2nd of Ash, 124th Year of the Age of Steel
Olga Barber was firm in her convictions. Stubborn, sure, but she knew where things stood. Not everyone had figured it out, but she saw the order in the mess of this world. There was a hierarchy to existence. Engineers, the inflexible little shits, were very close to the bottom. As close as you could get to the stinky cultists, defectors, and party magicians without actually being one.
And below them? Well, that was a special seat at the very bottom of her hierarchy dedicated specifically for one Private John Bacchas.
“No, Private. I just need a review of your training module. I don’t need anything more,” Olga said, trying her best to seem calm and easygoing, because she really didn’t need another complaint lodged against her. “So, if you -.”
“Sorry, ma’am! I am trying, ma’am. It’s only -,” and Olga noticed he was shivering. Private Bacchas towered over her, all muscles and suspiciously wide shoulders. He couldn’t look her in the eye. Pathetic. She knew a number of the younger recruits hadn’t yet learned to understand their biases were really only deserved by those special kinds of idiots who branded their souls with runes. He hadn’t any real reason to worry about her, or any other proper mage.
“Do you have a copy of the module?” She interrupted his blabbering. She really couldn’t stand cowardice. That, and she wondered at how he’d even managed to get this placement. The military shouldn’t be training anyone to drive her tanks if they couldn’t stand a simple conversation with a magecraft technician. Another thing to add to her next report to the commanding office.
He shook his head. And then again. Slowly, ever so, she watched as he began to string his words into some weave of a sentence. “We did and -,” Olga wondered if he knew that a nod meant yes, and that the gesture he had been doing, meant no. “- then we destroyed them. Standard procedure, ma’am. Everything I need is up here,” he said, tapping his forehead. Not that it meant anything. She’d been working to get any detail out of him for the last thirty minutes, and so far, she only learned they’d destroyed the training manual.
She’d never say it out loud but she sometimes suspected the Imperium wasn’t exactly run by geniuses.
“Alright. Well -,” she sighed, desperately trying to purge her frustration and rage and murderous desire all in a single breath. Life was hard, she remembered. Nothing was easy. Everyone did things they didn’t want to. That was, in so many words, society. Yes. Olga looked at the massive chihuahua of a man and told herself that she needed him. She could be patient. She could lie to herself.
“If you know how to drive this -,” she gestured at the tank behind her, parked and in disarray. Olga would need to have them put it together once she’d completed the Core. “- you will have to explain it to me. Carefully. Can you do that, Private?”
He shook his head, again. This time, Olga knew that meant yes.