Preface
Tabletop Role-Playing Game (TRPG)
An analog version of the RPG format utilizing paper rulebooks and dice.
A form of performance art where the GM (Game Master) and players carve out the details of a story from an initial outline.
The PCs (Player Characters) are born from the details on their character sheets. Each player lives through their PC as they overcome the GM’s trials to reach the final ending.
Nowadays, there are countless types of TRPGs, spanning genres that include fantasy, sci-fi, horror, modern chuanqi, shooters, postapocalyptic, and even niche settings such as those based on idols or maids.
My boots pound down on a road I’ve traveled all too many times before.
Before me lies my home. The chimney is ever so slightly tilted. There’s a broken bit on the roof in the spot where my father once tried and failed to climb it for repairs. The front door sticks out as the only bit that still looks new, its predecessor having been blown away in a storm many years ago.
There are many homes like it, but this is the only one that is mine.
I sprint toward it, opening the door and announcing my return.
“I’m home!”
Now that’d be a proper homecoming.
I slammed my mug onto the table with a weary grunt and wiped the foam from my lips. How the hell had I ended up drinking in the town hall without so much as setting down my luggage or changing out of my travel gear?
It had all been going so well at first. Some old friends from the Watch climbed down from their lookout perch with cheers of, “Look who made it back alive!” and the warm welcome was much appreciated until one of them rang the canton bell. Ordinarily used to herald the arrival of merchant caravans and the like, the sound drew out everyone; once they realized it was me, the whole town went into a frenzy.
Every loudly spoken word of welcome just served to attract more attention, and my outward appearance caused speculation to balloon before I could get a word in edgewise.
“Whoa, now! What’s with these killer horses?! You a magistrate now, kid?!”
“Nah, look at his fancy-schmancy clothes. I bet he caught some pretty noble lady’s eye! She’s probably keeping him like a pet.”
“You dolt! Then why’d he come back without a bodyguard? No, no, no, think: the lady who took the kids away was a mage, remember? His sister probably worked some magic or something! The little one, remember?”
The crowd merrily gossiped away, and I could do nothing to stem the deluge of wild conjecture. As an aside, Elisa was being referenced so vaguely because she’d spent most of her time in Konigstuhl sick and cooped up—most of our neighbors hadn’t gotten a chance to know her.
Hungry for entertainment to color the desolate winter months, the people of the canton came out one after another until I found myself being dragged off to the village’s reception building. People brought over the last of their wines and meads to gather around as I was propped up to tell tales of my travels.
Harmless questions like “How was the capital?” abounded—I chose not to ask why everyone knew the details of where I’d gone—with the men asking about pretty city girls and the women wanting to know more about the clothes and gems one could find in the metropolis. Mixed in were less reputable inquiries into urban pleasure districts, and also a suite of questions on the booze outside the canton; honestly, these people were better off joining the Wine God’s flock with how much they loved the stuff.
Shooing them all away would end up hurting my family’s name, so I buckled down and answered with good geniality. Someone was always ready to pour more liquor in my cup as soon as it went dry; that wasn’t the worst thing in the world, but...
“So did you see any adventurers?! What were they like?! Did you see any famous heroes?!”
“Heinz, what are you doing here in this crowd?”
...I couldn’t get over the fact that the one pouring me a new drink was my eldest brother, his arm drunkenly slung over my shoulder.
“C’mon Erich, let us have this!”
“Did you see any pretty girls?! Any demihumans we’ve never seen?!”
It wasn’t just Heinz: the twins had found their way here too. My best guess was that Margit—who’d disappeared at some point amid the chaos—had gone over to let my family know I’d returned. I was very grateful for how she’d thoughtfully given me a chance to spend time with them; it wasn’t as if she was just running away from the clamor of the party, of course.
“You know,” I grumbled, “I feel like the usual response would be to ask how your brother has been, don’t you?”
“Oh, come on! What’s the point in worrying about you when we know you have the cash to send letters and money home to us all the time?”
“Tell him, Heinz! Plus, what’s with those letters, anyway? Are you writing Elisa’s biography or something?! How much are you getting paid that you can use all that paper and ink?”
“And despite all your writings, not a word about the capital. You’re not getting away until we get our fair share of stories!”
Familiar voices and faces quipped at me, just as they always did. They’d all grown up in their own ways: Heinz was now fully bearded and truly looked the part as our head of household, Michael was dressed in surprisingly sharp fashion with his hair slicked back with some kind of oil, and despite his dumb questions, Hans carried himself with enough poise he could’ve been mistaken for someone else.
And it wasn’t just my family: everyone here brought back old memories. There were friends I’d run around the shelterbelt with as a kid, the adults who’d lovingly watched over us, and the old Harvest priest who drank harder than anyone else in the building.
So sharing stories with them all was honestly a wonderful time...but, like, where was my heartfelt reunion with my family?! This wasn’t what I’d been looking forward to!
Life just never went my way, I guess. Drowning my sorrows alongside my drink, I fielded the idle crowd’s questions until they were satisfied.
[Tips] Privacy is too high-minded a concept to be respected in a rural canton without entertainment.
Once the drunkards were too plastered to go on, I slipped out of the meeting hall, cradling my sloshing belly. Leaning against the handrail of the building’s terrace, I exposed myself to the cool night air. It felt great: winter winds whisked away the drunken heat on my cheeks.
I’d completely forgotten how devoid of amusement the countryside was, and how that meant everyone was always looking for an excuse to throw a party. Looking back, the return of someone who’d gone off to the city to earn a living was only ever going to trigger this sort of reaction.
Biting the cork off a bottle I’d swiped, I took a swig of wine. All the alcohol filling up my empty stomach was sure to be bad news in the near future, but it was too late to go back at this point; I might as well ride this train right to the end of the line.
Plus, my Heavy Drinker trait meant that I’d rarely ever gotten drunk before now. While I’d been given plenty of opportunities to sample the finest wines during my time under Lady Agrippina, the mental burden of the knowledge that “drunkenness equals death” had made it impossible to truly give myself up no matter how much I drank.
My memories of merry stupor were few and far between. The most recent one was probably when my friends and sister threw me a going-away party.
“Boy, that’s sour.”
Made for the masses in one of the Wine God’s temples, the drink made up with tartness what it lacked in body. Of course, the distilleries run by His faithful would never produce something truly bad, but it wasn’t nearly up to par after a year spent enjoying the most refined specimens.
Yet in spite of all my gripes, the wine of my hometown was delicious. In fact, maybe this was what a good drink truly looked like.
“What are we going to do if the life of the party sneaks out?”
And it was all thanks to the familiar presences of those I loved.
“You’re one to talk, father. What brings you out into the cold?”
“I figured we might finally get a chance to sit down and talk.”
My old man hadn’t put up any protest at the festivities, but he hadn’t been actively taking part either. Instead, he’d been at the edges of the room, watching over me and my brothers; now that I’d slipped out, he’d followed suit and taken a seat beside me. Not only had he swiped a bottle just like me, but he had a bag of dried jerky in his other hand.
I wondered whether it was because of his mercenary past: in a sea of wasted merrymakers, he’d remained aware enough to keep tabs on where everyone was. I hadn’t been seriously trying to hide, but that he’d spotted me as I crept away from the party suggested that my dad might have been quite the warrior in his prime.
He wordlessly offered me a piece of meat, so I reached in and plucked one out of the bag. As I washed down the salty jerky with a mouthful of sour wine, I could feel the rustic flavors of my hometown seep into my tongue.
“You really managed to come home,” he said.
“Yes,” I said. “I really did.”
“It...must’ve been a long road.”
A thousand emotions bubbled up behind his words. I simply nodded and asked him to tell me how things were going; it felt like we were headed for a watery, sentimental talk, but I wanted my homecoming to be a happier affair.
After all, no one had grieved over my indentured servitude quite like my father.
Honestly, no one had been to blame. It wasn’t anyone’s fault that Elisa had been born a changeling, or that I had the talent to earn money as a noble’s servant, and it definitely wasn’t his fault that he couldn’t pay the College’s tuition outright. Our family might have owned our own land, but at the end of the day, we were rural farmers. What point was there to guilt when the sum easily cleared our total yearly earnings?
At most, we’d been unlucky. That was all there was to it.
So I would have much preferred hearing how things were going. I’d kept my family up to date on how Elisa and I were faring, but since I’d asked them not to reply—letters truly did cost a lot to send—I’d been worried about my family for a while now.
Heinz was sure to inherit the farm, but the fate of the twins could seriously alter the course of our household. As the second son, Michael had the option of staying at home, but only for so long now that we had a nephew. Hans, on the other hand, would need to find a good family to marry into soon, or he’d really be in trouble.
I’d figured the money spent on paper and ink would be better allocated to whatever my family needed, so I’d suppressed my desire to hear back; yet as soon as I got home and saw them all face-to-face, I couldn’t help but worry. It was funny how that worked out.
“I can see all too well that everyone’s in good health,” I said, gesturing back inside. “But what about everyone’s futures? I’ve come of age, which means the twins must be doing something by now.”
My father stared at me, dumbfounded. I urged him on with the tip of my bottle and, after a moment of pause, he began to speak in a peaceful tone.
Apparently, my vivacious eldest brother had managed to grace me with another nephew and niece each. Right now, my sister-in-law Mina was carrying their fourth child in her belly.
...Which meant that my dolt of a brother had left his pregnant wife and children behind to come drink today. He really never changes, I thought. Heinz was the same fool he’d been on the night of his wedding, where he’d gotten so worked up about my helmet-splitting feat that he’d never be able to talk back to Miss Mina again.
Setting aside Heinz and his repeat offenses, in a twist of fortune, Michael had caught the eye of the village chief. My brother had married the man’s second daughter; now that they’d settled down and had a child, he no longer had any need to live at home. What a great stroke of luck.
But most surprising of all was Hans: he was now serving the magistrate himself. The little boy who couldn’t even go to the Watch tryouts without dragging his little brother along had grown up by leaps and bounds.
“Since you kept sending back all that money, we figured it’d only be right to let him have a try at school. At first, he was all embarrassed about going to class with a bunch of kids, but come spring, the magistrate picked him out to be a secretary at the castle.”
As uncouth as it was to say myself, the cash I’d set aside for my family was enough to confidently assert that I was a good son. Seeing as Hans had been the only one not to receive an education, my parents had used the funds to give him a chance to attend the magistrate’s private school.
Enrolling as an adult—the twins were just a year younger than Heinz, so they’d long since come of age—wasn’t unheard of, per se, but it certainly was rare. That rarity, paired with Hans’s newly discovered talent for writing, had been enough to draw the magistrate’s attention.
After graduating from school, he’d spent half a year or thereabouts helping the village scribe and writing letters for the canton chief. Then, one day, the magistrate had come to scout him on account of his remarkable penmanship.
His salary was four drachmae—enough to comfortably provide for two people. Although it was a bit less than ideal if he wanted to start a family, he could always hope for more in the coming years if he kept working diligently. Besides, getting to work for the magistrate was a dream come true for anyone in the canton but firstborn sons. Realistically speaking, that was about as good as it got: on Earth, the equivalent would be clearing a civil service exam in one shot to secure a career in the public sector right out of college.
I was as surprised as I was happy. The days following my and Elisa’s departure had gone swimmingly.
Hey, wait a second. The first son of our family was the head of a successful and independent farm; the second son had wedded into the village chief’s family; the third son served the magistrate as a secretary; the first daughter was enrolled in the Imperial College of Magic, destined to become a noblewoman...and I was an unemployed adventurer hopeful.
Huh? Am I the only one with zero career prospects?
I knew I’d chosen this path for myself, but I couldn’t help but feel a touch of desolation. I knocked back the rest of my wine, but it tasted even more sour than before.
“Man,” I sighed, “they’re all doing well, huh?”
“It’s all thanks to you, Erich.”
“Oh, come on. That’s not true.”
Happenstance was a part of life, but at the end of the day, fate was determined by one’s own skill and effort. Heinz’s fertility obviously had nothing to do with me, nor did Michael’s marriage. Even though Hans’s new job was predicated on schooling that my gifts had afforded him, the meat of his accomplishments came from his own talent. I was owed a bit of gratitude at the very most; the success itself wasn’t thanks to me.
“Well,” my father said, “we can leave it at that if that’s how you want it.”
“You don’t sound all too convinced.”
“Every parent wants to celebrate their kid’s accomplishments. Let me talk you up, will you?”
With a hearty laugh, my old man patted me on the head. His palm was rough and his movements were rougher: he was basically just scrambling my hair. But the crude show of affection filled me with a joy unmatched by Lady Leizniz and her finest combs. In that moment, I felt like all my efforts since leaving home were being recognized and rewarded.
After a bit, both of us started to get embarrassed. We paused for a moment with awkward smiles, until my dad cleared the air by asking, “So what’s your plan, anyway?”
I was hoping to stay until springtime, helping out around the house and resting up. Since I was barging in with two horses to look after, I was ready to pay in both money and labor; I might have given Rudolf a parting gift, but my purse was still fat enough to take care of me.
Once winter thawed, I would be off to the western frontier to become an adventurer.
I’d been working on this plan for a while now. Adventuring was mainly odd jobs, and quests to fight savage beasts or what have you were few and far between.
How could they not be? Humanity laid claim to vast swaths of the world, and danger had long since been expelled from the vicinity of our towns and cities. Economic development would grind to a halt if monsters popped up on every road between urban hubs.
An adventurer could expect to be a handyman, bouncer, or bodyguard, doing anything from searching for missing persons to repairing a broken roof. There was the occasional request to fight off a dangerous creature that had wandered into a nearby forest and the like, but that was well outside one’s expected everyday duties.
However, the same did not hold true on the remote frontier.
In undeveloped lands, nasty beasts still roamed free; highwaymen could sneak under sparse imperial patrols; and bandits thrived to the point where they were halfway to barbarian clans. If I could find my way to a place like that, then maybe the quixotic excitement I sought would await me.
Naturally, this also meant I would be in far greater danger. Daemons would rear their heads as a matter of course, and I had a real chance of running into phantasmal creatures and demibeasts that avoided populated regions. I would, in a word, be stepping foot outside the walled garden of civilization. It would be altogether different from the lazy tranquility of Konigstuhl or the austere security of Berylin.
Which means all the more opportunity to sell my name!
Make no mistake, though: as gung ho as I seemed, this wasn’t a thoughtless attempt to wander off into the middle of nowhere. I’d done my homework by speaking to adventurers in the capital and poring over books on the subject.
A munchkin feeds on data, and that isn’t limited to skill data. Grasping the peculiarities of a region and its balance of power is all part of the package needed to Fast Talk a GM. I wasn’t letting anything past me!
After thorough research, I’d set my sights on a city on the Empire’s westernmost frontier: Marsheim, otherwise known as Ende Erde.
Ruled by the Mars-Baden clan—a branch of the imperial Baden duchy—Marsheim bordered several satellite states to the west. The capital city was of the same name, but was more frequently referred to by its nickname of Ende Erde, earned for being founded on the literal ends of all earth.
Margrave Mars-Baden didn’t allow his territory to fall into anarchy, of course—the Empire’s authority would come into question if a territory bordering foreign states was in a state of chaos—but it was markedly more dangerous compared to the stable regions I’d been to in the past.
Villains laid claim to land where the authorities were stretched too thin to purge them, fangs and claws stalked the teeming wilderness, nearby satellites danced between attractive trade partners and bombs waiting to go off, and the foreign powers farther west offered unparalleled opportunity for all sorts of requests. The region was infamous among my kind: if you could make a name there as an adventurer, you could make it anywhere.
It was a lawless wasteland, not unlike the countries on either end of that infamous bridge.
Lands ripe with adventure were far from rare in the TRPG systems I’d so adored; they were convenient settings to start a campaign’s worth of trouble in. Search for them, and the products of imagination revealed themselves to be a part of reality.
Once the snow was gone, I’d take to the muddy roads for two months and set off for the borderlands...to finally realize my dream.
But that wasn’t all.
My dream was to be an adventurer, but not the kind of NPC who loitered around pubs and told stories to newbies. No, I wanted to experience an honest-to-goodness, heart-pounding adventure. Some said that quixotic romance didn’t exist at all; but then surely the legends of heroes wouldn’t be with us today.
I knew it was rare, but I would chase true adventure. I was going to follow my dreams and see through a journey to live up to all my fantasies.
The landing point was clear; all that remained was to jump for it.
Once I got there, things would be the same as usual: it’d be up to my own skill. No matter what sort of life I lived, it wouldn’t change the fact that I was a piece on the board, swayed by the clattering of dice. What more fun could be had than betting it all on myself? Snake eyes might follow me like old friends, but this was the path I was set on.
“I’m going to become an adventurer.”
My longing was unrusted; my yearning was still vivid; my dream still burned in the depths of my soul. For all the years I’d lived between this world and the last, I was made to know that boys were ever boys, regardless of how old they were. Laugh at me if you wish; I’ll laugh right back at you.
Who could blame me for wanting to be sung about in poems and songs? No great feat has ever been accomplished without equally great ambition.
“I see.”
Two simple words—that was all that came from my father’s mouth, and yet they pushed me forward like nothing else.
I truly was blessed. I didn’t have to worry about my parents’ future: our family was so well-off that I could shake our whole house down and not find a single speck of unease. Very few could go off chasing their wildest imaginations with as clear a mind as me.
I really, really am lucky.
“Oh, by the way.” Upon finishing his own drink, my dad tapped his hands together as if he’d remembered something. “Your mom was really mad. ‘What does he think he’s doing, drinking as soon as he gets home?!’ and all that.”
“What?!”
That’s not fair! I didn’t start it!
“Mina was right there with her, talking about how you should’ve put up your stuff and brought in your horses first. Looks like we’re all in for an earful when we get home.”
“Wait, wait, wait, what?! That doesn’t make any sense! I’m definitely not in the wrong here! Father, you have to help defend me!”
“Ah, but the more people we’ve got, the shorter the personal lectures are, so. Besides, I put in a donation at the church so we’d get some more liquor.”
“So that’s why we didn’t run out of wine! What the hell do you think you’re doing?!”
Twinkling crisply up above, the crescent moon laughed as I marched off to meet my fate.
[Tips] In the Empire, the frontier refers to the lands bordering foreign nations. The keepers of these realms are chosen from the uppermost echelons of high society, and are known as margraves.
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