"All right," Deslock shouted. "All aboard who are coming aboard! If you don't make the boat, you can bloody well swim!" He dropped down the ladder three rungs at a time and hit the longboat with a solid
thud. "Get a move on, gents! We've got things to do and places to go!"
Eventually everyone who was coming was in the longboat and they set off, the sailors straining now to row the extra weight. Deslock stood in the front and refused to move, no matter how many polite, meaningful comments the sailors made about weight distribution and balance. The upshot of all this was that it took nearly twice as long to get back to the island than it had taken them to row out to the ship.
And then, of course, when they reached the shore a bunch of shrieking parrots tried to steal Deslock's hat.
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They raced along the river, trees a blur on both sides and the stones below a solid gray sheet, Doctor Nexaddo clenching tight an improvised harness of sturdy vine. The stream took a tight bend to the right and finally opened up to the ocean. Coming to the shore they stopped for a moment to catch their collective breath. The doctor looked both ways, made a tug on the harness to the left and again they were off, faster than before, with an open view along the packed beach. As they reached the tip of a short puninsula the
Cepolada became viewable, out in open water. Shifting his gaze from the ship to the beach he could see a longboat being pulled onto shore. Most of the occupants were struggling to pull the boat onto shore, except for two--one standing off to the side shouting, and one on crutches who could only be Keil. The Doctor scowled. What was Keil doing off the ship in his condition?
It was obvious that he was needed by the Expedition. Time to make his entrance. The Doctor leaned down and whispered into a pointed ear. A smile crept across the face of Nexaddo's companion, revealing sharp white canines the length of a man's finger. The beast roared, the sound resounding for miles.
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Deslock turned at the sound, scanning the treeline, expecting to see some diabolical creature storming out at him. Instead, he saw Doctor Nexaddo coming down the beach, inexplicably riding a tiger. It was a magnificent creature--if it had stood on its hind legs, it would have been fully three times as long as the Doctor, with the tail adding another four feet or so. It's coat was dark and bristly, and its eyes glared baleful yellow at all and sundry. Nexaddo had, somehow, created a harness for the beast, and was at ease on its back, looking disgustingly pleased with himself.
"What the hell?" said Deslock, staring.
It was then that the parrots attacked. Three colorful birds clamped onto Deslock's hat, screeching, and tried to bodily lift it, possibly working on the assumption that it was part of his head. As such, they were somewhat surprised when it came off so easily, only to be snatched back down by an irate explorer.
Then, unfortunately, they went for his eyes.
The landing party quickly devolved into chaos, with sailors swinging oars to try and smash birds out of the air, Deslock attempting to compete with the screams of the parrots via robust swearing, and all and sundry trying to protect their eyes from avian claws. Doctor Nexaddo rode his tiger straight back into the jungle, ignominiously pursued by a colorful flock: if anyone had been in the mood for laughing, it would have been a hilarious sight. As things stood, though, everyone was more concerned with their own troubles.
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The man with the musket couldn't get a good shot.
Garril Rasput danced with the tiger, both of them whirling around in a blur of steel, sinew and claws. Here a fang drew spitting blood from orcish flesh: there an axe trailed crimson after passing through orange fur. They moved fast and smooth, each step and leap seeming as though it had to have been choreographed by a master days ahead of time, each blow a line in a deadly poem.
The tiger was nature's finest, the highest beast on the food chain, lord of all he surveyed. He had learned the art of death from the very moment he was born, practiced it every day of his existence, and was long since a master.
Garril was a huge, vaguely insane orc soused in so many chemicals and magical potions that he might as well have had acid for blood.
It wasn't really a fair fight.