The Unknown: A Game of Fear, Ignorance, and Adventure

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MintyNinja

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Rokya climbed out on to the upper decks slowly at first, dissuaded by the sheer heat of the dragon's passing. The burns on his wrapped hands throbbed as the last of the fires were put out. Sailors and crewmen bustled about, limping off to the mess hall or attempting to repair the structural damage.



Rokya said as he joined the three in their conversation.

"What the hell are you two talking about?" Deslock commanded, he wasn't fond of not knowing what was being said right in front of him. Rokya explained Rhee's previous statement and added his own thoughts.

"Personally, I'd rather slavers too, they tend to go for captives instead of kills. Which would give us enough time to take their ship out from under their feet." He laughed just for the audacity of his plan, a positive attitude was needed in a time like this. "By the way, Deslock, shouldn't our resident mage be helping with repairs? I've heard of his ability to give the mast life, surely that could be used to patch a few things up, right?"
 

Flying-Emu

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Ticky's eyebrows shot up at Rokya's comment. Turning to the man, he sniffed derisively. "What are you, some sort of idiot? You don't know much about the arcane, do you?" Ticky stepped closer to the man, his eyes narrowing dangerously. "While you were hip-hopping around 'rescuing' these bunch of slack-jawed sailors, I was busy making sure we didn't find ourselves with nothing but strips of plywood to float on!" He spat at Rokya's feet. "You want me to help with repairs? Do I seem like some sort of gnomish handyman? A Gods-damned carpenter?"

Ticky took a deep breath and stepped away from Rokya. "Magic is not something to be played with to complete chores. Every incantation requires something in return; it's a trade, a service for a product. Today, I was lucky; all they wanted today was a few shreds of my soul." The gnome buffed his fingers against his shoulder arrogantly. "Now if you'll excuse me, I'll see if I can do something that is actually pertinent to my abilities." And with that, Ticky sauntered off to assist the good doctor.
 

MintyNinja

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As the gnome stormed off Rokya said quietly to the other two, "I actually meant Raven Del Cid, but it wouldn't be very prudent to chase down the pissed off gnome, would it?" He would have spared a second to tell Rhee what had transpired, but she was laughing too hard to really listen.
 

Fingerprint

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San had stayed below decks the whole time. Although he didn't, at the time, know what had produced the monumental roar and caused the ship to lurch from left to right he had guessed it was not something he wanted to find out about. It was only now that he appeared on the deck looking as pale as a ghost and his usually squinted eyes wide with fear.

San hadn't intended to come topside for a while yet but the fact that the dragon had ripped a hole through half his room completely destroying his bunk (narrowly missing his chest of possesions) and then withdrawing its talons along with the dwarf who had been in the next room over had persuaded him that it might actually be safer in the sunlight.

It was then that San saw the carnage. The dead and dying were scattered over what was left of the deck. The masts and rigging were ripped, shattered and broken. And those who were left were starting on the clean up operation. Smoke plumed up from recently qwelled fires and some of the sailors and expedition members limped, crawled and were forced below decks to where Nexx had his makeshift I.C.U. ward.

San, upon seeing the wreckage and nearly getting taken off by a dragon, suddenly felt very sick.
 

Zemalac

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Deslock grunted at Royka. "Yes, I'm sure you meant Raven," he said, "but you should have known that Ticky was a mage as well. I mean, he's a gnome. Of course he's a wizard."

The explorer heaved an enormous sigh. "But enough of that. Back to business. You see it as being a choice between being spotted by slavers and being spotted by pirates. Good to see such optimism." He stared at a thin trail of smoke rising from a dying fire on the opposite side of the deck. A breeze swirled the smoke into tatters as he watched. "The wind's picking up," said Deslock, unnecessarily. "We've still got one mast, and we have spare sailcloth in the hold. Look, there's even clouds in the distance now--we've got some wind, thank the gods. We can still limp about if we need to, and I think we do. Get someone in the crow's nest, looking for ships--or, preferably, an island where we can cut a new mast. Yes, Dave?"

This last was to a sailor hovering nearby. The man doffed his hat and spoke to Deslock in a low voice. When he was finished, the explorer's face looked very old for the briefest of moments.

"We've lost three of our Expedition, apparently," said Deslock. "Reeko Jalbrook, Alexis Moonspear, and old Ko'el. They're just missing. Dragon must have got them, gods help the poor bastards."

_______________________​

Down below, a sailor's broken arm had made the Doctor realize he'd left his splinting kit in his cabin. He was needed in the mess hall to heal the wounded, but to do that he needed to find his materials--problematic.

Fortunately enough, Ticky entered the room, thankfully without injuries. Nex approached the gnome with great relief. "Thank the gods you're here!" he said in his fast, professional voice. "We need the help of a skilled hand. I can leave this chaos to you for a moment while I get the splints." He rushed past Ticky and down the corridor, heading for his room and his supplies.

Anyone listening in the hall after Nexaddo had entered his room would have heard a sharp exclamation soon after. Anyone fluent in gnomish would recognize the word as

A few moments later the gnome reappeared, holding a small saw. He made his quick way to the top deck, where he approached the Explorer. "...looks like a storm," Deslock was saying, "but I think it's going to miss us--yes, Doctor?"

Nexaddo delivered his breathless report. "Deslock, we are not looking good," he said. "I have counted six dead crew thus far, and I'm not sure how many more need care. They just keep coming in."

He paused, and shifted awkwardly for a moment. "I think you should know that the orc--Gris Axthorn, wasn't it? He didn't make it, and his body is lying on my bed."

Deslock glared furiously and rubbed his temples. "Four," he muttered.

"I'm, ah, not sure what to do with the body," Nexaddo confessed, after a moment's silence. "Bodies, I should say. There are more dead, I shouldn't just worry about the one that's lying in my cabin. Right. What would you have us do start doing with the bodies?"

Deslock sighed. "Arrange them as best you can," he said. "We'll give them proper sea-burials as soon as we are able. For now, Doctor, see to the wounded."


_______________________​

_______________________​

INTERLUDE

The wind howled and the rain lashed down, slashing sideways across the deck. The ship rose up a wall of water, burst through the top in a cloud of spray, and crashed down the other side, flinging the crew about to be caught by their safety lines. The ship's name could barely be seen through the driving rain, picked out in red paint on the bow. Osprey, said the red letters, when they were visible. The captain had ceased shouting orders at his men, for no one could hear him over the sounds of wind and rain; instead, he had taken to singing. His voice rang out through the gale, sounding a defiant hymn.

The lookout yelled a warning, but no one heard him. Indeed, no one needed to, for what he saw was right before their eyes, rising out of the darkness of the storm. It was a mass blacker than the waters and the sky, solid and hulking. Men screamed, for surely this was the end of days, and surely here was a demon rising from the maelstrom, coming to crush the world.

The captain did not move an inch from his course. "Courage, men!" he roared, confidant in the invincibility of his ship and himself. "O come all ye gods, ye Guardian, Judge and Fist! Rise up, all ye angels!"

The ship rose on a wave, towering above the black mass, and the captain bellowed the song. "Rise up! Rise again, to heaven's gates, the host to bear me through!"

The Osprey flew on the water, not even seeming to touch the sea. The wheel spun freely in the captain's hands, and it seemed to him as though he were indeed rising up, his ship taking wing and flying, spiting the very maw of the storm.

"Rise up! he sang triumphantly, and the trees hit the Osprey and cracked like gunshots as they tore out the bottom of the ship. The captain stood at the wheel, singing his hymn as the island tore his ship apart around him: and then the next wave came down, and there was nothing but silence.

The storm continued.
 

Bluedemon322

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John watched as the dragon vanished over the horizon before recovering from the shock of seeing one of the most powerfully magical creatures already. He hadn't expected to see something as volatile as a dragon until they at least had reached the Unknown Continent. What had a dragon been doing here so far from its lair? It wasn't like a dragon to stray very far from its hoard of treasure. Someone in the Expedition must have very powerful enemies indeed.

But John couldn't do anything about it at the moment, so he then took to collecting any dragon blood and scales that the dragon may have "dropped" when it was shot by ballistae and stabbed repeatedly. He knew the magical properties and uses for dragons, and even if it didn't prove useful, it was still worth a pretty penny and therefore worth keeping.
 

MintyNinja

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"but I think it's going to miss us--yes, Doctor?"

Considering his own part in the conversation done with, Rokya turned to Rhee and explained about the missing Expedition Members. He walked back down the stairs as he heard the news about Axthorn, Never even got to meet that one.
 

Shapsters

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Derlan limped into the mess hall where Ticky and the Doctor treated the injured parents, his face had a slight grimace from the pain in his leg and his chest, and yet despite the obvious pain he should have been in, he seemed to be more irritated than anything else. His eyes were red and dilated, his breath smelled rather foul and he walked with a slight wobble.

"Damn, sounds like our crew is dropping like flies..." he mumbled as he approached Ticky, "Ah Ticky old... friend? I need be might in assistance of medical. Seems as my leg has some sort of bullet in it and at least... well more so than one rib seems at least brokened."

His eyelids seemed heavy as he blinked and Derlan seemed to stare at Ticky with a glaze over his eyes.
 

ThePuzzldPirate

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Her eyes gazed back the mast she climbed not to long ago before laughing, she shook her head, She then purposely strode down the stairs after the merchant.
 

Zemalac

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The Expedition settled down. On deck, Doctor Nexaddo half-saluted the explorer with his saw. "I'll do my best," he told Deslock, and scampered off in search of boards he could cut for splints. He found many, amid the rubble on deck. His slings were made of sailcloth and his splints were pieces of shattered decking, but they would serve.

Back in the mess hall, the good Doctor was delighted to see Derlan speaking with Ticky. "Derlan! It would appear even a dragon can't get the best of you. I'll be able to repay my debt after all. I want to hear your story once I have a chance to rest." There was little time for further speech--the work was in front of him now, and it must be finished.

The sailor with the broken arm winced as Nexaddo probed his wrist. "Bite down on this," advised the Doctor, slipping a piece of wood between the sailor's lips. "Now, count to twenty...there we go," and he twisted. The man bit down to muffle his scream. The Doctor didn't even notice. The ulna and radius had to be aligned just so, and the splint tied around the palm and bone to keep everything immobile...

And so it went for the rest of the day: burns, blood and broken bones. On the following day, they held the funerals. There were five sailors who had died, and each of them received somber tributes from their comrades. Some men were brief and grim; some were eloquent and emotional; some went up knowing what they were going to say, and forgot the words by the time they stood before the canvas-wrapped body. Five times a sailor's body went over the rail, weighted down by lead and canvas, and five times Captain Grummond delivered a short speech on the lives of his men. "Lysin Osobi was a good man, and a fine sailor," he said. "Karl Dekkenridge kept to his post through storm and fire." "Eddy McTervish had been with me for nigh-on ten years." "Danial Scott died as he lived: on the sea, with a flute in his pocket." "Ferguson was the storyteller, and he will be sorely missed around the evening's table." Each body went over the rail almost silently, a dim white shape dropping to the water and vanishing beneath the waves.

Deslock stood to speak when it was Gris Axthorn's turn to go over the rail.

"I can't say I knew Gris Axthorn particularly well," he said, "and I can't say we were best friends in the time I knew him. We were both men with jobs to do, and we both did them well. All I know of him is that. He was professional, calm and collected. He was an orc who rose above the stereotype and became a merchant, and yet was still brave and adventurous enough to join this Expedition. I can't say he'll be missed: I can say the world is lesser for his absence." He stepped back and nodded.

The captain added the ceremonial lines: "From the sea we are born, and to the sea we return." The body of Gris Axthorn went over the side and hit the waves with barely a sound.

_________________________​

It was the better part of a week before the lookout spotted the island. By that time Deslock was already having paranoid fantasies about running out of supplies while stranded on the open sea, unable to move. Captain Grummond, in turn, had slowly become convinced that Deslock was plotting which of the crew he would eat first if they ran out of food. The crew was strung out from lack of activity and too much exertion, the Expedition was on edge because, well, because they were the Expedition, and the entire ship sailed through a miasma of uncertainty and flaring tempers. Twice the lookout screamed that he'd spotted the dragon again, and twice he was roundly cursed out by his fellows when it turned out that he hadn't.

"Land!" shouted the lookout.

"Yeah, right!" shouted those on the deck below.

"No, seriously, land!" the lookout shouted back. "And...reef, two miles out!"

And it was, indeed, land. They anchored the Cepolada a good fifty feet outside of the reef, and then activity ceased as just about everyone stood looking at the island. Partially in thanks for having found somewhere with large trees where they might cut another mast, and partially a desire to see any hostile creatures at long range instead of up close.

Deslock had his spyglass out. "There's someone on the beach," he said.

That quieted a lot of the cheerful comments. "Who?" asked Grummond, trying to make out the distant figure without the aid of the telescope.

"He's got a blue cap, and he's shouting and waving his arms up and down," said Deslock. "He's a little banged up, but he doesn't look like a ravening savage."

"Maybe he ate someone and got the cap from them," offered a nearby sailor. Deslock pointedly ignored him.

"Get me a longboat," he said.

_________________________​

Riley Lynch, first mate of the ill-fated Osprey, almost fell to his knees when the Cepolada's longboat crunched against the sand. "Thank the gods," he said. "Thank the gods, we're saved." In the time that Deslock had taken to get a small crew together and get the longboat down into the water a small crowd had gathered on the sand, composed of the remaining passengers and crew of the Osprey. Here was a black-clad young woman with a long sword at her hip; there was an ice elf with burns scars on his face and two slender blades; over here was a man with the head and legs of a goat, covered in charms and belts; and in the shadows stood an elf with dark red skin and black tattoos, a patch over her right eye and a leather cap on the stump of her left hand.

Deslock stepped forward and asked the question almost idly.

"So, who the hell are you?"

In honor of the one-year anniversary of The Unknown (which is coming up on Sunday--mark your calendars, ladies and gentlemen) and in honor of certain players either vanishing or dropping out, several new players will now be joining the Expedition. Give 'em a warm welcome, everybody.

To the newcomers: Welcome to The Unknown.
 

Yorgmiester

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*snap*

FWOOSH

The annoying seagull's tail burst into flame, and it let out a shrill, terrified cry, making a prompt nose-dive for the water, out of sight and sound. Prithis smiled contentedly and lowered his fingers, continuing his trek without breaking stride.

His staff and hooves made soft mushing sounds in the sand as he walked, his long gait leaving ample room between for the quiet sounds of waves and seabirds to drift lazily behind him. His breathing was easy and made little noise, for he was used to long walks. The gentle tinkering of many small metal parts around his person, an ambient he had grown accustomed to over the many long years, blended seamlessly with the other sounds, creating a nice, woody sort of harmony about him as he strode along the beach. The hot tropical sun beat down on his back, shining with a slightly golden gleam off of his rich brown fur. Prithis truly would look an odd sight to someone who might encounter him on the isle, or view him from a ship offshore. Some tall, lanky, grandfather-like beast loping across the sands; a twisted staff in one hand and a slew of charms, belts, bags and oddities dangling off of his person.

It had been several days since the other passengers of the Osprey had sent Prithis to make a circuit of the island. Of course, "sent" was not the right word, as the others had not known quite what to do with one of his kind. "Mutually agreed to let the crazy bastard wander off" was a better term, and wander off he had. The island was not large, but he had made frequent stops, leisurely excursions into the jungle to sate his curiosities and stomach. No doubt the rest of the passengers now thought him dead; et my some wild beast or drowned in the ocean. The thought tickled his fancy.

Pausing his unfaltering footslog, he eyed a large palm near the treeline, remarkable for it's very shallow slant out over the white sand. An odd back-and-forth wiggling of his lips indicated that the satyr was thinking. This lasted for only a few seconds before he began his approach, keeping his keen eyes on the old palm as if it were an adversary to be bested.

Despite his tall stature, Prithis was still too short to reach the coconuts. He would have to jump. Sighing, he dropped his staff on the sand and crouched, judging the distance, and then leaped, grasping onto the tree with his hands. He then craned his neck back and solidly head-butted the trunk, just below the coconuts.

Several of the large, round fruits fell and stuck in the sand, followed directly by Prithis. He grinned, taking up one of them in his hand and inspecting it keenly. After finding it acceptable the satyr promptly speared it on the end of one of his horns, twisting it about until a hole was made. It took nearly a minute for the milk to drain out of the coconut, but he wasted not, his long tongue and agile lips consuming every last drop.

Wiping his mouth with one furry arm, Prithis tossed the empty shell away and was about to leave, when he remembered the others he was about to rejoin.

Translated from Feyic, the language commonly shared by all "mystical woodland folk." Satyrs do have their own language, of course, but it is rarely used, even among their own kind.[/footnote] he muttered to himself, bending to pick up the remaining coconuts. Stuffing them into one of his many pouches, he picked up his staff and started off down the beach once more, feeling slightly more accomplished now that he had something to bring back. Not that these few pasty fruits were anything compared to how he had been eating over the last few days, but they wouldn't have to know that.

Presently he rounded a bend in the coastline and came suddenly upon an interesting scene; there was the camp and the group of stranded passengers from the Osprey, as usual, but now a ship sat anchored just offshore, and a boat was being lowered from it's side. Squinting and shielding his eyes with one hand, he could just make out the name of this new ship.

Cepolada.

The satyr grinned.

~~~​

By the time Prithis had reached the other stranded passengers on the beach, the longboat was already about to strike sand, and everyone else was ready for it, standing in a group near the water to greet their supposed rescuers. Prithis approached casually, licking the milk out of his third coconut, while keeping one curious eye on the men who stepped out of the boat and onto the wet sand.

The first man off the longboat was apparently the captain, by the way he carried himself. He had dirty blonde hair; not dirty by coloration, but by condition. It was terribly greasy and worn from so much time at sea. It matched his scraggly goatee, at least, and his personality, by the looks of it. He seemed to be very agitated about something.

Though Prithis could not fluently speak the Common Tongue of humans, he caught a few of the words in the captain's question and got the basic jist. Still, he opted to stay quiet, standing at the back of the crowd and sipping on his coconut. He stood at least a head taller than most of the people around him, so he had a good view of what was going on.
 

Sporky111

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Dec 17, 2008
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How long must we be here? Kadeam thought in exasperation. Since their "landing", he had been doing his best to deal with the heat. It seemed the storm had intentionally ran them ashore just to clear up and turn to non-stop, blazing sunshine the next day.

Luckily, it wasn't too long before he found a haven of cold-and-damp to match his icy blood. A short distance from the shore, he found a long-dead tree that had fallen over and been hollowed out by decay. The little cave was well shaded, and it was nicely cooled by the ground underneath. It was just deep enough that he could stretch out and lay down in relative comfort during the day, and get some bit of work done when it was cooler in the evenings and early morning.

He wiped his light-colored hair from his eyes and carefully rolled over onto his back. His cloak and tunic were hanging outside, leaving his chest bare. Along his left cheek, neck, and down his arms and chest his pale-blue skin was marred by pink burn scars. Despite his young age, he already had wrinkles between his eyebrows from frowning against the constant pain the burns caused him.

These tropics are hell. I can't even get a breeze like I can at sea.

He sat up as he was alerted by frantic screaming nearby. It sounded like the first mate. Kadeam crawled to his feet and adjusted his sword belt, then donned the rest of his clothes. As he stepped out of the shade and into the sun, he pulled his hood up and looked for the source of the sound.

Down the beach, Riley was almost-comically jumping and waving. Out to sea, Kadeam saw a ship approaching. He backed into the trees a bit and watched it approach, noting that it appeared to be in terrible shape.

It wasn't long before a boat landed on the shore, and several people approached. At their fore was a man that seemed very familiar to the ice elf, by reputation. "So, who the hell are you?"

"We're the crew of the ill-fated Osprey. We ran aground several days ago during a storm."
 

MintyNinja

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Rokya had joined the longboat, despite his previous experiences exploring an island and despite his own common sense, he had joined the longboat. If he had stopped to think about this change in attitude he may realize he was more his father's son than he expected, but contemplation would be saved for long nights with a drink in his hands. Currently he was helping the sailors maneuver over the reef, his bag once again at his side and his hands newly calloused. He had to hand it to Deslock, there was a certain appeal to going somewhere new everyday.

Eventually they hit the beach and after being tied off, assembled opposite the bedraggled crew. Perfect! Such a wild assortment will blend in wonderfully with our own dysfunctional bunch! Rokya's attention, however, was soon pulled to the tall man drinking from a coconut. He didn't notice the peculiar horns, or the goats' legs, just that there was food on this wonderful paradise!

As Deslock made the customarily polite introductions- "So, who the hell are you?" -Rokya waited patiently, searching the visible trees for any sign of food other than old bread and watery gruel.
 

Flying-Emu

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Ticky waited in the boat, his arms crossed and brow furrowed, intently watching the beach-dwellers. He made a concentrated effort to not stare at the Satyr; after all, they were not common by a long shot. Deslock began talking, but Ticky paid no attention. The idiot could stew, as far as he cared. Dragons, assassins, and shipwrecks (oh my!), and they hadn't even reached their destination.

"We're the crew of the ill-fated Osprey." An ice elf said blandly. "We ran aground several days ago during a storm."

Ticky raised an eyebrow at the elf. A rather polite reply to Deslock's vaguely insulting greeting. He kept his mouth shut, content to analyze the situation, and the Satyr at the back, quietly sipping from a coconut.

The gnome did not like his situation. He did not like his crewmates, he could live without the humid heat. He did not like these new men (and Satyr), and he did not like this island. Something niggled at the back of his mind, but he pushed it away.
 

Nukey

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Apr 24, 2009
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Cecia sat in the sand with her legs crossed, her reaming hand patting the side of a freshly made sandcastle and placing sticks and shells in places that she found fitting. The miniature home of silt and clay was covered in smooth lines, arch ways and windows, coming as close to a replica of a real castle one could hope to achieve with so little supplies. Though it wasn't what one would call "eye-catching", as the real show was in its production: crabs and other small critters were moving about the sculpture, helping to build it.

"Work faster, we still be havin' t' build th' watchtower an' th' palace center!" The red skinned elf mused, speaking in accent that was near impossible to understand. "Then, once that's done wi', we'll make another castle! Ye can be havin' wee wars an' swashbuckle them big lobsters that always be harassin' ye! Won't that be fun!? Haha!"

The Elf fell backwards holding her sides, loudly chuckling and struggling to contain herself. Sediments of muck and dirt accumulated on her hair and clothing, leaving stains all across her person as she rolled about the ground. As she did so, a number of sailors emerged from a longboat at the far side of the shore, one barking orders and the rest promptly following them. She didn't go over to check who it was, though, but upon hearing the commotion she rose to her feet and focused her attention towards the source of the noise, not wanting to approach before she was certain that it was safe to do so.

Sorry for the short length, but I'm afraid I'm about to lose internet soon and I really wanted to get this across.

Hope this is acceptable.

EDIT: Color removed by request.
 

Shapsters

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Derlan hopped out of the longboat, he would have been assessing the situation and the new found people, but he was too busy wondering why he was allowed on the boat. He wasn't exactly a good welcoming party, his many oddities were certainly enough to scare people off. That being said, on the chance there was a painted elf around, it was certainly a good idea to have another around to converse with.

Once he did take a look at the people occupying the island he was taken aback. A large variety of races were on the beach, including a female painted elf.

What an odd bunch of people, what is it about this expedition that attracts such weirdos? Including me!

That was when he spotted the Satyr, it was like nothing he had ever seen before. Head and feet of a goat? Large necklaces and bags hanging off his body, horns protruding from his head? This man... creature... whatever it was certainly fascinated Derlan and he felt it would be a missed opportunity if he didn't at least say hello.

Of course at first he needed to stare with his mouth open for a moment or two.

After Derlan had gotten a good stare at the Satyr he briskly jogged toward him, excited for the prospect of meeting this creature he had a wide grin on his face. Clearing his throat he attempted to introduce himself,

 

Bluedemon322

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John stepped off the steady, gently rocking boat and onto the beach. His legs were a little wobbly, but he was accustomed to the feeling one gets after a voyage at sea by now. Then he noticed the newcomers to their ill-fated expedition.

Two elves, a human women, and a satyr. Enough to replace the dead members of the original Expedition, with an extra for good luck.

How had these people ended up with a satyr? John had heard the legends of course, but they all differed.

Were satyrs insane followers of the god of Wine or protectors of the wild? Or were they just raving mad?

Wishing to investigate this, he started walking up to the satyr, but the paint elf beat him to it. Muttering quietly, he instead walked away from the area, into the wilderness, for reasons unknown to all but himself...

...And Zemalac, and probably any mage worth his pointy hat...
 

Yorgmiester

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Strange lot. Prithis thought as he watched the various people jumping onto the sand. One in particular interested him; a short gnome with brilliantly white hair, who sat in the boat looking rather angry and discontented. His eyes, unlike those of the rest of the rescuing crew, were kept pointedly off of Prithis' person. Much unlike the orange-colored Bird Elf that was staring in awe, mouth gaping wide, like some colorfully plumage-obsessed sunbathing crocodile.

Prithis kept one eye on the elf as it approached, tilting his head back to finish off his latest coconut. As the final drops wriggled down the length of his tongue and down his throat, the elf came to a halt, looking up at the Satyr with wide, child-like eyes.



Well, that was unexpected.

Prithis was pleasantly surprised. When the little land-bound parrot had opened it's mouth, he had expected some of that drawling human mumbling, or perhaps some frenzied elf squawking. Instead, this color blot had spoken with BeastTongue. Maybe there was some interest to be found in a conversation. Tossing the coconut over one shoulder and clearing his throat, Prithis turned towards the elf, opened his mouth...

...and let out a very loud, obnoxious braying noise. A long tongue waved about obscenely in the air, and many droplets of spit took flight.

The disappointment and surprise on the elf's face was hysterical, and Prithis couldn't help but break down into laughter. He bent nearly double, holding his stomach with one hand and pointing at the elf with the other, little bits of Feyic words springing up here and there between his guffaws, most likely words of mockery. His tail whirled and twisted through the air rather dramatically, a sure sign of his delight.

Recovering from his cackling, Prithis straightened and wiped the tears from his eyes, a silly grin spread across his face. Looking down at the elf's indignant expression only brought about more chuckles. Then, out of the corner of his eye, he caught sight of one of the Cepolada's crew, a boring looking human male, walking off towards the jungle, in the direction of the island's volcano.

"Watch this." Prithis finally said, in the Common Tongue. It was ironic that those were the first words he spoke to a member of this crew; they were also the first words he had learned of the human's language and the ones he used the most often.

Digging the final coconut out of his pouch, he held it firmly in his palm for a few moments and muttered something inaudible. Then he lobbed the fruit with all his might. The coconut etched a magnificent arc through the air, coming down square on the human's head. Just before impact, however, it peeled itself, removing it's own outer shell so that only a large gob of coconut milk remained. The messy white liquid made a spectacular splatter.

Prithis burst into laughter once more.