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Sweety Butterfly
753e50
The only element they had managed to steal correctly was the shameful openness of the goblins- much like their smaller brothers, they refused to act civilized, eating and drunkenly merrymaking and even fornicating in open-sided huts where all was public and communal, rather then in the privacy of their own homes. Most interesting to the dwarf, though, were their attempts at 'culture'- colour and shape was splashed upon every surface in the form of inks and sculpture, all clashing with the rest and looking very undignified indeed in the face of any cultured, wizened eye. Worst of all were the ghastly masks that hid each and every face, each seemly designed at random for no purpose at all.
Faced with such a people, Travelmason was, for the first time in many long years, unsure of how to react. The goblins were simple to deal with- cowardly and spineless as they were, one could usually bargain or make a deal, or if it came to it, simply pit superior strength against their superior numbers. But these creatures? Their muscles were beyond obscene, their numbers far too overwhelming, and worst of all they scoffed at his attempts to bargain and bribe his cargo, as if it was crass or undignified, somehow below barbarians like themselves. It took several nights for him to understand the way forward- during which time they were all passed around the village, to be gawked at and toyed with by the tribesman as mere oddities. To his great relief, the orks were not interested in his women as women, and for that much he was grateful. The worst, to Travelmason's mind, was the food- deeply aromatic and spicy, the orks had not seemed to grasp the concept of subtlety and simply threw themselves with reckless abandon into their cookery until the result was an obnoxious slew of flavours that offended his refined tongue.
Although he was not forced to endure excessive cruelty or torture, as he had sometimes known from the goblins, he wished to escape, and he wished it badly. And in time, he had an epiphany. Bargaining with the orks would not work- they are entirely separate to the goblins, as shown by their unwillingness to live among each other, let alone their difference in size and stature. Perhaps they were so separate as to be opposites? If the goblins were cowardly and weak, perhaps the orks believed themselves to be brave and strong, the barbarians playing at an honourable warrior's society. Travelmason switched his tact immediately- pleading his case to his captors, he asked how they may be so cruel as to leave a man defenceless. Surely they were willing to meet him on even ground? A fair competition, one dwarf to one ork each, in three separate fields. If he won them all, they would allow him to leave- if he lost even one, he and his mistresses would stay as willing slaves. To his delight, they accepted immediately, and he was soon brought to the tribe elder to discuss plans for a competition.
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