It Echoes Onward 4

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The main street that ran through the village of Shelter was little more than a wide dirt path. The homes that ran along both sides of it were squat buildings with thatch roofs. The sound of people talking and the creaking of wood could be heard off in the distance. Nothing looked broken or ruined, but everything looked like it had been patched several times.

Geralhd walked through the front door of the house where he was staying. It led into a small kitchen. Khita and Blacknail followed him. As Geralhd threw some water into a pot and lit a small fire in his stove, both his guests sat down at the table in the center of the room.

“So you didn’t answer me before. Why are you here?” Geralhd asked after he joined them a few moments later.

“You owe me more cheese. I don’t have any left,” Blacknail immediately told him. His voice was rather intense, because he was rather upset about it.

Geralhd rolled his eyes, but before he could reply, there was a knock on the front door and someone spoke up from outside. “It’s me, Tannin. I heard you had some guests a visiting so I decided to stop on by.”

“Come one in. I just put some water on for tea,” Geralhd replied after letting out a deep sigh. The young man then turned and gave Blacknail a meaningful look.

“Be good,” he told the hobgoblin.

“I’m always good. You humans are the ones who always mess things up. Do better,” Blacknail replied dismissively. As the leader, he was the only one that got to judge people’s performances.

The front door then swung open and Tannin stepped inside. The bearded old man gave them all a polite nod of greeting. There was a friendly smile on his face and his eyes held a warm twinkle. Blacknail decided that this meant the old man wanted something. The hobgoblin was getting used to humans’ strange ways.

“I see you’re still alive, young lass,” Tannin told Khita. “A few of the others had a bet going. Most of them thought you’d die or come crawling back here within a day or two. Living out in the forest is rough going for anyone, let alone a young woman.”

“I can take care of myself,” Khita replied scornfully. “I don’t need anyone telling me what to do, where to live, or how to survive. Tell those old hags you stuck me with before to mind their own damn business. They can shove their etiquette where the sun don’t shine.”

Her angry words just caused Tannin to chuckle loudly and grin wider. He looked quite amused.

“I take it that means you plan on staying out in the forest for a while longer?” he asked her playfully.

“Yes, I do,” she replied in a chilly tone.

Tannin nodded and then turned towards the cloaked hobgoblin. “And I see Blacknail is being as mysterious as always. Do you ever not wear a hood?”

“Yes,” Blacknail replied as he waited for his tea. He hoped it wasn’t the bitter kind. For now, Tannin had nothing the hobgoblin wanted, so talking to him wasn’t important.

Geralhd got up and pulled out a chair for Tannin, and then they both sat down. The two made small talk for a few moments, and Blacknail fought the urge to close his eyes and take a nap. When was he going to get his tea? He tried glaring at Geralhd to get his point across, but the man ignored him. He wasn’t a very good minion. Blacknail was going to have to do something about that later.

“Why don’t you ask for Blacknail’s help?” Khita suddenly asked. The use of his name caused Blacknail to focus back on what everyone was saying. He hadn’t been paying attention at all, so he had no idea what they were talking about.

“Does he know a lot about goblins?” Tannin asked. Blacknail felt a small tingle of panic, but the man sounded friendly and curious.

“I dare say, he is one of the utmost experts on the subject,” Geralhd replied with obvious amusement.

“I suppose he must have run into a lot of them out in the wild Green,” Tannin mused aloud.

Blacknail had been about to claim complete ignorance about goblins, but since Geralhd had spoken up, he decided to go along with it. This must an important conversation. Food was probably involved.

“You’re having a problem with goblins?” Blacknail asked as he straightened up in his chair.

“Ya, you could bloody well say that!” Tannin huffed in frustration. “We’ve suddenly been overrun by an infestation of the little pests. They’re getting into everything! The thieving is bad but it’s the destruction they leave in their wake that is the real damned problem. They’re spoiling more food than they actually steal. Every day we lose vital supplies.”

Tannin sounded and looked like he wanted to hit something. He was holding one hand up and was clenching it tightly into a fist. This topic was obviously making him angry. Blacknail could use that. Tannin could probably be convinced to offer a tasty reward to anyone who solved his problem.

As the old man continued to ramble on about spoiled grain, Blacknail heard a scratching noise from the far window. He looked out of the corner of his eye and noticed a green flash of movement. It was a goblin, a familiar one. Ferrar had caught up to them and was peeking in through the window.

“This batch even seems smarter than usual,” Tannin continued. “They sniff out poison, and they even avoid all our traps! The weighted barrel trap used to catch them by the dozen, but when young Raius checked it last night it was empty. Not only that, but somehow the goblins actually managed to disarm it and make off with the bait! If I didn’t know better, I would swear they were listening in on us and learning to counter our plans.”

“That’s silly; goblins aren’t that smart,” Blacknail quickly agreed in a flat voice as he turned away from the goblin in the window and focused on Tannin’s face. He needed to focus on manipulating the foolish human.

“Probably not, but something’s going on here. Do do you have any special tricks up your sleeves for dealing with the bloody things?”

“There is nothing up my sleeves but my human arms, but I do know some tricks,” Blacknail replied carefully. He didn’t want to give himself away.

There was moment of awkward silence, so Blacknail spoke up again. “I usually set bait out for them and then shoot them. Have you tried that?”

Blacknail had just made that up, but it was the best he could come up with on short notice, and it even sounded like it could work. When Blacknail wanted to chase goblins away he simply gave them chores. He usually never saw them again after that.

However, this idea didn’t appear to appease Tanin. The old man frowned and shook his head. He opened his mouth as if to speak but Khita cut him off.

“Blacknail, you’re forgetting one obvious solution,” she interjected.

“I am not,” Blacknail hissed at her. She was dumb.

“You keep the wild goblins away by training other goblins to guard your stuff. Mr. Tannin could do the same thing. There is no reason he can’t.” Khita shot back.

Blacknail grunted sourly. He hadn’t forgotten that. It was just a really stupid thing to bring up. Was she trying to expose his true identity and ruin his plans? Probably not, she was just stupid.

“Guard goblins?” Tannin asked doubtfully. He didn’t seem sure if Khita was joking or not, but he clearly found the idea hilarious. There was an amused grin on his bearded face.

“That’s what he does, and it works,” Khita replied defiantly. She then shrugged like she didn’t much care what he thought, even though it was obvious she did.

As he turned towards Khita, Blacknail sighed and gave her an annoyed glare. Seriously? Why was she bringing this up? This idea was so dumb only a human could have thought of it. Tannin would never consider such a dumb plan.

“My old master used to do it,” Blacknail explained after turning towards Tannin. “Goblins are territorial so if you take one in then it will drive the others away, but even trained goblins can be very annoying and get into trouble.”

“Huh, that actually doesn’t sound completely unreasonable,” Tannin mused as he looked off to the side contemplatively. “At this point I’d try almost anything, and feeding one goblin would cost us less than feeding a hundred of the gods damned despoilers.”

Under his hood, both of Blacknail’s eyes widened from surprise. Khita’s plan was so stupid it might actually work! He couldn’t waste this opportunity to take advantage of how weird humans were. Letting the humans get used to goblins would suit Blacknail’s purposes. It would also allow him to spy on the humans without concern, although apparently it wasn’t that hard. Even feral goblins could do it. Ferrar was still looking in through the window, and Blacknail had no doubt that he knew exactly what was going on.

“Er, I happen to have some goblins you could borrow,” Blacknail suggested. He had to press his advantage. “They know some simple commands and will keep out of trouble. Geralhd and the others can help you train them, so within a few days you should see a lot less goblin thefts.”

“How exactly do you train goblins?” Tannin asked. It sounded like he was seriously considering the idea.

“Mostly you just hit them a lot and offer them food. They only get into trouble if they get hungry,” Blacknail told him.

The water finally finished boiling and the shrill whistle of the kettle on the stove filled the air. As Geralhd got up and served the tea, everyone continued to discuss the goblin problem. Eventually, Tannin agreed to accept a pair of goblins from Blacknail.

With that decided, Blacknail and Khita excused themselves. Geralhd had promised to give Blacknail some cheese when they stopped by on their way out of the village, and they had finished their tea, so there was little point in sticking around. They still had to go track down Joan and ask her a few questions for Scamp and Imp.

“I suppose you youngsters don’t want to hang around here with an old man like me,” Tannin laughed as they were leaving. “Although, I suppose I have no idea how old you are, Blacknail.”

“Er… I’m ten,” the hobgoblin answered him. That was a good age for a human right?

“You’re ten?” Tannin repeated in disbelief. Uh oh, he seemed suspicious. Was that too low?

“Ten and a half?” Blacknail suggested.

“Ha ha, Blacknail is such a joker,” Geralhd laughed. His laughter was awkwardly loud and there was a stiff smile on his face.

“Get out of here and let me talk to Tannin,” he added as he motioned for Blacknail to leave. The hobgoblin immediately did as he was told and fled.

Once outside, Blacknail and Khita headed towards where they had met Joan during their last visit, and the sound of little footsteps followed them.

They passed by a few villagers as they walked and Blacknail gave them polite nods. When they got to their destination, Joan wasn’t there, so Khita went to find her while Blacknail waited.

“Hello again, Mr. Blacknail. How can I help you?” Joan asked when she arrived alongside a proud looking Khita. The young blonde woman was wearing a long homespun dress and there was a polite but curious expression on her face.

Blacknail didn’t immediately respond. He just stared at her blankly. What had he wanted to ask her again? Ferrar had been the one who had wanted to talk to her. He couldn’t remember what the goblin had told him…

“Um…” he mumbled aloud to buy time.

Thankfully, he didn’t have long to wait. Ferrar appeared from behind the corner of a nearby building. The little goblin looked extremely excited. He practically bounced as he ran over to join the conversation.

“Ask her about the color of clay matters, sometimes it goes black,” the goblin suggested as he grabbed Blacknail’s pants and looked up at the hobgoblin with wide eyes that shone with excitement.

“Does the color of the clay matter? Sometimes it’s black?” Blacknail repeated uncertainly at Joan.

There was no immediate reply. The blonde girl studied Blacknail and the goblin for several long seconds. She was squinting at them, and she seemed unsure of something.

“Is the goblin asking the question? I think that’s what I just heard,” she asked in disbelief.

This called for some skillful evasion of the truth.

“We’re both asking,” Blacknail answered. “He likes to talk, even if it’s nonsense, but you know that. He was here before.”

“Hmm, are you sure this is the same goblin? It looks a little different…”

“Yep, he is the same, and his name is Scamp,” Blacknail replied cheerily as he nudged Ferrar with his foot. The little pest had better play along.

“I’m Scamp and I’ve visited you before. That happened,” Ferrar quickly agreed as he nodded along enthusiastically. He was a smart little pest.

“How many talking goblins do you think there are? This is the same one as before,” Khita added as she laughed. Her words seemed to convince Joan, although Blacknail wasn’t sure why anyone would take her word over his. It was kind of insulting to be judged lower than Khita in any way….

Ferrar left Blacknail’s side and wandered over to Joan. The young woman continued to stare at the goblin suspiciously, but she didn’t back away. Ferrar began to ask her question after question and she answered them one by one. Blacknail and Khita hung back and tried to look interested. It was hard. Making clay pottery was apparently much more complicated than Blacknail had thought.

After talking for a few minutes, Joan led Ferrar inside of a shed and showed him around. Ferrar kept up his barrage of questions as they walked past several shelves. They stopped in front of an oven for few moments and Joan opened its door to show Ferrar. Blacknail peered inside as well, but it was empty and boring. Could they leave now?

“Alright time to go. We have important things to do,” Blacknail announced after a few minutes. He’d had enough. Looking at the oven had made him hungry.

“I’ll come visit you again!” the goblin told Joan as he smiled happily.

“I look forward to it,” Joan replied. She still didn’t seem to know what to make of the goblin and his questions, so she just smiled back politely.

With their farewells complete, Joan left to walk home and Ferrar disappeared. The goblin couldn’t leave by the front door with them and had to sneak out. That left Khita and Blacknail alone again.

“Let’s get out of here before we run into one of the old ladies that live here. I swear the hags have nothing better to do than bug me,” Khita complained as she turned to watch the street. She looked in both directions as if she was afraid someone was trying to sneak up on her.

On the way out of the village, they stopped by Geralhd’s again. Blacknail still needed to pick up his cheese. By this time, Tannin was gone and Geralhd met them at the door.

“Here you go. Someday soon I think I’m going to have to check out this base of yours,” Geralhd remarked as he handed the package of cheese over to Blacknail. It smelled like a good batch. He could tell because, it burned his nose when he tried to sniff it.

“Er… you can’t do that,” Blacknail told him as he tucked the precious bit of dairy away in his cloak. Geralhd didn’t know about Elyias or the horde of goblins there.

“Why not?” Geralhd asked. The quick reply had made him curious.

“It’s… a secret?” Blacknail muttered uncertainly. The cheese fumes were still clouding his brain. He was still seeing flashes of color.

One of Geralhd’s eyebrows rose. “You have a secret base?”

A grimace appeared on Blacknail’s face. It sounded dumb when Geralhd said it like that.

“There’s a huge wolf pack in the area. They’ve been acting aggressively so it wouldn’t be safe,” Khita added.

“Ya, that,” Blacknail agreed. How was Khita being so helpful? She had covered for him several times. It was weird. The hobgoblin scratched his nose. Maybe he was just having an off day?

“Oh, well take care of yourselves,” Geralhd told them. At the first sign of danger he had completely changed his mind about joining them.

“We’re not afraid of any wolves,” Khita replied confidently. Blacknail didn’t agree with her. He was tactically cautious about anything larger than him that wanted to eat him.

After saying their goodbyes, Blacknail and Khita headed out the village gates. They crossed the fields and met up with Ferrar and the other goblins, who were waiting for them. Well, one goblin was missing, but Blacknail was sure it would show up later, or not. The important thing was that they had accomplished their mission.

“Did you learn what you wanted to?” Blacknail asked Ferrar.

“Yep, I know many new things about fire and clay! I can burn more now,” Ferrar replied eagerly.

“Did you learn how to cook or make better food,” Blacknail asked suspiciously. That was the reason he had agreed to let Ferrar come along.

“Um, yes. I learned about ovens,” the goblin replied carefully.

“Good. Good,” Blacknail muttered as he turned away. He had gotten his hands on cheese, new ways of cooking, and convinced the stupid humans to let goblins inside their village. Things were looking up.



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13 Comments
  • Warren Peace
    June 19, 2017

    While the refugees were traversing the Wild, Blackbail was the obvious correct choice of leader. But in this current situation, he is the absolute worst leader that’s theoretically possible, and it’s taking him SO AGONIZINGLY LONG TO LEARN!

    I’m a little curious if anyone wants to argue that Blacktail isn’t a terrible leader. I think I could support my point using this chapter alone.

    Let’s look at Blackmail’s strengths, post-trekking: he’s the visionary who seeded the idea of building a goblin secret base. It’s hard to imagine Gob thinking that big, but that entire side of his personality is repressed so who knows what’s actually going on in his head. But after giving them the idea, he’s accomplished nothing, and in fact he’s been more detrimental to the base’s development than constructive. He’s not a builder, this one. His only real role is to apply the carrot and the stick to keep his workforce motivated, but nearly every application of the stick has been arbitrary and demotivational. Have yoi ever had a boss who loved to pull the best workers away from their areas of strength just to feed his sadistic impulses? Yeah.

    So the secret base is at best a wash, possibly a net negative for the hero.

    Blackrail’s most successful actions have all been accidental or inadvertent, happening despite his intentions. He rounded up the worst malcontents from the refugee gang and removed them from the picture. This likely made it that much easier for Gerahld and the others to become tolerated by the locals, but that was obviously not one of Blackpail’s considerations. He’s also inadvertently (and vert grudgingly) helped build bridges between the refugees and the townsfolk, notably with Joan, and her positive attitude towards him, Khita, and “Scamp” is the kind of thing that rubs off on others. I hardly even need to point out that once again these are things Blackvail doesn’t understand, and he would probably discourage them if he did.

    Unfortunately, the arrival of the Teenage Mutant Killer Wolfpack once again makes him indispensable for a time, which I’m afraid is going to be the next huge factor in his refusal to take off the blinders, grow the fuck up, and start acting like an adult, or at least a teenager. He probably needs to get laid. How come there don’t seem to be any female goblins in the secret base? Are they there behind the scenes, or is that a hint of something odd going on? Are they hermaphrodiric? Is the population able to adjust which sex’s traits are emphasized in different ratios, based on environmental conditions? It’s a real thing that happens in nature, at least.

    Anyway. Blackjail beginning to see Khita in a more honest way is encouraging, but this serial just moves so much slower than I want it to! I’d say “I’ll stop reading and come back when Blackkale learns what’s wrong with the statement ‘I don’t have to help them, I’m the leader!'” but that’s not likely to happen. This is my only serial that updates on Sundays! Even after football season starts, having a new update every Sunday is a nice luxury. But I’m still going to complain if I think the plot should move faster!

    • Warren Peace
      June 19, 2017

      Probably should have proofread before posting. Early on there’s some bad pronoun confusion with “he”s that could mean either Blackqail or Gob. Sorry about that.

    • wabbitking
      June 19, 2017

      personally I’ve been reading it at Geralhd as the leader and has ben letting Blacknail think he’s in charge.

    • Phantom Renegade
      June 19, 2017

      Oh Blacknail is a awful human leader, but all of his behavior so far is normal Blacknail, the only reason he didn’t do everything like this before is because he wasn’t top dog.

      Think about it, before the story he was a plumber slave, then the story started and he became a resource gathering/crafting pet, then he turned into a hobgoblin and he started being a murder pet, there’s not been many chances to learn leadership skills.
      I also think Blacknails biggest failing is applying goblin leadership logic to humans, but he can hardly be blamed for that, everything he does works really well on goblins (except Imp but he doesn’t count).

      I think the pace has been fine, it’s been two chapters since Blacknail nominally became leader, if he arrived in Shelter and immediately figured out everything about how to lead humans when he was pretty much the definition of a murder hobo before then the pace would be completely wonked.

    • Lesurous
      June 19, 2017

      Blacknail* Blacknail* Blacknail* Blacknail* -etc

      Some things to nit pick in your tirade, concerning the growth of Blacknail. The only leader that Blacknail has ever had was Herad, and her behaviour is exactly like Blacknail’s current way of leading. She motivated her band through money and power. He motivates his goblins through food and power.

      The reason why he is beating/teaching Imp and Scamp has already been made clear. A leader can’t allow future problems to sow, and he’s right to see Imp as a future problem. He’s a wild card (don’t know what he’s thinking), is now also a hobgoblin, and is above and beyond the intellect of his kin. What he lacks, compared to Blacknail, is experience and knowledge (Blacknail’s abilities as a ranger). Instilling a sense of futility in challenging Blacknail is a good move, especially considering that it is inevitable that Imp will have some ulterior motive for sticking with Blacknail, beyond safety.

      I also believe that Blacknail has grown as a leader since he’s brought together the goblin horde, for having no guidance beyond his memories of a vicious bandit leader. While no leader of men, his ability to assess things logically (and literally, for humor), gives him an edge for being a leader of goblins. His violence helps cement himself as unopposable in the hearts of the goblins.

      Pretty much, deconstruct what you read beyond it’s face value. Understand why a character behaves as they do, knows what they do, and seeks what they do.

  • Lesurous
    June 19, 2017

    Come one in > Come on in

    Thanks for the chapter. I do have to agree on one point with Warren Peace, the plot feels slowed down. While I feel it’s highly important to show character development, at the same time it’s beginning to feel drawn out. The thrill of action with the wolves also feels mute, considering the solution of an imminent problem by the MC is “build a wall”.

    • Midori
      June 20, 2017

      Its actuality a long term problem, that he didn’t notice until they pointlessly lost lives. They live in what amounts to a forest of death, if you live someplace dangerous because of outside threats you build a wall to keep them out and minimize you number of necessary guards and minimize the rate at which your workers die. That’s why every medieval city had a wall until they became mute point. Without the wall they will just become food for monster after monster until one party dies out.

      • Lesurous
        June 27, 2017

        Er, medieval cities didn’t have an walls to keep out wildlife, although it was an added benefit. City walls allow for protection, as well as aiding in controlling the traffic of people. Besides that, I doubt a wooden palisade built by goblins would do much vs. a irradiated mutant wolf.

        • wabbitking
          June 27, 2017

          Maybe but I can possible help against the mass of regular wolves the big one has with it.

  • Weedisdaboss
    June 21, 2017

    Imp was human lvl smart before evolving, now he should be on genius lvl, in any other novel he would be the MC only reason Blacknail is gona stay in power is because of plot armor…

    • ClearMadness
      June 24, 2017

      He is a Vessel, and Imp might just be smart enough to realize he doesn’t gain a lot from becoming the chief.

    • Lesurous
      June 27, 2017

      Don’t forget that intelligence doesn’t equal cunning. A smart man can be played a fool by a wise charlatan. Plus Blacknail is the only guy who can take you through the Green without it being nigh certain death.

  • Oak
    May 23, 2018

    Thanks for the chapter

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