps, before they changed over to their steel helms. The similarity continued to their weaponry. Classic Grossreich Model 1898 Kronerwerke Reichsgewehrs, apparently a relatively recent purchase. They would have been a typical sight on a battlefield…at the start of the Emrean War.

Despite their archaic look, they were well kempt, their equipment was clean and polished, and not a one was in ragged shape, though some were a bit round about the belly and cheeks. A picture of a country’s finest, that were all too readily and quickly expended in but the opening weeks of a war like you’d been through.
>>
A few officers met with you at the gate- your escort for the coming exercises. Though you had expected to see a general or two, that wouldn’t be the case yet. Perhaps they were testing your knowledge on a lower end first before you got to speak to any of the big cheeses. To each assembly area, you were driven to on a rather new looking model of automobile, to see each group before they set to their exercise- a theoretical operation where the Republican Guard were forced to hold against a relentless sudden attack from multiple directions by superior numbers, represented by the other two more common divisions. The Republican Guard were little different than you’d already seen, if somewhat scruffier from camping outside the city (they weren’t soft, judging by their camp, at least). The regular army was a different story.

The Peninsulars’ men were significantly less well equipped than the Republican Guards, and looked to you like a mix of irregular militiamen and troops from the generation previous to yours. Their uniforms were grayish green with brimless caps peaked with a mound of grey fur, off white bone buttons and dark trousers. Their shoes were not standard, a mix of whatever they seemed to prefer or were able to maintain. Old Sergeant Major Capretto had accused you and your fellow cadets of not knowing your shoes from your boots, but you were bemused to see that metaphor showing its face in reality, on a supposedly professional army.

All of that would have been fine, however. Their weaponry, was absolutely not. Single shot, breach loading long rifles. The rounds for a few of which were unjacketed, and driven by blackpowder. That sort of weapon wouldn’t have been an unknown concept to Kaiser Alexander, and you wondered if, somewhere, there was an even lower class of equipped soldier that was expected to carry out his duties with nothing but a wooden club and an animal skin loincloth.

The artillery was a similar story. Largely small mountain guns, and the bigger cannons being old hand-me-downs sold on the cheap. There were just as few machine guns to be found, and many of them also models so old you scarcely recognized what they were, looking more like antique artillery guns on wheels than the deadly weapons you were well familiar with the ferocity of. The Gilician Alliance had been stronger, and indeed, had been able to match itself against the Royal Army and Fealinnese ex-Imperials both.

There was no kind way to put it as far as equipment went; there was a lot of work to do, and much of it in either buying or making new equipment to bring this army into the present century.
>>
On the bright side, despite the deplorable state of their kit, Trelani soldiers gave every impression of being disciplined, motivated, and well trained. It probably helped that they were all volunteers- conscription law was existent, but merely theoretical. Most units were thus only at half-strength, though fully staffed with the command leadership at all times needed to facilitate mobilization, should it be necessary. Most, frankly, did not think that war could possibly arrive so suddenly without plenty of forewarning.

You expected the Republican Guards to win, to be allowed to, a testament to personal heroism and their prestige in the Republic. This expectation was smashed a couple days into the exercise, when an enterprising gambit by a Peninsular captain lodged itself in the defensive line of the Guards, and caused a partial (simulated) collapse. The Republican Guard was defeated- and humbled, though not as much as you might have thought from the respect the Guardsmen Officers and the Peninsular counterparts showed one another when everything came to an end.

A few days after your arrival in the capital, when everything was done, you were asked your opinion, and you did your job and told the truth. Not in the least offended, you were told in turn that the equipment problems were already being looked into, and that you’d be asked back to review what was going to be presented for replacements, particularly for the infantry small arms.

Back you went to Pietrecirchio, along with an assurance that an office with assistants would be set up for your use so that your daily obligations didn’t require a commute to the capital. Already, this was looking to be the easiest job you’d ever worked.

Yena was relieved to see you home again- as though there was some danger you would vanish for years once again. You told her about what you’d seen- and she in turn told you more she had learned about where you lived. There was a small collection of foreigners, not in their own district, but they met at a particular Cathedra-aligned steeple every other Sunday after the hours for contemplation and worship. Being a mountainfolk country, the Cathedra’s presence wasn’t as firm, given the dual-god beliefs of mountainfolk, but it heartened you to learn of the place, even if it was a squat and humble building rather than befitted with a bell tower as you were accustomed to.

Time passed. You looked through as many newspapers as you could, old and new, for what was happening back east. Little was regarded as important to Trelan. Concerns on the borders, local happenings, all of it was quaint in a way that should have been refreshing and relaxing, but you were anxious to hear of how the wheel of history might be turning anew, especially given the state Vitelia was left in.
>>
Autumn grew near, and you and other parents spent your first days with your children in preschool. Vittoria was, as usual, unique amongst the dozens, but she had been around mountainfolk children and did not suffer for her difference. A few days after her first day at school, the Republican Army once again sent for you to leave home for a few days, this time to attend small arms trials for equipment for the Trelani Republican Army.

To replace the practically ancient Capel Rifle (Emrean-Valstener in origin, and itself a conversion from an earlier kind of rifle, some of which were in use still) there were a triad of weapons so far beyond it, that the cost of replacement was seen as small compared to the benefit, even if some were more expensive than others. Considering how much needed to be replaced, money was seen as no object. A rare case of a definite investment producing great returns no matter what.

The most obvious and simple solution was to just buy more of the same kind of rifles that the Republican Guard already had, the K1898/05s. The Emrean War had seen that gun produced en masse and used by both sides, and the west was absolutely swimming with them. With the war between the largest players over, they were very willing to sell off extra stock, or to keep the lines going for buyers, just to get back in the black again after such a ruinous war. Arms sellers of dubious origin were already biting at each other for the chance to get the best deal on that.

While easy, that option lacked for a particular mystique. Were wars won by simple and easy logistics, and boring decisions? Yes, but this was no war, right now. This was defining a new army, perhaps a new sort to the globe, if you were willing to push your benefactors to be daring. A daring choice would be to indulge a newcomer engineer desperately looking for a place to sell his product, one that had failed to find buyers yet, though the broker insisted, not because the idea and project lacked merit.

Said project was a new gun by the Stachel Arms Boutique, which was a scaled up version of their Stachello submachinegun, made into a self-loading rifle. The idea of it alone was unusual enough to draw your attention, considering that the Stachello was a top-loading gun, and a rifle caliber equivalent would be gigantic and unwieldly. The actual weapon was only superficially similar to the submachinegun in shape, with a stubby magazine that probably held only six or seven rounds of ammunition, though in both a bottom and top fed variation. They had equally divergent problems. Besides being finicky due to factors unaccounted for in the sizing up, the top loader had a troubling habit of running away with its fire as though it was a machine gun rather than merely a self-loader, and the bottom loader had trouble loading its shots at all. Suffice it to say, the Trenali were less than impressed when these issues showed themselves to be more than flukes.
>>
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The final notable was a rather humble project at first glance, little different from the K1898s in principle of being bolt action rifles, though these ones looked less reliable and proven. Closer inspection revealed why- the demonstration was less the weapon, and more turning one weapon into another. A conversion kit by a Valstener gunsmith conglomerate called Van der Zeewind was of little use anymore to most countries, but of particular utility to Trelan. Said kit was the ZW Magazine, a four round integrated magazine which could be installed into suitable single shot smokeless powder rifles to turn them into magazine fed bolt actions- the plentiful Capel Rifle being one of the guns initially successfully modified in said way. It was a good fifteen to twenty years past being a new and useful development, but it was an efficient solution when most of the gun could be reused to make something completely new and suitable. It was most certainly the most budgetarily efficient, if dull option.

It might have been tempting to mix and match, but the weapons all used different ammunition calibers- and Trelani authorities knew well enough to not complicate that particular part of the logistical train further. They didn’t wish to aim for another half-measure.

>The Stachellungo M13, even if it was expensive and had significant teething issues, they could be fixed over time, and the theoretical advantage from jumping ahead a generation in small arms theory would do wonders for even a smaller country’s army against peer opponents.
>The Kronerwerke 1898/05 Rifle was already in use by the Guard, if they were available, why not simply extend that use? It would keep things simple and equalize any playing fields at the same time.
>The Van der Zeewind conversion was intriguing, and unquestionably cheap and efficient. Perhaps it was frugal to the point of absurdity to try and bring the military into the present by converting an already converted old gun into an approximation of a current era weapon, but it would mean more money for other things…
>>
Your word was the breaking point- in another month’s time, the first purchases were made, and the manufacturing tools and plants were being set up. The first step to bringing Trelan’s army up to standard quality, or even better, had been made. You couldn’t sell yourself short on effectiveness when it came to advisory positions now.

The weeks became months. The Year’s End wasn’t celebrated in Trelan like it was in Vitelia, so you made your own with the help of a heavy helping of questionably sourced fireworks. Vittoria loved them- Lorenzo less so. Your daughter would unfortunately have to wait a few years before you dared let her close to any of the small rockets or spark bombs.

A week before Vittoria’s birthday, Yena went into labor, and on the tenth of May of 1915, your second son was born. He looked near just like Lorenzo had, green haired and eyed like his mother. Your first child in a way, born outside of Vitelia. Was he still Vitelian? That would be up to you to make sure of, you supposed. At the very least, you were certainly making Trelan happy with this sort of unmistakably ethnic offspring.

>Name your second son. As like every other time, it should be something Vitelian, or at least appropriate. Something Mountainfolkish wouldn’t be out of place if Yena has an input- especially considering where you are.
Also- Give him an Honored Name:
>Your mentor and patron who had carried you as far as you had come, even if you had parted ways with him now: Stefano, after the former Comte di Zucchampo.
>For your old friend, perhaps as contrition for leaving him in Vitelia, but as a promise to be friends once more: Leone.
>Something else?
Additionally- His Birth Saint, though it is not asked for with the legal name, here…:
>Saint Noel, the patron of Charity.
>The Unspoken Third, the nameless patron of Gilicia- and the eternal wandering warrior.
>Saint Morginn, the First Saint, whom brought Order to Man.
>Some other domain?
>>
>>5895674
>The Van der Zeewind conversion was intriguing, and unquestionably cheap and efficient. Perhaps it was frugal to the point of absurdity to try and bring the military into the present by converting an already converted old gun into an approximation of a current era weapon, but it would mean more money for other things…

The money saved could be used to bankroll fixing the M13, and securing local production

>>5895676
>Something else?
Luigi, for the man who was by our side throughout our time, and saved us more times than we can count. We can always have more if we want to provide naming rights to others

>Saint Noel, the patron of Charity.
>>
>>5895674
>The Stachellungo M13, even if it was expensive and had significant teething issues, they could be fixed over time, and the theoretical advantage from jumping ahead a generation in small arms theory would do wonders for even a smaller country’s army against peer opponents.

>>5895676
>Name: Luigi
Stefano and Leone are good one's too.
>The Unspoken Third, the nameless patron of Gilicia- and the eternal wandering warrior.
Wandering warrior sounds cool.
>>
>>5895676
>The Kronerwerke 1898/05 Rifle was already in use by the Guard, if they were available, why not simply extend that use? It would keep things simple and equalize any playing fields at the same time.

Good balance between the two I think, and easily resupplied the huge stock lying around the region. Though getting more heavy weapons and modernising the artillery park is going to be just as important. Is the Kingdom is willing to sell off any surplus tanks?

Also it looks like the Republic needs to get its Navy into shape, breaking the Wezkatinbach blockade and having access to Emrean and Nauklander trade and arms markets will be useful.

Name your second son:
>Giovanno

Honoured Name:
>Your mentor and patron who had carried you as far as you had come, even if you had parted ways with him now: Stefano, after the former Comte di Zucchampo.

Birth Saint:
>Saint Morginn, the First Saint, whom brought Order to Man.

Also does anyone else find it hilarious how in the main quest we might end up with a democratic republican army influenced by a Utopian facing off against a Utopian army trained by a feudal aristocratic state? Though I'm kind of worried for Mal, everything indicates he's going to get a ton of shit from the locals.
>>
>>5895674
>The Stachellungo M13, even if it was expensive and had significant teething issues, they could be fixed over time, and the theoretical advantage from jumping ahead a generation in small arms theory would do wonders for even a smaller country’s army against peer opponents.
>Name your second son.
Have Yena do it this time. She really should get a turn in the naming, yeah?
>For your old friend, perhaps as contrition for leaving him in Vitelia, but as a promise to be friends once more: Leone.
>The Unspoken Third, the nameless patron of Gilicia- and the eternal wandering warrior.
>>
>>5895712
>he's going to get a ton of shit from the locals.
wasn't that always going to happen regardless of where he was going to go?
>>
>>5895720
Nah, if Richter had went to Halmeggia instead of Ellowie he'd been fine, Vynmark too.

Sosaldt was also alright for him, but
that's the place in a nutshell.
>>
>>5895676
>>5895709
I just realized I forgot to put in the Honored name for our boy
>Your mentor and patron who had carried you as far as you had come, even if you had parted ways with him now: Stefano, after the former Comte di Zucchampo.
I'll choose this one.
>>
>>5895674
>The Van der Zeewind conversion was intriguing, and unquestionably cheap and efficient. Perhaps it was frugal to the point of absurdity to try and bring the military into the present by converting an already converted old gun into an approximation of a current era weapon, but it would mean more money for other things…

>>5895676
>Name: Giuseppe
>Honored name: Stefano
>Saint Morginn, the First Saint, whom brought Order to Man.
>>
>>5895674
>The Kronerwerke 1898/05 Rifle was already in use by the Guard, if they were available, why not simply extend that use? It would keep things simple and equalize any playing fields at the same time.
Not going to risk it with double conversions, even if they don't have the history they have in our world.
>Name your second son. As like every other time, it should be something Vitelian, or at least appropriate. Something Mountainfolkish wouldn’t be out of place if Yena has an input- especially considering where you are.
Have Yena do it but I swear if it's Malachi I'm going to hunt you down like a dog.
Honored name:
>For your old friend, perhaps as contrition for leaving him in Vitelia, but as a promise to be friends once more: Leone.
Additionally- His Birth Saint, though it is not asked for with the legal name, here…:
>Saint Noel, the patron of Charity.
>>
>>5895676
>The Kronerwerke 1898/05 Rifle was already in use by the Guard, if they were available, why not simply extend that use? It would keep things simple and equalize any playing fields at the same time.

>Name your second son.
Let Yena decide

Honored Name:
>Your mentor and patron who had carried you as far as you had come, even if you had parted ways with him now: Stefano, after the former Comte di Zucchampo.

Additionally- His Birth Saint, though it is not asked for with the legal name, here…:
>Saint Noel, the patron of Charity.
>>
>>5895674
>The Stachellungo M13, even if it was expensive and had significant teething issues, they could be fixed over time, and the theoretical advantage from jumping ahead a generation in small arms theory would do wonders for even a smaller country’s army against peer opponents.

>>5895676
>Luigi
>For your old friend, perhaps as contrition for leaving him in Vitelia, but as a promise to be friends once more: Leone.
>Saint Morginn, the First Saint, whom brought Order to Man.
>>
>>5895674
>The Kronerwerke 1898/05 Rifle was already in use by the Guard, if they were available, why not simply extend that use? It would keep things simple and equalize any playing fields at the same time.
I would like a self-loader, but the Stachellungo seems like a dead end. Also artillery and machineguns are more important than rifles.
>>5895676
>Luigi
>Leone
>saint Noel
>>
>>5895676
Hey tanq a couple of more questions about Trelan's geopolitical situation:

-What is the Trelani assessment on how their adversaries' militaries compare to their own? Are they roughly equivalent equipment wise or are there any noticeable areas of concern that the Army is interested on catching up?

-How impassable is the southern border with Lindiva, is it similar to the Imperial Gate?

-Are the Trelani anti-Reich foreign policy-wise, or do they have a more neutral attitude?
>>
>>5895674
>The Kronerwerke 1898/05 Rifle was already in use by the Guard, if they were available, why not simply extend that use? It would keep things simple and equalize any playing fields at the same time.

Simple and sturdy. We can work with bolt action rifles, and critically we know that it'll do the job without creating issues. If we want to increase firepower invest in more cheap subguns or light machineguns instead.
>>
>>5895698
>>5895757
VdZ

>>5895709
>>5895719
>>5895843
Stachi

>>5895712
>>5895763
>>5895811
>>5896020
>>5896144
Reichsrifle

Calling it in a few hours.

>>5896085
>What is the Trelani assessment on how their adversaries' militaries compare to their own? Are they roughly equivalent equipment wise or are there any noticeable areas of concern that the Army is interested on catching up?
They're rather aware of their inferiority, though mostly in comparison to the Kalleans. Full blown wars haven't occurred in a long time even with their more hostile neighbors, though Ohtiz is passive, and Holherezhi raids and provocations are along the same general level as their own troops. The actual potential concern is with Wezkatinbach, which has a Reich trained and equipped army.
>How impassable is the southern border with Lindiva, is it similar to the Imperial Gate?
Along the same lines of impassibility, yes. Even going across them as an individual or a small party is an arduous task, doing so with anything of threatening size is far too much effort to not do it very dangerously.
After all, the mountains change when they're too dense and you wander too deep.
>Are the Trelani anti-Reich foreign policy-wise, or do they have a more neutral attitude?
They're too far from the Reich and its influence to personally care, as the Reich largely stopped territorial expansion at Fealinn and Felbach, but since the Reich tries to keep Wezkatinbach as the main influence and relation in the region, there is some animosity by proxy as the Reich has consistently propped up the primary regional rival.
>>
>>5895674
>The Kronerwerke 1898/05 Rifle was already in use by the Guard, if they were available, why not simply extend that use? It would keep things simple and equalize any playing fields at the same time.

>>5895676
>Giovanno
>For your old friend, perhaps as contrition for leaving him in Vitelia, but as a promise to be friends once more: Leone.
>Saint Morginn, the First Saint, whom brought Order to Man.
>>
>>5895674
>The Van der Zeewind conversion was intriguing, and unquestionably cheap and efficient. Perhaps it was frugal to the point of absurdity to try and bring the military into the present by converting an already converted old gun into an approximation of a current era weapon, but it would mean more money for other things…

>>5895676
>Name your second son
Let Yena choose a given name
>Also- Give him an Honored Name
Your mentor and patron who had carried you as far as you had come, even if you had parted ways with him now: Stefano, after the former Comte di Zucchampo.
>Additionally- His Birth Saint
Saint Morginn, the First Saint, whom brought Order to Man.
>>
>>5896277
One for the Reich.

>>5896362
One for the klifnaz.

A little funny that the gun I didn't have to make anew is what's passing, but there's a good reason such things are (well, were) standard, isn't there? Though there's plenty of reforms that have to occur.

>>5895698
>>5895709
>>5895843
>>5896020
Luigi without Mario.

>>5895712
Giovanno

>>5895757
Juicy

>>5895719
>>5895763
>>5895811
>>5896362
Taking care of three kids and cooking and cleaning isn't enough, make your mosshead do more work.

>>5895709
S/L

>>5895712
>>5895726
>>5895757
>>5895811
>>5896362
Stefano

>>5895719
>>5895763
>>5895843
>>5896277
Leone.

>>5895698
>>5895763
>>5895811
>>5896020
No L?

>>5895709
>>5895719
The Unspoken One.

>>5895712
>>5895757
>>5895843
>>5896277
>>5896362
The First Saint, ironically, on the Second Boy and Third Child.

Updating after I go eat something.

>>5895763
>I swear if it's Malachi I'm going to hunt you down like a dog.
Honestly it's something I figure that the characters would have discussed anyways, but funny and hacky as that would be, Malachi isn't that young in the main, he's more in his late twenties at best. Just short and stout.
>>
Luigi Stefano Morginn Bonaventura, born healthy and hale- named for the man who had saved your life, and whom had made your life- suitably given to guardianship by the very first Saint, Morginn the Chronicler, who had spread the law and goodness of the Judge while anointed by his holy flame, whom could read the laws of the all-arbiter from whence they erupted on the Isle of Prophecy. Perhaps the old Comte Di Zucchampo would appreciate your nod to his goodness, because Luigi most certainly wouldn’t, at least, not in a way anybody would recognize as proper. Even if he was an unfriendly sort, though, that had made no difference in his service. You’d meet again- and you were sure you’d have need of him once more when you did.

Given that the names were coming from people Yena was unfamiliar with, you asked if she wanted differently, but she allowed it. On the small condition that she name your next daughter. It was fair enough, but you changed the deal to the next one in general. Unlikely as it was, it was entirely possible to flip a coin ten times and have it land on a crown each time. Or, as it was in Trelan, landing on the popular executive.

Yena had to remind you, a few days after Luigi was born, to make sure to apply for the benefits from the government. Something that had slipped your mind in spite of the extra attention you devoted towards it, but having children wasn’t about the money, after all. Money hadn’t been a problem for a blissfully long time, but with this additional bonus to it, even the additional cost of another family member were nothing, and you were wondering what you should do with all these spare finances.

The old Bonetto inside should have been shrieking in fury, to see you suddenly wealthy and not in any political struggle whatsoever. Traitor to the revolution, traitor to your class. Well, smart boy, how many farmers of modest means were at the Azure Halls discussing the philosophy of the Utopia to come? Do you remember? That’s what you thought. Now quiet down, wisdom might not necessarily come with age, but Judge Above, could it come with patience from the deep soul?

The Trelani State Bank of course was perfectly happy to just keep your money. Wealthy foreign investment didn’t come often, let alone with Nief’yem wives. A light suggestion even came from one of the tellers at the bank, wondering aloud in Vitelian if you knew any other couples that might want to visit. Couples, the implied meaning being, that any intermingling would originate outside the country. Young mountainfolk men probably would bristle at the idea of foreigners flooding in and trying to take their women and country both, you knew that much about national politics.
>>
Not that you would mind more foreigners. The Steeple of the Verdant Saint had some nice people, but none had any revolutionary sentiment whatsoever, and you longed for the Vitelians you knew that could engage you on such a subject. A lack of such deep relationships might have been spurring your self critique. Elena had departed with your mailing address- surely, letters couldn’t be long in coming…unless it was too much of a terrible risk to try and contact you? No news had come of Vitelia here…

Until a few days later. A rumbling came through Pietrecirchio, but down in Vitelia, a massive earthquake burst in its center, a terrible calamity for those who lived there. Yet, a small light in the tragedy had made it up to you in the papers- a popular youth group that had only been organized but a year past, calling themselves the Vitelian Future League, and all over the stricken zones these volunteers were there to help selflessly, including their imposing leader, one Giovanno Leone.

Not long after, a letter did come, from the same man who had found fame as far as Trelan. It read rather simply:

Bonetto,

There is too much that we need to talk about, too much to catch up on, but that has been made very difficult for us to do. You share some fault for this, but I have been able to speak with Di Zucchampo, and he was not unreasonable, I will presume the same of you. I forgive you of everything- you know we never were enemies.


An abbreviated explanation of what was happening was included. After the Gilician Conflict, the forces that you knew as the Three Points had been thrown into utter disarray. Their greatest hopes for investments and developments had been snatched away, and the effort they made to win them back had not born fruit. So their efforts became less subtle, and more brutal. Crime had begun to sweep through Vitelia, and its people were demoralized enough that few had tried to oppose it, when the state itself abetted it.

Frustrated with the lack of hope, I founded the Vitelian Future League. Our old club, born anew, but it is nothing without you and Cesare. Neither of you can be returned to me yet, and as so, things have been very hard. But I cannot give up. I have created so many expectations, that I have no choice but to carry them. To become the Supra Hominem, the being beyond Niedhardt’s Summus Hominem.

The book will be finished by the year’s end, I have been working on it since University, though I told you about it when I was not so certain of the thrust of its thesis. I would appreciate your ideas before calling it a finished work, of course.

I know not enough of your circumstances. I only ask you to remain safe and sound where you are, and I will come to visit you when I am less occupied. The Judge Above willing, you may come back home someday.

Beside you facing the dawn,
Leo


More than ever, you longed for the southern shores once again.
>>
Letters besides that came around, in fits and starts, but mostly from Gilicia on private courier, as few seened to have enough business in Trelan to even carry mail. At least everybody knew where you were now- you them. You could begin to feel a little less solemn again about relations outside your household.

-----

The work was finally completed on the small office the Trelani Republican Army made for your use, along with needed workers for what was mostly paperwork, a branch of the Republican Army Twentieth Century Commission- so named for its lofty intents to bring the army forward into this century. While you might have had your opinions on the other branches of its defense forces, your realm was solely within the Republican Army, so your inputs went unasked for there.

Your first project, the standard infantry rifle rearmament program, was an easy and early success. Going with the Reichsrifles that had been your main opponent in the last decade might not have been a particularly adventurous choice, but such ambitions could be saved for other aspects of the army. The infantry were the sturdy backbone of any military after all, and the Kronerwerke 1898 was a perfectly satisfactory and well proven rifle, a good and reliable system that the Republican Guard already had familiarity with, so it would be the smoothest transition amongst any of the weapons.

There was less thinking to do when it came to purchasing of artillery and machine guns- that was a matter of buying up whatever was available with little pickiness, so long as it was new enough. The selection of the Reichsrifle was prescient in this case, as the vast majority of machine guns on the market, as it were, came from the Reich and Emre, both of which used the same caliber as the new standard infantry rifle.

Already though, as the new Republican Army was taking shape, there was ambition for more…extraordinary things, corps within the armed forces that were not simply what every other force that could be called an army was. Questions being asked, and capabilities and theories being provided as answers. The Trelani had not known a real war, though, not like you had- and thus they looked to you for the decisive direction…
>>
The easy route for the declaration of a special force was that of one that practically already existed- the infantrymen that came from the mountains and those that marched on the fluid borders defined by the southeast ranges were hardier, rougher, and more independently minded by nature. From them, a special force could be drawn from the best, capable of many different tasks that might be required, and equipped to perform to the lofty expectations of them. This proposal was to form units called Rangers, which would be attached to every unit in order to even spread this special strength throughout the armed forces. A good example to serve for the larger unit, as well- such elites would always be there, and likely, always hungry for new talent that might excel in the normal infantry.

A rather nostalgic option also presented itself, and though it would be the most difficult to assemble, it would doubtlessly be the most impressive. Your history with the first war to see the use of tanks was often spoken of with reverence, and many of the more ambitious men in the Republican Army command structure coveted their own tank force, regardless of the expense of not only special equipment but training it would require. Trelan was not a place brimming with mechanical specialists- they would have to be drawn in, trained, and otherwise made to be where they otherwise weren’t. Nostalgia, however, did drive you to look upon this more favorably than you might otherwise…

Finally, an insistence by visitors from the navy and the coastal provinces was upon a specialized Marine unit, as one had neglected to have been made, and the old system of having sailors do the work of such was growing less and less adequate as tensions raised and new situations came about. The future would demand a greater focus on the northern sea, it was insisted, and it would be foolishness to think otherwise. Admittedly, naval affairs were something you knew very little about- and could advise less on, but what was a marine if not an army man on a ship, anyways? Doubtlessly the Vitelian Royal Marines would try to beat you into a mush if they heard such a sentiment, but in your opinion, the Arditi had long eclipsed them.

>The hardened men of the mountaineers seemed the most promising with the least effort. A new Monte Nocca was needed- and here would be born the Republican Guard Rangers.
>As many knew, it was not enough to match your enemies, but to exceed them- and you knew how. Once again, the Special Weapons Battalion would be formed- but here, it would be the Special Armored Regiment.
>You were never a nautical man, but everybody could see the importance of the coastline and the northern sea. Scratch up what could be assembled- the Republican Marines were to be formed.
>Something else? (A careless compromise between two is likely to be rejected)
>>
By now, the day before Vittoria’s fifth birthday, much of the initial purchases and deliveries had been made from those willing to sell in bulk, and what was happening now was shoring up the remaining supply needed with contracts for manufacture as well as commissions for factories to be opened up in Trelan. Much of your work was letter writing and negotiation, sent out all over the continent, and organizing escorts for said correspondences, routes of import, much more than you ever thought you’d have to be responsible for, but your staff was competent so the work was arduous, but not impossible.

It was also the sort of work that was a flurry of activity some days and extremely dull other times. It meant you could spend a whole day off for Vittoria.

The morning of her birthday, you and Vittoria went to the public park, a place on the edge of the city where woods had been cultivated and fields and paths carved, with places for children to play and fields for ball games and Standard, a game where a leader on each team held a great pole and a flag, both teams having to figure out how to seize the other’s flag from its bearer and unite it with their own, the final winner being whomever had the most flags on their standard.

Vittoria had been clear what she wanted this year- before her birthday party, she had wanted a colorful handball she had seen at the toy store on a school trip, and it was easy enough to get. Quite popular amongst the children lately, apparently.

A whole hour of catching and running was had, with Yena and the other children watching. The offer for Lorenzo to play had been made, but the boy wasn’t yet three, and Vittoria was feeling rather greedy anyways. Eventually she tired herself out, and you both sat down on the nearest bench, Vittoria clutching her new toy tightly to her chest like somebody might steal it.

“Daddy?” Vittoria asked you while she sat by you on the bench, “Why does my haih look like this?”

“It’s because you’re my daughter, Vittoria,” you answered her. “There’s nothing wrong with your hair.”

“But Lowo and Lui have gween haih?” You nodded at her observation as she tried to puzzle out something that she wasn’t old enough to understand. “And they’ue boys, but mommy’s haihwis gween, but she’s a gihl, and you’ue a boy.” She seemed to come upon something she didn’t like the sound of. “Daddy? Is mommy my weal mommy?”

You sighed. “Yes, dear, she is.”

“Are you suh?”

“I’m one hundred percent sure,” you told her. “Who else would it be?”

“Auntie Lena.”

You snorted at that. “Vi, dear, Elena isn’t your mother.”
>>
“Ogay.” She seemed unsure, though. It was fair, in a way. Elena had been the only blond woman that Vittoria might have remembered ever seeing, and the theory of genetics wouldn’t make much sense until she learned about certain things. “How did you and mommy make me? Why does heh tummy get all big?”

You remembered every detail, but you weren’t going to tell a six-year-old how biting her mother’s nape was a vital part of the process, judging from every other conception. “When a boy and a girl grow up, and they love each other very much, their babies grow inside the mommy like flowers in a garden. But only when the daddy is around.”

“Theh’s alweady anotheh baby in mommy?” Vittoria asked with wonderment.

“…Yes.” Why not.

“A gihl this time?”

“That’s what your mommy wants, yes.”

“When?”

“Two or three years.”

“How do you know?” Vittoria’s attention was totally on you, and you knew she lacked patience for the truth at this age.

“I know everything.”

“Wowww.”

That claim would come back to bite you at some point, surely.

Lorenzo’s third birthday came around, and he was rather more a challenge to think of what to get, being that he was turning three, and the first time you had had to think about a gift for a child was when Vittoria was turning four. Lorenzo was not to be underestimated, though. Despite being only three, when Vittoria practiced her letters and words with you and Yena, he seemed to be paying attention. He was a quiet boy, but he seemed more inquisitive than expected of a three-year-old. Which is to say, that he thought whatsoever. So you got something intellectual for him. Intellectual, again, for a three-year-old. A picture book with broad wooden sheet pages, cutout pieces to fit into holes, and singular defining words.

He seemed to like it, at least. It was funny. You wanted him to hurry up and grow, but you didn’t want the same for Vittoria…
>>
June. July. August. Weeks of the known quantities of raising two very young children, where waking up in the midst of the night was the norm- and would be for years to come, frankly, but Yena, while tired, was never unhappy to rise at all hours to take care of things. You wondered absently if you should hire a maid- Yena was always busy, always holding a child or another, and she only had so much time and so many arms. When you asked, though, as ever, she insisted that she was doing well.

Perhaps you were alike more than you first knew. The acknowledgement that you both strived for a perfect future for these little ones, and the countless ones to follow. Why stop having children, you thought whimsically once, if you thought to bring forth utopia?

The two of you lived rather frugally, as ever. The costs of living were low, and any travel that had to be done was by cable tram or train, at most, by bicycle. The only gold Yena ever wore or desired was the band on her finger, and the most antique thing you indulged in was your old war partner, now tucked in a firmly locked display case and only removed these days to clean and oil it every so often. The accumulation of cash you were building up- you should invest it, you thought. Or at least do something with it. With your thirtieth birthday on its way, you felt a strange encroachment of the years, laughable as it was to think thirty was aged, in a way. There was a pressure to do things, especially when you were sitting on plenty to do it with.
There was of course the option of simply letting money beget more of itself. The arms companies that had been invited in were ever hungry for more capital, and the government very much wanting the investment from outside its budget. Considering that you were the primary advisement on the rifle rearmament program, investing afterwards in the weapons you had caused to come here might smack of conflicting interests, but it wasn’t as if your decision had been one done with your personal gain in mind, right?

Another idea was to try and draw some more familiar faces here. While the Trelani government didn’t particularly need or want, in its view, foreigners who were not also of mountainous persuasion, not only could your committee get more done with like minded and experienced individuals, but there were concerns that similar experience could help address. Such as the matter of the difficulty of imports and trade.
>>
At present, the most reliable route was from the south, through Kallec, but Kallec’s hostility towards its neighbors meant that it was far from preferable- you had enough experience with the negotiations needed to get the infantry rearmament going to know that well. Flying goods over the mountains was an idea, but there were few aircraft constructed yet that were strong and large enough to make such an economical venture. The northern sea route was much, much easier on paper, were it not for the machinations of the northern Pohja, whose small craft harassed shipping trying to come around without being forcibly boarded and inspected.

A solution had been found during the arms importation debacle, and it was a delightfully simple one. The arms coming from Emre, the shipping would just be registered and flagged in Emre, even if their constant destination and port of call would be in Trelani waters. Wezkatinbach wasn’t inclined to try and pick a fight with the new undisputed ruler of the northern seas- Emre’s appropriated navy could blow their collection of destroyers and antiquated cruisers out of the water as easily as brushing away a fly. So instead, a sudden rash of piracy had afflicted Trelani shipping once it had gone around the horn of the north, outside of where the Emrean navy might rush to its aid. Of course, Wezkatinbach felt no inclination to impede this activity by gangs and rogues, as it was already so terribly occupied elsewhere and couldn’t handle it, of course, though it still forbade the Trelani Republican Navy from even coming close to its wide stretch of claimed waters.

The Republic ill wished a war, and there was little justification anyways, as the piracy wasn’t being committed openly by the government, but by militias and casually ignored gangs enriching themselves, though it would be a lie that the purposeful neglect wasn’t its own action by the Wezkatinbach authorities. Attempts to escort vessels with Trelan’s own launches with Republic naval aid was claimed to be provocation by the northerners- their own navy would rapidly deploy in force should a Trelani flagged corvette come within the vast breadth of their claimed territorial waters.

The solution was theoretically simple. Armed guards aboard the merchant shipping that could dissuade pirates readily, but they couldn’t be soldiers of the Trelani Republic. In other words, a mercenary group. One would undoubtedly find itself being formed anyways, so if you wanted to be ahead of the game, you could try for it.
>>
Finally, if you wanted to be charitable, there was always the idea of giving to the locals, to the orphanages and groups for reaching out to the poor rural areas. Though your most compelling thought was sending a surely necessary infusion of funding to Leo’s group, the successor to the vanquished Young Futurists. They seemed to be doing quite a lot of good…

>You already had enough to concern yourself with- let that money grow for you while invested into the new business you created, and continue a peaceful life, for now.
>Grasp for your old friends and comrades, and bring them to familiar employment. You knew a good opportunity when you saw one- and one waited in the northern seas, with mercenaries…
>Fostering goodwill nearby was never a bad idea. Put money into the charities, the settlements, the new construction. Was that not the proper thing to do with excess wealth, after all?
>Take the necessary steps to discretely send money to Leo and his Vitelian Future League. Even if you were banished from Vitelia, the powers that be couldn’t keep you from changing it for the better.
>Something else?
>>
>>5897472

>As many knew, it was not enough to match your enemies, but to exceed them- and you knew how. Once again, the Special Weapons Battalion would be formed- but here, it would be the Special Armored Regiment.

Bonetto's a decent Arditi trainer but time to go back to to our true speciality.

Just to clarify, has Leo managed to track down Cesare?

Also with regard to arms trading, when does Caelussian equipment like say the T-8 start appearing in Vinstraga? Early to mid 1920s?
>>
>>5897491
Also

>Take the necessary steps to discretely send money to Leo and his Vitelian Future League. Even if you were banished from Vitelia, the powers that be couldn’t keep you from changing it for the better.

That should at least give Bonetto a foot in the door when he returns home within the postwar Utopian community.
>>
>>5897472
>The hardened men of the mountaineers seemed the most promising with the least effort. A new Monte Nocca was needed- and here would be born the Republican Guard Rangers
We're still a little early for Marines and let's save Tanq's wrists from drawing all those rivets.
>>5897487
>Fostering goodwill nearby was never a bad idea. Put money into the charities, the settlements, the new construction. Was that not the proper thing to do with excess wealth, after all?
Might as well fill all the Italian stereotypes and be a mafioso too.
>>
>>5897472
>As many knew, it was not enough to match your enemies, but to exceed them- and you knew how. Once again, the Special Weapons Battalion would be formed- but here, it would be the Special Armored Regiment.

>Grasp for your old friends and comrades, and bring them to familiar employment. You knew a good opportunity when you saw one- and one waited in the northern seas, with mercenaries…

Time to make money off their piracy problem. Suggest mining tunnels through the mountains to have land routes for trade. ( also to make our tank forces more useful)
>>
>>5897487
>As many knew, it was not enough to match your enemies, but to exceed them- and you knew how. Once again, the Special Weapons Battalion would be formed- but here, it would be the Special Armored Regiment.

>Grasp for your old friends and comrades, and bring them to familiar employment. You knew a good opportunity when you saw one- and one waited in the northern seas, with mercenaries…

If we can get our Vitelian guys as well it'll help with the armour unit's establishment.
>>
>>5897472
>As many knew, it was not enough to match your enemies, but to exceed them- and you knew how. Once again, the Special Weapons Battalion would be formed- but here, it would be the Special Armored Regiment.
But instead of just buying tanks, insist on development of a native design adapted to mountainous terrain. This way potential opponents will meet tanks in places they can't bring theirs to.
>>5897487
>Grasp for your old friends and comrades, and bring them to familiar employment. You knew a good opportunity when you saw one- and one waited in the northern seas, with mercenaries…
>Take the necessary steps to discretely send money to Leo and his Vitelian Future League. Even if you were banished from Vitelia, the powers that be couldn’t keep you from changing it for the better.
>>
>>5897472
>As many knew, it was not enough to match your enemies, but to exceed them- and you knew how. Once again, the Special Weapons Battalion would be formed- but here, it would be the Special Armored Regiment.

>>5897487
>Take the necessary steps to discretely send money to Leo and his Vitelian Future League. Even if you were banished from Vitelia, the powers that be couldn’t keep you from changing it for the better.
>>
>>5897472
>As many knew, it was not enough to match your enemies, but to exceed them- and you knew how. Once again, the Special Weapons Battalion would be formed- but here, it would be the Special Armored Regiment.
>>5897487
>Take the necessary steps to discretely send money to Leo and his Vitelian Future League. Even if you were banished from Vitelia, the powers that be couldn’t keep you from changing it for the better.
>>
>>5897537
So literally Naukland tanks? They basically have the same terrain restrictions as us.
>>
>>5897472
>You were never a nautical man, but everybody could see the importance of the coastline and the northern sea. Scratch up what could be assembled- the Republican Marines were to be formed
>>5897487
>Something else (Split funding between Local goodwill and Leo)
If the option for both doesn't gain votes, then just Local Funding.
>>
>>5897472
>You were never a nautical man, but everybody could see the importance of the coastline and the northern sea. Scratch up what could be assembled- the Republican Marines were to be formed.

>>5897487
>Grasp for your old friends and comrades, and bring them to familiar employment. You knew a good opportunity when you saw one- and one waited in the northern seas, with mercenaries…
>>
>>5897472
>As many knew, it was not enough to match your enemies, but to exceed them- and you knew how. Once again, the Special Weapons Battalion would be formed- but here, it would be the Special Armored Regiment.
Shove the mossheads into the kill cans.
>>5897487
>Take the necessary steps to discretely send money to Leo and his Vitelian Future League. Even if you were banished from Vitelia, the powers that be couldn’t keep you from changing it for the better.
Surely, SURELY, this is merely a patriotic citizen association that won't overthrow the Monarchy and establish a state based on Utopian principles.
>>
>>5897472
>You were never a nautical man, but everybody could see the importance of the coastline and the northern sea. Scratch up what could be assembled- the Republican Marines were to be formed.

>>5897487
>You already had enough to concern yourself with- let that money grow for you while invested into the new business you created, and continue a peaceful life, for now.
>>
>>5897491
>>5897515
>>5897536
>>5897537
>>5897538
>>5897545
>>5897708
Panzer Commander Quest

>>5897513
Mountaineering

>>5897640
>>5897690
Marinen

>>5897496
>>5897538
>>5897708
Donate to the Future.

>>5897513
Generosity for the locals.

>>5897515
>>5897536
>>5897690
Bring the party west.

>>5897537
Split between friends.

>>5897640
Split between charity organizations.

Calling it in a couple hours or so.

>>5897491
>Just to clarify, has Leo managed to track down Cesare?
Not yet. Not being able to go to the part of the world he disappeared in doesn't help, of course.
>Also with regard to arms trading, when does Caelussian equipment like say the T-8 start appearing in Vinstraga? Early to mid 1920s?
Around that time, yes. At this point they're still reaching their feelers out as far as the other end of the continent goes.

>>5897513
>let's save Tanq's wrists from drawing all those rivets.
Honestly I need to be worked harder. I've been too lazy recently, not enough drawing.

>>5897708
>SURELY, this is merely a patriotic citizen association that won't overthrow the Monarchy and establish a state based on Utopian principles.
It all depends on their fashion choices, doesn't it.
>>
>>5897472
>You were never a nautical man, but everybody could see the importance of the coastline and the northern sea. Scratch up what could be assembled- the Republican Marines were to be formed.

Had I got here earlier, i would have suggested aircraft / seaplanes to direct shipping and interdict / ward off the privateers. as they could be tendered by said shipping, also it would force a divestment from the Navy to intercept them.

>Fostering goodwill nearby was never a bad idea. Put money into the charities, the settlements, the new construction. Was that not the proper thing to do with excess wealth, after all?
>>
>>5897487
>The hardened men of the mountaineers seemed the most promising with the least effort. A new Monte Nocca was needed- and here would be born the Republican Guard Rangers.
The Arditi in the mountains.
>Take the necessary steps to discretely send money to Leo and his Vitelian Future League. Even if you were banished from Vitelia, the powers that be couldn’t keep you from changing it for the better.
Future friends in old places.
Hopefully this means our time in exile is lessened.
>>
>>5897809
>Honestly I need to be worked harder. I've been too lazy recently, not enough drawing.
I'll crack the whip if you insist. Could I get a quick sketch of a Shagherd with something to show scale? It doesn't need to be coloured or anything fancy.
>>
>>5897809
>Honestly I need to be worked harder. I've been too lazy recently, not enough drawing.

I'd be curious to see the Trelani flag myself.

On the topic of marines, do mountainfolk have any beliefs or aversion regarding the sea/open water? Like obviously they're not a seafaring culture but was just curious how they view something that's basically the opposite of their traditional living environment.
>>
>>5897487
>As many knew, it was not enough to match your enemies, but to exceed them- and you knew how. Once again, the Special Weapons Battalion would be formed- but here, it would be the Special Armored Regiment.
>Grasp for your old friends and comrades, and bring them to familiar employment. You knew a good opportunity when you saw one- and one waited in the northern seas, with mercenaries…
>>
>>5897809
Oy you missed my vote
>>
>>5897809
Looking at the map again >>5886937
I noticed Felbach seems to have border disputes with Wezkatinbach. Are there any possibilities for cooperation against a common foe?
>>
>>5897487
>Something else? (A careless compromise between two is likely to be rejected)
You need to start thinking of war in 3-dimensions. Only people on ships can cross water, correct?
Wrong.
What we need are diggers to go underneath the water source and up over on the other side.

>Something else?
Build an underground bunker.
>>
>>5897472
>You were never a nautical man, but everybody could see the importance of the coastline and the northern sea. Scratch up what could be assembled- the Republican Marines were to be formed.

>>5897487
>Grasp for your old friends and comrades, and bring them to familiar employment. You knew a good opportunity when you saw one- and one waited in the northern seas, with mercenaries…
>>
>>5897487
>>5897538
+1
>>
>>5897487
>As many knew, it was not enough to match your enemies, but to exceed them- and you knew how. Once again, the Special Weapons Battalion would be formed- but here, it would be the Special Armored Regiment.
>Take the necessary steps to discretely send money to Leo and his Vitelian Future League. Even if you were banished from Vitelia, the powers that be couldn’t keep you from changing it for the better.
>>
>>5897487
>As many knew, it was not enough to match your enemies, but to exceed them- and you knew how. Once again, the Special Weapons Battalion would be formed- but here, it would be the Special Armored Regiment.
>Take the necessary steps to discretely send money to Leo and his Vitelian Future League. Even if you were banished from Vitelia, the powers that be couldn’t keep you from changing it for the better.
I want to also get some comrades here if possible, but my vote is my primary choice since I want to help our old buddy Leo.
>>
>>5898501
Apologies.

>>5897737
>>5897862
>>5898766
More Marine.

>>5897904
The Peak.

>>5898452
>>5898790
>>5898817
>>5898856
Tonk.

>>5898547
You don't want to meet any subterranean folk, they're weird.

>>5897737
Calm investment.

>>5897862
The locals.

>>5897904
>>5898817
>>5898856
The Futurists.

>>5898452
>>5898766
Familiar Company.

>>5898547
Albanian Behavior.

I've decided that I need to let things relax a bit writing-wise, so I won't try and rush things today and instead push the update to monday. Do some drawings instead. Delays on delays, I know, but this at least won't be catch-up.

>>5898020
>On the topic of marines, do mountainfolk have any beliefs or aversion regarding the sea/open water? Like obviously they're not a seafaring culture but was just curious how they view something that's basically the opposite of their traditional living environment.
According to tradition, the patron of Humanity, the dead goddess Yjens, is the daughter of the Earth and the Sea. Sometimes this is interpreted as the Sea being a "god" in a way, but mountainfolk would tell differently, and they don't venerate it, because to them the Sea is an ancient, primordial being, and no place for humans to go forth into. The reasoning is extremely simple. You can't breathe if you immerse yourself in it, and upon its forever-stretching surface where man can survive, there is nothing for him to sustain himself. Therefore, you intrude upon this mysterious domain by sailing on it.
This is a very archaic and traditional belief, however. Any mountainfolk that can be called even adjacent to modern in behavior and culture see the Sea as the saltwater it is, and not to be feared, though sailors are still seen as very odd folk, similar to wandering mystics though with a seemingly similar drive to spread their tales and search for the unknown.
Thusly the majority of sailors tends towards minorities such as already semi-nomadic origin Pohja.

>>5898538
>Are there any possibilities for cooperation against a common foe?
Possibly- though the government doesn't want to escalate matters, especially not while their army is undergoing reform. Not that you're in much position to affect policy.
Unless, you know.
>>
>>5897487
>As many knew, it was not enough to match your enemies, but to exceed them- and you knew how. Once again, the Special Weapons Battalion would be formed- but here, it would be the Special Armored Regiment.

>Take the necessary steps to discretely send money to Leo and his Vitelian Future League. Even if you were banished from Vitelia, the powers that be couldn’t keep you from changing it for the better.
>>
>>5899065
We could literally be making our own personal army to use in the eventual Futurist uprising and you guys wanna just throw all our money away on people not loyal to us?
>>
>>5900101
Facts idk why they don't want to build our own private army.
>>
>>5900101
>>5900382
The Revolution must be won through Vitelian blood and steel, not Reich and mosshead mercenaries in it for loot and plunder
>>
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Sorry all for the delay, my internet went down yesterday and didn't come up for a while again. I'll get to work now.

As for the extra stuff-

The Trelani Republican tricolor bears upon it an emblem of the land's history- the Mountain Crown. Not an actual crown to be worn, traditionally, though replications in miniature aren't unheard of, it more refers to an ancient concept. That of reaching the heights to be the metaphorical jewels on what the land has already made its heights since time immemorial.

Paired, in very unrelated fashion, is what is known colloquially as a Shagherd in Sosaldt, but what is referred to by biologists as the Great Wooly Gurteltier- and despite being implied by name to be similar to a cow, it is more accurately an abnormally large Xenarthran, ie, a big bear-sized (often bigger) armadillo sloth thing.
They are part of an ecosystem that remains largely underground in massive unmapped cave systems that stretch down to an unknown depth, but occasionally surface to forage, and also to breed. Though they are often solitary, Wooly Gurteltiers have a tendency to form large competing groups in mating season that are extremely aggressive not only towards each other, but towards whatever they wander into. Their armor, thick hide, dense bones and wooly pelt contribute to the preferred tool for extermination being an anti-tank rifle or cannon.
>>
>>5900647
Sphere.
Probably shouldn't come as a surprise to hear I was expecting to see something more akin to a muskox with a ballistic coat of fur but this was a very welcome surprise.
Always fun to watch the bestiary grow, thanks tanq.
>>
>>5900647
Who would win in a fight between a Shagherd and Living Stone?
>>
Maybe it was friendship, maybe it was guilt, or perhaps you really believed it when you told yourself that it was for the good of Vitelia’s future. Such a large amount of money as you were sending certainly wasn’t done on a whim, and since you were still unwelcome in Vitelia, there was quite an involved process to go through in disguising the money order and routing it so that not only could nothing be misappropriated before it got to the receiver, but none would know exactly who sent it, either. Not without delving deeper into Trelan than you were- you’d earned enough goodwill for the bank to deal with this using a separate account under a suitably vague name that might as well have been anonymity.

It wasn’t a donation on par with what a truly wealthy upper society heir might give, but it was still assuredly a very helpful amount to a volunteer organization. It made you feel good to do this- to help friend and country both. No matter how far you were. Perhaps, even, this act of goodwill would be taken into consideration when time came to review whether or not you were still unwelcome in Vitelia.

Yet, how much had you cost Vitelia? Even if you argued that what you had done had all been for its benefit, that you only turned your coat so that you would fight the rot within, not the nation itself, would any amount of silver be more than a bandage to cover a mutilating scar?

Yena, at least, shared your wistfulness. Despite being of the mountainfolk, in a country that rewarded her for being herself and doing what she wished to do most, the two of you spoke of Monte Nocca, of Lapizlazulli, of the lands of Scurostrada. She lamented that she had never seen the place where you grew up, and that she felt nostalgia for the Holy City. It wasn’t that she misliked it here, she reassured you, when she seemed to realize you might blame yourself, it was merely…that you were barred from doing so.

Vittoria didn’t remember her birthplace, and she asked about it often when she overheard you and Yena reminiscing once. You had to rely on pictures, old photos and copies or miniatures of famous paintings. Vitelia was a beautiful country, and it had captured many a great artist in history, no matter where they came from. Even the self-assured Emreans, for all their claims of superiority, were known to travel to Vitelia and away from the nippy climes of the north to the warmth, and the sight of Imperial Antiquity.

A couple months passed- October arrived, and with it, your thirtieth birthday. As was traditional, Yena garbed herself in a frilly, lacy apron and nothing else, and in the small hours before your children woke up you engaged in what was less a gift and more necessary tradition- a hand clutched over her mouth as you pushed your hips against her ample bottom with reckless abandon. It was a risk- but you couldn’t leave so many young children out to wander to a suitably isolated place in this city, it would take too long.
>>
Everything was cleaned up afterwards, but Yena was still flushed and sweaty when Vittoria woke up, groggy, and asking for breakfast.

“Why ah you all wet?” Vittoria asked her mother.

“Night sweats, dear.”

“Huh???” Vittoria blinked, “It’s Octobah. It’s not hot.”

Yena dodged the five year old’s logic. “It’s your papa’s birthday today, Vi. Do you have your present?”

“Yeah!” She scampered off, and you put your hand around Yena’s waist.

“We’re lucky she’s such a heavy sleeper,” you said. Yena smiled and laughed softly, and put her lips to yours- a little tongue got in before Vittoria’s little feet came scuffling back in.

Your daughter was waddling forth with a big canvas with a wood frame as big as she was, that had been messily painted on with the crude but unmistakable cliffs of Lapizlazulli. “Happy Bihfday, daddy!” Vittoria yipped.

“Oh, Vi,” you picked the picture out of her hands, “It’s lovely.” It looked like it was painted by a five year old, yes, and there were clearly things that had been put in for fun, but it was more the thought than the skill that mattered, of course. You set it on the table and put out a leg on the back of the frame. “Is that us?” You pointed to a clutch of vague figures on the beaches by the cliffs.

“Yeah!” She pointed, “That’s you an’ mommy, that’s meee, and that’s Lowo an’ Lui.”

“Who’s this?” You pointed to another skirted squat figure with blonde hair. “Is Auntie Lena going to get short?”

“Nooo!” Vittoria pouted, “That’s Yena.”

“No,” you pointed to the green haired lady, teasing your daughter, “That’s Yena.”

“No, that’s mommy!”

Yena’s ears turned pink. “Palmiro, don’t teach our daughter to be a smart aleck.”

Your wife could have picked another name for the daughter she hoped to have. “Vittoria, are you hungry?” She nodded with a sharp up and down jerk of her chin. “Dearest?”

“Go and wake up Lorenzo,” Yena told Vittoria, “We aren’t having breakfast at home today. There’s a new café that your papa wants to go to. They have good, Vitelian coffee.”

Vittoria stuck her tongue out. “Ew, coffee.”

“They don’t just have coffee, Vi,” you reached out and pet her little blonde head, “Do as mommy said.”
>>
You had an enjoyable birthday, in every way you could ask for, from there. The whole day was an outing, and the family came home to have dinner there, Yena making Minestra Maritata (though she added a notable helping of cured salted pork cheek)- her favorite thing to make and eat both, and had by extension made you very fond of it too. The extra saltiness from cured pork cheek was something you’d have loathed to go without, and Yena had managed to find it when you thought the locals didn’t cure it the way it was down south.

Though as you went to sleep with Yena tucked under your arm, you wondered idly if it was proper to be happy in this place- how many more birthdays you should expect to have in exile.

-----

The winter came, and with it, the newest leaps in progress for the now expanded Twentieth Century Commission, under your guidance for the more experimental new branch of the armed forces. The preparations for the creation of the Special Armored Regiment were proceeding apace, but it was a rocky, troublesome path to get there. Automobiles in general were uncommon in Trelan, and there wasn’t an actual car factory to be found, even though efforts to mechanize farming in the lowlands of the country had been a priority for the Republic administration. The expertise simply wasn’t present, and thus, had to be made. Exhaustive efforts were made to set everything up, but you assured any frustrated personnel that it would be worth it- often with personal testimony towards the effectiveness of properly used armored vehicles.

At the same time, the army as a whole was shaping up. Near the whole of the army had proper uniforms now, and weapon purchases meant many might be mistaken for a proper modern soldier, though helmets were still lacking. Steel head protection was set to be imported from Emre. Apparently, the arms dealers that specialized with the Reich were reporting…problems.

Well, good. A pox upon the Grossreich.

After seemingly pointless exercises using tractors and utility cars, a first thing that could be called a success was had with armoring up a truck, as a proof of concept. Though for it to be a true practical armored car, it either needed a turret or multiple shooting angles, you had a revelation- that perhaps, an armored truck was just fine by itself…

It was no substitute for a tank, however. That would have to come from elsewhere than merely bolting steel onto a civilian vehicle.

The first option for purchase was the familiar AdJ Zephyr. It was apparently still a popular model for purchase outside of Emre, having garnered a certain reputation from its service record and broad utility. It was lightly armored, of decent mobility (though not as speedy as Vitelian vehicles by your measure) and could have a machine gun or a light cannon. One could call it the standard- though far from exceptional.
>>
Also on the Emrean marketplace was the AdL Tonnere- “Thunder.” You’d never seen one, but again, Emrean armor seemed standard for many at the moment. It was a similar sort of vehicle to the KWS Grossreich heavy panzer you’d fought before, being a large blocky hull with no turret structure, rather, being built more like a warship with a pair of sponson guns and machine gun ports, the number and type of weapon apparently interchangeable. It had a distinctive, pointed nose- rather odd looking, but apparently plenty of them had been made, and used…imposing vehicles to be sure, albeit less so than the old Titano, but such large vehicles, you knew, were not always usable everywhere.

Another contact however reported an interesting opportunity. The recently ended Valsten Civil War had prompted a large purchase of armored vehicles from the eastern nation of Delsau- which you knew little of. Unfortunately for Delsau, the war ended before the order was finished, and with plenty of war machines ready to go, the original buyers had no need of them, and refused to complete the deal, with their country in shambles and with empty pocketbooks. So now, the Delsans wished to sell- to whomever would take their product.

The BDA-1/L, as it was called, didn’t look unordinary at first glance. A squad, wide and boxy vehicle armed with naught but a machine gun in the hull next to the driver and a singular one in the turret, not much larger than the Reich light tanks you were familiar with while also not being as swift. The twist came in why it lacked speed- it was quite thickly armored, advertised as being proof against anti-tank rifle fire from both the front and the side angles. Anti-tank rifles had been a fearsome opponent when you encountered them. Was this added protection enough to elevate it?
>>
Finally, there was the admittedly fanciful option of trying to push for production of a local invention. The potential for such a project was huge, but so would be the investment into making it real, especially given the lack of expertise- such would have to be found, or painfully created through numerous trials and errors. You did have some money set aside to try and draw in a few people if need be- perhaps such help would be invaluable in such an aspiration. There also might be other opportunities to purchase other equipment- even if they were less opportune than the previously mentioned set. Comfortable as it would be to buy Vitelian armor, for example, last the dealers said, things were troublesome enough that new contracts for large orders seemed few and far between.

>The AdJ Zephyr would do just fine. A proven Emrean design, and you even had personal experience with it. No reason to break the mold for this one, it was already remarkable enough that such a backwater nation as this would have tanks at all.
>These tanks needed to live up to expectations- such that the heavily armed AdL Tonnere would fulfill. This was to be a unit known for power and strength, not a mere mobile machine gun battery…
>You’d never heard of Delsau or anything they made, but if they wanted to get rid of their BDA-1/Ls or whatever, then you knew a willing buyer- the vehicles sounded like they had what this experimental unit needed, especially for a first use vehicle.
>If the Republic wished for self sufficiency into the new era, it would have to create its own arms industry. A new tank would have to be made- and you its creator for what was expected of it…regardless of how much would have to be built to facilitate such development. (This will need a detailed description of what is needed- and an expectation that lofty requirements should not be expected of a newborn development team)
>Other?
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>>5900683
>Who would win in a fight between a Shagherd and Living Stone?
Shagherds eat small living stones sometimes, so it depends. It could be said it swings both ways considering how big some living stones get.
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>>5900769
>The AdJ Zephyr would do just fine. A proven Emrean design, and you even had personal experience with it. No reason to break the mold for this one, it was already remarkable enough that such a backwater nation as this would have tanks at all.

The Zephyr can also serve as a good base for an infant industry to develop off on, if Trelan can licence produce it.

Do the Wezkatinbachers have any Panzers, or are those still to new to hand out to regional proxies?
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>>5900769
What separates Trelan from its most likely opponent? If mountains, buy Delsau tanks. If plains, buy Tonnere
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>>5900769
>Other
Any Nauk tanks on the market?
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>>5900782
Also are the Volcans we encountered in Sosaldt around yet, or are those still too new?
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>>5900769
>If the Republic wished for self sufficiency into the new era, it would have to create its own arms industry. A new tank would have to be made- and you its creator for what was expected of it…regardless of how much would have to be built to facilitate such development. (This will need a detailed description of what is needed- and an expectation that lofty requirements should not be expected of a newborn development team)
Two-twin mounted turrets, able to turn 360 degrees, a massive tank, a moving fortress so to speak.
>>
>>5900769
>You’d never heard of Delsau or anything they made, but if they wanted to get rid of their BDA-1/Ls or whatever, then you knew a willing buyer- the vehicles sounded like they had what this experimental unit needed, especially for a first use vehicle.
>>
>>5900769
>You’d never heard of Delsau or anything they made, but if they wanted to get rid of their BDA-1/Ls or whatever, then you knew a willing buyer- the vehicles sounded like they had what this experimental unit needed, especially for a first use vehicle.
>>
>>5900769
>You’d never heard of Delsau or anything they made, but if they wanted to get rid of their BDA-1/Ls or whatever, then you knew a willing buyer- the vehicles sounded like they had what this experimental unit needed, especially for a first use vehicle.
>>
>>5900769
>You’d never heard of Delsau or anything they made, but if they wanted to get rid of their BDA-1/Ls or whatever, then you knew a willing buyer- the vehicles sounded like they had what this experimental unit needed, especially for a first use vehicle.

>Then we reverse engineer it and start our own production of different vehicles.

>APCs with machine gun turret. To bring troops safely to the front line and can give suppressive fire.

>Light tank with 20mm AA gun for rapid fire and to destroy other lightly armored vehicles and fortifications and suppressive fire. Support roll

>Heavy tank with 120mm cannon with LMG to protect it from infantry. Give it optics. Hit tanks and fortifications from range. Then breakthrough tactics to shatter enemy lines.
>>
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>>5900782
>Do the Wezkatinbachers have any Panzers, or are those still to new to hand out to regional proxies?
They do not. The Reich needed all the tanks they could get during the war, and afterwards, the Protectorates are holding on to what they have. Not to dive too deeply into the way the Grossreich works on an internal level, this isn't the time or place.

>>5900785
I suppose a small reminder of the geography involved might help.

>>5900812
>Any Nauk tanks on the market?
Not ones they've designed, no. The m/20 isn't set to be introduced for another four years and change, at the moment they're making clones of Emrean equipment. As they did when they discretely supplied them during the war.

>>5900822
>Also are the Volcans we encountered in Sosaldt around yet, or are those still too new?
Still too new, same story as above- they're products of the next decade.

I'll be calling things in another couple hours.
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>>5900769
>The AdJ Zephyr would do just fine. A proven Emrean design, and you even had personal experience with it. No reason to break the mold for this one, it was already remarkable enough that such a backwater nation as this would have tanks at all.
A known, proven design to serve as base for future development
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>>5901427

Thanks. Regarding the BDA-1/L I assume the turret is fully rotatable? Would we able able to fit in a small cannon (say up to the 3.7cm) in lieu of the MG?

Also wondering if the Archduchy was ever interested in these things in these early days of tanking, Delsau being next door and all...
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>>5901519
>Regarding the BDA-1/L I assume the turret is fully rotatable? Would we able able to fit in a small cannon (say up to the 3.7cm) in lieu of the MG?
It is, and a light cannon would be feasible- the small sort already in use, of course, which is descended from an infantry support gun.
>if the Archduchy was ever interested in these things in these early days of tanking, Delsau being next door and all...
Perhaps- though the Archduchy actually bought Reich surplus after the war. Much as the Reich is made out to be the ultimate boogeyman in Sosalia, nearly every country uses Reich surplus or some copy of it, even if it's usually sourced from the protectorates instead of the central province.
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>>5901427
Are the non-mountain parts just plains, or are the slightly shaded parts supposed to represent hilly terrain?
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>>5901566
Shading is actually hydration on the map. Wet vs dry areas.
Anyways calling this in an hour.
>>
Alrighty.

>>5900782
>>5901434
The Zephyr

>>5900785
The Tonnere.

>>5900955
Land Battleship.

>>5901013
>>5901071
>>5901292
The Delsan Entry.

>>5901300
Branch off of the former when possible.

Updating.
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>>5901706
Could you do a mock-up of the new tonk in Trelani colours?
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>>5900769
>These tanks needed to live up to expectations- such that the heavily armed AdL Tonnere would fulfill. This was to be a unit known for power and strength, not a mere mobile machine gun battery…
>>
Delsau wasn’t a place you heard or knew anything of, beyond it being some sort of Emrean influenced region to the northeast, but you knew one thing well enough- if they wanted to sell, you were willing to buy. As reliable a tank as the Zephyr might be, this BDA-1 sounded newer, and more adapted to the lessons learned from two wars. It might have been too late to serve for the purpose it was made, but who knew? Maybe they could make an impression in the west. Arrangements were made for the purchase of enough to equip the regiment, as well as replacements for parts-adding up to around four hundred of the machines. The spare examples would also be useful for potential sneaky reverse engineering. Even if what Trelan had for engineers couldn’t make a tank on their own, having a reference for design would make any future endeavor far easier.

The Year’s End came, and went. The second you’d had here, and even though there were more attendants to your impromptu fireworks show, a curious crowd enjoying the spectacle you had arranged for your family and the members of the Steeple of the Verdant Saint. Yet you knew, looking at the colorful stars and flowers blooming in the night sky, that this was nothing compared to home.

In the new year of 1916, January and February, the first batches of Delsan tanks arrived, enough to finally begin proper training and analysis with. They were squat and rather cramped vehicles, and ugly asymmetrical ones to boot, but the people of this country tended to be shorter too- it was less a problem for them than you. They handled well enough, even if their speed was somewhat sluggish. The tight interior crammed the gunner and driver together, as the turret was small, and not meant to allow more than the head and shoulders of the gunner into it- which was what helped make it smaller, a periscope mounted to the top-front of the turret for better vision, ahead of a rather small hatch in the top. An innovation seemed to make it less a discomfort, though, in that the gunner could be seated like the driver in a structure that could be attached or detached to the turret, though turning the turret with the crank while the “basket” was attached slowed it a great degree. A developing innovation, it seemed- you knew that warships had powered turning engines, and it took no genius to know they would make their way to these machines, in time.
>>
They had been intended to work with infantry, and indeed, a jogging man could trot at about the same speed as a cruising BDA-1L, but they at least did not crawl in an overly cumbersome limp. The paired machine guns didn’t particularly impress bemused statesmen inspecting their most recent expenditure, but you reassured them that armored vehicles such as these working closely with infantry could prove incredibly devastating, if used with the proper combination of daring and wit. It helped that you were well practiced at speaking and assuagement. A strong and confident voice only reinforced the telling of your learned experiences.

When you asked your fellow commissioners about why the politicians were so antsy, they told you something you should have known before them. In the coming months, Trelan’s southern neighbor, the Republic of Kallec, had arranged a large-scale exercise. A regular occurrence every few years or so, Trelan usually did rather poorly- Kallean soldiery was simply more aggressive, more driven, and most importantly, experienced with proper war. The Twentieth Century Commission had caused the government and army both to hope anew, however- and piqued the curiosity of the Kalleans. Perhaps this year, the Kalleans would be surprised, and what was once a sour note amongst Trelani might turn into a point of national pride.

The Special Armored Regiment’s troops and officers had been slacking anyways, you thought. This was a good excuse to start treating them like you’d treated all troops you’d mentored in the past- they’d have enough cozy coddling; it was time for the (mostly metaphorical) lash. In the past, it was because you were doing your best to prepare your troops for life and death. Here…what was it? Satisfying the ego of some green headed foreigners? No, it was more than that. You were building something from practically nothing.

If anybody’s ego was being satisfied, it must have been yours.
>>
It wasn’t your money, your prestige at risk, and at only thirty years old you were far from the picture of an aged old master of war, and even the former senior Trelani army members in your commission hadn’t broken fifty years of age. It struck you that the Trelani Army was taking a rather large gamble on you. By your measure it had already paid off, but perhaps a little more effort in a particular direction would seal the deal. It struck you- tanks never worked well alone. With your hand directly in the organization of the regiment, you could influence a particular piece of it to exceed others…

>Directly aid in training an accompaniment force for the tanks- call them Arditi d’Armato, perhaps. Infantry impossible to scrape from the tanks…and able to reach wherever the tanks couldn’t.
>There were armored cars left over from experimentation, and dedicated foot reconnaissance. How about unifying them into a singular armored reconnaissance company? To make them as resilient as the unit they were watching out for...
>You had heard of experimentations of such, but here, you would put it into official usage. There were spare tanks, and spare guns- it would be a relatively simple, if brutal task, to remove the turret structure and place a heavy mortar or casemated mountain gun in its place. Flying artillery, but brought to this century.
>Other? (Mind that Trelan is not a particularly industrialized or technologically advanced nation.)

Towards the end of the winter months, you got another letter from Leo- he thanked you for your help, but more importantly, announced that he was coming up for a visit. His organization had gotten popular enough that he didn’t have to go around dousing fires anymore, and established as he was, he could afford the luxury of travel rather than having to be present for every little thing. With how Vitelian Future League clubs had sprung up in every city and town and conglomerated, there had been a surprising amount of travel, of showing up at places that seemed to be going about it wrong. There were a lot of hotheaded young men, those who had lost fathers, young soldiers who had come back to nothing or worse, many young men in need- and all of their leaders deferred to Leo as their new hero…or learned to. You’d gotten out of practice with fighting, to be honest, but it sounded like Leo was just as tough and mighty as he was when the Auratus War ended. Thirty years old like you were, yet he hadn’t slackened a bit.

He would be coming to Trelan midway through march- and bringing a couple people. One was Marcella. No surprise there- they had gotten married. The last was a surprise, though you saw through Leo’s game there. Not much of a surprise when you already had three, after all.

You were no pauper- arranging a place to stay would be no problem. It was more a matter of what you wanted most to talk about. There was so much to catch up on, to cover…both for now and what was to come.

>?
>>
>>5902830
>There were armored cars left over from experimentation, and dedicated foot reconnaissance. How about unifying them into a singular armored reconnaissance company? To make them as resilient as the unit they were watching out for...
>Talk about his life with Marcella and ask Marcella how the big lug had been treating her. Talk about the whole, defecting from the army to fight the deep state thing. Talk about raising children, child care tips, etc. Talk about the future league club. And of course, swap manifestos.
>Also, start training again. I'm sure Palmiro isn't out of shape, but if Leo's been fighting every day, we're gonna need to start taking on dudes 5 on 1 to match him in time. It will be a good training exercise for the men too.
>>
>>5902830
>Directly aid in training an accompaniment force for the tanks- call them Arditi d’Armato, perhaps. Infantry impossible to scrape from the tanks…and able to reach wherever the tanks couldn’t.

Begleit-Grenadiers/Combined arms tactics let's go, having dedicated infantry for the armour will make cooperation much smoother.

>?
Discuss the current Vitelian political situation in more detail, obviously. Does he have any timeline for the Revolution?

If he's here before the joint exercises start I wonder if the Commission would be amenable to a guest instructor for the infantry/Arditi.
>>
>>5902830
Supporting >>5902847
>>
>>5902830
>There were armored cars left over from experimentation, and dedicated foot reconnaissance. How about unifying them into a singular armored reconnaissance company? To make them as resilient as the unit they were watching out for...
Also
>Start training again
>>
>>5902830
>Directly aid in training an accompaniment force for the tanks- call them Arditi d’Armato, perhaps. Infantry impossible to scrape from the tanks…and able to reach wherever the tanks couldn’t.

>Talk about our families and how Marcella and he are doing, talk about our children with Yena and ask about his. Ask how they've been faring generally. Apologize to him and more especially Marcella, if there are still any remaining resentments from our desertion. Correct me if I'm wrong but I remember we ordered that she be restrained right?
>Discuss Futurism and the Future League Club, give our own perspective on why we defected, which was mainly to fight the Three Points so that Utopianism could flourish in Vitelia. Ask about his manifesto, show him ours. Discuss the Revolution and the situation in Vitelia, and how we can bring about the Dawn.
>And start to train again. It would do no good to fall behind on it while Leo was in peak performance.
>>
>>5902826
Just to confirm, the BDA is a two or three seater?
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>>5902830
>Directly aid in training an accompaniment force for the tanks- call them Arditi d’Armato, perhaps. Infantry impossible to scrape from the tanks…and able to reach wherever the tanks couldn’t.

> Fundamentally we need to discuss how we want the League to take power in Vitelia, whether it be through peaceful or violent means. Though the former would seem unlikely given the Three Point's increasing repression.

>For the latter, it might be worth establishing a paramilitary wing of the League, there's plenty of veterans to form a solid core it seems. Start to brainstorm about guerilla warfare/insurgency after Bonetto and Leo settle on their political manifestos.
>>
>>5902861
>>5902830
>Support
>>
>>5902900
>Correct me if I'm wrong but I remember we ordered that she be restrained right?
It was Bonetto's command, yes.

>>5902960
>Just to confirm, the BDA is a two or three seater?
It's a crew of two. The hull machine gun is meant to be used from a stationary position by the driver, though really, in this era before even the suggestion of vertical stabilizers, everything should be fired while holding position anyways.

>>5902847
>>5902855
>>5902861
>>5903005
Armored Recon.

>>5902850
>>5902900
>>5902995
Tank Men.

Calling it in two and a half hours.
>>
>>5902830
>>Directly aid in training an accompaniment force for the tanks- call them Arditi d’Armato, perhaps. Infantry impossible to scrape from the tanks…and able to reach wherever the tanks couldn’t.
>>
>>5902830
>>There were armored cars left over from experimentation, and dedicated foot reconnaissance. How about unifying them into a singular armored reconnaissance company? To make them as resilient as the unit they were watching out for...
>>
>>5902830
>Directly aid in training an accompaniment force for the tanks- call them Arditi d’Armato, perhaps. Infantry impossible to scrape from the tanks…and able to reach wherever the tanks couldn’t.
I am >>5901434 phoneposting
>>
Two and a half hours? Nah. Next morning. Best to not write drowsy.
>>
>>5902830
Supporting
>>5902900
>>
>>5902830
>Directly aid in training an accompaniment force for the tanks- call them Arditi d’Armato, perhaps. Infantry impossible to scrape from the tanks…and able to reach wherever the tanks couldn’t.
>>
>>5902830
>There were armored cars left over from experimentation, and dedicated foot reconnaissance. How about unifying them into a singular armored reconnaissance company? To make them as resilient as the unit they were watching out for...
>>
>>5902830
>>You had heard of experimentations of such, but here, you would put it into official usage. There were spare tanks, and spare guns- it would be a relatively simple, if brutal task, to remove the turret structure and place a heavy mortar or casemated mountain gun in its place. Flying artillery, but brought to this century.

>Talk about Futurism, family, the past, and catch up with your friend Leo on what's been going on in the homeland.
>>
>>5902830
>You had heard of experimentations of such, but here, you would put it into official usage. There were spare tanks, and spare guns- it would be a relatively simple, if brutal task, to remove the turret structure and place a heavy mortar or casemated mountain gun in its place. Flying artillery, but brought to this century.
>>
>>5902830
>You had heard of experimentations of such, but here, you would put it into official usage. There were spare tanks, and spare guns- it would be a relatively simple, if brutal task, to remove the turret structure and place a heavy mortar or casemated mountain gun in its place. Flying artillery, but brought to this century.
>Talk about Futurism
>>
Alright.

>>5903074
>>5903151
>>5903219
>>5903247
The 'Ard.

>>5903080
>>5903274
Wheels.

>>5903310
>>5903344
>>5903575
Bigger guns.

Close, but it looks like it'll be the tank riders (not actually riding on tanks).
As well as the various talks and plans.
Writing.
>>
Rolled 100, 66, 27 = 193 (3d100)

Should have done this before I went to work, but oh well.
>>
Rolled 56, 67, 60 = 183 (3d100)

>>5904001
Huh.
Well then.
>>
>>5904001
Good for us, hopefully
>>
>>5904008
Looks like child rolls, and since we're not the ones rolling it, I assume it's for Leo and Marcella.
>>
>>5904229
Yeah, re-reading it, you're probably right.
>>
>>5904229
Imagine a girl with the combination of Leo's and Marcella's physiques...
>>
>>5904229
>>5904252
Golly I hope this doesn't produce some kind of invincible tactical/mechanical wunderkind offspring for a certain the next generation crusty face to have to deal with 16+ yeas from now haha
>>
>>5904252
i'm imagining
>>
>>5904229
It is, yes.

Anyways just a heads up this is gonna take some time longer to get done, this is looking to be a real ass kicker of an update, but it should be a good one.
>>
>>5904458
Now we just need to betroth one of our kids with Leo's and make them star crossed lovers as well
>>
>>5904727
I think this doesn't work out timeline-wise
>>
It wasn’t March yet, but you’d have plenty to talk about for sure.

For now, despite there being quite a few good ideas for augmentation of the Special Armored Regiment, you fixated particularly on what was at one point seen as a merely obligatory infantry accompaniment. The words you spoke about tanks being best supported by men had been heard, but as of now, little differentiated the Special Armored Regiment’s infantry from normal riflemen. They didn’t work particularly closely together, more alongside one another. To be expected, but it was far from a total exploitation of potential. This would have to change.

Your personal instruction was a vital part of forming and expanding what you dubbed the Arditi d’Armato, as of all the people you had fought alongside in the Emrean War utilizing tanks, the Arditi had been the most effective. The very least that had to be done was bringing the infantry up to such standards. Tanks were weakest when enemies were too close, after all, and that was the same place where the Arditi were the fiercest. Together, as one organ, such a fighting unit just might exceed even the best of the strongest enemies in the world.

Such arrogance had a heart lifting quality to it.

It would also serve as good practice- Leo announcing his coming round made you sorely aware of just how out of practice you were, even if you weren’t out of shape. The most physical intensity you’d had in the recent years was either basic mountain trail going, or particularly amorous exertions with Yena. It was time to knock the rust off. You sought to train soldiers how to be Arditi, not to teach them knitting and baking. An Arditi who couldn’t fight may as well have been a candle clipper in Lapizlazulli.

-----

March came around. Leo would be flying in, he wrote, not because he particularly liked the expense of it, but because he simply had no time to take the long ways around while still having the time for you. He didn’t need to justify it, you thought, but you supposed he was very likely not a rich man in spite of the influence he commanded. A visit to a friend couldn’t much be excused as proper use of funds by his organization…though, wouldn’t it be plenty excusable if the visit was for the reasons of planning the Revolution? You couldn’t help but think that, with everything going as it was, surely, such a thing might come sooner rather than later…

Vittoria was incredibly excited. She didn’t remember meeting Marcella or Leo, but people from her past were an unheard of event for her. It was like you were coming back, again, even if Marcella and Leo wouldn’t stay for long. When a knock came at the door the morning of the twentieth of March, thus, she was the first at the door, pointing and shrieking, “They heah! They heah!”
>>
As soon as you opened the door, a brawny arm reached out and snatched you around your back, and pulled you out, pushing you against what felt like a solid stone wall- but it was Leo’s breast, and you put an arm around him too in a big, long pat.

“It’s been too long, Bonetto,” Leo’s voice said, deeper and wearier than you remembered it being, before he let you go. He was dressed in a plain black shirt with a grey collar, far less martial than what you had grown to mostly expect him in.

“It has,” you agreed, unwilling to dilute such a statement by muddling it with anything else. Something pulled at your hair, and you reached up- Leo wasn’t the kind of man to do such a thing.

“Pwetty.”

“Cesare, stop that,” Leo said sharply, “Sorry, Bonetto, he’s very curious.”

You stepped back- the surprise, you presumed. A son. “Trust me, I understand,” you said, reaching out a finger for the boy to grasp. “I suppose I was undeserving.”

“Don’t be ridiculous. Boys have more than one name for a reason.”

“You flatter me.”

“He really does,” Marcella said, a bit grumpy sounding. You looked over to her- she had a sweater, and…

While Leo was holding a small child in his arm, and Marcella had another standing at her side- both ofthem ruddy of complexion, and with a light chestnut tone to their hair- more of their mother, presumably, than their father there. A boy and a girl, of the same age…twins?

“You have a daughter, too?” You asked Leo.

“I wanted t’ start with one for a while,” Marcella said, voice raised in sore protest, “’Course he had to mess that plan up. Ridiculous, y’know? What’d I do to deserve getting’ double knocked up?” Yena came to the door, holding Lorenzo’s hand and guiding him to the door, the poor shy boy, while carrying Luigi with her other arm. “Yennie!” Marcella’s voice brightened when she saw your wife, “It’s been ages!” They went to hug one another. “Oh my goodness, you’ve got three now?”

“You have two after such a short time!” Yena exclaimed, “Twins? If I weren’t happy to see you again, I’d be burning with envy…”

“Yeah. Don’t be,” Marcella laughed hollowly, “It wasn’t fun.”
>>
Well. Yena had been pregnant three times, and Marcella only once, but perhaps the experience was much different when twice the baby was stuffed up there, especially with Leo lending some of his prodigious size to them in miniature.

Yena looked down to Lorenzo, “Lolo, say hello.”

“H-hi.” The three-year-old stammered hesitantly.

“Won’t you come in?” Yena snapped her chin back up, “After coming so far, you must want to sit down. I have crostinis ready and waiting to be eaten.”

“Oh, good,” Marcella moved past you towards Yena, “I’m darn famished.”

The wives left you and Leo outside. You supposed the luggage left by the door was you two’s responsibility, then.

“Don’t mind her,” Leo said as you picked up a case.

“Hm?”

“Marcella’s still sore at you,” Leo said, “I already talked to her plenty about it. It’ll pass. She just has to get used to seeing you again.”

“I didn’t want to start things off with this,” you said, “With it being rather morose and all, but-“

“Save it,” Leo held up his hand, “We’ve got all day. Let’s get comfortable first.”

-----

The first hour was merely catching up, and small talk, though Yena and Marcella mainly talked to one another over the dining room table while you and Leo kept to each other at the other end of the main room, where the central stove formed the axle of the wheel that formed the house. Vittoria ran back and forth between the father and the mothers, seldom lingering for more than five minutes before flitting to listen to or yap questions and observations. Leo’s two children, Cesare and Chiara, were put in Lorenzo’s room with your older son- they were both somewhat younger than Lorenzo, around two and a half years old… they had been born on November 12 of 1913, just five months before the Gilician Conflict came to a close. Which meant they must have been conceived in…

“Were you married, when…” you led Leo on, gesturing to the playpen where his children were entertaining themselves with carved wooden animals, “You know.”

“Oh, nah, hell no,” Leo waved his hand dismissively, “We…well, if I’m gonna be honest, I think she wanted things the way it turned out, if you know what I mean. Her getting pregnant messed some things up, I probably wouldn’t have considered it for another couple years otherwise, what with what was happening.”

“I’m not in any position to criticize,” you chuckled, “Yena didn’t get a ring on her finger until after Vittoria was born…”

“Padi, padi!” Vittoria ran over to Leo- her padrino, as she had been informed. “Mahssi says you gotta pessant fwa me!”

“…Oh, yeah, I do,” Leo said, “Bonetto, go and open the red suitcase, there’s a long box in there.”

You went and got the present- and Vittoria snatched it out of the suitcase as soon as you opened it, running back to Leo with it. “Is this it???”
>>
“It is, Vittoria,” Leo said, smiling broadly, “To make up for your birthdays I missed.”

She immediately ripped it apart, and took out the device inside, blinked at it. “What’s this?”

“It’s a pop gun,” Leo said.

“A gun???” Vittoria’s jaw dropped.

“Not a real one, Vi,” you knelt down to show her. It didn’t even look like one, being a pair of brightly colored tubes with a wooden stock. “Here, you put the cork in here,” you helped yourself to one of the five corks provided in the same box, and then you demonstrated “firing” it, sharply drawing back one end of the tube and causing the cork to fly out with a sharp bwoip!

“Waaaooww!” Vittoria exclaimed, and she snatched the popgun back from you and fumbled with loading it, before shooting a cork herself.

“Say thank you to your godfather, Vi,” you said lightly.

“Thanks, Padi!” your daughter cried out before running back to her mother to show her the toy, prompting Yena to shout a scold over about Vittoria not running in the house again.

You watched her scamper away slightly slower, before saying sidelong to Leo, “You know how much grief you’re going to make her cause with that thing?”

“Like father, like daughter.”

You paused on that. “Leo.”

“Yeah?”

“I’m sorry. I just wanted to say that when you can actually see and hear me.”

“All’s forgiven.” Leo said, brushing it off.

“That’s it?”

“I don’t want anything between us now, Bonetto,” Leo sighed, “All the complicated stuff will get its own time.”

“There’s plenty more complicated things I want to discuss,” you said, “So better for this to be out of the way sooner.”

Leo raised an eyebrow at you and frowned slightly. “Alright. Let’s get some fresh air, then. Show me around the neighborhood a little.” He looked across the house to the table, and made a small gesture with his hand, before letting him lead you out. Midway down the stone tile road, past a handcart and a clutch of teens going to school, he finally asked, “So why here?”

“Why not anywhere?” you asked, “Nowhere is Vitelia but Vitelia. This place was where Yena went, and it’s glad to have us here. Gilicia certainly wouldn’t reward me for having green haired sons.”

“Alright,” Leo said, “Then why Gilicia? Why spend two years of your life for them? It can’t have been for whatever they paid. Did you want to become the Black Knight of Gilicia?”

“I didn’t join them with that intention, no,” you said.
>>
“There’re all sorts of nasty stories, y’know. The old guard all spread the word that you turned your coat to lead Imperial criminals to kill your countrymen. How you led a horde to Luce del Diamanti and did every evil thing that could be done, then put the place to the torch. I don’t believe it, Bonetto. That’s not true, is it?”

You put your hands in your pockets and pursed your lips. “I did do the first thing, I’ll admit. But I tried to lead them as honorably as I could. I tried my hardest to keep things as clean as possible, but war is war. They were called the Black Battalion, and for every good man in there by accident there were twenty bad ones, but they always followed orders. The ones who didn’t were newer, younger recruits, and they didn’t obey my commands, and were punished for it. Not that I think they tell that.”

Leo’s shoulders sagged. “Why though? Why break Gilicia off of Vitelia? It was a heavy blow to deal to your country, Bonetto.”

“It didn’t turn out the way I thought it would.” You told him about how your old mentor, Di Zucchampo, had met with you, had told you of the Three Points, and the plan to deal with them. To critically weaken them so Vitelia might be rescued from their grasp. “But his faction lost favor over time to the Gilician Seperatists, to the people who had more fame in battle and who took advantage of the cruelties wrought upon the Gilician urbanites. Di Zucchampo’s plan was to still have Gilicia under Vitelia’s authority, but instead, they seceded completely. The Vilja Domkarl went back, and I was another token in the exchange for peace, it seems. Me and some others exiled, for the war to come to an end.”

“Marcella was really angry, you know,” Leo said distantly, “That you went and did this without saying you would. Felt out whether we’d go with or not. Me, I’m still not sure. I was confused then, and I still am. Surely you could have seen a way to fix Vitelia without doing this, this thing where there’s no way you can come back, not for a while. Doesn’t make all that much sense for Di Zucchampo, either.”

You hadn’t wanted to potentially poke at a sore spot, but you had the answer. “Di Zucchampo didn’t go by his Comte name anymore. He just went by Stefano. And he told me that what he was doing, he felt Chiara would have done, but since she’s…he felt he had to do it in her place. I suppose I felt the same way, when I saw how he put his whole life aside.”

Leo averted his gaze, looked down in a low stoop, and to the side, to the stones, and was silent.

“I didn’t want to make you come with me if you didn’t believe in the cause otherwise,” you said, “I never wanted to fight you, and I didn’t. I only wanted to find the Revolution where I thought it was starting.”
>>
“…I see,” Leo straightened his back again, “I get it, if that’s what he said. I guess she would do that, if she lived. She was always such a God-botherer…” A pause. “It wasn’t all for naught, you know,” Leo said next, “These people you refer to as the Three Points. I know who you’re talking about, and they did lose a lot of power with Gilicia. They spent too much trying to get it back, and their power’s mostly broken. But the King’s a changed man. The Auratus War broke Lucius, Bonetto. He’s not as bold anymore. He’s listless and haggard. It’s like he aged twenty years in the past ten. In his youth he might have been rather a liberal, but now, he’s too meek to take the power to do so now that the throne beside his own is vacant.”

A thought, at that, as you passed an unassuming bakery, that you knew little of, since Yena baked her own bread. “Do you think it’ll be soon?” you asked Leo.

Leo gave you a pitying look. “There’s still too many people that would have you hanged the moment you stepped foot in Vitelia, Bonetto. The work’s far from finished.”

“I do want to go back, but I didn’t mean that. I meant the Revolution.”

“…Bonetto, don’t be in such a rush,” Leo admonished you, “There’s still a lot that needs to be done before any of that. A lot needs to happen. I need you back, for one. I haven’t forgotten about the people who got me to where I’m at now.”

“Cesare…”

“…” Leo seemed to weigh something in his head. “I might have found a lead on him.”

You snapped your eyes on Leo’s. “Where?”

“It’s a hunch, sort of. Even after all these years, after they’ve finally managed to count up who’s dead and who isn’t, they’ve never found Cesare’s body. So he’s not dead. At least, not dead from the Gilician Front. The Fealinnese have held on to Vitelian prisoners of war for years, Bonetto. They’re using them as hostages to try and get Vitelia to give ‘em what they want, and their demands have only gone up. I don’t know if King Lucius still has the stones to not bend to them, or if we actually can’t give them what they’re asking, but either way they’ve still got them.”

“They want a lot of money, I presume,” you said.

“Reparations, and military assistance against Gilicia.” Leo scoffed. “Some other ridiculous things too. I’ve cooled a lot on that bunch. They’re too cocky for what they are.” He stopped. “Hey, Bonetto, let’s turn back around before our beautiful wives think we’ve gone out to have beer for brunch.”

You laughed nervously. “Would Marcella think that?”

“Nah. Though.” Leo sighed, “I’m not sure how happy she is, sometimes. I wonder if this is how she wanted things to turn out.”

“She asked me permission to court you,” you said, “I think she likes you well enough.”
>>
“I- look, Bonetto, I know that much, a girl doesn’t ask you to bed unless she’s fond of you. It’s more like…it makes me feel guilty. She got sweet on me in the first place ‘cause I saved her and Chiara that time. Now it’s just her, and not Chiara, since I wasn’t there the time they needed help again. She’ll say it too, sometimes. She’ll get all sad, and she’ll say, it should have been her, not Chiara. You ever get those sorts of thoughts, with Yena?”

You shook your head. “It’s been too long to consider otherwise.”

Leo nodded slowly and uncertainly. “Yeah. Guess so.”

-----

Talk of the Revolution and Utopianism, of the Viteliean Future League, would wait for the first day. Instead, you merely spoke of life, of what you all did for the normal day to day. You talked about your work with the Twentieth Century Commission, and invited Leo to help with some of the training. He couldn’t stay for long, but since he could stay ten days, he could at least make a significant impact. It’d be best for the troops to see what the best of the best looked like- what they’d have to measure up to someday, likely. Marcella was curious of the country, and what was in it- she brightened when you told her of the tanks. It seemed there was a shared interest in your work, though Yena’s thoughts of what the north beaches were like was considered. Maybe the mountains were closer and better known for now, though…

>The scenery would be good for everybody- including your family. Focus more on roaming the environment. The beach, the mountains, and such. Leo was on holiday, wasn’t he?
>Stay around the city and show your guests about the Twentieth Century Commission’s work. An arditi and a mechanic would surely have a lot of input about needed subjects…
>Other?

Marcella’s wariness did fade over the course of the day, even if it didn’t disappear. Hopefully while she was alone with Leo at the inn, they could talk over it in more detail. Vittoria had decided to be a menace with her new toy, and whenever Yena stood up, Vittoria would send corks at her mother’s bottom, no matter how she was told not to- but it wouldn’t have been seemly to spank her the very first day Leo was here visiting, you insisted.
>>
You and Yena lay in bed that night- clothed, though her long nightgown had never been a barrier before, and chatted. You didn’t have sex every night like you once did years back- not that you lacked for affection like before, but Yena seemed less needy for it, initiated not nearly as persistently and tirelessly. At least, when she was still nursing.

“Palmiro?” Yena said drowsily, “Luigi is just newly weaned…it will be time, soon.”

“Yes, dear.” May the Judge have mercy on your hips.

“It made me think, talking with Marci again…”

“Hm.”

“She doesn’t want more children, right now,” Yena put her hand on your chest, “I can’t imagine it. I want to have children until I cannot birth them anymore, but with two, she seems to find it tiring already.”

“Marcella is different, Yena, I think it’s something she’s still trying to figure out, like taking a machine apart.”

“No, that’s not so much it, Palmiro,” Yena put her head against your chest by her hand, “…Are you alright with more?”

You put a hand on her hip. “I said as much when we married, did I not?”

“I want another daughter,” Yena said, “But after that, if you want to stop for a bit, that’s alright. I don’t want you to feel like…” she circled on your chest with splayed fingers, “…like you should go adventuring again, from exhaustion…”

>You’d be fine with a break, after another daughter. More than four anyways and you wondered if any might be neglected from lack of attention…
>What your wife wanted was your command. If she wanted to spend every other year pregnant, then you’d gladly ensure that.
>Other?

Picture for later, I didn't want to delay this more than it already has been.
>>
>>5905982
>Stay around the city and show your guests about the Twentieth Century Commission’s work. An arditi and a mechanic would surely have a lot of input about needed subjects…

>You’d be fine with a break, after another daughter. More than four anyways and you wondered if any might be neglected from lack of attention…
>>
>>5905981
>Stay around the city and show your guests about the Twentieth Century Commission’s work. An arditi and a mechanic would surely have a lot of input about needed subjects…
Leisure would be nicer, but sometimes you really just have to do business.
>>5905982
>What your wife wanted was your command. If she wanted to spend every other year pregnant, then you’d gladly ensure that.
How is the mosshead population so low when their women are this rapacious? Do the ones living in mountains just have half their babies snatched by big cats and wild dogs in the night?
>>
>>5905982
>The scenery would be good for everybody- including your family. Focus more on roaming the environment. The beach, the mountains, and such. Leo was on holiday, wasn’t he?
>What your wife wanted was your command. If she wanted to spend every other year pregnant, then you’d gladly ensure that.
Yena might be the best Waifu in any of these stories.
>>
>>5905982
>Stay around the city and show your guests about the Twentieth Century Commission’s work. An arditi and a mechanic would surely have a lot of input about needed subjects…

>What your wife wanted was your command. If she wanted to spend every other year pregnant, then you’d gladly ensure that.

Damn Fealinnese, maybe we should try to contact the Continuation Command through di Zucchampo if we can, see if they have any more information or assistance they can give
>>
>>5905981
>The scenery would be good for everybody- including your family. Focus more on roaming the environment. The beach, the mountains, and such. Leo was on holiday, wasn’t he?

>>5905982
>What your wife wanted was your command. If she wanted to spend every other year pregnant, then you’d gladly ensure that.
>>
>>5905981
>The scenery would be good for everybody- including your family. Focus more on roaming the environment. The beach, the mountains, and such. Leo was on holiday, wasn’t he?

>>5905982
>What your wife wanted was your command. If she wanted to spend every other year pregnant, then you’d gladly ensure that.
>>
>>5905982
>>5905981
supportan >>5906123
>>
>>5905981
>The scenery would be good for everybody- including your family. Focus more on roaming the environment. The beach, the mountains, and such. Leo was on holiday, wasn’t he?
>>5905982
>Other?
I'm worried Yena might realize taking care of 5 small children is too exhausting once it is too late. Propose a break of a few years, until Vittoria can be left unsupervised.
>>
>>5905982
>>The scenery would be good for everybody- including your family. Focus more on roaming the environment. The beach, the mountains, and such. Leo was on holiday, wasn’t he?
>>What your wife wanted was your command. If she wanted to spend every other year pregnant, then you’d gladly ensure that.
The Great Mosshead Replacement
>>
>>5905981
>Stay around the city and show your guests about the Twentieth Century Commission’s work. An arditi and a mechanic would surely have a lot of input about needed subjects…
I wonder what Marcella thinks of the tanks we had the army buy.
>>5905982
>What your wife wanted was your command. If she wanted to spend every other year pregnant, then you’d gladly ensure that.
>>
>>5905981
>Stay around the city and show your guests about the Twentieth Century Commission’s work. An arditi and a mechanic would surely have a lot of input about needed subjects…

>>5905982
>What your wife wanted was your command. If she wanted to spend every other year pregnant, then you’d gladly ensure that.
>>
File: Vin diesel and family.jpg (27 KB, 715x402)
27 KB
27 KB JPG
>>5905981
>>Stay around the city and show your guests about the Twentieth Century Commission’s work. An arditi and a mechanic would surely have a lot of input about needed subjects…

>>5905982
>What your wife wanted was your command. If she wanted to spend every other year pregnant, then you’d gladly ensure that.

Oh yeah, big family
>>
>>5906604
>>5905982
>support
>Tell her we will higher a live in nanny so she has help with chores.
>>
>>5905990
>>5906011
>>5906123
>>5906281
>>5906363
>>5906582
>>5906604
>>5906691
The wonders of the new century army.

>>5906016
>>5906133
>>5906238
>>5906298
>>5906333
Beach Episode. Not really.

>>5905990
Spare me.

>>5906011
>>5906016
>>5906123
>>5906133
>>5906238
>>5906281
>>5906333
>>5906363
>>5906582
>>5906604
Agent_Smith_Burly_Brawl.wav

>>5906298
Wait a few years for the big sister.

>>5906691
Use some of that money.

Updating. Won't get done until later tonight though, Sundays are rough workdays to update on because of having to go in earlier.
In the meantime, Marcella wasn't that keen on meeting again, but she's got a ball and chain now. Three of them, even.

>>5906011
>How is the mosshead population so low when their women are this rapacious? Do the ones living in mountains just have half their babies snatched by big cats and wild dogs in the night?
There's a couple reasons, but most primarily is that most mountainfolk women aren't Yena, in a matter of speaking.
The other is that while the mountains aren't the safest depending on which and where, they're also not particularly resource or food dense, and regularly, when a village is overpopulated, some volunteers have to leave for another settlement or go to the lowlands. New villages and towns aren't founded often- the "pure" mountainfolk population has remained relatively level for a long time.
>>
>>5906954
>The other is that while the mountains aren't the safest depending on which and where, they're also not particularly resource or food dense, and regularly, when a village is overpopulated, some volunteers have to leave for another settlement or go to the lowlands.

I assume that causes some tension with the Pohja, considering the mutual dislike between the two? Their feud doesn't seem to be religion-based like the Gilicians.
>>
>>5907290
>I assume that causes some tension with the Pohja, considering the mutual dislike between the two? Their feud doesn't seem to be religion-based like the Gilicians.
Just ask your wife what the term "Mesharet" means.
>>
>>5907469
Oh it's actual Hebrew lmao. No wonder why the goys can't stand them.
>>
A gentle finger went to a curled green lock by Yena’s ear. “You don’t have to worry about that. If you want a large family, then your wish is my command.”

“…Thank you, Palmiro,” Yena embraced you, “But, I am only one woman, and already…taking care of all of the children when you are away at work is a strain…”

“I can hire help if you need it,” you told Yena, “It won’t be long until Vittoria can help out, and after her, Lorenzo.”

“Might Elena come around, then?”

“Yena,” you sighed, “Asking Elena to help take care of a multitude of our children might be…something of a slight.”

“We’ve been married for six years, Palmiro,” Yena murmured with a hint of annoyance, “I do not think she is bitter about your choice. A woman does not like to be condescended to about such things, you know.”

“Alright, alright…” you relented, holding Yena tighter. Though you would have been much more comfortable about the matter if Elena had found a husband- she was as old as you were, and even though many Vitelian men had perished in wars now, surely she could find somebody. “I was thinking of showing our guests what I do with this Republic’s government,” you said next, “If you and Vittoria would like to come along, I can hire a caretaker for the day for ours and theirs, unless you think you would find it dull.”

“…I should learned for myself what you do,” Yena said slowly, “…But…”

“Yes?”

“…” Yena hesitated a while. “…Your children know you are a warrior, Palmiro. Vittoria played soldier before Giovanno got her that thing to shoot at me with. I…don’t want her to be a soldier, Palmiro.”

Normally it would be easy to reassure against, given that women nominally could not serve. Yet Yena knew differently. Chiara had been her friend- and she had perished a soldier. “I would be a hypocrite if I tried to control our children’s destinies, dearest.”

“She is my firstborn,” Yena insisted quietly, “She is the eldest of our children, and leads the way. All her siblings will know her example…and I dread that they will follow her.”

“…She’s not even six years old yet, love,” you kissed Yena’s crown, “Let’s be patient.”

“Hmmnn…”

There was little you could think of that could be done anyways, you thought as you both fell asleep. The best you could do was to try and ensure that the future might have already arrived before there was a war for any headstrong youths to try and fight in, as you had been tempted once.

-----
>>
“Goin’ to the ah-my, goin’ to the ah-my…” Vittoria sang as you all rode the trolley that morning on your way to the Special Armored Regiment’s training grounds and base camp. She sat on your lap, clutching her new pop gun, while Yena sat by you and sulked while looking out the window.

This morning had been quite a chore. As soon as Vittoria had woken up, she had continually shot Yena’s butt with her toy while she was trying to cook breakfast, which resulted in Yena seizing all the cork gun’s ammunition- and Vittoria had cried and bawled in despondent protest. She had calmed down some when you took her aside and told her that she shouldn’t use her gun to shoot at people, let alone her mother while she was trying to do something, but Yena wouldn’t give the corks back, telling you that you were too soft on Vittoria’s mischief.
Better that she attack her mother than her younger siblings or other children, you thought- Leo had told Vittoria to not shoot at anybody’s eyes, but your wife was getting rather annoyed with the whole deal. Vittoria had forgotten it all by now, but her mother still complained to Marcella about how, possibly, a gun whose corks came on strings might have been more suitable.

“They don’t give you butter biscuits in the army, Vi,” you told her, to try and mollify Yena somewhat.

“No!” Vittoria yawped, “Tell them they has to have buttah biskies, ah else!”

“What in the world is a butter biscuit?” Leo asked, furrowing his brow, “She’s not talking about the ones that are the swirls with chocolate, is she?”

“No choccy!” Vittoria protested on reflex.

Leo held up his hands. “Sorry, no choccy. Do all your kids like butter cookies, Bonetto?”

“They like them with different things,” you said, “The first time Lorenzo had them, he licked all the chocolate off and Vi took the rest from him.”

Marcella made a face. “Eugh.”

“Choccy is gross!” Vittoria argued, “It looks like poo!”

Marcella had no counterargument, either that or she was so stunned by the statement that she stared and blinked, and it made you chuckle.

“Palmiro!” Yena snapped, “Don’t encourage her to say that sort of thing.”

“Sorry. Vi, don’t say nasty things, or your mother’s going to wash your mouth out.”

“Tell me more about these people we’re going to see, Bonetto,” Leo prompted you, interrupting any defiant statement from your daughter. “Tanks and Arditi. Like we’re walking back in time.”
>>
“They’re the future of warfare, if I have anything to say about it,” you told Leo, “New tanks, the most up to date infantry tactics. You should have seen them when I first got here, Leo,” you swelled a bit with pride, “They looked like pictures in history books, not like a real army. They looked like our grandfathers might have if they served in their youth.”

“Or perhaps like a Gilician hill fighter.”

Perhaps. In equipment if not professionalism. Even that had changed by the end, though.

-----

It was good that the Twentieth Century Commission had gotten the troops up to uniform standards by the time you had visitors. What the average soldier used to wear really was more akin to militia than a professional army, and while they indeed descended from such, it was no longer dignified to wear casual work clothes when one had to at least pretend to project the image of their countrymen’s tenacity and their nation’s might. Leo brought up the lack of helmets immediately- you told him they were still on the way. The Emrean steel helm was good, but the shipping route was ever troublesome.

“Why not buy from Vitelia?” Marcella asked, “There’d be way less a hassle.”

“Nobody from Vitelia is selling,” you told her, “I don’t know why.”

“The people who’ve been most disrupted recently were of the arms industry,” Leo explained, “Army contracts dried up, and there’s still a lot of surplus to compete with.”

“Apparently not enough,” Marcella gestured to the fur cap of a Trelani rifleman, “Looks like there’s plenty of hungry customers still, ‘specially for newer stuff. Still not making their own, and it don’t take much to make a helmet if you make it good and simple. Now, where were those tanks you were talkin’ about?”

She and the rest of the group were shown quickly to a nearby platoon- their lieutenant informed of your intent here, and dismissed for now. Your daughter and wife were both fascinated- maybe they knew so little about what you did that merely seeing these things was incredibly interesting.

“They’re of Delsan make,” you said, “I don’t know much about Delsau, but they perform well enough.”
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Marcella wrinkled her nose. “I hear more of them making fancy cars than any military stuff. Guess they didn’t get ripped apart by no wars. Unless y’think that the King steppin’ down is a storm t’ recover from.”

Oh, right, that had happened, though in the days after the Emrean War you hadn’t been in a mind to pay attention to it. With the balance of power shifting so drastically, the royalty of Delsau found itself with few aristocratic friends in the north, and under pressure from both its own Emrean population and Naukland and Emre nearby, the King of Delsau’s last political decision had been to form an executive from his advisory cabinet and hold elections. Rather than burning in the flames of revolution, the monarch had passed into the pages of history with fanfare and festivals, hailing himself as a man of the new times, even if you were sure he wouldn’t have given up power if he could have held onto it for much longer.

“I didn’t think Delsau made anything but chocolate,” you said. Partially in jest. Plenty of things came from Delsau, that weren't relevant to common folk.

“They like to serve fancy tastes,” Marcella said, “Quick quiz. Where was the internal combustion engine invented?”

“Emre?” you guessed. Such a thing was hotly debated.

Marcella scoffed. “Yeah, they like t’ say that. Ask an Emrean and they’ll say anything good was their doin’. They invented flight, they invented cars, they’re the first t’ make food worth eatin’ an’ the first t’ have women worth screwin’. Psh. Nah, the modern engine was made in Halmeggia, same place where y’ get me.” She pointed a thumb to her chest, “And the guys who done that spread up to Delsau on royal commission, and they’re still there.”

Somehow you were sure the story wasn’t so neat, history was full of synchronous developments, but it was true that Emreans claimed responsibility for all good things. At least they had a right to such arrogance, unlike what little you had heard of the ill-natured easterners beyond the Reich’s mountainous edge, what some called the Imperial Gate, a new and presumptuous name for how ancient those great peaks were.

Marcella was never one for armaments, and good thing too, because the BDA-1/L was not looking to impress there. She demanded the engine be opened up, and she looked in, seemingly absolutely uncaring about the grease and oil getting on her clothes. Some people just refused to change.

“Huh,” Marcella said, in a little surprise, “I thought they’d take the engine straight outta the Zephyr, since they’re so close to Emre, but this is something else. Bonetto, did you work on the engines on the old C-2s much?”

“I left that to Luigi,” you said, “I don’t remember them very well.”
>>
“Ah well,” Marcella reached in, “To put it shortly, the C-2’s engine was basically a souped-up, high-performance automobile engine, not a tractor’s like the Zephyr. Funny how the tank called after the wind has an engine made for pushin’ dirt.” Marcella twinged and cursed as she tried to peek deeper in. “You definitely picked one that’ll make the mechanics hate your guts, with all the easy access bolted shut under a plate. Anyhow, that’s what this engine looks like. Made t’ go in somethin’ that ain’t as ugly as this thing is. So, another question, if your dumpy ass driver were t’ call the C-2’s engine anything in one word, what would he call it?”

Luigi was a rough natured and crude man, and rarely in a good mood. He had many colorful terms for a malfunctioning C-2’s engine. You tried to translate. “Delicate.”

“Bonetto, I knew your driver pretty well, and that’s not the word he’d use. But! Accurate.” She snapped her fingers and pointed in the same motion, “We learned a lot about motors in that war. The Delsans didn’t. These things break down when they go at high speed, don’t they?”

“The Delsans put strict limiters on them,” you said, “They don’t go very fast.”

“Sloppy. Guess it works.” Marcella got down from the back of the tank. “They break down easy at top work ‘cause they were never designed t’ have to put out the torque needed t’ move this heap a’ metal for a long time. They’re better tanks than I’d ever worked with, but they got the same problems when it comes t’ their hearts. I’d just hope these don’t have t’ do a ton of hard work.”

“I see.” You tapped a foot, thinking about how many of these had been bought. “Would you have suggested anything better?”

“What else is better?” Marcella shrugged, “Tanks break a lot, Bonetto. Y’know that. Just how it is. If y’want better you either gotta wait for it, or make it yourself.”

She was right. Nobody else was starting from any better, and for certain, this would be the finest tank force outside of Vitelia. Perhaps even better than Vitelia’s, if the talk about the funding cuts was accurate. Perhaps, though, such money was merely being funneled to causes that were more sorely needed. Dreams of Empire replaced with aspirations to do right by the welfare of the people.
>>
A few days later, this time without the women or any children, you and Leo went and trained with the to-be Armored Arditi. Leo pointedly noted that, considering the name and their intent, that some extra funding should be secured to coat them in armor plating just like both of their forbears. You found it extremely convincing, but the Trelani Republic was trying to tighten its purse strings after this particular reform- you’d just have to keep the issue on notice. In the meantime, the best you could do was make these men as hard and skilled as possible. Nothing drew funding quite like impressive demonstrations, and the exercise with the Kallean Army would be this summer.

“Too slow!” Leo shouted critically as he swept out a green haired trooper’s legs from under him and pinned him to the floor, “You stand on your heels like a vagrant begging for bread. If you wait for the enemy to move, then you surrender the initiative, and every advantage matters in close combat. Think aggressively, act on impulse! All the training in the world won’t matter if your instinct is to sit and wait!”

Of course, Leo’s build made most men hesitate. Even the burliest of the men in this infantry unit were squat and short like most men of this country were compared even to you, and Leo towered over them even more than others. Where you made quick work of most, he tossed opponents aside like they were mewling kitten climbing on his legs.

“You’ve certainly made them dread you,” you said as you took a break alongside him, “Was it a good idea to take on three at the same time? Surely they’ve lost any stomach to even try in a one on one fight.”

“Come on, Bonetto,” Leo shook his head, “Do you want Arditi? It’s even in the name. Brave to the point of recklessness, to not even fear death. Their confidence has to be blinding. The battle is not one of the body, but of the heart. Everything follows after that. One of my teachers told me once that it doesn’t matter how much bigger an elephant is than a mouse if the former is terrified of the latter. Marcella is a titan compared to a beetle, but she still can’t stand one flying in her face.”

“I hope to make these men more than beetles, Leo,” you laughed, “You wouldn’t mind sparring with me as well, would you? I feel like I’ve gotten softer over time, while you’re as great as you were in the Emrean War.”

Leo squinted at you quizzically. “Sure. But why? You don’t need to win your own battles, Bonetto. Didn’t you become something like a Colonel back in Gilicia? Your authority should be your strength.”

“I should ask the same of you.”

Leo thought, and frowned. “Alright, now’s as good a time as any, while we’re not being disturbed.” The rest of the troops, less than eager to be beaten around, had absconded to lunch. “To talk about this while we work.”

You really had gotten slow, and weak, at least compared to Leo. You could tell immediately.
>>
“You’re holding back,” you said breathlessly as he blocked another blow. “Come on, hit me.” A poor request. With a single open-handed strike, you were sent flying, the breath knocked out of you. “Judge Above,” you wheezed, “Were you holding back with them, as well?”

Leo nodded. “I’m not as strong as I used to be, Bonetto, but not by that much. But also, the people who follow me now wouldn’t respect me if I wasn’t like this. Especially not with the stuff I preach.”

Politics would be much easier to match against Leo than combative techniques, you decided, though you went a few more rounds despite being humbled.

“Let’s stop,” Leo offered first, “It’d be rude to send you back to your wife all bruised and battered.”

“How could I ever repay you,” you rasped, feeling rather more sarcastic than usual what with having been toyed with still. Leo was more than just strong, just skilled, he was on an entire other level. He claimed to not be as strong, but if that was true, then Vitelia had once had one of the most horrifyingly strong soldiers in history fighting for it once, only for him to go and teach school instead. “Tell me about your theory, Leo. That thing about, what was it, something to do with Niedhardt’s theory?”

“Niedhardt’s Summus Hominem, yes,” Leo said, “You remember him from our philosophy courses. A man of the Reich, the same era as Anton Ange, though on other ends of the continent. His theory was that of the Highest Man, the endpoint of humanity, what all men should aspire towards. A place people by nature do not aspire to.”

“The Übermensch, in New Nauk, yes. He believed humanity’s peak was to ascend beyond society and worldly value.”

“That is the root of my theory of the Suprahominem,” Leo said, “Niedhardt was no revolutionary. His idea of the peak of mankind was that of internal perfection, a pursuit of either nobles or aesthetes, not the common, average man. A self-centered existence. As one might expect from a neurotic, asocial depressed man as him. I think that such a mindset is unsuitable for the dawn, don’t you, Bonetto?”

“The arrival of the Dawn is a happy thing. Something to look forward to.”

“Indeed. But it will take much labor and courage to get to that tomorrow. Such is the purpose of my theory, my hypothetical man. Niedhardt’s superman is unsuitable, so my proposal is that of the Being Beyond Man. An entirely new creature. Or, I have also called that being the Revolutionary Man.”

“So this Revolutionary Man,” you followed on, “He is an apex of humanity?”

“Further beyond,” Leo said.

“Even further,” you said, “and his role is not enlightenment or ascendance, but to lead the people of the world forth into Utopia by example, in a way?”
>>
“That would be the sum of it, yes.” Leo stared into your eyes, “Throughout my life, Bonetto, I’ve learned something. Most people want their lives to be safe, stable, and peaceful, and sometimes they’ll sacrifice some things just for a little bit of each, or a feeling of it. Most people don’t have the drive, the force of will to try and change things unless they think they can do it without losing anything, or if they think they have nothing to lose, anyways. I’ve always been expected to lead the charge. I’ve always been counted on to fight and win. It’s made me see, Bonetto, why there’s things like kings and kaisers. People see strong people as their heroes, and raise them up. Each time, when there’s been a monarch, their family lingers and persists, weakening, growing feeble, until they’re replaced or another strong one of their line is born. They are Niedhardt’s supermen, in a way. They reach the apex, but never dare to cross beyond. They are still locked up, where the Suprahominem would break beyond…”

“So you are the Revolutionary Man,” you surmised.

“Don’t get me wrong, Bonetto,” Leo said, “I’d rather not be. But everybody who’s had my best interests in mind has always told me to reach as high as I can, to strive to be all I can be. Now that I’m in a position to do that, and everybody wants me to, the only thing that makes sense is for me to go above and beyond. Hell, you told me that I could do so much more good for Vitelia from a higher place, instead of being in the rank and file. I’m in a place to reach the top and use it as a stepping stone for something further, not to be a king, not to be a champion, but to raise the whole of the world by lifting up the sky. What do you think?”

It was complicated. You’d never actually predicted this- plenty of talk in the Young Futurists Club had been about what would happen, what it would be like, and yes, there were aspirations of Revolution, but staring in the face of this made you realize just how little you had truly expected to make it this far. Though perhaps, that was what made you and Leo exceptional, in some cynical way of looking at it. Here, in this moment, in this time that had been manufactured by you both, you had a glimpse of a future you had only dared dream of once.

Though, could you say that it was truly yourself, and not the many pushing up from below, the many who blew about you in the stormy seas of history and its making?

The way Leo looked at you, he had a certainty of his theory, but he also saw you as an equal, not a lesser. If he called himself a Revolutionary Man, then, he surely thought of you as one as well. He wanted to know of your own beliefs…and what you thought of his.

>?
>>
>>5908330
>“So you are the Revolutionary Man,” you surmised.
Dropped
>>
>>5908330
>"There's nothing wrong with the idea, and it may well be our fate to push us all forward. But what happens when you fall? Despite what we may be now, one day we will fall, through ordinary failure or the inevitability of death, so then what will happen to the sky we've worked so hard to hold up? No, while it may be desirable to take the whole of the world on our shoulders and carry it into the dawn, the only way that dawn can be true and bright is if all men carry the weight of it. Each and every man, or at least the vast majority, must be made to see and understand the necessity of becoming these figures and institutions must be created to drag even the weakest of us upwards and into the light of dawn. Indeed, when the revolution comes we will be at odds with the world of today. We will need not only our own strength but the strength of every man unified under one vision to truly prosper."

TL;DR: No one man can have all that power for even if they can be trusted with it and use it to always do what is best for the Dawn, death WILL come and then there will be nothing. Such superiors must act as leaders and teachers for sure, but it is only through the elevation of as many as possible that society as a whole can advance into the Dawn.

I also tried to work in the elements from our vote about Bonetto's manifesto:
>What torch must your Dawn bear? Power.
>What can your Utopia not suffer? The Fiend of Individuality.
>>
>>5908330
>It was not truly so different from what you believed. When you had written your manifesto there was a similar essence to it. There will inevitably be conflict, and as such one would need strength and strong people to bring about the Dawn.
>Nothing in your manifesto speaks against the establishment of a Revolutionary Man, in fact it can be spread about so that others may reach such heights as well both by our example and the institutions we create.
>Tell him that you've supported each other before, and will be happy to help him again. One would need a united front in order to fully get rid of the inter-conflicts of individuality and greed, to establish a united Vitelia under a single national identity. You will be honored to continue being his friend and comrade, fighting by his side to establish Utopia.
Bonetto, in his manifesto, wrote about the need to gain power and the fiend of individuality in order to bring about the Revolution and the need to keep our national identity.
Besides Leo is a good friend, almost as idealistic as we are.
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>>5908330
Blegh, it's always too early in the day to debate historiography in a quest.

I guess I'll support >>5908416 for now

From my perspective Bonetto's proto-manifesto is more focused on political ideology with its trinity of Power/Collectivism/Nationalism, while Leo's so far doesn't seem to say much about his actual platform- besides he supports great(er) man theory.

Of course this makes them pretty compatible- I could easily see Bonetto following Leo down the road of Fascism at this point, but then we wouldn't have a Civil War, would we? (Or least Bonetto being on the Revolutionary side)
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>>5908330
>You agree with him, both in essence and in form. There is a Dawn that must come, and if Leo and yourself needed to embrace the concept of the Revolutionary Man then so be it.
>There must to be both unity of mind and the need for power. We need to make society continue our beliefs even after our bodies' mortality takes us.
>Vitelia's national identity must be preserved, the body politic united as a single mind, and we must have enough strength to fight against our foes.
Bonetto's ideas don't really oppose Leo's or vice-versa. He's basically stretching out his hand to us metaphorically in this scene if I'm getting this right.
We told Leo to keep going up, and he did.

>>5908416
This is a good way of putting it too. I think you're saying that we approve from a philosophical standpoint and will help when the time is right?
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>>5908473
>>5908465
Basically yeah I agree with both you guys. Bonetto is definitely a radical of some stripe and his ideology doesn't really contradict the concept of an "Overman".
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>>5908330
>Sorry Bonetto, but I will be too tired from impregnating my mosshead to care about revolutions and dialectics
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>>5908499
You got the names mixed up there, pal.
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>>5908499
Ironically I think Yena fits the fascist view of the ideal woman pretty well (besides being a mosshead)
>>
Calling things in an hour.
>>5908403
Would you believe that I didn't have this line in mind from the start.

>>5908465
>but then we wouldn't have a Civil War, would we? (Or least Bonetto being on the Revolutionary side)
As a small look at the future, the Emrean Revolutionaries did scatter all sorts of places, and the Revolutionary scene's been having developments while Bonetto's been out and away from it. Things are still, as they say, cooking. The most impactful short term thing that results in the civil war hasn't actually occurred yet. Hopefully I won't need to wrap too much into thread 1, but I'm also not sure how big time skips can be without running past too much, too. This is sort of new.
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>>5908545
>Hopefully I won't need to wrap too much into thread 1

And there I was thinking we were going to have a thread 0.995
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>>5908545
>Would you believe that I didn't have this line in mind from the start.
To be fair the situation was perfect for it.
>>
Alright, I delayed a bit, but I think finally I can actually put out two updates in a day. It's been too long.

>>5908405
The place for the best is not at the top- your man must recuse himself from becoming a king.

>>5908416
>>5908465
>>5908473
We think similarly- and we can help one another, as to go beyond man is to forge the path of society, rather than simply being the man at the top.

>>5908499
I am no longer the Revolutionary Man. I am now the Flood.

Alright, let's wrap this all into something, I have a decent idea of what's what. Writing.
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>>5908502
Oops, blame my sleep deprived brain.
>>
You wanted to support Leo. He had never done wrong by you, never hurt you, and even when you had been driven apart he had come to you sooner and more often than actual family had. So far as you were concerned, as he was your children’s godfather, he may as well be family. He was all that was left for you from the Azure Halls- how could you not be allies?

Yet. A niggling little worm of doubt. What he was speaking of with this Being Beyond Man theorem- it sounded like the theory of the great man. A thing that some scholars adhered to, believing that change was caused solely by such people, and that history was otherwise static. It was hotly debated- yet difficult to argue against, considering how history was recorded and the ever incomplete nature of it leading to natural simplification and romanticism. Rarely told was the story of the countless who fought in the armies that won great conquests, the people whose labor enabled legends to be wrought, only sometimes, where somebody was motivated to assign alternate blame or praise, did such appear in a way that would be told in taverns for centuries to come.

Yet still, was there no room for both? A Revolutionary Man might be needed, a necessary piece, just like the whole was needed to raise such a leader, such an example. There was room, you decided, for that theory in what you hesitantly called your own plans for Utopia, even if you had not heard what Leo’s actual idea for that was. Merely what kind of person was necessary to bring it about. The light of the dawn had not yet been seen, only imagined, and so long as your aspirations were not corrupted, then why not continue as before, and press forth further and beyond?

What might occur, after all, if this divided you?

“I think that, together,” you said, “We will be strong enough to forge the future. I’ve always believed that you were able to be all it was possible for you to be, Leo. I’ll be there to help you when I’m most needed, even if I wasn’t there before. So we can bring everybody, even those who’ve fallen and can’t see the Dawn with us, forward into the revolution. So that, perhaps someday, every man can be a Revolutionary Man.”

Leo smiled at you. “That would be a bold aspiration.”

“Boldness is necessary to win.”
>>
Leo nodded. “I don’t mean to sound conceited, Bonetto. Even when I reach that point, to become a Being Beyond Man, I have no idea if it’ll be enough. We fight for the world, but our enemy is the world. I’ll need all the help I can get. I need you, I need Cesare…I needed everybody else too, but now…” He sighed and rested his square chin on an apelike fist. “I don’t want to be left with no choice, Bonetto. No choice but to be the one who overcomes everything on his lonesome, or else the Dawn might never come. Alexander never fought alone, but in his memoirs, he always thought he did. And I don’t want to be him, to do what he did out of arrogance rather than for the good of the future.”

“So long as you aren’t alone,” you put a finger into Leo’s chest and reassured, “It’ll be impossible for Alexander to rise from the depths.”

From there, you spoke of less heavy matters. The problems that Vitelia was facing, and how Futurist, Utopian solutions might solve them. The problems of societal welfare, those left behind and thus turning to methods of survival that impacted society negatively. The treachery of mercenary-minded capitalists, who thought nothing of exploiting the state and its people for their own small minded benefits (your own experience with arms dealers had told you that some thought absolutely nothing of subverting their brethren for silver). Then, how things might be restructured, reorganized.

“The King’s authority is barely used now,” Leo said, “and the noble estates run wild knowing his spirit is broken. The provinces meant to make Vitelia greater by cooperation instead undermine each other. It wasn’t always this way, but in this situation, their autonomy is doing nobody any favors except those who need favors the least. My idea is to subordinate any private estates to government representative authority. Not ground breaking, but that would also subvert the ministry and the Signore Delle Opinioni, who are appointed by these noble estates. From there, a proper authority might be entrusted with powers like the King’s. We’ll call it the office of Autarch, to rule alongside the king- then perhaps, only by authority of the people.”

“The Autarch must be able to be subverted themselves, though,” you pointed out.

“The duty of the restructured states, of course.”

“Of course.”

“The ultimate first step is to return power to where it ought to be, back when a strong willed and moral individual could hold the reigns. By the end of things, however, it will be Utopians appointed by Utopians, guiding a united people in a united purpose. For any of it to develop, though, it can’t be smothered in the bed by any powers making their last attempt to keep their ancient places.”
>>
“How would this reorganization occur, then?” You asked, “The Vitelian Future League is large, growing, popular and made up of energetic young men. Is there any plan to perhaps…use this?” You didn’t directly say what the use would be, but the implication was strong enough, and Leo shook his head.

“Not in that way, in the way they might prefer. I’ve been trying to get the Vitelian Future League to be more intellectual. More citizens than ruffians. They want to be rough, though. They like the idea of pushing everything fast, of getting their way because they’re right. They’re overconfident without having the strength to succeed. The opposite problem that you get with trained troops. They shouldn’t have to be soldiers, though. Just voices. Voices don’t have to shout threats to affect change, you know, but it’s taking them time to realize it.”

“So then these reasoned and passionate voices would become loud and many enough to compel a change by shift of popular opinion,” you assumed the plan.

“Yes,” Leo said, “But not for some time. The Three Points for example, they were weakened a lot, but they’re still in the process of crumbling. So long as people remain agitated at the powers that be, those against the status quo grow in number and conviction. So with that extra time, I want this movement to not be one where ever month I have to go around beating the stuffing out of any uppity prick who thinks that they run a Secret Family now, rather than fighting against them.”

“And how long will that take?” you asked hopefully.

Leo gave you a sympathetic frowning glance. “…Four years, maybe five. I don’t know, Bonetto. I’ve seen this country change a lot over our lifetimes, and some things fell apart faster than I thought, and some things have stuck around against all reason. What would really make people boil over though…” he sighed haggardly, “If another province broke off like Gilicia, that would make people lose all confidence in the authorities. They’d be forced to step down or lose everything.” He pointed at you, “That’s no invitation. I think that’s too risky to try and hope for. I’d rather this happen neatly, not having to scramble around getting everything as ready as possible at the last moment. I already had to do that when Marcella got pregnant, and I don’t want to think about what doing the equivalent of that with a whole country would be like.”

“I promise that I won’t make Vitelia pregnant.” You said drily.

“The rate you and Yena are going about things,” Leo shot back, “I wouldn’t be surprised if you founded a new country yourself.”

What a joke. Though it wouldn’t be a bad excuse to try out the Utopian Futurist concept…
>>
You continued briefly on- mostly to add your own input to the changes that needed to be made, largely in terms of priority...

>The distribution of wealth in Vitelia was abominable, and grew worse especially now. The nobles would have to be made ordinary citizens again- and they could earn honor through their estates being divested from them to a reasonable degree. They could do it that way, or be forced to return their wealth to the state less diplomatically.
>The authority of the state had to rise above all, or be built up to a place that it could do so readily. The blue bloods could keep their fancy titles and their old wealth for all you were concerned- but never again could Vitelia be ruled by anybody but the interest of Vitelians as a whole.
>The Vitelian Future League was a good start- but not enough. More clubs had to be founded, more ideas had to circulate, even those of foreigners. There was no shortage of utopians who were either isolated or exiled for their forward thinking, and they could be drawn to a new star on the horizon with enough support promised. After all, if all Utopians could be drawn to this cause, Vitelia might be the first place for the Dawn to become reality...
>Other?

Men started to trickle back in from Lunch, their spirits raised by their meals, and political talk gave way to the tactical. Instead of beating the stuffing out of them, Leo, now well acquainted with their relative strengths, paired them off, and over the course of his visit his schooling spread beyond your and his lessons. Fights were never fair, but by the time Leo would have to go they welcomed being the one who had to be “the one” against two, or several. Even the less capable men viewed it as confidence in them to test their abilities and their cleverness, and while they rarely won, their attitude about it all soared.

Leo admitted that they were not Arditi that he would consider complete, they would need half a year or more for that, but they were much more worthy than they were before to carry the title. For that, you had to thank him greatly.

When Leo and Marcella left, you couldn’t help but feel a bit sad that they couldn’t stay longer- that they were going back somewhere that you couldn’t, not for a while. Yet also, you felt oddly apprehensive, a strange feeling of nervous anticipation, like a storm coming on the horizon or a rumble before an earthquake. As if there was something great and fearsome that was going to happen, and you would be in no position to do anything about it. Like a bug floating down a river atop a leaf in the rain, haplessly riding it into the whirlpools round the rocks downstream.

-----
>>
Summer came- and with it passed the birthdays of all of your children, and the first signs of another on the way. Yena hoped for a daughter, but part of you was thankful for having some peace at night and in the morning again. Lorenzo would be starting children’s school this autumn, and Vittoria was starting to grasp both of the alphabets she was required to learn, even if she struggled with the tongue of the mountainfolk. It wasn’t required to speak it, as unlike Kallec further south, Trelan mostly communicated in Vitelian even between natives, but all Nief’yem had a cultural expectation to know their ancient language. An expectation extended even to those that didn’t look the part.

You had been spending long hours away from home- it meant you lacked much time with your family as of late, but thankfully that would be changing soon as the reason for your intense occupation fast approached, the thing you had been restlessly made to prepare and equip the men of the Special Armored Regiment for- the field exercise with the Kallean Army. The troops were about as ready as you could make them. The steel, Emrean make helmets had come in, round ridged constructions with no emblem or badge, merely a triangular ridge above the small front brim. You had pushed for armor for the Arditi, but the government had seen the budget for the changes made thus far, and balked at giving any more coin for changes not already defined and in progress. Despite armor being cited as a saver of lives, turning wounds into glancing scratches and deadly shrapnel into mere flesh wounds, the Twentieth Century Commission’s job had been to bring the Trelani Republican Army’s capabilities to a state needed to defend the nation, not to make it a powerhouse. Until anything further was seen as necessary, or so good to have that it would be mad to go without, the Republic had other projects that required funding. Ones that did not require a war to make themselves a useful investment.

So be it. It was hard to argue that a few cases of Holherezhan irregulars getting utterly trounced by newly rearmed territorials who sped them on their way with machine gun fire, was proper justification for yet more funding on top of the large amount already spent.
>>
The 1916 Iceforth Exercises began on the twenty third of July- even if the mock-battle was in and of itself meant to provide its own rewards in experience and analysis, the most effective leaders and units on the “victorious” side were still to be given special gilded medals and ribbons as commemoration- a very prestigious award for the Kalleans apparently, but a prize that in the past Trelani had only told morose fantasies of actually winning. Was it too much to hope for that your students and charges return with the stark white and gold and mother-of-pearl whorl of the Iceforth Honors? If there was any time for such to change, surely it was now.

You had done your best to prepare your personal pride and joy, to instruct them not only in personal combat but in how best to use each of their capabilities, told the tank officers of the weaknesses of their mounts that you had learned the hard way, right down to how to avoid catastrophe caused not by enemy fire but by one’s own overconfidence in their machine on otherwise ignored matters such as mud, foliage, and simple blindness and lack of situational awareness. Though there was one unexpected boon to the battlefield- taking place right on the plains of the border between Kallec and Trelan, the ground was open, flat, and wide. A perfect place for tanks that you’d never had the fortune to experience yourself…either the Kalleans would be in for a nasty surprise, or their visits before had failed to mar the veneer of complete confidence in victory.

>The Kallean Legion is a formidable opponent- but they do not know quite what has been unleashed to face them this time. I’ll need four rolls of 1d100, higher being better- the DC for them being 60, 70, 80, and 90. With each DC beaten, the other rolls get +7. The more dice beaten, the more successful the struggle for victory- 3 are required to prevail. Victory is unexpected by anybody, but if just one man could have a dramatic effect on an army, here is the place to prove it.
>Then after that you’ll need another set of 3 1d100s. You’ll never guess what for.
>>
Rolled 13 (1d100)

>>5908682
>The distribution of wealth in Vitelia was abominable, and grew worse especially now. The nobles would have to be made ordinary citizens again- and they could earn honor through their estates being divested from them to a reasonable degree. They could do it that way, or be forced to return their wealth to the state less diplomatically.
>>5908684
Rolling
>>
Rolled 78 (1d100)

>>5908682
>>The authority of the state had to rise above all, or be built up to a place that it could do so readily. The blue bloods could keep their fancy titles and their old wealth for all you were concerned- but never again could Vitelia be ruled by anybody but the interest of Vitelians as a whole.

>>5908684
>>
Rolled 41 (1d100)

>>5908684
>>
Rolled 87 (1d100)

>>5908684
The authority of the state had to rise above all, or be built up to a place that it could do so readily. The blue bloods could keep their fancy titles and their old wealth for all you were concerned- but never again could Vitelia be ruled by anybody but the interest of Vitelians as a whole.
>>
Rolled 50 (1d100)

>>5908734
>>5908684
And for the little one.
>>
Rolled 41 (1d100)

>>5908682
>The authority of the state had to rise above all, or be built up to a place that it could do so readily. The blue bloods could keep their fancy titles and their old wealth for all you were concerned- but never again could Vitelia be ruled by anybody but the interest of Vitelians as a whole.
>>
Rolled 2 (1d100)

>>5908684
>The Vitelian Future League was a good start- but not enough. More clubs had to be founded, more ideas had to circulate, even those of foreigners. There was no shortage of utopians who were either isolated or exiled for their forward thinking, and they could be drawn to a new star on the horizon with enough support promised. After all, if all Utopians could be drawn to this cause, Vitelia might be the first place for the Dawn to become reality...
>>
>>5908682
>The distribution of wealth in Vitelia was abominable, and grew worse especially now. The nobles would have to be made ordinary citizens again- and they could earn honor through their estates being divested from them to a reasonable degree. They could do it that way, or be forced to return their wealth to the state less diplomatically.
Aw, fuck. We almost had 'em. Guess putting up something of a fight against the Kalleans should be impressive in and of itself, though.
>>
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>>5908684
>>
>>5908782
Oh no it's retarded
>>
>>5908682
>>5908684
>>The authority of the state had to rise above all, or be built up to a place that it could do so readily. The blue bloods could keep their fancy titles and their old wealth for all you were concerned- but never again could Vitelia be ruled by anybody but the interest of Vitelians as a whole.
>>
>>5908805
2, SHEEEEEEEET
>>
>>5908682
>The distribution of wealth in Vitelia was abominable, and grew worse especially now. The nobles would have to be made ordinary citizens again- and they could earn honor through their estates being divested from them to a reasonable degree. They could do it that way, or be forced to return their wealth to the state less diplomatically.
>>
>>5908682
>The distribution of wealth in Vitelia was abominable, and grew worse especially now. The nobles would have to be made ordinary citizens again- and they could earn honor through their estates being divested from them to a reasonable degree. They could do it that way, or be forced to return their wealth to the state less diplomatically.
Fuck nobles, all my revolutionaries hate nobles
>>
>>5908684
>The authority of the state had to rise above all, or be built up to a place that it could do so readily. The blue bloods could keep their fancy titles and their old wealth for all you were concerned- but never again could Vitelia be ruled by anybody but the interest of Vitelians as a whole.
>>
Trying to make the state as authoritarian as possible isn't going to work if we still have upstart wealthy nobles trying to use said wealth to usurp the power of the state and corrupt the purity of the revolution with their personal interests.
They must be brought low and subsumed into the greater mass of humanity if they are to be rebuilt as Revolutionary Men. They will refuse to do it on their own and will have the power to resist as much as possible thanks to the wealth we've allowed them to keep otherwise.
>>
>>5908682
>>5908815
Changing my vote to
>The distribution of wealth in Vitelia was abominable, and grew worse especially now. The nobles would have to be made ordinary citizens again- and they could earn honor through their estates being divested from them to a reasonable degree. They could do it that way, or be forced to return their wealth to the state less diplomatically.

>>5908854
You've convinced me. We can't consolidate the Utopianist Revolution if we have more "Three Points" to contend with.
>>
>>5908734
I'll swap to

>The distribution of wealth in Vitelia was abominable, and grew worse especially now. The nobles would have to be made ordinary citizens again- and they could earn honor through their estates being divested from them to a reasonable degree. They could do it that way, or be forced to return their wealth to the state less diplomatically.

Either the above scheme, or alternatively safe and unhindered passage out of Vitelia with some amount of liquid assets and personal property if they choose to emigrate. I imagine quite a few of the aristocracy will choose to flee in the event of a successful Revolution anyway, and that way the threat of potential fifth columns post-war is reduced as well. They can go to Paelli or Halmeggia or Vynmark or wherever, as long as their involvement in domestic politics is over.
>>
>>5908861
>support >>5908684
>>
>>5908682
>>The Vitelian Future League was a good start- but not enough. More clubs had to be founded, more ideas had to circulate, even those of foreigners. There was no shortage of utopians who were either isolated or exiled for their forward thinking, and they could be drawn to a new star on the horizon with enough support promised. After all, if all Utopians could be drawn to this cause, Vitelia might be the first place for the Dawn to become reality...
>>
>>5908693
>>5908794
>>5908831
>>5908838
>>5908861
>>5908884
>>5908901
The Great Levelling.

>>5908697
>>5908744
The Authority of State.

>>5909183
Call in the Emreans.

Writing.

>>5908801
Funny how both sides agree on that but there's still a big fight over it.
>>
>>5908782
And you
>>
>>5908842
I just can't stop missing votes it seems.
>>
You observed the exercise along with a small party of other advisors, theorists, and concerned persons, as well as various military commanders. The more perceptive ones immediately noticed the difference not just with Trelani attendance, but in the difference between the forces, since as regional cooperatives, nothing was being kept secret between the two western nations. The average Kallean soldier looked noticeably similar to a Trelani one, though they preferred their caps less furred, but they also had a similarly modern armament, a familiar one. When you asked after it, you were told the reason why the Kalleans had the Vitelian weapons that you had been unable to procure, and it was because their own rearmament program had preceded the Trelani one by more than a decade, and they had very efficiently copied the Vitelian weapons they bought into their own local, if limited production. You even noticed a few Stachello submachineguns, that were assuredly newer, though Stachel was one of the few Vitelian arms manufacturers that had been exporting much, albeit mostly in specialist equipment such as the aforementioned machine pistol.

“I see that you bothered to equip your men for war this time,” a Kallean officer said to a Trelani one, “Have you had enough time to learn how to use these new Imperial toys?”

“You’ll be in for a rude surprise,” came the retort, “if you think you’ve seen every bit of evolution here.”

Cocky as all involved were, you still saw that the Kalleans were more experienced than the Trelani, and the latter were forced to maintain a defensive posture even in a pretend fight more about maneuvers and coordination than about individual fighting ability. When they encountered your Special Armored Regiment, though, they were confounded. You took great pleasure in listening in on an argument between those meant to decide what happened, as they did not believe that anti-tank rifles would fail to scratch these new tanks, until an overzealous Trelani man took a rifle for himself, demanded a live round for it, and demonstrated himself at fifty paces how a loud and large bullet merely put a thumb sized dent in the armor.

From there, the simulated Kallean line was thrown into imbalance as they only contained the armored push utilizing the direct fire of artillery. Your special unit faltered against this, but even on the defensive, they would be deployed to places in trouble, and the Kalleans found themselves unable to move them.
>>
The exercise was thusly a stalemate at its end- a draw. Nobody won, but more importantly, Trelan did not lose. You didn’t think that was very satisfactory and ending, with the Auratus War being a similar story of endless inconsequential results, but the officers and troops were quite proud of doing what had ever failed to be done before, in humbling their southern brethren.

The Kalleans were sore, and shocked, but you already saw them openly theorizing about how to deal with this vulnerability, saw them making interviews with the tankers and discussing what they were best at and what they were poor at. It was possible that they came away with more experience and knowledge than the Trelani had.

The result was, oddly enough, to your benefit. The result of neither victory nor defeat captured the fancy of the newspapers around the country, and criticism was easy to level at the government for not having provided just that little bit extra that might have pushed over things enough to get the Republic of Trelan an unprecedented victory over the rival Nief’yem from the south, who claimed their Dhegyar breeding made them superior in war as frequently as Trelani would claim such interbreeding merely made them ill mannered and odorous.

As for your opinion on the matter, you just felt secure in your present employment, regardless of the how any green hairs thought things should be. That your Special Armored Regiment had been the decisive factor between defeat and an even match was a candied cherry atop that particular sorbet.

-----

A year passed, and little changed when it came to your work- the Special Armored Regiment became better, more refined, and the Twentieth Century Commission made small, incremental changes where the meager year’s budget they’d been granted would allow it. The letters flew back and forth, and occasional visits brightened the days, even if they were only from Leo’s family and Elena. Yena wanted your family to come and visit, for your parents to meet their grandchildren and your siblings to see their niece and nephews, but to you, they had been gone for almost half your life. You were not in any hurry to find them if they did not seek you out, either.

It wasn’t something Yena was happy about. She suggested that, if Leo couldn’t get you back in the country by the time Vittoria became a young woman (around fourteen) then she should take Lorenzo with her on a pilgrimage to Monte Nocca, accompanying a venturing group.

“They should see their home again before they grow to adulthood,” Yena insisted, “They should see the Vitelia just as I got to once.”
>>
Yena, almost as much as having a larger and larger family that she had been denied as an only child with a singular parent, wanted to see the world. Not that she minded being a homebody, but it was a fact that Pietrecirchio was a much less exciting place than Lapizlazulli. Perhaps, when your next child was born and had grown to a certain degree, you could take your whole family on vacation. Perhaps extended holiday. Or maybe, even, you might move homes altogether.

On the seventeenth of July of 1917, your next child was brought into the world.

Ydela was born pale, but strong, with wispy and white-blonde hair- dedicated to Saint Nevosa (whom the Steeple of the Verdant Saint was dedicated to), who had been a convert missionary who dared to venture across the scarred westlands to the far west- and return, making the trip several times before being lost while venturing out into the maelstrom when it descended. Your second daughter thankfully wasn’t also named Yena as once intentioned- merely given that name for her middle, honored name. This particular birth was very difficult for some reason, and Yena was concerningly ill for weeks after, but to the family’s relief, she managed to recover, finally coming home after a month where the children had been constantly distressed.

It had been a frightening ordeal, however. If it weren’t for the city’s rather more developed medicine you weren’t sure if things would have been deadly rather than concerning.

Such would have soured 1917, but the Judge saw fit to ensure the birth year of your second daughter was not one shared by the close avoidance of tragedy. Later that year, incredible news came. Bold escalations in asserting autonomy by the constituent protectorates, demands of the populace and the governing troubles resulting in the dissolution of their Parliament, as well as the disgrace of what was lost in the Emrean Liberation, had finally taken their toll on the Kaiser. On August the eighteenth of the year 1917, Kaiser Pieter II’s rule came to an inglorious end, as he shot himself and died. His heir apparent, Henrik, was only ten years old. The Grossreich’s central authority was thrown into flux, and by all outside estimates, its collapse was imminent. Finally, the specter of Alexander might shatter into dust and fade into what must have been the first light of the morning…

Such lofty expectations would prove premature, and the hastily reformed Imperial Parliament gradually exerted control over the primary Imperial state while leaving the protectorates to their near-independence, but at the time, it felt like the closest the Reich had come to ultimate defeat.
>>
You had wanted to surprise the family with the idea of a vacation that year, but with Yena still weakened, you waited until the following summer, early in May of 1918. Vittoria would be turning eight years old this year, and was finally a measure more self sufficient than a very young child, able to properly help with her younger siblings even without either of you around. Though she had not gotten any less headstrong- this year in school she had gotten in trouble for getting into a physical fight with a pair of other girls over something petty. She had taken a slight over her hair color as an insult not only to her, but to you, and in the defense of honor had knocked some teeth out. Not a good way to end her year, but she was still a child.

That aside, you had planned this year’s summer holiday to last over the course of all of your children’s birthdays, even if Luigi and Ydela were too young to appreciate such properly. Though, also, perhaps it would be better to have some patience and wait a little bit, or to simply stick to the local area and not shake things up much this year. Yena had agreed to wait a few months after Ydela’s first birthday before starting on the next child, what with what had happened last year, but if you waited a couple more years then Lorenzo would be beyond what Vittoria’s age was now- and he was a clever, fast learning boy. It would make things easier, but who could say what might happen in the world as it was in two years? No matter when or where, though, it would certainly be a defining moment of your children’s youth, so it’d be best to think over the location carefully…

>Go on a nice holiday, a foreign excursion. Trelan was a place one got weary of after four years and nothing else of it…
>There wasn’t any reason to leave this country- or at least, the far west. Mountainfolk and their families were well respected here, unlike any other place you knew where it was odd at best. The beaches and mountains here would be enough.
>Make your plans- but later. The more of your children that were independent for any foreign trip, the better…
>Other?
Where to exactly in the case of a foreign excursion can be saved for then, unless it’s absolutely certain where in the world you want to go by a large consensus, with your memory good enough not to need refreshers.
Picture in the morning, too tired to finish it now.
>>
>>5909950
>>Go on a nice holiday, a foreign excursion. Trelan was a place one got weary of after four years and nothing else of it…

Emre- Lunaire or Jumelles would be fine, or if there's any major city/cities in the western third of the country.
>>
>>5909950
>There wasn’t any reason to leave this country- or at least, the far west. Mountainfolk and their families were well respected here, unlike any other place you knew where it was odd at best. The beaches and mountains here would be enough.
>>
>>5909950
>She had taken a slight over her hair color as an insult not only to her, but to you, and in the defense of honor had knocked some teeth out.
Based. As for the vote:
>There wasn’t any reason to leave this country- or at least, the far west. Mountainfolk and their families were well respected here, unlike any other place you knew where it was odd at best. The beaches and mountains here would be enough.
>>
>>5909950
>Go on a nice holiday, a foreign excursion. Trelan was a place one got weary of after four years and nothing else of it
>>
>>5909950
>Go on a nice holiday, a foreign excursion. Trelan was a place one got weary of after four years and nothing else of it…

This might be the only period the kids get to vacation overseas before Bonetto gets back into things, we should make use of it while we can
>>
>>5909950
>Go on a nice holiday, a foreign excursion. Trelan was a place one got weary of after four years and nothing else of it…
Emre sounds nice
>>
>>5909950
>Go on a nice holiday, a foreign excursion. Trelan was a place one got weary of after four years and nothing else of it…
>>
>>5909950
>Go on a nice holiday, a foreign excursion. Trelan was a place one got weary of after four years and nothing else of it…
Lets take the kids out
>>
>>5909950
>>5909972
Actually, fuck Trelan. This place is lame. Changing my vote to
>Go on a nice holiday, a foreign excursion. Trelan was a place one got weary of after four years and nothing else of it…
That said, I actually don't know where we'd go. Pohja lands aren't going to be very interesting *or* welcoming and I don't think we'd want to go to Kallec or Paelli. Sosalia doesn't sound like a hot tourist destination, either, aside from it being too far. Since Altskaeg is right out, I think the only real choice is Emre, but do we really want to go to Emre? Really? Truly?
>>
>>5910076
>Since Altskaeg is right out, I think the only real choice is Emre, but do we really want to go to Emre? Really? Truly?

>The entire trip consists of Bonetto commenting internally in his head on how this is nice, but Vitelia is *obviously* superior...
>>
>>5910093
>The entire trip consists of Bonetto commenting internally in his head on how this is nice, but Vitelia is *obviously* superior...
While intermittently dealing with absurdly smug Emreans. Ugh. Should we just rehash the mainline honeymoon, stay in Trelan, and go see the Iceforth Maelstrom?
>>
>>5910101
Maybe there's some cruise tours of the northern seas? Go see the Maelstrom, have plenty of entertainment for the kids on board, some stop brief stopovers around the region to cleanse the palate.
>>
>>5910107
That'd be nice, but the Pohja are being massive dicks and allowing piracy in the north seas, so it might not be very safe.
>>
>>5910108
I think we should just bite the Emrean bullet really, it's the one of the only parts of the continent we have really seen yet.

Besides Twaryi, but fuck Twaryi, even the Twaryians hate Twaryi
>>
>>5910112
Yeah, yeah, it's kinda inevitable so might as well get it over with. Though we did technically see Emre in one of the demiphantom dreams before it was voted to never do that shit ever again.
>>
>>5909950
>>Make your plans- but later. The more of your children that were independent for any foreign trip, the better…
I don't want to jump the bullet here. At least not without proper planning.
>>
>>5909950
It's a bit early for commercial air travel but do passenger airships/zeppelins exist yet?
>>
>>5909950
>Go on a nice holiday, a foreign excursion. Trelan was a place one got weary of after four years and nothing else of it…
>>
>>5910455
>It's a bit early for commercial air travel but do passenger airships/zeppelins exist yet?
For the wealthy, yes. Their commonality does depend on the nation of course, and the lesser distances involved does mean it's not, say, Atlantic Hindenburg prices.
>>
>>5909950
>Go on a nice holiday, a foreign excursion. Trelan was a place one got weary of after four years and nothing else of it…
>>
>>5909950
>Other?
No.
>>
>>5909950
>Go on a nice holiday, a foreign excursion. Trelan was a place one got weary of after four years and nothing else of it…

>>5910566
We are wealthy, aren't we?
>>
>>5909950
>There wasn’t any reason to leave this country- or at least, the far west. Mountainfolk and their families were well respected here, unlike any other place you knew where it was odd at best. The beaches and mountains here would be enough.
>>
>>5909950
>Go on a nice holiday, a foreign excursion. Trelan was a place one got weary of after four years and nothing else of it…

I guess Emre is doing better? Idk they're pumped up about having done "ALL THE GOOD THINGS IN LIFE" so we'll see
>Go see the Géant Solitaire island while we're at it. Could be nice.
>Take me on a Zeppelin tanq
>>
>>5909950
>>5910281
>There wasn’t any reason to leave this country- or at least, the far west. Mountainfolk and their families were well respected here, unlike any other place you knew where it was odd at best. The beaches and mountains here would be enough.
Changing my vote to this. I'd rather not blow our money on vacationing.
>>
>>5909950
>There wasn’t any reason to leave this country- or at least, the far west. Mountainfolk and their families were well respected here, unlike any other place you knew where it was odd at best. The beaches and mountains here would be enough.
Traveling for leisure is not what a true revolutionary anti-capitalist would do.
>>
>>5909950
Speaking of travel, does Bonetto have Trelani citizenship yet?
>>
>>5909950
>There wasn’t any reason to leave this country- or at least, the far west. Mountainfolk and their families were well respected here, unlike any other place you knew where it was odd at best. The beaches and mountains here would be enough.
>>
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>>5909956
>>5909988
>>5909998
>>5910040
>>5910069
>>5910071
>>5910076
>>5910462
>>5910735
>>5910813
>>5910846
Go on a foreign excursion.

>>5909969
>>5910844
>>5910847
>>5910852
>>5911229
Stick to home.

>>5910742
"No."

The idea seems to be going for Emre, but I'll have a selection up in the update. Should be soon. Despite the delay in getting to it it shouldn't be a long one.

>>5910813
>We are wealthy, aren't we?
For a government worker and compared to the average Trelani, yes. Not compared to, say, a business owner or investor. Much of the lump sum from the Gilician Alliance years ago is still intact, for example. You are not wanting for money, but not to a degree that you could, say, stop working for the rest of your life.

>>5911153
>does Bonetto have Trelani citizenship yet?
He is married to a Nief'yem, and all Nief'yem have citizenship. So, sort of.
Everything is dandy so long as Yena doesn't toss you out.
>>
>>5911407
>He is married to a Nief'yem, and all Nief'yem have citizenship.
So he has a green card?
>>
>>5911408
Somehow I don't think what you do with your wife counts as a job.
>>
>>5911409
Somone has to breed all those lascivious mossheads
>>
You had to go somewhere. Trelan had its good points- it was peaceful, it was welcoming to you and your family, and you were more gainfully employed than you might be able to expect from any other place, but it was not Vitelia, and not home. It was a tiresome place for you to have to stay for four years, and you had to go…anywhere else. Especially with all the changes that the continent might have been set to make. This year might be the last before something like a collapse of the Reich might launch the whole of Vinstraga into chaos (This consideration was before it was known, of course, that such wouldn’t happen).

A whole summer had been set aside- work wouldn’t demand you, and your house would be cared for as you took your whole household out of the country for a month or so. Was it self-indulgent? In a way, yes, but it was hardly any more appropriate to simply sit and rot because you couldn’t go home. Where to go, though? Besides Vitelia, of course, or Gilicia for that matter. Paelli was also not particularly receptive to mountainfolk, and even if you wanted to go to the Reich, no news that came from there lately suggested it was hospitable even to its own. A large, large portion of your accumulated assets would have to be devoted to travel if you went anywhere further than the west side of the continent, or to the north, though you had accepted such a sacrifice if it meant having a unique experience for you and your family.
>>
The first place that was a popular holiday destination for the whole continent, disrupted in its tourism in the recent decades but newly enjoying a boom of it, was the great light of the north, what else but Emre. A beating heart of culture and creativity, a wellspring of innovation and prosperity, and during the summer months, a pleasant and clear climate in beauteous lands. It readily sold itself- but what was less appealing was how you had to make your way there. With the Wezkatinbach view of its management of territorial waters, getting a ship to Emre should have been easy, but was not, from Trelan at least. The quickest way to go would ironically be to secure aerial passage from Paelli, who while not fond of green hairs, was a place said to be blind to all but the glitter of gold and the haze of incense smoke should either be in enough quantity. Undoubtedly the most luxurious of trips- you and Yena would certainly enjoy yourselves even if your children weren’t as appreciative.

Then, there was a closer and cheaper alternative. The Kingdom of Halmeggia’s relations with Vitelia had swung back and forth over the centuries, but to you now, it was a peaceful and pleasant place of culture and history with a warm Vitelian climate, and more importantly, Vitelian was spoken there commonly enough for there to be little barrier of language. Lingering until late July would even be to stay until a much-celebrated event- the fifth birthday of their crown princess, and the official first introduction of her to the Halmeggian people. Not that you were interested in the egos of monarchs, but it would make the place a lot of fun to be around.

The southern seas would have been interesting to sail down, but the Great Gales between Vinstraga and Zeeland only opened for a scant few years before snapping back shut in a rare but not unheard of blink event of the maelstroms- to the dismay of all thinking that trade and commerce would flow once again from there. Still though, despite now living rather close to them, you hadn’t actually thought about the Maelstroms particularly more than usual. They had ever been an abstract whose changing was a great portent, but Vitelia was just far away enough that it meant the ships came from elsewhere, or that the good were from another part of the world, rather than truly seeing the storms leave.
>>
So how could you not be curious? The Republic of Trelan was not keen, however, on indulging the curious. An exclusion zone was set up and carefully maintained to prevent anybody but those with special approval from going even close to far enough west to be in danger. The same was not so in Kallec. A vibrant band of towns was said to perch itself on the edge of existence, it was said, and for those seeking thrill and mystery, there was nothing like it. Usually non-Kallean cultures were shunned and forced to risk such things in Paelli, but you had a Nief’yem wife, and Nief’yem children. You were quite welcome in Kallec…though Yena didn’t like the idea at all. Mountainfolk of her strike considered the Maelstroms inviolable for a reason, and chose to never draw close enough to view where the land was marred, thinking it terribly cursed. Kalleans were a different stripe, daring and reckless enough to see such as a challenge, but that was not your wife. Perhaps your eldest daughter.

The world was vast and there were other places you could potentially go, though Sosalia and the east were going through a period of high tensions right now, and Naukland was even further than Emre while also lacking any languages you spoke, as even Emreans knew some New Nauk, while Naukland solely communicated in their old tongue. To go to any of the northern Pohja nations would be merely an exercise in foolhardiness, as if you took your family along, they could expect no good treatment. Altskaeg was a mysterious northern edge, inhabited by odd folk, but besides summer being the only season where the climate was tolerable, there was little reason to visit such a place. Paelli, while close, was also a place of gross excess. A place for rich socialites and degenerate honeymooners, not a family.

>The beacon of the north draws you- as it should. Would a proper Revolutionary not venture to the birth of the Revolution, as well as the heart of the world? Well, the second heart, as it had much to thank of your kind…
>Halmeggia would be easy to get to and good for the family all around. If you were to go out on an adventure, it may as well be a calming one.
>Yena might have been fearful of the Edge of the World- but you felt compelled to go there by the mystery. How could the rest of the planet compare?
>Other?
>>
>>5911459
>>Halmeggia would be easy to get to and good for the family all around. If you were to go out on an adventure, it may as well be a calming one.
>>
>>5911459
>Halmeggia would be easy to get to and good for the family all around. If you were to go out on an adventure, it may as well be a calming one.

If we have to go south anyway Halmeggia is decent, not like we ever saw the place when it wasn't on fire. Also we can show the kids the same sea as they would have seen growing up in Lapizlazulli.
>>
>>5911459
>Yena might have been fearful of the Edge of the World- but you felt compelled to go there by the mystery. How could the rest of the planet compare?
>>
>>5911459
>Yena might have been fearful of the Edge of the World- but you felt compelled to go there by the mystery. How could the rest of the planet compare?
>>
>>5911459
>Halmeggia would be easy to get to and good for the family all around. If you were to go out on an adventure, it may as well be a calming one.
>>
>>5911459
>Halmeggia would be easy to get to and good for the family all around. If you were to go out on an adventure, it may as well be a calming one.
>>
>>5911459
>>Halmeggia would be easy to get to and good for the family all around. If you were to go out on an adventure, it may as well be a calming one.
>>
>>5911459
>The beacon of the north draws you- as it should. Would a proper Revolutionary not venture to the birth of the Revolution, as well as the heart of the world? Well, the second heart, as it had much to thank of your kind…
>>
>>5911459
>The beacon of the north draws you- as it should. Would a proper Revolutionary not venture to the birth of the Revolution, as well as the heart of the world? Well, the second heart, as it had much to thank of your kind…
>>
>>5911459
>Yena might have been fearful of the Edge of the World- but you felt compelled to go there by the mystery. How could the rest of the planet compare?
>>
>>5911459
>Halmeggia would be easy to get to and good for the family all around. If you were to go out on an adventure, it may as well be a calming one.
>>
>>5911459
>The beacon of the north draws you- as it should. Would a proper Revolutionary not venture to the birth of the Revolution, as well as the heart of the world? Well, the second heart, as it had much to thank of your kind…
>>
>>5911459
>The beacon of the north draws you- as it should. Would a proper Revolutionary not venture to the birth of the Revolution, as well as the heart of the world? Well, the second heart, as it had much to thank of your kind
>>
>>5911459
Are Felbach and Fealinn Pohja states, or different people entirely?
>>
>>5911459
>Halmeggia would be easy to get to and good for the family all around. If you were to go out on an adventure, it may as well be a calming one.
We have to wrangle like 4 kids, lets have it be relaxed.
>>
>>5911459
>The beacon of the north draws you- as it should. Would a proper Revolutionary not venture to the birth of the Revolution, as well as the heart of the world? Well, the second heart, as it had much to thank of your kind…
C'mon, guys. We've already been to Halmeggia in Luftpanzer and we saw the Edge of the World in the mainline. Let's cross Emre off our list.
>>
>>5911746
I'd change my vote, but no one else will.
>>
>>5911746
>>5911463
>>5911768
I'll swap, though I'm happy with both.

>The beacon of the north draws you- as it should. Would a proper Revolutionary not venture to the birth of the Revolution, as well as the heart of the world? Well, the second heart, as it had much to thank of your kind…
>>
>>5911459
>The beacon of the north draws you- as it should. Would a proper Revolutionary not venture to the birth of the Revolution, as well as the heart of the world? Well, the second heart, as it had much to thank of your kind…
>>
>>5911459
>Halmeggia would be easy to get to and good for the family all around. If you were to go out on an adventure, it may as well be a calming one.
>>
>>5911459
>The beacon of the north draws you- as it should. Would a proper Revolutionary not venture to the birth of the Revolution, as well as the heart of the world? Well, the second heart, as it had much to thank of your kind…
>>
>>5911462
>>5911471
>>5911482
>>5911497
>>5911585
>>5911718
>>5911839
About fourteen years early.

>>5911468
>>5911469
>>5911575
The great gales- though no beaches.

>>5911516
>>5911528
>>5911592
>>5911630
>>5911746
>>5911777
>>5911790
>>5911929
To the unseen north.

Closer than I thought. Checking one more time after to see if I missed any or miscounted, but after that, updating.

>>5911637
>Are Felbach and Fealinn Pohja states, or different people entirely?
Pohja are mostly concentrated in Ohtiz, Holherezh, and Wezkatinbach, the region once called (and still called by some national confederationists) Pohjanask. So Felbachers and Fealinnese are different people, yes, though slapped hard enough with the cultural scourge like Sosalia was that they're more Imperial than what they were before, which was heavily influenced from Vitelia and Emre.
>>
>>5911459
>Halmeggia would be easy to get to and good for the family all around. If you were to go out on an adventure, it may as well be a calming one.
>>
>>5911982
>Pohja are mostly concentrated in Ohtiz, Holherezh, and Wezkatinbach, the region once called (and still called by some national confederationists) Pohjanask

Will you cover how they go Utopianist here, or leave it for when we go back to Richter? I figure that's something Bonetto would definitely be taking note of.
>>
Emre always made such a fuss of itself, even when no Emreans were present. You’d fought in what many called the Emrean Liberation, even if you knew no Emreans during it, and your Revolutionary cause was born in the beacon of the north. Your own firstborn daughter was named after an Emrean, so if you had the chance to go and see Emre, why not take it? Perhaps it would be like visiting home once more- albeit while having to speak a degenerated form of Vitelian.

The trip to take was kept a secret from the children until you figured out how to do it, then went over it with your wife. None of them had ever flown before, but far from the rather tight and bumpy conditions of a courier plane, you would instead choose to fly in a more fashionable, comfortable way. Aeronautics had advanced greatly over the course of the Emrean War, where aircraft were first used and abused in a military context necessitating their growth in power and durability, but the most relevant advance had been concerning lighter-than-air craft, airships. As they had lost wartime viability with the increasing capability of planes, the Reich’s formerly feared bombing fleet had been put up for auction in the troubles following, and airship manufacturers placed their hopes in contracts for passenger and mail liners- the hope being for them to fly south over the seas, but fate decided against such. Still, their accommodations were preferable to aircraft, so the wealthy readily took to them. The cost of such made you acutely aware of the difference in wealth between you and an actually rich person, and it made you physically ill to part ways with so much accumulated cash for something like a luxury cruise flight, but it wasn’t for your sake, you insisted to yourself.

Trelan was no place to find such things, of course. Instead, you would be taking a train down through Kallec, to the Paellan border, then going to the fields where one of their airship companies moored their craft, ironically going south in order to journey north. It was no shortage of new and exciting experiences for Vittoria and Lorenzo, whose vehicular experience thus far had been limited to trolley and automobile.

“It’s real big,” Lorenzo said, pointing to the engine that would be pulling the cars you’d ride south. “But it doesn’t look like the biggest ones?” Lorenzo’s speech had developed more quickly and smoothly than Vittoria’s, who had thankfully finally spoke without skipping certain consonants.

“What’s the biggest train, Lolo?” his older sister had given him a picture book about trains for his fifth birthday using her accumulated allowance- his fondness for them was why you now had a miniature rail line going around the center foyer of the house.

“The umm…” Lorenzo put his hands over his ears and thought before taking them down and answering, “The KR8.”

“And what’s this?”

“I forgot.”
>>
“Well,” you admitted, “Me too. But the KR8 is about twice as big as this one.”

“That’s really big.”

“It sure is, Lolo.”

“Lolo, come on!” Vittoria complained, coming to take his arm, “We came here to ride the train, not watch it leave without us!” She looked up to you, “Mommy says we need to get on, papa.”

“Go ahead,” you said, “It won’t leave without us, you don’t have to run.” A pause, as the advice was disregarded. “Vittoria Antonia Bonaventura! That means don’t run on the platform!” For a girl that had never seen a farm like you lived on, you had to wonder why she acted like she was raised in a barn sometimes…

Somebody with the clout you had didn’t need to negotiate much to show your older children up to the engine anyways, to watch the train’s crew service the engine, shovel the coal, blow the whistle- Vittoria would never admit it, but you bet that she liked trains as much as her younger brother did, considering how she preferred to play at home rather than out with the other girls. She played more with boys in general, even at school. The most she’d done with other little girls was hit them with sticks like the boys liked to do with each other, shoot them with her cork gun, not to mention the latest event of knocking their teeth out. Her favorite hobby as of late was getting herself dragged before teachers’ councils with you and her mother in attendance.

Better that she played with her brother than be around other little girls then, maybe. Lorenzo didn’t particularly like playing with other children his age himself, so it was better that he played trains with somebody. So long as she didn’t keep exclusively befriending boys when she became a young woman. You’d have to think of how to deal with that before it became a problem.

The new sights did not cease for the children, as when you crossed over to Paelli, there was a thorough inspection done by their border security, and they were of a sort of lineage that was impossible for your children not to comment on later.

One olive hued man squinted at your passport. “You don’t look like a mosshead,” he said to you, “You got some other papers?”

“They are my papers,” you said back, “I have no others that are not expired. Send a telegram to Pietranello, and I’m sure they’ll confirm it within the hour.”

The guard stared at you with a critical gaze that you were sure was related to your taste in women, then rolled his eyes. “You’re cleared.”

Afterwards, and thankfully not during the proceedings, the question came up.

“Papa,” Vittoria asked, “Those people looked different. Is the sun too bright for them?”

That made you smirk. “No, Vi, they’re Paellans. Their blood is that of the far west, of Zhantao and its surroundings. People from their have heavier eyes, and the hue of their skin is yellower.”

“Why?”
>>
You ruffled her hair. “The same reason you have blonde hair, Vi. People are just different in certain ways. You know better than to think less of them for it, don’t you?”

“They were acting mean.”

“Paellans don’t like Nief’yem, Vi,” Yena said, “Don’t worry about them. We aren’t staying near them for long.”

Vittoria’s face fell. “A lot of people don’t like us, don’t they. Is it like that in Vitelia too?”

“Not where we call home, honey,” you told Vittoria, petting her head. The truth was, in the northern territories of Vitelia where you hailed from, yes, mountainfolk weren’t well liked, but it wasn’t to the same degree that the Paellans or Pohja showed their contempt. It certainly wouldn’t be the case where you were going, either.

Yena touched the long sheet of emerald hair she had carefully cultivated over the years. “I do wonder, Palmiro,” she said sidelong to you, “If we could make things easier for ourselves if we all were the same color…even false blonde is fashionable.”

You stroked a long green lock from her scalp to its tail at her hip. “I see no need to hide anything.” Such was why you had lived in Trelan and not Gilicia after all.

The airship you embarked upon was painted in brilliant Pallean style of blue and gold, decorated in rich silk and brass, and had its name emblazoned on the side, the Drago del Sole, the marking of LS11 apparently not romantic enough for Paellan tastes. The crew, thankfully, were of a foreign expertise, as the skill to operate these craft had merely been borrowed, Imperial chatter going even between the serving staff on board the passenger cabin.

Most of the time, your family could be found on the glass ensconced observation deck, even when it was cloudy. The food was rather too rich for your liking, as part of the cost of riding was surely spent on the numerous exotic ingredients being used, but you were sustained well enough by the wonder of your wife and children. They probably would not have liked this as much if their first experience was aboard a two-seater rather than an admittedly small but still open arrangement as this. The sacrifices made for weight and space were hardly noticeable by your lot- maybe the extremely wealthy would object to a bedroom being little more than a closet with bunks, and a shared toilet space being a necessity, but that had just been life for you and your wife and children not all that long ago.

A large, detailed map occupied the back wall of the observation deck, with marks on it to show at what points during certain times in the voyage the airship would be at. When Lorenzo or Vittoria would ask where you were, you thus merely had to send them back to investigate themselves, and they’d run on back with excitement at their new knowledge. Most of the time, the view was mountains, forests and plains, but a couple of times the airship would drift over cities and settlements, easily located on the big map.
>>
The other passengers aboard were three other couples, one an elderly pair of Emreans, another a pair of excessively amorous youths from the same nation, and but one Paellan pair, who avoided you like you were diseased. The old Emreans were the most sociable, as the others preferred to keep to themselves, but they spoke New Nauk rather than attempting to match Vitelian with Emrean, so you and Yena were often the most engaged with them, even if they did seem fond of your children’s energy.

Finally, the airship made an extended circling pass over the destination, the capital at the center of Emre, the ancient city of Lunaire. Once, craft like you rode on had floated over this city to bombard it from the sky. Today, there was no sign of the war that had only ended eight years ago, the battles that had savaged the city before then. It was as though Emre truly had been born anew, but how long had it taken, you wondered, to plaster and paint over every shell fragment and bullet hole? How many unexploded munitions lurked, lodged in dirt or under a cobblestone? How many souls lived here whose nightmares brought them back to the recent past of this place with each night?

You saw the sights of famous places and buildings only seen before in photos and postcards, in paintings, none of them quite up to the task of matching the view of the city in early sunset. The Lunar Tower, whose alabaster and marble pedestal supported a tower of wrought iron lattices, which raised a shining silver-plated globe contraption at its peak which shifted to form phases of the moon. A testament to invention in the past century, if an immensely expensive work, and it had even been partially destroyed in the war and rebuilt since. It was extremely recognizable, but also relatively new compared to the other features of the city. The Place de la Republique, a grand garden that was old as the city’s past nobility, though touched by time. Where once a statue of Alexander had been torn down during the Revolution, and never replaced, an empty block its own symbol. The gardens reclaimed.

Older than the national gardens, there was a relic of the land before the Shattering, when the patronage of Emrean nobility to the church had raised the Cathedral of the Fair Saintess, whose construction had lingered for decades before the final touches and its ultimate completion were followed with the collapse of the Shattering. Yet more antique than that was the Red Arena of Nauk Imperial, restored to its old glory. Not to the old glory of the Nauk, but the ribbons and sculptures of the Emrean kingdoms before Alexander, which decorated the red granite worn round by centuries.
>>
There was more, of course, too much to possibly give a proper look at even on the slow spiral down, but each part of the city looked different, having been built and rebuilt, burned and scoured many times throughout history. Ruins atop graves formed the very earth walked upon in this place.

As though you had never known one another, all the passengers of the airship scattered near the moment you touched on the ground, pulled down by dozens of airfield crew. It was said in Emrean skies, flight had once been invented, the first pioneers of the sky having seen the same sights you had, albeit just a bit different.

Plenty invited you to remain in Lunaire, of course, but it would also be the place you would leave this country from, so nothing restrained you to this place. The summer coming up, with your children’s birthdays save for Ydela’s now in the past, the second week of June was progressing and thus it was indisputably beach season in Emre. That meant, you were insisted to by posters, that it was time for a swimsuit. Nothing that your family actually ever had- Lapizlazulli was on a beach, yes, but Yena didn’t actually swim. It seemed more a statement here anyways- particularly a suit that insisted on its own controversy- by barely covering anything. The much acclaimed (so it said) atom suit, so small that it could barely be seen…

“I do have to get one…” Yena said, her voice teasing at you.

>It screamed at you, didn’t it? Get the atom suit. The “smallest” kind.
>You couldn’t be called unfashionable here, it was a matter of pride. That didn’t mean you had to make your wife indecent. The “larger” atom was more suitable.
>Yena had ever walked the wet sands in a pale and light dress. Was she planning to swim? If not, what made this unsuitable?
>Other?
Also-
>Any color/design elements?
lazy vote I know but I don't have any more time now
>>
>>5912178
>You couldn’t be called unfashionable here, it was a matter of pride. That didn’t mean you had to make your wife indecent. The “larger” atom was more suitable.

A good compromise with the kids around.

>Any color/design elements?
Red and gold, the colours of the revolution
>>
>>5912178
>It screamed at you, didn’t it? Get the atom suit. The “smallest” kind.
Green, to match the carpet and the drapes
>>
>>5912178
>It screamed at you, didn’t it? Get the atom suit. The “smallest” kind.
No need to worry about the kids, they're Mossheads. They don't even have swimsuits. If anything they'll think it's weird she's not just nude.
>>
>>5912178
>Yena had ever walked the wet sands in a pale and light dress. Was she planning to swim? If not, what made this unsuitable?
There are children around you sick perverts. And sometimes more is less.
>>5912194
Either red or gold, both together would clash with green. Those are also the pan-African colors, so you don't want to imply that.
>>
>>5912178
>Yet more antique than that was the Red Arena of Nauk Imperial, restored to its old glory. Not to the old glory of the Nauk, but the ribbons and sculptures of the Emrean kingdoms before Alexander, which decorated the red granite worn round by centuries.

Didn't know the Imperium ruled over here, no wonder why the Nauks love to continue larping about it.

Yena had ever walked the wet sands in a pale and light dress. Was she planning to swim? If not, what made this unsuitable?
>>
>>5912178
>>Yena had ever walked the wet sands in a pale and light dress. Was she planning to swim? If not, what made this unsuitable?
Swimsuits are not practical or necessary. Next people will be demanding that we clad the panzer arditi in them instead of armor and send them off to battle half naked.
>>
>>5912178
Dunno if I'm misreading things but is Lorenzo on the spectrum?
>>
>>5912178
>>Yena had ever walked the wet sands in a pale and light dress. Was she planning to swim? If not, what made this unsuitable?
>>
>>5912342
It's just fatherlessness, Bonetto being around will cure it.
>>
>>5912178
>Yena had ever walked the wet sands in a pale and light dress. Was she planning to swim? If not, what made this unsuitable?
>>
>>5912178
>>You couldn’t be called unfashionable here, it was a matter of pride. That didn’t mean you had to make your wife indecent. The “larger” atom was more suitable.
>>5912342
Train autist, yeah
>>
>>5912178
>It screamed at you, didn’t it? Get the atom suit. The “smallest” kind
Red
>>
>>5912178
>You couldn’t be called unfashionable here, it was a matter of pride. That didn’t mean you had to make your wife indecent. The “larger” atom was more suitable.
Agreed on red
>>
>>5912194
>>5912456
>>5912526
Cover that behind. Make that cloth prove its worth.

>>5912198
>>5912226
>>5912472
Itsy bitsy, teeny weeny.

>>5912240
>>5912243
>>5912285
>>5912418
>>5912430
Consider the children, they shouldn't look at their mother and seen an Emrean rather than a Vitelian.

I'll call and update in the morning, I had an idea of rushing things and updating when I got back, but I'm too dry on writing process right now.

>>5912342
Give him a break, he's only six years old.
Though I suppose, if you want to think of things in such a way, you should ask- was Richter on the spectrum?
>>
>>5912178
>It screamed at you, didn’t it? Get the atom suit. The “smallest” kind.
Pink or green
>>
>>5912178
>Yena had ever walked the wet sands in a pale and light dress. Was she planning to swim? If not, what made this unsuitable?
Red and/or gold.
>>
>>5912178
>You couldn’t be called unfashionable here, it was a matter of pride. That didn’t mean you had to make your wife indecent. The “larger” atom was more suitable.
I think darkish purple will match her hair well
>>
>>5912571
>was Richter on the spectrum?
I don't know, but the voices in his head almost certainly were some stripe of retarded.
>>5912178
>Yena had ever walked the wet sands in a pale and light dress. Was she planning to swim? If not, what made this unsuitable?
Let's behave ourselves around the children, please.
>>
>>5912178
>It screamed at you, didn’t it? Get the atom suit. The “smallest” kind.
Red/gold
>>
>>5912178
>>You couldn’t be called unfashionable here, it was a matter of pride. That didn’t mean you had to make your wife indecent. The “larger” atom was more suitable.

Do we reaoly want another child so soon?
>>
>>5912571
>Consider the children, they shouldn't look at their mother and seen an Emrean rather than a Vitelian.

Counterpoint, Vitelians came up with the SNS suit so they can't really be complaining about who's more degenerate.
>>
>not wanting to see your wife in a skimpy bikini

Nothing but gaylords in this quest.
>>
>>5912178
>>It screamed at you, didn’t it? Get the atom suit. The “smallest” kind.
>>
>>5912178
>It screamed at you, didn’t it? Get the atom suit. The “smallest” kind.
>>
>>5912178
>>5912178
>Yena had ever walked the wet sands in a pale and light dress. Was she planning to swim? If not, what made this unsuitable?
>>
>>5912178
>It screamed at you, didn’t it? Get the atom suit. The “smallest” kind.
Forgot to copy the actual vote
>>
>>5912178
>>5912178
>Yena had ever walked the wet sands in a pale and light dress. Was she planning to swim? If not, what made this unsuitable?
Green.
>>
>>5912178
>It screamed at you, didn’t it? Get the atom suit. The “smallest” kind
Green
>>
>>5912178
>Yena had ever walked the wet sands in a pale and light dress. Was she planning to swim? If not, what made this unsuitable?
How about gold and green?
>>
>>5912605
>>5912835
>>5912882
>>5912932
>>5912939
I see where this is going.
>>
Alright.

>>5912583
>>5912635
>>5912728
>>5912807
>>5912862
>>5912932
The small.

>>5912605
>>5912613
>>5912835
>>5912882
>>5912939
The dress.

>>5912609
>>5912637
"Fashionable"

Fear not. I have a compromise in mind considering the contention. Updating.
Is the revolution about utopia or green headed women
>>
>>5912609
thanks, doc
>>
This is the most controversial vote in the thread.
>>
>>5912991
The two most controversial votes in Pasta Commander thus far:
- Do we betray Vitelia and join the rebels in Gilicia?
and
- Should we buy risqué swimwear for our wife?
>>
>>5913000
Don't forget what to name the kids in general.
>>
>>5913000
The struggle to free mossheads from the oppression of clothing is just as important as the struggle for liberty.
>>
Doing anything creative has felt like playing with duplo blocks lately, sorry. I'll have something out by tonight.
Though the amount of background that could use more coverage is concerning. I'd really rather this be the last prologue thread but you're not even back in Vitelia yet even with accelerated pace. It'd feel too messy to skip over twelve years too fast.
>>
>>5914540
We'll probably need another thread yeah. desu, it's probably going to be more
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>>5914540
The ride never ends
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>>5914540
Post WIFE
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>>5914540
I, for one, am ready for "PCQN - The Revolutionary Man - Prologue Part 5 (#0.998)".
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>>5914552
We ride the ouroboros neverending string of spaghetti
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It was hard to decide. It was obvious that one thing could be done anywhere, and the other, only here, but you weren’t the only one to consider.

“What is the matter, Palmiro?” Yena whispered, “We are in Emre, after all.”

“In Emre with four young children. What would they think of their mother dressed like that? It would be unseemly.”

“They don’t need to be around all the time,” Yena said, “Am I not worthy of such boasting? I’d lay no objections to you being bared.”

“Don’t be ridiculous,” you touched Yena’s back, “But that wouldn’t mean Emreans are deserving of the sight.”

A vivid scarlet sundress was decided on, with two layers that shifted tones in the sun- but for the other, for underneath, when the time was right…a green pair of scanty clothing that you weren’t even sure would fit on Yena. They made lingerie look modest, and seemed more suited to decorating an eastern tree than being put on a body. The “small” top was little different from the “large,” primarily in the brass piece in its center that connected the front halves, but the bottom part seemed practically incomplete. Whoever designed such a thing must have suffered a critical injury to their brain that destroyed any sense of restraint, but such an injury must have been contagious, for that same malady to spread to what was advertised to be a great many of the women.

Accommodations to try on the articles of clothing before purchase made the decision much easier, as Yena came out in the dress to show, to much appreciation, both genuine from yourself and profit-driven like the merchant running the stand. Or he could be properly appreciative. Either way.

“And the other one?” you questioned Yena.

She waved a teasing finger at you. “The river does not count as the shore, Palmiro.”

Lunaire wasn’t even close to the seaside, yet sold these. Presumably trying to catch tourists before they went north. Well, it worked. Though your children would largely be wearing the light summer wear they would have had back home anyways.
>>
From the Emrean ancient capital, you took a train east then north, to the twin cities over the northern strait, called Jumelles- a literal name. It wasn’t the closest shore, but it was the biggest destination for any beach activities, having all manner of coastal attractions, stones in some places, cliffs in others, and stretching up and down the peninsulas were famed red and pink banded sands, their stone progenitors worn round at their caps and poking up still here and there. It was no wonder that the twin cities were the destination for anybody with the wealth to set up shop there- it had all that could be asked for, save for until recently, availability. Recognizing its beauty, past Emrean nobility had made most of the capes a special preserve, a practice that continued through the Reich governance until now, where despite the Revolutionary parties losing political favor, new development that had been hesitant and testing before had exploded, and it had been made sure to inform the whole world of that fact.

Though, it seemed that preference had still naturally gone to those of means. Most of the beaches were still owned, and required payment to enter, and gendarmes could be seen at checkpoints and in between ensuring nobody got in without proper reservation. A step, you were told, to ensure that the beaches remained exquisite. If anybody wished to tramp about in the sand so they could scatter their garbage and fall down drunk, after all, there were many less pleasant plots of sand and seawater they could piss into.

Such a system had ups and downs, you thought, but it was impossible to deny that the measures taken had definitely had a much-appreciated effect when it came to keeping the grounds appealing for your family’s arrival.

The rules were simple. Keep to the designated stretch of beach near the condo (not difficult motivation) and that children weren’t to wander unsupervised to the north, or go north in general. It took no imagination to think of why, though it was a rather quaint reason if one were to explain the concept to mountainfolk. They always bathed in the nude in places where it was public to do so, albeit never with the other gender present, and always in mountain springs and geothermal pools rather than something so wide and open as a beach.

With your things deposited the first night’s arrival, you went out in the sunrise. You quickly noticed that, despite the “adult” area being to the north, the Emrean women on the general beach did not hesitate to display what they looked like in a “small” atom suit, though the balance of modesty was such that Yena did not look too out of place. The assumption, perhaps, was that a mother of four did not have the ideal body for such wear.
>>
They would be surprised. Yena was not particularly toned and fit, and most certainly not so when pregnant or in the months immediately following birth, but the cycle ever returned her to irresistibility, in your opinionated view, and despite being just shy of thirty years of age (her birthday landing on the first of August) she could put many of these skinny sand slatterns to shame in their own clothing.

…After four children through her, you had a certain investment, and a thankfulness that her body still fought tooth and nail against your best efforts to ruin it. You’d never wondered about it, but when she was questioned about it by the locals, Yena claimed it was her diet, the mountain springs, and her mother’s blood. Maybe there was a reason your hairline hadn’t started receding like Leo’s…

“This reminds me of old times, Palmiro,” Yena said to you, her hand clasped with yours as you walked down the beach, Vittoria and Lorenzo picking through the shore just ahead of you, looking for shells and stones. You carried a haversack over a shoulder with the things needed for when you would sit down. “The opposite side of the continent, and we’re doing the same thing. It’s relieving, isn’t it?”

“We’re not doing everything we did on the beach.”

“Not yet,” Yena leaned in close, “But we will, and I know better than to believe you’ll refuse.”

“Dearest, now’s not the time for such dirty talk.” She was holding Ydela just against her shoulder, and Luigi clung tightly to your hand in his fumbling three-year-old steps.
“Aren’t you glad?” Yena asked warmly, “Even with a minder around, Vittoria can take care of the other children, she loves being trusted so.” She might have overestimated herself as much as her mother did, though, considering she still slept with an increasing collection of stuffed goats. “I thought we couldn’t do as we once did without closer neighbors again, that I would have to wait until we were old and greying. I know it’s not what we came here for, but you cannot deny, there’s something in the air, something that rubs off.”

Yena was, you knew well from the years you’d been married, and the time before, a rather…aggressively natured woman in certain regards. You didn’t think any Emrean romance rubbed off on her whatsoever. “Emre has lost many of its people in its revolution,” you said, “When I attended the Azure Halls, some professors said that Emreans were so impatient that they hurried to have tomorrow come the same day, and were naturally neurotic. A product of their environment, he said, where the summer is not so long and the winters are sharp when they arrive. I could believe some of it.” After all, Emre was where the vision of the Dawn had been born, and the Emrean Liberation most famously fought by those who proclaimed to seek it.
>>
“They could wear the things they do now, in autumn and even winter,” Yena looked around to the other women about, most either her age or younger, that had been swept up in the popular and controversial wave of the latest beach fashion. “If they are hot enough of blood and heart, don’t you think?”

“The Emreans would have us all believe that particular angle. Defiant even of the seasons.”

“Papa, mama!” Vittoria cried out from ahead, “Come look at what Lolo found!”

Looking for a shell, your son had found one that was already claimed- a hermit crab that had huddled into its home, a cowardly creature.

“Can I keep it, papa?” Lorenzo asked you.

“No, not this one,” you said, handing him the shell back, “Go take it back to the shore and let him go. If you want a pet then we should get it at home. These crabs aren’t like the ones back home.” You didn’t even know how you would take care of one. Such creatures weren’t exactly arbitrary adoptions.

“Come on, Papa, pleeaasse?” Vittoria interjected.

You didn’t budge. Yena’s tightening of her lips already hinted at disapproval of taking in any sea creatures. Mountainfolk were not supposed to find such animals endearing, at least while alive. “We’re not taking the poor thing so far from home. Go back out and find shells with no owners, and take Luigi with you.”

“But Papa-“

“Vi, take your younger brother with you. He wants to see what you’ve been looking at.”

Vittoria sighed. “Okay, okay. Come on, Lui. Let’s go throw rocks in the water.”

“Vittoria,” Yena scolded warningly.

“What?” your eldest daughter wrinkled her nose, “It’s just water.”

“Be very careful,” you told Vittoria, “If you accidentally hit somebody with a rock it might hurt them a lot, and you can get in a lot of trouble if you make an Emrean angry.”
“I know,” Vittoria said moodily as she took Luigi by the hand, “I’m not a little baby.”

…Vittoria would always be your baby girl, you thought as she walked off. “You don’t need to be so strict with the children, dear. I’m here now. You can relax.”

Yena pouted and cast her eyes down to the sand. “My father let me wander too freely, and I was reckless where I shouldn’t have been. Things happened that would not have, were I not insistent on being a free spirit. I don’t want my children to make my mistakes. To have what happened to me, repeat in their lives.”

“That won’t happen.” In a tone that had a firm undertone of wanting no objections to continue this.

The children became of a mood to set down, and so you did, with toys, lunch, and towel cloths. An Emrean might have had a parasol, but no Vitelian feared sunlight nor being bronzed by it- though the sun seemed to shine just as brightly as home here, and somehow, Trelan was dimmer.
>>
Yena sat with her two youngest children on her lap while Lorenzo showed her other rocks and shells he had scrounged up in two messy fistfuls. You looked over to your eldest, who was absent from her mother’s side- by her own will, it seemed, as she was poking in the sand ahead of you. You got up, and touched her shoulder.

“Huh?” Vittoria turned her head and blinked. “What is it, papa?”

“Come on, Vi, let’s build a castle,” you said, “You and Lolo play with blocks too much for you to not like it. I even got things to do it with.”

A fortress of wet sand was soon raised, carved with square and round molds made from cheap detritus and carved to shape with misbegotten utensils, but the final product didn’t remain intact for long. For whatever reason, when it was all done, Vittoria wanted to put the pile of sand to siege, so you both pitched small stones at it until the walls had fallen and the keep had collapsed. What a miserable lord this imaginary noble of the beach must have been, to immediately have his grand estate conquered and razed upon its completion.

“Papa?” Vittoria asked as she picked through the sand for the stones again, ringing them around the fallen center. Rebuilding it stronger, perhaps. “Is the ocean like this in Vitelia?”

“Not quite. The southern seas are always warm, and beyond them is Zeeland. Emre lies at the edge of the north. Go north from here, and all you will find is the northern apex, the top of the globe, and there’s nothing there but stone and ice. And Saint Noel wishing he picked a warmer place to headquarter his order of goodwill.” The World’s Zenith had been selected, it was said in folk tales, for one reason- it was the one place in the world where, no matter how the maelstroms raged, one could find a path to anywhere else. The misery of the place enhanced the virtue of the stalwart Order of Saint Noel, the Wreath of Hearth Fire- forever unrecognized by any but children of a certain age and their parents. “When the Iceforth Gale falls, and the Zeewind Maelstrom vanishes as well, the Vitelian Sea, our sea, is unparalleled in wealth and beauty. A time will come when the sun rises on such times again.”

“Papa,” Vittoria went on as she completed remaking the castle’s center with a haphazard plating of stone and shell. More were needed to reinforce it fully. “What are you gonna do when we go back home? Not Trelan, but, Vitelia.”

It was hard to answer such a thing for true, but an eight-year-old girl didn’t need the details of ideal employment and money reserves. She probably just wanted to know what you did as a job because that’s what fathers do, rather than, say, plans to usurp power from the upper classes and institute wealth redistribution to break the both the shackles of noble influence and poverty at once.
>>
“We have savings. I’ll have something planned, but I’ll probably work with your godfather and his organization. It’s hard to say, but everything will be fine when the time comes. They probably won’t let me go back into the army again in Vitelia at least.”

Enough money had certainly been thrown the way of Leo and his Vitelian Future Leagues to merit some compensation if you needed it, not that you thought you would. Though, Trelan definitely wanted to keep its mitts on you what with the financial compensation for a large family of mountainfolk heritage.

“Papa,” Vittoria said, “Tell me about what it was like being in the army.”

“No.” A reflexive reaction. “Not until you’re older.”

“I am older. How old is older?”

“Thirteen.” You decided on that arbitrarily.

Vittoria didn’t like that. “Five years? But that’s forever from now!”

“You won’t understand until then,” you told her, “It’s not just shooting guns at people. It’s a lot of doing what people say, being in danger, and sitting out in the cold while lucky to eat something hot for dinner. You’ll find out about these things when you’re older, Vi. Have patience.” Whether or not she was ready to hear it, though, you weren’t sure if it was enough time for you.

“I don’t wanna,” Vittoria sulked. “I wanna be a soldier, daddy. I wanna know what it’s like so I know what I need to do.”

“…Why?”

“I remember it, not good but I remember,” Vittoria said, “While you were gone. When Mama was taking me to the mountains. Sometimes, she’d be afraid, and when she was scared, I was scared too. I don’t wanna be scared, papa, and I don’t want mama to be scared either. I wanna be strong and brave like you.”

You reached a hand to your daughter’s head and stroked her blonde hair. Her mother’s hair had not been more than slightly trimmed in years, and had formed impressive sheets of emerald tresses, but Vittoria’s scruffy hair had been kept cut to her shoulders at her insistence. At least she didn’t keep it at your length, despite her aspirations. “You will be, honey. But growing up doesn’t happen overnight.”

You almost wished she and the rest of the children would slow down a bit. Well, actually, Ydela could hurry up on that. Cleaning up after babies was a relief to not have to do anymore when they reached the age which they could mind their hygiene properly at. It was, however, something you had grown accustomed to, especially with the reality that new babies were not going to cease coming anytime soon.
>>
Vittoria squatted on her heels and contemplated the half ruined, half-built sand castle. “Back in the mountains, the elder always said fighting was wrong. They say the same thing in school. Fighting is wrong, killing things is wrong. It’s what bad guys do. But army men fight, army men kill. And papa’s not a bad guy.”

“Plenty of people think I’m a bad guy. It doesn’t bother me now.”

“But you’re not!” Vittoria protested sharply, “That’s why I got in trouble, and I’m sorry I got in trouble, but they was saying that my papa’s a bag guy because they heard you fought in wars, an’ then they said I got the hair of a bad guy, so…”

You hadn’t heard that part of the story. You had thought it was just the hair- Vittoria hadn’t said the other part when you and her teachers had the meeting about her violence.
“Mela should have said thank you,” Vittoria said in a sulking cooling down, “Her front teeth were takin’ too long to fall out anyways.”

“Vittoria…”

“I know…” She sighed and poked a collapsed wall with a painted wooden trowel that had been brought along and used to build it, “But…I know fighting doesn’t make somebody bad. It just don’t. Sometimes somebody has to get hit. But Papa…when is it right to hit people? You do it, and you’re good, so you know, right?”

It’d have been nice if Vittoria had wanted to play catch or something instead of making you have to articulate philosophy in a way an eight-year-old girl could understand. At least she wasn’t asking for the real answer about where babies came from. The truth of her conception- that she had been made on the kitchen floor of a dingy apartment while breakfast was burning.

>Violence is a last resort. It isn’t something to look for an excuse to do- and not something to do to feel good. It’d be best not to encourage your daughter to get into more trouble.
>Sometimes, certain people need to be hit, and there’s no other way to deal with a problem. It was just a matter of knowing whether or not somebody deserved it.
>The world was going to undergo a revolution, and that invariably meant fighting. Best to be ready for it- best to be ready in mind and body to fight. To live, in a way, was to fight, and was it wrong to live?
>Other?
Also-
>Play something with her like a normal girl?
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>>5915946
>Other?
'Everyone needs to be hit at least once.' Then just stare at her. 'Do you understand?'
>Play something with her like a normal girl?
No.
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>>5915946
>Sometimes, certain people need to be hit, and there’s no other way to deal with a problem. It was just a matter of knowing whether or not somebody deserved it.

Not that it should be your first or default option.

>Play something with her like a normal girl.
Frisbee?
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>>5915946
>The world was going to undergo a revolution, and that invariably meant fighting. Best to be ready for it- best to be ready in mind and body to fight. To live, in a way, was to fight, and was it wrong to live?
Daughter is based. There's no shame in being a soldier, and sadly fights are probably the only way to make bullies stop in schools.
>Play in the ocean or with water guns. Maybe with a beach ball or frisbee.
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>>5915946
>It’d have been nice if Vittoria had wanted to play catch or something instead of making you have to articulate philosophy in a way an eight-year-old girl could understand
Good thing we're a socialist, she might even be able to see the holes in our rhetoric.

>Sometimes, certain people need to be hit, and there’s no other way to deal with a problem. It was just a matter of knowing whether or not somebody deserved it.
>Play something with her like a normal girl?
It's the ocean. Go swimming. Throw her and her brother into the sea, the usual.
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>>5915946
>Sometimes, certain people need to be hit, and there’s no other way to deal with a problem. It was just a matter of knowing whether or not somebody deserved it.

>Play something with her like a normal girl?
Water fight
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>>5915946
>Sometimes, certain people need to be hit, and there’s no other way to deal with a problem. It was just a matter of knowing whether or not somebody deserved it.
>Play something with her like a normal girl?
House? Fetch? Number Blocks?
Let's go with tag. In or out of the water.
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>>5915946
>Sometimes, certain people need to be hit, and there’s no other way to deal with a problem. It was just a matter of knowing whether or not somebody deserved it.
We're raising a (slightly; she's still Vitelian, after all) less insane Anya here, aren't we? I sure can't wait for her to be influenced by us, get involved in the revolution, and die horribly.

>Play something with her like a normal girl?
The ocean's right there. Let's do ocean stuff.
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>>5915946
>>Sometimes, certain people need to be hit, and there’s no other way to deal with a problem. It was just a matter of knowing whether or not somebody deserved it.

Play Beach ball
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>>5915946
>Sometimes, certain people need to be hit, and there’s no other way to deal with a problem. It was just a matter of knowing whether or not somebody deserved it.
>Play something with her like a normal girl?
Go down to the water and draw things in the sand for the the tide wash away
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>>5916326
>We're raising a (slightly; she's still Vitelian, after all) less insane Anya here, aren't we? I sure can't wait for her to be influenced by us, get involved in the revolution, and die horribly.

I can see the future vote happening already, Yena is going to go ballistic.
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>>5915946
>Sometimes, certain people need to be hit, and there’s no other way to deal with a problem. It was just a matter of knowing whether or not somebody deserved it.
>Play something with her like a normal girl?
Dig a hole. Awaken her manly spirit.
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>>5915946
>Sometimes, certain people need to be hit, and there’s no other way to deal with a problem. It was just a matter of knowing whether or not somebody deserved it.
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>>5916457
As cute as this family we've built is, knowing how things work out in the end is going to make this absolutely heartbreaking.
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>>5916667
the tanq giveth and the tanq taketh away
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>>5916667
That's the true reason for a big family, so we have spares after the war /s
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>>5916701
Man, Bonetto's friendship with Leo going down the shitter is going to be enough cause for heartbreak for me. I can't imagine how bad it'll be if he loses one of the children (and then Yena b/c of that).
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>>5915946
>The world was going to undergo a revolution, and that invariably meant fighting. Best to be ready for it- best to be ready in mind and body to fight. To live, in a way, was to fight, and was it wrong to live?

>>5916877
That's why we should teach them to fight early on
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>>5916877
And then here comes the Reich with a steel chair once the civil war is over
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>>5917250
And the multiple warring states of Vitelia, can't forget about that.
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Alright my internet's finally back up.

>>5915961
The only game you play with your daughter is Punchies.

>>5915966
>>5916015
>>5916030
>>5916077
>>5916326
>>5916339
>>5916374
>>5916497
>>5916595
Sometimes, people need to be hit. I'll tell you later about such people.

>>5915974
>>5917207
To live is to fight, and it's better to win.

Updating.

>>5916326
>We're raising a (slightly; she's still Vitelian, after all) less insane Anya here, aren't we?
If you want to attempt such, I guess, she's got a ways to go. Hopefully you don't want to instill a similar Electra Complex. Or whatever it would be.
>>
>>5916703
Yeah, we already have so many that getting all of them killed will take active effort on our part. What genuinely is worrying is the fact that we haven't dawnpilled Yena and if the Revolution we start ends up hurting our senpai, I think she'll be extremely mad.
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>>5917789
I feel like Vittoria is the only one at risk right now, honestly. Doesn't feel like Lorenzo would ever go into a combat arm if he did volunteer with his personality, Luigi will just hit the right age by the present day and the rest will be too young.
>>
>All our sons look like mossheads
>All our daughters look Vitelian

Is the Judge trying to tell Bonetto something?
>>
“You shouldn’t hit people, Vi, but…sometimes, Vittoria,” you told her, “Certain people need to be hit, and there’s no other way to deal with them. You just have to know if they deserve it or not.”

“…How d’you know if they deserve it?” she asked, after thinking a moment.

That was more complicated. “You’ll learn as you grow up. Just try not to get into trouble for now, do it for mommy.” The tone had gotten more morose than you’d like for a beach holiday. “Come with me, Vi. I don’t think you’ve touched seawater in your life. That won’t do for even a Hill Vitelian.”

“I dunno how to swim…”

“We won’t go that deep. But you can learn if you want to.”

Not that anybody was prepared for this- you and Lorenzo had loose shirts and shorts, but Vittoria was in a blue dress more suited for the sand than the water at all- not that she had cared about messing up her clothes with mud or water in the past without being asked. As you all waded out, you found out the reason for the assumption- the waves were calm, and mostly dissipated by the time the water was anywhere but at Lorenzo’s chest height.

“Hy, Vi,” you touched your eldest’s shoulder, “You remember playing airplane?”

“That’s for Lolo now, not me.”

“You never played the real thing,” you said as you picked her up by her waist, “The mountain pools are too rocky.”

“Huh?”

“Pinch your nose, honey.”

She didn’t ask why, even if she should have- and as soon as she did, Vittoria went airborne, and Lorenzo giggled up a storm when she hit the water with a huge splash. You were right over there to make sure she wasn’t in some place too deep to stand up in, only to discover that your actions had been taken as a declaration of war. Whatever Vittoria did, of course, Lorenzo copied, and you soon had to tower back up over the kids to use your height as an unfair advantage in the battle of water splashing that ensued. Vittoria was thrown twice more, and Lorenzo, getting cocky, thought he might escape that. He did not, though unlike his sister, he didn’t like it- and cried out in panic when you seized him again.

When you came back ashore, Yena had a frustrated pout fixed upon you.

“Palmiro,” she said levelly, “Do not toss our children…”

“There’s no danger in it, darling,” you stroked Yena’s cheek with a finger, poked it. “The sand here is soft. I’d never do this back in Trelan.” …Were you going to say back at home?
“You scared Lorenzo,” Yena said critically, “I thought something was the matter.”

Your poke turned to a full hand on her head. “Relax, Yena. I promise I’ll be more careful, if it worries you.”
>>
Vittoria wanted to go back out to the waves again right away, this time, because she wanted you to teach her how to swim. Lorenzo stayed ashore, while you set to telling Vittoria what you knew. Hill Vitelians were hardly fish, but living in Lapizlazulli and being friends with Sea Vitelians meant one simply found themselves in the water from time to time as a matter of course- which meant knowing how to not drown in it at the first inconvenience. Yena was far happier this time when you returned without sending your daughter hurtling through the air once more- and Vittoria urged Lorenzo to learn what she had, even if such hadn’t been comprehensive.

You had time for it, even if you were spending more time with the children than Yena, now. She didn’t seem to mind. After all, you would have the evening for each other. Instead, while you showed your timid son about the water, you noticed Vittoria talking her mother’s ear off about what you were doing. Something she hadn’t done in some time.

Returning to the condo in the afternoon, you bought a pile of snacks for the kids, and arranged a minder to be at hand should any help be needed while you and Yena were out. Dinner was had before you left, some of the offerings seeming quite familiar to Vitelian shoreside food, though with more mind towards colder water creatures of crustacean variety. A variety of spiny lobster was said in not so many words to have aphrodisiac properties, though with it being served in bisque to all, you had a certainty that Emrean Thorn Lobster was simply presented as a regional cure-all, especially for an empty stomach.

Besides, it wasn’t as though you’d need the encouragement from a shellfish of all things.

As you walked out onto the north beach, you marveled at how…empty it was. Were you lucky, or was it some unknown custom? You brought it up with Yena- as she still had the dress on, despite the other article lurking under yet unseen.

“At night, the light of things otherwise unseen may shine,” Yena said with unusual confidence, “I know little of Emreans, but perhaps they prefer the protection of the sun’s light and heat.”

The dusk was still plenty warm, you thought. “Surely a people as passionate as Emreans would take to ghost stories more like Trelani do.”

“They are not simply stories Palmiro.”

“I have heard much and seen little,” you said with a shrug. Mountain mystics loved to spin tall tales and offer up random blessings and tokens for luck. Sometimes, yes, Vittoria had claimed to see things, but you brushed it off as the fanciful imagination of a child. “Whatever they are, I’d think Emreans would be fascinated with them regardless.”

“This place is marred by the regrets and anger of war and sacrifice, is it not?” Yena asked rhetorically, “I do not think any kind of people would wish to encounter the spirits left over of such things.”
>>
She had a point. If there was a spirit with you, it was most certainly one that tormented you with the past when conflict was your day-to-day life. “Then it’s the least those wisps could do to give us this stretch of coast all to us.” Even if it was possible the stony alcoves and hollows could be hiding those who were out but wished not to be seen. “Let’s see what this small-sized atom suit is all about then.”

Yena paused, and pulled a finger at the strap of her sundress. “Let’s set our things down, then, if nobody is here. It is…” she smirked a crooked and uneven smile of one caught off guard by a joke, “It is quite something. I am unused to the feeling of something riding up all day…”

“Riding up?”

“Look at this,” Yena said coyly, then she tugged on the dress’s straps and let it fall off of her shoulders, then her waist, and the rest had to be tugged down over her hips. “What do you think?” She asked, as your wife stood before you…practically nude, in wear that struck you speechless with the sheer audacity of it.

“That is…small,” you let out, letting your eyes feast upon Yena. It was so tightly and precariously fitted that calling it a suit for swimming was blatant mockery. You moved around her, and were more shocked by the back than the front- the lines holding the already skimpy lower part went around and down in a small triangle at Yena’s hips- and disappeared down the crease of her substantial posterior. Her full buttocks were practically exposed, when you brushed her hair forward of her shoulders.

Yena suddenly seemed a little unsure at your silence, as she looked down at her body. “Ah…it’s breezy for certain. That poster of the woman back where we got this…she was very slim. Skinny like I once was. Even if she is a painted picture rather than a bromide.”

“She was nothing compared to what I’m seeing,” you reassured Yena. Most of the breadth she had gained wasn’t to her stomach, after all. “If there were anybody else here, you’d make them feel a devil for looking at you.” You had spoken with the store owner about the poster woman, by his choice, not yours. The jacket and the planes are because she was a pilot, and one of no small repute, but you knew naught of her legacy after the war besides being the first one to don this ridiculous and lewd excuse for fashion. Perhaps nobody cared about her now besides such- the ending of the Emrean Liberation had left an unpleasant taste in the mouths of all, and you saw plenty of signs that, besides the good of it, the Emrean people had had more than enough of war.

You both laid down the cloths and set yourselves to lounge atop them, enjoying the sun’s fall into the sea and the whisper of the wind, the occasional cry of a seabird from far off. Yena tugged at her hair a moment, and turned her body to look at you.
>>
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“This is the way she had her hair, over one eye, yes?” Yena asked with a sultry smile, “Does it suit me?”

…It didn’t, in some odd way. “A scrawny Emrean need not provide an example, darling,” you said as you scooted closer and set your hand on her waist.

She accepted that without a word, and you lay beside one another, simply taking in the scenery. Yes, Yena was alluring, but she wasn’t making the moves she usually did- so you enjoyed one another’s quiet company on the red seaside.

“Palmiro,” Yena asked softly, and suddenly. “Are you…happy?”

A pause. “Why would I not be?”

“You’ve made me very happy, Palmiro,” Yena said, her arm around you holding tight, but her lips turned down in doubt. “But what choice do I have but to be? You were there when I needed you most. You’ve given us a family, I’ve seen so far beyond the place I was born now that I cannot imagine how small my world once was. I live because of you…but I feel, that where I have gone all over as a dream, you wander as though forced. You want to go home to a place that has forsaken you, but not for your blood family, not for your friends, as they can come over to you, instead. I want to do what I can, Palmiro, to make you as glad as you’ve made me, but…I wonder if I can.”

…It was true that she shared none of the fascination for the Dawn that you did. Yet you were united in other ways. You had been married near a decade, spent the prime of your youths together- had four children, who would surely be followed by more. Yet were you happy? You hadn’t particularly considered your happiness in your pursuits, for sure…

>It was no fault of Yena’s that you weren’t happy with where you were. It was really all your own fault- she was doing her best, and you appreciated that, but some things were just a matter of you not having the patience to stand the wait.
>Of course you were happy. What could you truly ask for now? The fanciful dream of Revolution did not have to be your sole drive in life- perhaps, it could remain distant, though not discarded…
>What made you personally happy shouldn’t be a concern for her. Not being completely satisfied merely drove you to reach higher and further. It was better for you, this way. More fulfilling.
>Other?
Also-
>You’re by yourselves, your wife is in barely anything, and you’re both needy. Indulge yourselves without care. Yena had certainly waited long enough for an exotic location to make love.
>This may be an amorous outing, but you did want to let your wife’s body rest- keep your fooling around to that of a less potentially consequential sort.
>Who said that being out and alone meant that sex was a requirement? You preferred a little bit of a solemn and quiet evening, right now.
>Other?
>>
>>5919574
>Of course you were happy. What could you truly ask for now? The fanciful dream of Revolution did not have to be your sole drive in life- perhaps, it could remain distant, though not discarded…
>You’re by yourselves, your wife is in barely anything, and you’re both needy. Indulge yourselves without care. Yena had certainly waited long enough for an exotic location to make love.
>>
>>5919574
>It was no fault of Yena’s that you weren’t happy with where you were. It was really all your own fault- she was doing her best, and you appreciated that, but some things were just a matter of you not having the patience to stand the wait.

Well not fully happy anyway, our life in Trelan is still pretty damn good for most commoners.

>You’re by yourselves, your wife is in barely anything, and you’re both needy. Indulge yourselves without care. Yena had certainly waited long enough for an exotic location to make love.
>>
>>5919574
Wow, I think this is the best drawing you've ever made. It's prefect.

>No pubes
Oh wait, nevermind.

>Other?
What is happiness?

>Other?
Swim.
>>
>>5919574
>It was no fault of Yena’s that you weren’t happy with where you were. It was really all your own fault- she was doing her best, and you appreciated that, but some things were just a matter of you not having the patience to stand the wait.
>You’re by yourselves, your wife is in barely anything, and you’re both needy. Indulge yourselves without care. Yena had certainly waited long enough for an exotic location to make love.
>>
>>5919574
>It was no fault of Yena’s that you weren’t happy with where you were. It was really all your own fault- she was doing her best, and you appreciated that, but some things were just a matter of you not having the patience to stand the wait.
>You’re by yourselves, your wife is in barely anything, and you’re both needy. Indulge yourselves without care. Yena had certainly waited long enough for an exotic location to make love.
>>
>>5919574
>>It was no fault of Yena’s that you weren’t happy with where you were. It was really all your own fault- she was doing her best, and you appreciated that, but some things were just a matter of you not having the patience to stand the wait.

>You’re by yourselves, your wife is in barely anything, and you’re both needy. Indulge yourselves without care. Yena had certainly waited long enough for an exotic location to make love.
>>
>>5919586
>>5919592
>>5919599
>>5919603
>>5919604
Disgusting. The fuck is wrong with you degenerates?
>>
>>5919574
>It was no fault of Yena’s that you weren’t happy with where you were. It was really all your own fault- she was doing her best, and you appreciated that, but some things were just a matter of you not having the patience to stand the wait.
>Who said that being out and alone meant that sex was a requirement? You preferred a little bit of a solemn and quiet evening, right now.
Let's not do anything that might get us nicked for public indecency while the kids are unaccounted for. Spending the night in a foreign police station wearing in nothing but a thong is not a good way to round off a holiday.
>>
>>5919612
It's mosshead tradition.
>>
>>5919574
>Of course you were happy. What could you truly ask for now? The fanciful dream of Revolution did not have to be your sole drive in life- perhaps, it could remain distant, though not discarded…
>You’re by yourselves, your wife is in barely anything, and you’re both needy. Indulge yourselves without care. Yena had certainly waited long enough for an exotic location to make love.
R E P O P U L A T E
>>
>>5919574
>>What made you personally happy shouldn’t be a concern for her. Not being completely satisfied merely drove you to reach higher and further. It was better for you, this way. More fulfilling.
>>Who said that being out and alone meant that sex was a requirement? You preferred a little bit of a solemn and quiet evening, right now.
Fantasize about our true love, the revolution, instead.
>>
>>5919574
>It was no fault of Yena’s that you weren’t happy with where you were. It was really all your own fault- she was doing her best, and you appreciated that, but some things were just a matter of you not having the patience to stand the wait.
Strisciando dentro la mia pelle, questa piaghe non guariranno
>Who said that being out and alone meant that sex was a requirement? You preferred a little bit of a solemn and quiet evening, right now.
By PCQ's time half the mossheads in the world will have sprung from Bonetto's Bonettino.
>>
>>5919586
>>5919662
I did not seek it but I found it nevertheless.

>>5919592
>>5919599
>>5919603
>>5919604
>>5919632
>>5919790
It's not you- it's me.

>>5919593
A warm gun.
A .38 revolver to be specific.

>>5919679
Don't worry about it.

>>5919586
>>5919592
>>5919599
>>5919603
>>5919604
>>5919662
Shag.

>>5919593
Swim.

>>5919632
>>5919679
>>5919790
Sulk.

It's probably okay to call this here and start updating since I actually have the energy for it. Though I'll probably only have a couple more updates and votes before calling the thread. Last one really did take much, much longer than it should have.

>>5919593
>No pubes
>Oh wait, nevermind.
If I held a vote to discuss your wife's grooming habits and your preferences to it then I'm sure the vote would be as savage a war as it would be autistic a choice to present.
>>
“What would me being happy mean, you think?” You asked Yena, “Is it having more than I deserve? Is it the freedom to do whatever I want? Or is it something I can’t think of unless I see the light of the Dawn? It’s hard to say what anybody can do, Yena. It’s not any fault of yours, or anybody. I’m thankful for everything you’ve done and continue to do, for all the good things I have, but some of my deepest aspirations…are things I don’t have the patience to wait for, and I can’t do anything else. It’s all that can be done, but I’m still not accustomed to the feeling of waiting in impotence.”

Yena frowned at you, and tilted her head. “Maybe you’ve a wrong view of things.”

“How so?”

“I see you, and I know what you do,” Yena said, caressing your cheek with her hand, her ring’s metal a chill against your skin. “I do not see somebody who is merely waiting. Simply sitting about like he is asleep, or a listless drunk. You might have wandered far from the hearth, but you have ever been my lion, Palmiro. I think that what you’re actually doing, is preparing. Being made ready for what is not happening yet. Why fight in a war that is not happening yet?”

“…I don’t know. Perhaps I feel like I wouldn’t be waiting if I hadn’t made mistakes, ones I should have known not to make.”

“Everybody makes mistakes, Palmiro. Awful ones. Ours are in the past, though…” Yena flipped her hand and brushed your cheek with her nails, “I do not know much of what is spoken of in your Azure Halls, yes, but I think I know that a Futurist should not be chained to a past long gone.”

Perhaps so. Were you much a futurist now, though?

Yena laid her legs across you, and put one knee up, pushed the ball of her foot against your manhood. “We’re moving on, and making you happy. I want to make love with our eyes upon each other, Palmiro, not in the dark under covers like we are hiding, and I know that you feel the same way.” She pushed and ground in a gentle circle, “You can’t keep the lust from your eyes, and that flatters me...too much for me to wait for night to fall on us.”

Yena would accept no further talk, and you decided that of all the things you had no patience for right now, the restraint of impulse would be the first addressed.

The atom suit was not much of a barrier, and you pressed against Yena’s crotch with your fingers, felt the crease, and stroked up, down, slowly, and the cloth grew damp as you and your wife pushed your lips against one another’s teased at each other with the tips of your tongues. You tried to slip your hand under the bra of the atom suit, but it was too taut against Yena’s chest- you seized the brass piece in between and tugged it upwards, and seized her breasts as they fell out beneath.
>>
Yena pushed on your chest with a finger- to make you sit back, and she straddled you as she sat on your lap, grinding against you with a single lascivious eye visible, the other hidden by her new choice of style.

“Shouldn’t we go to those stones?” You asked.

“No,” Yena said breathily, “Of course not.”

“What if somebody sees us?” The beach did seem quite empty, but you couldn’t be too sure…perhaps there were festivities elsewhere, judging by the boom and crack of firework some ways off.

“We’ve never cared about that before,” Yena said as she pushed against you, her chest flat against yours, “Mmm.” She kissed you once more, and you were left to figure out what to do about finally getting started proper. There were a pair of ties on the back of the suit, you remembered- and you found one to tug on. Pushing the cloth aside seemed improper, if enticing, especially when this fell away so readily. The green bottoms were pulled away easily, revealing another patch of green just beneath- you’d heard mountain women kept mostly clear down there, as to not shed much loosely into public bathing springs, but you’d seen Yena in several fashions.

Yena pulled herself back and looked across at you in breathless anticipation, but only for a moment as you admired her greens upon its valley, before she reached into your shorts and pulled you out, rising with the same motion, setting herself slowly down to mount you with a tantalizing embrace of her inside, a familiar and sensual warmth enveloping you as your lips locked again. She moved her chin to your shoulder, and rocked her hips back and forth, first as slow as the waves behind you, but then quickening in pace, rising with the panting of her breath. She pushed, insisted, she pleaded and scratched.

Yena grew tired, so you put her down on her side and did your fair share of the work, her thigh grasped tautly and raised up over your hip, soft whispers in Yena’s ear punctuating each thrust into her. You grew lost in one another, and you soon cared nothing for any person besides the one whom you were inside of.

Yena recovered her stamina, and once more, stroked your chest, put her face into your neck, let you sit back. This time when she straddled you, she faced away, and she pushed back and forth with a new and fierce vigor. Her hums and pants became cries and moans, sweat slicked her from shoulders to waist, and you felt your body insisting upon the finale. This was practiced and proper, though- you hesitated and waited, clenched your teeth and gripped Yena’s waist, until you finally felt her lift and fall with a final extended sigh, the feeling of her twitching and spasms tingling over your manhood, and you relinquished all control as you found her nape under her hair and bit down, hard enough to feel, soft enough for your teeth to only graze her, as blinding pleasure overtook any other senses.
>>
You didn’t even noticed that both of you had rolled over to your side again, Yena tucked within the curl of your body over her.

She turned, and you withdrew from her, a small trail of your seed running down her thigh from within- Yena turned on her knees and embraced you again, her head on your breast.

“…” She was silent save for labored breathing, until she breathed out quietly, “I love you so much, Palmiro…”

It was repeating what you had already spent the past twenty minutes saying to one another.

“Yena,” you said to your wife as you ran your hand down her back and over her bottom, “Let’s go out to the sea.”

“Ah…” Yena shifted against you, “I do not know how to swim in the sea…”

“You don’t need to know. Just come and feel the waves against your legs. We can’t go back to the children stinking of sex.”

“I suppose…though you’re on more than my legs…” Yena put herself on her knees, then rose to her feet. “…That wasn’t all of it, was it?”

Ah. So it was that way, then. “Of course not. Come along.” You took her by her hand, then paused. “…Aren’t you going to put the suit back on?”

Yena looked to the discarded bottom piece laying on the scrunched towel, then back to you, and put her breasts back into her top. “It matters little right now, does it not?”

From behind, perhaps nobody would have been able to tell whether or not Yena had the briefs portion on or not, but from in front… “Maybe not,” you allowed. Perhaps it would have been risking it washing away soon, anyways. Yena took the lead ahead of you now- less afraid of the water, it seemed, with proper motivation.

That did turn out to be the case- you stood out in the water with one another, hands held, watching the night slip over the sea, and then you had sex in the surf, standing, then lifting, then carrying Yena back once more, even messier than you had embarked on that journey. More flirting, more pillow talk, more kissing- and under the moonlight, your excursion ended with the feeling of Yena’s lips pushed against the root of your manhood and her tongue caressing what it could, as you both lay on the ground, yourself stroking her hair with one hand and curving your fingers through her atom suit with the other, as you carried one another into a third climax.

“If only,” Yena sighed afterwards, “We could fall asleep out here…and do it all again in the sunrise.”

“We could,” you suggested playfully, “You are too good of a mother to be tempted, though.”

“…It is extremely tempting,” Yena murmured, “But I am as you say I am.” Her voice was exhausted, but she had a gleaming smile in her eyes, and a tilt to the corners of her mouth that resisted any fatigue.
>>
Some said, even if you struggled to find your own happiness, that a happy wife was a happy life. For now, you agreed- especially given that Yena’s satisfaction here was shared with yourself. There were far worse things for a wife to be insistent upon than a lewd evening to share…

-----

You returned late, and the children were already put to sleep in bed- the minder was paid a bonus, and you and Yena went quickly to sleep yourselves.

Your dreams did not match the bliss and pleasure of the hours before.

When you awoke, thankfully, it was more than to the end of awful dreams- it was to the feeling of Yena’s mouth once again on your member. She noticed you opening your eyes, winked, then lifted her head up- smiled at you again, wiping her mouth. “Good morning, darling,” she said sweetly.

“Dearest,” you sat up and leaned forward, “Was last night not enough? You’ll spoil the taste of the breakfast…”

Yena gave you a quizzical stare. “This is that, today. If I’m to wear that suit any more days I’d be embarrassed if I had a paunch.”

You remembered again; how insistent Yena had been on wanting to provide you happiness. Was that what this was? An overbearing attempt to keep your spirits raised? “A slice of bread and coffee with cream might sit better in the morning.”

Yena closed her eyes and raised a lecturing finger. “My my, Palmiro, you should know by now. The secret diet to youth and beauty is not grain nor fruit, it is love.” With that, she went down again with gusto. “Ohmmff.”

Nevermind that Yena would soon be having a different kind of paunch in the year to come. You should have expected such repercussions, but had utterly disregarded them in the moment, something a remarkable number of men could not criticize you for.

-----

This was not you and Yena’s first time keeping up an appearance of normality- the children were awake and none the wiser, even if they had the slightest idea of what had happened. It was only when you went out with the other guests to attend to breakfast at the central café and lounge that you saw some notion of…trouble?
>>
It was when a pair of constables with blue and white stiff caps walked into the dining space, and asked something short and stern in Emrean to the attendants- you approximated it as who called?

Emrean was a dissimilar language to Vitelian even if it had the same roots, though Emrean was corrupted by the influence of Old Nauk, so you could follow along a little, filling in the spaces where necessary with odd crossings to New Nauk’s similarities, to tell what was being discussed when the constables were called over to an elderly couple’s table.

“Yes, it was I,” the grandfather said, “I believe my grandchild witnessed a murder on the beaches last night!”

Silence and intrigue swept over the room as most turned to look, and pique an ear. One of the stern faced, round chinned constables passed an annoyed glance back at the new attention, but the interview continued unabated.

“He snuck out last evening, and he told us later that night in quite a fuss,” the old man said, “Saying that he had seen a Siren carrying off a lone man into the seas! He insisted that my old sailor’s tales were true! Well, my wife thought otherwise…as did I, of course.”

The interviewing officer took down notes in a pad, then squinted over at you and Yena suspiciously.

“What time was this?” the officer asked.

“Why, while we were out at the Sunlit Moon’s Fair, of course. I know not when he set out, but he came back before we returned. He was so excited that he thought nothing of confessing his misbehavior.”

“Which beach was this, as well?” the policeman asked.

“The north one. He thought that he was barred from it for no good reason. Now, while a child might see a figure like a siren dragging a man to his doom as but myth come to life, I fear the worst. That a murder has taken place, and there will be a body washing up on these red shores!”

The older policeman looking over you and Yena finally sighed, tapped his partner on the shoulder, and went to you.

“Yoo,” he said in rough New Nauk, “Where wah yoo on ze last noir?”

“The north beach, in evening,” you said, “We saw no murder.”

The constable rolled his eyes and went back to his partner. “There was no murder,” he scowled now in Emrean, “Let’s go.”

“But Lieutenant!” the other policeman interjected, “What if there is a siren, and a murder by one at that?”

“There is no goddamned siren, you dunderhead. Let’s go back to our post. Pickpockets love the early waking hours and they love better when officers of the law go chasing sirens.”

You felt your ears heat up at the realization- but they cooled when you noted too that the trouble that might have come for you had decided to disregard your silliness. Yena didn’t realize, and blinked in cluelessness- perhaps because she lacked the knowledge of certain mythological details that you had gained in your education on histories.
>>
“Sirens?” She echoed, “Whatever could he have seen?”

“Well, Yena,” you started slowly, “Do you know what a siren is? Or rather, what they look like?”

Yena shook her head. No surprise. She had a deep knowledge of her own culture’s creatures, both real and fictive, but she did not preoccupy herself with other pasts.

“Sirens,” you explained, also to the benefit of the now attentive children- you would have to be careful about this- “Are a mystical creature of Sea Vitelian origin, that they carried tales of from…wherever they came from. They’re beautiful, alluring women, who with their charming appearance and the notes of their songs, lure menfolk to the sea, to be drowned and vanish to the bottom of the ocean. Some say they become sea creatures instead of dying, others say they are taken to a kingdom under the oceans. But the original tales only describe them as bringing doom to the weaker willed.”

Yena nodded, but still had not been clued on a critical detail, which you now spoke of.

“Sirens are approximations of human form, and imperfect, so instead of hair, from their heads sprouts a grand mane of seaweed or kelp- given their objective, they would rather a more verdant shade.”

Yena then realized, and quickly, as her cheeks turned pink, then red, and then the rest of her face followed in turning a deep scarlet hue, and she clasped her hands in her lap and looked down. “I…I-I see…”

The two of you, however, were not the only ones now having a revelation. “Papa,” Lorenzo piped up a bit too loudly, “Is mommy a Siren?”

“No, stupid,” Vittoria said with a strange grumpiness, “I’m not half-fish, Lolo, and you aren’t either.”

Lorenzo hadn’t been asking her, though. He had, already, assigned you as the ultimate bearer of knowledge. Maybe Vittoria had spread the claim to him of you knowing everything…as a six year old boy, Lorenzo lacked the perspective necessary to even begin to question such, though he wouldn’t necessarily be the only person you answered concerning this harmless and silly question.

>Of course your mother’s a Siren, Lolo. And a Siren isn’t a fish. Too bad that being a half-siren would only benefit his sisters…
>No, your mother isn’t a Siren. She’s a Nief’yem, just like all of you. The mountains are the opposite of the sea, you’re from nowhere near the seafloor.
>Answer that he was a Vitelian- as all of you were- and ought to be proud of that. No creature of myth compared to the repute a person of Vitelia should command.
>Other?
Also-
>Is there anything in particular you want to find or see while in the territory of the capes of Jumelles?
>>
>>5920080
>Other
You're all Vitelian. And Nief'yem simultaneously, except the boys are half It's complicated- get your mother to explain to you how the latter works if you're still curious.

>Is there anything in particular you want to find or see while in the territory of the capes of Jumelles?

Have the Utopianists completely all ran off into exile? Would be interesting if we ran across a Debon or anyone really, sit around in a cafe and debate things like the old days in Lapislazulli.

Otherwise besides the usual sightseeing maybe a stop at the local Atelier, using our Commission credentials? Good to keep updated on the latest tonk and weapon developments.
>>
>>5920080
>Answer that he was a Vitelian- as all of you were- and ought to be proud of that. No creature of myth compared to the repute a person of Vitelia should command.
>Is there anything in particular you want to find or see while in the territory of the capes of Jumelles?
>>5920100 Suggestions are good.
>>
>>5920080
>Of course your mother’s a Siren, Lolo. And a Siren isn’t a fish. Too bad that being a half-siren would only benefit his sisters…
>>
>>5920080
>Answer that he was a Vitelian- as all of you were- and ought to be proud of that. No creature of myth compared to the repute a person of Vitelia should command.
>>
>>5919938
To be fair, she's older, married, mature, has four kids, and a mountain woman. Having hair down there isn't too big a stretch.
>>
>>5920080
>No, your mother isn’t a Siren. She’s a Nief’yem, just like all of you. The mountains are the opposite of the sea, you’re from nowhere near the seafloor.

>Is there anything in particular you want to find or see while in the territory of the capes of Jumelles?
Find a nice restaurant, top-class, one that you have to call for reservations months in advance, then slip the maitre d money for a table.
>>
>>5920080
>No, your mother isn’t a Siren. She’s a Nief’yem, just like all of you. The mountains are the opposite of the sea, you’re from nowhere near the seafloor.
Probably important he remember this before anything else. Vitelian excellence can come later.
>>
>>5920080
>Answer that he was a Vitelian- as all of you were- and ought to be proud of that. No creature of myth compared to the repute a person of Vitelia should command.

Vitelia Eterna
>>
>>5920080
>No, your mother isn’t a Siren. She’s a Nief’yem, just like all of you. The mountains are the opposite of the sea, you’re from nowhere near the seafloor.
>Answer that he was a Vitelian- as all of you were- and ought to be proud of that. No creature of myth compared to the repute a person of Vitelia should command.
His mother is a Nief'yem, they are all Nief'yem, but they are also Vitelians like us
>>
>>5920080
>Of course your mother’s a Siren, Lolo. And a Siren isn’t a fish. Too bad that being a half-siren would only benefit his sisters…
>>
>>5920080
>Answer that he was a Vitelian- as all of you were- and ought to be proud of that. No creature of myth compared to the repute a person of Vitelia should command.
>>
>>5920080
>Answer that he was a Vitelian- as all of you were- and ought to be proud of that. No creature of myth compared to the repute a person of Vitelia should command.
>Keep updated on tanks and military stuff here. Do some sightseeing too.
>>
>>5920080
>Answer that he was a Vitelian- as all of you were- and ought to be proud of that. No creature of myth compared to the repute a person of Vitelia should command.
>>
>>5920080
>No, your mother isn’t a Siren. She’s a Nief’yem, just like all of you. The mountains are the opposite of the sea, you’re from nowhere near the seafloor.
Niefishness passes down the maternal line, after all.
>>
>>5920561
What are you trying to insinuate?
>>
>>5920080
>Answer that he was a Vitelian- as all of you were- and ought to be proud of that. No creature of myth compared to the repute a person of Vitelia should command.
>>
>>5920080
>No, your mother isn’t a Siren. She’s a Nief’yem, just like all of you. The mountains are the opposite of the sea, you’re from nowhere near the seafloor.
>>
>>5920100
>>5920418
Nationality and Ethnicity are hardly mutually exclusive, after all...

>>5920103
>>5920215
>>5920411
>>5920443
>>5920506
>>5920542
>>5920654
Your blood is that of starch in boiling water.

>>5920104
>>5920428
Mess with your wife.

>>5920329
>>5920561
You're a niefer.

I won't be updating until tomorrow, woke up too late today. I'll cut the thread there, though, no need to try and stretch things to the very end I've decided.
>>
>>5920827

>>5920763
>>5920392

You missed a couple (not like it changes the outcome, but still)

Looking forward to thread 0.99 Part 2
>>
>>5920845
Right, right.

>>5920392
>>5920763
More green dreams.
>>
“No, Lolo,” you answered him, “Your mother isn’t a Siren, and you aren’t one either. You’re Vitelian, as we all are. A creature of myth commands far less repute than people of our nation.”

“Padi is a Vitelian too, right papa?” Vittoria asked.

“He is,” you said, “That he and us are all such is my point.” A thought. “Vittoria, don’t call your brother stupid. Apologize to him.”

Vittoria scrunched up her face and without looking at her brother, muttered something like an apology.

“Say it for real.”

“I’m sorry, Lolo, I was mean.”

Lorenzo hadn’t seemed offended before, and he remained blank faced still. “Don’t look sad, Vi.”

Vittoria frowned deeper and rolled her eyes. What a mood she was in, for some reason. It would pass- for risk of having her mother make her talk about it.

“You are also Nief’yem…” Yena felt the need to add, a bit sullenly. “You are of mountain blood. Do not forget it, as no others will. You have been blessed in a way that the eyes can see.”

Funny that, considering that despite being green haired, by mountainfolk blood laws, Lorenzo and Luigi were only “half” Nief’yem, not that Yena ever referred to them as such. Meanwhile, your daughters were considered fully Nief’yem. Even if Yena didn’t say it, she expressed it in clear language by the tattoo ever on her cheek. That tattoo’s directions meant that she was married to a “foreigner” and had had children. That would mean, to not break the line of mountainfolk blood, her sons would have to marry Nief’yem, or their own children would be considered not.

You wondered for a moment just what they’d think of that, what Yena would think, when time came that such a thing would be relevant to your sons.

“Mountain blood runs in all your veins, yes,” you said instead of speaking your misgivings aloud, “But you are Vitelian no matter what your ancestry.”

Trelan would have liked it if you relented to otherwise, after all, and you were not here to return there so readily.

For that day, you decided to go to the Sunlit Moon’s Fair, still going, though apparently today would be a quieter time than the last. Not that the children minded- this was all new to them. Trelan had its own fairs and festivals, but Jumelles had both its own greater scale and grace. After all, the Twin Capes dwarfed Trelan’s greatest cities, and the Emreans ever sought to impress the entire world, bringing about things never seen, plenty of them senseless either in idea or scale, but brimming with a spirit of invention nevertheless where even the Republican Trelan had a culture steeped in Mountainfolk tradition. It was refreshing to even see, let alone participate in this, though it made you wistful for home again- Lapizlazulli was a place of thought and evolution, but without such a degree of excess.
>>
Perhaps the Emreans could not be blamed for such. It had not been long ago that they had suffered greatly for a victory they had not known in many years, perhaps it was only proper to keep a victory feast going and going on.

The children, of course, had nothing but appreciation for everything being bigger and louder. A session miniature crank-powered automatic pellet gun cost far more money than was reasonable, even more than the overpriced wares being hawked by souvenir vendors, but it had quickly become Vittoria’s second most favorite animal, and you wouldn’t deny her a turn with it, even if your wallet wept for the wound you inflicted upon it so that she and her brother both could take a turn at pelting the target range with a storm of pellets.

It was hard to tell when evening hours actually came, Emrean Summers were longer and brighter than they were down south, though the sky did eventually turn gold, red, then purple, and the whole of the family was too tired to do anything but go back to where you were staying, the water avoided near completely despite everybody wearing the same attire ready for it.

The beach was going nowhere, anyways. The sun would rise, the winds would be warm and the water would be wet.

-----

The next day, you ventured into the city- the cities, rather, themselves. You’d leave Yena and the children to rest further, for there was something you wanted to see yourself that they’d lack interest in. A place you’d become familiar with in passing during the war, then afterwards when pursuing arms contracts for Trelan. The Atelier de Jumelles, the Emrean Republic’s private and state cooperative industrial venture, whose complexes churned out various sorts of heavy military equipment first for the Liberation, then afterwards to sell to the world. Despite their scale, they had never actually been available, their contracts constantly full, their waiting list even at maximum capacity. Their business was doing very, very well for itself, to say the least.

Simply seeing it would be enough for you, though you hardly expected to see much. You had no appointment and no offer of business, and were hardly important enough for an impromptu tour, but even what small things you could have a glance at would have been just fine. What you got was unexpected- and much more than you expected that anybody thought you might see. For it had nothing to do with the industry or product, but rather, its owners.

The bickering in Emrean was too fast for you to follow as you entered the foyer, but it escalated to shouting within moments, before the receptionist could even glance at you.
>>
“Out!” a shout from the top of the stairs as a pair of auburn and grey headed men gestured accusatorily at one another, “Complain if you wish, cast away our name if it is so worthless to you, come to fill my daughter’s head with tales and silly dreams if it keeps you out of that damned Red Poppy Café, but don’t you dare try and turn her against me!”

“I tell her nothing but the truth, you greedy bag of slime,” returned a similar sounding hoarse Emrean voice, “What of my children, Giraud? Will you have the same heart for them that our country did?”

“Leave this place or be thrown out on your arse, Jean-Phillipe! I will not speak these words again should I need to repeat them!”

“Then repeat them, you blood-fearing dog!”

“Stop fighting!” A girl’s voice shrieked- and right when you thought you would witness a fight, the man called Jean-Phillipe hesitated, whirled on his heel and stormed down the stairs.

“Do not show your face here again without invitation!” Came the shout after him. The man walked more measuredly down the stairs, and sighed, swore under his breath. “Jeane-Helena, go back to the other room and have a tea cake. Your father has to deal with another guest.”

You looked up the stairs to the daughter- she was auburn like the two men that had finished screaming at one another, and pale faced for that. She had lovely grey eyes peering back meekly at you, and she wore a coat that was clearly far too big for her, and was wrapped about her more like a longcoat than a jacket. It seemed martial…was it a uniform jacket put on a child? You didn’t know enough about Emrean variants to know.

“Who are you?” demanded the man apparently called Giraud, “Do you have an appointment?” He spoke to you in New Nauk, and you replied with the same.

“No,” you said, “but I have an interest. I am Palmiro Bonaventura, and I work on the Twentieth Century Committee for the Republic of Trelan, which is involved with armed forces procurements. I was in the area so I thought I’d poke my head in.”

“Hmph.” Immediately, to your surprise, he switched to clear Vitelian. “Well, we’re completely full up on orders and backorders both, so the best I can offer you is a catalog.” Something you knew already, not that you had any need to mention it and make you seem like a hopeful tourist looking for a park to explore. “You don’t look Trelani to me. You seem Vitelian, from the way you speak New Nauk.”

“You’re right, I am Vitelian.”

“…I apologize, you caught me at a bad time. I am Giraud L’Ensoleillee, and I am the founder, owner and president of the Atelier de Jumelles’ Heavy Engineering and Metalworks division, Acier Solaire. But I suppose you knew that already.”

“The company yes, your person, no.” A hand was offered and you grasped it firmly. “Your daughter?”
>>
Giraud looked over his shoulder and barked, “Jeanne-Helena, I said to go back to the other room!” He turned back to you. “Yes. She has an interest in my work, but too much of these works are not a place for a child to wander unsupervised. A well-appointed playroom has been outfitted for her use, but she never lingers there if she’s left to her own devices. Troublesome like her…” he shook his head.

“If I may ask,” you said, “Who was that other man?”

“It is none of your-” Giraud caught himself and tightened the corners of his mouth. “That was my brother. He is not involved with this business. He is simply…an embittered man. Many Emreans lost much in the Liberation. He lost more than most, but that is no excuse. He should know better how to carry and compose himself, intelligent and upright a man as I know he is. He is of Revolutionary sentiment, you see. He has changed our venerable name for one of his choosing. To say the most in the least time needed, he is dissatisfied with how the Emrean people dispensed with his bloody-minded fellows and their cult of so-called progress.”

So-called progress indeed. The Revolutionaries were the one who won the war. “I see. I’m sorry that I intruded on your personal affairs.”

“Merely bad fortune,” Giraud sighed, “There are worse times to be in the foyer of this place. Back during the Liberation, an Imperial battleship shell blew it to pieces, and the whole thing wasn’t rebuilt until a year after the end of the war…”

There wasn’t much more to speak of- Giraud wasn’t going to show anybody around without an appointment, as he had places to be, but he did hand you off to a secretary to show you what was public and to provide you with papers and advertisements. What piqued your interest though, moreso than the display of the very newest model of tank, a mockup of a kind not even finished going into production yet, was the talk of Revolutionaries, of where they got together. A kind of place you hadn’t been able to be in a long, long time. The Red Poppy Café, was it? You’d have to ask around about it. You had already told Yena not to expect you until nightfall. So long as you returned before the next sunrise, all would be fine…

-----

“Red Poppy Café” turned out to be slang, and not a particularly friendly sort, for a general place Revolutionaries hung out at. It was at least a café. You remembered fondly the days when you and your brazen friends, all young and crass, thought nothing of going to cabarets simply to lounge about. Would the Revolutionaries here also be soldiers, veterans of a war whose end pleased nobody? You couldn’t think what else they could be, it took stubborn sorts, apparently, to remain Red even after the embarrassment of the war’s finale, especially in an apparently conservative region such as the Twin Capes. Stubborn, isolated sorts like veterans of a war like the one you had endured.
>>
While the place wasn’t called the Red Poppy, it may as well have been for those in the know- the Angel’s Dawn Coffee House, two references in one. Open all hours- likely inhabited at all hours, too.

“You’re new,” the boney, sunken-faced and balding proprietor said immediately when you stepped in, the door tingling a bell behind you, “You looking for somebody?”

“Sort of,” you said. It seemed quiet, silent- until you heard a few dissonant notes from a piano. An odd, minimal melody. “I heard this was where red poppies grow.”

“You heard wrong,” the man scoffed, “The flowers grow no more. The soil’s dry and choked with ash, and the clouds are dark. The red poppies wait for rain, or for blood to dye the whites a color of the future.”

“Then I have found the right place.”

You paced about, searching for interesting looking folk. Despite seeming to be always doing business, the place wasn’t packed. Regulars drifted in and out constantly, but you saw one person that caught your attention- for having just seen him earlier that day.

“Hm. You again?” The man called Jean-Phillipe asked you gruffly as he sat with a cup of night-black coffee, a clay pot with presumably more of such next to the saucer. “What are you doing here? Did my brother send you after me?”

“I heard of a café for Red Poppy, and I presumed it was a gathering place for fellow travelers, not an opium den.”

Jean-Phillipe laughed hoarsely. “It might be one of a sort depending on your attitude.” He went from New Nauk to Vitelian, just like his brother. “Let us not speak in that language of the bastard offspring of swine. We both know better tongues more worthy of civilized men.”

“Gladly,” you said, sitting down to introduce yourself. “I am Palmiro Bonaventura. You are?”

“Some call me Jean-Phillipe L’Ensoilellee,” the man picked up his coffee in a practiced, manner-laden pinch, “But I prefer to be called Jean-Phillipe Debon.”

“That is much easier to say.”

“Hm.” He flicked his eyes over your face. “You have the scar of a battle upon your head. There’s been too many wars to keep track of, but I imagine it most likely to be…”

“We called it the Auratus War,” you said, “But all knew it as the Emrean Liberation. My friends and I from school saw the way the wind was blowing, and joined the army in time to be involved in it from the first day that King Lucius declared war.”

“I feel sorry for you,” Jean-Phillipe said, sipping his coffee, “We of Emre fought against the Reich to free ourselves from their grip and the stain of their conquest. Vitelia entered the war for the sake of the greed of its upper castes.”
>>
"My fellows and I did not believe that we fought for that,” you said, “We fought to strike at the Kaiser just as you did. Those who influenced Vitelia to war may not have been Revolutionaries, but my friends and I saw a cause that would advance the coming of the dawn.

“And did it?”

You already had an answer, though it was not one you liked. “Not in the way we thought it would. All of them save for one perished. I am now an exile of my country because I fought to aid the Gilician Revolt.”

Jean-Phillipe closed his eyes halfway and squinted skeptically at you. “You are a very strange Revolutionary to align yourself with so many causes for the old times. The nobility of the Vitelian Throne, then the machinations of the Cathedra, those who begat the Shattering out of their own motives, which were uncharacteristically self-serving rather than God fearing.”

Another point of potential contention, which you knew from your admittedly Vitelian and thus biased history. Some called the inciting event for the series of crises and wars called the Shattering to be when a king of what was then Emereix perished without proper heirs, causing a succession crisis. The popular heir was one unsuitable for rule by degree of the Cathedra. He was well loved for his sympathy for the common people’s struggle and promised much should he come to power, but he was a bastard, and unsuitable to inherit. When he contested the throne being granted to a female cousin who had a much stronger claim, a war broke out that eventually sent the entire continent to its knees, indirectly setting the stage for Zeissenburg’s rise. To claim this was the fault of the Church was quite a bold claim, considering what Alexander would do to the influence of the Cathedra, and a rather uniquely Emrean sentiment.

That mattered less to you than it did to Vitelia’s integrity, however.

“I did not do it to serve the church, either,” you said, “It was a complicated affair. Gilicia was not anticipated to separate the way it did, but in the end, the enemies I fought alongside them were indeed weakened substantially. So the dawn has come closer to Vitelia.”

“I hope that you’re right.” Jean-Phillipe gave the barman, who had simply been standing and listening, a gesture with his finger, and you had a cup of coffee in front of you within moments. “With how the recent years have been, I should hope you have had other aspirations than what we’ve spoken about.”

“I do,” you said, “I have a wife and four children, and I am well off enough of means to travel here from Trelan, while I wait for my friends to open my home to me again.” You picked up the coffee and gave it a testing sniff. It smelled of dark fruit, sweet and syrupy even though there was no hint of cream to lighten its deep darkness. “Do you have your own?”
>>
“Yes,” Jean-Phillipe said, “But it is a sad and dreary memory. Not one that I regret, but too many of the Dawn find themselves without and spiteful for it, or not wanting the distraction in favor of advancing the cause. Which is why so many left when they could find no further way forward here, but alas.”

“Tell me about them. Your family. It’s better than the weather, or talking about broken dreams.”

Jean-Phillipe relented, and drew his fingers through his close cut beard in thought. “Sad stories are for brandy and not coffee, but you are the first to ask in a long time…”

It was a tale long in telling. Jean-Phillipe had found true love early in life, and despite the condemnation of his family, had hurried into commitment and had children. He sixteen and her nineteen.

“We were foolish, but so enamored with one another, with life, that we could not care about the consequences. She gave us triplets, but the birth was hard upon her, and she never recovered. I had left with her uncaring of my family’s will, and they only accepted my return for my desperation, that I had to scrape and beg, and some small mercy that they would not let three babes of their blood to starve. They grew healthy and strong, and though I had to work very hard to sustain them without my family’s false faced charity, every moment was one I felt was worth it all. I raised them to be proud, to be moral, and to think of the future, but when the war with the Reich began, they suffered from the same foolish, romantic impulses I had at their age.”

Jean-Phillipe was your age when his first son was killed in battle against his own wayward countrymen. The second fell in battle when the Kaiser’s army intervened, and he tried desperately to keep my final son at home, but he was strong of will, and saw his country triumphant in the final years.

“So I took him under my own wing, closer than the others who I was powerless to protect. Yet, do you know what happened? He was good, and just, but when he argued for the moral treatment of Imperial prisoners taken in the retreat, tried to protect them by force, he was mortally wounded by his own men who were mad with fury and lust for blood. Then, the Reich’s men found the courage of trapped animals and wreaked ruin upon the vanguard of the Revolution. We all know what happened next.”

“I’m sorry for you,” you said, coffee only half done. Emreans liked it scalding, and the sweetness reminded you of Chiara.
>>
“Many sons and daughters of Emre suffered in their struggle. I am hardly unique. I was crushed, yes, for years, but I found the embrace of a widow and we began anew. I have two more children now, and it is for them I remain here, but it took a long time for the dead to not be first in my heart and mind, and they linger with me still. It is hard to begin anew from nothing. I suppose I don’t blame my countrymen for not wanting to do the same, with greater and grander things than one’s own flesh.”

It was hard for you to imagine it too, starting anew with a completely new family. You hadn’t even gone out and made new friends that were closer than those you had lost. Maybe you really did belong in a place like this, but if it were back home, it would be certain to be empty. Yet you hadn’t been in such a place. You’d been in a home with a loving family that you had brought into the world with Yena, and really, by the end of the day, Jean-Phillipe too would likely be heading to a similar place for his. The true lost souls were probably people you weren’t even speaking to. People who didn’t come to these places.

In return for his tale, you told Jean-Phillipe yours. No distaste was had towards your pick of mate, and the black coats were detested as much as you had felt about them during the war- but you found an unexpected similarity when Jean-Phillipe shared his thoughts on your service after you were done telling about the one you had shared.

“You were a Commandant D’Panciere, as I was,” Jean-Phillipe said, “From nothing at all, to the position of a captain. You did very well for yourself.”

“Thank you.”

“I was one too, though my position of influence from even before the Revolution meant that by the end, I commanded a brigade. The Bronze Brigade, the sun’s shields. The symbol of a sun on a shining field. I am proud to say they were without peer…even if I have been separated from them now.”

“I’ll have to find out more about them,” you said, “My unit had no such fancy name, though perhaps we should have made one.”
>>
“Armor is the future of warfare,” Jean-Phillipe continued, “An evolution on land like that which took place in the air, on the sea. They are more than mere heaps of metal, in the proper hands, with the proper minds, they are the only suitable mount for the Knights of the New Century. So often I saw them wasted, underestimated, squandered. They have such potential, but the finest clockwork is wasted if used by a fool as a hammer. I’ve been writing a book. A small history, but also a theory, a thesis, a guide for those who come after. It’s very nearly done, and it will be magnificent…though my own people seem like they would rather I fade away and bother them no more, even with words of wisdom.”

Everybody seemed to have progressed well on their memoirs. A shame you hadn’t managed that. Yet.

“I’d like a copy when you’re done with it. I’d rather not be using clocks to beat in nails if I can help it.” You could definitely think of plenty in a certain unit you oversaw the development of that could use the study material to great effect. “Say, do you know any good restaurants in this place?”

Jean-Phillipe wrinkled his nose like you had asked if the sky was blue. “There is not a single place in the capes that does not exceed the rest of the world, if you ask me, but the places most go are on the Prominence Promenade, though if you think you can go anywhere there without an appointment from the last winter or an invitation from a prince, then you can think again.”

“I’ll figure something out.” After all, if you were planning to hang out in a café with Revolutionaries all day, you had to make it up to Yena in some way, and you may as well do as one did in Jumelles.

-----
>>
That'll be all for this thread, thanks all for playing, reading, and all that. Sorry that I sort of fell of towards the end, but I guess I shouldn't try to keep things going until the end of the thread lifespan anyways considering how long they last these days. I'll still be around for questions and discussion and such until the thread drops off.

I'm thinking to keep myself doing things I'll do something higher effort for Valentine's Day. Not a tradition, no, but just to do more things and keep myself occupied. We'll leave who to popular vote, so if you're interested in that sort of thing, go ahead and write that in for me.

The next thread will be...probably in a couple weeks or so, maybe three? I'll announce beforehand on my xitter.
>>
>>5922641
Klaudia's big butt for Valentine's day!
Maybe dressed up nice to Hilda go on a date.
>>
>>5922641
Rubadubdub, thanks for the grub, tanq.
>go ahead and write that in for me.
Valentines is Von Walentines. 1 vote here for Cow x Badger Boy.
>>
>>5922641
Hm, did we meet Jeane-Helena as Richter?
>>
>>5922641
Thanks for the thread tanq. As for Valentine's Day, how about the three mosshead girls, like how you did Signy, Hilda, and Maddy for Christmas?
>>
>>5922641
Thanks for running tanq, good shit as always.

As for Valentine's Day I guess I'll support >>5922673

Minor question, do all mossheads with green hair always come with green eyes, or can they be born with other shades as well?

Also is there a Nief'yem priesthood and/or temples, or is their faith passed down mainly through the elders and oral transmission?

>>5922679
Jeanne-Helena is Framboise's actual name
>>
>>5922641
Thank you QM!
>>
>>5922641
>go ahead and write that in for me
a romantic dinner date with Poltergeist in his ethereal shack
>>
>>5922679
She looked rather different then.

>>5922694
I don't actually remember having three...unless you're referring to ethnicity rather than hair color, I'll need a reminder who the third is beside Fie and Yena.
Unless you meant Malachi.

>>5922697
>Minor question, do all mossheads with green hair always come with green eyes, or can they be born with other shades as well?
There isn't an eye pigmentation limitation, no. They come in all sorts.

>Also is there a Nief'yem priesthood and/or temples, or is their faith passed down mainly through the elders and oral transmission?
Temples yes, though they're mostly disused and historical relics rather than actively maintained and used. Elders are responsible for keeping record of tradition and culture, though they also have writings and don't just rely on oral history. That the mountain brand of faith is mostly in the background of life is why most these days have the shared gods system where they give reverence to both above and below. The highest of knowledge keepers, however, are wandering mystics who go between villages and dispense and collect knowledge, and sometimes solve problems that they have been called to resolve. Canon is extremely loose, but certain things are set strictly by these mystics who invariably gain their most important information from a particular group of settlements, said to be so deep in the mountains (even which mountains are uncertain) that it is pointless to try and find them without being one of these mysterious mystics who do nothing but wander.

You probably know what they are, but Bonetto nor even Yena doesn't.
>>
>>5922896
Yva perhaps? Though I don't recall if she's actually a mosshead.
>>
>>5922641
Does the Cathedra have a Saint Valentine, or his equivalent?
>>
>>5922937
>Yva perhaps? Though I don't recall if she's actually a mosshead.
She is an ethnic Nief'yem (to be technical, a half-Nief'yem, as she claims, which would mean that she is the daughter of two generations of Nief'yem women intermarrying with foreign men- there is a point where being a daughter doesn't make you pure anymore), but doesn't have green hair. Calling a non-green haired Nief'yem "mosshead" is a bit odd, though.

>>5923079
>Does the Cathedra have a Saint Valentine, or his equivalent?
As in, a patron of courtly love? It's been around so long that there's a patron of practically everything, so yes, though because of the history of the early church on the Old Continent a lot of the earliest and vaguest Saints are of a more martial variety.
>So what's their name?
I'll save it for when it comes up and isn't a relatively hurried decision.
>>
>>5923265
I know we've largely avoided setting exact figures but do you have any rough population numbers for the west? Would it be more or less populous than Sosalia?
>>
>>5923354
>do you have any rough population numbers for the west? Would it be more or less populous than Sosalia?
It would depend on the region, but generally more in the case of the southern states, and less in the north. Compared to Emre the rest of the northern nations are relatively sparsely populated, but Vitelia is around as populous as Emre.
>>
>>5922641
Thanks for running. You know me, any woman's fine as long as there's bush.



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