"Okay," said Deslock. "Well, then. We've found you two, but we seem to be shedding others. Pah." The explorer appeared to be deflated for a moment, the hollows of his cheeks standing out starkly. Then he took a breath that seemed to restore his usual bluster, and spoke. "Moving on. Garril, don't kill people. Yet. Unless you have a good reason for it. We'll play that one by ear."
He straightened his posture, found that he was still a good half a foot shorter than the orc, and turned to loom over Derlan instead. "And now, if you please, I'd like the pair of you to give me some idea of what you've been up to, beyond getting trapped inside active volcanoes." And then, almost as an afterthought, "Well done on surviving that, by the way."
Doctor Nexaddo heaved himself out of the fore hatch, grateful for a cool breeze after being slow roasted below deck. From nearby he could hear Grummond grumbling--there continued to be a lack of able bodies around, and there was nothing imaginable that should be causing the group to spend such an enormous amount of time on what amounted to a faulty time bomb. The volcano was still a threat, so why were they still there? The doctor's anxiousness grew the more he thought about it, sending him pacing up and down the deck railing.
Surely the Expedition shouldn't have been gone this long? How long did it take to grab a mast and drag it out to a ship? The Doctor was admittedly no sailor, but he didn't think it should take this long.
He took a deep breath, collected his thoughts and looked around for somebody to occupy his time.
He straightened his posture, found that he was still a good half a foot shorter than the orc, and turned to loom over Derlan instead. "And now, if you please, I'd like the pair of you to give me some idea of what you've been up to, beyond getting trapped inside active volcanoes." And then, almost as an afterthought, "Well done on surviving that, by the way."
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Doctor Nexaddo heaved himself out of the fore hatch, grateful for a cool breeze after being slow roasted below deck. From nearby he could hear Grummond grumbling--there continued to be a lack of able bodies around, and there was nothing imaginable that should be causing the group to spend such an enormous amount of time on what amounted to a faulty time bomb. The volcano was still a threat, so why were they still there? The doctor's anxiousness grew the more he thought about it, sending him pacing up and down the deck railing.
Surely the Expedition shouldn't have been gone this long? How long did it take to grab a mast and drag it out to a ship? The Doctor was admittedly no sailor, but he didn't think it should take this long.
He took a deep breath, collected his thoughts and looked around for somebody to occupy his time.