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Chapter 67 – Fun with Homophones

What the hell?

I groaned at the bright sunlight stabbing my retinas through the slit windows, already high in the sky, and rolled off the cuddle puddle. My mouth was dry and I was definitely not prepared for a deluge of System notifications. I dismissed them without reading most of them. The new noblins had co with so pretty bizarre technologies. I struggled to the nearest rain cistern and washed the fur out of my mouth, then stood under the water for a minute as the cool spray ran through my matted fur. This hangover wasn’t as bad as the tis on Rava that I’d missed a full night of sleep. But it wasn’t far off.

When I turned around, I was surprised to see Sally, agitated and fidgeting, waiting for my attention. While technically verbal, my lead engineer almost never spoke. Once she was convinced she had got her point across, she turned and moved to the corner of the bluff where we’d made our first paper mill. She pointed at a blank spot on a table nearby and began to chitter.

I looked at her. “You… want another table?” I guessed.

She made a frustrated squawk and stamped her feet. I sighed. But I’d rarely seen the shy taskmaster so animated with , so I concentrated.

“Sothing isn’t on the table that ought be?”

She waved her arms, and then made a square in the air, and then a crinkling noise as she balled her fists.

“Is this where you keep the paper?” I asked.

She nodded, exasperated.

“So, where’s all the paper gone?”

Sally howled, having finally gotten her point across. She turned and stamped off to another corner of the bluff where a trio of pot-bellied noblins were leaning over a work bench Dozens of discarded sheets of paper littered the ground around them, representing hours of work for Javier and his clothiers/paper makers.

“What’s all this?” I demanded.

The noblins looked up, blinked, and squinted at .

Unauthorized duplication: this narrative has been taken without consent. Report sightings.

“Whossat?” one asked. “Issit morning already?”

“Your king,” I said.

One of the noblins sniffed. “Well I didn’t vote for ye!”

The largest one reached over and slapped the dissident, who squawked and acted appropriately chagrinned.

“Sorrys ‘bout that, King. I’ll keep ‘im in line.” he squinted. “You sure you’re Apollo? I thought ye’d be bigger.”

I glanced at Sally, who practically vibrated with impatience.

“Look, I said. “I get that you guys are eager, but the engineers need paper, too. We’re working on engines, motors, and batteries today and we can’t scribble everything on bark.”

One of the noblins snorted. “What we’re workin on is way more great than whatever engines are, king!”

“Designs for new guns?”

“Wot? No! Way better.”

“Artillery? Missiles?”

“Nothing like that!”

I marched up to the table and pulled over one of the wide sheets of paper, looking at the noblin’s work.

“That’s not finished, boss!”

I squinted down at the page where rough squares had been drawn—in so sort of sticky ink. I didn’t even know we had ink. And inside the squares… “Are these… comics?” I asked.

“It’s Histry,” said the largest of the pack. "Record of your kicking porkbelly butt wot at the battle of the bluff! How’s folk gonna rember it?”

“It was yesterday,” I said. I looked down at a crude drawing of a tall, muscled goblin atop a rough sloth. It was musclebound, with a large gun in each hand, and a crown. “Is this supposed to be ?” I asked. I shook my head. “I’m so confused. I thought you guys were supposed to be cannoneers, but you’ve got terrible eyesight and you’re sitting here making cartoons.”

“But this is your canon we’s workin’ on,” one of them protested. “I don’t see wot the problem is.”

“My… oh no. No, no, no.”

I walked away from the group. System!

Did you give

comic book nerd goblins?!

I tried to keep my teeth from grinding. Show

the details of the noblin canoneer.

I fell onto my backside, dizzy, and not just from the hangover. What had I done? The potential destructive force of firearms to the goblin species was bad enough, now I’d gone and given them religion! And judging by the comic panels squeezed in my hand, they were making

out to be so sort of war god. I felt sick.

System, can I go back and choose the partizans instead?

I rolled over, stomach heaving, and threw up.

When I looked up, Sally stood, little arms crossed and nose in the air. She sniffed loudly, and then stomped off. Couldn’t bla her. Alright. I guess we were doing this. Noblin canoneers were now and forever a permanent part of Tribe Apollo. Unless I had them all killed as soon as they were born, which was unconscionable. After all, I’d been raised Lutheran, and even though for many years I had no longer believed in an omniscient supre being—ironic, I know—I was pretty sure murder still equalled bad. Especially when the canoneers hadn’t done anything wrong and it was my fault they were here. Unless…

System, did you take advantage of

while I was drunk and trick ?

No kidding. Not like it would have admitted it anyway. I should have known this all-powerful calculator with a penchant for puns would eventually pull sothing like this. Alright. Alright. Think, Apollo. This was happening, and it was ti to adapt and iterate. I was witnessing the literal birth of the very concept of religion among a growing civilization whose primary ans of communication had, up til now, been chirps, screams, and physical assault.

Maybe this wasn’t a disaster. Historically on Earth, religion had done just as much good as bad. sopotamian religions kept track of seasons, written records of crop yields, and animal husbandry guides. Christian Churches in Europe had been instruntal in the distribution of the printing press and increasing literacy rates. The Islamic Golden Age had given us algebra, astrophysics, and coffee.

God, I missed coffee.

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