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By mikema63
#14805598
Well it's just about done. Written for an online contest over my summer break.

The prompt was to write a story about a guy getting a job interview, screwing it up, and still managing to get the job.

I debated a good bit whether or not to share it but fuck it I worked hard on the damned thing so here it is.

The smell of blood was in the air. This was largely because Erirk had gotten a nosebleed due to an altercation with his breakfast cutlery and it was difficult for him to smell much else.

“This is going to be a disaster,” He mumbled.

“It’ll be fine,” Erirk's best friend Grok said. “Just don’t stick another fork in your nose and you’ll be fine.”

“You were the one who bumped into my arm.” Erirk didn’t say it with enough force to escape the rag. After all he was probably the only Orc in all of the kingdoms who could’ve managed the feat of accidentally stabbing himself at breakfast. He could almost hear the laughter of whatever malevolent god ruled his life.

“It’ll be fine. Just let me do all the talking and try to avoid a repeat of the bear thing.” Grok was trying to be reassuring but his grim face told Erirk how worried he was.

Erirk was, in his own opinion, the worst Orc who had ever lived. He wasn’t strong, he was a bit of a coward, and he had a legendary propensity to screw up just about anything he tried to do. Breakfast being a recent example. The only thing that had kept him from getting himself killed was his friend Grok. Grok was an Orc’s Orc. He was strong, brave, had his share of admirers in the tribe, and he was also very intelligent. For an Orc. The last was the only trait he and Erirk shared, and since they were the only two in the tribe who could use full sentences and have a conversation more interesting than what they would have for dinner, they became friends despite their differences.

When Erirk had failed in his trial of adulthood by screaming his head off, falling flat on his face in front of the bear he was supposed to kill, and having the bear lick his self-inflicted wounds out of pity, Grok had gone with him when he was kicked out of the tribe. Apparently, the thought of a life spent trying to discuss history and philosophy with people who thought the meaning of life was to have the biggest collection of severed heads didn't appeal to him.

There wasn’t much work for a tribe-less Orc. The only career paths being to work in a mine or find a job henching for one of the various evil overlords scattered about the kingdoms. Mining was out, he'd probably kill himself the first time he swung a pickax. So they had traveled far into the wilds to sign up with the great and terrible warlord Jenkins.

“This place is dusty,” Erirk eyed the layer of dust on the floor of the torch-lit hallway. “You’d think they’d hire someone to at least sweep.”

“If you think you could manage to not accidentally impale yourself on the broom you could offer them your services,” Grok replied.

They came into a small room with chairs and a potted man eating plant. Some of the chairs were occupied by various monsters from a troll eating a lamb to a hobgoblin with spectacles reading through the latest issue of Henchmen Quarterly.

Erirk did his best to wipe up the last of the blood from his green face and stuffed the rags into one of the pouches on his tattered, hand sewn, clothes. “So, do we just wait or what?”

“I have no idea,” Grok replied. “Never really done this before.”

“Just wait till your names get called dear,” a reedy voice said from behind them.

Startled, they turned to see a goblin wearing the goblin equivalent of work clothes, greasy soiled rags. It was also wearing a red bonnet with a sunflower stitched to the side which managed to somehow clash with the dirty rags so garishly that it was the worst part of the outfit.

“I’m Tiffany, Mr. Bobert’s secretary, please take these documents and review them. If you are illiterate be aware that you are still subject to the stipulations of any contracts you sign. Refusal to sign any documents will lead to your termination,” Tiffany said. She had the sort of manic grin that can only be achieved after having grinned for several hours straight without resting your facial muscles.

“Terminated? You mean we wouldn’t get the job?” Erirk asked.

“No, no don’t be silly. I mean you’ll be terminated, as in killed, probably by fire. Though some get their heads chopped off by the guards. That's always so fun!” Her smile tightened to the point Erirk was concerned her face might start tearing. Or he would anyway if he weren’t busy being concerned about the whole dying thing.

“We best sign our forms them,” Grok said. He grabbed the now pale green Erirk by the shoulder and steered him toward a chair. “Thank you, miss Tiffany.”

“It’s mister Tiffany. Just make sure you finish the forms before the interview.” The Brightly capped goblin said, and then turned to assist a Barghest.

“We’re going to die,” Erirk said. “We might as well have just jumped off a cliff. It would have been less painful.”

“Calm down and help me go through the forms. It’ll help us live longer.”

Erirk clutched the forms in his hands and did his best to bury himself in the sea of bureaucratic legalese. He found it comforting, in a strange way, how all the rules and stipulations fit together and the challenge of sorting it all out. He even discovered a few interesting loopholes and useful clauses over the next hour.

“Erirk and Grok,” Tiffany called out. “Mr. Bobert is ready to see you now.”

Erirk jerked back into awareness of his surroundings, and unfortunately his situation, prompting sweat to reform over his bald green head.

Grok looked over at him. “Did you understand any of that stuff? I gave up at the first page.”

“Yeah I understood it,” Erirk said. He tried to wipe the sweat from his forehead, but noticed he was using the rags from his nosebleed. All he'd done was add blood to the sweat.

Grok sighed and pulled out his own rag. “Is it safe to sign these?” He asked wiping down Erirk’s forehead.

“Not really but it’s still safer than not signing them.”

Grok nodded with a strained look on his face. “No turning back now, I guess.”

The secretary led them down a short hallway that branched off from the waiting room. They came to a plain wooden door embedded in the rock. Tiffany hesitated when she grabbed the knob. “Good luck boys.”

Bobert was dressed in Goblin kinds highest fashion. Rags so filthy that it was everything Erirk could do to not lose his hard-won breakfast.

Bobert was seated at a little desk, parchment papers and quills strewn randomly on it’s surface. Bobert's face, best described as a stretched out mold covered prune, lacked even the hint that a smile had ever graced the region below his long pointed nose. Erirk did his best to avoid looking at the goblin in front of him.

“Sir, Mr. Grok and Mr. Erirk are here for their interview,” said Tiffany.

“I sent you to get them, I know who they are. Sit down you two.” Bobert’s voice gurgled like irritable swamp bubbles.

Erirk felt a new cascade of sweat form as he and Grok sat down. “Good evening mister Bobert it’s a pleasure to meet you,” Erirk stammered before Grok shut him up with a sidelong look. Right, let Grok do the talking.

“Humph,” Bobert said with a disdainful glance. “So, you too are interested in becoming henchmen for the great and terrible warlord Jenkins. What skills would you bring to this position? Any experience with maiming villagers or defending castles and dungeons?”

“We have experience invading small towns and excel at locating hidden people and loot within the ruins,” Grok said this with his most professional menacing glare. Erirk tried to copy this but, considering the looks he got from both Bobert and Grok, he quickly decided to not try it again.

“I see, and do you have a reference from your tribe?”

It was the question Erirk was dreading, but Grok had assured him that he could get them through.

“We were in the Orlock tribe but I left to find better.” Grok's excuse was short, not unheard of, and carefully worded to be technically true. Most didn’t credit Orcs with the ability to do anything as cunning as carefully wording things, so they hoped to not be questioned further.

Unfortunately it seemed that Bobert’s nose could smell more than just the immense stink his body and clothes emanated. It had a keen sense of bullshit detection.

“Really,” he said looking between them. “And what about you mister Erirk? Did you leave the tribe to find better?” He sneered as he said it.

“Ah ah, um, well…” Erirk was sure that he could mop out the dungeon with the amount of sweat he was producing.

“Well?” Erirk had never heard a more ominous rendition of the word well in his life. Visions of working in a mine, or worse having someone called in to kill them on the spot, went through his head.

“I...I was...kicked out.” Erirk slumped.

Grok Covered his face with a palm. “You could’ve lied you know.”

“I see,” said Bobert. “Well then I obviously am not hiring someone who couldn’t even make it in their own tribe, and I certainly can't let someone who can’t even lie leave with our location.”

Grok braced himself to jump across the table and Bobert sneered and manifested a fireball in his hand.

Erirk braced for death. It was, after all, just about what any failure of an orc could expect. A portion of his life flashed as the world slowed down. It figured that the only part that would flash before his eyes where the stupid pointless contracts full of rules and regulations they had signed. Then he saw something.

“Article 3, subsection C2,” he said.

Everyone stopped and stared.

He cleared his throat nervously. “Ah, it, um, says…” He stammered.

“If applicant admits to extreme cowardice to the point that they are going to piss themselves in the face of death, then, applicant may leave with wet pants in full view of staff to provide an example of what a total idiot looks like,” Tiffany said, reading from the relevant form. She leaned over to have a look at Erirk. “Well, he certainly qualifies.”

Erirk blushed, as much as an Orc could, as Grok put his head into his hands.

Bobert laughed, long and hard, wheezing like it would kill him.

“Fine, go on you two, get out,” he said when he calmed down enough to speak. “Best thing that’s happened all week.”

So they left, walked straight out of the dungeon, the halls filled with the laughter of a dozen different species of monsters. Erirk wished he hadn’t said a thing and had just accepted his death.

Well, at least Grok’s hand on his shoulder let him know they were still friends, and they could find a nice mine somewhere far away where no one would ever recognize him.

“Mister Grok! Mister Erirk!” They turned to see Tiffany running towards them. She stopped in front of them to catch her breath.

When she recovered she straightened and handed them both a single page. “Good news, the great and terrible warlord was watching via a scrying orb, he likes to watch the less promising applicants on his leisure time you see. You’re both hired!”

Erirk looked at the paper. “Erirk,” he read. “I was impressed with your ability to remember those bullshit rules I wrote. Better I haven’t had that good a laugh in a long time. So I’m hiring you as an HR manager working directly for Bobert. Congratulations! P.S. this hiring isn’t optional.”

Erirk wondered if it was too late to get burned to death.
By Decky
#14805631
I assume Grok and Erirk are fancy gentlemen? There seems to be something of a subtext behind their reason for leaving the tribe together. Will this be a one off or is it the start of your magnum opus?
Last edited by Decky on 17 May 2017 02:06, edited 1 time in total.
By mikema63
#14805635
Decky wrote:I assume Grok and Erirk are fancy gentlemen? There seems to be something of a subtext behind their reason for leaving the tribe together. Will this be a one off or is it the start of your magnum opus?


All my stories have fancier types. I left it open to do more someday maybe but I doubt I'll have a magnum opus ever.

A blushing orc? That presents a funny picture! I like that you mixed fantasy into it. I will reread it later.


Thank you, I thought the prompt was dull and wanted to do something fun with it.
User avatar
By MistyTiger
#14806231
I enjoyed that story. It was humorous and reminded me of the Percy Jackson series.

There were a few sentences I would change a little, but overall a great contest submission.
User avatar
By Drlee
#14806235
I assume Grok and Erirk are fancy gentlemen? There seems to be something of a subtext behind their reason for leaving the tribe together. Will this be a one off or is it the start of your magnum opus?


Decky, I swear. I would pay $1000.00 to have dinner with you, Red Army and Special Olympian. My job would be to just enjoy repartee.
By mikema63
#14806239
Funnily enough Decky was the only person so far, excepting one gay guy I showed it to, who was able to notice the subtext.

I enjoyed that story. It was humorous and reminded me of the Percy Jackson series.

There were a few sentences I would change a little, but overall a great contest submission.


Thank you. :)

By all means point out the sentences you think could be rewritten. I'm always happy for constructive criticism, It's not like I consider myself a particularly skilled writer.
By Decky
#14806391
Drlee wrote:Decky, I swear. I would pay $1000.00 to have dinner with you, Red Army and Special Olympian. My job would be to just enjoy repartee.


Sure but we only take cash, I wouldn't want it going through the books. the Tories would only give it to bankers or look for news ways to steal free milk from school kids (they literally do that it isn't hyperbole, they are like villains from a kid's TV show). :p Imagine if Ter was there too and he provided the food, and we could have it on Noeman's private island! Skinster, Frollein and Red Barn would need to be there too of course to stop it being a sausage fest.

What a night it would be! I think Jim Jam would be interesting too, he could tell us about Woodstock. Oh and PI as well although he would humble us all by drinking us under the table... actually this has stopped being a dinner and became a rave/ the last days of Rome...

mikema63 wrote:Funnily enough Decky was the only person so far, excepting one gay guy I showed it to, who was able to notice the subtext.


I don't know exactly what you are insinuating there Mike but my arse is an exit door only!!! I don't drink wine, I dress really badly, I have done lots manual labour and I don't even own a suit. My conscience is clear!

PS Mike you might like this.

User avatar
By MememyselfandIJK
#14806406
Decky wrote:Sure but we only take cash, I wouldn't want it going through the books. the Tories would only give it to bankers or look for news ways to steal free milk from school kids (they literally do that it isn't hyperbole, they are like villains from a kid's TV show). :p


(Sarcasm) **Gasp** How dare you accept money and violate the true communist way of barter? Looks like you need to be sent off for re-education!

On a (slightly) more serious note, I too would pay big money to meet other guys IRL. Sometimes just chatting on the online forums isn't enough.

@mikema63 Fantastic story. If you are still editing, maybe add a little more description so I can visualize what it looks like a little more (but not too much or else it would be like one of those boring trashy novels)
User avatar
By MistyTiger
#14806414
I made some corrections. I decided to just copy and paste the whole thing with the corrections included.

The smell of blood filled the air. This was due to Erirk’s nosebleed, which was caused by an altercation with his breakfast cutlery, thereby making it difficult for him to smell much else.

“This is going to be a disaster,” he mumbled.

“It’ll be fine,” Erirk's best friend Grok said. “Just don’t stick another fork in your nose and you’ll be fine.”

“You were the one who bumped into my arm.” Erirk didn’t say it with enough force to escape the rag. After all he was probably the only Orc in all of the kingdoms who could’ve managed the extraordinary feat of accidentally stabbing himself at breakfast. He could almost hear the laughter of whatever malevolent god ruled his life.

“It’ll be fine. Just let me do all the talking and try to avoid a repeat of the bear thing.” Grok was trying to be reassuring but his grim face told Erirk how worried he was.

Erirk was, in his own opinion, the worst Orc who had ever lived. He wasn’t strong, he was a bit of a coward. He had a legendary propensity to screw up just about anything he tried to do, breakfast being the most recent example. The only thing that prevented him from accidentally killing himself was his friend Grok. Grok was an Orc’s Orc. He was strong, brave, had his share of admirers in the tribe, and was also very intelligent, for an Orc. Intelligence was the only trait he and Erirk shared, they were the only two in the tribe who could use full sentences and have a conversation more interesting than what they would have for dinner. It was the only thing that bound them together as friends.

When Erirk had failed in his trial of adulthood by screaming his head off, falling flat on his face in front of the bear he was supposed to kill, and having the bear lick his self-inflicted wounds out of pity, Grok had gone with him when he was kicked out of the tribe. Apparently, the thought of a life spent trying to discuss history and philosophy with people who thought the meaning of life was to have the biggest collection of severed heads didn't appeal to him.

There wasn’t much work for a tribe-less Orc. The only career paths were either working in a mine or henching for one of the various evil overlords scattered about the kingdoms. Mining was out, he'd probably kill himself the first time he swung a pickax. So they had traveled far into the wilds to sign up with the great and terrible warlord Jenkins.

“This place is dusty,” Erirk eyed the layer of dust on the floor of the torch-lit hallway. “You’d think they’d hire someone to at least sweep.”

“If you think you could manage to not accidentally impale yourself on the broom you could offer them your services,” Grok replied.

They came into a small room with chairs and a potted man-eating plant. Some of the chairs were occupied by various monsters from a troll eating a lamb to a hobgoblin with spectacles reading through the latest issue of Henchmen Quarterly.

Erirk did his best to wipe up the last of the blood from his green face and stuffed the rags into one of the pouches of his tattered, hand-sewn clothes. “So, do we just wait or what?”

“I have no idea, never really done this before,” Grok replied.

From behind them a reedy voice said, “Just wait till your names get called, dear.”

Startled, they turned to see a goblin wearing the goblin equivalent of work clothes, which were grease-soiled rags. It was also wearing a red bonnet with a sunflower stitched to the side which managed to somehow clash with the dirty rags so garishly that it was the worst part of the outfit.

“I’m Tiffany, Mr. Bobert’s secretary, please take these documents and review them. If you are illiterate be aware that you are still subject to the stipulations of any contracts you sign. Refusal to sign any documents will lead to your termination,” Tiffany said. She had the sort of manic grin that can only be achieved after having grinned for several hours straight without resting your facial muscles.

“Terminated? You mean we wouldn’t get the job?” Erirk asked.

“No, no don’t be silly. I mean you’ll be terminated, as in killed, probably by fire. Though some get their heads chopped off by the guards. That's always so fun!” Her smile tightened to the point Erirk was concerned her face might start tearing. Or he would anyway if he weren’t busy being concerned about the whole dying thing.

“We best sign our forms them,” Grok said. He grabbed the now pale green Erirk by the shoulder and steered him toward a chair. “Thank you, miss Tiffany.”

“It’s mister Tiffany. Just make sure you finish the forms before the interview.” The brightly capped goblin said, and then turned to assist a Barghest.

“We’re going to die,” Erirk said. “We might as well have just jumped off a cliff. It would have been less painful.”

“Calm down and help me go through the forms. It’ll help us live longer.”

Erirk clutched the forms in his hands and did his best to bury himself in the sea of bureaucratic legalese. He found it comforting, in a strange way, how all the rules and stipulations fit together and the challenge of sorting it all out. He even discovered a few interesting loopholes and useful clauses over the next hour.

“Erirk and Grok,” Tiffany called out. “Mr. Bobert is ready to see you now.”

Erirk jerked back into awareness of his surroundings, and the unfortunateness of his situation caused a profuseness of sweat to reform over his bald, green head.

Grok looked over at him. “Did you understand any of that stuff? I gave up at the first page.”

“Yeah I understood it,” Erirk said. He tried to wipe the sweat from his forehead, but noticed he was using the rags from his nosebleed. All he'd done was add blood to the sweat.

Grok sighed and pulled out his own rag. “Is it safe to sign these?” He asked wiping down Erirk’s forehead.

“Not really, but it’s still safer than not signing them.”

Grok nodded with a strained look on his face. “No turning back now, I guess.”

The secretary led them down a short hallway that branched off from the waiting room. They came to a plain wooden door embedded in the rock. Tiffany hesitated when she grabbed the knob. “Good luck boys.”

Bobert was dressed in Goblin kinds highest fashion, in rags so filthy that it was all Erirk could do to not lose his hard-won breakfast.

Bobert was seated at a little desk, parchment papers and quills strewn randomly on its surface. Bobert's face, which could best be described as a stretched out mold-covered prune, lacked even the hint that a smile had ever graced the region below his long, pointed nose. Erirk did his best to avoid looking at the goblin in front of him.

“Sir, Mr. Grok and Mr. Erirk are here for their interview,” said Tiffany.

“I sent you to get them, I know who they are. Sit down, you two.” Bobert’s voice gurgled like irritable swamp bubbles.

Erirk felt a new cascade of sweat form as he and Grok sat down. “Good evening mister Bobert it’s a pleasure to meet you,” Erirk stammered before Grok shut him up with a sidelong look. Right, he should let Grok do the talking, Erirk thought.

“Humph,” Bobert said with a disdainful glance. “So, you two are interested in becoming henchmen for the great and terrible warlord Jenkins? What skills would you bring to this position? Any experience with maiming villagers or defending castles and dungeons?”

“We have experience with invading small towns and are skilled at locating hidden people and loot within the ruins,” Grok said with his most professional, menacing glare. Erirk tried to copy this but, considering the looks he got from both Bobert and Grok, he quickly decided to not try it again.

“I see, and do you have a reference from your tribe?”

It was the question Erirk was dreading, but Grok had assured him that he could get them through.

“We were in the Orlock tribe but I left to find better.” Grok's excuse was short, not unheard of, and carefully worded to be technically true. Most didn’t credit Orcs with the ability to do anything as cunning as carefully wording things, so they hoped to not be questioned further.

Unfortunately it seemed that Bobert’s nose could smell more than just the immense stink his body and clothes emanated. It had a keen sense of bullshit detection.

“Really,” he said looking between them. “And what about you mister Erirk? Did you leave the tribe to find better?” He sneered as he said it.

“Ah ah, um, well…” Erirk was sure that he could mop out the dungeon with the amount of sweat seeping out of his pores.

“Well?” Erirk had never heard a more ominous rendition of the word “well” in his life. Visions of working in a mine, or worse having someone called in to kill them on the spot, went through his head.

“I...I was...kicked out.” Erirk slumped.

Grok covered his face with one palm. “You could’ve lied you know.”

“I see,” said Bobert. “Well then I obviously am not hiring someone who couldn’t even make it in their own tribe, and I certainly can't let someone who can’t even lie leave with our location.”

Grok braced himself to jump across the table and Bobert sneered and manifested a fireball in his hand.

Erirk braced for death. It was, after all, just about what any failure of an orc could expect. A portion of his life flashed as the world slowed down. It figured that the only part that would flash before his eyes where the stupid pointless contracts full of rules and regulations they had signed. Then he saw something.

“Article 3, subsection C2,” he said.

Everyone stopped and stared.

He cleared his throat nervously. “Ah, it, um, says…” He stammered.

“If applicant admits to extreme cowardice to the point that they are going to piss themselves in the face of death, then, applicant may leave with wet pants in full view of staff to provide an example of what a total idiot looks like,” Tiffany said, reading from the relevant form. She leaned over to have a look at Erirk. “Well, he certainly qualifies.”

Erirk blushed, as much as an Orc could, as Grok put his head into his hands.

Bobert laughed, long and hard, wheezing like it would kill him.

“Fine, go on you two. Get out,” he said when he calmed down enough to speak. “Best thing that’s happened all week.”

So they left, walked straight out of the dungeon, the halls filled with the laughter of a dozen different species of monsters. Erirk wished he hadn’t said a thing and had just accepted his death.

Well, at least Grok’s hand on his shoulder let him know they were still friends, and they could find a nice mine somewhere far away where no one would ever recognize him.

“Mister Grok! Mister Erirk!” They turned to see Tiffany running towards them. She stopped in front of them to catch her breath.

When she recovered she straightened and handed them both a single page. “Good news, the great and terrible warlord was watching via a scrying orb, he likes to watch the less promising applicants on his leisure time you see. You’re both hired!”

Erirk looked at the paper. “Erirk,” he read. “I was impressed with your ability to remember those bullshit rules I wrote. I haven’t had that good of a laugh in a long time. So, I’m hiring you as an HR manager working directly for Bobert. Congratulations! P.S. this hiring isn’t optional.”

Erirk wondered if it was too late to get burned to death.


On second thought, not sure if the corrections I made were just a "few". They are just suggestions. Oh and the goblin kinds sentence, could be "goblinkind's"...caught that just after I submitted.
By mikema63
#14806472
I don't know exactly what you are insinuating there Mike but my arse is an exit door only!!! I don't drink wine, I dress really badly, I have done lots manual labour and I don't even own a suit. My conscience is clear!

PS Mike you might like this.


How very dare you!

@MistyTiger I'll give it a look tonight or tomorrow. Thank you. :)

@MememyselfandIJK I'm glad you liked it. If I can pare it down I can add more but the contest has a word limit.
User avatar
By MememyselfandIJK
#14806477
mikema63 wrote:@MememyselfandIJK I'm glad you liked it. If I can pare it down I can add more but the contest has a word limit.


I cannot tell you how much I hate word limits. Whenever I do an application for something I always go over the limit and when I cut it down I feel like I missed something. :knife:
User avatar
By MistyTiger
#14806480
I used to write articles online and word limits nearly killed me! I don't know if I increased the word count of your story, but you should definitely check!

You could probably trim away some of the descriptions about the greasy clothing, although seeing the dirtiness repeated was part of the humor. You mention rags and greasy clothes or rags 3 or more times. :lol:
By mikema63
#14806484
It's the sort of thing erirk would notice and be fixated on I figured.
User avatar
By MistyTiger
#14806491
mikema63 wrote:It's the sort of thing erirk would notice and be fixated on I figured.


Ah, I get it. He does seem like the nervous type. Maybe if you made a sequel, Erirk could have a mini panic attack on the new job. :excited:
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