Entry tags:
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- travis touchdown [no more heroes]
@BURGERKING— @ALL
I understand some of you are reluctant to change your names or use a different moniker when we make the drop in 1916's Gallipoli. If you're not from a standardized Earth, I suggest you reconsider. If you need assistance, I'll assign you one myself. You don't have to consider them names but codenames to be discarded after we return to BASE.
An example of this: Rider is now Kale. I told him I would notify you all of this alteration.
Think wisely about the impact small things could have on a timeline. They add up and any amount of skepticism brought about by our foolishness is too much. Thanks.
An example of this: Rider is now Kale. I told him I would notify you all of this alteration.
Think wisely about the impact small things could have on a timeline. They add up and any amount of skepticism brought about by our foolishness is too much. Thanks.

no subject
You said our scullions, you're in charge of servants? What does that make you?
I would think maybe he was particularly fond of Turnips...or maybe he hated them and her and used it spitefully. It could go either way.
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I'm not in charge of servants. Well, not then. But my father was the Lord Paramount of the North. [That makes him "the bastard son of the Lord Paramount of the North," though through a series of accidents and scant victories, he's now the Warden of the North himself.] Guests were always coming in and out of his castle, so the castle employed a great many people. Might have been that Turnip would have become the cook after her father if things had gone differently.
Remembering the cook, I think he was fond of turnips.
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Did they die? You speak of them in past tense.
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My sister and I took it back, but not until several years had passed. Even then, it was a narrow thing.
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(guess who likes a good revenge story!!!)
cw: Game of Thrones (rape, dogs, eyeballs, Ramsay Bolton, etc)
He'd starved his hounds. He'd told me that he would make me watch them eat my brother, make me watch his soldiers taking turns with my sister, that he would scoop out my eyes after, and that he would then feed me to his dogs.
In the end, his lady wife loosed them upon him. A hard end, but better than he deserved.
GET AT ME CWs
I'm sorry about your brother. Try as we may to protect the ones closest to us, all it takes to lose them is one single moment.
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Our brother was just twelve or so. We did it to try to save him. But even if we failed him, and I often think I did, that I allowed the cruel son to play a game with me with my brother as the stakes, we can try to protect all the people of the North — from cruel rulers and from winter famine and from the war to come.
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We won't let our enemies play games.
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[And because it isn't a series of deeds that brings shame to him or to his family or to anyone but the Boltons, and because it has nothing to do with his death in the cold snow at Castle Black, or the death of a dragon in an icy lake.]
You have stories of your own?
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I don't know what you'd want to hear.
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1/2
2/2
It was a tolerable moment I remember experiencing.
no subject
Are you a cook by trade?
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no subject
A sellsword. There was a time when I thought of becoming one myself. Not many paths were open to me when I was a boy.
[He doesn't mention now that he'd avoided that path, because there was far less honor in it than in joining the Watch -- or so he'd thought at the time.]
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We're sellswords now, if you consider the facts. So I guess your old plans have come true.
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If they think otherwise in your time, were your people once more like mine in this?
[Hei can't see Jon's small snort of laughter at the second part.]
So we are, though it may be that some of us think we're part of a noble cause. That wouldn't matter much to most sellswords I've ever heard of.
no subject
My world opens its doors to people like that, no matter who your parents are.
As for "noble causes", I don't consider fighting a war that's already been fought a noble cause. I accepted COST's invitation because it's just another job. I wonder why you joined up?
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Your world still sounds better for bastards.
[Yet if he hadn't been a bastard, if he hadn't felt that all routes were closed to him except for the Watch, what would have become of his world? Would anyone who took the threat of the White Walkers seriously have survived the Great Ranging?]
It's not just another job to me, but that doesn't mean I'd name it a noble cause myself — it might be to some, and might not be to others, and neither of those matters much to whether or not something must be done.
I've been fighting so long to protect all the people of my world, to give them a chance to live. There's no point in winning that chance for them and then losing it to a new enemy.
no subject
I'd say just about anyone would consider that a noble cause. You'll be in good company, with the righteous COST members aboard this ship.
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The threat to my world is an army of dead men, controlled by a general who makes no treaties. If they kill you, they raise you as one of their own, and they'll keep doing it until they've taken every living creature.
You sound like you don't approve of righteousness.
no subject
I hate the pious. Righteousness is far different, tolerable in small doses.