Anthony picked up the silver cup from the mantelpiece and turned it over, feeling its heft as his eyes danced around the decorated paneled walls. Dozens of different pistols and rifles as well as scores of swords and axes hung proudly, the streaming sun from the skylight illuminating the entire west side of the room. He placed the cup back and nodded his head, “So you see, I need a requisition sent most urgently to the, uh...erm,” he fished inside his lower vest pocket and withdrew a scrap of paper. “Senatus Populusque Romanus Military Exquesher Office in Rome.”
The man seated comfortably in the hand stuffed, crushed velvet blue couch flicked one end of his cigar absently, the trailing ash caught by the waiting presence of his maid holding a brass tray near his elbow. He smiled at her the same way a hunter would at his prized retriever before returning his gaze to Guiltius. “I know what it is you would need,” he replied, his voice deep and gravely from years of too much whiskey, “but what I don’t understand is what you need me for?”
Guiltius smiled broadly, eyes glinting as he prepared to launch into his speech. “The current situation here is, you have to understand, a bit of a mess. No?” The other man nodded, head cocking slightly in agreement. Anthony continued. “The Senate can’t control the army. The army and navy are at odds. The impressors are against the loyalist. The loyalists are against the monarchists. And in the mix of it all, we have a two front war here against some rather unconventional enemies that is stretching our soldiers to the limits and beyond.”
“But you are not a military man, Mister Guiltius.”
“No, sadly on that note I am not, BUT I do have the good graces to represent one.”
“Hmmm,” the seated man shifted, crossing his legs over each other the other way. “If you are right, I still don’t see why you are coming to me. Couldn’t your ‘friend’ handle such a requisition.”
“Normally you would be right, but he is currently fielding a large number of soldiers against the northern aggressions of the Incan Empire for starters. And secondly, such a req would need to be ratified by a ranking member of the armed forces with at least a captain’s stripes; of which sadly, my much maligned and needy companion is short of by one chevron.”
“Ah,” he brought his cigar back to his mouth and drew in a mouthful of smoke, savoring it before letting it escape from his lips in a rippling stream. “I think I am beginning to see.”
Guiltius idly ran his fingers against the smooth barrel of an Egyptian style shotgun, playing his palms just over the walnut stock. “And being in the field, he cannot rely on his superior to act in haste on his request, especially since it would have to go through the normal bureaucracy and you know, as a retired officer yourself that some bean counter would most likely parse the requisition down or discard it all together.”
Leaving the weapon alone, he turned around continuing, “And being a lieutenant himself, a requisition signed with only his name and sent to the Exquesher would be discarded or returned without even being looked at.” His grin broadened, “So I come to you, good sir, as a patriot and fellow supporter of Rome and her armed forces, to help me in having this document drawn up so my agents can ensure it gets to Rome as swiftly as humanly possible.”
“And what is it you are requesting for your friend?”
“A trifling really I’m sure, but for the men in the field it is the difference between freedom and a violent end.”
“Well?”
“I am to requisition one thousand medium ranged standard issue design rifles with, er...,” he looked back at his paper, “less than 1% degree of barrel width variance between them.” He looked back up and smiled. “Delivered to Mikona Warehouse, 2nd Wharf Street in Huamanga.”
The seated man laughed. “Damn, Mister Guiltius, you have got a set of brass ones, don’t you?” He laughed louder, his voice eventually breaking down into a ragged set of coughing. “1% of variance? Zeus’ Balls, that’s a hoot.”
“Are you saying it can’t be done?”
“Oh, no no no, it can be. I just know for a fact that the Exquesher is going to be crapping ten penny nails when this crosses his desk.” He tapped his cigar, the ash once more caught without fail. “I have been saying it for years, we need to revamp the entire line of the modern soldier from cap to boots and everything in between. It’s why I’m semi-retired...he he he,” he chuckled, holding his left arm up and showing the missing end of it where it stopped at his elbow, “the fact they don’t listen to us and my arm being chopped off.”
“Perhaps after the war is over, someone will see that your idea has merit.”
“War department doesn’t work like that, Mister Guiltius. When there is no war, no one bothers to spend money, research, or development on things to better suit a war.”
Anthony shrugged, still keeping his expression friendly and his grin present as he tried to bring the deal to a close. “All things being equal, I don’t think our men and women on the front line can wait that long. And as for the Exquesher, I don’t think that his discomfort or displeasure should detract from vital needed arms for the soldiers in the field.”
“I don’t know, it’s a rather big deal for what you’re asking me. I’m not officially part of the COC anymore and I am not sure that this friend of yours you represent will have a happy Captain behind him when he finds he’s gone around the proper channels.”
Feeling himself grow elated to finally be at the end of the deal, Guiltius nodded exaggeratedly as he brought his pitch to a close. “I know what you are saying, and it is for that reason that I am seeing it fit to have your patriotic duty amply rewarded in a way that I know would bring great pleasure and satisfaction to you.”
“Oh really?”
Guiltius grinned wider, the door behind him opening and three of his men entering with treasures in tow. The first one lowered a flat wooden box that when opened held a gross hand rolled taipedonig leaf cigars from Chichen Itza. The second one placed a larger metal box on the ground, this one filled with 14 individually packed wooden casks of forty year old scotch. And the last one had a battered, beaten UAL prisoner in tow, the man’s hands lashed together behind his back, feet hobbled by a length of wooden stays and chains. His mouth was gagged but his eyes were wide as he looked at the now white faced Major and blanched himself.
“This is a League sharpshooter known as Falayd ibn-Ashmael. I had a friend look him up, especially since I know for a fact the two of you have a history together. He was, in all places if you can imagine, here in Huamanga in the prisoner of war camp just sitting around waiting for the war to end or the League to pay for his release.” His eyes centered on the Major’s empty sleeve. “I assume you would want to have some word with him, you know, man to man.”
He withdrew a sheaf of masterforged requisition forms and placed them in front of the officer, pushing an inked quill into his hand. “I would gladly leave all this to you, as well as the use of two of my men should you need assistance during your ‘conversation’ for a few hours in exchange for lets say,” he counted the pages quickly, “nine copies of your signature on these forms. Seems pretty cheap, one signature for each month you’ve been retired, wouldn’t you say?”
About an hour later, Guiltius sent off a missive to Lieutenant Sulla of the 11th Veii Riflemen that his request for six-hundred specified rifles would be arriving within the next two weeks, the fresh faced private taking the sealed satchel bag gravely before saluting and racing away. Anthony sighed contentedly as he turned in his chair and looked out the window.
“Something wrong, sugar?” Candace asked, running her hands across his chest as she hugged him languidly from behind.
“Me? Nope,” he grabbed her fingers and squeezed them, bringing the tips to his lips to kiss her painted nails. “Everything is fine.”
She stepped around, sliding into his lap and pressing her form against his chest. “So you did good business, sugar?”
Anthony grinned. “Girl, I’m a businessman.” And then he leaned forward, kissing her carmine stained lips as he ran his hand against her buttocks. “And all I do, baby, is good business.”