No Promises
I killed for the second time when I was six years old.
It took...
I killed for the second time when I was six years old.
It took...
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User | Total |
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Nugar | 12 |
Don't play games with a chess master. Kick over the board and shoot him.
wow did not see that coming.
I mean who would go apeshit crazy if they caught their wife fucking her brother? am I right? crazy I tell you.
Understandable. When such things happen you sort of go crazy and full of rage. Reason takes a backseat.The irony, of course, is that the SI is actually his son, but since in this continuity he finds out about the incest cuckoldry, Robert thinks the SI is NOT his son.
...
So uh.
That escalated quickly.
I mean you went from shooting Petyr Baelish dead to King's Landing is on fire, Bob's pissed as fuck, and the SI's on the lam in all of two chapters.
Nice.
I'm not sure what else to say, I sort of just wanna watch things burn
Understandable. When such things happen you sort of go crazy and full of rage. Reason takes a backseat.
And like Generic mentioned, this went sideways so damn fast. Hoping to see how you take this and how canon goes out the window.
Doesn't the SI look a lot like Robert? I mean he is probably angry right now, but he should realise that once he calms downThe irony, of course, is that the SI is actually his son, but since in this continuity he finds out about the incest cuckoldry, Robert thinks the SI is NOT his son.
Doesn't the SI look a lot like Robert? I mean he is probably angry right now, but he should realise that once he calms down
Robert isn't going to Listen to anything while Varys has both of his Small soft oily and tight Fingers in the King's ears.Doesn't the SI look a lot like Robert? I mean he is probably angry right now, but he should realise that once he calms down
Man, it's kind of hilarious to see the SI just having this really successful thing going, and have it all crashing down on him because one of the nominally non-evil characters lost their shit.
Good stuff, Nugar.
To be fair, Robert has good reasons, given both his personality, and medieval legalities and ethics.Man, it's kind of hilarious to see the SI just having this really successful thing going, and have it all crashing down on him because one of the nominally non-evil characters lost their shit.
No, he has in-character reasons. They're not good ones.To be fair, Robert has good reasons, given both his personality, and medieval legalities and ethics.
I was referring more to his being deeply angry, because catching your wife fucking her brother is something that it's normal to get angry about, and in-setting, reasonable to be violently angry about. His reaction to the SI was not him thinking, it was him being too angry to think.No, he has in-character reasons. They're not good ones.
Though even by the setting's fucked-up societal and legal standards, I think trying to kill the son that's actually obviously his was overreacting.
Oh, yes, that's true.I was referring more to his being deeply angry, because catching your wife fucking her brother is something that it's normal to get angry about, and in-setting, reasonable to be violently angry about. His reaction to the SI was not him thinking, it was him being too angry to think.
I always have a bit of trouble believing the personal reproduction of stuff like gunpowder, or in this case 19th century optics and steel.
Though wootz is simple enough for me to believe that an SI could get some made and tempered/hardened/whatever and ready for use eventually, I'm less sold on being able to pass it off as the base for valyrian steel, or a lesser version. High carbon is better but definitely not magical like valyrian. I'm definitely not sold on being able to do that and also a bunch of other similarly large tasks.
And reproducing things like optics runs into the 'building the tools to build the tools' thing, doesn't it? I don't know much about glassmaking, sure, but to sell me on the fact that you could reproduce it, you need to actually demonstrate the knowledge of production, not just tell me that you have it.
The disconnect for me has happened already, since all that we know of the introduced so far in-story is a listing ("my glassworks, my theatre" etc.) and a general reference to the history OTL. Approach-wise, the first impression of the first three sections has already been blown. Being told 'I put a lot of time into these glasses', or even 'I tried this this this and this before making these' is just not as effective as the narrative actually showcasing any technical knowledge and ability.What do you think, though? There's room in the next scene I could have doubleD muse on his works. In a bitter kind of fashion as he flees into the wilderness.
Heh. "Grandson, I know you deserved a better share. But you also deserve to not suck at negotiating, you little idiot!"However, dear Grandfather Tywin knew an opportunity when he saw it. He hired and imported my first set of glassmakers, from the biggest glass industry around, Myr. He still gets sixty five percent of the profits from the float houses, but he also paid for and owns all the infrastructure there, too. I get fifteen.
I negotiated better for my next big project, and managed to wrangle a substantially better deal. Partially, that was because Tywin hadn't screwed me over because he was greedy, he screwed me over as a lesson for me to be a more shrewd negotiator, and bent on the second deal because I tried really hard and got Cersei and Jaime and Tyrion involved as I tried everything from guilt to threats.
Good dog.You know the best thing about having a war dog as a traveling companion?
You always have a trustworthy companion on watch while you sleep. That's really useful, especially if you were too tired when making camp to notice all the rooted up ground a hundred yards or so from your chosen campsite, and a fucking herd of wild pigs shows up midmorning.
One. One 'oh shit' contingency remaining in my satchel.
Wild boars are tough as hell and so brave as to be functionally insane, but a shrapnel grenade in the middle of a suspicious but not yet hostile group will send them squealing.
Good damned thing, too. I'd bet on us against bandits, even small groups of soldiers or guards. I wouldn't take the bet against a herd of wild boars.
Of course, then we had to immediately get up and put some distance between us and the commotion, just in case. The only good part was we took a hindquarter with us. Rusty ate well, too.
Compasses on Planetos were kind of weird. Just like on Earth, magnetic north wasn't the same as true north, but here it was off by fifty degrees or more. Not that even the Maesters could give me a better idea of 'true' north than 'that way'. I think the poles might be flipped, too, but I might have been misreading the field, because I'd forgotten a lot about magnets. Still, at least it pointed in a consistent direction, and I added a second, nonmagnetic arm to show actual north. I also added the traditional mirror on the back, so you could see who's lost.
Heh. "Grandson, I know you deserved a better share. But you also deserve to not suck at negotiating, you little idiot!"
Good dog.
@believability of uplift. It helps to show also failures - what was done here, but I would expect many, many failures for every success.
I find myself wondering, reading that -- could it be that the Land of Always Winter is cold because the Great Other lives there, not because it's the north pole? If the actual pole is further away in another direction, that would explain the oddity of magnetic north being so different.
After all, not all planets have to be perfectly Earth-like in their climate zones, and a larger planet with lower mass (so gravity remains similar) could be large enough to have a lot more space between those zones.
Tywin is one of my favorite characters. As a character. I imagine dealing with his shit personally would get old fast. He just wants a grandson he can be prould of and confident in. One who will protect the family and crush everyone else without succumbing to the demons of friendship, trust, and compassion.
When you put it like that, I feel like most nobles are making a mistake by not having dogs. Trustworthiness is a rare and precious thing in-setting.Can you believe when I was originally planning this story out, I didn't have a dog? I was writing and I paused and dropped my hand down and snapped my fingers a few times so Dixie, my female german shepherd, would come over for a good scritching, and I'm like, 'Waiiiit a minute. I could never not have a dog. You can trust dogs.'