After leaving Rebecca an exhausted, sweaty, sex-stained mess, Mason stretched and enjoyed the soft pillow and sheets in the chieftainâs hall room. He could smell something cooking in the kitchen, Haleyâs soft voice echoing down the hall. But after a few moments of quiet his mind drifted back to the rain and the hills and the battle with the orcs. Then to his strange new power and the way it made him feel.
âYou were pretty amazing, you know,â he said.
âYou werenât so bad yourself,â Rebecca mumbled, and Mason laughed.
âI meant with the orcs. I was thinking about the battle. I was watching. They all tried to take you down and couldnât.â
She sat up a little, holding the sheet over herself as if they hadnât just spent the last hour screwing each otherâs brains out.
âSeul-ki helped,â she grinned. âAnyway, nevermind me, youâre the one who came outta the woods like bigfoot, naked and sportinâ claws.â
Mason laughed but felt his humor drain faster than it should have. âI donât remember it well, to be honest. It's...a very strange power. I'm not sure I should even use it again.â
âThat sounds too serious for naked cuddles.â She gave him a squeeze and sighed. âWhat time is it?â
He smiled. âI donât care.â But then he realized he should probably talk to Blake more seriously about the worm, and prestige classes, and âMakersâ and Phase two⊠âActually I should go talk to Blake,â he sighed, and Rebecca gripped his chest.
âI'm not finished with you yet.â
He patted her arm. âI can stick around town for a few days, I think. I'll come right back.â
âPromise?â
âPromise.â She released her death grip and got out of bed, then he showered off and wandered past Haley, stopping to give her a quick squeeze. She just grinned and kept on singing over her cooking, and he wandered out into the hall.
There were plenty of people as usual. A mix of refugees, original citizens, and the new people from Sanctuary. Most gave Mason looks he either didnât recognize or had no idea what to do with. But he did his best to meet the eyes and smiles with one of his own or a nod.
See? Getting better at
âthisâ, Blake,
he thought
, just like you said, Blake.
He found his brother in his office, dressed in what could only be called post-apocalyptic business casual.
âThere he is. Good timing, Iâve just rounded up the others.â
âUh. What others?â Mason glanced at the empty office before Blake came out and took his arm.
âThis way.â
He led them to what Mason supposed might have been a âconference roomâ, with apparently every player but Rebecca sitting around the table with a mug or a glass. Haley swooped in behind them with a large tray of cookies, dressed smartly in office attire like she hadnât just been having a threesome most of the day. She gave Mason a wink on the way by.
âWhen did youâŠâ he cleared his throat and glanced at the others. âUh hi. What are we discussing?â
âOur plans,â Blake said, nodding at the others before taking his seat. When Mason gestured to explain further he rolled his eyes. âTo deal with the giant orc fortress that is likely hell bent on our destruction."
"Oh. That."
He found a seat next to Carl, who looked him up and down and grinned.
âGet enough beauty sleep?â
âYou tell me.â Mason matched it, but turned sober. âHowâs SilvieâŠand the girls?â
âRosa is doing fine, I think,â Carl said without flinching. Mason opened his mouth and closed it, at something at a loss before Rebecca burst through the door.
"I'm here!" Her hair was still a sex-tangled mess, and she practically oozed ârecently bangedâ as she adjusted her shorts and sat down in the closest seat. Several people were grinning now, and she was just starting to turn pink when Blake clapped his hands.
"Well! Now that we're all present and accounted for. I have it on good authorityâthat is, the great artificial overlord himselfâthe orcs of the âBlack Towersâ intend to obliterate us."
Everyone went quiet at that. Phuong spoke first.
"Thank you for telling us, patron. But may I ask, how
exactly
do you know that?"
"Because I'm me.â Blake grinned. âAnd none of that âpatronâ nonsense. But if you must know, because as I was taking over the minds of our orc friends, I was able to see through their eyes. I saw their objectives. They think of them as âdivine commandâ from their various gods, incidentally, but the result is the same. I quote directly from a random orc warriorâ âObjective: Destroy all human settlements in the Great Forest. Receive âClan pointsâ for your family.â I imagine their leaders have something similar.â
The players all shifted and whispered amongst themselves until Mason spoke.
"You're telling me, those creatures are getting orders from the system to kill us?"
"Precisely so."
"Jesus Christ.â Mason clenched a fist. âWhy would it do that? I mean...isn't all this...arenât these things basically like robots? Artificial things in the shape of fantasy creatures?â
Blake frowned and pursed his lips. "I donât think so. I was in their minds, and they seemed quite conscious and sentient, much like humans. If they're some kind of biological robots, they are extremely convincing."
Again the room silenced, this time Garet broke it.
"So what do we do?"
"That's why we're here.â Blake drummed the table with both hands. âI thought we should discuss it. And perhaps vote."
"Vote on what?" Garet asked.
Blake pulled back and quirked his head. "I'm happy to hear suggestions. And I'm no general, but, I think basically...do we wait, or do we attack?"
"Attack?â Carl practically choked. âI meanâŠ.I know you folks havenât seen itâŠbut itâs a fortress. God only knows how many of them are in there."
"We killed quite a lot already,â Blake shrugged. âWe can kill more."
"Aren't yaâll forgetting an option?â Rebecca said, a little shyly. âCanât weâŠuh, try talking to âem?"
A few people scoffed, which annoyed Mason because Rebecca went beet red. Blake didnât, but he didnât look optimistic.
"Anythingâs possible. But Iâm afraid it doesnât seem likely."
"Why not?" Mason asked, genuinely curious.
"They seem to think of humans as some kind ofâŠdiametrically opposed entities. Eternal enemies only to be destroyed. A kind of blood feud, I believe is the correct description."
Everyone silenced again at that. Blake looked straight at Mason.
âOnly you and Carl have seen this place. What do you think?â
Every eye turned to Mason, which as usual made him uncomfortable. âYou don't want to know what I think,â he said and shook his head.
âThatâs why weâre here, brother. Go on, weâre listening.â
Mason glared, feeling pulled back in time to when theyâd first arrived at the settlement. âI think if they want to kill us, we leave. We go buy a giant boat with patron points, or find a coastal settlement. Or we split up and spread out. The system took away children, sick people, elderlyâwe can run. I say we do anything but play this stupid game by fighting a war with crazy, bloodthirsty orcs or giant fucking worms or legions of undead.â
There. Heâd said it. It felt slightly petulant and stupid but a piece of him wanted nothing to do with any of this. The same piece just wanted to say âfuck thisâ, take his women and his brother and hide so deep in the forest nothing would ever find them.
The players were exchanging looks and Blake clearly looked like he needed to perform some kind of damage control. He was preparing to do just that when Mason sighed and spoke again.
âBut if we
don
ât
run, then defence is a losing strategy. You don't leave an enemy like that to think and plan. Who knows how they'll try and hurt you, or how far they'll go. If you all insist on staying here, then thereâs only one choice. We go out there, and we wipe out every last one of them.â
âAmen to that,â said Carl with a wink, and the feeling more or less spread from player to player around the room. Only Blake seemed to frown and meet Masonâs eyes.
âDo we need to vote? I agree with Mason. Kill them all and get it over with,â said Tommaso, who had stayed to guard the settlement and had likely yet to
see
an orc.
A few grunts of agreement until Blake finally stopped it and called for a vote anyway, and everyone but him raised their hand to attack.
âI suppose thatâs it then,â he shrugged. âBut Iâm still going to ask the civilians. They arenât doing the fighting, of course. But if we all get killed, after all, theyâll be screwed too.â
No one said anything to that, though it was clear not many agreed. Blake seemed to sense it and shrugged.
âBut it may not matter what they say. Thank you everyone, thatâs all. Take a few days to rest and prepare. Then I expect Nassau is going to war.â